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大学英语考试
大学英语考试
全国英语等级考试(PETS)
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单选题There has been a ______ for industry to be constructed in a single region, instead of being scattered evenly over the whole country.
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单选题
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单选题Everything ______ into consideration, the candidates ought to have another chance.
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单选题My suggestion is that the experiment ______ in another day.
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单选题When companies need new employees, they usually place advertisements in newspapers in order to attract as many applicants as possible. But many large well-known companies hire new people frequently without putting advertisements in newspaper, because they already have many resumes on hand. Therefore, it is not always a best way to apply only to companies that place ads in newspapers. A person looking for a job is advised to send his resume with a cover letter to a well-known company even if a position is not then open. He can follow up with a telephone call to inquire if his resume has been received and if some jobs are available. If there is not a job available in the company at that time, he can ask that they keep his material on file and contact him in the future when something is available. If later he sees an advertisement in the newspaper for a job with that company, he may call the company whether they will consider him for the position. So, a person has nothing to lose and everything to gain by sending in his resume.
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单选题We will go to visit the Great Wall if the rain ______ tomorrow.
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单选题Parents have to accept their children for ______ they are and not ______ they want them to be.
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单选题I think I ______ the movie we went to last night even more if I had read the book.
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单选题That tree, ______ branches are almost bare, is a very big and old one.
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单选题Instead of going into details about his project, he spoke ______.
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单选题Since then I______ the mail. A. am expecting B. have expected C. was expecting D. have been expecting
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单选题You'd like that, ______? A. don't you B. didn't you C. hadn't you D. wouldn't you
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单选题Professor Wu told us that by the end of the year he ______ here for three years.
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单选题The plural forms of the words radio and hero are ______. A. radioes and heroes B. radios and heroes C. radioes and heros D. radios and heros
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单选题Humanity uses a little less than half the water available worldwide. Yet occurrences of shortages and droughts(干旱) are causing famine and distress in some areas, and industrial and agricultural by-products are polluting water supplies. Since the world" population is expected to double in the next 50 years, many experts think we are on the edge of a widespread water crisis. But that doesn"t have to be the outcome. Water shortages do not have to trouble the world—if we start valuing water more than we have in the past. Just as we began to appreciate petroleum more after the 1970s oil crises, today we must start looking at water from a fresh economic perspective. We can no longer afford to consider water a virtually free resource of which we can use as much as we like in any way we want. Instead, for all uses except the domestic demand of the poor, governments should price water to reflect its actual value. This means charging a fee for the water itself as well as for the supply costs. Governments should also protect this resource by providing water in more economically and environmentally sound ways. For example, often the cheapest way to provide irrigation(灌溉) water in the dry tropics is through small-scale projects, such as gathering rainfall in depressions(凹地) and pumping it to nearby cropland. No matter what steps governments take to provide water more efficiently, they must change their institutional and legal approaches to water sue. Rather than spread control among hundreds or even thousands of local, regional, and national agencies that watch various aspects of water use, countries should set up central authorities to coordinate water policy.
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单选题When we got here, our monitor had done ______ everything.
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单选题I took the umbrella with me ______ it should rain.
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单选题(D) Historically, the traditional role of women of all classes in Britain had been confined (限制) to that of mother in the home. Single and childless women consequently had an uncomfortable and difficult time. The majority of women had no voting or political rights until 1928, and for centuries wives and their property had been the legal possessions of their husbands. Formal education for women was thought to be unnecessary for their role in life, and was non-existent for the majority. The female position in society became a little better in some respects towards the end of the nineteenth century, but was still very limited. However, elementary education for all was established and a few institutions of higher education began to admit women in restricted numbers. Since the 1960s, women in Britain have been fighting for greater equality with men in job opportunities and rates of pay. Various laws from the 1970s to the present have been made. In spite of all these, men remain better paid than women in many occupations, particularly in industry. Women constitute nearly half the national workforce, there are more employed married women in Britain than in any other European Community country, and some 60 percent of wives are now employed compared with 22 percent in 1951. But their average weekly wage is still only 70 percent of the average paid to men. This is true of both the manufacturing trades and the service industries. The majority of female workers are consequently badly paid and often unprotected by the trade unions or the law.
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