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单选题What does the example of "software development" illustrate?
单选题The proportion of works cut for the cinema in Britain dropped from 40 percent when I joined the BBFC in 1975 to less than 4 percent when I left. But I don't think that 20 years from now it will be possible to regulate any medium as closely as I regulated film. The Internet is, of course, the greatest problem for this century. The world will have to find a means, through some sort of international treaty of United Nations initiative, to control the material that's now going totally unregulated into people's homes. That said, it will only take one little country like Paraguay to refuse to sign a treaty for transmission to be unstoppable. Parental control is never going to be sufficient. I'm still very worried about the impact of violent video games, even though researchers say their impact is moderated by the fact that players don't so much experience the game as enjoy the technical manoeuvres (策略) that enable you to win. But in respect of violence in mainstream films, I'm more optimistic. Quite suddenly, tastes have changed, and it's no longer Stallone or Schwarzenegger who are the top stars, but Leonardo DiCaprio—that has taken everybody by surprise. Go through the most successful films in Europe and America now and you will find virtually none that we are violent. Quentin Tarantino didn't usher in a new, violent generation, and films are becoming much more prosocial than one would have expected. Cinemagoing will undoubtedly survive. The new multiplexes are a glorious experience, offering perfect sound and picture and very comfortable seats, thins which had died out in the 1980s. I can't believe we've achieved that only to throw it away in favor of huddling around a 14-inch computer monitor to watch digitally-delivered movies at home. It will become increasingly cheap to make films, with cameras becoming smaller and lighter but remaining very precise. That means greater chances for new talent to emerge, as it will be much easier for people to learn how to be better film-makers. People's working lives will be shorter in the future, and once retired they will spend a lot of time learning to do things that amuse them—like making videos. Fifty years on we could well be media saturated as producers as well as audience; instead of writing letters, one will send little home movies entitled My Week.
单选题One advantage of playing basketball is ______ it can give you a great
deal of pleasure.
A. how
B. that
C. why
D. when
单选题 Questions 18~20 are based on a talk introducing American adult education programs. You now have 15 seconds to read Questions 18~20.
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单选题 He landed in this country when he was 4 years old without a
word of English, and there he has recently graduated with honors from Loyola
Academy. An immigrant kid whose family rents an apartment in a
city two-flat, he attended the North Shore school with full scholarship. All the
aunts and uncles were so proud that they made their way from the old country or
from various comers of this country to celebrate his graduation.
A debate is raging about whether immigrant children first should be
taught English, then their other subjects; or whether they should be taught
other subjects in their native tongue as they are more gradually introduced to
English over two to three years. California voters recently
banished the gradual approach—bilingual education—in favor of immersion in the
English language. The Chicago Public Schools in February put a three-year
deadline on moving into all English classes in most cases. But that was never an
issue for this graduate, and it never came up for discussion at his party.
Relatives and friends laughed and reminisced in their native tongue, inside and
outside, on sofas and lawn chairs. Before long, the instruments came out, old
world music filled the air and the traditional dancing began.
Like many immigrant children, the graduate listens to his parents in the old
language and responds to them in English. During a year after arriving here and
enrolling in a Chicago Public School he was speaking fluent English with an
American accent so strong that his parents would roll their eyes.
But fluency had not come easily; it required a year of total immersion in
English, including a teacher who never could seem to learn how to pronounce his
name correctly. "He'd come home crying," his mother said. Now,
you can't hear a trace of his original language in his voice. The switch, at
least for him, has been complete; a matter of personal preference early on, he
says, but now to the point where he has trouble remembering how to speak his
first language at all. But he still understands.
At the graduation party, his father asked for a beer in the native
tongue, and the young man tossed him a can without missing a beat.
单选题 Questions 17-20 are based on the following monologue introducing the "Clovis first" theory. You now have 20 seconds to read Questions 17-20.
单选题Healthy eating is very important for us. If we want to be healthy, we must have enough food. It must be clean food which has been properly cooked or hasn't been polluted. It must be the right kind of food. Most people in our country have enough food. We know when we need food because we feel hungry, then, if we eat a bowl of rice, we do not feel hungry. We have eaten enough food. But have we eaten the right kind of food? Rice and bread are both good for us. They help us to work. They keep us warm when the weather is cold. But if we do not eat other food as well, we become ill. Meat, fish, eggs and milk are all very good for us. They help us to grow. They keep us healthy. We must have some of these kinds of food every day. We also need fruit and vegetables. These also help us to grow and be healthy. They make our bone and skin healthy.
单选题Read the following text. Choose the best word or phrase marked A, B, C or D
for each numbered blank.
On the night of the play, Albert was at
the hall early and he was already made-up long before the end of the first act.
He certainly looked the part all right, he thought as he {{U}}(21)
{{/U}} himself {{U}}(22) {{/U}} the mirror. He even {{U}}(23)
{{/U}} if he should go out into the street to see what {{U}}(24)
{{/U}} he made on people out there. Just for a {{U}}(25) {{/U}} , of
course! Then he was seized with a sudden attack of stage fright.
