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英语二
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单选题When the child was ______ milk, he became very thin and sick.
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单选题The child is clearly very disturbed emotionally and may require long-term therapy.
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单选题A national debate is now ______ about whether we should replace golden weeks with paid vacations.
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单选题The songs of Bob Dylan are very popular among young people, who regard him other musicians.
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单选题"Do you know her?" " ______I remember______"
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单选题Real policemen hardly recognize any resemblance (类同之处)between their lives and what they see on TV--if they ever get home in time. There are similarities, of course, but the cops(警官) don't think much of them. The first difference is that a policeman's real life revolves round the law. Most of his training is in criminal law. He has to know exactly what actions are crimes and what evidence can be used to prove them in court. He has to know nearly as much law as a professional lawyer, and what is more, he has to apply it on his feet, in the dark and rain, running down an alley after someone he wants to talk to. Little of his time is spent in chatting to scanty-clad ([穿衣不多的) ladies or in dramatic confrontations with desperate criminals. He will spend most of his working life typing millions of words on thousands of forms about hundreds of sad, unimportant people who are guilt or not--of stupid, petty crimes.
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单选题—I’m told John’s mother is ill.   —________.
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单选题In divorce cases, the welfare of the children must be our primary concern.
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单选题What can we infer from Zhang Yashan's statement in Para. 2?
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单选题Even plants can run a fever, especially when they're under attack by insects or disease. But unlike humans, plants can have their temperature taken from 3,000 feet away--straight up. A decade ago, adapting the infrared scanning technology developed for military purposes and other satellites, physicist Stephen Paley came up with a quick way to take the temperature of crops to determine which ones are under stress. The goal was to let farmers precisely target pesticide (杀虫剂) spraying rather than rain poison on a whole field, which invariably includes plants that don't have pest (害虫) problems. Even better, Paley's Remote Scanning Services Company could detect crop problems before they became visible to the eye. Mounted on a plane flown at 3,000 feet at night, an infrared scanner measured the heat emitted by crops. The data were transformed into a color-coded map showing where plants were running "fevers". Farmers could then spot-spray, using 40 to 70 percent less pesticide than they otherwise would. The bad news is that Paley's company closed down in 1984, after only three years. Farmers resisted the new technology and long-term backers were hard to find. But with the renewed concern about pesticides on produce, and refinements in infrared scanning, Paley hopes to get back into operation. Agriculture experts have no doubt the technology works. "This technique can be used on 75 percent of agricultural land in the United States, "says George Oerther of Texas A&M. Ray Jackson, who recently retired from the Department of Agriculture, thinks? remote infrared crop scanning could be adopted by the end of the decade. But only if Paley finds the financial backing which he failed to obtain 10 years ago.
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单选题Customer. I'd like to send this gift to a friend in Italy. Clerk: ______ A. Have you got anything to declare? B. How nice! C. I'm pleased to service you. D. Could you fill out this form?
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单选题FedExServiceRestrictionsU.S.EXPRESSFREIGHTINTERNATIONALEXPRESSFREIGHTINTERNATIONALAIRCARGO1or2DayFreight3DayFreightInternationalPriorityFreightorEconomyFreightInternationalPremiumorExpressFreightInternationalAirporttoAirportMinimumweightperpieceorshipment68kg68kg68kgNominimumrestrictionsNominimumrestrictionsMaximumweightperpiece997kg997kg997kg997kg997kgMaximumlengthPlusgirthperpiece762cm762cm762cm762cm762cmMaximumlengthperpiece302cm122cm302cm302cm302cmMaximumheightperpiece178cm178cm178cm178cm178cm
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单选题Despite all the heated ______ they had, they remained the best of friends throughout their lives. A. viewpoints B. standpoints C. differences D. arguments
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单选题All of us would have enjoyed the party much more if there ______ quite such a crowd of people there. A. weren't B. hasn't been C. hadn't been D. wouldn't be
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单选题It is stated in the passage that in Russia and China ______.
