单选题From the passage we can know patients in hospital ______.
单选题______of the two authors thinks that the danger of a nuclear war is increasing.
单选题The reason why the 55-year-old Hispanic woman became a florist is that ______.
单选题While typing, Helen has a habit of stopping ______ to give her long and flowing hair a smooth.
单选题Modern medicine and new methods of food production allow adults to live longer and babies to ______ easier. A. exist B. extinct C. survive D. revive
单选题(Provided) the computer is (given) correct information (to start), accuracy (is) another outstanding advantage.
单选题The manager promised to keep me _______ of how the project was going on.
单选题After a year's hard work I think I am ______ to a long holiday. A. entailed B. deserved C. entitled D. satisfied
单选题 By maintaining a strong family ______, they are also maintaining the infrastructure of society.
单选题There has been an increase in attendance at lectures______by the World Affairs Council, which brings international issues to public attention.
单选题In the 1962 movie Lawrence of Arabia, one scene shows an American newspaper reporter eagerly snapping photos of men looting a sabotaged train. One of the looters, Chief Auda abu Tayi of the Howeitat clan, suddenly notices the camera and snatches it. "Am I in this?" he asks, before smashing it open. To the dismayed reporter, Lawrence explains, "He thinks these things will steal his virtue. He thinks you"re a kind of thief." As soon as colonizers and explorers began taking cameras into distant lands, stories began circulating about how indigenous peoples saw them as tools for black magic. The "ignorant natives" may have had a point. When photography first became available, scientists welcomed it as a more objective way of recording faraway societies than early travelers" exaggerated accounts. But in some ways, anthropological photographs reveal more about the culture that holds the camera than the one that stares back. Up into the 1950s and 1960s, many ethnographers sought "pure" pictures of "primitive" cultures, routinely deleting modern accoutrements such as clocks and Western dress. They paid men and women to re-enact rituals or to pose as members of war or hunting parties, often with little regard for veracity. Edward Curtis, the legendary photographer of North American Indians, for example, got one Makah man to pose as a whaler with a spear in 1915 — even though the Makah had not hunted whales in a generation. These photographs reinforced widely accepted stereotypes that indigenous cultures were isolated, primitive, and unchanging. For instance, National Geographic magazine"s photographs have taught millions of Americans about other cultures. As Catherine Lutz and Jane Collins point out in their 1993 book Reading National Geographic, the magazine since its founding in 1888 has kept a tradition of presenting beautiful photos that don"t challenge white, middle-class American conventions. While dark-skinned women can be shown without tops, for example, white women"s breasts are taboo. Photos that could unsettle or disturb, such as areas of the world torn asunder by war or famine, are discarded in favor of those that reassure to conform with the society"s stated pledge to present only "kindly" visions of foreign societies. The result, Lutz and Collins say, is the depiction of "an idealized and exotic world relatively free of pain or class conflict." Lutz actually likes National Geographic a lot. She read the magazine as a child, and its lush imagery influenced her eventual choice off anthropology as a career. She just thinks that as people look at the photographs of other cultures, they should be alert to the choice of composition and images.
单选题The taller the container, ______ at the bottom.
A. the greater will the water pressure be
B. the water pressure will be greater
C. the greater will be the water pressure
D. greater the water pressure will be
单选题You haven't wasted my time; on the ______, you've helped me save some time.
单选题We must try to use our intellect ______.
单选题Why is it ______ the more connected we get, the more disconnected I feel?
