单选题Weather ______, the picnic will be held as scheduled.
单选题Speaker A: We have a booking for tonight. The name"s Cliff.
Speaker B: ______. ... Yes, that was two single rooms with bath.
单选题If you want ______ you have to get the fund somewhere. A. that the job is done B. the job done C. to have done the job D. the job that is done
单选题The services provided in the first advertisement do not include ______.
单选题A few common misconceptions. Beauty is only skin-deep. One's physical assets and liabilities don't count all that much in a managerial career. A woman should always try to look her best. Over the last 30 years, social scientists have conducted more than 1,000 studies of how we react to beautiful and not-so-beautiful people. The virtually unanimous conclusion: Looks do matter, more than most of us realize. The data suggest, for example, that physically attractive individuals are more likely to be treated well by their parents, sought out as friends, and pursued romantically. With the possible exception of women seeking managerial jobs, they are also more likely to be hired, paid well, and promoted. Un-American, you say, unfair and extremely unbelievable? Once again, the scientists have caught us mouthing pieties (虔诚) while acting just the contrary. Their typical experiment works something like this. They give each member of a group-college students, perhaps, or teachers or corporate personnel managers a piece of paper relating an individual's accomplishments. Attached to the paper is a photograph. While the papers all say exactly the same thing the pictures are different. Some show a strikingly attractive person, some an average-looking character, and some an unusually unattractive human being. Group members are asked to rate the individual on certain attributes, anything from personal warmth to the likelihood that he or she will be promoted. Almost invariably, the better looking the person in the picture, the higher the person is rated. In the phrase, borrowed from Sappho, that the social scientists use to sum up the common perception, what is beautiful is good. In business, however, good looks cut both ways for women, and deeper than for men. A Utah State University professor, who is an authority on the subject, explains: In terms of their careers, the impact of physical attractiveness on males is only modest. But its potential impact on females can be tremendous, making its easier, for example, for the more attractive to get jobs where they are in the public eye. On another note, though, there is enough literature now for us to conclude that attractive women who aspire to managerial positions do not get on as well as women who may be less attractive.
单选题Mr. Johnson prefers that ______ with him personally. A. she speaks B. she will speak C. she speak D. she would speak
单选题The bill was passed in the parliament by a majority of 200 votes ______ 30.
单选题You should use ______ and natural language when you write a personal
letter.
A. forillal
B. political
C. magic
D. plain
单选题
When I was still an architecture
student, a teacher told me, "We learn more from buildings that fall down than
from buildings that stand up." What he meant was that construction is as much
the result of experience as of theory. Although structural design follows
established formulas, the actual performance of a building is complicated by the
passage of time, the behavior of users, the natural elements--and unnatural
events. All are difficult to simulate. Buildings, unlike cars, can't be
crash-tasted. The first important lesson of the World Trade
Center collapse is that tall buildings can withstand the impact of a large
jetliner. The twin towers were supported by 59 perimeter columns on each side.
Although about 30 of these columns, extending from four to six floors, were
destroyed in each building by the impact, initially both towers remained
standing. Even so, the death toll (代价) was appalling--2,235 people lost their
lives. I was once asked, how tall buildings should be designed
given what we'd learned from the World Trade Center collapse. My answer was,
"Lower". The question of when a tall building becomes unsafe is easy to answer.
Common aerial fire-fighting ladders in use today are 100 feet high and can reach
to about the 10th floor, so fires in buildings up to 10 stories high can be
fought from the exterior (外部). Fighting fires and evacuating occupants above
that height depend on fire stairs. The taller the building, the longer it will
take for firefighters to climb to the scene of the fire. So the simple answer to
the safety question is "Lower than 10 stories." Then why don't
cities impose lower height limits? A 60-story office building does not have six
times as much rentable space as a 10-story building. However, all things being
equal, such a building will produce four times more revenue and four times more
in property taxes. So cutting building heights would mean cutting city
budgets. The most important lesson of the World Trade Center
collapse is not that we should stop building tall buildings but that we have
misjudged their cost. We did the same thing when we underestimated the cost of
hurtling along a highway in a steel box at 70 miles per hour. It took many years
before seat beks, air bags, radial tires, and antilock brakes became
commonplace. At first, cars simply were too slow to warrant concern. Later,
manufacturers resisted these expensive devices, arguing that consumers would not
pay for safety. Now we do willingly.
