单选题The current French bestseller lists are wonderfully eclectic. In (1) . there is everything (2) blockbuster thrillers to Catherine Miller's La Vie Sexuelle de Catherine M., a novel which has been (3) praised as high art and (4) as upmarket porn. Then there are novels (5) the sticky questions of good and (6) (Le Demon et Mademoiselle Prym) and faith versus science m the modern world (L'apparition). Philosophical (7) continue in the non-fiction list. (8) this week by Michel Onfray's "Antimanuel de Philosophic". a witty talk (9) some of philosophy's perennial debates. Those who like their big issues in small chunks are also enjoying Frederic Beigbeder's Dernier Inventaire avant Liquidation. a survey of France's (10) 20th-century books, (11) with Mr. Beigbeder's (12) humour from the title on (The 50 books of the Century Chosen by You and Critiqued by Me), In Britain. meanwhile, there is olive oil all over the non-fiction list. It's a major (13) for Nigella Lawson, a domestic divinity and celebrity (14) , whose latest (15) of recipes tops the list. Annie Hawes, in second (16) . took herself (17) to the sun-drenched hills of Italy to grow her own olives and write a book about them as did Carol Drinkwater, just (18) the border in France. Fiction-wise, it's business as (19) , with the requisite holiday mix of thrillers, romance, fantasy and Harry Potter. with The Goblet of Fire still burning (20) at number three.
单选题With the increasing pace of economic globalization and competition among various countries in the market, information, technology, professionals, capital and other types of economic resources is becoming increasingly evident. International
1
is becoming progressively
2
. Previously
3
competition among enterprises in different countries is growing gradually into competition among governments that finds expression in a concentrated form. Previous
4
contention for enterprises" interests in the world market now evidences itself in the contention for
5
interests. In this new situation, to
6
national interests and to enable a country to be constantly in a favorable position in the international market, the most important thing is to have a highly
7
government that
8
the full trust of citizens.
The basic objective of the study of the "government administration" is to
9
the competitive edge of a government in the international market, to
10
the efficiency and quality of government administrative behaviors, and to enhance the skills and the efficiency of government policy operations. The evident
11
between government administration and enterprise management lies in the fact
12
the former is a macro-activity and represents the overall national interests. Considering this from the
13
of the theory of behavioral efficiency function, the degree of the efficiency and quality of government administrative behaviors and the standard of the skills and the efficiency of government policy operations have a direct
14
on the amount of national interests and the degree of security and happiness of its people. Thus, to
15
the level of overall national interests requires a highly efficient enterprise management and a high-quality enterprise group with significant core competitiveness. More importantly, it requires highly efficient government administration and the government"s international competitiveness to have a
16
advantage. For China, a country that is still in the
17
of "shift in the mode of growth" and "transformation in the system", the fundamental
18
to turn this objective into a
19
is to make innovations in government administration.
So, against the
20
backgrounds of economic globalization and the domestic economic transformation, how should we make innovations in government administration? I think many things can be done in this regard. Yet the most important thing is to effect the change of the concept, functions, forms and the institution of government administration.
单选题Which of the following best reflects the humanistic perspective of the five writers?
单选题Voters in rich countries think that
单选题According to the text, the cost increase in the rail industry is mainly caused by ______.
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单选题{{B}}Part A{{/B}}{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} Read the following four
texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your
answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.{{B}}Text 1{{/B}}
From the health point of view we are
living in a marvelous age. We are immunized from birth against many of the most
dangerous disease. A large number of once fatal illness can now be found for the
most stubborn remaining disease. The expectation of life has increased
enormously. But though the possibility of living a long and happy life is
greater than ever before, every day we witness the incredible slaughter of them,
women and children on the roads Man versus the motor-car! It is a never-ending
battle which man is losing Thousand of people the world over are killed or
horribly killed each year and we are quietly sitting back and letting it happen.
