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已选分类 文学外国语言文学英语语言文学
单选题Fifty years ago, wealthy people liked hunting wild animals for fun _______ sight-seeing.
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单选题John Locke, the well-known 18th century English thinker, emphasized experience as the condition for expansion of human knowledge.
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单选题I was speaking to Ann on the phone about our tour plan ______ suddenly we were cut off.
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单选题 BRITISH universities can be depressing. The teachers moan about their pay and students worry they will end up frying burgers—or jobless. Perhaps they should try visiting McDonald's University in London's East Finchley. Students are often 'rough and ready', with poor qualifications and low self-esteem. But ambition-arousing pictures display the ladder of opportunity that leads from the grill (烤架) to the corner office (McDonald's chief executives have always started at the bottom). A map of the world shows the seven counterpart universities. Cabinets display trophies (奖杯) such as the Sunday Times award for being one of Britain's best 25 employers. McDonald's is one of Britain's biggest trainers. It gets about one million applicants a year, accepting only one in 15, and spends £40 million a year on training. The Finchley campus, opened by Margaret Thatcher in 1989, is one of the biggest training centers in Europe. It is part of a bigger system. An employees' web-portal, Our Lounge, provides training as well as details about that day's shifts, and allows employees to compete against each other in work-related video games. The focus is on practicalities. A retired policeman conducts a fast-paced class on conflict management. He shows a video of a woman driven angry by the fact that you cannot get chicken McNuggets at breakfast time. He asks the class if they have ever had a difficult customer, and every hand goes up. Students are then urged to share their advice. Self-esteem and self-management are included in the courses, too. A year-long apprenticeship program emphasizing English and maths leads to a nationally recognized qualification. McDonald's has paid for almost 100 people to get degrees from Manchester Metropolitan University. The company professes to be not confused by the fact that many graduates will end up working elsewhere. It needs to train people who might be managing a business with a £5m turnover (营业额) by their mid-20s. It also needs to satisfy the company's appetite for senior managers, one of whom will eventually control the entire global McDonald's empire.
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单选题The elements of nature must be reckoned with in any military campaign. Napoleon and Hitler both underestimated the______of the Russian winter.
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单选题A new material ______ , we have good reason to be optimistic. A. developed B. being developed C. was being developed D. was developed
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单选题Having entered the hall, she found a chair in one corner and _______herself silently.
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单选题They make better use of the time they have, and they are less likely to succumb to fatigue in stressful jobs.
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单选题 A few years back, the decision to move the Barnes, a respected American art institution, from its current location in the suburban town of Merion, Pa., to a site in Philadelphia's museum district caused an argument—not only because it shamelessly went against the will of the founder, Albert C. Barnes, but also because it threatened to break a relationship among art, architecture and landscape critical to the Barnes's success as a museum. For any architect taking on the challenge of the new space, the confusion of moral and design questions might seem overwhelming (势不可挡的). What is an architect's responsibility to Barnes's vision of a marvelous but odd collection of early Modern artworks housed in a rambling (布局凌乱的) 1920s Beaux-Arts pile? Is it possible to reproduce its spirit in such a changed setting? Or does trying to copy the Barnes's unique atmosphere only doom (注定) you to failure? The answers of the New York architects taking the commission are not reassuring. The new Barnes will include many of the features that have become virtually mandatory (强制性的) in the museum world today—conservation and education departments, temporary exhibition space, bookstore, café— making it four times the size of the old Barnes. The architects have tried to compensate for this by laying out these spaces in an elaborate architectural procession that is clearly intended to copy the peacefulness, if not the fantastic charm, of the old museum. But the result is a complicated design. Almost every detail seems to ache from the strain of trying to preserve the spirit of the original building in a very different context. The failure to do so, despite such an earnest effort, is the strongest argument yet for why the Barnes should not be moved in the first place. The old Barnes is by no means an obvious model for a great museum. Inside the lighting is far from perfect, and the collection itself, mixing masterpieces by Cézanne, Picasso and Soutine with second-rate paintings by lesser-known artists, has a distinctly odd flavor. But these apparent flaws are also what have made the Barnes one of the country's most charming exhibition spaces. But today the new Barnes is after a different kind of audience. Although museum officials say the existing limits on crowd size will be kept, it is clearly meant to draw bigger numbers and more tourist dollars. For most visitors the relationship to the art will feel less immediate.
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单选题I could not have fulfilled the task in time if it for your help.
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单选题I'd like to have _____information about your university.
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单选题Before leaving the village, he visited the old house ______ he spent his childhood.
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单选题The sun is very large in comparison with its nine ______ planets which, in turn, are circled by a total of thirty-three satellite.
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单选题Numerous experiments have demonstrated that mass is ______ to energy.
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单选题As she the newspaper, the baby ______ asleep.
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单选题In spite of the wide range of reading material specially written or ____________for language learning purposes, there is yet no comprehensive systematic programme for the reading skills.
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单选题_______ that the trade between the two countries reached its highest point.
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单选题Some children display an ______ curiosity about every new thing they encounter. A. incredible B. infectious C. incompatible D. inaccessible
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单选题下面的短文后列出了10个句子,请根据短文的内容对每个句子作出判断:如果该句提供的是正确信息,选择A;如果该句提供的是错误信息,选择B;如果该句的信息文中没有提及,选择C。在答题卡相应位置上将答案选项涂黑。Setting Effective Goals  Avital Schweitzer, 17, is clearly goal directed.She works hard to achieve
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单选题 Nothing is so uncertain as the fashion market where one style ______ over another before being replaced.
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