单选题There are signs ______ restaurants are becoming more popular with families. A. that B. which C. in which D. whose
单选题
单选题Pupil: I apologize for being late this morning. My alarm clock never went off. Teacher: ______.
单选题Mike: ______ Lynn: I'd love to, but I have to work on
my history assignment.
A. Shall we ask a few friends over this weekend?
B. Why not come over for dinner this Saturday?
C. What do you think of mountain climbing?
D. Will you please go to the movie with us?
单选题I'm glad that my children are making ______ progress in school.
单选题Speaker A: Is everyone always so helpful to you in your office?Speaker B: ______
单选题I don't think Mr. Matson will come here again today. Please give the
ticket to ______ comes here first.
A. whomever
B. whom
C. who
D. whoever
单选题(There) is an unresolved controversy as to (whom) (is) the real author of the Elizabethan plays (commonly) credited to William Shakespeare.A. ThereB. whomC. isD. commonly
单选题Frequently single-parent children ______ some of the functions that the absent adult in the house would have served.
单选题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} In this part there are 4 passages
followed by questions or unfinished statements, each with four suggested
answers. Choose the one you think is the best answer. Mark your choice on the
Answer Sheet by drawing with a pencil a short bar across the corresponding
letter in the brackets.{{B}}Passage One{{/B}}
During the past generation, the
American middle-class family that once could count on hard work and fair play to
keep itself financially secure had been transformed by economic risk and new
realties. Now a pink slip, a bad diagnosis, or a disappearing spouse can reduce
a family from solidly middle class to newly poor in a few months.
In just one generation, millions of mothers have gone to work,
transforming basic family economics. Scholars, policymakers, and critics of all
stripes have debated the social implications of these changes, but few have
looked at the side effect: family risk has risen as well. Today's families have
budgeted to the limits of theirs new two-paycheck status. As a result, they have
lost the parachuted they once had in times of financial setback—a back-up earner
(usually Mom) who could go into the workforce if the primary earner got laid off
or fell sick. This "added-worker effect" could support the safety net offered by
unemployment insurance or disability insurance to help families weather bad
times. But today, a disruption to family fortunes can no longer be made up with
extra income from an otherwise-stay-at-home partner. During the
same period, families have been asked to absorb much more risk in their
retirement income. Steelworkers, airline employees, and now those in the auto
industry are joining millions of families who must worry about interest rates,
stock market fluctuation, and the harsh reality that they may outlive their
retirement money. For much of the past year, President Bush campaigned to move
Social Security to a saving-ac- count model, with retirees trading much or all
of their guaranteed payments for payments depending on in- vestment returns. For
younger families the picture is not any better. Both the absolute cost of
healthcare and the share of it borne by families have risen—and newly
fashionable health-saving plans are spreading from legislative halls to Wal-Mart
workers, with much higher deductibles and a large new dose of investment risk
for families' future healthcare. Even demographics are working
against the middle class family, as the odds of having a weak elderly parent-and
all the attendant need for physical and financial assistance—have jumped
eightfold in just one generation. From the middle-class family
perspective, much of this, understandably, looks far less like an opportunity to
exercise more financial responsibility, and a good deal more like a frightening
acceleration of the whole- sale shift of financial risk onto their already
overburdened shoulders. The financial fallout has begun, and the political
fallout may not be far behind.
单选题When I try to understand ______ that prevents so many Americans from being as happy as one might expected, it seems to me that there are two causes. A. why it does B. what it does C. what it is D. why it is