It has been rightly said that when a man is sitting behind a steering wheel, his
ear becomes the extension of his personality. There is no doubt that the
motor-car often brings out a man's very worst qualities. People who are normally
quiet and pleasant may become unrecognizable when they are behind steering
wheel. They swear, they are ill-mannered and aggressive, willful as
two-year-olds and utterly selfish. All their hidden frustrations,
disappointments and jealousies seem to be brought to the surface by the act of
driving. The surprising thing is that the society smiles so
gently on the motorist and seems to forgive his convenience. Cities are allowed
to become almost uninhabitable because of heavy traffic; towns are made ugly by
huge car parks; the countryside is desecrated by road networks; and the mass
annual slaughter becomes nothing more than a statistic, to be conveniently
forgotten It is high time a world code were created to reduce this senseless
waste of human life. With regard to driving, the laws of some countries are
notoriously lax and even the strictest are not strict enough. A code which was
universally accepted could only have a dramatically beneficial effect on the
accident rate. Here are a few examples of some of the things that might be done.
The driving test should be standardized and made for more difficult than it is;
all the drivers should be made to take a test every three years or so; the age
at which young people are allowed to drive any vehicle should be raised to at
least 21; all vehicles should be put through strict annual tests for safety.
Even the smallest amount of alcohol in the blood can impair a person's driving
ability. Present drinking and driving laws (where they exist) should be made
much stricter. Maximum and minimum speed limits should be imposed on all roads.
Governments should lay down safety specifications for manufacturers, as has been
done in the USA. All advertising stressing power and performance should he
banned. These measures may sound inordinately harsh. But surely nothing should
be considered as too severe if it results in reducing the annual toll of human
life. After all, the world is for human beings not for
motor-cars.
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Everybody dances. If you have
{{U}}(1) {{/U}} swerved to avoid stepping on a crack in the sidewalk,
you have danced. If you have ever kneeled to pray, you have danced. For these
actions have figured importantly {{U}}(2) {{/U}} the history of dance.
Dance goes {{U}}(3) {{/U}} to the beginnings of civilization—{{U}}
(4) {{/U}} the tribe—where natives danced to get {{U}}(5)
{{/U}} they wanted. Primitive dance was {{U}}(6) {{/U}} all
practical, not the social dancing we know today. Natives approached dance with
{{U}}(7) {{/U}} seriousness as a way to help the tribe in the crucial
process {{U}}(8) {{/U}} survival. Dance was believed to be the
{{U}}(9) {{/U}} direct way to repel locusts, to {{U}}(10) {{/U}}
rain to fall, to insure that a male heir would be born, and {{U}}(11)
{{/U}} guarantee victory in a forthcoming battle. Primitive
{{U}}(12) {{/U}} was generally done by many people moving in the same
manner and direction. {{U}}(13) {{/U}} all dances had leaders, solo
dances {{U}}(14) {{/U}} rare. Much use was made of {{U}}(15)
{{/U}} part of the body. And so {{U}}(16) {{/U}} were these tribal
dances that, if a native {{U}}(17) {{/U}} miss a single step, he would
be put to death {{U}}(18) {{/U}} the spot. Fortunately, the same rigid
{{U}}(19) {{/U}} that governed the lives of these people do not apply in
the {{U}}(20) {{/U}} relaxed settings of today's
discotheques.
单选题The question of whether war is inevitable is one, which has concerned many of the world's great writers. Before considering this question, it will be useful to introduce some related concepts. Conflict, defined as opposition among social entities directed against one another, is distinguished from competition, defined as opposition among social entities independently striving for something, which is in inadequate aupply. Competitors may not be aware of one another, while the parties to a conflict are. Conflict and competition are both categories of opposition, which has been defined as a process by which social entities function is the disservice of one another. Opposition is thus contrasted with cooperation, the process by which social entities function in the service of one another. These definitions are necessary because it is important to emphasize that competition between individuals or groups in inevitable in a world of limited resources, but conflict is not. Conflict, nevertheless, is very likely to occur, and is probably an essential and desirable element of human societies. Many authors have argued for the inevitability of war from the premise that in the struggle for existence among animal species, 0nly the fittest survive. In general, however, this struggle in nature is competition, not conflict. Social animals, such as monkeys and cattle, fight to win or maintain leadership of the group. The struggle for existence occurs not in such fights, but in the competition for limited feeding areas and for occupancy of areas free from meat-eating animals. Those who fail in this competition starve to death or become victims to other species. This struggle for existence does not resemble human war, but rather the competition of individuals for jobs, markets, and materials. The essence of the struggle is the competition for the necessities of life that are insufficient to satisfy all. Among nations there is competition in developing resources, trades, skills, and a satisfactory way of life. The successful nations grow and prosper; the unsuccessful decline. While it is true that this competition may induce efforts to expand territory at the expense of others, and thus lead to conflict, it cannot be said that war-like conflict among nations is inevitable, although competition is.
