单选题What is the major complaint of job-hunters?
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单选题Questions 16 to 18 are based on the passage you have just heard.
单选题Why is McDonald using fruit production to take the place of traditional French fries?
单选题The software discussed in the passage is designed to help______.
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单选题 Passage Two
Questions 30 to 32 are based on the passage you have just
heard.
单选题Which of the following adjectives can best describe the author's attitude toward water pollution problem?
单选题He was eager to talk with ______ customers.
单选题Directions: In this section, you will hear 3 short
passages. At the end of each passage, you will hear some questions. Both the
passage and the questions will be spoken only once. After you hear a question,
you must choose the best answer from the four choices marked A, B, C and
D. Questions 16 to 18 are based on the
passage you have just heard.
单选题A) in C) at B) under D) on
单选题From the passage we know that the earliest pre-election polls were ______ in reflecting the public opinions.
单选题Questions 19 to 22 are based on the conversation you have just heard.
单选题Questions 57 to 61 are based on the following passage. Japan is going through a complex national identity crisis. That may be no bad thing, says a new book by an American researcher. The economy is ceased making progress, but the society is in motion. Japan is a difficult country to report on and analyze because things do not change in big, noticeable ways. They change in an increasing process, generally of small steps but which, over time, can add up to big movements. And just such a big movement seems to be taking place. Mr. Nathan has been observing Japan since the 1960s. Whereas most people look at economic data or the comings and goings of prime ministers, he is more interested in schools, novels, comic books, and the minds of young entrepreneurs and maverick (持有不同意见的) local politicians. In particular, his focus is on whether Japan's famously cohesive, conformist society may be breaking under the strain of economic stagnation (停滞), and on how such strains have been affecting the country's sense of purpose and of national identity. Fractures (分裂) are what he looks for and fractures are what he finds. On balance, they are neither obviously dangerous nor obviously positive, but they are, as he says, signs of motion which could, in time, lead in unpredictable directions. The most worrying factures he writes about are in the schools where violence and truancy (逃学) have risen remarkably. Old Japan hands shrug wearily at such things, for worries about violence have long existed but have never really seemed terribly serious. Now, though, Mr. Nathan's numbers do make the situation look grave. Such trends appear to be symptoms of two related phenomena: a widespread feeling of disillusionment, alienation, uncertainty or plain anger, which has spread to children, too; and a gradual breakdown of old systems of discipline — part familial, part social, part legal — which, appear to prevent schools and parents from dealing effectively with children behaving in a bad way. Japan is, in short, passing through a national identity crisis. However, there are plenty of positive aspects to it, too. One is a considerable increase in the number of actual or budding young entrepreneurs. The numbers remain modest, but are nevertheless surprisingly high given the state of the economy in recent years. Another is a new eagerness among popular writers and maverick politicians to try to define and encourage a new national pride.
单选题Those gifts of rare books that were given to us were deeply______.
单选题Undocumented workers became the target of "Operation Safe Travel" because ______.
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单选题Why does the author assert that through travel We only "truly touch one another"?
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