单选题Are there any other students going to the park ______Jack and Jane on Sunday?[A] but[B] except[C] with[D] besides
单选题She ______ to have given up all hopes of life.
A.seems
B.looks
C.likes
D.wish
单选题Whendoesthemanworkeveryday?A.Fromeighttofive.B.Fromninetofive.C.Fromeighttofour.
单选题The MBA course normally attracts 30 students per year ______ whom up to half will be from abroad.[A] it[B] with[C] of[D] from
单选题Imagine, one day, getting out of bed in Beijing and being at your office in Shanghai in only a couple of hours, and then, after a full day of work, going back home to Beijing and having dinner there. Sounds unusual, doesn't it? But it's not that unrealistic, with the development of China's high-speed railway system. And that's not all. China has an even greater high-speed railway plan—to connect the country with Southeast Asia, and eventually Eastern Europe. China is negotiating to extend its own high-speed railway network to up to 17 countries in 10 to 15 years, eventually reaching London and Singapore. China has proposed three such projects. The first would possibly connect Kunming with Singapore via Vietnam and Malaysia. Another could start in Urumqi and go through Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan, and possibly to Germany. The third would start in the northeast and go north through Russia and then into Western Europe. If China's plan for the high-speed railway goes forward, people could zip over from London to Beijing in under two days. The new system would still follow China's high-speed railway standard. And the trains would be able to go 346 kilometers an hour, almost as fast as some airplanes. China's bullet train(高速客车), the one connecting Wuhan to Guangzhou, already has the World's fastest average speed. It covers 1,069 kilometers in about three hours. Of course, there are some technical challenges to overcome. There are so many issues that need to be settled, such as safety, rail gauge (轨距), maintenance of railway tracks. So, it's important to pay attention to every detail. But the key issue is really money. China is already spending hundreds of billions of Yuan on domestic railway expansion. China prefers that the other countries pay in natural resources rather than with capital investment. Resources from those countries could stream into China to sustain development. It'll be a win-win project. For other countries, the railway network will definitely create more opportunities for business, tourism and so on, not to mention the better communication among those countries. For China, such a project would not only connect it with the rest of Asia and bring some much-needed resources, but would also help develop China's far west. We foresee that in the coming decades, millions of people will migrate to the western regions, where the land is empty and resources unused. With high-speed trains, people will set up factories and business centers in the west once and for all. And they'll trade with Central Asian and Eastern European countries.
单选题To get promoted, one must not only. by competent but______.
单选题I'm ______ Chinese and I do feel ______ Chinese language is ______ most beautiful language.[A] /; the; a[B] a; /; the[C] a; the; /[D] a; /; a
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单选题Tales From Animal Hospital David Grant David Grant has become a familiar face to millions of fans of Animal Hospital. Here Dr. Grant tells us the very best of his personal stories about the animals he has treated, including familiar patients such as the dogs Snowy and Duchess, the delightful cat Marigold Serendipity Diamond. He also takes the reader behind the scenes at Harmsworth Memorial Animal Hospital as he describes his day, from ordinary medical cheek-ups to surgery (外科手术). Tales From Animal Hospital will delight all fans of the programme and anyone who has a lively interest in their pet, whether it be cat, dog or snake! £ 14.99 Hardback 272pp ISBN 0751304417 Newton: The Last Sorcerer Michael White From the author of Stephen Hawking: A Life in Science, comes this colourful description of the life of the world's first modem scientist. Interesting yet based on fact. Michael White's learned yet readable new book offers a tree picture of Newton completely different from what people commonly know about him. Newton is shown as a gifted scientist with very human weaknesses who stood at the point in history where magic (魔术) ended and science began. £ 18.99 Hardback 320pp Fourth Estate ISBN 1857024168 Fermat's Last Theorem Simon Sigh In 1963 a schoolboy called Andrew Wiles reading in his school library came across the world's greatest mathematical problem: Fermat's Last Theorem (定理). First put forward by the French mathematician Pierre de Fermat in the seventeenth century, the theorem had baffled and beaten the finest mathematical minds, including a French woman scientist who made a major advance in working out the problem, and who had to dress like a man in order to be able to study at the Ecole Polytechnique. Through unbelievable determination Andrew Wiles finally worked out the problem in 1995. An unusual story of human effort over three centuries, Fermat's Last Theorem will delight specialists and general readers alike. £ 12.99 Hardback 384pp Fourth Estate ISBN 1857025210
单选题Well, I studied economics at university, and then I was lucky because I got a job very quick- ly as an accountant in a local department store, it wasn't exactly what I wanted, but, you know it was a first job. I stayed there for four years altogether. After three years I was promoted to ac- counts manager, and I stayed in that job for a year, but then I really got bored, so I decided to leave and I applied for other jobs in this area. I had no luck getting a second job at all, and 1 was very short of money, so in the end I had to get a job working as a waitress in a restaurant. Well, it wasn't very successful because I'm quite clumsy. I kept dropping things, so after six months, they gave me a sack (解雇). And then, just by chance I met an old friend who I was at university with. And he was working in television. He got me a job as a television researcher on a program called "Business Today". After a few months they decided that they wanted young presenters of the program, and I got a job — and I love it. So do you think if I'm lucky or not?
单选题Boys in our school are not allowed to ______ long hair.
单选题Suddenly I heard a ______ voice of my friend Tom.
单选题—Shall we eat Italian food tonight? —______.
A. Yes, that's all right
B. Never mind
C. Yes, good idea
D. You're welcome
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单选题Australia is nearly as large as the United States, but most of it is too dry to live in. Around the edge(边缘) of this huge dry part are large sheep and cattle farms. A few of them are as large as the smallest states in America. Often the nearest neighbors are many hundred miles away. The two-way radio is very important to people who live on these great Australian farms. It works much like a telephone. A person can listen to someone else talk and give an answer. When these radios first came into use, the Australian government set up a special(专门的,特别的 ) two-way radio programme(节目). Then, people on the large farms could talk to a doctor hundreds of miles away. They could tell the doctor about someone who was sick, and the doctor could let them know how to care for the sick person. Since the large farms were so far from towns, the children could not to go to school. Radio schools were set up for them in some places. At a certain time each day, the boys and girls turn on their radios and listen to teachers in cities miles away. Families on the large farms wanted to give news to their neighbors. "Round robin(知更鸟)" talks by radio were started to keep families in touch with each other. They could talk about who was getting married or who was sick or who was going away. The men could talk about their sheep and cattle and how much money the markets would pay for them. In many ways the radio became a newspaper for the farm people of Australia.
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单选题Wheredoesthewomanwork?A.Inahospital.B.Inalab.C.Onafarm.
单选题____ they will send us an invitation is not yet known, __we hope they sill.
单选题--Tom often has bread for breakfast, ______ hey--Yes, he.
