单选题By saying that he became sort of dependent on the industry, Mark Amerika meant that ______.
单选题Sitting still all day is______to a healthy boy's nature.
单选题Everyone has faced the embarrassing______of deciding how much extra to give a waiter or taxi-driver.
单选题He swallows his words so much that I can never ______ what he is saying. A. make out B. put up C. deal with D. take up
单选题Mail service will be temporarily______because of the strike of the
postal workers.
A. suspended
B. abridged
C. deprived
D. lessened
单选题Certainly the humanist thinkers of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries,
who are
our ideological ancestors, thought that the goal of life was the unfolding of a person"s potentialities;
what mattered to
them was the person
who is much
, not the one
who has much or use much
.
单选题War is the social cancer of mankind. It is a
pernicious
form of ignorance, for it destroys not only its "enemies", but also the whole superstructure of what it is a part—and thus eventually it defeats itself.
单选题
单选题The new chemical will {{U}}exterminate{{/U}} this kind of insects in this area.
单选题The house they have bought is in very bad repair. The old boiler in the kitchen needs ______.
单选题I am grateful for your ______ invitation, and I'd like to accept your
offer with pleasure.
A. delighted
B. innocent
C. gracious
D. prestigious
单选题As we have seen, propaganda can appeal to us by amusing our emotions or ______ our attention from the real issues at hand.
单选题One of the most authoritative voices speaking to us today is the voice of the advertisers. Its strident clamour dominates our lives. It shouts at us from the television screen and the radio loudspeakers; waves to us from every page of the newspaper; plucks at our sleeves on the escalator; signals to us from the successful man as a man no less than 20% of whose mall consists of announcements of giant carpet sales. Advertising has been among England's biggest growth industries since the war, in terms of the ratio of money earnings to demonstrable achievement. Why all this fantastic expenditure? Perhaps the answer is that advertising saves the manufacturers from having to think about the customer. At the stage of designing and developing a product, there is quite enough to think about without worrying over whether anybody will want to buy it. The designer is busy enough without adding customer——appeal to all his other problems of man——hours and machine tolerances and stress factors, So they just go ahead and make the thing and leave it, by pretending that it confers status, or attracts love, or signifies manliness, if the advertising agency can to this authoritatively enough, the manufacturer is in clover. Other manufacturers find advertising saves them changing their product. And manufacturers hate change. The ideal product is one which goes on unchanged for ever. If, therefore, for one reason or another, some alteration seems called for——how much better to change the image, the packet or tile pitch made by the product, rather than go to all the inconvenience of changing the product itself. The advertising man has to combine the qualities of the three most authoritative professions: Church, Bar, and Medicine. The great skill required of our priests, most highly developed in missionaries but present, indeed mandatory, in all, is the kill of getting people to believe in and contribute money to something which can never be logically proved. At the Bar, an essential ability is that of presenting the most persuasive case you can to a jury of ordinary people, with emotional appeals masquerading as logical exposition; a case you do not necessarily have to believe in yourself, just one you have studiously avoided discovering to be false. As for medicine, any doctor will confirm that a large part of his job is not clinical treatment but faith healing. His apparently scientific approach enables his patients believe that he knows exactly what is wrong with them and exactly what they need to put them right, just as advertising does——"Run down? You need...". "No one will dance with you? A dab of * * * * will make you popular." Advertising men use statistics rather like a drunk uses a lamp-post-for support rather than illumination. They will dress anyone up in a white coat to appear like an unimpeachable authority or, failing that, they will even be happy with the announcement, "As used by 90% of the actors who play doctors on television." Their engaging quality is that they enjoy having their latest ruses uncovered almost as anyone else.
单选题Do you think it is late to ______on a new career? A. disembark B. embark C. remark D. assume
单选题All parts of this machine are ______ , so that it is very simple to get replacements for them. A. specialized B. standardized C. minimized D. modernized
单选题British Prime Minister Tony Blair promised the electorate that guns would not be fired without an attempt to win a further U.N. sanction.
