单选题Woman: Thanks a lot! This scarf will be perfect with my blue jacket. Man: Made a good choice, did I? Question: What does the man mean?
单选题Nothing is less sensible than the advice of the Duke of Cambridge who is reported to have said: "Any change, at any time, for any reason is to be deplored. "
单选题As a famous leader of human rights movement, Martin Luther King detested injustice.
单选题The Labor Party's electoral strategy, based on an ______ with other smaller parties, has proved successful.
单选题"You try to get some sleep. I'll ______the patient's breakfast," said the nurse.
单选题Man: Not every woman could do the thing like her. She is extraordinary.Woman: Yeah, she is. But I'll have my moments.Question: what does the woman mean?
单选题Failure to provide ______ explanations for his frequent blunders, this young man was fired.
单选题The relatively theory is basically made up of two parts: the restricted and the general relativity theory.
单选题Man: I have to call an ambulance immediately. Woman: What's up? Question: What does the woman want to know?
单选题Jane may seem
indifferent
, but she really does care.
单选题{{B}}Part Ⅳ Cloze{{/B}}In this part, there is a passage with 15 blanks. For each
blank there are 4 choices marked A, B, C and D.
Are you single but too busy to search for love? Then
you need to try the latest dating phenomenon that is sweeping{{U}} (61)
{{/U}}the UK — speed dating. Speed dating{{U}} (62)
{{/U}}men and women meeting in a room and finding out as much as they can
about possible{{U}} (63) {{/U}}in three minutes. It's proving very{{U}}
(64) {{/U}}with Britain's young people who find that they haven't got
the time to meet that special one. At a speed dating event you
are given three minutes to talk,{{U}} (65) {{/U}},with a member of the
opposite sex. Then a bell is{{U}} (66) {{/U}}and you move to another
person and start chatting again. By the end of the evening you will have spoken
with up to twenty men or women! If, by the end of a
conversation, you{{U}} (67) {{/U}}the person or would like to see him or
her again,you write it{{U}} (68) {{/U}}on a card. Then, if the other
person also fancies you, the organizers will contact you with their details.
But is three minutes long enough to make an impression and{{U}}
(69) {{/U}}if you want to see someone again? Research, suggests
that{{U}} (70) {{/U}}can be felt within the first thirty seconds of
meeting someone,and that is{{U}} (71) {{/U}}speed dating is all about,
knowing quickly if you are going to like someone. And what
about romance? Is it possible to make a good{{U}} (72) {{/U}}in such a
short time?{{U}} (73) {{/U}},people say you can't hurry love. However,
Britain will soon have its first marriage from a speed date.
So, if you are on a{{U}} (74) {{/U}}to find Mr. or Miss Right,
what have you got to lose?{{U}} (75) {{/U}}, you still go home on your
own. But at best, the person of your dreams could be just three minutes away.
单选题The police are trying to retrieve the stolen statue.
单选题I shall never forgive him for his completely unjust ______.
单选题A: Have you invited Susan to the party? B: ______
单选题In 1982, Hitachi was indicted for stealing confidential documents from IBM. As part of a court settlement, the company paid IBM hundreds of millions of dollars.
单选题A: Please deposit twenty more cents. B: ______.
单选题
In recent years a new farming
revolution has begun, one that involves the {{U}}(61) {{/U}} of life at
a fundamental level--the gene. The study of genetics has {{U}}(62)
{{/U}} a new industry called biotechnology. As the name suggests, It
{{U}}(63) {{/U}} biology and modern technology through such techniques
as genetic engineering. Some of the new biotech companies specialize in
agriculture and are working feverishly to {{U}}(64) {{/U}} seeds that
give a high yield, that {{U}}(65) {{/U}} diseases, drought and frost,
and that reduce the need for {{U}}(66) {{/U}} chemicals. If such goals
could be achieved, it would be most {{U}}(67) {{/U}}. But some have
raised concerns about genetically engineered crops. In nature,
genetic diversity is created within certain {{U}}(68) {{/U}}. A rose can
be crossed with a different kind of rose, but a rose will never cross with a
potato. Genetic engineering, {{U}}(69) {{/U}} usually involves taking
genes from one species and inserting them into another {{U}}(70) {{/U}}
to transfer a desired characteristic. This could mean, for example, selecting a
gene which leads to the production of a chemical with anti-freeze {{U}}(71)
{{/U}} from an artic fish, and inserting it into a potato or strawberry to
make it frost-resistant. {{U}}(72) {{/U}}, then, biotechnology allows
humans to {{U}}(73) {{/U}} the genetic wails that separate
species. Like the green revolution, {{U}}(74) {{/U}}
some call the gene revolution contributes to the problem of genetic
uniformity--some say even more so {{U}}(75) {{/U}} geneticists can
employ techniques such as cloning and {{U}}(76) {{/U}} culture (培养),
processes that produce perfectly {{U}}(77) {{/U}} copies. Concerns about
the erosion of biodiversity, therefore, remain. Genetically altered plants,
however, raise new {{U}}(78) {{/U}}, such as the effects that they may
have on us and the environment. "We are flying blindly into a new {{U}}(79)
{{/U}} of agricultural biotechnology with high hopes, few constraints, and
little idea of the potential {{U}}(80) {{/U}} " said science writer
Jeremy Rifkin.
