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Before starting a production run, it's not necessary to perform a trial run.
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Shrek said, ‘I'm not the one with the problem, okay? It's the world that seems to have a problem with me.’ Here it means “不是我对世界不满,是世界对我不满。”( )
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Which of the following is not completely forbidden, but people tend to have very strong feelings about it and it's probably not a good small talk topic?
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It's no use _______ me not to worry.A. you tell B. your telling C. for you to have told D. having told
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When Lucky was first learning Chinese, he heard back a saying. It's ( ).
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The speaker did not explain how a child manages to learn to speak so quickly.
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People all over the world write to Big Ben. They【C1】______send birthday presents. Big Ben is not a【C2】______. It's a clock!
Big Ben is the great clock【C3】______up in a tower of the Parliament building. This is the building in London where laws are【C4】______. The people of London like to see Big Ben's four friendly faces. They like to hear the chimes【C5】______. 15 minutes. They like to hear the bell【C6】______on the hour. Bong! Bong! Bong!
Big Ben's story started in 1834. In that year the old parliament building burned【C7】______. Its clock tower crashed to the ground. There【C8】______to be a new building—and a new clock.
Plans were made. They called【C9】______a "King of Clocks, the biggest and best in the world". So the clock had to be big. And it had to【C10】______very good time.
In two years the big clock was made. Five more years went by【C11】______the clock tower was finished. Then the four bells for the chimes were brought into the tower. And at last the giant hour bell was put in【C12】______. It rang our for the first time【C13】______July 11, 1859.
This great bell had to【C14】______a name. A meeting of Parliament was called to pick【C15】______. "This clock is the King of Clocks," one man said. "Let's call the bell the Queen of Bells."
"Then why not Victoria?" said【C16】______.(Victoria was the British queen at that time)The talk about names went【C17】______. Then Benjamin Hall got up to speak. He was a big man that others liked. By this time they were all【C18】______. Some one shouted, "Why not call it Big Ben and be done【C19】______it?"
Everybody laughed, and the meeting broke up. But Big Ben it was from then on. Not just the bell【C20】______the whole clock.
【C1】
A.once
B.usually
C.ever
D.even
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It goes______saying that it is not an easy thing to learn a foreign language.
A.on
B.with
C.without
D.to
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A meager diet may give you health and long life, but it's not much fun—and it might not even be necessary. We may be able to hang on to most of that youthful vigor even if we don't start to diet until old age.
Stephen Spindler and his colleagues from the University of California at Riverside have found that some of an elderly mouse's liver genes can be made to behave as they did when the mouse was young simply by limiting its food for four weeks. The genetic rejuvenation won't reverse other damage caused by time for the mouse, but could help its liver metabolize drugs or get rid of toxins.
Spindler's team fed three mice a normal diet for their whole lives, and fed another three on half-rations. Three more mice were switched from the normal diet to half-feed for a month when they were 34 months old—equivalent to about 70 human years.
The researchers checked the activity of 11,000 genes from the mouse livers, and found that 46 changed with age in the normally fed mice. The changes were associated with things like inflammation and free radical production—probably bad news for mouse health. In the mice that had dieted all their lives, 27 of those 46 genes continued to behave like young genes. But the most surprising finding was that the mice that only started dieting in old age also benefited from 70 percent of these gene changes.
"This is the first indication that these effects kick in pretty quickly," says Huber Warner from the National Institute on Aging near Washington, D.C..
No one yet knows if calorie restriction works in people as it does in mice, but Spindler is hopeful. "There's attracting and tempting evidence out there that it will work," he says.
If it does work in people, there might be good reasons for rejuvenating the liver. As we get older, our bodies are less efficient at metabolizing drugs, for example. A brief period of time of dieting, says Spindler, could be enough to make sure a drug is effective.
But Spindler isn't sure the trade-off is worth it. "The mice get less disease, they live longer, but they're hungry," he says. "Even seeing what a diet does, it's still hard to go to a restaurant and say: 'I can only eat half of that'."
Spindler hopes we soon won't need to diet at all. His company, Life Span Genetics in California, is looking for drugs that have the effects of calorie restriction.
According to the passage, which of the following is NOT true?
A.Eating less than usual might make us live longer.
B.If we go on a diet when old, we may keep healthy.
C.Dieting might not be needed. ~
D.We have to begin dieting from childhood.
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It's_____ to learn how to play tennis.
A. easily
B. easy
C. lazy
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听力原文:W: I'm really looking forward to this trip with our geology class. But I'm not certain if I have the strength to carry a backpack up and down the mountain, especially when it's full of tools.
M: They are taking two donkeys to carry the tools. We just have to carry our personal items, like clothing and sleeping bags.
Q: What does the man mean?
(17)
A.He doesn't know what tools to bring.
B.He doesn't mind helping the woman.
C.The woman won't have to carry the tools.
D.The donkeys will carry the woman's personal items.
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听力原文:W: What a lot of traffic! You should have listened to me not to drive down the main street when it's so crowded.
M: Just be patient, honey. It's usual that many roads are busy on weekends.
Q: Where did the conversation take place?
(13)
A.At a railway station.
B.At an airport.
C.On a road.
D.In an office.
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听力原文:W: Are you going to learn to drive, Peter? I got my driver's license last summer. It's not as difficult as many people think.
M: No, I'm not. I'm afraid of breaking my neck. So I'd rather be a bus commuter.
Q: Why won't the man learn to drive?
(15)
A.Because driving is too dangerous.
B.Because buying a car is too expensive.
C.Because getting a driver's licence is too difficult.
D.Because taking a bus is more convenient.
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It's not considered()to be drunk in the street.
