单选题The painting was larger than it appeared to be. For, hanging in a darkened recess of the chapel, it was ______ by the perspective.
单选题Our culture has caused most Americans to assume not only that our language is universal but that the gestures we use are understood by everyone. We do not realize that waving good-bye is the way to summon a person from the Philippines to one's side, or that in Italy and some Latin-American countries, curling the finger to oneself is a sign of farewell. Those private citizens who sent packages to our troops occupying Germany after World War II and marked them GIFT to escape duty payments did not bother to find out that " Gift" means poison in German. Moreover, we like to think of ourselves as friendly, yet we prefer to be at least 3 feet or an arm's length away from others. Latins and Middle Easterners like to come closer and touch, which makes Americans uncomfortable. Our linguistic and cultural blindness and the casualness with which we take notice of the developed tastes, gestures, customs and languages of other countries, are making us lose friends, business and respect in the world. Even here in the United States, we make few concessions to the needs of foreign visitors. There are no information signs in four languages on our public buildings or monuments; we do not have multilingual guided tours. Very few restaurant menus have translations, and multilingual waiters, bank clerks and policemen are rare. Our transportation systems have maps in English only and often we ourselves have difficulty understanding them. When we go abroad, we tend to cluster in hotels and restaurants where English is spoken. Then attitudes and information we pick up are conditioned by those natives—usually the richer—who speak English. Our business dealings, as well as the nation's diplomacy, are conducted through interpreters. For many years, America and Americans could get by with cultural blindness and linguistic ignorance. After all America is the most powerful country of the free world, the distributor needed funds and goods. But all that is past. American dollars no longer buy all good things, and we are slowly beginning to realize that our proper role in the world is changing. A 1979 Harris poll reported that 55 percent of Americans want this country to play a more significant role in world affairs; we want to have a hand in the important decisions of the next century, even though it may not always be the upper hand.
单选题Because a circle has no beginning or end, the wedding ring is a symbol of ______ love. A. extravagant B. prominent C. prescient D. eternal
单选题{{B}}Passage 6{{/B}}
For someone whose life has been
shattered, Hiroshi Shimizu is remarkably calm. In a cramped Tokyo law office,
the subdued, bitter man in his 30s—using an assumed name for the interview
relates how he became infected with the HIV virus from tainted blood products
sold by Japanese hospitals to hemophiliacs during the mid-1980s. "I was raped,"
says Shimizu. "I never thought doctors would give me bad medicine. "
last year, Shimizu was shocked when a doctor newly transferred to his
hospital broke the news. Four years earlier, he had asked his previous doctor if
he could safely marry. "He told me: 'There's absolutely no problem,' even though
he knew [I was infected]," Shimizu says. "I could have passed it to my wife. "
Luckily, he hasn't. Shimizu is one of more than 2,000
hemophiliacs and their loved ones infected with the deadly virus before
heat-treated blood products became available in Japan. It's a tragedy—and now
it's a national scandal. In recent weeks, the country has been rocked by charges
that Japanese drug and hospital companies kept selling tainted blood even after
the AIDS threat was proved beyond a shadow of a doubt. Even worse is the charge
that the Japanese government knowingly allowed this dangerous practice as part
of a policy to protect domestic companies from foreign competition. Japan's
bureaucrats are already under attack for their role in the banking fiasco. As
the AIDS scandal unfolds, Japanese confidence in government could erode even
further. Big settlements in a related lawsuit may also set a precedent in other
AIDS liability cases around the world. The origins of the
tragedy go back to 1983. By then, scientists were closing in on the virus that
causes AIDS, and U. S. health authorities mandated that all blood products be
heat-treated to protect hemophiliacs and patients from infection. Japanese
authorities were concerned as well: the Health & Welfare Ministry formed an
AIDS study group headed by the country's foremost hemophilia expert, Dr. Takeshi
Abe. RAIN AND SLEET. What happened next has only just been
revealed, thanks to an investigation by new Health Minister Naoto Kan. According
to investigators, the ministry group on July 4, 1983, recommended banning
untreated blood imports. Since no heat-treated products were then available from
Japanese companies, the group also advised allowing emergency imports of
heat-treated blood from companies such as U. S. drug giant Baxter International
Inc. But a week later, the recommendation was reversed.
According to memos recovered from the records of Atsuaki Gunji, then head of the
ministry's Biological & antibiotics Div., the recommendation was overturned
because it would "deal a blow" to domestic companies. Japan's marketers of blood
products bought imports of untreated blood—and they did not have their
heat-treatment processes yet. The ministry insisted that Baxter conduct two
years of clinical testing in Japan before it used its new heat treatment there.
Domestic drug companies, led by Osaka-based Green Cross Ltd. rushed to develop
their own treatment processes. Meanwhile, Baxter and other foreign companies
that already sold untreated blood products in Japan had to continue the practice
if they wanted to stay in the market. The recent revelations
have sparked some startling events in a country where discussion of AIDS is
still largely taboo. In February, health Minister Kan made front-page news when
he officially apologized to HIV-infected hemophiliacs and families who had
staged a 72-hour vigil in rain and sleet outside the
ministry.
