单选题That battered old bat of his is a ______ joke to all his friends.
单选题This can help to ______ something that the students may not have comprehended.
单选题
单选题The soldiers were______ from leaving the camp after dark.
单选题The prizes will be ______ at the end of the school year. A. distributed B. attributed C. granted D. contributed
单选题What does "to zero out" mean?
单选题If securities of a foreign corporation are sold in the US, the corporation is ______ to the US law.
单选题A team of researchers ______ the problem of diseases connected with contaminated milk.
单选题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} Write your translations in your answer
sheet.{{B}}Section A{{/B}}Translate the underlined sentences into good
Chinese.
{{U}}Every society, beginning with some slight inclination in
one direction or another, carries its preference farther and farther,
integrating itself more and more completely upon its chosen basis, and
discarding those types of behavior that are uncongenial.{{/U}} (1) Most of those
organizations of personality that seem to us most uncontrovertibly abnormal have
been used by different civilizations in the very foundations of their
institutional life. Conversely the most valued traits of normal individuals have
been looked on in differently organized cultures as aberrant. Normality, in
short, within a very wide range, is culturally defined. {{U}}It is primarily a
term for the socially elaborated segment of human behavior in any culture, and
abnormality is a term for the segment that particular civilization does not
use.{{/U}} (2) The very eyes with which we see the problem are conditioned by the
long traditional habits of our own society. It is a point that
has been made more often in relation to ethics than in relation to psychiatry.
We do not any longer make the mistake of deriving the morality of our locality
and decade directly from the inevitable constitution of human nature. We do not
elevate it to the dignity of a first principle. We recognize that morality
differs in every society, and is a convenient term for socially approved habits.
Mankind has always preferred to say, "it is morally good," rather than, "it is
habitual," and the fact of this preference is matter enough for a critical
science of ethics. But historically the two phrases are synonymous.
The concept of the normal is properly a variant of the concept of the
good. It is that which society has approved. A normal action is one which falls
well within the limits of expected behavior for a particular society. {{U}}Its
variability among different peoples is essentially a function of the variability
of the behavior patterns that different societies have created for themselves,
and can never be wholly divorced from a consideration of culturally
institutionalized types of behavior.{{/U}}(3) Each culture is a
more or less elaborate working out of the potentialities of the segment it has
chosen. {{U}}In so far as a civilization is well integrated and consistent within
itself, it will tend to carry farther and farther, according to its nature, its
initial impulse toward a particular type of action, and from the point of view
of any other culture those elaborations may include more and more extreme and
aberrant traits.{{/U}} (4) Each of these traits, in proportion as
it reinforces the chosen behavior patterns of that culture, is for that culture,
normal. Those individuals to whom it is congenial either congenitally, or as the
result of childhood sets, are accorded prestige in that culture, and are not
visited with the social contempt or disapproval which their traits would call
down upon them in a society that was differently organized. {{U}}On the other
hand, those individuals whose characteristics are not congenial to the selected
type of human behavior in that community are considered the deviants, no matter
how valued their personality traits may be in a different civilization.{{/U}}
(5)
单选题
The media can impact current events. As
a graduate student at Berkeley in the 1960s, I re member experiencing the events
related to the People's Park that were occurring on campus. Some of these events
were given national media coverage in the press and on TV. I found it
interesting to compare my impressions of what was going on with perceptions
obtained from the news media. I could begin to see events of that time feed on
news coverage. This also provided me with some healthy insights into the
distinctions between these realities. Electronic media are
having a greater impact on the people's lives every day. People gather more and
more of their impressions from representations. Television and telephone
communications are linking people to a global village, or what one writer calls
the Electronic City. Consider the information that television brings into your
home every day. Consider also the contact you have with others simply by using
telephone. These media extend your consciousness and your contact. For example,
the video coverage of the 1989 San Francisco earthquake focused on "Live Action"
such as the fires or the rescue efforts. This gave the viewer the impression of
total disaster. Television coverage of the Iraqi War also developed an
immediacy. CNN reported events as they happened. This coverage was distributed
worldwide. Although most people were far away from these events, they developed
some perception of these realities. In 1992, many people watched
in horror as riots broke out on a sad Wednesday evening in Los Angeles,
seemingly fed by video coverage Rodney King beating. We are now in an age where
the public can have access to information that enables it to make its own
judgments, and most people, who had seen the video of this beating, could not
understand how the jury was able to ac- quit the policemen involved. Media
coverage of events as they occur also provides powerful feed- back that
influences events. This can have harmful results, as it seemed on that Wednesday
night in Los Angeles. By Friday night the public got to that Wednesday night in
Los Angeles. By Friday night the public got to see Rodney King on television
pleading. "Can we all get along?" By Saturday, television seemed to provide
positive feedback as the Los Angeles riot turned out into a rally for peace. The
television showed thousands of people marching with banners and cleaning tools.
