单选题Congressional debate over the passage of this controversial bill is inevitable.
单选题No one hopes that he will ______ his usefulness.
单选题The writer's second marriage is different from the first one in all the following way except ______.
单选题These national parks are very important for preserving many animals, who would otherwise nm the risk of becoming______.
单选题The principle underlying all treatment of developmental difficulties in children ______.
单选题Fill in each of the following blanks with ONE Word to complete the meaning
of the passage.
The great chariot of society, which for
so long had run down the gentle slope of tradition, now found itself powered by
an internal combustion engine. Transactions and gain{{U}} 51 {{/U}}a
new and startling{{U}} 52 {{/U}}force. What forces
could have been{{U}} 53 {{/U}}powerful to smash a comfortable and{{U}}
54 {{/U}}world and institute in its place this new society? There
was no single massive{{U}} 55 {{/U}}. It was not great events, single
adventures, individual laws, or charming{{U}} 56 {{/U}}which{{U}}
57 {{/U}}about the economic revolution. It was a process of internal
growth. First, there was the gradual emergence of national
political{{U}} 58 {{/U}}in Europe. A second great current of change was
to be found in the slow decay of the religious spirit under the{{U}} 59
{{/U}}of the skeptical, inquiring, humanist views of the Italian
Renaissance. Still another{{U}} 60 {{/U}}current lies in the slow
social changes that eventually rendered the market system possible. In the
course of this change, power naturally began to gravitate into the hands of
those who understood money matters--the
merchants.
单选题Television is one of today's most powerful and widespread means of mass communication. It directly influences our lives on both a short and long-term basis; it brings worldwide situations into our homes; it affords extensive opportunities for acquiring higher education; and it performs these tasks in a convenient yet effective manner. We are all aware of the popularly accepted applications of television, particularly those relative to entertainment and news broadcasting. Television, however, has also been a vital link in unmanned deep space exploration (such as the Voyager I and Ⅱ missions), in providing visions from hazardous areas (such as proximity to radioactive materials or environments) in underwater research, in viewing storms moving across a metropolitan area (the camera being placed in a weather-protective enclosure near the top of a tower), etc. The earth's weather satellites also use television cameras for vie- wing cloud cover and movements from 20,000 miles in space. Infrared filters are used for night views, and several systems include a spinning mirror arrangement to permit wide-area views from the camera. Realizing the unlimited applications for today's television, one may thus logically ponder the true benefits of confining most of our video activities to the mass-entertainment field. Conventional television broadcasting within the United States centres around free enterprise and public ownership. This requires funding by commercial sponsors, and thus functions in a revenue-producing business manner. Television in USSR-subjected areas, conversely, is a government-owned and maintained arrangement. While such arrangements eliminate the need for commercial sponsorship, it also has the possibility of limiting the type of programs available to viewers (a number of purely entertainment programs similar to the classic "Bewitched", however, have been seen on these government -controlled networks. All isn't as gray and dismal as the uninformed might unnecessarily visualize). A highly modified form of television called Slow-Scan TV is presently being used by many Amateur Radio operators to provide direct visual communications with almost any area of the world. This unique visual mode recently allowed people on the tiny South Pacific country of Pitcairn Island to view, for the first time in their lives, distant areas and people of the world. The chief radio Amateur and communications officer of Pitcairn, incidentally, is the legendary Tom Christian-great, great grandson of Tom Christian of "Mutiny on the Bounty" fame. Radio Amateurs in many lands worked together for several months establishing visual capabilities. The results have proven spectacular, yet the visual capabilities have only been used for health education, or welfare purposes. Commercial TV is still unknown to natives of that tiny country. Numerous other forms of television and visual communication, have also been used on a semi-restricted basis. This indicates the many untapped areas of video and television which may soon be exploited on a more widespread basis. The old clich of a picture being worth a thousand words truly has merit.
单选题It is reported that the latest outbreak of the bird flu in Pennsylvania in the United States has prompted China to slap a ban on poultry imports from the sate.
单选题When we watch a play or a film, we all realize that the characters are sometimes ______.
单选题It is not enough to observe behaviors and ______ them with physiological events that occur at the same time.
单选题The plainer a bowerbird's plumage, the more brightly it decorates its nest to attract a mate.
单选题______ the way, we set off on foot into the dark night.
单选题
单选题
单选题What is happening is a survival-of-the-fittest struggle affecting ______ smaller factories in relatively low-tech, labor-intensive industries.
单选题The old musician decided to move to her country home______her advanced age and poor health. A. with regard to B. by virtue of C. on account of D. at the verge of
单选题War, chiefly the Civil War, in U. S. history has been a vital force in the rise of industrial capitalism, in the change of America from a dominantly agrarian and ______ country to one chiefly manufacturing in nature.
单选题{{B}}Passage 2{{/B}}
Don't call him just a college
professor. Internet entrepreneur, TV personality, advisor to presidents, and
friend to the rich and powerful would be more accurate. Henry
Louis "Skip" Gates Jr. is better known for his activities outside the academy.
