单选题Whatisthecharacteristicofcurrentaccount?A.Itsinterestrateishigher.B.Itsinterestrateisverylow.C.It'sconvenient.D.It'sinconvenient.
单选题For most of us, dieting is a frustrating fact of life. With so much conflicting nutritional information about, it can be difficult to tell which weight-loss strategies really work. Let's start by discounting these confusing myths. 1. All calories are created equal What you eat, not how much, is the main factor behind weight gain, according to research. Calories from fat pack on the pounds. The reason: during digestion, the body bums many more calories metabolising protein and carbohydrates' than it does metabolizing fat. 2. Desserts are taboo Cakes, pies and ice cream can sensibly be worked into a diet, the expert says. Moderation is the key. Cut down on other meals if you'll be eating out at a restaurant known for its rich sweets. Or indulge, but take only a few bites. 3. Fast foods are forbidden A plain hamburger on a bun is still a healthful choice. So is grilled chicken or a green salad with low-cal dressing. But watch out for French fries, milkshakes and batter-dipped chicken or fish. 4. Fasting is the fastest diet Some studies suggest that drastically reducing calorie intake switches the body into a "starvation mode", which conserves calories and decreases your metabolic rate. The more frequently you deprive yourself of food, the better your body may get at storing calories. So, in the long run, repeated fasting may actually undermine your weight-loss efforts. 5. To keep weight off, simply watch what you eat According to experts, exercise combined with dieting ensures weight loss better than dieting a- lone does. Experts also agree that sticking with regular, moderate exercise is more important that occasional vigorous workouts are. Obesity-researcher Kelly Brownell encourages patients to make a series of small physical efforts: taking the stairs instead of the elevator and parking the car far from where you are going and walking. Most important, before getting caught up in dietary myths, let good sense shape your eating habits. Your body will thank you for it.
单选题{{B}}Text 1{{/B}}
Every ten years there is a national
census to count the number of people. The Census Office asks every household to
answer questions on a census form. The census counts people by the kind of
housing they live in, the country in which they were born, and the kind of job
they do and how they travel to work. Census results are used by a great many
people and are available to everyone in many ways. For example, in order to work
out present and future needs we must know how people are housed now, and the
sizes and ages of their families. For hospitals, schools and other local
services, the size of annual grants made by the Government to these services
depends largely on the numbers and needs of people in the area.
Many of the figures come from the census. In order to work out future
spending for pensions, we need to know people's ages, how many are men and how
many are women, whether they are single or married, and the size of the family.
The census shows how many people have moved from one area to another and how the
local workforce is changing. This information is used when factories, offices,
shops, public transport and places for leisure are being planned. The census is
taken in order to provide figures about the nation as a whole. It does not give
information about any named person, family or household. Names and addresses are
needed to take the census accurately, but they are not fed into the computer.
After the census, the forms are locked away and will not be released to anyone
outside the Census Office for 100 years. The answers you give on your census
form will be treated secretly. No one outside the Census Office will see your
completed form, but if you refuse to complete your form properly, you may be
taken to court and the form could be produced as evidence. Everyone working on
the census is required to keep it secret and can be prosecuted if he or she
improperly reveals information.
单选题
单选题Where did the man find the bag?
单选题Questions 22-25 are based on a conversation you are going to hear.
单选题Questions 18~21 are based on the following dialogue.
单选题According to the author American television is poor in quality because ______.
单选题
IQuestions 18-21 are based on the following
dialogue./I
单选题 Questions 14~17 are based on the following dialogue on traveling.
单选题Joyce Swenson:
Joyce is 36 years old and has worked for a publishing company in New York city for two years. Presently, she is working as a senior editor in charge of developmental programs. An opening for a vice-presidential position has just opened. Joyce is one of four people applying for the position. The other three applicants are men who have been at the company approximately as long as she has. The requirements for the job include a master'' s degree and a minimum of ten years experience working as a manager in a publishing company. Historically, the company has hired from within the male. Joyce has applied for promotions before but she has been passed over each time by a male candidate. When Joyce joined the company, she was single. Now she is married and has two school-aged children and one preschooler. Joyce feels she has been discriminated against because of her sex. She feels motherhood is viewed by the company as a negative factor in job promotion.
