It is implies that Internet advertisements can help ().
A.companies make more profit
B.companies do formal exchanges
C.media register in statistics
D.media grade barter sites
A.companies make more profit
B.companies do formal exchanges
C.media register in statistics
D.media grade barter sites
amuse his friends with some tricks.
One day Ramon went to visit his friend Frank who was sick at home with a bad cold.“How are you feeling? ” asked Ramon.“Worse than yesterday, ” replied Frank.“I have a terrible cough, and there's not a drop of medicine in the house.”
“Cheer up, Frank.I'll send Blackie to the local drugstore for some cough syrup(糖浆).He'll be back in a minute, before you know it.” Ramon put a five-dollar bill in Blackie's mouth and the dog ran down the street.“And keep the change, ” Ramon shouted after him.
“Oh, Ramon, don't be silly.You know that dog won't be back with any medicine.” “Oh yes, he will, ” replied Ramon.Half an hour later, however, Blackie had not returned.Ramon was feeling embarrassed, and felt angry at his friend's little smile.
“Something has happened to him, I'm sure, ” said Ramon.“He obeys me as a rule.” Just then Frank saw Blackie at a distance.He hurried to open the door and let him in.Frank was shocked to see a bottle of medicine in the dog's mouth.
“Good boy, ” said Ramon, “but what took you so long? ” Blackie ran over to the window, barking and wagging(摆动)his tail.Ramon glanced out and saw a bone outside.
1、Frank's cold had worsened and he had no medicine at home.
2、Ramon called for a doctor.
3、Ramon felt embarrassed when Blackie was late.
4、Blackie barked at the bone outside the window because he wanted to have it.
5、The story mainly implies dogs are after all dogs, however clever they are.
ic-looking(相貌平平)man in a generic-looking suit slides back and forth before a map of the region,telling us we have nothing to worry about.Only a slight chance of an isolated thunderstorm after midnight.It’s 6:30 p.m.He smiles,tells us to have a great evening and fades away to sports.Less than an hour later,it’s pouring.And I mean pouring.Sheets-of-rain-down-the-windowpanes pouring.It remains one of life’s 1ittle mysteries to me how such well-intentioned and well-trained people using such high-tech equipment can be so wrong,and so often. I’ve often said that if I made that many mistakes in front of so many people,I’d have been out of job 35 years ago.I grew up on the windswept(受大风侵袭的)plains of western New York State.When the m an on the Buffalo station said it was going to snow,it snowed.It never failed. This was October,usually around Halloween(万圣节)。 He then predicted snow for the next six months,and he was never wrong November. December.January.February.March.April.Snow.Even as a kid,I figured Out this wasn’t rocket science.But at least he was always accurate.He had no equipment,no red or blue or green spots floating across his map.In fact,I’ll not sure I remember a map。In those days,we a11 knew where we were.NO map was Required。He got most()f his forecast tips,I suspect,from his bones and how they felt.
I have my simple theories why weather reporting is so inaccurate. WeatherepOrters rarely go outside.Nor can they see outside.MOst 0f them work in windowless buildings.
31.The sentence “It happened again the 0ther night” implies that ().
A.weather reporters are Often fired because they are inaccurate
B.it rains much too 0ften at night in that area of the country
C.inaccuracies in teleVisiOn weather reports are frequent
D.the author Often watches the weather report on teleVisiOn
32.The phrase“fades away to sports”(para.1)means ().
A.he goe s on t0 talk ab0ut sports programs
B.he goes away t0 play sports after work
C.sports programs begin when he disappears
D.sports have to be cancelled because 0f ranin
33.1t began to rain ().
A.at 6:30 p.m.
B.before 7:30 p.m.
C.after 7:30 p.m
D.by midnight
34.What the author intends to say id that weather reports are inaccurate because weaher reporters ().
A.are not well—equipped as expected
B.are not always responsible enough
C.go unpunished for their mistakes
D.do not conduct enough fieldwork
35.According to the author ,the man on the Buffalo station was accurate in predicting weather because ().
A.his pay depended on the tips he got from weather reports
B.what he felt in his bones helped to foresee the weather
C.it was the knowledge he gained from his ancestors
D.he could see snow coming from the windswept plains
A、no change
B、a decrease
C、an increase
D、an unpredictable change
E、Either A or B.
A.Austin’s theory
B.Grice’s theory
C.Horn’s R- principle
D.Levinson’s M- principle
As the name implies, CTI(Computer-Telephone-Integration) is the fusing of telephone operations with those performed by a computer. CTI has actually been around for a good two decades. Until recently, it required users to(36)a good deal of knowledge about telephone interconnect processes as well as networking and database programming to(37)even the most rudimentary tasks. These two skill sets are rarely possessed by the same individual.But today CTI has gone client/server. Microsoft corp. has included its client-side Telephony API(TAPI) with every copy of Windows 95. The company's service-side TAPI is now available for Windows NT. There are many telephony(38)that turn the interconnect portion of a CTI(39)into standard data programming, and low-cost, easy -to- create telephony is born. Better yet, many of these(38)are Visual Basic add-ons. CTI is also subject to all the cost benefits of cheaper, PC-based hardware.The two portions of CTI are(40)
A.acquire
B.capture
C.modify
D.possess
On the other hand, scientists are increasingly learning that aging and biological age are two different things, and that the former is a key risk factor for conditions such as heart disease, cancer and many more. In that light, aging itself might be seen as something treatable, the way you would treat high blood pressure or a vitamin deficiency.
