学历类
公务员类
工程类
语言类
金融会计类
计算机类
医学类
研究生类
专业技术资格
职业技能资格
学历类
党建思政类
普通高校专升本
高等教育自学考试
电大&远程教育考试
普通高校统一招生考试
高职分类招生考试
普通高校专升本
成人高考专升本
成人高考
外语
医学综合
管理学
政治
外语
大学语文
艺术概论
计算机
高等数学(一)
高等数学(二)
民法
教育理论
生态学基础
阅读理解Which of the following would be the best title for this passage?
进入题库练习
阅读理解 Generations of Americans have been brought up to believe that a good breakfast is one of life's essentials. Eating breakfast at the start of the day, we have all been told, is as necessary as putting gasoline in the family car before starting a trip. But for many people the thought of food first thing in the morning is by no means a pleasure. So despite all the efforts, they still take no breakfast. Between 1977 and 1983, the latest years for which figures are available, the number of people who didn't have breakfast increased by 33 percent—from 8. 8 million to 11. 7 million—according to the Chicago-based Market Research Corporation of America. For those who feel pain or guilt about not eating breakfast, however, there is some good news. Several studies in the last few years indicate that, for adults especially, there may be nothing wrong with omitting breakfast. 'Going without breakfast does not affect performance. ' said Arnold E. Bender, the former professor of nutrition at Queen Elizabeth College in London, 'nor does giving people breakfast improve performance. ' Scientific evidence linking breakfast to better health or better performance is surprisingly inadequate, and most of the recent work involves children, not adults. 'The literature,' says one researcher, Dr. Ernesto Pollitt at the University of Texas, 'is poor'.
进入题库练习
阅读理解Benjamin Franklin's parents moved to Massachusetts because they wanted_______.
进入题库练习
阅读理解The writer's mother thinks that county music is
进入题库练习
阅读理解What is the most expensive food in the menu?
进入题库练习
阅读理解Usually, the continuing education program is given________. 
进入题库练习
阅读理解 If you have £0.5, what drink can you buy?
进入题库练习
阅读理解Passage 2 I am one of the many city people who are always saying that given the choice we would prefer to live in the country away from the dirt and noise of a large city. I have managed to convince myself that it weren’t for my job I would immediately head out for the open spaces and go back to nature in some sleepy village buried in the country. But how realistic is the dream? Cities can be frightening places. The majority of the population live in massive tower blocks, noisy, dirty and impersonal. The sense of belonging to a community tends to disappear when you live fifteen floors up. All you can see from your window is sky, or other blocks of flats. Children become aggressive and nervous—cooped up at home all day, with nowhere to play; their mothers feel isolated from the rest of the worlD、 Strangely enough whereas in the past the inhabitants of one street all knew each other, nowadays people on the same floor in tower blocks don’t even say hello to each other. Country life, on the other hand, differs from this kind of isolated existence in that a sense of community generally binds the inhabitants of small villages together. People have the advantage of knowing that there is always someone to turn to when they need help. But country life has disadvantages too. While it is true that you may be among friends in a village, it is also true that you are cut off from the existing and important events that take place in cities. There’s little possibility of going to a new show or the latest movie. Shopping becomes a major problem, and for anything slightly out of the ordinary you have to go on and expedition to the nearest large town. The city-dweller who leaves for the country is often oppressed by a sense of unbearable stillness and quiet. What, then, is the answer? The country has the advantage of peace and quiet, but suffers from the disadvantage of being cut off; the city breeds a feeling of isolation, and constant noise batters the senses. But one of its main advantages is that you are at the center of things, and that life doesn’t come to an end at half-past nine at night. Some people have found (or rather bought) a compromise between the two; they have expressed their preference for the “quiet life”by leaving the suburbs and moving to villages within commuting distance of large cities. They generally have about as much sensitivity as the plastic flowers they leave behind—they are polluted with strange ideas about change and improvement which they force on to the unwilling original inhabitants of the villages. What then of my dreams of leaning on a cottage gate and murmuring “morning” to the locals as they pass by? I’m keen on the idea, but you see there’s my cat, Toby, I’m not at all sure that he would take to all that fresh air and exercise in the long grass, I mean, can you see him mixing with all those hearty males down the farm? No, he would rather have the electric imitation-coal fire any evening. We get the impression from the first paragraph that the author 
进入题库练习
阅读理解The passage is mainly about________.
进入题库练习
阅读理解Task 4 Directions:This task (No.61 to No.65)is the same as Task l.  Facial expressions carry meanings that are partly determined by culture.For example, many Japanese do not show their emotions as freely as Americans do,so teachers in the United States sometimes have trouble knowing whether their Japanese students understand and enjoy their lessons.Another example is the smile.As a common facial expression,it may show affection, convey politeness, or disguise(掩饰) true feelings. But in different cultures. smiles have different meanings. Many people in Russia consider smiling at strangers in public to be unusual and even a suspicious behavior. Yet many Americans smile freely at strangers in public places,for American culture a smile is typically an expression of pleasure.Therefore some Russians believe that Americans smile in the wrong places; some Americans believe that Russians don' t smile enough. In Southeast Asian cultures, a smile is frequently used to cover emotional pain or embarrassment.Vietnamese people may tell the sad story of how they had to leave their country but end the story with a smile.The best title for this passage is_______ .
进入题库练习
阅读理解The last part of the passage is mainly about ________.
进入题库练习
阅读理解Whom did Benjamin Franklin work for at the age of11?
进入题库练习
阅读理解According to the passage, which of the following adjectives best describes those people who work in large cities and live in villages? 
进入题库练习
阅读理解What does the word "go-between" mean in the last paragraph? 
进入题库练习
阅读理解Buyers purchase goods as a group in order to_______  . 
进入题库练习
阅读理解People change their position frequently in order to _________.
进入题库练习
阅读理解What does Blue Planet II remind us to do?
进入题库练习
阅读理解What caused the growth of a deadly germ in the heating pipes of the hotels?.
进入题库练习
阅读理解The best title for the passage would be _________. 
进入题库练习
阅读理解Vietnamese people may end the sad story with a smile to_______ .
进入题库练习