单选题They tell the people in their community not to store apples in the refrigerator because fresh fruit like apples is ______ .
单选题"Holmes!" I whispered. "What on earth are you doing in this disgusting place?" A. humble B. unpleasant C. underprivileged D. noisy
单选题
Every artist knows in his heart that he
is saying something to the public. Not only does he want to say it well, but he
wants it to be something which has not been said before. He hopes the public
will listen and understand—he wants to teach them, and he wants them to learn
from him. What visual artists like painters want to teach is
easy to make out but difficult to explain, because painters {{U}}translate{{/U}}
their experiences into shapes and colors, not words. They seem to feel that a
certain selection of shapes and colors, out of the countless billions possible,
is exceptionally interesting for them and worth showing to us. Without their
work we should never have noticed these particular shapes and colors, or have
felt the delight which they brought to the artist. Most artists
take their shapes and colors from the world of nature and from human bodies in
motion and repose; their choices indicate that these aspects of the world are
worth looking at, that they contain beautiful sights. Contemporary artists might
say that they merely choose subjects that provide an interesting pattern, that
there is nothing more in it. Yet even they do not choose entirely without
reference to the character of their subjects. If one painter
chooses to paint a gangrenous leg and another a lake in moonlight, each of them
is directing our attention to a certain aspect of the world. Each painter is
telling us something, showing us something, emphasizing something m all of which
means that, consciously or unconsciously, he is trying to teach
us.
单选题So ______ was the mood of the meeting that an agreement was soon reached. A.resentful B.amiable C.suffocating D.gloomy
单选题The traditional American Thanksgiving day celebration
21
to 1621.
22
that year a special least was prepared in Plymouth, Massachusetts. The colonists who
23
there had left England because they felt
24
of religious freedom. They came to the
25
and faced difficulties in
26
the ocean. The ship which
27
them was called Mayflower. The North Atlantic was difficult to travel. There were bad storms. They were
28
in learning to live in the new earth by the Indians who
29
the region. The puritans,
30
they were called, had much to be thankful
31
. Their religious practices were
32
longer a source of criticism by the government. They learned to
33
their farming habits to the climate and soil.
34
they selected the fourth Thursday of November for their Thanksgiving
35
, they invited their
36
, the Indians, to join them in dinner and
37
of gratitude for the new life. They recalled the group of 102 men, women and children who left
38
. They remembered their
39
who did not see the shore of Massachusetts. They
40
the 65 days journey which had tested their strength.
单选题The salt dissolved in the water gradually, finally all that remained
was an almost ______ residue on the bottom of the glass.
A. lumpy
B. imperceptible
C. glassy
D. opaque
单选题Some—such as liquid oxygen—are so cold that they embrittle many constructional materials and evaporate continuously if not refrigerated. A. weaken B. strengthen C. reduce D. cause ... to become brittle
单选题His major task is to integrate the work of Various bureaus under the ministry.
单选题"What does the middleman do but add to the price of goods in the shops?" Such remarks are aimed at the intermediate operations between manufacturers and final customers. This practice usually attracts a lot of attention from the public and the press and the operation most talked about is what is often called wholesaling. The wholesaler buys goods in large quantities from the manufacturers and sells them in smaller parcels to retailers, and for this service his selling price to the retailer is raised several percent higher. But his job is made more difficult by retail demand not necessarily running level with manufacturers' production. Because he adjusts or regulates the flow of goods by holding stock Until required, he frees the manufacturer, to some extent, from the effect on production of changing demand and having to bear the whole risk. The manufacturer can then keep up a steady production flow, and the retailer has no need to hold heavy stocks, who can call on the wholesaler for supplies any time. This wholesale function is like that of a valve in a water pipe. The middleman also bears part of the risk that would otherwise fall on the manufacturer and also the retailer. The wholesaler provides a purely commercial service, for which he is too well rewarded. But the point that is missed by many people is that the wholesaler is not just someone adding to the cost of goods. It is true one could eliminate the wholesaler but one would still be left with his function: that of making sure that goods find their way to the people who want them.
单选题To {{U}}weaken{{/U}} the damage for earthquakes, scientists are working on ways to enable accurate prediction.
单选题While researchers may not ______ the expansive claims of hard-core vitamin enthusiasts, evidence suggests that the nutrients play a much more complex role in assuring vitality and optimal health than was previously thought. A. authorize B. license C. counteract D. endorse
单选题In response to the needs of a changing world, the
realm
of education system has been diversified over the years.
单选题Now a single cell phone is able to store a large ______ of information about an individual life.
单选题Often the roots of the plants
harbor
ants, which help build up the soil by their wastes and dead bodies.
单选题The word "they" underlined in Paragraph 4 refers to ______.
单选题The bright flowers and warm winds ______ that spring had come. A. threatened B. announced C. stated D. pronounced
单选题Psychologist Alfred Adler suggested that the primary goal of the psyche (精神) was superiority. Although
41
he believed that individuals struggled to
42
superiority over others, Adler eventually developed a more
43
definition of the drive for superiority.
Adler"s
44
of striving for superiority does not refer to the everyday meaning of the word superiority. He did not mean that we
45
seek to surpass one another in
46
or position, nor did he mean that we seek to
47
an attitude of exaggerated importance over our
48
. Rather, Adler"s drive for superiority involves the desire, to be competent and effective, complete and
49
, in whatever one strives to do.
Striving for superiority occasionally takes the
50
of an exaggerated lust for power. An individual may seek to play god and exercise
51
over objects and people. The goal may introduce a
52
tendency into our lives, in which we play games of "dog eat dog". But such
53
of the desire for superiority do not reflect its more
54
, constructive nature.
According to Adler, striving for superiority is innate and is part of the struggle for survival that human beings share with other species in the
55
of evolution. From this
56
, life is not
57
by the need to reduce
58
or restore equilibrium, as Sigmund Freud tended to think; instead, life is encouraged by the desire to move from below to above, from minus to plus, from
59
to superior. The particular ways in which individuals undertakes their
60
for superiority are determined by their culture, their unique history, and their style of life.
单选题The two countries have developed a ______ relation and increased a great deal in foreign trade. A. managerial B. lethal C. metric D. cordial
单选题Water makes up some 70
percentage
points of the body, and drinking enough water—either tap water or expensive mineral water—will ensure that the body is properly lubricated and flushed.
单选题The trade fair is designed to facilitate further cooperation between Chinese auto industries and overseas auto industries. A. promote B. protect C. preserve D. prolong
