单选题Customers may also be permitted to ______ their current accounts for a short period in anticipation of a credit item coming in.
单选题{{B}}Passage Two{{/B}}
Researchers have studied the poor as
individuals, as families and households, as members of poor communities,
neighborhoods and regions, as products of larger poverty-creating structures.
They have been analyzed as victims of crime and criminals, as members of
minority cultures, as passive consumers of mass culture and active producers of
a "counterculture", as an economic burden and as a reserve army of labor - to
mention just some of the preoccupations of poverty research. The
elites, who occupy the small upper stratum within the category of the non-poor,
and their functions in the emergence and reproduction of poverty are as
interesting and important an object for poverty research as the poor themselves.
The elites have images of the poor and of poverty which shape their decisions
and actions. So far, little is known about those images, except as they are
sketchily portrayed in popular stereotypes. The elites may well ignore or deny
the external effects of their own actions (and omissions) upon the living
conditions of the poor. Many social scientists may take a very different view.
As poverty emerged and was reproduced, legal frameworks were created to contain
the problems it caused with profound, and largely unknown, consequences for the
poor themselves. In general, political, educational and social institutions tend
to ignore or even damage the interests of the poor. In constructing a physical
in frastructure for transport, industry, trade and tourism, the settlements of
the poor are often the first to suffer or to be left standing and exposed to
pollution, noise and crowding. Most important are the economic
functions of poverty, as for lack of other options the Ix)or are forced to
perform activities considered degrading or unclean. The poor are more likely to
buy secondhand goods and leftover foodstuffs, thus prolonging their economic
utility. They are likely to use the services of low-quality doctors, teachers
and lawyers whom the non-poor shy away from. Poverty and the poor serve an
important symbolic function, in reminding citizens of the lot that may befall
those who do not heed the values of thrift, diligence and cleanliness, and of
the constant threat that the rough, the immoral and the violent represent for
the rest of society. Physically, the poor and the non-poor are
kept apart, through differential land use and ghettoization. Socially, they are
separated through differential participation in the labor market, the
consumption economy, and in political, social and cultural institutions.
Conceptually, they are divided through stereotyping and media cliche. This
separation is even more pronounced between the elites and the
poor.
单选题The poem admirably expresses complicated nuance of feeling. A. annoyance B. innocence C. slight difference D. great nuisance
单选题She______ she didn't know me when I passed her in the street.
单选题The book would have been more useful if a ______ of technical terms and abbreviation had been included.
单选题The little girl wore a very thin coat. A sudeen gust of cold wind made her ______.
单选题An air of______ surrounded the events leading up to his resignation.
单选题He gave me a lot of help in my work, so I have to ______ my success to him.
单选题A(n) ______ sentence is of doubtful meaning because it can be interpreted in more than one way.
单选题The pilot made an unexpected ______ because of engine trouble.
单选题I must take this watch to be repaired: it______over twenty minutes a day.(四川大学2009年试题)
单选题Children are A
among
the most frequent victims of violent, B
drug-related
crimes C
that
have nothing D
doing with
the cost of acquiring the drugs.
单选题In the past, consumers were often cheated or______into buying goods by business s and they could hardly do anything about it.
单选题Woody arrived at a most ______ moment; I was just getting into the bath. A. inopportune B. importunate C. incongruous D. unfitting
单选题In spite of a problem with the
faulty
equipment, some very useful work was accomplished.
