单选题On the local market, ______ fruits and vegetables are now commonly
sold.
A. exotic
B. enough
C. limited
D. famous
单选题______ the whole story, Jane decided not to see the film.
A. Having been told
B. Having told
C. Been told
D. Telling
单选题Since any answer may bring______to his govenrnent the spokesman tried to avoid the question.
单选题People appreciate ______ with him because he has a good sense of humor.
单选题In order to raise the efficiency of the water supply, measures should be taken to______.
单选题Passage Two In some countries where racial prejudice is acute, violence has so come to be taken for granted as a means of solving differences, that it is not even questioned. There are countries where the white man imposes his rule by brute force; there are countries where the black man protests by setting fire to cities and by looting and pillaging. Important people on both sides, who would in other respects appear to be reasonable men, get up and calmly argue in favor of violence—as if it were a legitimate solution, like any other. What is really frightening, what really fills you with despair, is the realization that when it comes to the crunch, we have made no actual progress at all. We may wear collars and ties instead of war-paint, but our instinct remain basically unchanged. The whole of the recorded history of the human race, that tedious documentation of violence, has taught us absolutely nothing. We have still not learnt that violence never solves a problem but makes it more acute. The sheer horror, the bloodshed, the suffering means nothing. No solution ever comes to light the morning after when we dismally contemplate the smoking ruins and wonder what hit us. The truly reasonable men who know where the solutions lie are finding it harder and harder to get a hearing. They are despised, mistrusted and even persecuted by their own kind because they advocate such apparently outrageous things as law enforcement. If half the energy that goes into violent acts were put to good use, if our efforts were directed at cleaning up the slums and ghettos, at improving living-standards and providing education and employment for all, we would have gone a long way to arriving at a solution. Our strength is sapped by having to mop up the mess that violence leaves in its wake. In a well-directed effort, it would not be impossible to fulfill the ideals of a stable social program. The benefits that can be derived from constructive solutions are everywhere apparent in the world around us. Genuine and lasting solutions are always possible, providing we work within the framework of the law. Before we can even begin to contemplate peaceful co-existence between the races, we must appreciate each other's problems. And to do this, we must learn about them: it is a simple exercise in communication, in exchanging information. "Talk, talk, talk," the advocates of violence say, "all you ever do is talk, and we are none the wiser." It's rather like the story of the famous barrister who painstakingly explained his case to the judge. After listening to a lengthy argument the judge complained that after all this talk, he was none the wiser. "Possibly, my Lord," the barrister replied, "none the wiser, but surely far better informed." Knowledge is the necessary prerequisite to wisdom: the knowledge that violence creates the evils it pretends to solve.
单选题Passage Three Successful businesses tend to continue implementing the ideas that made them successful. But in a rapidly changing world, ideas often become obsolete overnight. What worked in the past won't necessarily work in the future. In order to thrive in the future, you must constantly create new ideas for every aspect of your business. In fact, you must continually generate new ideas just to keep your head above water. Businesses that aren't creative about their future may not survive. Although Bill Gates is the richest, most successful man on the planet, he did not anticipate the Internet. Now he's scrambling to catch up. If Bill Gates can miss a major aspect of his industry, it can happen to you in your industry. Your business needs to continually innovate and create its future. Gates is now constantly worried about the future of Microsoft. Here's what he said in a recent interview in U.S. News World Report: "Will we be replaced tomorrow? No. In a very short time frame, Microsoft is an incredibly strong company. But when you look to the two-to-three-year time frame, I don't think anyone can say with a straight face that any technology company has a guaranteed position. Not Intel, not Microsoft, not Compaq, not Dell, take any of your favorites. And that's totally honest." You may remember that in 1985 the Cabbage Patch Kids dolls were the best-selling toy on the market. But after Coleco Industries introduced their sensational line of dolls they became complacent and didn't create any new toys worth mentioning. As a result. Coleco went bankrupt in 1988. The most successful businesses survive in the long term because they constantly reassess their situations and reinvest themselves accordingly. The 3M Company has a 15% rule: employees are encouraged to spend 15% of their time developing new ideas on any project they desire; it's no surprise, then, that 3M has been around since 1902. Most businesses are not willing to tear apart last year's model of success and build a new one. Here's a familiar analogy to explain why they are lulled into complacency: imagine that your business is like a pot of lobsters; to cook lobsters, you put them into a pot of warm water and gradually turn up the heat; the lobsters don't realize they're being cooked because the process is so gradual. As a result, they become complacent and die without a struggle. However, if you throw a lobster into the pot when the water is boiling, it will desperately try to escape. This lobster is not lulled by a slowly changing environment. It realizes instantly that it's in a bad environment and takes immediate action to change its status.
