单选题My landlady is always trying to meddle in everything we do.
单选题There was ______that we were in a fix, as we had no food in the coach and no water.
单选题Every weekend when I came back from school, Mother prepared meals______enough for a Sahara-bound camel and made me eat them up.
单选题If you do something on ______, you do it because you suddenly want to, although you haven"t planned to.
单选题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} There are 4 reading passages in this part. Each passage
is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there
are four choices marked A, B, C, and D. You should decide on the best choice and
mark your answer on the ANSWER SHEET by blackening the corresponding letter in
the brackets.
Called by many critics the greatest
achievement of English lyrical poetry, this elegy was written upon the death of
a fellow alumnus of Milton's, Edward King, who was drowned in the Irish Sea in
1637. A group of King's former schoolmates at Cambridge issued a commemorative
volume titled Obsequies to the Memory of Mr. Edward King (1638). It was in this
limited publication that Lycidas first appeared. Heretofore, of his great poems
only Comus had been published, and that anonymously. Lycidas is
not an expression of personal grief ( personal grief was to be eloquent in
Milton's next important poem, the Latin Epitaphium Damonis), but rather a record
of the thoughts that King's death evoked in the poet. King had written verses
himself and had prepared himself for the Church. These two facts of the dead
man's career form the basis for what Milton had to say. Outwardly the poem is
written in the tradition of pastoral poetry, and more particularly in the
tradition of the pastoral elegy as exhibited in the ancient Greek Lament for
Bion by Moschus. The poet is spoken of as a shepherd. But Milton introduces the
innovation of identifying the Christian idea of shepherd (pastor) as meaning
priest. In a wonderful fusion of pagan and Christian tradition, Milton makes his
elegy the occasion for a scathing attack on the corruptions of the clergy in his
time, with parenthetical thrusts of scorn at his trivial contemporaries, the
Cavalier poets. Samuel Johnson, who disliked all pastoral
poetry, made the one outstandingly foolish judgment of his career, in dismissing
Lycidas as a work of an. He said its "diction is harsh, the rhymes uncertain,
and the numbers unpleasing, "--a testimony of the fact that Johnson was deaf to
the refinements of English poetry at its subtlest, for Lycidas is an exquisite
piece of music from the first line through the last. Moreover, Johnson was upset
at the mingling of "trifling fictions" with "the most awful and sacred truths,
such as ought never to be polluted with such irreverent combinations." That
pronouncement can only mean that Johnson failed to grasp the noble idea at the
center of the poem: Milton's definition of the high function of a
poet.
单选题He was a member of the Hillary ______ that conquered Mount Everest. A. mission B. invasion C. experiment D. expedition
单选题Don't expect young children to be as ______ with the scenery as you are.
单选题
单选题His plan is not practical and is ______ to failure.
单选题It can be inferred from the passage that tainted blood products are ______.
单选题In 1844, Charles Stun, a British soldier and colonial administrator, made an expedition ______ a supposed inland sea; his party penetrated more than 1,000 miles northward, almost to the center of Australi
单选题His physical and emotional ___________ to Oxford and to Mississippi, to the land and to the people that shaped him, was at the core of his being.
单选题
单选题Plastic heart valves and other human "spare parts" have ______ possible many recent developments in surgery.