This week he sold Africana com, a website he created with a fellow Harvard
University professor, to Time Warner. Terms of the deal weren't revealed, though
the Wall Street Journal pegged the price at more than $10 million, with Gates
reaping up to $1 million. Time Warner will incorporate the site, a portal with
news and information about people of African descent, into America Online when
the two merge as expected. The sense is that Gates got a very good deal. The
site is a rich source of scholarship but hardly a rich source of
revenue. As recently as the late 1980s Gates, who turns 50 this
week, was an obscure professor, penning books on literary theory only a graduate
student could love. Now he can't be avoided. He hosted a series about Africa on
public television, writes occasional articles for the New Yorker, and even
advises the Gore presidential campaign. He counts director Steven Spielberg,
Microsoft's Bill Gates and President Clinton as friends. "They're not intimate
friends," he insists. Indeed, Gates has evolved into a kind of
expert on everything African-American. "He remains the go-to person on the state
of African-American affairs," said Perry Steinberg, head of American Program
Bureau, a lecture agency. The 30 or so speeches Gates delivers each year are
another source of income for the professor. With fame comes
controversy. Several other black intellectuals have taken him to task for not
being confrontational enough. Gates has heard it before. '"Me? Critics? Oh, what
a shock." But he considers himself more a descendent of historian and educator
W. E.B. Du Bois than of Malcolm X. His ultimate goal is to build the field of
Afro-American studies. "Fifty years from now I want there to be at least 10
great centers of Afro-American studies," he says. If working as
a consultant on Spielberg's historical film Amistad or giving A1 Gore advice
helps, so be it.
单选题
单选题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} There are 4 reading passages in this part. Each
passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them
there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. Choose the best answer and mark the
corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a single line through the center.
{{B}}Passage One{{/B}}
For my proposed journey, the first
priority was clearly to start learning Arabic. I have never been a
linguist. Though I had traveled widely as a journalist, I had never managed to
pick up more than a smattering of phrases in any tongue other than French, and
even my French was laborious for want of lengthy practice. The prospect of
tackling one of the notoriously difficult languages at the age of forty, and
trying to speak it well, both deterred and excited me. It was perhaps expecting
a little too much of a curiously unreceptive part of myself, yet the possibility
that I might gain access to a completely alien culture and tradition by this
means was enormously pleasing. I enrolled as pupil in a small
school in the center of the city. It was run by Mr. Beheit, of dapper
appearance and explosive temperament, who assured me that after three months of
his special treatment I would speak Arabic fluently. Whereupon he drew from his
desk a postcard which an old pupil has sent him from somewhere in the Middle
East, expressing great gratitude and reporting the astonishment of local Arabs
that he could converse with them like a native. It was written in English.
Mr. Beheit himself spent most of his time coaching businessmen in French, and
through the thin, partitioned walls of his school one could hear him bellowing
in exasperation at some confuse entrepreneur: "Non. M. Jones. le ne suis pas
francais. Pas, Pas, Pas." (No Mr. Jones, I'm not, not, NOT). I was
gratified that my own tutor, whose name was Ahmed, was infinitely softer and
less public in his approach. For a couple of hours every morning
we would face each other across a small table, while we discussed in meticulous
detail the colour scheme of the tiny cubicle, the events in the street below
and, once a week, the hair-raising progress of a window-cleaner across the wall
of the building opposite. In between, bearing in mind the particular interest I
had in acquiring Arabic, I would inquire the way to some imaginary oasis,
anxiously demand fodder and water for my camels, wonder politely whether the
sheikh was prepared to grant me audience now. It was all hard going. I
frequently despaired of ever becoming anything like a fluent speaker, though
Ahmed assured me that my pronunciation was above average for a Westerner. This,
I suspected, was partly flattery, for there are a couple of Arabic sounds which
not even a gift for mimicry allowed me to grasp for ages. There were, moreover,
vast distinctions of meaning conveyed by subtle sound shifts rarely employed in
English. And for me the problem was increased by the need to assimilate a
vocabulary, that would vary from place to place across five essentially
Arabic-speaking countries that practiced vernaculars of their own: so that the
word for "people", for instance, might be "nais", "sahab" or "sooken".
Each day I was mentally exhausted by the strain of a morning in school,
followed by an afternoon struggling at home with a tape recorder. Yet there was
relief in the most elementary forms of understanding and progress. When I merely
got the drift of a torrent which Ahmed had just release, I was childishly
clated. When I managed to roll a complete sentence off my tongue without
apparently thinking what I was saying, and it came out right. I beamed
like an idiot. And the enjoyment of reading and writing the flowing Arabic
script was something that did not leave me once I had mastered it. By the end of
June, noone could have described me as anything like a fluent speaker of Arabic.
I was approximately in the position of a fifteen-year old who, equipped with a
modicum of schoolroom French, nervously awaits his first trip to Paris. But this
was something I could reprove upon in my own time. I bade farewell to Mr.
Beheit, still struggling to drive the French negative into the still confused
mind of Mr. Jones.
