单选题Lisa made a lot of effort to persuade her father into ______ to her going to the United States to study business administration.
单选题When snow {{U}}collects{{/U}} on top of a building during the winter, the weight sometimes weakens the construction and occasionally causes the roof to collapse.
单选题{{U}}Accommodations{{/U}} must be made for students with learning disabilities.
单选题These students' determination to Uface up to/U difficulties plays a crucial role in their success.
单选题Still happily together, Mayer Solen and Joann Oakes credit Senior-Net for "introducing" them not only to each other but also to a world of computer-literate over-60 s. "Senior-Net offers a forum where senior citizens can talk freely, help each other, and even console each other," Joann says. "Even though we are scattered across the country, we can share thoughts, opinions and concerns about issues that affect us. It's like a big family. When Mayer and I travel around the country, we make it a point to look up other Senior-Net members." Mary Furlong, founder of the 10-years-old network, says it is a painless way to socialize, especially for those recently widowed and reluctant to go out alone, and for the disabled. Senior-Net has more then 6 000 members across the United States. Joann Oakes and Mayer Solen fell for each other just before Christmas in 1991. She had been watching from a distance as Mr. Solen flitted from one group of friends to another. Finally, the two began a conversation. They discovered they were both widowed. They talked on and on. At midnight, they said good night, turned off their computers and went to bed, Mr. Solen in the south-western state of Nevada, and Mrs. Oakes in the north-western state of Washington. From then on they talked nearly every day via their computers until their marriage. Computers are playing Cupid for what seems to be an unlikely target—a generation that didn't know the difference between a mouse and a modem until they reached 60. Now, older adults are plugged in to exchange gardening tips, debate religion ,or try to recall the lines of old time popular songs. The marriage between seniors and computers is, in fact, perfectly natural. They grew up in a time when people wrote weekly letters to each other and kept journals and diaries. A computer is an easier way to do the same. With no risk of censure or rejection, grandfathers can let their hair down. Church-going people confess they are not really sure what they think about religion. People who always thought of themselves as conserved and "respectable" may be found flirting shamelessly with correspondents who live 500 miles away. If anyone dislikes the company or the discussion, they don't have to be polite. "Just hit the control button and you're gone," says Joann Oakes.
单选题The human ear admits only a very limited range of frequencies.
单选题Courageous people think quickly and act without Uhesitation/U.
单选题A: John, you didn't show up at my birthday party last night. B: ______.
单选题There is never any need to feel (shameless) or even childish (in wanting) (to move on) (to) new experiences.
单选题As the global village continues to shrink and cultures collide, it is essential for all of us to become more sensitive, more aware of, and more observant to the body language (motions/gestures) that surround us each day. And as many of us cross over cultural borders, it would be fitting for us to respect, learn, and understand more about the effective and powerful "silent language" of gestures. Without gestures, our world would be static and colorless. The social anthropologists, Edward T. Hall claims 60 percent of all our communication is nonverbal. In that case, how can we possibly communicate with one another without gestures? The world is a giddy montage (蒙太奇) of vivid gestures--the ones used by traffic police, street vendors, expressway drivers, teachers, children on playground and athletes with their exuberant (热情洋溢的) hugging, clenched fists and "high fives". People all over the world use their hands, heads, and bodies to communicate expressively. Gestures and body language communicate as effectively as words- maybe even more effectively. We use gestures daily, almost instinctively, from beckoning to a waiter, or punctuating a business presentation with visual signals to airport ground attendants guiding an airline pilot into the jet-way or a parent using a whole dictionary of gestures to teach a child. Gestures are woven into our social lives. The "vocabulary" of gestures can be at once informative and entertaining...but also dangerous. Gestures can be menacing, warm, instructive, or even sensuous. Bear in mind that some gestures are in general use, but there may always be exceptions. In recent years, Western and contemporary values and ideas have become more popular and have either influenced, altered, and even replaced, some of the more traditional gestures. Understanding human behavior is tricky stuff. No two people behave in precisely the same way. Nor do people from the same culture all perform exactly the same gestures and body language uniformly. For almost any gestures there will probably be a minority within a given nationality who might say, "Well, some might attach that meaning to it, but to me it means..." and then they will provide a different interpretation. In the world of gestures, the best single piece of advice is to remember the two A's--"ask" and be "aware". If you see a motion or gesture that is new or confusing, ask a local person what it signifies. Then, be aware of the many body signs and customs around you.
