填空题Directions: Using the information in the text, complete each sentence 6-10, with a word or phrase from the list below. For each sentence(6-10), mark one letter(A-G)on your Answer Sheet. Do not mark any letter twice. A. providing warning message B. shareware programs are illegally produced C. the Internet helps to increase the use of shareware D. shareware avoids costs of commercial distribution E. there were not many cheap quality commercial software F. you can test shareware before you decide whether to buy it G providing needed service, upgraded version of software and necessary documents
填空题He will ______ arrive by the next train, because he does not back out. (doubt)
填空题CONVERSATION1Timeforthemantoarriveatthehotel:(1).Priceoftheroom:$(2).Numberoftheunit:No.(3).Onthe(4)floor.
填空题People traveling long distances frequently have to decide whether they would prefer to go by land, sea, or air. Hardly anyone can positively enjoy sitting in a train for more than a few hours.【R1】______It is almost impossible to take your mind off the journey. Reading is only a partial solution, for the monotonous rhythm of the wheels clicking on the rails soon lulls you to sleep. During the day, sleep comes in snatches. At night, when you wish to go to sleep you rarely manage to do so. If you are lucky enough to get a couchette, you spend half the night staring at the small blue light in the ceiling, or fumbling to find your passport when you cross a frontier.【R2】______Long car journeys are even less pleasant, for it is quite impossible even to read. On motorways you can, at least, travel fairly safely at high speeds, but more often than not, the greater part of the journey is spent on narrow, bumpy roads which are crowded with traffic. 【R3】______ You can stretch your legs on the spacious decks, play games, swim, meet interesting people and enjoy good food — always assuming, of course, that the sea is calm. If it is not, and you are likely to get seasick, no form of transport could be worse. Even if you travel in ideal weather, sea journeys take a long time. 【R4】______ Aeroplanes have the reputation of being dangerous and even hardened travelers are intimidated by them. They also have the grave disadvantage of being the most expensive form of transport.【R5】______Traveling at a height of 30, 000 feet, far above the clouds, and at over 500 miles an hour is an exhilarating experience. You do not have to devise ways of talking your mind off the journey, for an aeroplane gets you to your destination rapidly. 【R6】______The real escapist can watch a free film show and sip champagne on some services. But even when such refinements are not available, there is plenty to keep you occupied. An aeroplane offers you an unusual and breathtaking view of the world.【R7】______You really see the shape of the land. If the landscape is hidden from the view, you can enjoy the extraordinary sight of unbroken cloud plains that stretch out for miles before you, while the sun shines brilliantly in a clear sky. The journey is so smooth that there is nothing to prevent you from reading or sleeping. 【R8】______You will not have to spend the next few days recovering from a long and arduous journey. A. You soar effortlessly over high mountains and deep valleys. B. But nothing can match them for speed and comfort. C. Train compartments soon get cramped and stuffy. D. Inevitably you arrive at your destination almost exhausted. E. By comparison, trips by sea offer a great variety of civilized comforts. F. For a few hours, you settle back in a deep armchair to enjoy the flight. G Relatively few people are prepared to sacrifice up to a third of their holidays for the pleasure of traveling on a ship. H. However you decide to spend your time, one thing is certain: you will arrive at your destination fresh and uncrumpled.
