单选题Sporting activities are essentially modified forms of hunting behavior. Viewed biologically, the modem foot-bailer is in reality a member of a hunting group. His killing weapon has turned into a harmless football and his prey (猎物) into a goalmouth. If his aim is accurate and he scores a goal, he enjoys the hunter's triumph of killing his prey. To understand how this transformation has taken place we must briefly look back at our forefathers. They spent over a million years evolving as cooperative hunters. Their very survival depended on success in the hunting-field. Under this pressure their whole way of life, even their bodies, became greatly changed. They became chasers, runners, jumpers, aimers, throwers and prey-killers. They cooperated as skillful male-group attackers. Then about ten thousand years ago, after this immensely long period of hunting their food, they became farmers. Their improved intelligence, so vital to their old hunting life, was put to a new use--that of controlling and domesticating their prey. The hunt became suddenly out of date. The food was there on the farms, awaiting their needs. The risks and uncertainties of the hunt were no longer essential for survival.
单选题Many new ______ will be opened up in the future for those with a
university education.
A. opportunities
B. realities
C. necessities
D. probabilities
单选题Many people invest in the stock market hoping to find the next Microsoft and Dell. However, I know (1) personal experience how difficult this really is. For more than a year, I was (2) hundreds and sometimes thousands of dollars a day investing in the market. It seemed so easy, I dreamed of (3) my job at the end of the year, of buying a small apartment in Paris, of travelling around the world. But these dreams (4) to a sudden and dramatic end when a stock I (5) , Texas cellular phone wholesaler, fell by more than 75 percent (6) a one-year period. On the (7) day, it plunged by more than $15 a share. There was a rumor the company was (8) sales figures. That was when I learned how quickly Wall Street (9) companies that misrepresent the (10)
单选题He (was) (born) in a (small) village in (the year) 1970.
单选题 I was addressing a small gathering in a suburban Virginia
living room—a women's group that had invited men to join them. Throughout the
evening, one man had been particularly talkative, frequently offering ideas and
anecdotes, while his wife sat silently beside him on the couch. Toward the end
of the evening, I commented that women frequently complain that their husbands
don't talk to them. This man quickly nodded in agreement. He gestured toward his
wife and said, "She's the talker in our family. " The room burst in laughter;
the man looked puzzled and hurt. "It's true," he explained. "When I come home
from work I have nothing to say. If she didn't keep the conversation going, we'd
spend the whole evening in silence. " This episode crystallizes
the irony that although American men tend to talk more than women in public
situations, they often talk less at home. And this pattern is wreaking havoc
with marriage. The pattern was observed by political scientist
Andrew Hacker in the late 1970s. Sociologist Catherine Kohler Riessman reports
in her book Divorce Talk that most of the women she interviewed-but only a few
of the men-gave lack of communication as the reason for their divorces. Given
the current divorce rate of nearly 50 percent, that amounts to millions of cases
in the United States every year--a virtual epidemic of failed
conversation. In my own research, complaints from women about
their husbands most often focused not on tangible inequities such as having
given up the chance for a career to accompany a husband to his, or doing far
more than their share of daily life--support work like cleaning, cooking and
social arrangements. Instead, they focused on communication years before, that
most wives want their husbands to be, first and foremost, conversational
partners, but few husbands share this expectation of their wives.
In short, the image that best represents the current crisis is the
stereotypical cartoon scene of a man sitting at the breakfast table with a
newspaper held up in front of his face, while a woman glares at the back of it,
wanting to talk.
单选题Hairdresser: How would you like to do your hair today? The same style as usual? Mrs. Lee: I have a special party to attend tonight, and I'd like to change styles. Hairdresser: Very well. You're not in a hurry, are you? Mrs. Lee: No. ______.