单选题The discovery of the Antarctic not only proved one of the most interesting of all geographical adventures, but created what might be called "the heroic age of Antarctic exploration". By their tremendous heroism, men such as Shackleton, Scott, and Amundsen caused a new continent to emerge from the shadows, and yet that heroic age, little more than a century old, is already passing. Modern science and inventions are revolutionizing the techniques of former explorers, and, although still calling for courage and feats of endurance, future journeys into these icy wastes will probably depend on motor vehicles equipped with caterpillar traction rather than on the dogs that earlier discoverers found so invaluable. Few realize that this Antarctic continent is almost equal in size to South America, and enormous field of work awaits geographers and prospectors. The coasts of this continent remain to be accurately charted, and the mapping of the whole of interior presents formidable task to the cartographers who undertake the work. Once their labors are completed, it will be possible to prospect the vast natural resources which scientists believe will furnish one of the largest treasure hoards of metals and minerals the world has yet known, an almost inexhaustible sources of copper, coal, uranium, and many other ores will become available to man. Such discoveries will usher in an era of practical exploitation of the Antarctic wastes. The polar darkness which hides this continent for the six winter months will be defeated by huge batteries of light, and make possible the establishing of air fields for the future intercontinental air service by making these areas as light as day. Present flying routes will completely change, for the Antarctic refueling bases will make flight fiom Australia to South America comparatively easy over the 5,000 miles journey. The climate is not likely to offer an insuperable problem, for the explorer Admiral Byrd has shown that the climate is possible even for men completely untrained for expeditions into those frozen wastes. Some of his parties were men who had never seen snow before, and yet he records that they survived the rigors of the Antarctic climate comfortably, so that, provided that the appropriate installations are made, we may assume that human beings from all countries could live there safely. Byrd even affirms that it is probably the most health climate in the world, for the intense cold of thousands of years has sterilized this continent, and rendered it absolutely germfree, with the consequences that ordinary and extraordinary sicknesses and disease from which man suffers in other zones with different climates are here utterly unknown. There exist no problems of conservation and preservation of food supplies, for the latter keep indefinitely without any signs of deterioration; it may even be that later generations will come to regard the Antarctic as the natural storehouse for the whole world. Plans are already on foot to set up permanent bases on the shores of this continent, and what so few years ago was regarded as a "dead continent" now promises to be a most active centre of human life and endeavor.
单选题If you want to go to the concert, you'll have to make a______, or there will be no tickets. (2003年上海交通大学考博试题)
单选题As for the missing funds, the company manager, when demanded to give an explanation, could not even come up with a ______ one.
单选题Specialization can be seen as a response to the problem of an increasing accumulation of scientific knowledge. By splitting up the subject matter into smaller units, one man could continue to handle the information and use it as the basis for further research. But specialization was only one of a series of related developments in science affecting the process of communication. Another was the growing professionalisation of scientific activity. No clear-cut distinction can be drawn between professionals and amateurs in science; exceptions can be found to any rule. Neverthelss, the word "amateur" does carry a connotation that the person concerned is not fully integrated into the scientific community and, in particular, may not fully share its values. The growth of specialization in the nineteenth century, with its consequent requirement of a longer, more complex training, implied greater problems for amateur participation in science. The trend was naturally most obvious in those areas of science based especially on a mathematical or laboratory training, and can be illustrated in terms of the development of geology in the United Kingdom. A comparison of British geological publications over the last century and a half reveals not simply an increasing emphasis on the primacy of research, but also a changing definition of what constitutes an acceptable research paper. Thus, in the nineteenth century, local geological studies represented worthwhile research in their own right; but, in the twentieth century, local studies have increasingly become acceptable to professionals only if they incorporate, and reflect on, the wider geological picture. Amateurs, on the other hand, have continued to pursue local studies in the old way. The overall result has been to make entrance to professional geological journals harder for amateurs, a result that has been reinforced by the widespread introduction of refereeing, first by national journals in the nineteenth century and then by several local geological journals in the twentieth century. As a logical consequence of this development, separate journals have now appeared aimed mainly towards either professional or amateur readership. A rather similar process of differentiation has led to professional geologists coming together nationally within one or two specific societies, where the amateurs have tended either to remain in local societies or to come together nationally in a different way. Although the process of professionalisation and specialization was already well under way in British geology during the nineteenth century, its full consequences were thus delayed until the twentieth century. In science generally, however, the nineteenth century must be reckoned as the crucial period for this change in the structure of science.
单选题
