填空题Which number comes next in this series?
2736, 9108, 17127, 89298,?,
填空题For answers 56-60, complete the sentences with the information
given in the passage in a maximum of 4 words.
填空题A British psychologist verifies that
1
are not born with talents. Excellence comes mainly from
2
Favored by academics all over the world, the theory means a lot to teachers and parents. However, studies indicate that excellent people show few early signs of promise
3
parental encouragement. All of them devoted themselves to serious training. Those exceptionally talented required
4
of instruction and practice. Opponents believe practice and other factors are not enough to explain
5
.
填空题Which word of four letters can be added to the front of the following words to create other English words?
CARD BOX CODE BAG HASTE
填空题 France Canada Russia Course of study French language and literature comparative literature (57) Length of course (51) (54) (58) Purpose of study diploma (55) (59) Accommodation (52) (56) in a student hostel Advantage opportunity to speak French; (53) beautiful countryside small classes (60) ; greattheatre France Canada Russia Course of study French language and literature comparative literature (57) Length of course (51) (54) (58) Purpose of study diploma (55) (59) Accommodation (52) (56) in a student hostel Advantage opportunity to speak French; (53) beautiful countryside small classes (60) ; greattheatre
填空题Read the passage and fill in each blank with one word. Choose the word in
one of the following three ways: according to the context, by using the correct
form of the given word, or by using some given letters of the word. Remember to
write the answers on the answer sheet.Turn in your
collection of industry-supplied freebies and Goodman will send back a few
replacement pens bearing the No Free Lunch insignia (标记).
According to the Journal of the American Medical Association, the pharmaceutical
(制药) in{{U}} {{U}} 1 {{/U}} {{/U}}spends $8,000 to $13,000 per
physician each year to pro{{U}} {{U}} 2 {{/U}} {{/U}}its wares,
which are hawked by a sales force of roughly 80,000 representatives. He decided
to keep the clinic off-limits to drug sales re{{U}} {{U}} 3
{{/U}} {{/U}}but found it hard to practice. He created a {{U}} {{U}}
4 {{/U}} {{/U}}to sell the pens and mugs to raise money for the
patients, which is called it NoFreeLunch. org. Drug companies
send extravagant gifts to doctors, which do inf{{U}} {{U}} 5
{{/U}} {{/U}}what they prescribe. The more expensive drugs, which are heavily
{{U}} {{U}} 6 {{/U}} {{/U}}(market) to doctors, are far more
frequently pr{{U}} {{U}} 6 {{/U}} {{/U}}by doctors.
Goodman has done many things to alert physicians to such {{U}}
{{U}} 8 {{/U}} {{/U}}(trouble) data; he also plans to convince
med-schools to ed{{U}} {{U}} 9 {{/U}} {{/U}}their students about
the {{U}} {{U}} 10 {{/U}} {{/U}}(ethic) hazard of accepting
corporate gifts. "I find [No Free Lunch] to be one of the few hopeful things in
this area," she says. "So many doctors are now bought and paid for."
填空题 Directions: In this section, there is one
passage followed by a summary. Read the passage carefully and complete the
summary by choosing no more than three words from the passage. Remember to write
the answers on the Answer Sheet. Questions
76-80 are based on the following passage.
Developing Environmental Management
Strategies Strong and sustainable economic
activity depends on healthy environmental management. It is being increasingly
recognized by the public, government and industry that there is no need to shift
smoothly from a "react and cure" approach to an "anticipate and prevent"
approach. The mechanism governing this change started to appear three to four
years ago and the momentum for change has been gathering steadily ever since.
Whilst the need to embrace these changes is almost universally
accepted, the mechanisms for change and the priorities for action have been far
from clear. The public and the media point to anecdotal evidence of lack of
progress, or setbacks, over a bewildering range of topics. These incidents are
catalogued by local and national pressure groups to enhance their own campaigns
for change. The Government, under pressure from the European Community, has
introduced legislation which, although progressive, often appears to industry to
be fragmented and difficult to digest. There is, therefore, a
clear and often expressed need on the part of British and European management
for techniques to identify and prioritize the key environmental issues for
allocation of resources and action. The technique emerging as the most effective
is a strategy which involves the formulation of a policy statement setting out
the organization's philosophy on the environment and the aims to be achieved. A
detailed assessment of the environmental status and performance of the operation
is then undertaken, key issues identified and targets set. The performance of
the operation or unit is regularly audited to measure progress towards the
targets set. This environmental strategy is often called an Environmental
Management System or simply referred to as an Environmental Audit.
