学科分类

已选分类 文学外国语言文学英语语言文学
单选题Let us hope that ______ a nuclear war, the human race might still survive.
进入题库练习
单选题I know he failed his last test, but really he's ______ stupid. A. something but B. anything but C. nothing but D. not but
进入题库练习
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,并将所选答案的代码(指A、B或C)填在答题纸的相应位置上。The Thinking Habit That Changed My Life  I remember one evening three years ago, when
进入题库练习
单选题
进入题库练习
单选题In spite of ______reviews in the press, tile production of her play was almost certain oblivion by enthusiastic audiences whose acumen was greater than that of the critics.
进入题库练习
单选题WhenMr.Smithgotthere,hefoundthatabout___________ofhisfriendshadbeenincited.
进入题库练习
单选题根据下面资料,回答问题。Some farmers in California are having a hard time picking their crops.There are not enough workers to help them with the harvest. One farmer used to grow peaches (桃子), but will soon grow a
进入题库练习
单选题At this time next week, we __ the matter with our friends 
进入题库练习
单选题This edition is rare. I have never seen ______ before.
进入题库练习
单选题He got home two hours late and said he had been ______ in the office by business.
进入题库练习
单选题A: I like that blue tie, but I can't believe the price on it. I really can't afford to spend that much money on a tie. B: ______.
进入题库练习
单选题 He has influenced generations of artists but John Baldessari's own celebrity came relatively late. A physically imposing 79-year-old, he seemed slightly uncomfortable at a press conference at the Metropolitan Museum, where a travelling retrospective of his work has just opened for its final stop. Asked to distil his art for the many who have not heard of him, he responded cheerfully that it was not the job of an artist to 'spoon-feed' viewers but to make them feel intelligent. For decades Mr Baldessari has made art that challenges convention. Though his work is heavily conceptual, it is not designed to alienate—and is often very funny. In the wake of abstract expressionism, when painting was all, Mr Baldessari was investigating what it meant to make a painting, what the rules were, and how far he could stretch them. In the 1960s he created a series of works that featured mostly text on canvas, painted by sign professionals. One, in black letters on canvas, reads 'PURE BEAUTY'. The words sit there like a taunt (嘲弄), a question, a declaration. 'I do not believe in screwing the bourgeoisie,' Mr Baldessari explained in an interview. The irony in his work is not designed to reveal what is vacant in art, or what is silly about those who buy it. He just wants people to question what they are looking at. He pokes fun at the art establishment, but he lets viewers in on the joke. Art, he says, supplies 'spiritual nourishment'. Asked if a show at the Met sat uncomfortably with his subversive streak, Mr Baldessari did not miss a beat: 'I would be happy to hang in a broom closet at the Met. It's a huge honour.' Mr Baldessari attributes some of his experimentation to having grown up in National City, California, a suburb just north of the Mexican border and well beyond the reach of any art scene. He was culturally isolated, but also free from the pressures of rejection. 'I was trying to find out what was irreducibly art.' His boldest early work was his 'Cremation Project' in 1970, when he ceremonially burned nearly all the paintings he had made between 1953 and 1966. 'I really think it's my best piece to date,' he wrote of it at the time. He supported himself by teaching, mainly at the progressive California Institute of the Arts in Valencia. He earned a reputation for being a revolutionary and generous teacher who inspired students to renounce painting and view art as something that happens in the brain. 'Artists are indebted to him,' said Marla Prather, who organised the show at the Met. He taught countless people how to make art from the ordinary stuff of life. Now the man himself is finally getting his due.
进入题库练习
单选题I was speaking to Ann on the phone when suddenly we were _____.
进入题库练习
单选题Because of its excellence in quality, for the last two years, Audi car has ______ Germany's Touting Car Championship.
进入题库练习
单选题Nearly a third of women are the main breadwinners in their household in Britain, according to a major survey. Researchers said that in many relationships it was no longer assumed that the man would bring in the bigger income, 27 in a time of widespread redundancies (裁员). In a 28 shift in attitudes, four out of ten women said that the career of whichever partner had the highest income would take 29 in the relationship. In one in ten families, a house husband looks after the children and does the 30 while their female partner works full time. Ten percent of women admitted this role 31 had put strains on their relationship and some said it had even led to them 32 company. The Women and Work Survey 2014, commissioned (受……委托) by Grazia magazine, found that almost half of full-time mothers 33 not earning their own money. And two thirds of the mothers among the 2,000 women in the survey said they wanted to keep working in some way after having children. A 34 higher number of those with children under three said they would prefer to work—preferably part-time—rather than stay at home. Victoria Harper of Grazia said, 'Women are getting good jobs when they graduate, and working up the career 35 faster than they have ever done.' This means that there has to be more 36 between the roles of men and women in a relationship and when they have children. A. precedence B. connection C. prospect D. slightly E. ladder F. favored G. plan H. reversal I. especially J. parting K. opposite L. chores M. disliked N. fluidity O. significant
进入题库练习
单选题Does it ______ to let little children play with fireworks?
进入题库练习
单选题 Direction: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a short essay on the topic The Certificate Craze. You should write at least 120 words but no more than 180 words. Outlines are given below in Chinese: 1.现在许多人热衷于各类证书考试; 2.其目的各不相同; 3.在我看来……
进入题库练习
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; 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.
进入题库练习
单选题Floods cause billions of dollars worth of property damage______. A. relatively B. actually C. annually D. comparatively
进入题库练习
单选题W: Have you found your book yet? M:______
进入题库练习