单选题A:I have no idea where to go in the Spring break. Got any
suggestions? B: I'm not sure. ______
A. I'd go for some brochures in the travel agency.
B. If you have money, you can go anywhere.
C. Pm not going anywhere in particular.
D. I'd appreciate it if you can consult the ads in the Papers.
单选题The (scientific) revolution of the early 1900s (affected) education by (change) the nature of (technology).
单选题Betsy: Do you like these apricots?
Randolph: ______
单选题Some companies have introduced ______ working time with less emphasis on pressure and more on efficiency. A. rigid B. limited C. flexible D. strict
单选题
单选题______ difficulties we may come across, we'll help one another to overcome them. A. Wherever B. Whatever C. However D. Whenever
单选题{{B}}21-25{{/B}}
No woman can be too rich or too thin.
This saying often attributed to the late Duchess (公爵夫人 )of Windsor embodies much
of the odd spirit of our times. Being thin is deemed as such a virtue.
The problem with such a view is that some people actually attempt to live
by it. I myself have fantasies of slipping into narrow designer clothes.
Consequently, I have been on a diet for the better—or worse—part of my life.
Being rich wouldn't be bad either, but that won't happen unless an unknown
relative dies suddenly in some distant land, leaving me millions of
dollars. Where did we go off the track? When did eating butter
become a sin, and a little bit of extra flesh unappealing, if not repellent? All
religions have certain days when people refrain from eating, and excessive
eating is one of Christianity's seven deadly sins. However, until quite
recently, most people had a problem getting enough to eat. In some religious
groups, wealth was a symbol of probable salvation and high morals, and fatness a
sign of wealth and well-being. Today the opposite is tree. We
have shifted to thinness as our new mark of virtue. The result is that being
fat—or even only somewhat overweight--is bad because it implies a lack of moral
strength: Our obsession (迷恋) with thinness is also fueled by
health concerns. It is true that in this country we have more overweight people
than ever before, and that, in many cases, being overweight correlates with an
increased risk of heart and blood vessel disease. These diseases, however, may
have as much to do with our way of life and our high-fat diets as with excess
weight. And the associated risk of cancer in the digestive system may be more of
a dietary problem--too much fat and a lack of fiber--than a weight
problem. The real concern, then, is not that we weigh too much,
but that we neither exercise enough nor eat well. Exercise is necessary for
strong bones and both heart and lung health. A balanced diet without a lot of
fat can also help the body avoid many diseases. We should surely stop paying so
much attention to weight. Simply being thin is not enough. It is actually
hazardous if those who get (or already are) thin think they are automatically
healthy and thus free from paying attention to their overall life-style.
Thinness can be pure vainglory (虚荣).
