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单选题When the relationship of parents and children is at this low ______, mutual love and respect need careful maintenance and rebuilding.
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单选题By working hard he acquired an extraordinary______ of the English language.
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单选题U.S. airlines would have to suffer the following losses if there were war with Iraq except that ______.
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单选题Questions 25—27 are based on the following conversation. You now have 15 seconds to read questions 25—27.
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单选题
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单选题3 It was two years ago today that the hunting ban came into force, supposedly ending centuries of tradition. However, the law has been an unmitigated failure—not that either side is shouting about it. It was a nightmare vision that struck fear and loathing into the hearts of millions. When the hunting ban became law, it was said, 16,000 people would lose their jobs, thousands of hounds would be put down, rotting carcasses would litter the country side, hedgerows would disappear, riders would face on-the-spot fines, law-abiding people from doctors to barristers would be dragged from their horses and carted off to prison, while dog owners would be prosecuted if their mutt caught a rabbit. These were just some of the claims as desperate countryside campaigners battled to save their sport in the lead-up to the hunting ban, which Labour rammed into law using the Parliament Act on November 18, 2004. For many, the fears were real. Others exaggerated as they fought an increasingly aggressive anti-hunting lobby which had rejected acres of independent evidence affirming that hunting is the most humane way of killing foxes. In the battle to "fight prejudice, fight the ban", every emotive argument was deployed. For its part, the anti-hunting brigade extravagantly claimed that the ban would put an end to the rich parading in red jackets. A senior Labour MP, Peter Bradley, admitted in this newspaper that it was, as many suspected, about "class war". He lost his seat shortly afterwards. But people in red coats did not disappear. In fact, none of the forecasts came true. What did happen was something nobody had predicted, the spectacular revival and growth of hunting with hounds.In short, the hun ting ban has been a failure. Today, on the second anniversary of the ban's coming into force on February 18, 2005, new figures show that participation in the sport has never been higher. It is so cheer ful that two new packs have been formed, something that has not happened for centuries. They include the seductively named Private Pack, set up by the financier Roddy Flem ing in Gloucestershire. It operates on an invitation-only basis, a sort of hunting private members club. This can only mean one thing, like it or not, hunting is cool. Young people are taking it up, enticed by the element of rebellion and the mystique of what actually hap pens as hunts attempt to keep within the law.
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单选题In the first decades of the twentieth century, the individual gene could not be seen, but could be worked with fruitfully.
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单选题Mr Wang's behavior is______
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单选题This is the ______ piano on which the composer created some of his greatest works.
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单选题Apparently there were ______ between police reports taken from the same witnesses at different times. A. distortions B. discrepancies C. disorders D. distractions
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单选题Which of the following is NOT a correct statement?
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单选题Before we move, we should______some of the old furniture, so that we can have more room in the new house.(中国矿业大学2008年试题)
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单选题An American university president once commented that "Einstein has created a new outlook, a new view of the universe. It may be some generations before the average mind grasps the identity of time and space, and so on, but even ordinary men understand now that the universe is something vast than ever thought before. " A. It may be some generations B. before C. something vast D. than ever thought before.
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单选题Patients tend to feel indignant and insulted of the physician tells them he can find no organic cause for the pain. They tend to interpret the term "psychogenic" to mean that they are complaining of nonexistent symptoms. They need to be educated about the fact that many forms of pain have no underlying physical cause but are the result, as mentioned earlier, of tension, stress or hostile factors in the general environment. Sometimes a pain may be a manifestation of "conversion hysteria". Obviously, it is folly for an individual to ignore symptoms that could be a warning of a potentially serious illness. Some people are so terrified of getting news from a doctor that they allow their malaise to worsen, sometimes past the point of no return. Total neglect is not the answer to hypochondria. The only answer has to be increased education about the way the human body works; so that more people be able to steer an intelligent course between promiscuous pill-popping and irresponsible disregard of genuine symptoms. Of all forms of pain, none is important for the individual to understand than the "threshold" variety. Almost everyone has a telltale ache that is triggered whenever tension or fatigue reaches a certain point. It can take the form of a migraine-type headache or a squeezing pain deep in the abdomen or cramps or a pain in the lower back or even in the joints. The individual who has learned how to make the correlation between such threshold pains and their cause doesn"t panic when they occur; he or she does something about relieving the stress and tension. Then, if the pain persists despite the absence of apparent cause, the individual will telephone the doctor.