填空题Read the article below and choose the best sentence from the list on the next page to fill each of the gaps. For each gap(1-8)mark one letter(A~H)on your Answer Sheet. Do not mark any letter twice. Paris Hotel Wars. For nearly a hundred years, the Hotel le Bristol and five other so-called Parisian palace hotels — the Crillon, George V. Meurice, Plaza Athenee and Ritz — have seen themselves as the guardians of French tradition and grand service.【L1】______They're also very expensive. Five-star properties in Paris have average room rates of $350 to $700 per night, but rooms at the palaces start at $1,000 and climb all the way to $31,000. 【L2】______ The luxury oligopoly, however, is facing its first significant challenge.【L3】______In October, the Singapore-based Raffles Group reopened Le Royal Monceau, which dates from 1928, after spending more than $140 million to gut and refurbish it. In December, Hong Kong-based Shangri-La unveiled its offering inside the former residence of Napoleon's grandnephew. 【L4】______The hotel will blend "French services with Oriental flair," meaning yoga mats in the rooms, massage parlors in the suites and dim sum on the room-service menu. In early 2013 the Peninsula Group will debut its first European hotel on the swanky Avenue Kleber. 【L5】______ The target clientele is a growing emerging-market elite. The number of millionaire households rose 14% worldwide in 2009 to include 11.2 million people, according to the Boston Consulting Group, and China alone saw a spike of 31%.【L6】______The Asian chains will feature top-notch plumbing and state-of-the-art technology, which have often been missing from the palace hotels in the past. The new competition has prompted the old guard to renovate its properties and dust off their history.【L7】______At the Bristol, managers recount how during World War II. their predecessors erased a suite from the floor plan and harbored a Jewish architect, who later thanked them by building the elegant wrought-iron elevator at the hotel's center.【L8】______But what's clear is this: for luxury travelers headed to Paris this spring and summer, the choice of accommodations just got a whole lot better.A. In June, Mandarin Oriental will welcome guests to its 130-room property near the Louvre, built at a cost of more than $16 million per room.B. Their flagship restaurants serve only French haute cuisine, and their historic buildings remain as iconic today as they were in the 18th and 19th centuries.C. Together these openings will boost the number of luxury rooms in the city by 40%.D. Asian hotel groups are investing hundreds of millions of dollars in lavish new properties in historic buildings throughout Paris — all with rooms at the palaces' price point.E. Luxury today needs to have a story, so the Crillon emphasizes that Marie Antoinette took piano lessons in its drawing rooms, and the Ritz honors Coco Chanel's 30-year residency there.F. Whether or not historical tales can preserve the allure of Parisian tourism is still unknown.G. But the new properties will appeal to any traveler who simply wants to stay in a less fusty yet still luxurious environment.H. Their iconic status kept their rooms filled through most of the recession, even at those prices.
填空题Part 1 Question 46-50 Here is a letter from Colorado State University to inform the applicant Mr. Li that he has been admitted to Cognitive Psychology Program beginning with the fall semester of 2000. Dear Mr. Li, Thank you for your interest in graduate study at Colorado State University. You have been admitted to our Cognitive Psychology Program beginning with the fall semester of 2007. The enclosed brochure provides a derailed description of the Cognitive Psychology Program, including, the program of study, degree requirements, mentorship program, faculty research interests and laboratory facilities. We hope you will join us this fall. Your undergraduate record, interests and experience indicate that you will gain much new and exciting knowledge at CSU. Please notify me in writing of your decision to accept or reject this offer, prior to April 15. If you have any questions, feel free to contact me at 555-555-5555. Sincerely, Hugh Camera ☆ Read the letter and complete the given information form. ☆ Write a word, phrase or number in the spaces 1-5. ☆ The extra expenses arising from transportation will be borne by your side. ☆ Please pay special attention to the packing for the long sea voyage. A Letter From Colorado State University Mr. Li has been admitted to (1)______ of Colorado State University Mr. Li will begin with (2) ______of year 2007. Mr. Li receives the brochure providing (3) ______ Mr. Li is required notify CSU of his (4) ______before (5) ______
填空题It is possible to learn from the failure and to prepare more ______ for success in meeting other goals. (confident)
填空题Beauty has always been regarded as something praiseworthy.【R1】______They have better marriages and have more respectable occupations. Personal consultants give them better advice for finding jobs. Even judges are softer on attractive defendants.【R2】______While attractiveness is a positive factor for a man on his way up the executive ladder, it is harmful to a woman. 【R3】______Their effort and ability were thought to account for their success. Attractive female executives were considered to have less integrity than unattractive ones.【R4】______All unattractive women executives were thought to have more integrity and to be more capable than the attractive female executives. Interestingly, though, the rise of the unattractive overnight successes was attributed more to personal relationships and less to ability than was that of attractive overnight successes. 【R5】______An attractive woman is perceived to be more feminine and an attractive man more masculine than the less attractive ones. Thus, an attractive woman has advantage in traditionally female jobs.【R6】______This is true even in politics. "When the only clue is how he or she looks, people treat men and women differently," says Anne Bowman, who recently published a study on the effects of attractiveness on political candidates.【R7】______She asked 125 undergraduate students to rank two groups of photographs, in order of attractiveness, one group of men and one group of women. The students were told the photographs were of candidates for political offices. They were asked to rank them again, in the order they vote for them. The results showed that attractive males utterly defeated unattractive men. 【R8】______ A. But an attractive woman in a traditionally masculine position appears to lack the masculine qualities required. B. She did a survey among college students. C. Almost everyone thinks attractive people are happier and healthier. D. Their success was attributed not to ability but to factors such as luck. E. But in the executive circle, beauty can be a liability. F. However, the women who had ranked most attractive invariably received the fewest votes. G. Why are attractive women not thought to be able? H. Handsome male executives were perceived as having more integrity than plainer men.
