单选题Farmers are more anxious for rain than people in cities because they have more at ______ .
单选题By the end of the Spring and Autumn Period slave society was ______ disintegration. A. on the ground of B. on the top of C. in the light of D. on the verge of
单选题Computers have aided in the study of humanities for almost as long as the machines have existed. Decades ago, when the technology consisted solely of massive, number-crunching mainframe computers, the chief liberal arts applications were in compiling statistical indexes of works of literature. Mainframe computers helped greatly in the highly laborious task, which dates back to the Renaissance, of cataloging each reference of a particular word in a particular work. Concordances help scholars scrutinize important texts for patterns and meaning. Other humanities applications for computers in this early era of technology included compiling dictionaries, especially for foreign or antiquated languages, and cataloging library collections. Such types of computer usage in the humanities may seem limited at first, but they have produced some interesting results in the last few years and promise to continue to do so. As computer use and access have grown, so has the number of digitized texts of classic literary works. The niche in academia Donald Foster, an English professor at Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, New York, is one of the leaders in textual scholarship. In the late 1980s Foster created SHAXICON, a database that tracks all the "rare" words used by English playwright William Shakespeare. Each of these words appears in any individual Shakespeare play no more than 12 times. The words can then be cross-referenced with some 2 000 other poetic texts, allowing experienced researchers to explore when they were written, who wrote them, how the author was influenced by the works of other writers, and how the texts changed as they were reproduced over the centuries. In late 1995 Foster's work attracted widespread notice when he claimed that Shakespeare was the anonymous author of an obscure 578-line poem, A Funeral Elegy(1612). Although experts had made similar claims for other works in the past, Foster gained the backing of a number of prominent scholars because of his computer-based approach. If Foster's claim holds up to long-term judgment, the poem will be one of the few additions to the Shakespearean canon in the last 100 years. Foster's work gained further public acclaim and validation when he was asked to help identify the anonymous author of the best-selling political novel Primary Colors(1996). After using his computer program to compare the stylistic traits of various writers with those in the novel, Foster tabbed journalist Joe Klein as the author soon after, Klein admitted that he was the author. Foster was also employed as an expert in the case of the notorious Unabomber, a terrorist who published an anonymous manifesto in several major newspapers in 1995.
单选题Do you think this present is ______ for a little boy?
单选题Among the more common scenes are those in the courtyards of apartment buildings where the children play, while their elders gossip on benches, and young people congregate to listen to music.
单选题Those guys are continually quarrelling,but it is usually a storm in teacup.
单选题 Ebola, which spreads through body fluid or secretions such as urine, ______ and semen, can kill up to 90% of those infected.
单选题The 1982 Oil and Gas Act gives power to permit the disposal of assets held by the Corporation, and the Corporation's statutory monopoly in the supply of gas for fuel purposes so as to permit private companies to compete in this supply. A. defers B. curtails C. triggers D. sparks
单选题Had the explosion broken out, the passengers in the plane should have been killed, for it was ______ timed with the plane's take-off. A. spontaneously B. instantaneously C. simultaneously D. conscientiously
单选题{{B}}Passage Three{{/B}}
The history of Western music
properly begins with the music of the Christian, Church. But all through the
Middle Ages and even to the present time men have continually turned back to
Greece and Rome for instruction, for correction, and for inspiration in their
several fields of work; this has been true in music--though with some important
differences. R6man literature, for example, never ceased to exert influence in
the Middle Ages, and this influence became much greater in the fourteenth and
fifteenth centuries when more Roman works became known, at the same time, too,
the surviving literature of Greece was gradually recovered. But in
literature, as well as in some other fields (notably sculpture), medieval or
Renaissance artists had the advantage of being able to study and, if they so
desired, imitate the models of antiquity. The actual poems or statues were
before them. In music this was not so. The Middle Ages did not possess a single
example of Greek or Roman music--nor, it may be added, are we today much better
off. About a dozen examples--half of them were fragments--of Greek music have
been discovered, nearly all from comparatively late periods, but there is no
general agreement as to just how they were meant to sound; there are no
authentic remains of ancient Roman music. So we, as well as the men of medieval
times, derive nearly all our knowledge of this art in the ancient civilizations
at second hand from a few rather vague accounts of performances, but mostly from
theatrical treatises and literary descriptions.
单选题This was a five-digit national coding system to ____________ each postal delivery section.
单选题Sudden disastrous external stress such as in severe automobile accidents, airplane crashes, and underwater explosions may cause death through Urupture/U of the major arteries.
单选题It is agreed that a person is more likely to suffer from arteriosclerosis ______.
单选题Libraries are an investment for the future and should not be allowed to fall into______.
单选题The Public Broadcasting System is supported by donations from foundations and other sources.
单选题{{B}}Passage 3{{/B}}
Forget football. At many high schools,
the fiercest competition is between Coke and Pepsi over exclusive "pouring
rights" to sell on campus. But last week Jeffrey Dunn, president of Coca-Cola
Americas, called a timeout: Coke's machines will now also stock water, juice,
and other healthful options--even rival brands and their facades will feature
school scenes and other "noncommercial graphics" instead of Coke's vivid red
logo. "the pendulum needs to swing back" on school-based marketing, said
Dunn. Coke's about-face--particularly the call to end the
exclusive deals that bottlers make with school districts--comes amid rising
concern over kids' health: American children are growing ever more obese and
developing weight-related diseases usually found in adults. While inactivity and
huge helpings factor heavily, a recent study in the Lancet fingered soda pop as
a likely culprit. Communities--and legislators--are already on the case. Last
year, for instance, parents in Philadelphia detailed a proposed contract with
Coca-Cola that would have netted the school system $ 43 million over 10 years.
And in a searing' report to congress last month, the U. S. Department of
Agriculture recommended that all snacks sold in schools meet federal nutrition
standards (the requirements are loose enough that Snickers bars
qualify). Spare change? Activists hope Coke's capitulation will
help curb commercialism in schools altogether. From ads on Channel One, which
broadcasts current-affairs programs on classroom TV, to middle-school math texts
that cite Nike and other bran-name products in their word problems, to
company-sponsored scoreboards on football fields, American pupils are bombarded.
But Andrew Hagelshaw, executive director of the Oakland, Calif.-based Center for
Commercial-Free Public Education, views Coca-Cola's policy shift as a "partial
victory". Schools sign contracts with local bottlers; the parent company can
only urge them to back off. Moreover, Coke's machines will remain in place,
although with healthier options. And don't expect teenagers to
suddenly swear off the stuff--or school districts to give up the revenue. At
Wheeler High School in Marietta, Ga., where students arrive before 7 a.m. and
stay as late as 11 o'clock at night, they rely on the machines. And the $ 50,000
in annual vending revenues have enabled Principal Joe Boland to refinish the gym
floor, in- stall a new high-jump pit, and pay $ 7,000 for two buses. "If
someone made an offer to me to take the machines out, I'd consider it," says
Boland. "But nobody's offering me any
money."
单选题Why does the author give his opinion of the definition of poetry?
单选题There is no ______ between the sample and the final product he received.
单选题
单选题Which of the following statement about the welfare policy is TRUE?