A、respect
B、respectable
C、respective
D、respectful
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A study of art history might be a good way to learn more about a culture than is possible to learn in general history classes, Most【B1】history courses primarily concentrate on polities, economies, and war. But art history【B2】on much more than this【B3】art reflects not only the political【B4】of a people, but also religious beliefs, emotions, and psychology. In addition,【B5】about the daily activities of our【B6】or of people very different from our own can be provided by art, In short, art【B7】the essential qualities of a time and a place, and a study of it【B8】offers us a deeper understanding【B9】can be found in most history, books.
In history books,【B10】information about the political life of a country is【B11】; that is, facts about polities axe given,【B12】opinions are not expressed. Art, on the other hand, is【B13】, it reflects emotions and opinions. The great Spanish painter Francisco Goya was perhaps the first【B14】"political" artist. In his well-known painting The Third of May, 1080, he【B15】the Spanish government for its【B16】of power over people.
In the same way, art can【B17】a culture's religious beliefs. For hundreds of years in Europe, religious alt was almost the only【B18】of art that existed. Churches and other religious buildings were filled with paintings that【B19】people and stories from the Bible. By【B20】, one of the main characteristics of art in the Middle East was(and still is) its absence of human and animal images.
【B1】
A.usual
B.typical
C.average
D.popular
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听力原文:A book may be compared to your neighbor; if it's good, it can not last too long; if bad, you can not get rid of it too early.
(29)
A.It is good to have a nice neighbor as long as possible, and it is bad to get rid of a nasty neighbor.
B.You never get tired of a good book; while you should get rid of a bad one the earlier the better.
C.It is good to have a nice neighbor as long as possible, and a bad neighbor as short as possible.
D.A good book is a good neighbor who will last long, and a bad one is just like a bad neighbor who would like to get rid of you.
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In theory, the best way to learn a foreign language is the same way a baby learns to speak; ______in practice its not always feasible.
A.when
B.therefore
C.none the less
D.so long as
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It is not polite to______a speaker when he is making a speech.
A.interrupt
B.cease
C.oppose
D.inquire
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A study of art history might be a good way to learn more about a culture than that is possible to learn in general history classes. Most (1)_____ history courses concentrate on politics, economics, and war. (2)_____, art history (3)_____ on much more than this because art reflects not only the political values of a people, but also religious (4)_____, emotions, and psychology. (5)_____, information about the daily activities of our own can be provided by art. In short, art expresses the (6)_____ qualities of a time and a place, and a study of it clearly offers us a deeper understanding than what can be found in most history books.
In history books, objective information about the political life of a country is (7)_____; that is, facts about political are given, but (8)_____ are not expressed. Art, on the other hand, is (9)_____: it reflects emotions and impressions. The great Spanish painter Francisco Goya severely criticized the Spanish government for its (10)_____ of power over people. Over a hundred years later, symbolic (11)_____ were used in Pablo Picasso's Guemica to express the (12)_____ of War. (13)_____, on another continent, the powerful paintings of Diego Rivera depicted these Mexican artists' concealed (14)_____ and sadness about social problems.
In the same way, art can (15)_____ a culture's religious beliefs. For hundreds of years in Europe, religious art was (16)_____ the only type of art that existed. Churches and other religious buildings were filled with paintings that depicted people and stories from the Bible. (17)_____ most people couldn't read, they could still understand biblical stories in the pictures on church walls. (18)_____, one of the main characteristics of art in the Middle East was (and still is) its (19)_____ of human and animal images. This reflects the Islamic belief that statues are (20)_____.
A.interesting
B.plausible
C.superior
D.typical
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A good night's sleep may help your brain permanently file away lessons learned during the day. But, according to a new study, the brain begins processing and storing those memories long before it's time for bed-and continues to do so even while you're thinking about and doing other things.
Recent studies have shown that the parts of the brain that we use to learn a task become active again during sleep. This activity, scientists suggest, could be the brain transferring memories from short-term to long-term storage.
But the brain doesn't necessarily wait until the lights are out to begin processing those memories.
To find out how the brain handles memories during waking hours, scientists gave 15 volunteers two tasks, each requiring different parts of the brain to learn. In one task, the subjects learned how to navigate a virtual town and then searched the town for an object. In the second task, they learned to predict where a sequence of dots would appear on a screen.
Using a special machine, the researchers scanned the volunteers' brains right before and right after the tasks. They compared the two images to see whether the regions of the brain involved in learning the task were still active even after the task was completed.
After a break, the scientists took a third image of each participant's brain. They wanted to determine whether these regions in the brain continued to be active after snore time had passed.
They discovered that, for at least an hour after learning a task, the brain stays active. It appears to continue processing the new information.
Furthermore, the images showed that distracting the subjects doesn't affect their ability to store memories. The processing continues even when they're thinking about or doing other things.
Some scientists say this could mean that sleep isn't essential for storing memories. Others disagree. Until that's settled, it's probably still better to be on the safe side, getting plenty of sleep.
According to the passage, ______.
A.a good night's sleep helps your brain permanently file away lessons learned during the day.
B.the brain has to wait until the lights are out to begin processing those memories
C.perhaps it's safe for anyone to get plenty of sleep when it has not been proved unnecessary for memory
D.attracting the subjects doesn't affect their ability to store memories.
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It's not a good way to make friends______the Internet.
A.in
B.on
C.at
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a word can not be learned by only being presented to the students, often it has to be encountered at least seven times in different context/tasks before it can learned by the students.()
是
否
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We did not learn how to write a ___.
A.memo
B.application letter
C.notice
D.story
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in uk, in addition to polite expressions, when refusing a request, people find or give ______, if not genuine ones, sometimes called "white lies".
A、comments
B、concerns
C、excuses
D、intentions