填空题Our teacher ______ the result of this examination in the afternoon. (analysis)
填空题We only have the Dickens book in the Oxford University Press ______. (edit)
填空题Directions: Using the information in the text, complete each sentence 6-10, with a word or phrase from the list below. For each sentence(6-10), mark one letter(A-G)on your Answer Sheet. Do not mark any letter twice. A. to know their culture B. to dry all its moisture C. clay is a rare material D. to make the pottery stiff E. in order to make a living F. qualified clay should be processed clay G to use them as ornaments as well as daily items
填空题Part 4 Questions 26-45 ·Read the following passage and decide which answer best fits each space. ·For questions 26-45, mark one letter A, B, C or D on the Answer Sheet. Participation (26) high school sports is not a constitutional right. (27) , it is a privilege, paid for by taxpayers, open to students who promise to (28) certain conduct requirements on and off the field. One of these promises is to (29) from using drugs. Drug use is a serious problem among high school students. Studies show that as many as 500, 000 high school students use muscle-pumping, life-destroying substances such as steroids. Many more use illegal drugs, (30) cause discipline problems and (31) the stage for lifelong (32) . Drug testing works to (33) and identify use. That is why drug testing is required to compete in the Olympics, the National Collegiate Athletic Association and the National Football League. (34) drug testing was instituted by these organizations, use of performance- (35) drugs has been greatly reduced. We should want (36) in schools. Indeed, many athletes (37) testing programs, and no wonder. Without testing, athletes have to choose between drug use and a competitive disadvantage (38) the field. Those who challenge the need for drug testing may be forgetting (39) it is like be an adolescent. Peer pressure is enormous, and one of the few effective counter-weights is the fear of being caught. More importantly, once drug use is (40) , a school can (41) to the student before he or she gets addicted or arrested. For 25 years, public schools (42) by federal judges and civil libertarians, with results everyone can see. It is time (43) decisions on how to run public schools locally (44) officials. There is nothing unconstitutional about asking those who gain the advantages of school-sponsored athletics to contribute to the safety of other players, the integrity of the game and their own well-being. The Supreme Court should leave these programs (45) .
填空题1. Accustomed though we are to speaking of the films made before 1927 as "silent", the film has never been, in the full sense of the word, silent. From the very beginning, music was regarded as an indispensable accompaniment; when the Lumiere films were shown at the first public film exhibition in the United States in February 1896, they were accompanied by piano improvisations on popular tunes. 2. At first, the music played bore no special relationship to the films; an accompaniment of any kind was sufficient. Within a very short time, however, the incongruity of playing lively music to a solemn film became apparent, and film pianists began to take some care in matching their pieces to the mood of the film. 3. As movie theaters grew in number and importance, a violinist, and perhaps a cellist, would be added to the pianist in certain cases, and in the larger movie theaters small orchestras were formed. For a number of years the selection of music for each film program rested entirely in the hands of the conductor or leader of the orchestra, and very often the principal qualification for holding such a position was not skill or taste so much as the ownership of a large personal library of musical pieces. Since the conductor seldom saw the films until the night before they were to be shown(if, indeed, the conductor was lucky enough to see them then), the musical arrangement was normally improvised in the greatest hurry. 4. To help meet this difficulty, film-distributing companies started the practice of publishing suggestions for musical accompaniments. In 1909, for example, the Edison Company began issuing with their films such indications of mood as "pleasant", "sad", "lively". The suggestions became more explicit, and so emerged the musical cue sheet containing indications of mood, the titles of suitable pieces of music, and precise directions to show where one piece led into the next. 5. Certain films had music especially composed for them. The most famous of these early special scores was that composed and arranged for D. W. Griffith's film Birth of a Nation, which was released in 1915. Questions 1-5 Directions: For questions 1-5, choose the best title for each paragraph from below. For each numbered paragraph(1-5), mark one letter(A-G)on your Answer Sheet. Do not mark any letter twice. A. Classification of silent film B. Especially composed music for film C. Matching of music with film mood D. Famous film distributing companies E. Improvised musical arrangement F. Publishing suggestions for music accompaniments G. Music as the indispensable accompaniment of film
填空题Questions 14-18 ·Using the information in the text, complete each sentence 14-8 with an expression from the list below. ·For each sentence (14-18), mark one letter (A -G) on the Answer Sheet. ·Do not mark any letter twice.A. different colorsB. hair folliclesC. dietary fiberD. antioxidant activityE. their cholesterolF. hair lossG. free radicals
填空题CONVERSATION1(Questions1-4)Themanusuallycanbegottenintouchat(1)orin(2).Timeforhersistertocomeback:next(3).Thewomanwillcometotheman'sat(4).