单选题Many businesses' promotion campaigns ______ because they never fulfill what they have said in their ads. A. pass away B. get by C. fall through D. give away
单选题Genghis Khan was not one to agonize over gender roles. He was into sex and power, and he didn't mind saying so. "The greatest joy a man can know is to conquer his enemies and drive them before him." The emperor once thundered. Genghis Khan conquered two thirds of the known world during the early 13th century and he may have set an all-time record for what biologists call reproductive success. An account written 33 years after his death credited him with 20,000 descendants. Men's manners have improved markedly since Genghis Khan's day. At heart, though, we're the same animals we were 800 years ago, which is to say we are status seekers. We may talk of equality and fraternity. We may strive for classless societies. But we go right on building hierarchies, and jockeying for status within them. Can we abandon the tendency? Probably not. As scientists are now discovering, status seeking is not just a habit or a cultural tradition. It's a design feature of the male psyche--a biological drive that is rooted in the nervous system and regulated by hormones and brain chemicals. How do we know this relentless one-upmanship is a biological endowment? Anthropologists find the same pattern virtually everywhere they 10ok and so do zoologists. Male competition is fierce among crickets, crayfish and elephants, and it's ubiquitous among higher primates, for example, male chimpanzees have an extraordinarily strong drive for dominance. Coincidence? Evolutionists don't think so. From their perspective, life is essentially a race to repro-duke, and natural selection is bound to favor different strategies in different organisms. In reproductive terms, they have vastly more to gain from it. A female can't flood the gene pool by commandeering extra mates; no matter how much sperm she attracts, she is unlikely to produce more than a dozen viable offspring. But as Genghis Khan's exploits make clear, males can profit enormously by out mating their peers. It's not hard to see how that dynamic, played out over millions of years, would leave modern men fretting over status. We're built from the genes that the most determined competitors passed down. Fortunately, we don't aspire to families of 800. As monogamy and contraceptives may have leveled the reproductive playfield, power has become its own psychological reward. Those who achieve high status still enjoy more sex with more partners than the rest of us, and the reason is no mystery. Researchers have consistently found that women favor signs of "earning capacity" over good looks. For sheer sex appeal, a doughy (脸色苍白的) bald guy in a Rolex will outscore a stud (非常英俊的男子) in a Burger King uniform almost every time.
单选题Man: ______ Woman: No... but it's a non-smoking
section, I'm afraid.
A. Cigarette?
B. Mind if I have a smoke here?
C. Is this a smoking zone?
D. Is smoking allowed in here?
单选题They hardly speak to each other nowadays, ______ they? A. don't B. do C. haven't D. have
单选题A: I'm afraid I have spilled some coffee on the tablecloth.
B: ______
A. Oh. don't worry about that.
B. You needn't apologize.
C. I feel sorry for that.
D. Oh. you shouldn't have done that.
单选题In the 1920s demand for American farm products fell, as European countries began to recover from World War I and instituted austerity (紧缩) programs to reduce their imports. The result was a sharp drop in farm prices. This period was more disastrous for farmers than earlier times had been, because farmers were no longer self-sufficient. They were paying for machinery, seed, and fertilizer, and they were also buying consumer goods. The prices of the items fanners bought remained constant, while prices they received for their products fell. These developments were made worse by the Great Depression, which began in 1929 and extended throughout the 1930s. In 1929, under President Herbert Hoover, the Federal Farm Board was organized. It established the principle of direct interference with supply and demand, and it represented the first national commitment to provide greater economic stability for farmers. President Hoover"s successor attached even more importance to this problem. One of the first measures proposed by President Franklin D. Roosevelt when he took office in 1933 was the Agricultural Adjustment Act, which was subsequently passed by Congress. This law was declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court on the grounds that general taxes were being collected to pay one special group of people. However, new laws were passed immediately that achieved the same result of resting soil and providing flood-control measures, but which were based on the principle of soil conservation. The Roosevelt Administration believed that rebuilding the nation"s soil was in the national interest and was not simply a plan to help farmers at the expense of other citizens. Later the government guaranteed loans to farmers so that they could buy farm machinery, hybrid (杂交) grain, and fertilizers. (287 words)
单选题 The question of ethics in the legal profession is
one that has plagued the industry since its inception. The common image of an
attorney is one who will resort to any unethical trick to twist the laws to fit
his purposes. In the more specific industry of criminal law, defense attorneys
are often criticized for advocating on behalf of defendants who are "obviously
guilty," thus becoming roadblocks on the path to justice. Much to the contrary,
however, defense attorneys provide a valuable serve that should earn them
praise, not scorn. While it is true that every lawyer will do
everything within his power to interpret the laws in the manner most beneficial
to his client, such a characterization is by no means limited to defense
attorneys. The prosecutor will do the same thing, employing all his legal
knowledge and know-how to establish the guilt of the defendant. In this respect,
the vague nature of the law is highlighted, and it becomes a virtual necessity
for each side to use every tool at their disposal, on the assumption that the
other side will also use every tool at his. The net result emerges as a
positive, in which the tricks of the opposing attorneys cancel one another out,
leaving only the truth, clearer and devoid of manipulation, presented for the
jury's consideration. Further, the defense attorney is a vital
element of the American judicial system, in that without him the defendant would
stand no chance whatsoever. Under the constitution, even the most "obvious
guilty" defendants are guaranteed the right to a fair trial, involving someone
able and willing to advocate on his behalf. Of course, there are bad apples in
the industry who are unethical and care nothing for actual justice, and whose
only concerns are their wallets. Generally speaking, however, without defense
attorneys, the system would crumble into a mere machine in which defendants are
assumed guilty, without a chance to argue or prove otherwise, and many innocent
people falsely charged with crimes would be severely punished for transgressions
that they didn't commit. It is a basic fact that the adversarial
system of justice in the United States is necessary in order to ensure the
fairest and most unbiased presentation and evaluation of the facts possible.
