单选题I can clearly remember the first time I met Mr. Andrews, my old headmaster, 21 that was over twenty years ago. During the war, I was at school in the north of England. As soon as it ended, my family returned to London. There were not enough schools left for children to go to and my father had to go from one school to another, asking them to 22 me as a pupil. I used to go with him but he had such a 23 time trying to persuade people even to see him that I seldom had to do any tests. We had been to all the schools near we lived, but the more my father argued, the more 24 it became. In the end, we went to a school about five miles away from home. The headmaster kept us waiting for 25 an hour. While we were waiting, I 26 around at the school building, which was one of those old Victorian structures, completely out of date but still standing. I could hear the boys playing in the playground outside when the headmaster's secretary finally 27 us into his office. Mr. Andrews spoke to me first. "Why do you want to come here?" he asked. I had been thinking of saying something about studying but I couldn't 28 remembering the boys outside. "I don't know anyone in London," I said. "I like to play with the other boys. I like to read a lot of books too." I 29 . "All right," Mr. Andrews said. "We have one place 30 , in fact." My two years at that school were the happiest of my life.
单选题He ______ a book, and now he needs a holiday. A. has been writing B. was writing C. will write D. wrote
单选题There is no denying that students should learn something about how computers work, just as we expect them at least to understand that the internal combustion engine (内燃机) has something to do with burning fuel, expanding gases and pistons (活塞) being driven. For people should have some basic idea of how the things that they use do what they do. Further, students might be helped by a course that considers the computer's impact on society. But that is not what is meant by computer literacy. For computer literacy is not a form of literacy (读写能力) ; it is a trade skill that should not be taught as a liberal art. Learning how to use a computer and learning how to program one are two distinct activities. A case might be made that the competent citizens of tomorrow should free themselves from their fear of computers. But this is quite different from saying that all ought to know how to program one. Leave that to people who have chosen programming as a career. While programming can be lots of fun, and while our society needs some people who are experts at it, the same is true of auto repair and violin-making. Learning how to use a computer is not that difficult, and it gets easier all the time as programs become more "user-friendly". Let us assume that in the future everyone is going to have to know how to use a computer to be a competent citizen. What does the phrase "learning to use a computer" mean? It sounds like "learning to drive a car", that is, it sounds as if there is some set of definite skills that, once acquired, enable one to use a computer. In fact, "learning to use a computer" is much more like "learning to play a game", but learning the rules of one game may not help you play a second game, whose rules may not be the same. There is no such a thing as teaching someone how to use a computer. One can only teach people to use this or that program and generally that is easily accomplished.
单选题People joke that no one in Los Angeles reads; everyone watches TV, rents videos, or goes to the movies. The most popular reading material is comic books, movie magazines, and TV guides. City libraries have only 10 percent of the traffic that car washes have. But how do you explain this? An annual book festival in west Los Angeles is flourishing year after year. People wait haft an hour for a parking space to become available. This outdoor festival, sponsored by a newspaper, occurs every April for one weekend. This year's attendance was estimated at 70,000 on Saturday and 75,000 on Sunday. The festival consisted of 280 exhibitors. There were about 90 talks given by authors, with an audience question-and-answer period following each talk. Autograph(亲笔签名)seekers sought out more than 150 authors. A food court sold all kinds of popular food and diverse foreign foods, from American hamburgers to Hawaiian shave ice drinks. Except for a $ 7 parking fee, the festival was free. Even so, some people avoided the food court prices by staying away and having their own sandwiches and drinks. People came from all over California. One couple drove down from San Francisco. "This is our sixth year here now. We love it, "said the husband. "It's just fantastic to be in the great outdoors, to be among so many books and authors, and to get some very good deals, too." The idea for the festival occurred years ago, but nobody knew if it would succeed. Although book festivals were already popular in other US cities, would Los Angeles residents welcome one? "The citizens of the city are very unpredictable, "said one of the festival founders.
单选题My father said that he would take ______ for dinner when he came next time. A.all us out B.out all us C.all out us D.us all out
单选题French writer Patrick Modiano, 69, devoted himself______to his writing, and won the 2014 Nobel Prize for Literature.