Because of that, many more people turned out to join the peaceful event they saw
unfolding on television. The real healing, of course, will take much longer, but
electronic media will continue to be a part of that
process.
单选题On the whole it's a good book; and it would be unwise to ______ those small defects. A. dwell on B. identify with C. persist in D. hack into
单选题To what extent will future scientific discoveries make possible the ______ of human life span?
单选题The rioters headed downtown,______.they attacked the city hall. A. since B. as C. whereupon D. yet
单选题Though many thought him a tedious old man, he had a ______ spirit that delighted his friends.
单选题It was an {{U}}allusion{{/U}} to what the scientist thought was an inappropriate distribution of funds for stem cell research.
单选题You have to speak to her louder as her hearing is found to be slightly______.
单选题I've never ______ the theory that people am more important than animals.
单选题As Texas begins to recover from two weeks of devastating storms, a generally hidden truth about its economy will come to light again. Most of the builders and electricians who will have to repair the houses, remake the roads and re-establish the electrical power lines will have to take on undocumented workers in order to meet their contracts. In 1996 the Immigration and Naturalisation Service (INS) conservatively estimated that Texas had over 600,000 undocumented immigrants doing the jobs no one else wants: hauling carcasses in packing plants, picking fruit, cleaning hotel rooms, or sorting out the unspeakable damage caused by natural disasters. Mention the issue of these workers to a Texan, and he is liable to fall uncharacteristically silent. Even state legislators avoid the issue. They know that many of their constituents employ undocumented workers. They also know that the booming Texas economy is driven in part by the ready supply of cheap, diligent, illegal labour. Dallas is one magnet for undocumented workers. The city's politicians oppose INS crackdowns fearing they will damage the local economy and bankrupt small companies. Houston is another. There a dawn drive past some of the city's 36 informal day-labour sites shows the size of the undocumented workforce. Young Mexicans wait on the pavement, ready to jump into the back of any pick-up truck that slows down to take them. Houston police estimate that over 150,000 labourers, about 85% of them undocumented, gather every day in search of a job. It is a testament to the vitality of the Texas economy that most of them get hired usually to mix cement and shift bricks. No questions are asked, no papers signed. Most workers do not even know their employer's name. They are paid in cash, around 40 dollars a day while the average American earns more than twice as much.
单选题The liberal view of democratic citizenship that developed in the 17th and 18th centuries was fundamentally different from that of the classical Greeks. The pursuit of private interests with as little interference as possible from government was seen as the road to human happiness and progress rather than the public obligations and involvement in the collective community that were emphasized by the Greeks. Freedom was to be realized by limiting the scope of governmental activity and political obligation and not through immersion in the collective life of the polis. The basic role of the citizen was to select governmental leaders and keep the powers and scope of public authority in check. On the liberal view, the. rights of citizens against the state were the focus of special emphasis. Over time, the liberal democratic notion of citizenship developed in two directions. First, there was a movement to increase the proportion of members of society who were eligible to participate as citizens--especially through extending the right of suffrage--and to ensure the basic political equality of all. Second, there was a broadening of the legitimate activities of government and a use of governmental power to redress imbalances in social and economic life. Political citizenship became an instrument through which groups and classes with sufficient numbers of votes could use the state power to enhance their social and economic well-being. Within the general liberal view of democratic citizenship, tensions have developed over the degree to which government can and should be used as an instrument for promoting happiness and well-being. Political philosopher Martin Diamond has categorized two views of democracy as follows. On the one hand, there is the "libertarian" perspective that stresses the private pursuit of happiness and emphasizes the necessity for restraint on government and protection of individual liberties. On the other hand, there is the "majoritarian" view that emphasizes the "task of the government to uplift and aid the common man against the malefactors of great wealth." The tensions between these two views are very evident today. Taxpayer revolts and calls for smaller government and less government regulation clash with demands for greater government involvement in the economic marketplace and the social sphere.
单选题Suddenly one of the leaves begins to fly in a strong wind; the leaf is really no leaf at all--it's an insect ______ as a leaf.
