单选题About what percent of the gifted has not graduated from colleges?
单选题Liberal(自由)education is becoming the task of teachers. It is (56) not only to teach and learn knowledge, but also to develop a person's (57) Its (58) is to teach each student to think for himself and make (59) decisions. Now liberal education has a great (60) on the world. Much work has been done to find better way of teaching.In a liberal class, students are (61) to have their own thoughts and their own ideas when they have lessons which are often held in the form of (62) . They are properly guided to (63) the knowledge learned. Punishment (64) exists. Teachers and students are just like (65) .The (66) is of course a perfect one if it can really be (67) However, it only exists in the imagination and will never be (68) We must (69) that children should at least be guided properly. Just close your eyes and think how many students will (70) the duties of a student if they are not (71) . What is the (72) of advice if it is not suppor-ted by a reasonable (73) of control and punishment?It is (74) for us to judge the success and failure of the kind of education now, but from the bad behavior of the children, which is actually the (75) of liberal education, we can see that something must be done to help these children.
单选题Since she can speak Japanese fluently, she has an advantage __________ other job applicants.
单选题Noticing that my daughter was shy, our hostess went out of her way making her feel at home. A. Noticing B. went out of C. making D. at home
单选题Mary said she _______ in this flat for five years.
单选题In all cultures, women are generally seen ______ to nature than men.
单选题Life is often compared ______ a stage by many writers.
单选题"______are the Olympic Games held? "They______once every four years."
单选题Jiang: Hello, can I speak to the head of the household? Chen: ______ Jiang: This is Jiang Ping with Children's Publishing Company. May I have your name, sir? Chen: My name is Chen.
单选题The words such as "smog" and "brunch" are called ______.
单选题The instructor had gone (over) the problems (many times) (before) the students (will take) the final examination.
单选题Speaker A: ______ , do you mind if I borrow that newspaper for a little while? Speaker B: I'm sorry, but it doesn't belong to me. Have you checked with Mark? A. Excuse me B. Pardon C. I'm sorry D. I'm not sure
单选题She doesn't talk much, but what she says makes ______ A. sense B. idea C. meaning D. significance
单选题I can hardly imagine Peter ______ across the Atlantic Ocean in 15 days.A. sailB. to sailC. sailingD. to have sailed
单选题The teacher suggested that they ______ in the exercise at once. A. had handed B. should have handed C. handed D. hand
单选题Before building a house, you will have to ______ the government's permission. A. get from B. follow C. receive D. ask for
单选题Different cultures have different communication ______
单选题We spent a day in the country and (1) a lot of flowers. Our car was full of flowers inside! On the way home we had to stop at traffic lights, and there my wife saw the (2) It stood outside a (3) shop. "Buy it," she said at once. "We'll (4) it home on the roof-rack. I've always wanted one like that. " What could I do? Ten minutes (5) I was twenty dollars poorer, and the book shelf was tied on to the roof rack. It was tall and narrow and quite heavy too. As it was getting (6) , I drove slowly. Other drivers seemed more polite than usual that evening. The police even (7) traffic to let us through. Carrying furniture was a good (8) . After a time my wife said, "There is a long line of cars (9) . Why don't they overtake?" Just at that time a police car did overtake. The two officers looked at us seriously when they went (10) . But then (11) a kind smile they asked us to (12) their car through the busy traffic. The police car stopped at our village church. One of the (13) came to me. "Right, sir," he said. "Don't you need any more (14) now?" I didn't quite (15) . "Thanks, officer," I said. "You've been very (16) . I live just down the road. " He was looking at our (17) : first at the flowers, then at the bookshelf. "Well, well," he said and laughed. "It's a bookshelf you've got here! We (18) it was-er, something else. " My wife began to laugh. Suddenly I understood (19) the police drove here. I (20) at the officer, "Yes, it's a bookshelf, but thanks again. " I drove home as fast as I could.
单选题Any student who ______ his homework is unlikely to pass the examination.
单选题Susan Sontag (1933—2004) was one of the most noticeable figures in the world of literature. For more than 40 years she made it morally necessary to know everything—to read every book worth reading, to see every movie worth seeing. When she was still in her early 30s, publishing essays in such important magazines as Partisan Review, she appeared as the symbol of American cultural life, trying hard to follow every new development in literature, film and art. With great effort and serious judgment, Sontag walked at the latest edges of world culture. Seriousness was one of Sontag's lifelong watchwords (格言), but at a time when the barriers between the well-educated and the poorly-educated were obvious, she argued for a true openness to the pleasures of pop culture. In "Notes on Camp", the 1964 essay that first made her name, she explained what was then a little-known set of difficult understandings, through which she could not have been more famous. "Notes on Camp", she wrote, represents "a victory of 'form' over 'content', 'beauty' over 'morals'". By conviction (信念) she was a sensualist (感觉论者), but by nature she was a moralist (伦理学者), and in the works she published in the 1970s and 1980s, it was the latter side of her that came forward. In Illness as Metaphor—published in 1978, after she suffered cancer—she argued against the idea that cancer was somehow a special problem of repressed personalities (被压抑的个性), a concept that effectively blamed the victims for the disease. In fact, re-examining old positions was her lifelong habit. In America, her story of a 19th century Polish actress who set up a perfect society in California, won the National Book Award in 2000. But it was with a tireless, all-purpose cultural view that she made her lasting fame. "Sometimes," she once said, "I feel that, in the end, all I am really defending... is the idea of seriousness, of true seriousness." And in the end, she made us take it seriously too.