单选题
单选题Without
coordination
among the departments, students will be confused about the courses they have to take.
单选题I decided to go to the cinema as soon as I ______. A. finish what I did B. would finish what I was doing C. finished what I did D. finished what I was doing
单选题{{B}}阅读理解四{{/B}}
Questions 16 to 20 are based on the
following passage. Religion consists of conscious
ideas, hopes, enthusiasms, and objects of worship; it operates by grace and
flourishes by prayer. Reason, on the other hand, is a mere principle or
potential order, on which indeed we may come to reflect but which exists in us
ideally only, without variation or stress of any kind. We conform or do not
conform to it; it does not urge or chide us, not call for any emotions on our
part other than those naturally aroused by the various objects which it unfolds
in their true nature and proportion. Rationality is nothing but a form, an ideal
constitution which experience may more or less embody. Religion is a part of
experience itself, a mass of sentiments and ideas. The one is an inviolate
principle, the other a changing and struggling force. And yet this struggling
and changing force of religion seems to direct man toward something eternal. It
seems to make for an ultimate harmony within the soul and for an ultimate
harmony between the soul and all that the soul depends upon. Religion, in its
intent, is a more conscious and direct pursuit of the Life of Reason than is
society, science, or art, for these approach and fill out the ideal life
tentatively and piecemeal, hardly regarding the foal or caring for the ultimate
justification of the instinctive aims. Nevertheless, we must
confess that this religious pursuit of the Life of Reason has been singularly
abortive. Those within the pale of each religion may prevail upon themselves, to
express satisfaction with its results, thanks to a fond partiality in reading
the past and generous draughts of hope for the future ; but any one regarding
the various religions at once and comparing their achievements with what reason
requires, must feel how terrible is the disappointment which they have one and
all prepared for mankind. To confuse intelligence and dislocate sentiment by
gratuitous fictions is a short-sighted way of pursuing happiness. Thus religion
too often debauches the morality it comes to sanction and impedes the science it
ought to fulfill. Religion pursues rationality through the
imagination. When it explains events or assigns causes, it is an imaginative
substitute for science. When it gives precepts, insinuates ideals, or remoulds
aspiration, it is an imaginative substitute for wisdom-I mean for the deliberate
and impartial pursuit of all food. The condition and the aims of life are both
represented in religion poetically, but this poetry tends to arrogate to itself
literal truth and moral authority, neither of which it possesses. Hence the
depth and importance of religion becomes intelligible no less than its
contradictions and practical disasters. Its object is the same as that of
reason, but its method is to proceed by intuition and by unchecked poetical
conceits.
单选题______ day we had yesterday!
单选题Some young people have made a(n)______ by developing private business.
单选题Free medical service is______to nearly all the college students in China.
单选题Your college students are men of privilege. It costs ten times ______,
in labour and care and money, to bring you out where you are today, as it costs
to raise a boy without education.
A. so as
B. as much
C. so much
D. too much
单选题______ every word of his were true, what action would the committee wish to take? A. Since B. As C. Even D. Suppose
单选题 In the longest-term study of its kind, researchers
pitted two popular diets head to head—a low-fat American Heart Association-style
diet and a carb-controlled Mediterranean diet, each combined with regular
physical activity—in a population of overweight patients who had Type 2
diabetes. Researchers found that over the four-year study,
patients who adhered to the Mediterranean-style eating plan maintained lower
blood-sugar levels for a longer time than those in the low-fat-diet group. The
Mediterranean dieters were also able to maintain slightly more weight loss than
the low-fat group and showed small improvements in triglyceride and HDL
cholesterol levels, both risk factors for heart disease. On the basis of their
finding, the study's authors suggest that some diabetes patients may be able to
substitute diet and exercise for blood-sugar-lowering medications. "A
Mediterranean-style diet is a very important part in the treatment of diabetes.
