单选题During the famine, many people were ______ to going without food for
days.
A. sunk
B. reduced
C. forced
D. declined
单选题
单选题Father does not like ______ meat. A. lean B. slim C. skinny D. slender
单选题The leaders of the two countries are planning their summit meeting with a ______ to maintain and develop good ties.
单选题
单选题On leaving, we thanked him most warmly for the hospitality ______ to us and our friends.
单选题David ______ his company's success to the unity of all the staff and their persevering hard work.
单选题The office staff ______ gathered to hear the president speak.
单选题{{B}}Section A{{/B}}{{B}}Directions:{{/B}}Each of the passages below is followed
by some questions. For each question four answers are given. Read the passages
carefully and choose the best answer to each question. Put your choice on the
ANSWER SHEET.{{B}}Passage One{{/B}}
It was a normal day in the life of the
American Red Cross in Greater New York. First, part of a building on West 140th
Street, in Harlem, fell down. Beds tumbled through the air, people slid out of
their apartments and onto the ground, three people died, and the Red Cross was
there, helping shocked residents find temporary shelter, and food and clothing.
Then it was back downtown for that evening's big fund-raiser, the Eleventh
Annual Red Cross Award Dinner Dance, at the Pierre. "That's why I have bad hair
tonight," said Christopher Peake, a Red Cross spokesman who had spent much of
the day at the Harlem scene, in the drizzling rain. He was now in a tuxedo, and
actually his hair didn't look so bad, framed by a centerpiece of tulips and
jonquils, and perhaps improved by subdued lighting from eight crystal
chandeliers. Definitely not having a had-hair night was
Elizabeth Dole, the wife of Senator Robert Dole and the president of the
American Red Cross. President Dole has chestnut-colored Republican hair, which
was softly coifed, and she was wearing a fitted burgundy velvet evening suit
("Someone made it for me! I love velveti" she exclaimed, in her enthusiastic,
Northern Carolina hostess voice) and sparkling drop earrings. Of course, she
hadn't been standing in the rain in Harlem; she had just flown up on the
three-o'clock shuttle from Washington. Dole is extremely pretty, with round
green eyes and a full mouth and a direct personality. She tilts her head
attentively when she listens. She was the recipient of the evening's award;
previous award winners have included Alice Tully, Princess Yasmin Asa Khan, ..
and, most recently, Brooke Astor. Not exactly a sequence at the end of
which you would expect to find Elizabeth Dole, but award givers are famous for
having political instincts as well as philanthropic ones.
Surrounded by the deep-blue swags and golden draperies of the ballroom
were more than thirty-five dinner tables set with groupings of candles and
floral centerpieces and Royal Doulton china. American Express was there. So were
Bristol-Myers Squibb; Coopers the New York Times Company; Union
Bank of Switzerland; Chemical Bank; New York Life; ... and Price Waterhouse. The
actress Arlene Dahl, with her rather red hair and her bearded husband, presided
over one table. Otherwise, it was a typical, faceless, captain-of-industry fund
raiser (no models! no stars! ), of which there seems to be at least one every
night in New York City. It was not a society night, but still the evening
raised four hundred and thirty thousand dollars.
单选题It was a real ______ when Susan came back from her vacation and told us she had married a local waiter.(2003年上海交通大学考博试题)
单选题Michael found it difficult to get his British jokes ______ to American audiences.
单选题Every Thursday evening, I counsel a group of teenagers with serious substance abuse problems. None of the youngsters elected to see me. Typically, they were caught using drugs, or worse, by their parents or a police officer and were then referred to my clinic. To be sure, all the usual intoxicants--alcohol, marijuana and cocaine-are involved. But a new type of addiction has crept into the mix, controlled prescription drugs, including painkillers. This is hardly unique to my clinic. Several studies report that since 1992, the number of 12-to 17-year-olds abusing controlled prescription drugs has tripled. One of my patients, Mary, illustrates this trend all too well. Mary at 16 is a "garbage head", meaning that she will ingest anything she thinks will give her a high. Last December, she was taken to the hospital for an overdose of alcohol, and ketamine, a chemical cousin of angel dust that doctors sometimes use to anesthetize patients and that, more commonly, veterinarians use to sedate large animals. So where does this physically energetic teenager obtain her pills? Weeks earlier, she had an operation, a minor though uncomfortable procedure by any standards. The surgeon wrote a prescription for 80 tablets. Mary spent the next week in the addiction of the drug until her mother confiscated the last 20 tablets. At medical conferences, I hear colleagues fault parents who abuse and obtain these controlled substances but leave them easily accessible in their unlocked medicine chests where teenagers can help themselves. Other experts fault the Internet, where al-most anyone can obtain controlled prescription drugs from offshore pharmacies with a few clicks on a home computer. None of these targets come close to the real root of the problem. Many doctors are too quick to write prescriptions for these powerful drugs. The National Center for Addiction and Substance Abuse recently reported that 43.3 percent of all American doctors did not even ask patients about prescription drug abuse when taking histories; 33 percent did not regularly call or obtain records from a patient's previous doctor or from other physicians before writing such prescriptions; 47.1 percent said their patients pressured them into prescribing these drugs; and only 39.1 percent had had any training in recognizing prescription drug abuse and addiction. No one in pain--physical or psychic--should suffer. But the fact remains that we doctors still do the bulk of prescribing of the substances. The search for root causes of the epidemic with controlled substance abuse has to include doctors as active participants. A big part of the solution depends on reserving prescriptions for those who need, rather than de-sire, them.
单选题To my surprise, the young man was
resourceful
enough to find infinite ways to express his emotions with gestures.
单选题The reader trusts the writer to create and re-create for him a vision of a fictional world that is free of moral ambiguity, a larger-than-life domain in which such ideals as courage, justice, honor, loyalty and love are challenged and upheld. A. detected B. supplied C. divulged D. preserved
单选题Her successful jump brought a ______ cheer from the crowd.
单选题These two areas are similar ______they both have a high rainfall during this season.
单选题We can infer from the second paragraph that ______.
单选题Total investments for this year reached $56 million, and to put this
into ______ investments this year will double those made in 1997.
A. sight
B. vision
C. perspective
D. horizon
单选题
单选题{{B}}Passage Three{{/B}}
By far the most common difficulty in
study is simple failure to get down to regular concentrated work. This
difficulty is much greater for those who do not work to a plan and have no
regular routine of study. Many students muddle along, doing a hit of this
subject or that, as the mood takes them, or letting their set work pile up until
the last possible moment. Few students work to a set time-table.
They say that if they did construct a timetable for themselves they would not
keep to it, or would have to alter it constantly, since they can never predict
from one day to the next what their activities will be. No doubt
some temperaments take much more kindly to a regular routine than others. There
are many who shy away from the self-regimentatign of a weekly time-table, and
dislike being tied clown to a definite programme of work. Many able students
claim that they work in cycles. When they become interested in a topic they work
on it intensively for three or four days at a time. On other days they avoid
work completely. It has to be confessed that we do not fully understand
the complexities of the motivation to work. Most people over 25 years of age
have become conditioned to a work routine, and the majority of really productive
workers set aside regular hours for the more important aspects of their work.
The "tough-minded" school of workers is usually very contemptuous of the idea
that good work can only be done spontaneously, under the influence of
inspiration. Those who believe that they need only work and
study as the fit takes them have a mistaken belief either in their own talent or
in the value of "freedom". Freedom from restraint and discipline leads to
unhappiness rather than to "self-expression" or "personality development". Our
society insists on regular habits, timekeeping and punctuality, and whether we
like it or not, if we mean to make our way in society we have to comply with its
demands.
