单选题The fact (which) a good teacher has some of (the gifts) of a good actor (does not mean) that he will indeed be able to (act well) on the stage.
单选题A: This toothache is killing me. B. If I am right, this is the third time you've had it this month. A: You are right.______
单选题Smuggling is a {{U}}detrimental{{/U}} activity which might bring destruction to our economy; therefore, it must be banned.
单选题Man: These family reunions are complicated. Could you pick Mark up from the airport? I'm on a tight schedule today.Woman: OK, but then let's switch. I'm supposed to pick Sarah up tomorrow.Question: What does the woman mean?
单选题Shelley's famous poem “To a Skylark” praises the birds for its {{U}}carefree{{/U}} spirit.
单选题A frequently cited example of the endangered species is the pand
单选题You (will) almost always (find) Caroline (playing) a video game because she enjoys (to be challenged).A. willB. findC. playingD. to be challenged
单选题More American mothers than ever are working, and more workers are mothers. Yet their march into the world of paid work continues to cause suspicion. One recent survey found that 48 percent of Americans believe that preschoolers suffer if their mothers work, while another found that 42 percent of employed parents think that working mothers care more about succeeding at work than meeting their children's needs. All mothers deserve our support--those who care for children at home and those who have joined the work force. But many working mothers continue to believe that they are shortchanging (少找钱)their children. They shouldn't. Research tells us that kids do just fine when mothers work. Suzanne Bianchi a scientist of the University of Maryland, has found that mothers today spend as much if not more time with their children than they did in 1965, even though the percentage of mothers who work rose from 35 percent to 71 percent. Then there are the obvious financial benefits. For many children, these earnings are the difference between living in poverty—or out of it. The kids are all right. Studies conducted by the University of Michigan have consistently demonstrated that a child's social or academic competence does not depend on whether a mother is employed. In my research four out of five children (nine out of ten in single parent families) told me that having a working mother was their preferred arrangement. My study found that children with working mothers are no more likely to drop out, take drugs, break the law, or experiment with sex prematurely than children with non-employed mothers. Children have taken their mothers' example to heart. Ninety percent of the young women I interviewed said they hoped to combine work with motherhood, while two-thirds of the men said they wanted to share parenting and work. Sadly, children support working mothers more than we do as a society. Parental leave and child-care benefits in the United States remain inadequate, particularly when compared to what's offered in other countries. Children thrive when their mothers have satisfying, well-paid jobs when they can count on other caretakers to share the load. The challenge facing us is thus not whether good workers can also be good mothers, but whether we can create the conditions that enable working mothers and fathers to be good parents.
单选题A: ______B: Yes. I would like the beef steak.
单选题The heart bypass (心脏搭桥术)has become part of our cultural life. It has come to seem like a ceremony of passage for the successful male, a red symbol of courage in midlife. Six hundred thousand bypass operations are performed a year in the United States. After a bypass, most heart patients experience significant relief from the peculiar discomfort in the chest caused by insufficient blood to the heart muscle. In some cases the surgery can dramatically extend life. American heart patients, who now number about 12 million, are enthusiastic about the surgery. Bypass is one of the most common major operations in America. In private, however, many of my fellow workers in medicine suspect that bypass has become too popular. A recent Harvard study showed that as many as two-thirds of patients referred for bypass don't need it or could have it postponed. In Canada and Britain, where physicians perform bypass surgery much less frequently than they do in America,heart patients fare just as well. In addition, bypassing a blocked section of an artery does nothing to ;prevent the artery (动脉) from getting clogged somewhere else. In fact, bypass surgery can accelerate the development of new blockage. But bypass did not have to prove itself. It has become hugely popular. Voices of caution were drowned out as more and more hospitals raced to offer bypass. By 1979,100 000: bypasses a year were taking place, and 10 years later the figure has risen to 260 000. Medical students were keen to train in cardiac (心脏的) surgery; for all the hard training, it was a advancing ,challenging field. In fact, the rewards are handsome. There is more money to be made performing this surgery than there is in practicing in almost any other field of medicine. The idea of bold surgeons reaching into our bodies to save a wounded heart cannot but exert a powerful grip on our imaginations, as if we are witnessing a cultural ceremony where two overachieving individuals—surgeon and patient—come together, Bypass may indeed be both a life-extending and pain-relieving procedure for many patients. But perhaps it has transfixed us for too long.
单选题Concern with money, and then more money, in order to buy the conveniences and luxuries of modern life, has brought great changes to the lives of most Frenchmen. More people are working than ever before in France. In the cities the traditional leisurely midday meal is disappearing. Offices, shops and factories are discovering the greater efficiency of a short lunch hour in company lunchrooms. In almost all lines of work emphasis now falls on ever-increasing output. Thus the "typical" Frenchman produces more, earns more, and buys more consumer goods than his counterpart of only a generation ago. He gains in creature comforts and ease of life. What he loses to some extent is his sense of personal uniqueness, or individuality. Some say that France has been Americanized. This is because the United States is a world symbol of the technological society and its consumer products. The so-called Americanization of France has its critics. They fear that "assembly-line life" will lead to the dis- appearance of the pleasures of the more graceful and leisurely old French style. What will happen, they ask, to taste, elegance, and the cultivation of the good things in life—to joy in the smell of a freshly picked apple, a stroll by the river, or just happy hours of conversation in a local care? Since the late 1940's life in France has indeed taken on qualities of rush, tension, and the pursuit of material gain. Some of the strongest critics of the new way of life are the young, especially university students. They are concerned with the future, and they fear that France is threatened by the triumph of the competitive, goods-oriented culture. Occasionally, they have reacted against the trend with considerable violence. In spite of the critics, however, countless Frenchmen are committed to keeping France in the forefront of the modern economic world. They find that the present life brings more rewards, conveniences, and pleasures than that of the past. They believe that a modern, industrial France is preferable to the old.