We knew that, " says Dr. Loren Greene, a New York University Medical Center
endocrinologist, who was not involved in the study. "But there just hasn't been
a good study to confirm this before." The current study does
not make clear, however, whether diet alone can reduce blood sugar enough to
eliminate the use of diabetes medication or whether it is even advisable to
forgo medication at all. Participants in the new study were kept off drugs when
their AIC levels—a measurement that indicates a patient's blood-sugar levels
over the previous three months—were below 7%, the standard cutoff for what is
considered controlled blood sugar. But "we don't know for sure if people with
AIC levels under 7% still need to be on drugs, " says Greene. "The research just
hasn't answered that question yet." Recent studies suggest that using
blood-sugar-controlling medication even among the 57 million Americans who have
pre-diabetes—meaning they have elevated, but not dangerously high blood sugar
and are at very high risk of developing diabetes— may prevent the development of
heart disease an stroke. While diabetes doctors generally agree
that the first line of defense against Type 2 diabetes should always be exercise
and diet, many recommend also using drugs. For its part, the American Diabetes
Association advises patients with Type 2 diabetes to make appropriate lifestyle
changes and to start a drug regimen immediately upon diagnosis. Still, many
doctors acknowledge patients' aversion to chronic drug-taking." Almost
universally, people don't want to take medicine if they can avoid it, " says
Greene. And physicians point out that the direct and indirect costs associated
with taking a drug—even one as widely prescribed as the generic diabetes
medication metformin(二甲双胍,一种抗糖尿病和降血糖药)—can serve as a barrier for many patients,
especially among disadvantaged populations and those without health
insurance. Whether avoidance of medication in certain cases
proves to be reasonable, for now it can at least be used as an effective
incentive to improve lifestyle habits, says Greene: "If you are told, 'If you
don't want to go on medicine, stick to this diet, ' then that's a pretty
valuable tool at least for patient compliance."
单选题Which of the following can best describe the management of human resources in American companies?
单选题
单选题The teacher asked us to write a ______ in one hour. A. two-hundred-word composition B. two-hundred words composition C. two-hundreds-words composition D. two hundreds of words composition
单选题Violent criminals with something to hide have more reason than ever to be paranoid about a tap on the shoulder which could send them to jail. Queensland police are working through a backlog of unsolved murders with some dramatic success. Greater cooperation between the public and various law enforcement agencies is playing a role, but new genetic-testing techniques are the real key to providing the vital evidence to mount a prosecution. Evidence left behind at the scene of any murder is guaranteed to outlive the person who left it. A blood, saliva or tissue sample in the size of a pin, kept dry and out of sunlight, will last several thousand years. From it, scientific analysis now can tell accurately the sex of the person who left it. When matched against a sample from a crime suspect, it can indicate with million-to-one certainty whether the samples come from the same source. Only twins share identical DNA. So precise is the technology if the biological parents of a suspect agree to provide a sample, forensic scientists can work out the rest for themselves without cooperation from the suspect. Queensland forensic scientists have been using the DNA testing technology since 1992, and last year they were recognized internationally for their competence in positive individual identification. That is part of the reason 20 of Queensland's most puzzling unsolved murders dating to 1932 are being ac timely investigated. There also have been several recent arrests for unsolved murders. Forensic evidence was instrumental in charges being laid over the bashing death of waitress Tasha Douty on Brampton Island in 1983. Douty's blood-splattered, naked body was found on a nude sunbathing beach at Dinghy Bay on the island. Footprints in the sand indicated that the killer had grappled with the 21-year-old mother who had fled up the beach before being caught and beaten to death. According to Leo Freney, the supervising forensic scientist at the John Tonge Centre at Brisbane's Griffith University, DNA testing has become an invaluable tool for police, its use is in identifying and rejecting suspects. In fact, he says, it eliminates more people than it convicts. " It is easily as good as fingerprints for the purpose of identification, " he says. "In the case of violent crime it is better than fingerprints. You can't innocently explain things like blood and semen at a crime scene where you may be able to innocently explain fingerprints. " In Queensland, a person who has been arrested on suspicion of an offence can be taken before a magistrate and ordered to provide a sample of body fluid by :force if necessary.