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单选题 Directions: For each blank in the following passage, choose the best answer from the choices given below. Mark your answer on the ANSWER SHEET by drawing with a pencil a short bar across the corresponding letter in the brackets. When television first began to expand, very few of the people who had become famous as radio commentators were able to be effective on television. Some of the difficulties they experienced when were trying to {{U}}(31) {{/U}} themselves to the new medium were technical. When working on radio, for example, they had become {{U}}(32) {{/U}} to seeing on behalf of the listener. This {{U}}(33) {{/U}} of seeing for others means that the commentator has to be very good at talking. Above all, he has to be able to {{U}}(34) {{/U}} a continuous sequence of visual images which {{U}}(35) {{/U}} meaning to the sounds which the listener hears. In the {{U}}(36) {{/U}} of television, however, the commentator sees everything with the viewer. His role, therefore, is completely different. He is there to make {{U}}(37) {{/U}} that the viewer does not miss some point of interest, to help him focus on particular things, and to {{U}}(38) {{/U}} the images on the television screen. Unlike his radio colleague, he must know the {{U}}(39) {{/U}} of silence and how to use it at those moments {{U}}(40) {{/U}} the pictures speak for themselves.
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单选题{{B}}Part A{{/B}}Directions : Read the following four passages. Answer the questions blow each passage by choosing A, B, C and D. {{B}}Text 1{{/B}} Less than 40 years ago in the United States, it was common to change a one-dollar bill for a dollar's worth of silver. That is because the coins were actually made of silver. But those days are gone. There is no silver in today's coins. When the price of the precious metal rises above its face value as money, the metal will become more valuable in other uses. Silver coins are no longer in circulation because the silver in coins is worth much more than their face value. A silver firm could find that it is cheaper to obtain silver by melting down coins than by buying it on the commodity markets. Coins today are made of an alloy of cheaper metals. Gresham's Law, named after Sir Thomas Gresham, argues that "good money" is driven out of circulation by "bad money". Good money differs from bad money because it has higher commodity value. Gresham lived in the 16th century in England where it was common for gold and silver coins to be debased. Governments did this by mixing cheaper metals with gold and silver. The governments could thus make a profit in coinage by issuing coins that had less precious metal than the face value indicated. Because different mixings of coins had different amounts of gold and silver, even though they bore the same face value, some coins were worth more than others as commodities. People who dealt with gold and silver could easily see the difference between the "good" and the "had" money. Gresham observed that coins with a higher content of gold and silver were kept rather than being used in exchange, or were melted down for their precious metal. In the mid-1960s when the U. S. issued new coins to replace silver coins, Gresham's law went right in action.
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单选题Children's intelligence, music ability, physical endurance, etc. ______ enormously from individual to individual.
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单选题There is widespread speculation that he is going to resign.
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单选题 Most of the people who appear most often and most gloriously in the history books are great conquerors and generals and soldiers, whereas the people who really helped civilization forward are often never mentioned at all. We do not know who first set a broken leg, or launched a seaworthy boat, or calculated the{{U}} (31) {{/U}}of the year, or manured a field; but we know{{U}} (32) {{/U}}about the killers and destroyers. People think a great deal of them, so{{U}} (33) {{/U}}so that on all the highest pillars in the great cities of the world you will find the figure of a conqueror or a general or a soldier. And I think most people believe that the greatest countries are{{U}} (34) {{/U}}that have beaten in battle the greatest number of other countries and ruled over them as conquerors. It is just possible they are,{{U}} (35) {{/U}}they are not the most civilized. Animals fight; so do savages; hence to be good at fighting is to be good in the way in{{U}} (36) {{/U}}an animal or a savage is good, but it is not to be civilized. Even being good at getting other people to fight for you and{{U}} (37) {{/U}}them how to do it most efficiently — this, after all, is{{U}} (38) {{/U}}conquerors and generals have done -- is not being civilized. People fight to settle quarrels. Fighting means killing, and civilized peoples ought to be able to find some way of settling their disputes other{{U}} (39) {{/U}}by seeing which side can kill off the greater number of other side, and then{{U}} (40) {{/U}}that that side which has killed most has won.
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