单选题Even today, when air and road travel has made Africa so readily accessible to Europeans and Americans, there are innumerable aspects of African life which tend to take one by surprise. The unfamiliar lies hidden every where, and the presence of Western culture seems merely to emphasize this unfamiliarity. Basically, the essence of our reaction to the strange, the unfamiliar, is a sense of fear. Every country contains landscapes that arouse unease-whether it be some remote Alpine valley, the wild lavender fields of Upper Province, or a lonely Norwegian fjord at twilight But in my own experience West Africa contains more weird and eerie regions-rain-forest, mangrove swamp, parched plains of red earth-than any other place that I have seen. It is not only in the foreigner that these landscapes evoke fear. A large part of all old African religions is devoted to soothing the unknown and the unseen-evil Spirits which live in a particular tree or a particular rock, a thousand varieties of ghosts and witches, the ever-present spirits of dead ancestors or relatives. I have myself been kept awake at night in Calabar by a friend from Lagos who was convinced that the witches of the east were out to get him, or that he was about to be kidnapped and eaten. During four and a half hours in a canoe along the creeks of the Niger delta, gliding over the still and colorless water beneath an equally still and colorless but burning sky, I, too, have experienced a sense of fear, or at least a sense of awe. Except for the ticking of the little outboard engine the silence was complete. On either hand stretched the silver-white swamps of mangrove, seeming, with their awkward exposed roots, to be standing knee-deep in the water. Where the creek narrowed you could peer deep into these thickets of mangroves-vistas secret, interminable and somehow meaningless. There was no sign of life except for the shrill screech of some unseen bird. I was on my way to the ancient slaving port of Bonny .which we reached in late afternoon. Scrambling up some derelict stone steps (slithery with slime and which had managed to detach themselves from the landing-stage so that you had to jump a two-foot gap to reach wet land), I found myself in an area of black mud and tumbled blocks of stone.
单选题{{B}}Passage Five{{/B}}
Nanotechnology, according to its fans,
will jump-start a new industrial revolution with molecular-sized structures as
complex as the human cell and 100 times stronger than steel. The new technology
transforms everyday products and the way they are made by manipulating atoms so
that materials can be shrunk, strengthened and lightened all at once. To date
only modest nanotech-based products—such as stain-resistant fabrics and fresh
food packaging—have entered the market, but some scientists predict
nanotechnology will eventually be the only game in town. "It will be a
ubiquitous technology," said George Stephanopoulos, professor of chemical
engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He echoes other
nanotech supporters who say industrial countries are already sliding toward its
use in every aspect of manufacturing. Aided by recent advances
in microscopes, scientists can now place single atoms where they want for the
first time. The potential applications are numerous, with microscopic computers,
cancer-killing antennae and nonpolluting car engines on the distant horizon.
When it's all going to happen, though, is another matter. According to most
scientific accounts, the nanotech future may be 10 to 20 years off. Major
hurdles need to be jumped. First, there is a lack of economic mass production.
Some of the more complicated devices would require exact placement of billions
of atoms. "It may take the lifetime of the universe to complete the construction
of (such a) device," said George Barbastathis, assistant professor at MIT.
Another challenge is bridging the nanoscale and macroscopic, he said. In other
words, the smallness of a nano device is useless when it must be attached to
large wires. It's unclear how scientists will overcome these problems. And fears
derived from science fiction threaten to derail nanotechnology even as it
emerges, in much the same way popular anxiety over "super-weeds" and
"frankenfoods" have hobbled biotechnology in agriculture and fear of "designer
babies" has set back stem-cell research. Lured by a market with
billions of dollars in potential profits, giants like GE, Intel, Motorola and
IBM are already heavily involved in research. Worldwide, the two industries with
the potential to win big with nanotechnology are electronics and biotechnology,
according to MIT researchers. On the biotech front, scientists are promoting the
notion of nanoparticles made from gold that could be triggered remotely to heat
and kill individual cancer cells. Nanotechnology holds equal promise for wealth
creation, hut there isn't a consensus among venture capitalists on how to
realize it. "Which direction is it going to work out in? That's the question on
everyone's mind," Gang Chen, an associate professor at the MIT, told scientists
at a Boston nano gathering.
单选题It is the central government that has ______ the coastal economies preferential policies. A. delivered B. granted C. submitted D.given
单选题The false it-couldn't-be-dones in science are comic because ______.
单选题Brides are increasingly shunning summer weddings and getting married during winter to cut costs amid the economic gloom, figures suggest. A. instead of B. otherwise C. instead D. rather than
单选题People's confidence in Blair was greatly ______ by his wife's misbehavior.