单选题A: Would you cash these traveler's checks, please? B: ______
单选题The police are trying to {{U}}get back{{/U}} the stolen statue.
单选题{{B}}Passage One{{/B}}
If those "mad moments"--when you can't
remember what your friend has told you or where you left your keys--are becoming
more frequent, mental exercises and a healthy brain diet may help.
Just as bodies require more maintenance with the passing years, so do
brains, which scientists now know show signs of aging as early as the 20s and
30s. "Brain aging starts at a very young age, younger than any of us had
imagined and these processes continue gradually over the years," said Dr. Gary
Small, the director of the Center on Aging at the University of California, Los
Angeles. 'Tin convinced that it is never too early to get started on a mental or
brain-fitness program," he added. In his book, The Memory Bible,
the 51-year-old neuroscientist (神经学家) lists what he refers to as the 10
suggestions for keeping the brain young. They include training memory, building
skills, reducing stress, mental exercises, brain food and a healthy
lifestyle. "Misplacing your keys a couple of times don't mean
you should start labeling your cabinets. Memory loss is not an inevitable
consequence of aging. Our brains can fight back," he said. Small
provides the weapons for a full-scale attack. Simple memory tests give an
indication of what you are up against and tools such as "look" and "connect" are
designed to make sure that important things such as names and dates are never
forgotten. "So if you wanted to learn names and faces, for example, you meet
Mrs. Beatty and you notice a distinguishing facial feature, maybe a high
eyebrow," said Small. "You associate the first thing that comes to your mind. I
think of the actor Warren Beatty, so I create a mental picture of Warren Beatty
kissing her brow." Small admits it may sound a bit strange but
he says it works. "Mental exercises could be anything from doing crossword
puzzles and writing with your left hand if you are right handed or learning a
language. It could be anything that is fun that people enjoy doing," he
added.
单选题Britain has the highest ______ of road traffic in the world—over 60 cars for every mile of road.
单选题A:What did you think of the movie? B:______
单选题The building is so well constructed that it will survive even the strongest earthquake.
单选题Most lecturers find it {{U}}expedient{{/U}} to use notes when addressing to graduate students.
单选题Larry was so absorbed in his novel that he forgot about his dinner cooking in the oven.
单选题{{B}}Passage One{{/B}}
A few years ago, when environmentalists
in Washington State began agitating to rid local dumps of toxic old computers
and televisions, they found an unexpected ally: Hewlett-Packard Co. Teaming up
with greens and retailers, hp took on IBM, Apple Computer, and several major TV
manufacturers, which were resisting recycling programs because of the
costs. Aided by hp's energetic lobbying, the greens persuaded
state lawmakers to adopt a landmark program that forces electronics companies to
foot the bill for recycling their old equipment. "This bill puts our
market-based economy to work for the environment," said Washington Governor
Christine O. Gregoire as she signed the plan into law on Mar 24. The movement to
recycle electronic refuse, or "e-waste," is spreading across the nation, and so
is hp's clout. The company helped the greens win a big battle in
Maine, In 2004 when the state passed the nation's first e-waste
"take-back" law. Washington followed suit. Now, Minnesota and New Jersey are
preparing to act, and 19 other states are weighing legislation. Activists hope
to banish high-tech junk from landfills and scrub the nation's air and water of
lead, chromium, mercury, and other toxins prevalent in digital debris, hp's
efforts have made it the darling of environmentalists. They say take-back laws
are more effective at getting digital junk recycled than point-of-sale fees,
which tax consumer electronics products to fund state-run recycling programs.
They're also pleased because effective programs in the U. S. reduce the
likelihood that the products will be shipped to less developed countries and
disassembled under unsafe conditions. But hp's agenda isn't
entirely altruistic. Take-back laws play to the company's strategic strengths.
For decades the computer maker has invested in recycling infrastructure, a move
that has lowered its production costs, given it a leg up in the secondary market
for equipment, and allowed it to build a customer service out of "asset
management," which includes protection of dam that might remain on discarded
gear. In 2005, hp recycled more than 70 000 tons of product, the
equivalent of about 10% of company sales and a 15% increase from the year
before. And it collected more than 2.5 million units (in excess of 25 000 tons)
of hardware to be refurbished for resale or donation. No other
electronics maker has a resale business on this scale. But the others may soon
wish to emulate hp. "We see legislation coming," says David Lear, hp's
vice-president for corporate, social, and environmental responsibility. "A lot
of companies haven't stepped up to the plate.... If we do this right, it becomes
an advantage to us."