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单选题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} Read the following text. Choose the best
word (s) for each numbered blank and mark& B, C, and D on ANSWER SHEET 1.
The population of the United States is
only 6% the world's population, but Americans {{U}}(1) {{/U}} one third
of all the energy {{U}}(2) {{/U}} in the world. This fact alone says
that Americans need to use less energy. And because the price of energy had been
rising very rapidly {{U}}(3) {{/U}} the limited supplies of oil in
particular, Americans are becoming aware to the need to {{U}}(4) {{/U}}
energy. In California we have a California Energy Commission which has set up in
the past five years to {{U}}(5) {{/U}} plan for our future energy rise.
We have {{U}}(6) {{/U}} laws in California to help us conserve energy.
First of all, our houses in California have been very {{U}}(7) {{/U}} of
energy in the past. They were not {{U}}(8) {{/U}} very carefully and so
the heat would go out of the house very rapidly. Now we require that the homes
have a {{U}}(9) {{/U}} level of insulation, and so the homes built now
are much more {{U}}(10) {{/U}} {{U}} (11)
{{/U}}, in transportation {{U}}(12) {{/U}} a large percentage of oil
energy is used, we need to develop more public transportation. In China, of
course, you have a very good public-transportation system. And it is a (n)
{{U}}(13) {{/U}} for the kind of thing we need to develop more in the
United States. Automobiles are also becoming more {{U}}(14) {{/U}}
The smaller automobile with efficient engine can help to conserve a large
amount of energy along with planning our {{U}}(15) {{/U}} more
carefully. Many different studies have shown that we could
{{U}}(16) {{/U}} our energy consumption by {{U}}(17) {{/U}} half
or two thirds and still have the {{U}}(18) {{/U}} quality of life. And
many different types of technologies are currently being researched as to
{{U}}(19) {{/U}} they can be built to use 20 energy and
still supply the same service.
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单选题The advantage of telecities over megacities may include all the following EXCEPT
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单选题Mass production, the defining characteristic of the Second Wave economy, becomes increasingly obsolete as firms install information intensive, often robotized manufacturing systems capable of endless cheap variation, even customization. The revolutionary result is, in effect, the demassification of mass production. The shift toward smart flex techs promotes diversity and feeds consumer choice to the point that a Wal-Mart store can offer the buyer nearly 110,000 products in various types, sizes, models and colors to choose among. But Wal-Mart is a mass merchandiser. Increasingly, the mass market itself is breaking up into differentiated niches as customer needs diverge and better information makes it possible for businesses to identify and serve micro markets. Specialty stores, boutiques, superstores, TV home-shopping systems, computer based buying, direct mail and other systems provide a growing diversity of channels through which producers can distribute their wares to customers in an increasingly demassified marketplace. When we wrote Future Shock in the late 1960s, visionary marketers began talking about "market segmentation". Today they no longer focus on " segments" but on " particles "—family units and even single individuals. Meanwhile, advertising is targeted at smaller and smaller market segments reached through increasingly demassified media. The dramatic breakup of mass audiences is underscored by the crisis of the once great TV networks, ABC, CBS, and NBC, at a time when Tele-Communications, Inc. of Denver, announces a fiber optic network capable of providing viewers with five hundred interactive channels of television. Such systems mean that sellers will be able to target buyers with even greater precision. The simultaneous demassification of production, distribution and communication revolutionizes the economy and shifts it from homogeneity toward extreme heterogeneity.
单选题What seems to be the most important thing you have to decide on before a meeting starts? ______
单选题In his book
The Tipping Point
, Malcolm Gladwell argues that "social epidemics" are driven in large part by the actions of a tiny minority of special individuals, often called influentials, who are unusually informed, persuasive, or well-connected. The idea is intuitively compelling, but it doesn"t explain how ideas actually spread.
The supposed importance of influentials derives from a plausible-sounding but largely untested theory called the "two-step flow of communication": Information flows from the media to the influentials and from them to everyone else. Marketers have embraced the two-step flow because it suggests that if they can just find and influence the influentials, those selected people will do most of the work for them. The theory also seems to explain the sudden and unexpected popularity of certain looks, brands, or neighborhoods. In many such cases, a cursory search for causes finds that some small group of people was wearing, promoting, or developing whatever it is before anyone else paid attention. Anecdotal evidence of this kind fits nicely with the idea that only certain special people can drive trends.
