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单选题The writer thinks the TV networks should view the Web as a potential to help them to ______.
单选题According to the passage, drinking ______.
单选题Text … Dramatic Peak District, with its genuine steep fells, never fails to astonish me. A car will (9) you all round the Peak District (10) a morning. It is nothing (11) a crumpled green handkerchief. (12) , we hear of search parties going out there to find (13) travelers. I have never explored this region properly, and so it remains to me a country of (14) . I could go on with this list of surprises, but perhaps you had better make your own. Another (15) of our landscape is its exquisite moderation. It has been born of a compromise (16) wildness and tameness, between Nature and Man. One (17) for this is that it contains that exquisite (18) between Nature and Man. The fence and the gate are man-made, but are not severely regular and trim (19) they would be in some other countries. The trees and hedges, the grass and (20) flowers, all suggest that Nature has not been forced (21) obedience. The irregularity and coloring of the cottage make it (22) snugly into the landscape, and you feel it might have grown there, because it looks nearly as much a piece of natural history as the trees. In some countries, the cottage would have declared, "Man, the drainer, the tiller, the builder, has settled here. " In this English (23) there is no such direct opposition. Men and trees and flowers, we feel, have all settled down comfortably together. The motto is, "Live and let live. " This exquisite (24) between Nature and Man explains in part the charm of the older Britain. The whole town fitted snugly into the landscape, (25) they were no more than bits of woodland; and roads went (26) the easiest way as (27) as rivers. It was impossible to say where cultivation ended and wild life began. It was a country rich (28) trees, birds, and wild flowers, as we can see to this day.
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单选题Questions 19~21 are based on the following monologue.
单选题What is the author's attitude towards the future of traditional media?
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单选题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} This section is designed to test your
ability to understand spoken English.You will hear a selection of recorded
materials and you must answer the questions that accompany them.There are two
partsin this section, Part A and Part B. Remember,while you are
doing the test,you should first put down your answers in you test booklet.At the
end of the listening comprehension section, you will have 3 minutes to transfer
all your answer from your test booklet to ANSWER SHEET 1. If you
have any questions,you may raise your hand now as you will not be allowed to
speak once the test has started.{{B}}Part A{{/B}}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.
单选题The novel that brought Hemingway greatest fame is______ .
单选题Howmanyoftheemployeesinthisorganizationaremen?
单选题Within 30 years, humans could be debating whether to take charge of their own evolution. The average life span in the developed world will be 90, diseases will be diagnosed before symptoms appear, many humans will already be genetically modified and patients with heart diseases, cancer or dangerous infections will be treated with prescriptions tailored to their own genetic makeup, according to Francis Collins, one of the leaders of the project to sequence the entire human genome. By 2010, Collins told in a major international biotechnology forum in France this week, there could be predictive tests for at least 12 hereditary conditions, and scientists would understand the role that genes played in most common diseases. Embryoes developed by in vitro fertilization methods would be routinely scanned for genetic illnesses. Legislation to prevent genetic discrimination—the creation of an underclass denied health care, employment or insurance because of this genetic knowledge—could be in place within 10 years. By 2020, the designer drugs based on research on the human genome will be coming on to the market. The pharmaceutical industry would have produced powerful treatments for diabetes, hypertension, heart disease and schizophrenia. By 2030, if all went well, there should be comprehensive health care based on genetic knowledge, with individual medicine based on individual risk. Doctors would understand better the links between genes and environmental factors. Illnesses would be detected much earlier by molecular surveillance, even before symptoms appeared, and therapies would be more effective and more available. Collins also foresaw that by 2030, people would be arguing, as British physicist Stephen Hawking already is, that humans could start to take charge of their own evolution by altering their genes to improve the species.
单选题 You are going to hear four conversations. Before listening
to each conversation, you will have 5 seconds to read each of the questions
which accompany it. After listening, you will have time to answer each question
by choosing A, B, C or D.
Questions 11-13 are based on a
conversation you are going to hear.
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单选题Adam Smith, a writer in the 1700s,was the first person to see the importance of the division of labor and to explain part of its advantages. He gives as an example the process by which pins were made in England. "One man draws out the wire, another strengthens it, a third cuts it, a fourth points it, a fifth grinds it at the top to prepare it to receive the head. To make the head requires two or three distinct operations. To put it on is a separate operation, to polish the pins is another. And the important business of making pins is, in this manner, divided into about eighteen distinct operations, which in some factories are all performed by different people, though in others the same man will sometimes perform two or three of them " Ten men, Smith said, in this way, turned out twelve pounds of pins a day or about 4800 pins a person. But if all of them had worked separately and independently without division of labor, they certainly could not turn out any pin, each of them would have made twenty pins in a day and perhaps not even one. There can be no doubt that division of labor is an efficient way of organizing work. Fewer people can make more pins. Adam Smith saw this but he also took it for granted that division of labor is in itself responsible for economic growth and development and that it accounts for the difference between expanding economies and those that stand still. But division of labor adds nothing new: it only enables people to produce more of what they already have.
单选题Whydidthescientistsworksohardatmappingthehumangenome?A.Becausethehumangenomecandestroymanyillnesses.B.Becausethehumangenome'scompletioncanhelptogetridofmanydiseases.C.Becausetheywantedtobebetterknownthanothers.D.BecausetheHumanGenomeProjectcanprovidealotofchancesofwork.
单选题{{B}}Text 2{{/B}}
However important we may regard school
life to be, the fact cannot be denied that children spend more time at home than
in the classrooms. Therefore, the great influence of parents cannot be ignored
or discounted by the teacher. They can become strong allies of school personnel
or they can consciously or unconsciously hinder and thwart curricula
objectives. Administrators have been aware of the need to keep
parents apprised of the newer methods used in Schools. Many principals have
conducted workshops explaining such matters as reading readiness programs,
manuscript writing, and developmental mathematics. Moreover, the
classroom teacher, with the permission of the supervisors, can also play an
important role in enlightening parents. The many interviews carried on during
the year as well as new ways of reporting pupils' progress, can significantly
aid in achieving a harmonious interplay between school and home.
To illustrate, suppose that a father has been drilling Junior in
arithmetic processes night after night. In a friendly interview, the teacher can
help the parent sublimate his natural parental interest into productive
channels. He might be persuaded to let Junior participate in discussing the
family budget, buying the food, using a yardstick or measuring cup at home,
setting the clock, calculating mileage on a trip, and engaging in scores of
other activities that have a mathematical basis. If the father
follows the advice, it is reasonable to assume that he will soon realize his son
is making satisfactory progress in mathematics and, at the same time, enjoying
the work. Too often, however, teachers' conferences with parents
are devoted to petty accounts of children's misdemeanors, complaints about
laziness and poor work habits, and suggestions for penalties and rewards at
home. What is needed is a more creative approach in which the
teacher, as a professional adviser, plants ideas in parents' minds for the best
utilization of the many hours that the child spends out of the
classroom. In this way, the school and the home join forces in
fostering the fullest development of youngsters'
capacities.
单选题From the passage we know the buyer pays more attention to______.
