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【单选题】

An opinion poll was conducted in the early 1990’s to ascertain the cultural attitudes of residents of five countries in Western Europe (Britain, France, Italy, Spain and Germany). One thousand people, forming a representative sample of the population, from each of the five participating countries were interviewed. The results of the poll suggest that though there is general agreement that culture can be defined as a distinct part of life, there are clear differences in the views of various European nations.
The poll assumed that literature, history, science, the arts, law, economics and so on would be regarded as significant components of culture by all participants but it set out to examine the areas which they deemed the most important forms of cultural expression. In addition, the poll required interviewees to indicate in a questionnaire the type of education they considered most appropriate for the modem world, the best channels of knowledge and the arts they most valued. The interviewees were also asked which European countries they found most attractive from a cultural point of view.
The results of the poll show interesting differences between the participating nations in terms of which components of culture they regard as most important forms of cultural expression. For the French and Italians, literature comes well at the top of the list. In contrast, mathematics is given priority by the British and economics/politics by the Germans. History occupies second place for the French, the Italians and Germans but is given very low priority by the British. For the Spanish these four areas are more or less equal, with mathematics having a slight edge.
It seems that members of each country in the survey have a common definition of culture but that definition varies from country to country. The variations tend to support the national stereotypes we have of one another. The French and Italians are literary peoples, the British scientific and the Germans practical and hard-working.
France has the distinction, according to the results of the poll, of being the country which provokes most interest from its British, Italian and German neighbors. Spanish interviewees indicated more interest in Italy than in France. The French also placed Italy first. Italy occupies second place for both the British and the Germans. It would seem, then, that the "literary" nations of France and Italy are more culturally exciting than the scientific British or the practical Germans!
The view of education in the five countries is particularly illuminating in view of the high cultural priority given to literature by both Italy and France because there is general agreement among the majority of the 5,000 interviewees that schooling should provide scientific and technical education rather than attempt to inculcate literary and artistic culture.
The residents of the five countries of the survey share the view that books are the best way of broadening knowledge. The French, Germans, and Italians identify radio and television as the second best means of improving knowledge but for the British and Spanish travel is in second place and conversation and discussion in third place.
The poll confirms that, though there are broad similarities among the nations surveyed, the British, French, Italians, Spanish and Germans do not share identical cultural preferences and classifications. There are, it would seem, specific national characteristics.
Which of the following is NOT included in the questions directed to the interviewees

A.
Do you think literature, history, science, the arts, law, economics and so on should be regarded as significant components of culture
B.
What kind of education is most appropriate for the modem world
C.
What are the best channels of knowledge and the arts you most value
D.
Which European countries are most attractive from a cultural point of view
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【单选题】How many pills should the patient take one day() A.4. B.8. C.12. D.15.

A.
[听力原文]
B.
M: Take the pill three times a day right after meals, and each time take four.
C.
W: Thanks a lot. doctor!

【单选题】Passage ThreeQuestions 32 to 35 are based on the passage you have just heard.

A.
Children should be held responsible for their own actions.
B.
Children should be given as much freedom as possible.
C.
Children should be treated with respect.
D.
Children should be treated equally as adults.

【单选题】It can be inferred from the passage that() A. Walt Disney cartoon characters were born earlier than Pat Sullivan’s B. only professionals can create cartoon characters C. Popeye the Sailor and Olive Oy...

A.
Animation means making things which are lifeless come alive and move.
B.
Since earliest times, people have always been astonished by movement. But not until this century have we managed to take control of movement, to record it, and in the case of animation, to retranslate it and recreate it. To do all this, we use a movie camera and a projector (放映机).
C.
In the world of cartoon animation, nothing is impossible. You can make the characters do exactly what you want them to do.
D.
A famous early cartoon character was Felix the Cat, created by Pat Sullivan in America in the early nineteen twenties. Felix was a wonderful cat. He could do all sorts of things no natural cat could do like taking off his tail, using it as a handle and then putting it back.
E.
Most of the great early animators lived and worked in America, the home of the moving picture industry. The famous Walt Disney cartoon characters came to life after 1928. Popeye the Sailor and his girl friend Olive Oyo were born at Max Ficischer in 1933.
F.
But to be an animator, you don’t have to be a professional (专业人士). It is possible for anyone to make a simple animated film without using a camera at all, All you have to do is to draw directly onto an empty film and then run the film through a projector.

【单选题】Passage ThreeQuestions 32 to 35 are based on the passage you have just heard.

A.
They can stay away as they want.
B.
They will be punished severely.
C.
They will be sent back home.
D.
They will be denied further education.