Biophysicist Alex Zhavoronkov believes that aging should be considered a disease. He said that describing aging as a disease creates incentives to develop treatments.
"It unties the hands of the pharmaceutical (制药的.industry so that they can begin treating the disease and not just the side effects," he said.
"Right now, people think of aging as natural and something you can't control," he said. "In academic circles, people take aging research as just an interest area where they can try to develop interventions. The medical community also takes aging for granted, and can do nothing about it except keep people within a certain health range."
But if aging were recognized as a disease, he said, "It would attract funding and change the way we do health care. What matters is understanding that aging is curable."
"It was always known that the body accumulates damage," he added. "The only way to cure aging is to find ways to repair that damage. I think of it as preventive medicine for age-related conditions."
Leonard Hayflick, a professor at the University of California, San Francisco, said the idea that aging can be cured implies the human lifespan can be increased, which some researchers suggest is possible. Hayflick is not among them.
"There're many people who recover from cancer, stroke, or heart disease. But they continue to age, because aging is separate from their disease," Hayflick said. "Even if those causes of death were eliminated, life expectancy would still not go much beyond 92 years."
66.What do people generally believe about aging______
A.It should cause no alarm whatsoever.
B.They just cannot do anything about it.
C.It should be regarded as a kind of disease.
D.They can delay it with advances in science.
67.How do many scientists view aging now______
A.It might be prevented and treated.
B.It can be as risky as heart disease.
C.It results from a vitamin deficiency.
D.It is an irreversible biological process.
68.What does Alex Zhavoronkov think of "describing aging as a disease"______
A.It will prompt people to take aging more seriously.
B.It will greatly help reduce the side effects of aging.
C.It will free pharmacists from the conventional beliefs about aging.
D.It will motivate doctors and pharmacists to find ways to treat aging.
69.What do we learn about the medical community______
A.They now have a strong interest in research on aging.
B.They differ from the academic circles in their view on aging.
C.They can contribute to people's health only to a limited extent.
D.They have ways to intervene in people's aging process.
70.What does professor Leonard Hayflick believe______
A.The human lifespan cannot be prolonged.
B.Aging is hardly separable from disease.
C.Few people live up to the age of 92.
D.Heart disease is the major cause of aging.
(1)In this passage the author implies that .
A) women are weaker than men, but faster
B) women are slower than men ,but stronger
C) men are not always stronger and faster than women
D) men are faster and stronger than women
(2)“That at least is what people say.” Means people .
A) say other things too
B) don’t say this much
C) say this but may not think so
D)only think this
(3)Which of the following is true?
A) Boys and girls study separately everywhere.
B) Women do not run or swim in races with men.
C) Famous Prime Ministers are women.
D) Men can expect to live longer than women in Europe.
(4)Women are called ‘the weaker sex’ because .
A) women do as much work as men
B) people think women are weaker than men
C) sport is easier for men than for women
D)in sport the two sexes are always together
(5)What problems does sport have?
A) Some women athletes are actually men.
B) Some women athletes are given hormone injections.
C) Women and men do not run or swim in the same races.
D)It is difficult to check whether women athletes are really women.
Now it's true that the human body has developed its millions of nerves to be highly aware of what goes on both inside and outside of it.This helps us adjust to the world.Without our nerves and our brain, which is a bundle of nerves, we wouldn't know what's happening.But we pay for our sensitivity.We can feel pain when the slightest thing is wrong with any part of our body.The history of torture is based on the human body being open to pain.
But there is a way to handle pain.Look at the Indian fakir (苦行僧) who sits on a bed of nails.Fakirs can put a needle right through an arm, and feel no pain.This ability that some humans have developed to handle pain should give us ideas about how the mind can deal with pain.
The big thing in withstanding pain is our attitude towards it.If the dentist says, “This will hurt a little,” it helps us to accept the pain.By staying relaxed, and by treating the pain as an interesting sensation we can handle the pain without falling apart.After all, although pain is an unpleasant sensation, it is still a sensation, and sensations are the stuff of life.
26.The passage is mainly about().
A.how to suffer pain
B.how to avoid pain
C.how to handle pain
D.how to stop pain
27.Th e sentence “But we pay for our sensitivity.” in the second paragraph implies that ()
A.we should pay a debt for our feeling
B.we have to be hurt when we feel something
C.our pain is worth feeling
D.when we feel pain, we are suffering it
28.When the author mentions the Indian fakir, he suggests that().
A.Indians are not at all afraid of pain
B.people may be senseless of pain
C.some people are able to handle pain
D.fakirs have magic to put needles right through their arms
29.The most important thing to handle pain is ()
A.how we look at pain
B.to feel pain as much as possible
C.to show an interest in pain
D.to accept the pain reluctantly
30.The author's attitude towards pain is().
A.pessimistic
B.optimistic
C.radical
D.practical
A.is
B.are
C.have
D.has