单选题{{B}}Passage Four{{/B}}
For more than 10 years there has been a
bigger rise in car crime than in most other types of crime. An average of more
than two cars a minute are broken into, vandalized (破坏) or stolen in the UK. Car
crime accounts for almost a third of all reported offences with no signs that
the trend is slowing down. Although there are highly
professional criminals involved in car theft, almost 90 percent of car crime is
committed by the opportunist. Amateur thieves are aided by our carelessness.
When the Automobile Association (AA) engineers surveyed one town centre car park
last year, 10 percent of cars checked were unlocked, a figure backed up by a
Home Office national survey that found 12 percent of drivers sometimes left
their cars unlocked. The vehicles are sitting in petrol stations
while drivers pay for their fuel. The AA has discovered that cars are left
unattended for an average of three minutes and sometimes much longer as drivers
buy drinks, cigarettes and other consumer items and then pay at the counter.
With payment by credit card more and more common, it is not unusual for a driver
to be out of his car as long as six minutes providing the car thief with a
golden opportunity. In an exclusive AA survey, carried out at a
busy garage on a main road out of London, 300 motorists were questioned over
three days of the holiday period. 24 percent admitted that they "always" or
"sometimes" leave the keys in the car. This means that nationwide, a million
cars daily become easy targets for the opportunist thief. The AA
recommends locking up whenever you leave the car--and for however short a
period. A partially open sunroof or window is a further come-on to
thieves. Leaving valuables in view is an invitation to the
criminal. A Manchester probationary (假释期) service research project, which
interviewed almost 100 car thieves last year, found many would investigate a
coat thrown on a seat. Never leave any documents showing your home address in
the car. If you have a garage, use it and lock it--a garaged car is at
substantially less risk. There are many other traps to avoid.
The Home Office has found little awareness among drivers about safe parking.
Most motorists questioned made no efforts to avoid parking in quiet spots away
from street lights just the places thieves love. The AA advises drivers to park
in places with people around m thieves do not like
audiences.
单选题The president devoted his (energies) to (update) the curricula, (making) the education offered at Washington College as meaningful (as possible).
单选题{{B}}Passage One{{/B}}
Passage One I have an
infatuation(迷恋)with autumn. The colors of the season, and the smells, have
always thrilled me. I have always found joy in this time of year. The last few
autumns of my life, however, I recollect in shades of gray rather than cheerful
oranges and yellows. When I became a single mother, every aspect
of life took on new meaning. Since I was used to carrying out most of the
parental duties without much help during my marriage, I truly did not foresee
how different parenting would become after the marriage was over. But suddenly I
realized I was a statistic. The daily routine was not changed so much; it was
the angle at which I had begun to look at life. I believed my
ex-husband's lawyer was tracking every grade the children made, and I was under
a microscope in this new town where the children and I moved our "broken home."
I feared having to eventually establish my family with each new teacher and each
new term as a single-parent family. I just wanted to be us again, without the
stigma (特征)of the label that put on us. During those few gray
years, I would reassure myself that soon things would be better, and that I
would someday be able to feel whole again. There is no mathematical equation of
adults proportioned to children to equal a stable, loving family. Every family
has its strengths. In fact, studies show that in families who read together, eat
together and communicate openly, children are likely to succeed academically, as
well as socially and emotionally. I am sure these, habits are just as effective
when practiced in single-parent families. I realize now that I am not a
statistic. We are an active, vital family in this charming community, where we
are not marked by any stigma of any statistics of any focus groups.
We are given opportunity, all of us. We are surrounded by beauty and
immersed in possibility. There is joy to be found here, in what we see around us
and in creating our own rendition of how we want to be seen. There is strength
and grace in our own willingness to break free from conformity without falling
behind the barriers of self-imposed limitations or preconceived notions of where
we should fit in this world according to
research.
单选题It is amusing that she _____ her father’s bad temper as well as her mother’s good looks.
单选题A major difference between the Japanese and U.S workforces is that ______
单选题
单选题According to the last paragraph, development of education ______
单选题Whom does “he” (last paragraph) refer to?
单选题Hypnotized individuals can be induced to act bizarrely.
单选题Woman: Do you really think Prof. Green will make you re-do the entire experiment? Man: I don't know. I'll cross the bridge when I come to it. Question: What's the man planning to do?
