单选题I tried very hard to persuade him to join our groups but I met with
{{U}}flat refusal{{/U}}.
A. disapproval
B. rejection
C. refusal
D. decline
单选题Muren feels that with CG technology, just about any special effect can be achieved.
单选题The government should promote teaching as a career by advertising_____
单选题Do you believe these two {{U}}intimate{{/U}} friends used to be enemies?
单选题Dotting the marshy expanse of the Florida Everglades are little islands known locally as hummocks.
单选题{{B}}第三篇{{/B}}
Faster Effective Reading
A higher reading rate, with no loss of comprehension, will help you in
other subjects as well as in English, and the general principles apply to any
language. Naturally, you will not read every book at the same speed. You
would expect to read a newspaper, for example, much more rapidly than a physics
or economics textbook—but you can raise your average reading speed over the
whole range of materials you wish to cover so that the percentage (百分比) gained
will be the same whatever kind of reading you are concerned with.
The reading passages which follow are all of an average level of
difficulty for your stage of instruction. They are all about five hundred words
long. They are about topics of general interest which do not require a great
deal of specialized knowledge. Thus they fall between the kind of reading you
might find in your textbooks and the much less demanding kind you will find in a
newspaper or light novel. If you read this kind of English, with understanding
at, say, four hundred words per minute, you might drop to two hundred or two
hundred and fifty. Perhaps you would like to know what reading
speeds are common among native Englishspeaking university students and how those
speeds can be improved. Tests in Minnesota, U. S. A, for example, have
shown that students without special training can read English of average
difficulty, for example, Tolstoy's War and Peace in translation, at speeds of
between 240 and 250 words per minute with about seventy percent comprehension.
Students in Minnesota claim that after twelve half-hour lessons, once a week,
the reading speed can be increased, with no loss of comprehension, to around
five hundred words per minute.
单选题There has been a {{U}}boom{{/U}} in economy in recent years.
单选题David likes country life and has decided to
undertake
fanning.
单选题These factories were closed for failing to {{U}}comply{{/U}} with the air-pollution laws issued by the Government.
单选题The National Trust in Britain plays an increasingly important part in the preservation for public enjoyment of the best that is left unspoiled of the British countryside. Although the Trust has received practical and moral support from the Government, it is not a rich Government department. It is a voluntary association of people who care for the unspoiled countryside and historic buildings of Britain. It is a charity which depends for its existence on voluntary support from members of the public. Its primary duty is to protect places of great natural beauty and places of historical interest. Members of the National Trust are peopleA. who are government employees and get their pay from the government.B. who are interested in dealing with social problems.C. who are rich enough to work for the organization without pay.D. who care for the unspoiled countryside and historic buildings in Britain.
单选题All instructors will allow somewhat changed focus in the original topic.
单选题The company
recommended
that a new petrol station be built here.
单选题Cement was seldom Used in buildings in the Middle Ages.A. crudelyB. rarelyC. originallyD. occasionally
单选题Many fine cooks
insist on
ingredients of the highest quality.
单选题We also want to use the water to irrigate Ubarren/U desert land.
单选题Did
anyone
call when I was out?
单选题Star Quality A new anti-cheating system for counting the judges' scores in ice skating is flawed, according to leading sports specialists. Ice skating's governing body announced the new rules last week after concerns that a judge at the Winter Olympics may have been unfairly influenced. Initially the judges in the pairs figure-skating event at the Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City voted 5 to 4 to give the gold medal to a Russian pair, even though they had a fall during their routine. But the International Skating Union suspended the French judge for failing to reveal that she had been put under pressure to vote for the Russians. The International Olympics Committee then decided to give a second gold to the Canadian runners-up (亚军). The ISU, skating's governing body, now says it intends to change the rules. In future 14 judges will judge each event, but only 7 of their scores-selected at random-will count. The ISU won't finally approve the new system until it meets in June but already U. K. Sport, the British Government's sports body, has expressed reservations. "I remain to be convinced that the random selection system would offer the guarantees that everyone concerned with ethical sport is looking for", says Jerry Bingham, U. K. Sport's heact of ethics (伦理). A random system can still be manipulated, says Mark Dixon, a specialist on sports statistics from the Royal Statistical Society in London. "The score of one or two judges who have been nobbled (受到贿赂) may still be in the seven selected. " Many other sports that have judges, including diving, gymnastics, and synchronized swimming, have a system that discards the highest and lowest scores. If a judge was under pressure to favour a particular team, they would tend to give it very high scores and mark down the opposition team, so their scores wouldn't count. It works for diving, says Jeff Cook, a member of the international government body's technical committee. "If you remove those at the top and bottom you're left with those in the middle, so you're getting a reasonable average. " Since the 2000 Olympics in Sydney, diving has tightened up in its system still further. Two separate panels of judges score different rounds of diving during top competitions. Neither panel knows the scores given by the other. "We have done this to head off any suggestion of bias," says Cook. Bingham urged the ISU to consider other options. "This should involve examining the way in which other sports deal with the problem of adjudicating (裁定) on matter of style and presentation," he says.
单选题The Street Violinist I got up and dressed, stuck my violin under my jacket, and went out into the streets to try my luck. I wandered about for an hour, looking for a likely spot, feeling as though I were about to commit a crime. Then I stopped at last under a bridge near the station and decided to have a try. I felt tense and nervous. It was the first time, after all. I drew the violin from under my coat like a gun. It was here, in Southampton, with trains rattling overhead, that I was about to declare myself. One morning I was part of the hurrying crowds, the next I stood apart, my back to the wall, my hat on the pavement before me, the violin under my chin. The fist notes I played were loud and raw, like a declaration of protest. Then they settled down and began to run more smoothly and to stay more or less in turn. To my surprise I was neither arrested nor told to shut up. Indeed, nobody took any notice at all. Then an old man, without stopping, surreptitiously tossed a penny into my hat as though getting out of some guilty evidence. I worked the streets of Southampton for several days, gradually acquiring the truths of the trade by trial and error. It was not a good thing, for instance, to let the hat fill up with money—the sight could discourage the patron. Nor was it wise to empty it completely, which could also confuse him, giving him no hint as to where to drop his money. Placing a couple of pennies in the hat to start the thing going soon became a regular ritual, making sure between tunes, to hide most of the earnings, but always leaving two pennies behind. Old ladies were most generous, and so were women with children, shopgirls, typists and barmaids. As for the man, heavy drinkers were always willing listeners and so were big guys with muscles. But never a man with a gentleman's hat, briefcase or dog. Respectable types were the meanest of all. Except for retired army officers, who would tell " why aren't you working, young man?" and then toss some money into the hat to hide their confusion.
单选题Cement was {{U}}seldom{{/U}} Used in buildings in the Middle Ages.
单选题The
steadily
rising cost of labor on the waterfront has greatly increased the cost of shipping cargo by water.