单选题As most new buyers soon learn, it is not that easy for a novice to use, particularly when the manuals contain instructions like this ______ from Apple: "This character prevents script from terminating the currently forming output line when it encounters the script command in the input stream. "
单选题The Supreme Court's decisions on physician-assisted suicide carry important implications for how medicine seeks to relieve dying patients of pain and suffering. Although it ruled that there is no constitutional right to physician-assisted suicide, the Court in effect supported the medical principle of "double effect, "a centuries-old moral principle holding that an action having two effects—a good one that is intended and a harmful one that is foreseen—is permissible if the actor intends only the good effect. Doctors have used that principle in recent years to justify using high doses of morphine to control terminally iii patients' pain, even though increasing dosages will eventually kill the patient. Nancy Dubler, director of Montefiore Medical Center, contends that the principle will shield doctors who "until now have very, very strongly insisted that they could not give patients sufficient mediation to control their pain if that might hasten death." George Annas, chair of the health law department at Boston University, maintains that, as long as a doctor prescribes a drug for a legitimate medical purpose, the doctor has done nothing illegal even if the patient uses the drug to hasten death. "It's like surgery," he says. "We don't call those deaths homicides because the doctors didn't intend to kill their patients, although they risked their death. If you're a physician, you can risk your patient's suicide as long as you don't intend their suicide." On another level, many in the medical community acknowledge that the assisted-suicide debate has been fueled in part by the despair of patients for whom modern medicine has prolonged the physical agony of dying. Just three weeks before the Court's ruling on physician-assisted suicide, the National Academy of Science (NAS) released a two-volume report, Approaching Death: Improving Care at the End of Life. It identifies the under treatment of pain and the aggressive use of "ineffectual an forced medical procedures that may prolong and even dishonor the period of dying" as the twi problems of end-of-life care. The profession is taking steps to require young doctors to train in hospices, to test knowledge of aggressive pain management therapies, to develop a medicare billing code for hospital-base care, and to develop new standards for assessing and treating pain at the end of life. Annas says lawyers can play a key role in insisting that these well-meaning medical initiative translate into better care. "Large numbers of physicians seem unconcerned with the pain their patients are needlessly and predictably suffering", to the extent that it constitutes "systematic patient abuse". He says medical licensing boards "must make it clear.., that painful deaths are presumptively ones that are incompetently managed and should result in license suspension".
单选题Before turning to writing, I spent eight years as a lawyer______about how life would be with a prominent father blazing my trail.
单选题Although most universities in the United States are on a semester system which offers classes in the fall and spring, some schools ______ a quarter system comprised of fall, winter, and summer quarters. A. manipulate B. stipulate C. regulate D. observe
单选题After walking for hours without finding the village, we began to have
______ about our map.
A. troubles
B. fears
C. limitations
D. misgivings
单选题The passage suggests that if there were a slight global warming at the present time, it would be ______.
单选题The statement was an allusion to recent troubles with the agency's computers. A. an explanation B. a contradiction C. a reference D. a rejection
单选题Your letters ______ those pleasant days when we worked together, I'll remember forever.
单选题After “9.11”, the Olympic Games severely Utaxed /Uthe security services of the host country.