Summary: There has been a steady
movement towards more efficient, proactive environmental management. Whilst the
{{U}}(76) {{/U}} is generally accepted, the means have yet to be agreed
upon. Attempts at introducing {{U}}(77) {{/U}} have, so far, been
unsatisfactory. Techniques are currently being defined for allocating
{{U}}(78) {{/U}} or action on key environmental issues. The most useful
approach is to draw up a {{U}}(78) {{/U}} which clarifies the
environmental attitudes and aims of the organization. Performance and progress
towards these targets can then be measured. A detailed evaluation or
{{U}}(80) {{/U}} is regularly carried out.
填空题Proofreadthepassageasrequired,eachindicatedlinecontainsamaximumofoneerror.Correctthepassageinthefollowingway:foracorrectline,putthesign"√"inthecorrespondingblank;forawrongword,underlinethewrongwordandwritethecorrectoneintheblank;foramissingword,markthepositionofthemissingwordwiththesignandwritethewordyoubelievetobemissingintheblank;foranunnecessaryword,crosstheunnecessarywordwiththesign"/"andputthewordwiththesign"/"intheblank.Remembertowritetheanswersontheanswersheet.Perhapsquickestwaytounderstandtheelementsofwhata81.______novelistisdoingisnottoread,andtowrite;tomakeyourown82.______experimentwiththedangersanddifficultyofwords.Recall,then,83.______someeventwhathasleftadistinctimpressiononyou--howatthe84.______cornerofthestreet,perhaps,youpassedtwopeopletalking.Atreeshook;anelectriclightdancing;thetoneofthetalkwas85.______comic,butalsotragic;awholevision,anentireconception,seemedcontaininthatmoment.86.______Butwhenyouattempttoreconstructitinwords,youwillfindthatitbreaksintoathousandconflictingimpression.Some87.______mustbesubdued;otheremphasized;intheprocessyouwilllose,88.______probably,allgraspupontheemotionitself.Thenturnfromyour89.______blurredandlitteredpagesontheopeningpagesofsomegreat90.______novelists--Defoe,JaneAusten,Hardy.Nowyouwillbebetterabletoappreciatetheirmastery.
填空题 Passage Two Questions
66- 70 are based on the following passage. "My advisor
wants me to call him by his first name," many foreign graduate students in the
U.S. have said, "But I just can't do it. It doesn't seem right. I have to show
my respect." On the other hand, professors have said of foreign
students, "They keep bowing and saying ' Yes, sir, yes, sir. ' I can hardly
stand it. I wish they'd stop being so polite and just say what they have on
their minds." Differing ideas about formality and respect
frequently complicate relationships between American professors and students
from abroad, especially Asian students (especially female Asian students). The
professors generally prefer informal relationships (sometimes, but not always,
including the use of first names rather than titles and family names) and little
acknowledgment of status differences. Many foreign students are used to more
formal relationships and sometimes have difficulty bringing themselves to speak
to their teachers at all, let alone addressing them by their given
names. The characteristics of student-teacher relationships on
American campuses vary somewhat, depending on whether the students involved are
undergraduate or graduate students, and depending on the size and nature of the
college. Graduate students typically have more intense relationships with their
professors than undergraduates do; at smaller colleges student-teacher
relationships are typically even less formal than they are at larger
institutions. To say that student-teacher relationships are
informal is not to say that there are no recognized status differences between
the two groups. There are. But native American students may show their respect
mainly in tile vocabulary and tone of voice they use when speaking to teachers.
Much of their behavior around teachers may seem to foreign students to be
disrespectful. For example, American students will eat in class, read
newspapers, and assume quite informal postures. Approve of such behavior, but
they tolerate it. Students, after all, are individuals who have the right to
decide for themselves how they are going to behave.
Questions:
填空题唯一重要的事情就是要平安回家。(matter)
填空题Cricket, although loved by millions of people, is not one of the easiest sports to understand. Indeed, the game has lots of subtle
41
(complex), and it"s probably fair to say that cricket fans tend to be quite proud of them.
The sport
42
(originate) in England and spread to many parts of the former British Em
43
, hence its popularity today in countries such as Australia (the current world champions), New Zealand, India, Pakistan, South Africa, and many of the islands of the Caribbean.
You could perhaps des
44
cricket as being a little like baseball, but cricket fans probably wouldn"t appreciate the comparison as they tend to see their game as much more soph
45
.
The basic facts of cricket are that it is played on a roughly oval-shaped grass field (usually at least 50% bigger than the average football pitch) by two teams of eleven players who take it in turns to "bat" and to "field".
The batting team has two of its players on the pitch at any one time, and the o
46
of these "batsmen" is to score as many "runs" as possible. To score runs the batsman uses a
47
(wood) bat (heavier than a baseball bat, with a wider end) to hit the ball (slightly bigger than a tennis ball, but made of lea
48
and therefore heavier) that is
49
(throw) by the member of the fielding team known as the "bowler". Unlike in baseball, the bowler has to make the ball bounce off the pitch before it reaches the batsman.
