单选题WhatwasFrankdoingwhenJaneapproachedhim?A.Chattingwithhisfriends.B.Sleeping.C.Reading.D.Doinghisassignment.
单选题How does the man feel about his grade?
单选题Directions: You will hear four dialogues or
monologues.Before listening to each one, you will have 5 seconds to read each of
the questions which accompany it.While listening, answer each question by
choosing A, B, C or D.After listening, you will have 10 seconds to check your
answer to each question.You will hear the recording only once.
Questions 11-13 are based on thefollowing
dialogue.
单选题Read the following text. Choose the best word or phrase for each numbered
blank. ... As time {{U}}
{{U}} 1 {{/U}} {{/U}}by, I was able to work {{U}} {{U}}
2 {{/U}} {{/U}}my fears. Now I understand that the closest I have ever
felt to God is in the back of an ambulance. When I {{U}} {{U}} 3
{{/U}} {{/U}}to help {{U}} {{U}} 4 {{/U}} {{/U}}strangers, I
am part of something {{U}} {{U}} 5 {{/U}} {{/U}}than myself.
Sometimes I truly {{U}} {{U}} 6 {{/U}} {{/U}}with someone
{{U}} {{U}} 7 {{/U}} {{/U}}I would never have met {{U}}
{{U}} 8 {{/U}} {{/U}}-as I did with Nellie. One
midnight, the AIDS hospice {{U}} {{U}} 9 {{/U}} {{/U}}help. A
colleague and I were {{U}} {{U}} 10 {{/U}} {{/U}}to a
bedroom. {{U}} {{U}} 11 {{/U}} {{/U}}there was
a thin black woman with wild hair. When I was given a {{U}} {{U}}
12 {{/U}} {{/U}}of her {{U}} {{U}} 13 {{/U}}
{{/U}}history, I thought, this lady {{U}} {{U}} 14 {{/U}}
{{/U}}dead over ten times. She had AIDS, hepatitis and TB. She had had brain
surgery. Tonight she had a seizure. "Hello, I'm Clarissa, are
you in pain?" I asked. She replied by cursing {{U}} {{U}} 15
{{/U}} {{/U}}me. I didn't take {{U}} {{U}} 16 {{/U}}
{{/U}}. When I rode alone with her in the back of the ambulance
as another EMT drove, I {{U}} {{U}} 17 {{/U}} {{/U}}the
printout. Nellie was 33 years old. No previous address. No family members. No
next of kin. Her whole life as {{U}} {{U}} 18 {{/U}} {{/U}}here
was just a list of medicines, {{U}} {{U}} 19 {{/U}} {{/U}}and
illnesses. One line {{U}} {{U}} 20 {{/U}} {{/U}}my attention:
hobbies. Nellie's hobbies were sewing and gospel singing. I could not sew, but I
loved gospel music.
单选题
单选题
单选题WhydideverybodyinthevillagethinkMarkwoulddie?A.Hewasseriouslyill.B.Hewasbadlywounded.C.Doctorswoulddonothingforhim.
单选题
单选题{{B}}第一节{{/B}}听下面3段对话,从A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项。
单选题Medicine comes in many forms. In its liquid form, medicine affects the body very quickly. But the effects of liquid medicine arch' t usually long-lasting. This is why pills and capsules (胶囊) are also used. The pills and capsules being sold today arch' t perfect, either. Pills dissolve in the stomach. The medicine in the pills is released when the pills dissolve. But often, the pills dissolve too quickly. Scientists have been trying to develop a pill that can release medicine slowly over a long period of time. They have applied their knowledge of plants to produce the "osmotic (渗透的) pump pill". The cell walls of plants are made of cellulose (纤维素). Cellulose is a very porous substance. Their holes are big enough to allow water through the cell walls. As water enters a cell, pressure builds up in the cell. The pressure pumps other substances out of the cell. These substances leave the cell through the cellulose wall. This slow, steady process is called osmosis. The osmotic pump pill is coated with synthetic cellulose. Liquid medicine is contained in the pill. The holes in the cellulose coating of the pill are big enough to allow water in the pill. As water from the body enters the pill, pressure builds up in the pill. The medicine is then slowly pumped out of the pill.
单选题Whenever advertisers want you to stop thinking about the product and to start thinking about something bigger, better, or more attractive than the product, they use that very popular word "like". The word "like" is the advertiser's equivalent of the magician's use of misdirection. "Like" gets you to ignore the product and concentrate on the claim the advertiser is making about it. "For skin like peaches and cream" claims the ad for a skin cream. What is this ad really claiming? It doesn't say this cream will give you peaches-and-cream skin. There is no verb in this claim, so it doesn't even mention using the product. How is skin ever like "peaches and cream".'? Remember, ads must be read exactly according to the dictionary definition of words. This ad is making absolutely no promise for this skin cream. If you think this cream will give you soft, smooth, and youthful-looking skin, you are the one who has read the meaning into the ad. The wine that claims "It's like taking a trip to France" wants you to think about a romantic evening in Paris as you walk along the street after a wonderful meal in an intimate cafe. Of course, you don't really believe that a wine can take you to France, but the goal of the ad is to get you to think pleasant, romantic thoughts about France and not about how the wine tastes or how expensive it may be. That little word "like" has taken you away from crushed grapes into a world of your own imaginative making. Who knows, maybe the next time you buy wine, you'll think those pleasant thoughts when you see this brand of wine, and you'll buy it. How about the most famous "like" claim of all, "Winston tastes good like a cigarette should" ? Ignoring the grammatical error here, you might want to know what this claim is saying. Whether a cigarette tastes good or bad is a subjective judgment because what tastes good to one person may well taste horrible to another. There are many people who say that all cigarettes taste terrible, other people who say only some cigarettes taste all right, and still others who say all cigarettes taste good.
单选题
单选题{{I}} Questions 24-25 are based on the conversation you've just heard.{{/I}}
单选题
单选题What is true about a human being in the future?
单选题
单选题[此试题无题干]
单选题
单选题
单选题Bear in mind that fewer workers gain a sense of self-actualization from work itself than those who gain it from incidental aspects of the work. The former are the ambitious achievers and relatively few in number. They seek a job that has work they really want to do. The nonjob-oriented employees accept almost any job that is available. They are not very fussy about the nature of the work so long as it provides an acceptable income and satisfactory human relations. This interpretation probably explains the findings of a twelve-year study by a Princeton, New Jersey research corporation that studied the personality dynamics of employees of several thousand client companies. Generally they found that four out of every five employees were misemployed. That is they were working in jobs for which they were not entirely suited. They were non job-oriented. The focus of the study was on office jobs in twelve key industries: banking and finance; chemical; pharmaceutical; data processing; farm equipment; heavy manufacturing; insurance; media/publishing; printing/business firms; real estate; and stock brokerage and mutual funds. One of the statements in the published report of this study is, "Too many individuals who are misemployed in the job they hold, cling tenaciously to that job, doing just well enough not to be terminated." Many of these misemployed actually do their work quite well because it is easily learned and more or less of a routine nature. When they leave an employer their positions are easily filled by applicants who walk into the employment office looking for an opening. A few of these routine workers do break out of their occupational level and train themselves for something on a higher level. They exemplify the statement of the person who says, "I became successful as soon as I made up my mind as to where I was going and how I was going to get there even though I was broke when I made the decision." One factor in the inability of certain workers to find themselves vocationally may be in their lack of self-esteem. Vocational crystallization and self-esteem are related. People with high self-esteem express greater certainty about their career choices than do those with low self-esteem.