单选题In the development of a government agency, ______ .
单选题If you come to Tokyo, I can put you ______ in an apartment near my company. A. across B. down C. out D. up
单选题According to BBC boxing reporter Mike Costello, just as there is worldwide ______ with boxing, so there is worldwide opposition.
单选题The most important advances made by man come from ______.
单选题The fire caused great losses, but the factory tried to ______ the consequences by saying that the damage was not as serious as reported.
单选题Cloning shakes us all to our very souls. For humans to consider the cloning of one another forces them all to question the very concepts of right and wrong that make them all human. The cloning of any species, whether they be human or non-human, is wrong. Scientists and ethicists alike have debated the implications of human or non-human cloning extensively since 1997 when .scientists at Roslin Institute in Scotland produced Dolly. No direct conclusions have been drawn, but compelling arguments state that cloning of both human and non-human species results in harmful physical and psychological effects on both groups. The possible physical damage that could be done if human cloning became a reality is obvious when one looks at the sheer loss of life that occurred before the birth of Dolly. Less than ten percent of the initial transfers survive to be healthy creatures. There were 277 trial implants of nuclei. Nineteen of those 277 were deemed healthy while the others were discarded. Five of those nineteen survived, but four of them died within ten days of birth of severe abnormalities. Dolly was the only one to survive. Even Lan Wilmut, one of the scientists accredited with the cloning phenomenon at the Roslin Institute agrees, "the more you interfere with reproduction, the more danger there is of things going wrong." The psychological effects of cloning are less obvious, but nonetheless, very plausible. In addition to physical harms, there are worries about the psychological harms to cloned human children. One of those harms is that cloning creates serious issues of identity and individuality. Human cloning is obviously damaging to both the family and the cloned child. It is harder to convince that non-human cloning is wrong and unethical, but it is just the same. Western culture and tradition has long held the belief that the treatment of animals should be guided by different ethical standards than the treatment of humans. Animals have been seen as non-feeling and savage beasts since time began. Humans in general have no problem with seeing animals as objects to be used whenever it becomes necessary. But what would happen if humans started to use animals as body for growing human organs? What if we were to learn how to clone functioning brains and have them grow inside of chimps? Would non-human primates, such as a chimpanzee, who carried one or more human genes via transgenic technology, be defined as still a chimp, a human, a subhuman, or something else? If defined as human, would we have to give it rights of citizenship? And if humans were to carry non-human transgenic genes, would that alter our definitions and treatment of them? Also, if the technology were to be so that scientists could transfer human genes into animals and vice versa, it could create a worldwide catastrophe that no one would be able to stop.
单选题When the young surgeon had difficulty with a delicate operation, he turned to a (n)______ surgeon for advice.
单选题{{B}}Passage Five{{/B}}
The study of literary influence among
women writers has frequently adopted a model of sororal or matrilineal sharing
in an often explicitly stated contrast to Harold Bloom's well-established theory
of the "anxiety of influence" besetting male writers. In Bloom's powerfully
influential vision, that anxiety is posed as a kind of Freudian agon of sons
against fathers, a struggle of self-definition through resistance and mastery.
Feminist critics have generally agreed with the Bloomian model as applied to
male authors but have demurred with respect to women writers, whom we have
tended to see in familial terms. The model of a separate women's tradition in
literature, its inner coherence maintained by resistance to male dominance, that
was posited in the 1970s by Ellen Moers, Elaine Showalter, and Sandra M. Gilbert
and Susan Gubar has been widely accepted. As Betsy Erkkila points out, these
groundbreaking feminist critics may not have significantly challenged the
Bloomian model as applied to women writers and women precursors, but they did at
any rate establish their resistance to the masculine literary establishment and
the masculine model of rivalry. Their successors and elaborators have argued
forcefully that a women's tradition is constituted of a supportive community
whose members welcome the all-too-rare voices of foremothers calling to them
across the ages. Even the literary foremothers nearer at hand, according to this
prevailing vision, have served as models for emulation rather than hegemonic
powers to be challenged. Erkkila, for example, asks pointedly, "How useful is
the Bloomian model when the poet attempts to define herself not in relation to
her poetic fathers but in relation to her poetic mothers." Her answer (later
modified because of greater complexity) is not very. A metaphor of motherhood
and daughterhood has, in the words of Linda R. Williams's recent revisionist
theory, "profoundly affected our reading of women's literary history." Citing
Alice Walker's argument about nebulous forms of knowing in In Search of Our
Mothers' Gardens, Luce Irigary's concept of connectedness ( "One doesn't stir
without the other") and Helene Cixous's version of the authentic woman writer's
writing of her mother's milk in "The Laugh of the Medusa," Williams calls for an
interpretation of literary connectedness not as a revision of the Freudian and
Bloomian system-which Erkkila, by retaining the familial language, has in a
sense retained, but as a way "outside of an Oedipal dynamic"
altogether. The revisionist views of Williams and Erkkila are
useful corrections of the prevailing mode of feminist theories that
"romanticize, maternalize, essentialize, and eternalize women writers and the
relationships among them." Neither, however, asks if women writers may not
sometimes exhibit, rather than either revise or escape, the Bloomian model of
literary rivalry. It is a prospect, perhaps, that we would prefer not to
entertain. But it is a prospect that, while clearly not typical, may be less
atypical than feminist critics may have supposed in our times too idealizing and
essentializing theories. An instance of such a female adoption
(and adaptation) of the Bloomian model of male writers' anxiety is Katherine
Anne Porter's anxious and artfully duplicitous essay on a literary elder sister,
"Reflections on Willa Cather." Operating in the loosely narrative fashion that
characterized not only Porter's nonfiction but her very mode of thought, the
essay purports to pay retrospective tribute to one of the preeminent women
writers of the early and mid-twentieth century, but in fact asserts Porter's own
stature in the world of letters. In the story of her essay, the protagonist is
not Cather, as one would expect from the title, but Porter herself. The essay is
cast in a pervasive first-person mode in which the observing or commenting "I"
becomes the active principle and its putative topic a passive reflector, a
mirror reflecting Katherine Anne Porter.