单选题
单选题To survive in the intense trade competition between countries, we must ______ the qualifies and varieties of products we make to the world market demand.
单选题By using the bicycle, ______.
单选题She Uvalues/U the boy as if he were her own son.
单选题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} Below each of the following passages you will find some
questions or incomplete statements. Each question or statement is followed by
four choices marked A, B, C and D. Read each passage carefully, and then select
the choice that best answers the question or completes the statement. Mark the
letter of your choice with a single bar across the square brackets on your
Machine-scoring Answer Sheet.{{B}}Passage One{{/B}}
It took no time at all for the native
Americans who first greeted Christopher Columbus to be all but erased from the
face of the earth. For about a thousand years the peaceful people known as the
Taino had thrived in modern-day Cuba and many other islands. But less than 30
years after Columbus' arrival, the Taino would be destroyed by Spanish weaponry,
forced labor and European diseases. Unlike their distant cousins, the Inca,
Aztecs and Maya, the Taino left no pyramids or temples—no obvious signs that
they had ever existed. But it is a mistake to assume—as many
scholars have until quite recently—that the absence of abundant artifacts meant
the Taino were necessarily more primitive than the grander civilizations of
Central and South America. They simply used less durable materials: the Taino
relied on wood for building and most craftwork, and much of what they made has
disintegrated over the centuries. However, thanks largely to two remarkable digs
undertaken recently, archaeologists will be able to enrich their knowledge of
the Taino. There nearly intact remains of a Taino dwelling
buried in the dirt. This site may have been one of the Taino's major centers.
Meanwhile, deep in the forests of the Dominican Republic, a U. S.-Dominican team
has also made an important discovery: a 240-ft. deep Taino cenote, or ceremonial
well, where hundreds of objects thrown in as offerings have been preserved in
the oxygen-poor water. It will take a much longer time to
understand the Taino fully, but they have been rescued from the ignoble status
of footnotes in the chapter of history that began with the arrival of
Columbus.
单选题The narrator had finally decided to attend the fraternity party perhaps because ______.
单选题In many countries tobacco and medicine are government ______.
单选题Further education is officially (described as) the post-secondary stage of education, (comprised) all vocational and convocational (provision made) for young people who have left school, (or for adults).A. described asB. comprisedC. provision madeD. or for adults
单选题He has always been a source of inspiration to me and I hope that he will take it as a ______ when I say that. A. compassion B. compliment C. complication D. supplement
单选题It will be worth the effort even if you fail; the rewards you______will be great.
单选题{{B}}Passage 2{{/B}}
Nearly two thousand years have passed
since a census decreed by Caesar Augustus became part of the greatest story ever
told. Many things have changed in the intervening years. The hotel industry
worries more about overbuilding than overcrowding, and if they had to meet an
unexpected influx, few inns would have a manger to accommodate the weary guests.
Now it is the census taker that does the traveling in the fond hope that a
highly mobile population will stay put long enough to get a good sampling.
Methods of gathering, recording, and evaluating information have presumably been
improved a great deal. And where then it was the modest purpose of Rome to
obtain a simple head count as an adequate basis for levying taxes, now batteries
of complicated statistical series furnished by governmental agencies and private
organizations are eagerly scanned and interpreted by sages and seers to get a
clue to future events. The Bible does not tell us how the Roman census takers
made out, and as regards our more immediate concern, the reliability of present
day economic forecasting, there are considerable differences of opinion. They
were aired at the celebration of the 125th anniversary of the American
Statistical Association. There was the thought that business forecasting might
well be on its way from an art to a science, and some speakers talked about
newfangled computers and high-falutin mathematical systems in terms of
excitement and endearment which we, at least in our younger years when these
things mattered, would have associated more readily with the description of a
fair maiden. But others pointed to the deplorable record of highly esteemed
forecasts and forecasters with a batting average below that of the Mets, and the
President-elect of the Association' cautioned that "high powered statistical
methods are usually in order where the facts are crude and inadequate, the exact
contrary of what crude and inadequate statisticians assume". We left his
birthday party somewhere between hope and despair and with the conviction, not
really newly acquired, that proper statistical methods applied to ascertainable
facts have their merits in economic forecasting as long as neither forecaster
nor public is deluded into mistaking the delineation of probabilities and trends
for a prediction of certainties of mathematical
exactitude.
单选题The Great Wall is a great tourist ______ , drawing millions of visitors from all parts of the world every year. A. attention B. appointment C. attraction D. interest
单选题By signing an application, I asked that an account ______ for me and a credit card issued as I requested.
单选题We learn from the last paragraph that the author believes that ______.
单选题We shouldn"t treat children as peers or friends, but guide them in making their choices, even if it means with some
discipline
.
单选题These pollutants can be ______ hundreds and eve thousands of kilometers by large air masses. A. contained B. conveyed C. contaminated D. conserved