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【单选题】

What does the man want the woman to do().

A.To play’ the piano.
B.To give a performance.
C.To sing a song.

A.
M: Can you accompany me while I am singing
B.
W: I don’t play very well, but I will give it a try.
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【单选题】最初推出创新教育遭遇的质疑,引起的争论,甚至遭到的非常不客气的指责,都说明了社会容忍创新的空间的大小,而创新的实验最后的获奖,同样说明了这一点。对这段文字的正确理解是( )

A.
最初推出创新教育的部门往往遭到质疑,甚至是指责
B.
社会越来越能容忍创新教育
C.
创新的实验最后获奖,说明人们越来越理解和容忍创新教育
D.
由于把握了社会容忍度,创新教育才获得了奖项

【单选题】What did President Rudenstine do() A、He tried to identify some of Harvard’s main intellectual priorities. B、He paid attention to the quality of the undergraduate teaching. C、He allowed students with l...

A.
Harvard University is the oldest institute of higher learning in the United States. Founded 16 years after the arrival of Pilgrims at Plymouth, the university has grown from 9 students with a single master to the present enrollment of more than 18 000 students, including undergraduates and students in 10 graduate and professional schools. Over 14 000 people work at Harvard, including more than 2 000 faculties. Harvard has produced six presidents of the United States and 34 Nobel winners.
B.
During its early years, Harvard offered a classic academic course based on the model of English universities, but consistent with the prevailing (流行的,盛行的;占优势的) Puritan philosophy. Although many of its early graduates became ministers in Puritan churches throughout New England, the university never formally belonged to a specific religious group.
C.
Under President Pusey, Harvard started what was then the largest fund-raising campaign in the history of American higher education. It was 82.5 million dollars program for the university. The program increased faculty salaries, broadened students aid. created new professorships, and expanded Harvard’s physical facilities.
D.
Nell L. Rudenstine took office as Harvard’s 26th president in 1991. As part of an overall effort to achieve greater coordination among the university’s schools and faculties, Rudenstine encouraged academic planning and identified some of Harvard’s main intellectual priorities. He also stressed the importance of the university’s excellence in undergraduate education, the significance of keeping Harvard’s door open to students from families of different economic backgrounds, the task of adapting the research university to an era of both rapid information growth and serious fund shortage.

【单选题】下述哪项不属于个人史?()

A.
居住环境和条件
B.
生活与工作情况
C.
饮食习惯
D.
过去健康情况
E.
烟酒嗜好

【单选题】Watercolor is the oldest painting medium known. It dates back to the early cave dwellers who discovered they could add lifelike qualities to drawings of animals and other figures on the walls of caves...

A.
The decline of fresco painting.
B.
The predominance of oils over watercolor.
C.
The rediscovery of watercolor in England.
D.
The origins and development of watercolor.

【单选题】What does the man mean(). A.He didn’t have enough money to go to the concert. B.He arrived too late to hear the concert. C.He altered his plans suddenly.

A.
W: If I go to Tokyo, will you meet me there We can visit my cousin’s new home.
B.
M: Well, I had intended to, but I changed my mind at the last moment.

【单选题】Why did the man ask the woman the way(). A.Because he wanted to arrive at Turner’s Street on time. B.Because he didn’t know where the bus stop was. C.Because he didn’t know how to get to Turner’s Stre...

A.
M: Excuse me. Is this road to Turner’s Street
B.
W: Yes.
C.
M: Is it very far from here
D.
W: No, not very far. About an hour’s walk.
E.
M: Are there any buses going there
F.
W: Oh, yes, but the buses don’t come very often. Only about 4 times a day.
G.
M: When does the next bus come along
H.
W: Not until haft past seven. You will arrive there if you walk.
I.
M: Well, thank you. I’d better walk. I can’t wait all hour and a half for a bus.

【单选题】There’s been a lot of talk about extraterrestrial beings visiting our planet. I don’t put much stock in that. I am convinced, however, that we are surrounded by sentient things of our own making whose...

A.
The author believes that there have been extraterrestrial beings visiting our planet.
B.
The author and his wife talked about the refund in the driveway where noting could hear them.
C.
The author and his wife were overjoyed at the repayment from the IRS.
D.
The author noticed that the refrigerator was overhearing his conversation with his wif

【单选题】People might be seriously ill if the cells in their body (). A.grow without being instructed B.die regularly C.fail to follow people’s instructions D.develop in the human body

A.
Whatever our differences as human beings are, we all think we’re more like the rest of the animal world than we realize. It is said that we share 40 percent of our genetic (遗传的) structure with the simple worm.
B.
But that fact has helped Sir John Sulston win the 2002 Nobel Prize for Medicine. Sir John is the founder of the Sanger Institute in Cambridge, which was set up in 1992 to get further understanding of the human genuine (染色体组).
C.
To help them do this, they turned to the worm. The nematode (线虫类的) worm is one of the earliest creatures on planet earth. It is less than one millimeter long, completely transparent and spends its entire life digging holes through sand. But it still has lots to say about human life, and what can be done to make it better.
D.
What the worm told Sir John and his colleagues was that each of cells in the human body is programmed like a computer. They grow, develop and die according to a set of instructions that are coded in our genetic make-up.
E.
Many of the diseases that humans suffer from happen when these instructions go wrong or are not obeyed. When the cell refuses to die but carries on growing instead, this leads to cancer. Heart attacks and diseases like AIDS cause more cell deaths than normal, increasing the damage they do to the body. Sir John was the first scientist to prove the existence of programmed cell death.