Without defense attorneys, that system cannot be carried out, and would result
in a loss of the civil liberties that the nation enjoys and treasures. To that
end, all of those who make that process a reality, including defense attorneys,
deserve our support and admiration, not our suspicion and disdain.
单选题Salt, shells or metals are still used as money in out-of-the-way parts of the world today. Salt may seem rather a strange (1) to use as money, (2) in countries where the food of the people is mainly vegetable, it is often an (3) necessity. Cakes of salt, stamped to show their (4) , were used as money in some countries until recent (5) , and cakes of salt (6) buy goods in Borneo and Darts of Africa. Sea shells (7) as money at some time (8) another over the greater part of the Old World. These were (9) mainly from the beaches of the Maldives Islands in the Indian Ocean, and were traded to India and China. In Africa, shells were traded fight across the (10) from East to West. Metal, valued by weight, (11) coins in many parts of the world. Iron, in lumps, bars or rings, is still used in many countries (12) paper money. It can either be exchanged (13) goods, or made into tools, weapons, or ornaments. The early money of China, apart from shells, was of bronze, (14) in flat, round pieces with a hole in the middle, called "cash". The (15) of these are between three thousand and four thousand years old-older than the earliest coins of the eastern Mediterranean. Nowadays, coins and notes have (16) nearly all the more picturesque (17) of money, and (18) in one or two of the more remote countries people still keep it for future use on ceremonial (19) such as weddings and funerals, examples of (20) money will soon be found only in museums.
单选题{{B}}Passage Two{{/B}}
Each semester, Andrew Tom receives a
term bill outlining his expenses: tuition, dorm fee, student center fee,
recreation fee, resident activity fee, health insurance. {{U}}If only the rest of
his expenses were as easy to quantify.{{/U}} "It's like you start
out the semester with plenty of money and then $ 20 for dinner out here and $100
at the department store there, it's gone," said Tom, a Northeastern University
third-year student. "And there are so many things you need like toothpaste or
laundry detergent (洗涤剂) that you don't think about until you get here and need
it." From the books lining their shelves to the fashionable
clothes filling their closets, college students say the expenses of a college
education go well beyond tuition and a dining hall meal plan. Many say they
arrive on campus only to be overwhelmed by unexpected costs from sports fees to
the actual price of a slice of pizza. Balancing a job with
schoolwork, especially at colleges known for their heavy workloads like Harvard
and MIT, can be tough. So can the pressure students often feel to financially
keep pace with their friends. "When you get dragged along
shopping, you're going to spend money; if you get dragged to a party and
everyone wants to take a cab but you're {{U}}cheap{{/U}} and want to take a bus.