How could he {{U}}(26) {{/U}} all those people {{U}}(27) {{/U}}
the audience? He put his head in his hands and tried to {{U}}(28) {{/U}}
his lines. He had only a very small part, but his mind was a complete
{{U}}(29) {{/U}} A {{U}}(30) {{/U}} on the door
made him {{U}}(31) {{/U}} . He felt really alarmed. He was due to go to
stage in the second act. Had he missed his entrance and {{U}}(32) {{/U}}
the play for everybody? But it was only the producer, who noitced what a state
he was in. She {{U}}(33) {{/U}} he should go and stand near the stage
where he could watch the play and follow in his script at the same time. It was
a good way of getting {{U}}(34) {{/U}} his nervousness, she said. She
was right. It seemed to {{U}}(35) {{/U}}. In fact, the more he watched
the play, the more he became involved in it, so that he began to {{U}}(36)
{{/U}} himself part of it. At last the moment came for him
to go on stage. But suddenly the producer was by his {{U}}(37) {{/U}}
again. This time she looked worried as she placed a hand on his arm to restrain
him {{U}}(38) {{/U}}. "I'm afraid you're going {{U}}(39)
{{/U}}," She said. "They're jumped three pages of the script and have
{{U}}(40) {{/U}} your part out
completely."
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单选题A number of recent books have reworked subjects, forms and writing techniques. Today's children read stories about divorce, death, drugs, air pollution, political extremism and violence. Relying on the magic of the illustrator, all kinds of books are being published. Before they know to read, babies can play with books made of cloth or books made to take in the bath. Later on, they are given picture books that may be cubical (立方形的) or triangular, outsized or very small. They also like work-books which come with watercolors and paintbrushes, and comic books (漫画册) filled with details where they have to spot a figure hidden among thousands of others. Not that the traditional children's books are being neglected. There are still storybooks where the pages pop up (跳起) when they are opened, to make a forest or a castle. Among the latest ideas are interactive stories where readers choose the plot (情节) or ending they want, and books on CD, which are very popular, in rich industrialized countries. The public has enthusiastically greeted the wealth of creativity displayed by publishers. "Previously, giving a child a book as often seen as improper," says Canadian author Marie-France Hebert. Her books, published by a French-language publisher, sell like hot cakes in hundreds of thousands of copies. "There's a real appetite for reading these days and I try to get across to children the passion for reading which is food for the mind and the heart, like a medicine or a vitamin.
单选题The writer's tone in this passage is ______.
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单选题Which of the following can be the best title for the passage?
单选题______ refers to the events following the climax of a drama or novel in which a resolution or clarification takes place. A. Anti-climax B. Climax C. Suspense D. Denouement
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单选题{{B}}Part A{{/B}} Read the following four texts. Answer the
questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on
ANSWER SHEET 1.{{B}}Text 1{{/B}}
Prior to the 20th century, many languages
with small numbers of speakers survived for centuries. The increasingly
interconnected modern world makes it much more difficult for small language
communities to live in relative isolation, which is a key factor in language
maintenance and preservation. It remains to be seen whether the
world can maintain its linguistic and cultural diversity in the centuries ahead.
Many powerful forces appear to work against it. population growth, which
pushes migrant populations into the world's last isolated locations; mass
tourism; global telecommunications and mass media; and the spread of gigantic
global corporations. All of these forces appear to signify a future in which the
language of advertising, popular culture, and consumer products become similar.
Already English and a few other major tongues have emerged as global languages
of commerce and communication. For many of the world's peoples, learning one of
these languages is viewed as the key to education, economic opportunity, and a
better way of life. Only about 3,000 languages now in use are
expected to survive the coming century. Are most of the rest doomed in the
century after that? Whether most of these languages survive
will probably depend on how strongly cultural groups wish to keep their identity
alive through a native language. To do so will require an emphasis on
bilingualism (mastery of two languages). Bilingual speakers could use their own
language in smaller spheres--at home, among friends, in community settings—and a
global language at work, in dealings with government, and in commercial spheres.
In this way, many small languages could sustain their cultural and linguistic
integrity alongside global languages, rather than yield to the homogenizing
forces of globalization. Ironically, the trend of technological
innovation that has threatened minority languages could also help save them. For
example, some experts predict that computer software translation tools will one
day permit minority language speakers to browse the Internet using their native
tongues. Linguists are currently using computer-aided learning tools to teach a
variety of threatened languages. For many endangered languages,
the line between revival and death is extremely thin. Language is remarkably
resilient, however. It is not just a tool for communicating, but also a powerful
way of separating different groups, or of demonstrating group identity. Many
indigenous communities have shown that it is possible to live in the modern
world while reclaiming their unique identities through language.