单选题{{B}}Passage Three{{/B}}
Extraordinary creative activity has
been characterized as revolutionary, flying in the face of what is established
and producing not what is acceptable but what will become accepted. According to
this formulation, highly creative activity transcends the limits of an existing
form and establishes a new principle of organization. However, the idea that
extraordinary creativity transcends established limits is misleading when it is
applied to the arts, even though it may he valid for the science. Differences
between highly creative art and highly creative science arise in part froha a
difference in their goal. For the sciences, a new theory is the goal and end
result of the creative act. Innovative science produces new propositions
in terms of which diverse phenomena can be related to one another in more
coherent ways. Such phenomena as a brilliant diamond or a nesting bird are
relegated to the role of date, serving as the means for formulating or testing a
new theory. The goal of highly creative art is different: the phenomenon
itself becomes the direct product of the creative act. Shakespeare's
Hamlet is not a tract about the behavior of indecisive princes or the uses of
political power, nor is Picasso's painting Guernica primarily a prepositional
statement about the Spanish Civil War or the evils of fascism. What highly
creative activity produces is not a new generalization that transcends
established limits, but rather an aesthetic particular. Aesthetic particulars
produced by the highly creative artist extend or exploit, rather than transcend
that form. This is not to deny that a highly creative artist
sometimes establishes a new principle of organization in the history of an
artistic field; the composer Monteverdi who created music of the highest
aesthetic value, comes to mind. More generally, however, whether or not a
composition establishes a new principle in the history of music has no bearing
on its aesthetic worth. Because they embody a new principle of organization,
some musical works, such as the operas of the Florentine Camerata, are of signal
historical' importance, but few listeners or musicologists would include these
among the great works of music. On the other hand, Mozart's 'The Marriage
of Figaro'(费加罗的婚礼) is surely among the master-pieces of music even though its
modest innovations are confined to extending existing means. It has been
said of Beethoven that he toppled the rules and freed music from the stifling
confines of convention. But a close study of his composition reveals that
Beethoven overturned no fundamental rules. Rather, he was an incomparable
strategist who exploited limits the rules, forms, and conventions that he
inherited from predecessors such as Haydn and Mozart, Handel and Bach, in
strikingly original ways.
单选题Analysts have had their go at humor, and I have read some of this interpretative literature, but without being greatly instructed. Humor can be dissected, as a frog can, but the thing dies in the process and the innards (内在部分) are discouraging to any but the pure scientific mind. In a newsreel theatre the other day I saw a picture of a man who had developed the soap bubble to a higher point than it had ever before reached. He had become the ace soap bubble blower of America, had perfected the business of blowing bubbles, refined it, doubled it, squared it, and had even worked himself up into a convenient lather. The effect was not pretty. Some of the bubbles were too big to be beautiful, and the blower was always jumping into them or out of them, or playing some sort of unattractive trick with them. It was, if anything, a rather repulsive sight. Humor is a little like that: it won't stand much blowing up, and it won't stand much poking. It has a certain fragility, an evasiveness, which one had best respect. Essentially, it is a complete mystery. A human frame convulsed with laughter, and the laughter becoming mysterious and uncontrollable, is as far out of balance as one shaken with the hiccoughs or in the throes of a sneezing fit. One of the things commonly said about humorist is that they are really very sad people- clowns with a breaking heart. There is some truth in it, but it is badly stated. It would be more accurate, I think, to say that there is a deep vein of melancholy running through everyone's life and that the humorist, perhaps more sensible of it than some others, compensates for it actively and positively. Humorists fatten on trouble. They have always made trouble pay. They struggle along with a good will and endure pain cheerfully, knowing how well it till serve them in the sweet by and by. You find them wrestling with foreign languages, fighting folding ironing boards and swollen drainpipes, suffering the terrible discomfort of tight boot (or as Josh illings wittily called them, "tire boots"). They pour out their sorrows profitably, in a form hat is not quite a fiction nor quite a fact either. Beneath the sparking surface of these dilemmas lows the strong tide of human woe. Practically everyone is a manic depressive of sorts, with his up moments and his down moments, and you certainly don't have to be a humorist to taste the sadness of situation and mood. But there is often a rather fine line between laughing and crying, and if a humorous piece of writing brings a person to the point where his emotional responses are untrustworthy and seem likely to break over into the opposite realm, it is because humor, like poetry, has an extra content. It plays close to the bit hot fire which is Truth, and sometimes the reader feels. the heat.
单选题(The above) is the most important aspect (which) apes (can be told) from (more primitive) social groupings.
单选题They are building the dam in ______ with another firm.