单选题Text 5 Resistance to the 1954 United States Supreme Court decision terminating segregation placed the schools in the middle of a bitter and sometimes violent dispute. By 1965, when a measure of genuine integration had become a reality in many school districts, the schools again found themselves in the eye of a stormy controversy. This time the question was not which children were going to what schools but what kind of education society should provide for the students; the goal of high academic performance, which had been revived by criticisms and reforms of the 1950s and early 1960s, began to be challenged by demands for more liberal and free schooling. Many university and some high-school students from all ethnic groups and classes had been growing more and more frustrated--some of them desperately so--over what they felt was a cruel and senseless war in Vietnam and a cruel, discriminatory, competitive, loveless society at home. They demanded curriculum reform, improved teaching methods, and greater stress and action on such problems as overpopulation, pollution, international strife, deadly weaponry, and discrimination. Pressure for reform came not only from students but also from many educators. While students and educators alike spoke of the greater need for what was taught, opinions as to what was relevant varied greatly. The blacks wanted new textbooks in which their people were recognized and fairly represented, and some of them wanted courses in black studies. They, and many white educators, also objected to culturally biased intelligence and aptitude tests and to academic college entrance standards and examinations. Such tests, they said, did not take into account the diverse backgrounds of students who belonged to ethnic minorities and whose culture was therefore different from that of the white middle-class student. Whites and blacks alike also wanted a curriculum that touched more closely on contemporary social problems and teaching methods that recognized their existence as individual human beings rather than as faceless robots competing for grades. Alarmed by the helplessness and hopelessness of the urban ghetto schools, educators began to insist on curricula and teaching methods flexible enough to provide for differences in students' social and ethnic backgrounds. Moreover, for educational reformers the urban ghetto school became a symbol of a general failure of American education to accomplish the goal of individual development. Also reminiscent of those decades were the child-centered schools that sprang up in the later 1960s as alternatives to and examples for the traditional schools. The clash between the academically and the humanistically oriented schools of thought, therefore, was in many ways one more encounter in the continuing battle between conservatives and liberals.
单选题If the work ______ by the end of the month is delayed, the construction company will be fined. A. to be completed B. will be completed C. has been completed . D. being completed
单选题{{B}}16-20{{/B}}
China's employment and re-employment
situation remains tough with a surge this year in the number of graduates
hitting the job market and in unemployment in general, a senior official
said. The country's registered average unemployment rate in
urban areas reached 4 per cent last year and is expected to go higher this year,
Labour and Social Security Minister Zheng Silin told Xinhua yesterday.
There are nearly 14 million laid-off workers in urban areas so far. And
more than 10 million new graduates are predicted to enter the work force Zheng
said. To make things worse, about 150 million rural workers
will head to the cities to seek employment, he said. Zheng, who
was appointed as the minister during the first session of the 10th National
People's Congress in March, has urged his departments nationwide to do more to
assist laid-off workers to restart their lives.
单选题(At a party) Adam: This is a great apartment. Tammy: I think so, too.______? Adam: No, I'm Adam. I came with Carl. I don't really know anyone here. Carl's told me about most of his friends, but I can't match the names with the faces.
单选题 One thing almost everyone is agreed on, including
Americans, is that they place a very high valuation upon success. Success does
not necessarily mean material rewards, but recognition of some sort-preferably
measurable. If a boy turn out to be a preacher(传真者) instead of a businessman,
that's all right. But the bigger his church is, the more successful he is judged
to be. A good many things contributed to this accent on
success. There was the Puritan(清教徒) belief in the virtue of work, both for its
own sake and because the rewards it brought were regarded as signs of God's
love. There was the richness of opportunity in a land waiting to be settled.
There was the lack of a settled society with fixed ranks and classes, so that a
man was certain to rise through achievement. Here was the determination of an
immigrant to gain in the new world what had been denied to him in the old, and
on the part of his children an urge to throw off the immigrant(负担) by still more
success and still more rise in a fluid and classless society. Brothers did not
compete within the family for the favor of the parents as in Europe, but worked
hard for success in the outer world, along paths of their own choosing.
单选题Jessie: Oh boy. I don't think I can ever figure the problem
out. Peter: ______
A. Do you want to talk about it?
B. It took me 5 minutes to work it out.
C. I'm sorry to hear that.
D. Do you need some help?