单选题{{B}}Passage Two{{/B}}
More American mothers than ever are
working, and more workers are mothers. Yet their march into the world of paid
work continues to cause suspicion. One recent survey found that 48 percent of
Americans believe that preschoolers suffer if their mothers work, while another
found that 42 percent of employed parents think that working mothers care more
about succeeding at work than meeting their children's needs.
All mothers deserve our support--those who care for children at home and
those who have joined the work force. But many working mothers continue to
believe that they are shortchanging (少找钱)their children. They shouldn't.
Research tells us that kids do just fine when mothers work.
Suzanne Bianchi a scientist of the University of Maryland, has found that
mothers today spend as much if not more time with their children than they did
in 1965, even though the percentage of mothers who work rose from 35 percent to
71 percent. Then there are the obvious financial benefits. For many children,
these earnings are the difference between living in poverty—or out of
it. The kids are all right. Studies conducted by the University
of Michigan have consistently demonstrated that a child's social or academic
competence does not depend on whether a mother is employed. In my research four
out of five children (nine out of ten in single parent families) told me that
having a working mother was their preferred arrangement. My study found that
children with working mothers are no more likely to drop out, take drugs, break
the law, or experiment with sex prematurely than children with non-employed
mothers. Children have taken their mothers' example to heart. Ninety percent of
the young women I interviewed said they hoped to combine work with motherhood,
while two-thirds of the men said they wanted to share parenting and
work. Sadly, children support working mothers more than we do as
a society. Parental leave and child-care benefits in the United States remain
inadequate, particularly when compared to what's offered in other countries.
Children thrive when their mothers have satisfying, well-paid jobs when they can
count on other caretakers to share the load. The challenge facing us is thus not
whether good workers can also be good mothers, but whether we can create the
conditions that enable working mothers and fathers to be good
parents.
单选题Next semester, Susan must take three {{U}}compulsory{{/U}} courses.
单选题The "standard of living" of any country means the average person's share of the goods and services which the country produces. A country's standard of living, therefore, depends first and foremost on its capacity to produce wealth. "Wealth" in this sense is not money, for we do not live on money but on things that money can buy: "goods" such as food and clothing, and "services" such as transport and entertainment. A country's capacity to produce wealth depends upon many factors, most of which have an effect on one another. Wealth depends to a great extent upon a country's natural resources, such as coal, gold, and other minerals, water supply and so on. Some regions of the world are well supplied with coal and minerals, and have a fertile soil and a favourable climate; other regions possess none of them. Next to natural resources comes the ability to turn them to use. Some countries are perhaps well off in natural resources, but suffered for many years from civil and external wars, and for this and other reasons have been unable to develop their resources. Sound and stable political conditions, and freedom from foreign invasion, enable a country to develop its natural resources peacefully and steadily, and to produce more wealth than another country equally well served by nature but less well ordered. Another important factor is the technical efficiency of a country's people. Industrialized countries that have trained numerous skilled workers and technicians are better placed to produce wealth than countries whose workers are largely unskilled. A country's standard of living does not only depend upon the wealth that is produced and consumed within its own borders, but also upon what is indirectly produced through international trade. For example, Britain's wealth in foodstuffs and other agricultural products would be much less if she had to depend only on those grown at home. Trade makes it possible for her surplus manufactured goods to be traded abroad for the agricultural products that would otherwise be lacking. A country's wealth is, therefore, much influenced by its manufacturing capacity, provided that other countries can be found ready to accept its manufactures.