填空题
填空题______ (如果他下午来) , I should ask him to help us.
填空题
填空题It wasn't so much that I disliked her ______ (倒不如说我对这份工作不感兴趣).
填空题Cyber Café
(网吧) computer centers are found in many cities around the world. Now, a few American high schools are
1
these centers. All students can use the Cyber Café. But school officials say it especially helps students who have no computer or cannot use the Internet home.
The officials say thirteen percent of the students at the school are from poor families. Many students have
2
the United States from other countries only
3
. Students in the school"s program for learning English speak twenty-three other languages. The idea for a Cyber Café began three years ago. At that time, officials were planning to
4
the school building. Parents interested in technology
5
a Cyber Café. They wanted this center even though schools in the area had suffered
6
cuts. The community wanted to help. It wanted all students to have the best chances to learn.
Officials in the area supported the idea. So did parents, teachers,
7
students, and business community and some organizations. Over two years, the
8
collected more than one-hundred-seventy-thousand dollars.
Students use the Internet to complete research, writing homework and required papers on the computers.
9
, they can send and receive electronic mall. That is especially helpful for the many students who have family members in other nations. The Cyber Café also serves a social purpose. Visitors can
10
for a drink of coffee, tea, or hot chocolate.
填空题The author doubts that people can really accept the notion that space within dwellings may be reduced even further.
填空题I suggest he____________(调整自己以适应)his new conditions.
填空题
填空题
填空题You'd better take an umbrella with you______(以防下雨).
填空题Greatly agitated,she rushed to the apartment and tried the door, ______(结果却发现门是锁着的).
填空题______ (当他想提出投诉时), he found that the hotel that he wanted was completely filled because of a convention.
填空题The purposes of the two experiments made by some college professors about the importance of organization are different.
填空题
填空题A new report says that the number of unintentional poisoning cases of Tylenol is increasing.
填空题{{B}}Questions 47 to 56 are based on the following passage.{{/B}}
Although the enjoyment of color is universal and color theory
has all kinds of names to it, color remains a very emotional and subjective
element. Our awareness of color is {{U}}(47) {{/U}} conditioned by our
culture, but color also probably {{U}}(48) {{/U}} our instincts. Our
psyche (心智) reacts in different ways to colors in part through subjective
{{U}}(49) {{/U}} and in part through cultural conditioning, and the two
are often hard to separate. Black and white, for example, {{U}}(50)
{{/U}} us intuitively (直觉) of night and day, darkness and light; their link
with evil and good is likely the result of culture. There exists
a {{U}}(51) {{/U}} tendency to feel that some colors are warm whereas
other colors are cool. Colors that are near red on the color wheel (色轮) are
{{U}}(52) {{/U}} warm colors—which seem more {{U}}(53) {{/U}} ;
and colors near blue are regarded as cool colors, which seem more {{U}}(54)
{{/U}} . Scientists have demonstrated that exposure to red light increases
the heartbeat and that exposure to blue light slows it clown. For artists the
{{U}}(55) {{/U}} of warm and cool depends on the contrasting
relationship between any two colors. A violet might be cooler than an orange,
because it has blue in it, and the same violet might be warmer than green,
because it has red in it. The warm-cool {{U}}(56) {{/U}} helps to create
exciting color contrasts because warm colors seem warmer next to cool colors and
cool colors seem cooler next to warm colors. A) partially
F) associations
K) arouses B)
considered G) remove
L)
satisfying C) distinction
H) universal
M) respectively D) appointment
I) ascribes
N) remind
E) relaxing
J) stimulating O)
replacement
填空题Because the problem of aging still remains a myth, some workplace bosses are uncertain a bout whether hiring older workers is ______.
填空题______play a major role in the development of cancer.
填空题Technological changes brought dramatic new options to Americans living in the 1990s. During this decade new forms of entertainment, commerce, research, and communication became commonplace in the U.S. The driving force behind much of this change was a(n)
1
popularly known as the Internet.
The Internet was developed during the 1970s by the Department of Defense. In the case of an attack, military advisers suggested the
2
of being able to operate one computer from another terminal. In the early days, the Internet was used mainly by scientists to communicate with other scientists. The Internet
3
under government control until 1984.
One early problem faced by Internet users was speed. Phone lines could only transmit information at a
4
rate. The development of
fiber-optic
(光纤) cables allowed for billions of bits of information to be received every minute. Companies like Intel developed faster microprocessors, so personal computers could process the
5
signals at a more rapid rate.
In the early 1990s, the World Wide Web was developed, in large part, for
6
purposes. Corporations created home pages where they could place text and graphics to sell products. Soon airline tickets, hotel
7
, and even cars and homes could be purchased online. Universities
8
research data on the Internet, so students could find
9
information without leaving their dormitories. Companies soon discovered that work could be done at home and
10
online, so a whole new class of telecommuters began to earn a living from home offices unshaven and wearing
pajamas
(睡衣).
A. advantage
B. commercial
C. conservation
D. equipped
E. incoming
F. innovation
G. limited
H. local
I. maintained
J. occupations
K. posted
L. remained
M. reservations
N. submitted
O. valuable
填空题The researchers put all the plants in a greenhouse to grow under normal conditions for forty days. Then, for fifteen days after that, the plants did not receive any (47) . The normal plants lost their green color. Finally, they lost their leaves. But the researchers say the (48) plants kept their leaves and their (49) . After the fifteen dry days, all the plants were watered again for a week. The transgenic plants returned to (50) growth, and their seed production was close to normal. But the other plants all died. Rosa Rivera says the transgenic plants kept a (51) high water level. They also (52) to produce energy during the dry period, although at a reduced level. The amount of seeds they produced was close to normal. In addition, the researchers found that the plants could (53) on only thirty percent of the normal amount of (54) water. Yield loss was minor, they said. The (55) appeared late last year in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. The University of California has applied for patent (56) for the technology. The researchers expect to move forward with field testing of the transgenic tobacco in late August. They hope for similar results with crops like tomatoes, rice, wheat and cotton. A. similar B. keep C. water D. relatively E. normal F. survive G. gained H) transgenic I) color J) production K) level L) findings M) continued N) protection O) irrigation