【单选题】It can be inferred from the text that (). A.no one believes women’s study B.few people believe women’s warning signs C.women’s heart attack is often ignored D.women always realized their dangers

A.
What if you were having a heart attack, but no one believed you A new study of 515 female heart-attack survivors (aged 29 to 97) reveals that this happens all too often.
B.
In the study, 95% said they knew something was seriously wrong a month or more before their heart attack, but none of their doctors had even told them that they had heart disease. And when their heart attack happened, fewer than 30% had chest pain or discomfort, the classic warning signs that most emergency room physicians and nurses look for.
C.
One study volunteer in her mid-30s had a heart attack while driving her children to school. "She had repeatedly sought help for early warning symptoms," says study author Jean McSweeney of the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. Despite abnormal cardiac stress test results, she got no treatment. Two weeks later, she nearly died.
D.
Here are the signs that a heart attack may be weeks away: extreme fatigue, disturbed sleep, shortness of breath, and/or anxiety. "If a woman has risk factors for a heart attack and suddenly has unusual symptoms, she needs to tell the doctor that they’re interfering with her everyday activities," McSweeney says. "Be sure of it.

【单选题】The research done by the Dement commission shows that Americans() A. don’t like to take naps B. are terribly worried about their national debt C. sleep less than is good for them D. have caused many i...

A.
American society is not nap (午睡) friendly. In fact, says David Dinges, a sleep specialist at the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. "There’s even a prohibition against admitting we need sleep". Nobody wants to be caught napping or found asleep at work. To quote a proverb: "Some sleep five hours, nature requires seven, laziness nine and wickedness eleven."
B.
Wrong. The way not to fall asleep at work is to take naps when you need them. "We have to totally change our attitude toward napping", says Dr. William Dement of Stanford University, the godfather of sleep research.
C.
Last year a national commission led by Dement identified an" American sleep debt "which one member said was important as the national debt. The commission was concerned about the dangers of sleepness: people causing industrial accidents or falling asleep while driving. This may be why we have a new sleep policy in the White House. According to recent reports, president Clinton is trying to take a half-hour snooze (打瞌睡) every afternoon.
D.
About 60 percent of American adults nap when given the opportunity. We seem to have "a midafternoon quiet phase" also called "a secondary sleep gate". Sleeping 15 minutes to two hours in the early afternoon can reduce stress and make us refreshed. Clearly, we were born to nap.
E.
We superstars of Snooze don’t nap to replace lost shut-eye or to prepare for a night shift. Rather,we "snack" on sleep, whenever, wherever and at whatever time we feel like it. I myself have napped in buses, cars, planes and on boats; on floors and beds; and in libraries, offices and museums.

【单选题】54() A.afew B.alittle C.little D.few

A.
Long long ago mankind began to use tools. Throughout the world, you can still find the tools which were used over two million years ago. People made such tools by hitting one stone (36) another. By this means, they got pieces from one of the stones. These pieces of stone were always (37) on one side. People utilized them to (38) skin and meat from some animals that were dead, (39) to make other tools from wood. Mankind needed (40) use tools since, unlike other meat-eating (41) , say lions, they did not have sharp teeth. Tools greatly helped people obtain food more (42) .
B.
Tools helped (43) human intelligence as well when human worked with them. The human brain became bigger gradually, and human beings began to invent a growing number of tools. The stone piece was one of the (44) tools that were used by people, and maybe it was (45) . Some scientists hold it was the key (46) human beings’ success.
C.
A new kind of tool has come into people’s view since 1960, that is, the silicon chip a small chip of silicon crystal. It is a bit (47) than a fingernail, but it is able to (48) several million "bits" of information or so. No doubt that it is an (49) brain.
D.
Each year these chips grow cleverer, however (50) size becomes smaller, what’s more, their cost gets (51) .
E.
It is (52) over two million years that human beings used chips, but human (53) changed so little at that time. Now we have made use of silicon chips for merely (54) years, but our life is changing faster with each passing day.
F.
(55) will human life be like in two decades

【单选题】HIV主要通过损害哪种细胞,造成细胞免疫功能损害()

A.
库普弗细胞(枯否细胞)
B.
B淋巴细胞
C.
C.
D.
T淋巴细胞
E.
D.
F.
T淋巴细胞
G.
E.自然杀伤细胞

【单选题】Questions 11 to 18 are based on the conversation you have just heard.

A.
Take another magazine.
B.
Take the time to read.
C.
Take a dictionary.
D.
Take the desk away.