填空题Home Is Where the Tongue Is For all the pressures and rewards of regionalization and globalization, local identities remain the most ingrained. Even if the end result of globalization is to make the world smaller, its scope seems to foster the need for more intimate local connections among many individuals. As Bernard Poignant, mayor of the town of Quimper in Brittany, told the Washington Post, "Man is a fragile animal and he needs his close attachments. The more open the world becomes, the more ties there will be to one's roots and one's land." In most communities, local languages such as Poignant's Breton serve a strong symbolic function as a clear mark of "authenticity". The sum total of a community's shared historical experience, authenticity reflects a perceived line from a culturally idealized past to the present, carried by the language and traditions associated with the community's origins. A concern for authenticity leads most secular Israelis to champion Hebrew among themselves while also acquiring English and even Arabic. The same obsession with authenticity drives Hasidic Jews in Israel or the Diaspora to champion Yiddish while also learning Hebrew and English. In each case, authenticity amounts to a central core of cultural beliefs and interpretations that are not only resistant to globalization but also are actually reinforced by the "threat" that globalization seems to present to these historical values. Scholars may argue that cultural identities change over time in response to specific reward systems. But locals often resist such explanation and defend authenticity and local mother tongues against the perceived threat of globalization with near religious ardor. As a result, never before in history have there been as many standardized languages as there are today: roughly 1,200. Many smaller languages, even those with far fewer than one million speakers, have benefited from state-sponsored or voluntary preservation movements. On the most informal level, communities in Alaska and the American northwest have formed Internet discussion groups in an attempt to pass on Native American languages to younger generations. In the Basque, Catalan, and Galician regions of Spain, such movements arc fiercely political and frequently involve staunch resistance to the Spanish government over political and linguistic rights. Projects have ranged from a campaign to print Spanish money in the four official languages of the state to the creation of language immersion nursery and primary schools. Zapatistas in Mexico are championing the revival of Mayan languages in an equally political campaign for local autonomy. In addition to invoking the subjective importance of local roots, proponents of local languages defend their continued use on pragmatic grounds. Local tongues foster higher levels of school success, higher degrees of participation in local government, more informed citizenship, and better knowledge of one's own culture, history, and faith. Government and relief agencies can also use local languages to spread information about industrial and agricultural techniques as well as modem health care to diverse audiences. Development workers in West Africa, for example, have found that the best way to teach the vast number of farmers with little or no formal education how to sow and rotate crops for higher yields is in these local tongues. Nevertheless, both regionalization and globalization require that more and more speakers and readers of local languages be multi-literate.
填空题I looked ______ over his shoulder. (back)
填空题Using the information in the text, complete each sentence 14-18, with a word or phrase from the list below. For each sentence(14-18), mark one letter(A~G)on the Answer Sheet. Do not mark any letter twice.A. $150B. safeC. agreementsD. drivers who can't drive on because of the flat tireE. a flat tireF. provide a kind of temporary support to the flat tireG. more than $150
填空题It"s ______ to be caught telling a lie. (embarrass)
填空题You will hear five people talking about the short courses they attended. For questions 9-13, choose from the list A-F what each speaker expresses. Use the letters only once. There is one extra letter which you do not need to use.A. I was encouraged by the teachers to continue developing my skill.B. I learnt something about the subject that I hadn't expected.C. I enjoyed the social life more than the course content.D. I intended doing a similar course again.E. I found out something about myself.F. I thought the course was good value for money.