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单选题The reporter asked the general to ______on his statement.
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单选题Most people would be (71) by the high quality of medicine (72) to most Americans. There is a lot of specialization, a great deal of (73) to the individual, a (74) amount of advanced technical equipment, and (75) effort not to make mistakes because of the financial risk which doctors and hospitals must (76) in the courts if they (77) things badly. But the Americans are in a mess. The problem is the way in (78) health care is organized and (79) . (80) to pubic belief it is not just a free competition system. The private system has been joined by a large public system, because private care wag simply not (81) the less fortunate and the elderly. But even with this huge public part of the system, (82) this year will eat up 84.5 billion dollars—more than 10 percent of the U. S. budget, large numbers of Americans are left (83) . These include about half the 11 million unemployed and those who fail to meet the strict limits (84) income fixed by a government trying to save where it can. The basic problem, however, is that there is no central control (85) the health system. There is no (86) to what doctors and hospitals charge for their services, other than what the public is able to pay. The number of doctors has shot up and prices have climbed. When faced with a toothache, a sick child, or a heart attack, all the unfortunate persons concerned can do is (87) up. Two thirds of the population (88) covered by medical insurance. Doctors charge as much as they want (89) that the insurance company will pay the bill. The rising cost of medicine in the U. S. A. is among the most worrying problems facing the country. In 198l the Country's health bill climbed 15.9 percent—about twice as fast as prices (90) general.
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单选题Advocates of private school argue that education in one of these facilities is more valuable and ______than any other educational opportunity.
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单选题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} There are 15 questions in this part of the test. Read the passage through. Then, go back and choose one suitable word or phrase marked A, B, C or D for each blank in the passage. Mark the corresponding letter of the word or phrase you have chosen with a single bar across the square brackets on your Machine-scoring Answer Sheet. Assuming that a constant travel-time budget, geographic constraints and short-term infrastructure constraints persist as fundamental features of global mobility, what long-term results can one expect? In high-income regions, {{U}}(21) {{/U}}North America, our picture suggests that the share of traffic{{U}} (22) {{/U}}supplied by buses and automobiles will decline as high-speed transport rises sharply. In developing countries, we{{U}} (23) {{/U}}the strongest increase to be in the shares first for buses and later for automobiles. Globally, these{{U}} (24) {{/U}}in bus and automobile transport are partially offsetting. In all regions, the share of low-speed rail transport will probably continue its strongly{{U}} (25) {{/U}}decline. We expect that throughout the period 1990~2050, the{{U}} (26) {{/U}}North American will continue to devote most of his or her 1.1-hour travel-time{{U}} (27) {{/U}}to automobile travel. The very large demand{{U}} (28) {{/U}}air travel (or high-speed rail travel) that will be manifest in 2050{{U}} (29) {{/U}}to only 12 minutes per person a day; a little time goes a long way in the air. In several developing regions, most travel{{U}} (30) {{/U}}in 2050 will still be devoted to nonmotorized modes. Buses will persist{{U}} (31) {{/U}}the primary form of motorized transportation in developing countries for decades. {{U}}(32) {{/U}}important air travel becomes, buses, automobiles and{{U}} (33) {{/U}}low-speed trains will surely go on serving vital functions. {{U}}(34) {{/U}}of the super-rich already commute and shop in aircraft, but average people will continue to spend most of their travel time on the{{U}} (35) {{/U}}.
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单选题These examples show that openness and the ability to change brings couples a giant step closer to the marital harmony they ______. A. request B. negotiate C. crave D. detest
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单选题Business travelers may grumble about moving to the back of the Airbus, but in the air and on the ground, special deals ______ for those who are willing to lower their sights.
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