单选题 SECTION A MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONS In this section there are four passages followed by ten multiple-choice questions. For each question, there are four suggested answers marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that you think is the best answer and mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET TWO. Passage One If you are running a Windows computer, you must install an array of security software to prevent an international collection of crooks, hackers, vandals and sleazy business people who aim to invade your PC through the Internet. You need a good antivirus program, a strong firewall program, an effective antispam program, and a program that specializes in stopping spyware and adware. But the fastest-growing computer security problem isn't viruses or other traditional malicious programs, and it can't be entirely defeated by using security software. It's called 'social engineering', and it consists of tactics that try to fool users into giving up sensitive financial data that criminals can use to steal their money and even their identities. Here are a few tips to help you avoid these schemes: 1. Don't trust email from financial institutions. Email is so easily manipulated by crooks that you simply should never, ever consider any email from a financial institution as legitimate. The message may bear a bank's or a broker's logo, but you should never respond to such an email, and never click on any link it contains. 2. Never respond to unsolicited commercial email, or spam, or even click on a link in an unsolicited commercial email. In the old days, responding to spam just got you on more spam email lists. Today, it might also result in the secret installation of a key logger or other malicious software. Besides, any company that has to resort to spam as a sales tool isn't likely to have a very good product to offer. Do you really think that if someone had invented a pill that enlarged breasts, he would be selling it through spam? He would have sold it to a big drug company for billions. The only safe response to spam is to ignore it and delete it. 3. Don't download or use free software unless you are sure it's legitimate. Sites offering free cursors, for instance, can secretly install all sorts of bad stuff on your PC. This is especially true of free security software, which is sometimes just malicious software posing as a security program. There are many legitimate free programs, but check them out before downloading. Look them up on the CNET or PC Magazine websites, which review most software. If they are not covered there, assume they are not legitimate. There are some new security programs aimed directly at social-engineering cheats. A new add-on for the Firefox web browser, called Shazou, can tell you where a website's server is located. If you think you are on the Bank of America website, but Shazou tells you the server is in Russia, that is a clue that you are being cheated. And Symantec plans a new product called Norton Confidential that will tell you if a website appears to be a fake. The best defense against social engineering, however, is to be smart and careful. Passage Two Credit card rewards programs have traditionally featured airline miles, gift certificates, and cash back for customers who spend enough on their cards to rack up points. But recently, credit card companies have started offering a different kind of gift: They're handing out lower interest rates, refunding interest payments, and using other strategies to provide incentives for cardholders to pay down their debt and make on-time payments. The deals, however, don't always work in consumers' favor. The new Citi Forward card gives cardholders points and reduces their annual interest rate for making on-time payments and for staying under their credit limit. TD Bank's Simply Flexible card changes customers' interest rates depending on how much of their balance they pay off. If they pay off 10 percent or more of their balance, then they get the lowest available interest rate; paying between the minimum payment and 5 percent of the balance gets them the highest interest rate. And Discover's Motiva card gives cardholders one month's worth of interest back after six consecutive on-time payments. Card companies say the idea behind the new rewards is to help customers get on top of their finances. 'It's all about promoting financial fitness and giving customers the choices they need to help them manage their debt,' says Michael Copley, senior vice president of retail lending for TD Bank. He says he thinks the Simply Flexible card motivates cardholders to pay off more of their debt and attributes the company's relatively low delinquency rate to the product. Because of the continuing recession, companies have an incentive to keep their customers from sliding further under water. 'This is in response to recognition on the part of issuers that they have to help their cardholders do a better job of managing their money so customers keep those cards for a long time,' says Ron Shevlin, senior analyst at Aite Group, a research and advisory firm. The challenge for companies, he says, is to balance the profitability of consumers who maintain a balance, and therefore pay interest fees each month, against the increased risk that those cardholders pose because they are more likely to default on their debt. Rewards programs that encourage customers to maintain a balance while paying on time, such as the Motiva card, may help them strike that balance. According to consumer advocates and credit card experts, consumers who carry a balance may be better off selecting a card with the lowest interest rate rather than participating in one of these rewards programs, although they can help consumers improve their credit. 'In general, I think these cards are great for people who don't have great credit and regularly carry a balance on their cards,' says Adam Jusko, founder of www. IndexCreditCards. com. 