单选题
单选题He is one of the most ______ writers of that country.
单选题{{B}} Directions:{{/B}}{{I}} 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. Then
mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the
centre.{{/I}} {{B}}Passage OneQuestions 26 to 28 are
based on the passage you have just heard.{{/B}}
单选题According to the passage, the one who will do most of the heavy lifting should ultimately be______.
单选题
Questions 19 to 21 are based on the
conversation you have just heard.
单选题Now listen to the following recording and answer questions 23 to 25.
单选题The result of the experiments is reliable and persuasive as all the participants are chosen__________.
单选题
单选题China has ______ for over 20 years. [A] develop [B] developed [C] developing
单选题
单选题A.Studying.B.Preparingsnacks.C.Playingcards.D.Learninghowtoplaybridge.
单选题Passage Three Questions 32 to 35 are based on the passage you have just heard.
单选题{{B}}Passage Two{{/B}}
Basically, there are three types of
fatigue, physical, pathological (由疾病引起的), and psychological. As you might
suspect, each differs significantly from the others. When you
exercise your body you produce waste products. Muscles, for example, discard
lactic acid (乳酸) into the blood; cells dump in carbon dioxide. When these wastes
reach a certain level in the blood, the brain is notified and your activity
level drops. Excess wastes in the muscles may produce soreness. If the blood of
a physically fatigued animal is injected into a rested animal, it will produce
fatigue. The solution to this type of fatigue is simple-rest. That should revive
you; if it doesn't, another cause should be sought. Have you
ever become involved in so many activities that you had to be in two places at
once? This is what happens when your body has a disease. The cells are overtaxed
and cannot keep up with both fighting the disease and keeping you active. The
result is fatigue. Some communicable diseases like the flu and colds are
notorious for draining your energy. Other non-communicable diseases, like anemia
(贫血), drain you because you are lacking an important body ingredient. Being
overweight can cause pathological fatigue. It should be obvious that this type
of fatigue is not going to go away without treatment. In a way, pathological
fatigue is a lifesaver. It lets you know something is wrong and that you need
rest. Even a poor diet can produce pathological fatigue. Frequently, people who
go on crash diets develop pathological fatigue, and if the diet is not improved,
they may do physical harm to their bodies. Here is the most
common type of fatigue. Almost everybody experiences it now and then. Often, the
cause is an emotional war you arc waging with yourself or those around you. Some
of these familiar factors can bring on psychological fatigue: worries, stress,
lack of exercise, boredom, depression. If you know someone with psychological
fatigue, would you advise him to rest? No way! That might be fine for our other
types of fatigue, but for this one, it's deadly. If you are ever going to be
able to cope with stress, depression, or worry, you need oxygen in your cells
and a more optimistic attitude. Get out of the chair and do something! Believe
it or not, many people throw themselves into physical labor like cleaning or
carpentry to "defatigue" themselves. If you find yourself in a particularly
stressful situation that you can't physically escape, escape mentally. When
fatigue continues, maybe you need to get to the root of the
problem.
单选题As one of the youngest professors in the university, Mr. Brown is certainly on the ______ of a brilliant career.
单选题请根据下面短文回答题 You have probably seen ads (广告) in newspaper or on television for mail-order companies. Perhaps a catalogue (商品目录) has been sent to you. Why do people buy things they have not seen in person? Some people believe that things can be bought more cheaply by mail. Another good thing about buying by mail is that it is easier and more enjoyable to sit at home and work through a catalogue than to shop around the stores. With a catalogue from a large company, you have your own shop window for almost everything you want to buy. Buying from a catalogue is so easy. It saves the shopper time and trouble. Sometimes, it saves the shopper money, too. But people often buy more than they can really afford (付得起) or need, because many things look so good to them. They can probably pay a certain part of the full price - a down payment. Then they pay a certain amount of money every month until the goods is paid for in full. But by then they often find what they have bought are of no use at all.
单选题 One thing the tour books don't tell you about London
is that 2.000 of its residents are foxes. As native as the royal family, they
fled the city about centuries ago alter developers and pollution moved in. But
now that the environment is cleaner, the foxes have come home, one of the many
wild animals that have moved into urban areas around the world.
"The number and variety of wild animals in urban areas is increasing," says
Gomer Jones, president of the National Institute for Urban Wildlife, in
Columbia, Maryland. A survey of the wildlife in New York's Central Park last
year tallied the species of mammals, including muskrats, shrews and flying
squirrels. A similar survey conducted in the 1890s counted only five species.
One of the country's largest populations of raccoons (浣熊) now lives in
Washington D.C., and moose (驼鹿) are regularly seen wandering into Maine towns.
Peregrine falcons (游隼) dive from the window ledges of buildings in the largest
U.S. cities to prey on pigeons. Several changes have brought
wild animals to the cities. Foremost is that air and water quality in many
cities has improved as a result of the 1970s' pollution-control efforts.
Meanwhile, rural areas have been built up, leaving many animals on the edges of
suburbia. In addition, conservationists have created urban wildlife
refuges. The Greater London Council last year spent $750,000 to
buy land and build 10 permanent wildlife refuges in the city. Over 1,000
volunteers have donated money and cleared rabble from derelict lots. As a
result, pheasants now strut in the East End and badgers scuttle across lawns
near the center of town. A colony of rare house martins nests on a window ledge
beside Harrods, and one evening last year a fox was seen on Westminster Bridge
looking up at Big Ben. For peregrine falcons, cities are
actually safer than rural cliff dwellings. By 1970 the birds were extinct east
of the Mississippi because the DDT had made their eggs too thin to support life.
That year, ornithologist Tom Cede of Cornell University began rising the birds
for release in cities, for cities afforded abundant food and contained none of
the peregrine's natural predators. "Before they were
exterminated, some migrated to cities on their own because they had run out of
cliff space," Cade says. "To peregrines, buildings are just like cliffs." He has
released about 30 birds since 1975 in New York, Baltimore, Philadelphia and
Norfolk, and of the 20 pairs now living in the East, half are urbanites. "A few
of the young ones have gotten into trouble by falling down chimneys and crashing
into window-glass, but overall their adjustment has been successful."
单选题A.Attheageoftwo.B.Attheageoffour.C.Attheageoffive.D.Attheageofeight.
单选题Conie Pratt soon became a famous actress by ______.
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]. Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2 with a single
line through the centre.
Passage One
{{B}}Questions 26 to 29 are based on the passage you have just
heard.{{/B}}
单选题 Questions 32 to 35 are based on the passage you
have just heard.