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【单选题】

The Lakers’ forward Kobe Bryant has scored 50 or more points in four straight s, second in the NBA only to Wilt Chamberlain’s seven. He also now is tied with Michael Jordan for second with four behind Chamberlain’s 32 in most 60-point s.
"He’s doing something I’ve never seen," Lakers coach Phil Jackson said in an e-mail Saturday. "This has been historic." He should know because he coached Jordan and played against Chamberlain. Bryant is not going to win the MVP award, which likely will go to Dirk Nowitzki or Steve Nash. But his scoring brilliance again seems to answer the question of who’s the best player in the league and it also provides more evidence in the similarity of Bryant and Jordan in their talent and approach to the .
In any ease, Bryant is the player now firmly holding that mythical torch of greatness, sporting celebrity and creativity that Jordan once took from Julius "Dr. J" Erring. "Kobe has the verdant green light to hoist it up until he cools down," Jackson said. "Wonders never cease in this ." Certainly, Bryant has been wonderful in the four s, averaging 56.3 points with two s of at least 60. Moreover, he hardly has been selfish or working outside the offense because most of his field goals have come on long jumpers, including 17 of 33 on three-pointers. Bryant is shooting 54 percent.
"It’s phenomenal. It’s incredible," Jackson told Los Angeles reporters. "He’s shooting [outside] more than Michael was. Michael was probably doing more post-up, more penetration, more at-the-basket kind of stuff. But Kobe’s doing a whole range of things. I think his shooting has just been remarkable, the way he is raising up over people and knocking the ball down."
It’s still a long way off, but because he started in the NBA when he was 18, Bryant, 28, can pass Kareem Abdul-Jabbar as the league’s all-time scorer if he can stay healthy and average 25 points until he is 38. "The best part of it all is that we’re winning," Bryant said. "The second is that this generation of players who might not have ever heard of the Elgin [Baylors] or Wilts [and their] greatness will now take notice so the legacy of their brilliance will live on.
"As far as myself, I can’t explain it. All is in slow motion all the time. I don’t know why or how, but it’s trippy." That’s probably what Chamberlain said during his record run.
Which word is most similar in meaning to "trippy" in the last paragraph

A.
Normal.
B.
Illusional.
C.
Fanny.
D.
Perplexed.
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参考解析:
.
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【单选题】8() A.demonstration B.cheat C.attention D.stunt

A.
These are tough times for Wal-Mart, America’s biggest retailer. Long accused of (1) small-town America mad condemned for the selfishness of its pay, the company has lately come under (2) for its meanness over employees’ health-care benefits. The charge is arguably (3) : the firm’s health coverage, while (4) less extensive than the average for big companies, is on equal terms (5) other retailers’. But bad publicity, coupled with rising costs, has (6) the Bentonville giant to action. WalMart is making changes that should shift the ground in America’s healthcare debate.
B.
One (7) is to reduce the prices of many generic, or out-of-patent, prescription drugs. Wal-Mart’s critics dismiss the move as a publicity (8) . The list of drugs includes only 143 different medicines and excludes many popular group. True, but short-sighted. Wal-Mart has (9) retailing by using its size to squeeze suppliers and (10) the gains on to consumers. It could (11) the same with drugs. A "Wal-Mart effect" in drugs will not solve America’s health-costs problem: group account for only a small share of drug costs, which in turn make (12) only 10% of overall health spending. But it would (13) .
C.
The firm’s other initiative is more (14) . Wal-Mart is joining the small but fast-growing group of employers (15) are controlling costs by shifting to health insurance with high deductibles.
D.
Early evidence (16) these plans do help firms control the cost of health insurance. But critics say that the savings are (17) . They argue that the plans shift costs to sicker workers, discourage preventative care and will anyway do little to (18) overall health spending, (19) most of the $2 trillion that America (20) health care each year goes to people with multiple chronic diseases.

【单选题】11() A.make B.do C.get D.form

A.
These are tough times for Wal-Mart, America’s biggest retailer. Long accused of (1) small-town America mad condemned for the selfishness of its pay, the company has lately come under (2) for its meanness over employees’ health-care benefits. The charge is arguably (3) : the firm’s health coverage, while (4) less extensive than the average for big companies, is on equal terms (5) other retailers’. But bad publicity, coupled with rising costs, has (6) the Bentonville giant to action. WalMart is making changes that should shift the ground in America’s healthcare debate.
B.
One (7) is to reduce the prices of many generic, or out-of-patent, prescription drugs. Wal-Mart’s critics dismiss the move as a publicity (8) . The list of drugs includes only 143 different medicines and excludes many popular group. True, but short-sighted. Wal-Mart has (9) retailing by using its size to squeeze suppliers and (10) the gains on to consumers. It could (11) the same with drugs. A "Wal-Mart effect" in drugs will not solve America’s health-costs problem: group account for only a small share of drug costs, which in turn make (12) only 10% of overall health spending. But it would (13) .
C.
The firm’s other initiative is more (14) . Wal-Mart is joining the small but fast-growing group of employers (15) are controlling costs by shifting to health insurance with high deductibles.
D.
Early evidence (16) these plans do help firms control the cost of health insurance. But critics say that the savings are (17) . They argue that the plans shift costs to sicker workers, discourage preventative care and will anyway do little to (18) overall health spending, (19) most of the $2 trillion that America (20) health care each year goes to people with multiple chronic diseases.

【单选题】"I love Microsoft and Microsoft did not lose me," protested Robert Scoble, a little too loudly, on his blog last week, in a bid to end feverish speculation in the blogosphere about why, exactly, he ha...

A.
He doesn’t get along with Microsoft any longer.
B.
He wishes to have a single office.
C.
He wants to earn more money.
D.
He doesn’t think that Microsoft has been able to move with times.

【单选题】2000年5月13日,甲(17岁)在A市街道上闲逛时遇到与自已有仇隙的乙,乙抽出随身携带的三棱刮刀追逐甲,甲躲闪不及,被乙砍伤颈部,眼看就要刺中头部,甲慌乱之中操起路边的一根木棒抵挡,一下就将乙打倒在地(事后鉴定颅部受严重损伤死亡)。甲以为只是将乙某打晕,正好趁机逃走,刚走几步,忽然遇见乙的哥哥丙带着四五个小青年过来,丙看到弟弟被打倒,和几个青年一起持匕首朝甲冲过来。甲因受伤跑不快,背上被砍好几刀...

A.
甲与乙本来就有仇隙,在路上持木棒与乙打架,属互相斗殴的行为,甲对乙死亡所持心态为间接故意。对甲应定故意杀人罪
B.
甲与乙斗殴,确实有间接故意的过错,但甲并未存心想杀死乙,所以不能定故意杀人罪,应定过失致人死亡罪
C.
甲构成故意伤害罪,因为他没有杀人故意只有伤害故意
D.
甲对乙的死亡不负刑事责任,他的行为属于正当防卫