Ardith Smiths:
Ardith is 39 years old. She is a single mother of three children. She works full time as a marketing manager for a fast-food chain. Ardith works 50 hours a week and carpools her 12-year-old daughter to gymnastics after work three days a week. She also makes sure that she is in the stands to watch her 16-year-old son wrestle or watch her 15-year-old daughter play soccer.
Ardith takes her role as mother and employee very seriously. She feels that her children couldn''t have to help out around the house because they are too busy with academics and sports activities. This same attitude carries over to the workplace. She hates to burden her secretary with extra work, so instead, she does a lot of it herself. She feels that she must be everything to everybody she comes in contact with. It is important to note that Ardith grew up in the 1950s. Her mother was always there for her. There was never a day that Ardith did not come home and find her mother waiting for her ( sometimes with milk and cookies). Her mother was involved with the parents'' organization at school and was her girl scout leader. Although the family was not well-off financed, Ardith always dressed well. Her mother was an excellent dressmaker.
Mary Sand:
Ardith'' s friend Mary is 37 years old. She is also a single mother with three as she possibly can. She has limited her volunteering on committees. The one activity that she does get involved in is the annual book sale at school. Her children are responsible for many of the household chores. She has created a rotation system so that they all learn how to wash, iron, clean and cook.
Karia Brown:
Karia received her nursing degree while working part time as a clerk or typist, and at the same time raising her sons Jeff and Jason. Karia married when she was about 25 years old. Karia met her husband Paul at a friend'' s party. It was sort of a fix up. Paul was much older than her, about 40 years old. Karia was anxious to get married. She had been dating on and off but never seriously. Her parents felt time was running out especially if Karia was to begin a family. Paul and Karia never really fought but a silence ran through their marriage. The children were what made Karia come to life. Paul was content to sit at home, watch TV, or work on his hobby carving wooden figures. The marriage seemed to just extinguish itself. Karia ran the house, worked, went to school, and raised her two sons.
Jane Cresswell:
Jane, a career woman, does an afternoon job so she has to get the housework and shopping done in the morning. One morning her son, Jimmy, who is only two, threw the radio out of the window , the dog made a mess on the carpet, and her husband, Brian, was snoring on the sofa, not lifting a finger to help her. She thinks she has had enough of the life.
Now match each of the persons to the appropriate statement.
Note: there are two extra statements.
Statements
[A] She likes to do everything by herself.
[B] She finds her life unbearable.
[C] She believes the children should help out with the house chores.
[D] She feels that she is a victim of the sex discrimination.
[E] It''s never too old to learn for her.
[F] Her marriage life is not satisfying.
[G] She had an idea family.
单选题Directions: Read the following text. Answer
the questions on each text by choosing A, B, C or D. The way people hold to the belief that a fun-filled,
painfree life equals happiness actually reduces their chances of ever attaining
real happiness. If fun and pleasure are equal to happiness, then pain must be
equal to unhappiness. But in fact, the opposite is true: more often than not,
things that lead to happiness involve some pain. As a result,
many people avoid the very attempts that are the source of true happiness. They
fear the pain inevitably brought by such things as marriage, raising children,
professional achievement, religious, commitment(承担的义务),
self-improvement. Ask a bachelor(单身汉) why he resists marriage
even though he finds dating to be less and less satisfying. If he is honest he
will tell you that he is afraid of making a commitment. For commitment is in
fact quite painful. The single life is filled with fun, adventure, excitement.
Marriage has such moments, but they are not its most distinguishing
features. Couples with infant children are lucky to get a whole
night's sleep or a three-day vacation. I don't know any parent who would choose
the word fun to describe raising children. But couples who decide not to have
children never know the joys of watching a child grow up or of playing with a
grandchild. Understanding and accepting that true happiness has
nothing to do with fun is one of the most liberating realizations. It liberates
time: now we can devote more hours to activities that can genuinely increase our
happiness. It liberates money: buying that new car or those fancy clothes that
will do nothing to increase our happiness now seems pointless. And it liberates
us from envy: we now understand that all those who are always having so much fun
actually may not be happy at all.
单选题{{B}}Part A{{/B}}
{{I}}You will hear 10 short dialogues. For each dialogue, there is one question and four possible answers. Choose the correct answer--A, B, C or D, and mark it in your test booklet. You will have 15 seconds to answer the question and you will hear each dialogue ONLY ONCE.
Now look at Question 1.{{/I}}
单选题What does the man want to do?
单选题Whyisthewomanworriedaboutthewashingmachine?
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单选题The first paragraph indicates that medical workers ______.