单选题In Zurich, a leading canton in the Swiss Confederation, it has been proposed to teach one foreign language—English—in primary schools. This would represent a change (21) Zurich's elementary school kids now study English and French. Voters will decide whether French will be (22) Some educators (23) that two foreign languages are too much for kids. Supporters of one foreign language believe that kids fail to reach strong (24) in German, the mother tongue for schoolchildren in Zurich. In fact, Zurich kids speak Swiss German, which is (25) an oral language. In school they have to learn standard German, which (26) is a foreign language. (27) you add them all together Zurich kids are learning four languages. All of Switzerland will watch what Zurich voters decide because Zurich is an influential canton and others may (28) . Yet some German-speaking cantons have already decided to (29) plans to reduce the number of foreign languages. (30) what happens, Swiss kids will be fluent in more than one language which is a definite asset in today's (31) economy. It is also a definite asset in learning other subjects. Studies (32) in American universities have found that kids who study in duallanguage schools outperform their (33) who are taught in English only. Apparently, kids educated in two languages develop a mental (34) that monolingual kids lack. Perhaps four languages are too many in elementary schools, but two is not (35) at all.
单选题Even the best medical treatment can not cure all the diseases that ______ men and women. A. beseech B. beset C. bewitch D. bestow
单选题To maintain public ______ is not only the policemen' s duty but also every citizen's responsibility.
单选题The government is to ban payments to witnesses by newspapers seeking to buy up people involved in prominent cases
1
the trial of Rosemary West. In a significant
2
of legal controls over the press, Lord Irvine, the Lord Chancellor, will introduce a
3
bill that will propose making payments to witnesses
4
and will strictly control the amount of
5
that can be given to a case
6
a trial begins. In a letter to Gerald Kaufman, chairman of the House of Commons media select committee, Lord Irvine said he
7
with a committee report this year which said that self regulation did not
8
sufficient control.
9
of the letter came two days after Lord Irvine caused a
10
of media protest when he said the
11
of privacy controls contained in European legislation would be left to judges
12
to parliament. The Lord Chancellor said introduction of the Human Rights Bill, which
13
the European convention on Human Rights legally
14
in Britain, laid down that everybody was
15
to privacy and that public figures could go to court to protect themselves and their families. "Press freedoms will be in safe hands
16
our British judges," he said. Witness payments became an
17
after West was sentenced to 10 life sentences in 1995. Up to 19 witnesses were
18
to have received payments for telling their stories to newspapers. Concerns were raised
19
witnesses might be encouraged to exaggerate their stories in court to
20
guilty verdicts.
单选题The last guests to reach the hotel ______at 12 o'clock at night.
A.checked up
B.checked in
C.checked out
D.check on
单选题It's desirable that you have to speak to both groups of men quickly if you want to ______a nasty disagreement. A. head off B. clear with C. get across D. leap out
单选题The prime minister tried to act but her plans were ______ by her cabinet. A. frustrated B. discussed C. embellished D. overlooked
单选题Operation which left patients _____ and in need of long period of recovery time now leave them feeling relaxed and comfortable.
单选题______ may think they are better than the facts would justify.
单选题According to the writer, one can offer to invite a client to lunch ______.
单选题Between 1981 and 1987, the number of permanent jobs had increased by only 1,000 , although training has been substantially______by the corporation.(2013年3月中国科学院考博试题)
单选题It is no______that a large number of violent crimes are committed under the influence of alcohol. A. coincidence B. correspondence C. inspiration D. intuition