单项选择题X 纠错

A.She is exhausted.
B.She is near-sighted.
C.She cannot finish work in time.
D.She cannot go straight home.

参考答案:
查答案就用赞题库小程序 还有拍照搜题 语音搜题 快来试试吧
无需下载 立即使用

你可能喜欢

填空题

When Captain Cook asked the chiefs in Tahiti why they always ate 26, they replied, “Because it is right.” If we ask Americans why they eat with knives and forks, or why their men wear pants 27 skirts, or why they may be married to only one person at a time, we are likely to get 28 and very uninformative answers: “Because it’s right.” “Because that’s the way it’s done.” “Because it’s the 29.” Or even “I don’t know.” The reason for these and countless other patterns of social behavior is that they are 30 by social norms—shared rules or guidelines which prescribe the behavior that is appropriate in a given situation. Norms 31 how people “ought” to behave under particular circumstances in a particular society. We conform (遵守) to norms so readily that we are hardly aware they 32. In fact, we are much more likely to notice 33 from norms than conformity to them. You would not be surprised if a stranger tried to shake hands when you were introduced, but you might be a little 34 if they bowed, started to stroke you, or kissed you on both 35. Yet each of these other forms of greeting is appropriate in other parts of the world. When we visit another society whose norms are different, we quickly become aware that things we do this way, they do that way.

29()

参考答案:custom

单项选择题

Questions 36 to 45 are based on the following passage.
What does it take to be a well-trained nurse The answer used to be two-year associate’s or four-year bachelor’s degree programs. But as the nursing shortage 36, a growing number of schools and hospitals are establishing “fast-track programs” that enable college graduates with no nursing 37 to become registered nurses with only a year or so of 38 training.In 1991, there were only 40 fast-track curricula; now there are more than 200. Typical is Columbia University’s Entry to Practice program. Students earn their bachelor of science in nursing in a year. Those who stay on for an 39 two years can earn a master’s degree that 40 them as nurse practitioners (执业护士) or clinical nurse specialists.Many students are recent 41; others are career switchers. Rudy Guardron, 32, a 2004 graduate of Columbia’s program, was a premedical student in college and then worked for a pharmaceutical (药物的) research company. At Columbia, he was 42 as a nurse practitioner. “I saw that nurses were in high 43 and it looked like a really good opportunity,” he says. “Also, I didn’t want to be in school for that long.”The fast-track trend fills a need, but it’s also creating some 44 between newcomers and veterans. “Nurses that are still at the bedside 45 these kids with suspicion,” says Linda Pellico, who has taught nursing at Yale University for 18 years. “They wonder, how can they do it quicker” The answer is they don’t.

A.additional
B.applied
C.demand
D.excessive
E.experience
F.explores
G.graduates
H.operations
I.promote
J.qualifies
K.specialized
L.tension
M.trained
N.view
O.worsens

单项选择题

Passage Two Questions 20 to 22 are based on the passage you have just heard.

A.Driving.
B.Gardening.
C.Going to the pub.
D.Visiting friends.

单项选择题

Questions 12 to 15 are based on the conversation you have just heard.

A.Mr Gartner from Milan.
B.Gianni Riva at Megastar.
C.The company’s sales representative.
D.Gavin from the Chamber of Commerce.

单项选择题

Passage Three Questions 23 to 25 are based on the passage you have just heard.

A.He crashed into a car parked there.
B.He knocked down several mailboxes.
C.He tore down the company’s main gate.
D.He did serious damage to a loaded truck.

单项选择题

Questions 9 to 11 are based on the conversation you have just heard.

A.They are in opposite directions.
B.They are fifty-five miles apart.
C.They are quite close to each other.
D.They are a long drive from Norwalk.

单项选择题

Questions 36 to 45 are based on the following passage.
What does it take to be a well-trained nurse The answer used to be two-year associate’s or four-year bachelor’s degree programs. But as the nursing shortage 36, a growing number of schools and hospitals are establishing “fast-track programs” that enable college graduates with no nursing 37 to become registered nurses with only a year or so of 38 training.In 1991, there were only 40 fast-track curricula; now there are more than 200. Typical is Columbia University’s Entry to Practice program. Students earn their bachelor of science in nursing in a year. Those who stay on for an 39 two years can earn a master’s degree that 40 them as nurse practitioners (执业护士) or clinical nurse specialists.Many students are recent 41; others are career switchers. Rudy Guardron, 32, a 2004 graduate of Columbia’s program, was a premedical student in college and then worked for a pharmaceutical (药物的) research company. At Columbia, he was 42 as a nurse practitioner. “I saw that nurses were in high 43 and it looked like a really good opportunity,” he says. “Also, I didn’t want to be in school for that long.”The fast-track trend fills a need, but it’s also creating some 44 between newcomers and veterans. “Nurses that are still at the bedside 45 these kids with suspicion,” says Linda Pellico, who has taught nursing at Yale University for 18 years. “They wonder, how can they do it quicker” The answer is they don’t.

A.additional
B.applied
C.demand
D.excessive
E.experience
F.explores
G.graduates
H.operations
I.promote
J.qualifies
K.specialized
L.tension
M.trained
N.view
O.worsens

单项选择题

Passage One Questions 16 to 19 are based on the passage you have just heard.

A.Carry out a cultural exchange program.
B.Work on an agricultural project.
C.Learn Portuguese.
D.Teach English.

填空题

When Captain Cook asked the chiefs in Tahiti why they always ate 26, they replied, “Because it is right.” If we ask Americans why they eat with knives and forks, or why their men wear pants 27 skirts, or why they may be married to only one person at a time, we are likely to get 28 and very uninformative answers: “Because it’s right.” “Because that’s the way it’s done.” “Because it’s the 29.” Or even “I don’t know.” The reason for these and countless other patterns of social behavior is that they are 30 by social norms—shared rules or guidelines which prescribe the behavior that is appropriate in a given situation. Norms 31 how people “ought” to behave under particular circumstances in a particular society. We conform (遵守) to norms so readily that we are hardly aware they 32. In fact, we are much more likely to notice 33 from norms than conformity to them. You would not be surprised if a stranger tried to shake hands when you were introduced, but you might be a little 34 if they bowed, started to stroke you, or kissed you on both 35. Yet each of these other forms of greeting is appropriate in other parts of the world. When we visit another society whose norms are different, we quickly become aware that things we do this way, they do that way.

28()

参考答案:similar

单项选择题

A.The furniture has to be rearranged.
B.The sound equipment has to be set up.
C.The conference room has to be cleaned.
D.The video machine has to be checked.

赞题库

赞题库-搜题找答案

(已有500万+用户使用)


  • 历年真题

  • 章节练习

  • 每日一练

  • 高频考题

  • 错题收藏

  • 在线模考

  • 提分密卷

  • 模拟试题

无需下载 立即使用

版权所有©考试资料网(ppkao.com)All Rights Reserved