'Customers who only occasionally carry a balance, on the other hand, would be better off finding a card with a more appealing rewards program,' he adds. Passage Three Elizabeth I has been dead for more than 400 years, and Mary Queen of Scots was beheaded (砍头) 16 years earlier in 1587. Yet today's women still identify with these two powerful queens. Elizabeth is frequently mentioned in opinion polls about great leaders, and many successful women have been inspired by her. Meanwhile, Elizabeth's self-willed cousin, Mary Queen of Scots, also has legions of fans. She is often cited as the ultimate romantic heroine who followed her heart and was undone by love. Elizabeth and Mary were celebrity queens in their own lifetimes, and part of their enduring fascination is that they embody the female dilemma we all share — whether we should follow our head (Elizabeth) or our heart (Mary). Even today, we feel we have to choose between the two as it often seems impossible to reconcile demanding work and duty to others with expressing our needs for love and personal fulfillment. Elizabeth and Mary's lives as queens were rich, complex and dangerous, and the prize that divided them was nothing less than the English crown itself. Yet their opposing responses to love and loss, rivalry and danger, hope and frustration of desire still strike a chord with 21st-century women. Elizabeth was an intellectual and pragmatist (实用主义者) who was largely in control of her emotions, while Mary, a courageous woman of action, was a reckless romantic who followed her heart. Elizabeth made personal sacrifices in order to be a great queen and effective ruler. She never married, but often spoke about being 'mother and wife' of her people. Mary, on the other hand, married Bothwell against all advice and faced the subsequent wreckage of her reign. Mary was a reckless romantic but was by no means a fool. She was an intelligent, respected ruler, but her failing was her lack of insight into the consequences of her actions. Her rashness left her vulnerable and eventually led to her downfall. On the contrary, Elizabeth was far more politically adept and knew how to play the game. Mary's primary concern was her own immediate desire. Of course, it is possible that there's a bit of both Mary and Elizabeth in every woman. Similarly, the queens' public images were not always so clear-cut. Until the scandal following her second husband's murder, Mary was considered the 'good' queen, the woman who had done what was expected of her by marrying and producing a son. Elizabeth was generally considered wanton (放荡的人), with her bold flirtation (调情) with Lord Dudley, her refusal to marry and her resistance to being managed by the men who surrounded her. Mary, though the tragedy of her death, became a Catholic martyr, while Elizabeth, leading her people against Spain's great Armada, became England's greatest queen. Just as Mary and Elizabeth's public images could be overturned by a murder and a marriage, or an execution and a naval victory, so we can be deceived about ourselves and others. Passage Four Police Officer Tidwell left the station just after 8 a. m. on Sunday June 4. He had spent an uneventful night on duty and was looking forward to his day of rest. By habit he took a short cut down the path behind Dugby Hall road and after a minute or two he saw a man climbing down a drainpipe from an open bedroom window of number 29. In silence Tidwell crept into the garden. The man reached the ground and was dusting himself down when he felt his arm gripped. 'It's 8:15 on a Sunday morning,' said the officer, 'and this sort of thing seems an unlikely adventure at such a time. Would you mind explaining?' The man was obviously startled but kept calm. He said, 'I know what you're thinking, Officer, but it isn't true. This is a funny mistake.' 'It's part of my job to take an interest in unusual events. I think you've just left this house in a manner other than the customary one. That may be quite innocent, but I'd like to make sure. ' Tidwell took out his notebook and a pen. 'Name, address and occupation and then, please, tell me your story.' 'Charlie Crane, lorry driver, from Nottingham, 51 Breton Street. My story...' 'Yes. What were you doing like a fly on that wall, Mr. Crane? Well, I had a breakdown yesterday and had to stay the night here. Bed and breakfast. The landlady's name is Mrs. Fern. She gave me breakfast at seven, and I was out of here in the fight way and down at the lorry by half past seven. Only when I felt around for a cigarette, did I realize I'd left $80 in my envelope under the pillow here at Number 29. I always put it under my pillow at night. It's a habit I've got into. I even do it at home...' 'I see. Why didn't you miss it when you went to pay Mrs... What's her name?' 'I'd paid her last night. You've got to pay when you take the room, see? So I came rushing back, but it's Sunday, and she'd gone back to bed, and could I wake her? I rang the bell and banged on the front door for ten minutes before I came round here to the back and spotted my bedroom window still open. Up I went, then, up this pipe. It's a trick I learnt in the army. She didn't make the bed, and the money was still there. You know the rest, and I hope you believe it because...' 'Mr. Crane, whatever are you doing here? I thought you'd gone an hour ago.' It was Mrs. Fern, speaking from the kitchen window at the corner of the house.
单选题The census distinguished itself from previous studies on population movement in that ______.
单选题We spent the day ______ through forests and over mountains.
单选题 At the last place Gary worked, they ______ an annual company picnic. All the employees ______ bring their families along and spend the day at a nearby park. It was great.
单选题The ascent of the mountain is ______, but anyone who makes it to the top is rewarded by a spectacular view.