In their recent work, however, some researchers have come up with the finding that influentials have far less impact on social epidemics than is generally supposed. In fact, they don"t seem to be required of all.
The researchers" argument stems from a simple observation about social influence: With the exception of a few celebrities like Oprah Winfrey—whose outsize presence is primarily a function of media, not interpersonal, influence—even the most influential members of a population simply don"t interact with that many others. Yet it is precisely these noncelebrity influentials who, according to the two-step-flow theory, are supposed to drive social epidemics, by influencing their friends and colleagues directly. For a social epidemic to occur, however, each person so affected must then influence his or her own acquaintances, who must in turn influence theirs, and so on; and just how many others pay attention to each of
these people
has little to do with the initial influential. If people in the network just two degrees removed from the initial influential prove resistant, for example the cascade of change won"t propagate very far or affect many people.
Building on the basic truth about interpersonal influence, the researchers studied the dynamics of social influence by conducting thousands of computer simulations of populations, manipulating a number of variables relating to people"s ability to influence others and their tendency to be influenced. They found that the principal requirement for what is called "global cascades"—the widespread propagation of influence through networks—is the presence not of a few influentials but, rather, of a critical mass of easily influenced people.
单选题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}}Readthefollowingtext.Choosethebestword(s)foreachnumberedblankandmarkA,B,CorDonANSWERSHEET1.SomeoftheconcernssurroundingTurkey'sapplicationtojointheEuropeanUnion,tobe{{U}}(1){{/U}}onbytheEU'sCouncilofMinistersonDecember17th,areeconomic—inparticular,thecountry'srelativepoverty.ItsGDPperheadislessthanathirdoftheaverageforthe15pre-2004membersoftheEU.{{U}}(2){{/U}}itisnotfaroffthatofLatvia—oneofthetennewmemberswhich{{U}}(3){{/U}}onMay1st2004,anditismuchthesameas{{U}}(4){{/U}}oftwocountries,BulgariaandRomania,whichthisweekconcluded{{U}}(5){{/U}}talkswiththeEUthatcouldmakethemfullmembersonJanuary1st2007.{{U}}(6){{/U}},thecountry'srecenteconomicprogresshasbeen,accordingtoDonaldJohnston,thesecretary-generaloftheOECD,stunning.GDPinthesecondquarteroftheyearwas13.4%higherthanayearearlier,a{{U}}(7){{/U}}ofgrowththatnoEUcountrycomescloseto{{U}}(8){{/U}}.Turkey's{{U}}(9){{/U}}ratehasjustfallenintosinglefiguresforthefirsttimesince1972,andthisweekthecountry{{U}}(10){{/U}}agreementwiththeIMFonanewthree-year,$10billioneconomicprogramthatwillhelpTurkey{{U}}(11){{/U}}inflationtowardEuropeanlevels,andenhancetheeconomy'sresilience.Resiliencehasnothistoricallybeenthecountry'seconomicstrongpoint.{{U}}(12){{/U}},throughoutthe1990sgrowthoscillatedlikeanelectrocardiogram{{U}}(13){{/U}}aviolentheartattack.This{{U}}(14){{/U}}hasbeenoneofthemainreasonswhythecountryhasfaileddismallytoattackmuch-neededforeigndirectinvestment.Itsstockofsuchinvestmentislowernowthanitwasinthe1980s,andannual{{U}}(15){{/U}}havescarcelyeverreached$1billion.Onedeterrenttoforeigninvestorsisdueto{{U}}(16){{/U}}onJanuary1st2005.Onthatday,Turkeywilltakeawaytherightofvirtuallyeveryoneofitscitizenstocallthemselvesamillionaire.Sixzeroswillberemovedfromthefacevalueofthelira(里拉,土耳其货币单位);oneunitofthelocal{{U}}(17){{/U}}willhenceforthbeworthwhatlmillionarenow—ie,about0.53(0.53欧元).Goodswillhavetobe{{U}}(18){{/U}}inboththenewandoldliraforthewholeoftheyear,{{U}}(19){{/U}}foreignbankersand{{U}}(20){{/U}}canbegintolookforwardtoatimeinTurkeywhentheywillnolongerhavetojugglementallywithindeterminatestringsofzeros.
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