单选题The popular idea that classical music can improve your maths is falling from favor. New experiments have failed to support the widely publicized finding that Mozart's music promotes mathematical thinking. Researchers reported six years ago that listening to Mozart brings about short-term improvements in spatial-temporal reasoning, the type of thinking used in maths. Gordon Shaw of the University of California at Irvine and Frances Rauscher of the University of Wisconsin in Oshkosh had asked students to perform spatial tasks such as imagining how a piece of paper would look if it were folded and cut in a certain pattern. Some of the students then listened to a Mozart sonata and took the test again. The performance of the Mozart group improved. Shaw found. He reasoned that listening to Mozart increases the number of connections between neurons. But Kenneth Steele of Appalachian State University in North Carolina learnt that other studies failed to find this effect. He decided to repeat one of Shaw's experiments to see for himself. Steele divided 125 students into three groups and tested their abilities to work out how paper would look if cut and folded. One group listened to Mozart another listened to a piece by Philip Glass and the third did not listen to anything. Then the students took the test again. No group showed any statistically significant improvement in their abilities. Steele concludes that the Mozart effect doesn't exist. "It's about as unproven and as unsupported as you can get," he says. Shaw however defends his study. One reason he gives is that people who perform poorly in the initial test get the greatest boost from Mozart but Steele didn't separate his students into groups based on ability. "We're still at the stage where it needs to be examined," Shaw says. "I suspect that the more we understand the neurobiology, the more we'll be able to design tests that give a robust effect. "
单选题In theory, millions of people suffering devastating diseases may one day be helped or even cured with treatments derived from human embryonic stem cells, but human embryos must be destroyed to obtain these stem cells. So research involving them is ______ in controversy, with each side arguing passionately for the rights of the sick or the rights of the unborn. A. refuted B. modified C. marred D. mired
单选题D. briefed
单选题Eighty percent of mothers cradle their ______ in their left arms, holding them against the left side of their bodies. A. infants B. hoses C. handkerchiefs D. fences
单选题The terrible noise is______me mad.(2003年西南财经大学考博试题)
单选题The chimney vomited a cloud of smoke.
单选题He ______ himself bitterly for his miserable behavior that evening.
A. repealed
B. resented
C. replayed
D. reproached
单选题"De you mind ______?" "Go ahead. I don't mind."
单选题 Directions: In this section you will read four passages. Each
one is followed by several questions about it. For questions, you are to choose
the one best answer A, B, C, or D to each question.{{B}}Passage One{{/B}}
In a recent book entitled The Psychic Life of
Insects, Professor Bouvier says that we must be careful not to credit the little
winged fellows with intelligence when they behave in what seems like an
intelligent manner. They may be only reacting. I would like to confront the
professor with an instance of reasoning power on the part of an insect which
cannot be explained away in any other manner. During the summer
of 1899, while I was at work on my doctoral thesis, we kept a female wasp at our
cottage. It was more like a child of our own than a wasp, except that it looked
more like a wasp than a child of our own. That was one of the ways we told the
difference. It was still a young wasp when we got it (thirteen
or fourteen years old) and for some time we could not get it to eat or drink, it
was so shy. Since it was a female we decided to call it Miriam, but soon the
children's nickname for it-- " Pudge" --became a fixture, and "Pudge" it was
from that time on. One evening I had been working late in my
laboratory fooling around with some gin and other chemicals, and in leaving the
room I tripped over a nine of diamonds which someone had left lying on the floor
and knocked over my card index which contained the names and addresses of all
the larvae worth knowing in North America. The cards went everywhere.
I was too tired to stop to pick them up that night, and went sobbing to
bed, just as mad as I could be. As I went, however, I noticed the wasp was
flying about in circles over the scattered cards. "Maybe Pudge will pick them
up," I said half laughingly to myself, never thinking for one moment that such
would be the case. When I came down the next morning Pudge was
still asleep in her box, evidently tired out. And well she might have been. For
there on the floor lay the cards scattered all about just as I had left them the
night before. The faithful little insect had buzzed about all night trying to
come to some decision about picking them up and arranging them in the boxes for
me, and then had figured out for herself that, as she knew practically nothing
of larvae of any sort except wasp larvae, she would probably make more of a mess
of rearranging them than if she had left them on the floor for me to fix. It was
just too much for her to tackle, and, discouraged, she went over and lay down in
her box, where she cried herself to sleep. If this is not an
answer to Professor Bouvier's statement, I do not know what
is.
单选题The magician made us think he cut the girl into pieces but it was
merely an ______.
A. illusion
B. impression
C. image
D. illumination
单选题According to psychoanalysis, a person's attention is attracted ______ by the intensity of different signals ______ by their context, significance, and information content.
