单选题It is impossible for me to finish so many exercises in ________.
单选题Never before ______ seen any lady who can play tennis as well as Maria.
单选题First of all, a teacher should show love for his students on top of his academic knowledge. ______, he is not qualified for his position.
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单选题Mr. Hall understands that ______ math has always been easy for him, it is not easy for the students.
单选题Did your mum and dad go to university, or did they leave school and go straight to the Job Centre? The educational experience of parents is still important when it comes to how today's students choose an area of study and what to do after graduation, according to The Future-track research in the UK. The research was done by the Higher Education Careers Service Unit. It plans to follow university applicants for six years from 2006 through their early careers. The first year's findings come from a study of 130,000 university applicants. They show significant differences in prospective students' approach to higher education, depending on whether their parents got degrees (second-generation applicants) or didn't (first-generation applicants). First-generation applicants were more likely to say that their career and employment prospects were uppermost in their minds in deciding to go to university. About one-fifth of this group gave "to enable me to get a good job" as their main reason for choosing high education. And 37 percent said that a degree was "part of my career plan". A young person coming from a non-professional household where finances are stretched may find the idea of learning for its own sake to be a luxury. This explains the explosion in vocational courses. At Portsmouth University, first-year student Kim Burnett, 19, says that she specifically chose her degree in health research management and psychology to get a secure, well-paid job. Harriet Edge, 20, studying medicine at Manchester University, also wanted job security. Her parents lacked college degrees, though the fact that her uncle is a doctor appears to have influenced her choice. "Medicine is one of those fields where it's pretty likely you'll get a job at the end. That's a big plus, as the debt levels after five years of study are going to be frightening," she says. Many experts believe that this situation affects those with no family tradition of higher education far more keenly. The fact that 26 percent of respondents said that they needed more advice implies that some students may end up feeling that their higher education investment was not worthwhile. For those with graduate parents, this lack of guidance may, the researchers suggest, be less of a problem. "But, for those without the advantages, lack of access to career guidance before applying for higher education leaves them exposed to making poorer choices," the survey concludes.
单选题Doris's success lies in the fact ______ she is co-operative and eager to learn from others. A. which B. that C. when D. why
单选题The ice was not ______ to bear the weight of the men.
单选题If people don't learn from this, then his suffering and death were __________.
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单选题A mom will take __________ in teaching her children to walk and talk and do so many things.
单选题The building, (which) roof can (be seen) here, is (the) biggest supermarket (in) town.
单选题The employee was told to finish the job _____ what happened.
单选题You won’t be seeing Mike any more. The boss fired her. She’s gone __________.
单选题I'm going to have my letters ______ tomorrow. A. type B. typing C. typed D. to be typed
单选题One car went too fast and ______ missed hitting another car.
单选题I can"t tell the ______ difference between the twin sisters.
单选题______ impossible to make a living in real estate, Nancy added insurance as a side line.A. It's beingB. Its beingC. It isD. It being
单选题__________ either you or I going to the Great Wall tomorrow?
单选题______ work has been done to improve people"s living standard.
