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青少年及成人英语考试
大学英语考试
全国英语等级考试(PETS)
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成人英语三级
新概念英语(NCTE)一级
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新概念英语(NCTE)三级基础
新概念英语(NCTE)三级
新概念英语(NCTE)四级
成人英语三级
金融英语(FECT)考试
单选题The room, (which) window (faces) the south, is (the nicest) one of all (on) this floor.A. whichB. facesC. the nicestD. on
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单选题Larry: So you consider yourself an artist. Paul: Yes, in many ways. Larry: And you don't consider yourself an engineer? Paul: ______. A. Oh, a little bit of that, too B. No, I do C. Yeah, I don't think so D. Yeah, and it is the same
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单选题Do you think _____ possible to master a foreign language within two months?
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单选题______ I in your position, I would not accept the job.
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单选题That ______ the case, how can you expect to get everybody moving? A. is B. has been C. being D. was
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单选题With all your brains you ______ the math test, but you failed. You were too careless. A. should pass B. should have passed C. must pass D. must have passed
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单选题- How can the problem be solved?   - Well, we must ______it to the president’s own judgment.
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单选题(Since) the injury (is bad), the doctors (will operate) him (immediately).
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单选题They hurried there only to find the meeting canceled. In fact they ______ at all. A. needn't have gone B. wouldn't have gone C. mustn't have gone D. might not have gone
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单选题Speaker A: You must be Teddy. Thanks for coming. Speaker B: Yes, __________ .
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单选题As the Titanic was sinking and women and children climbed into lifeboats, the musicians from the ship"s band stood and played. They died when the ship went down. Men stood on the deck and smoked cigarettes. They died, too. This behavior is puzzling to economists, who like to believe that people tend to act in their own self interest. "There was no pushing," says David Savage, an economist at Queensland University in Australia who has studied witness reports from the survivors. It was "very, very orderly behavior." Savage has compared the behavior of the passengers on the Titanic with those on the Lusitania, another ship that also sank at about the same time. But when the Lusitania went down, the passengers panicked (恐慌). There were a lot of similarities between these two events. These two ships were both luxury ones, they had a similar number of passengers and a similar number of survivors. The biggest difference, Savage concludes, was time. The Lusitania sank in less than 20 minutes. But for the Titanic, it was two-and-a-half hours. "If you"re going down in under 17 minutes, basically it"s instinctual." On the Titanic, social order ruled, and it was women and children first. On the Lusitania, instinct won out. The survivors were largely the people who could swim and get into the lifeboats. "Yes, we"re self-interested," Savage says. But we"re also part of a society. Given time, social norms (规范) can beat our natural self-interest. A hundred years ago, women and children always went first. Men were stoic (坚忍的). On the Titanic, there was enough time for these norms to become forceful.
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单选题If I can help ______, I don't like working late into the night.A. soB. thatC. itD. them
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单选题We were all very glad hearing the news ______ he had won the award.
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单选题Questions 1 to 5 are based on the following passage: Languages are remarkably complex and wonderfully complicated organs of culture. (76) They contain the quickest and the most efficient means of communicating within their respective cultures. To learn a foreign language is to learn another culture. In the words of a poet and philosopher, "As many languages as one speaks, so many lives one lives." A culture and its language are as necessary as brain and body; while one is a part of the other, neither can function without the other. In learning a foreign language, the best beginning would be starting with the nonlanguage elements of the language: its gestures, its body language, etc. Eye contact is extremely important in English. Direct eye contact leads to understanding, or, as the English saying goes, seeing eye-to-eye. We can never see eye-to-eye with a native speaker of English until we have learned to look directly into his eyes.
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单选题I sometimes wish that my university ______ A. is as large as yours B. was as large as yours C. be as large as yours D. were as large as yours
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单选题It was reported that only a five-year-old child ________ the serious traffic accident yesterday.
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单选题The book was (so bored) that I (returned it) (to the library) (without finishing it).
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单选题Washington Irving was America"s first man of letters to be known internationally. His works were received enthusiastically both in England and in the United States. He was, in fact, one of the most successful writers of his time in the country, and at the same time winning the admiration of fellow writers like Scott in Britain arid Poe and Hawthorne in the United States. The respect in which he was held partly owing to the man himself, with his warm friendliness, his good sense, his urbanity, his gay spirits, his artistic integrity, his love of both the Old World and the New. Thackeray described Irving as "a gentleman, who, though himself born in no very high sphere, was most finished, polished, witty; socially the equal of the most refined Europeans." In England he was granted an honorary degree from Oxford—an unusual honor for a citizen of a young, uncultured nation—and he received the medal of the Royal Society of Literature. America made him ambassador to Spain. Irving"s background provides little to explain his literary achievements. A gifted but delicate child, he had little schooling. He studied law, but without zeal, and never did practice seriously. He was immune to his strict Presbyterian home environment, frequenting both social gatherings and the theater.
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单选题W: Has the latest Time Magazine arrived yet? Today"s already Tuesday. M: ______
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单选题During the twentieth century there has been a great change in the lives of women. A woman marrying at the end of the nineteenth century would probably have been in her middle twenties, and would be likely to have seven or eight children, of whom four or five lived till they were five years old. (76) By the time the youngest was fifteen, the mother would have been in her early fifties and would expect to live a further twenty years, during which chance and health made it unusual for her to get paid work. Today women marry younger and have fewer children. Usually a woman's youngest child will be fifteen when she is forty-five and can be expected to live another thirty-five years and is likely to take paid work until sixty. This important change in women's life has only recently begun to have its full effect on women's economic position. Even a few years ago most girls left school and took a full-time job. However, when they married, they usually left work at once and never returned to it. Today the school-leaving age is sixteen, many girls stay at school after that age, and though women marry younger, more married women stay at work at least until shortly before their first child is born. Many more afterwards return to full- or part-time work. Such changes have led to a new relationship in marriage, with the husband accepting a greater share of the duties and satisfactions of family life.
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