The bowler tries to get the batsman "out", which usually happens in one of three ways: if the ball hits the "wicket" (three vertical pieces of wood, about seventy centimeters high) that the batsman stands in front of; if the batsman uses his leg in
50
of his bat to block a ball that would have hit the wicket; or if one of the members of the fielding team catches the ball, after the batsman has hit it.
填空题ITAIPUDAM:VitalstatisticsLocation:BrazilandParaguayCompletiondate:(21)Purpose:Hydro-electricpowerCost:(22)Type:GravityMaterial:(23)length:7.8kilometers(24):196meters(25)1.02trillioncubicfeetTherearetwoproblemscausedbytheconstructionofthedam.Oneisthatthewaterfromthedam(26)whichspreaddiseasesamongthepeople.Theotheristhatthereservoirdestroyedtherainforest,whichconsequentlycausedthedeathof(27)andotherforestcreatures.Question28-30Labelthediagram,andwriteonewordforeachblank.
填空题Being Watched We like to see murderers and thieves end up in prison. If they are c (46) as a consequence of being filmed by security cameras, having their phone calls l (47) to or their email messages read, m (48) just be the weapon we have long been looking for in our war against them. Recent s (49) breakthroughs have also made it possible to solve crimes that took place decades a (50) , so that just about any story can be worked out from its ending. This, too, is good news; if it is true it means that there really is no hiding place for the wrongdoer, (51) the police will always get their man, and that crime doesn't pay. The worrying thing is, of course, that it is not just the (52) (crime) who are being watched. All of us have now become the stars of films made in shops, car parks and the high street. Records are kept, and sometimes (53) (sell), of the numbers we most often phone, while the emails we like to think of as being private and (54) (person) are copied and stored by persons unknown. Some say this is the price of freedom f (55) crime, and that the innocent have nothing to fear.
填空题Whatnumberismissingfromthesegmentbelow?
填空题resent, calm, obvious, in detail, resolve, satisfy, involve, prefer, allow for, outcome, according to, inspire Psychologists agree that conflicts are inevitable in almost any long-term relationship; however, what matters most is the way in which they are (1) rather than the sources of the dis-agreements themselves. (2) recent studies, the methods that couples use to settle their differences are crucial to the success of the (3) . One of the interesting findings is that although excessively aggressive behaviour pattems are (4) undesirable, what must be avoided at all costs is the suppression of anger, as feelings of (5) can lead a relationship to break down irretrievably. It is essential for couples to communicate when things start going wrong, and successful conflict resolution (6) a three-stage process. Firstly, one partner should explain precisely what the problem is and should try and remain as (7) and unemotional as possible. Secondly, the couple should discuss the specific problem (8) taking care not to rake up old grievances. Finally, and perhaps most importantly, there should be negotiation until a (9) agreement is reached. This may not mean that their problem will be solved, but even this is (10) to allowing a problem to rankle.
填空题Intellectual property, the product of a porson or a company"
1
, is protected through patents, namely, copyrights and trademarks. Copyrights protect original works of
2
, including books,
3
paintings, movies and architecture. Copyright has a time limit and after a period of time, the works can be copied or used
4
. Trademarks, different from copyrights, protect product
5
forever.
填空题Determine what number should replace the question mark:
1 64 243 256 125 36 ?
填空题Britain'scarindustrymaybeshowingdownbutBritishengineerscanstillbuildtheworld'sfastestcar.(46)(construct)workbeginstodayonacarthatengineershopewillbreakthelandspeedrecord(47)morethan200mph.Thecar,Bloodhound,isdesignedtotravelfasterthan1,000mph(1,600km/h)--farinex(48)ofthespeedofsoundandtheequivalentofcrossingfourfootballpitcheseverysecondTherecordof763mphwass(49)in1997bytheRoyalAirForcepilotAndyGreen,whowillalsodriveBloodhound.Thetimetrialissch(50)for2011andwilltakeplaceindesertintheNorthernCapeofSouthAfrica.Theear'spencil-shapeshellismadefrom(51)(forge)aerospace-gradealuminum.Threeengineslieunderthebonnet:a400kgEuro-fighterTyphoonjetengine,arocketandathirdenginetopumpfuelthroughtotherocket.Thiscombinationshouldproduce135,000horse-powerseq(52)tothepowerof180FormulaOneears.WingCommanderGreen,46,willliefeet-firstinBloodhound.Asthecar(53)(acceleration)to1,050mphin40seconds,hewillexperienceaforceof2.5G,orabouttwicehisbodyweight.Ashedeceleratesandexperiencesforcesofupto3G,thebloodwilldrainfromhisheadtohisfeetandhecouldblackout.Hewillprepare(54)thetrialbyflyingupsidedowninastuntaircraft."Ahugeadvantageis(55)I'vegot20years'experienceofflyingfastjets,"hesaid.