Chances are you"ll end up sharing the fee for the cab," said Tom. "I guess you
could say no, but no one wants to be the only one eating in the snack bar while
your friends are ont to dinner. " Max Cohen, a biology major at
MIT, said he is accustomed to watching fellow students spend $ 40 a night to
have dinner delivered or $ 50 during a night out at a bar. During the school's
recent spring break, friends on trips for the week posted away messages that
read like a world map—Paris, Rome, Tokyo. "Meanwhile I stay home and work," said
Cohen. "I didn't realize when I came here how much money I would spend or how
hard I would have to work to get by." It is a lesson some
younger students learn quickly. Others, surrounded by credit card offers, go
into debt, or worse, are forced to leave school. "A lot of
people don't think twice about how much they spend," said a first-year student
at MIT, "and you feel the pressure sometimes to go along with
them."
单选题Directions: In this part there are three passages and four
advertisements. Each passage and the four advertisements are followed by five
questions or unfinished statements. For each of them, there are four suggested
answers. Choose the one that you think is the best answer. Mark your answer on
the ANSWER SHEET by drawing with a pencil a short bar across the corresponding
letter in the brackets. Once, Angela shared
her feelings about money, "Money worries me. I think ! intend to live without
money because I HATE MONEY. " We were all touched by her words as they reminded
us of the spiritual burdens that money managing can bring to us. Later I offered
to help Angela deal with her financial problems. She hesitated to accept my
offer, and I could see she was afraid of what it might involve. I quickly
assured her that 1 wouldn't make her do more than she was able to. I told her
frankly that I wouldn't burden her with guilt, judgements, or impossible tasks.
All I would ask her to do was to let me help her look at her fears and try to
make some sense of them. Angela still resisted my offer, and I
can remember the excuses she gave me as the repeated complaints I had heard from
so many people. "I'll never understand money", "I don't deserve to have money. "
and the most devastating one of all, "I just can't do it. "
Angela's attitude conveyed the same negativity and fear that I believed annoyed
many people. I was sure it was this attitude that prevented people from managing
their money effectively. My counseling has taught me that these anxieties are
inseparably connected to our self-doubts and fear for survival. At a deeper
level we know that money is not the source of life, but sense of worth that
drives us to act as if it were. It locks us up in self-doubts and prevents us
from tapping into the true source of our management power and spirit.
单选题Richard Satava, program manager for advanced medical technologies, has been a driving force in bringing virtual reality to medicine, where computers create a "virtual" or simulated environment for surgeons and other medical practitioners (从业者). "With virtual reality we"ll be able to put a surgeon in every trench," said Satava. He envisaged a time when soldiers who are wounded fighting overseas are put in mobile surgical units equipped with computers. The computers would transmit images of the soldiers to surgeons back in the U.S. The surgeons would look at the soldier through virtual reality helmets (头盔) that contain a small screen displaying the image of the wound. The doctors would guide robotic instruments in the battlefield mobile surgical unit that operate on the soldier. Although Satava"s vision may be years away from standard operating procedure, scientists are progressing toward virtual reality surgery. Engineers at an international organization in California are developing a tele-operating device. As surgeons watch a three-dimensional image of the surgery, they move instruments that are connected to a computer, which passes their movements to robotic instruments that perform the surgery. The computer provides feedback to the surgeon on force, textures, and sound. These technological wonders may not yet be part of the community hospital setting but increasingly some of the machinery is finding its way into civilian medicine. At Wayne State University Medical School, surgeon Lucia Zamorano takes images of the brain from computerized scans and uses a computer program to produce a 3-D image. She can then maneuver the 3-D image on the computer screen to map the shortest, least invasive surgical path to the tumor (肿瘤). Zamorano is also using technology that attaches a probe to surgical instruments so that she can track their positions. While cutting away a tumor deep in the brain, she watches the movement of her surgical tools in a computer graphics image of the patient"s brain taken before surgery. During these procedures—operations that are done through small cuts in the body in which a miniature camera and surgical tools are maneuvered—surgeons are wearing 3-D glasses for a better view. And they are commanding robot surgeons to cut away tissue more accurately than human surgeons can. Satava says, "We are in the midst of a fundamental change in the field of medicine. " (392 words )
单选题We didn't know his telephone number, otherwise we ______ him. A. had telephoned B. must have telephoned C. would telephone D. would have telephoned
单选题Jim: What do you think of the movie? Mary: ______.
A. I had no idea about it.
B. Oh, you've already seen that movie.
C. We should go to see it together tomorrow.
D. It was worth neither the time nor the money.
单选题I cannot ______ you a good post.
