单项选择题

Read the following article and choose the best word, for each space. For questions 26-45, mark one letter A, B, CorD on your Answer Sheet. Internet Clones Youku isn’t the Chinese YouTube and Renren isn’t the Chinese Facebook. That realization hasn’t【C1】______on investors, who continue to pile into Chinese Internet stocks with【C2】______discrimination. The Chinese Internet story certainly is compelling. With more than 450 million online, the Chinese Web boasts more【C3】______than any other in the world. Brokerage CLSA expects that number to increase to more than 800 million by 2013.【C4】______important, rising incomes and low levels of e-commerce penetration mean online sales and advertising should increase.【C5】______an even faster clip. Mainstays of the sector Baidu and Sina have more than doubled in【C6】______in the past 12 months. Online-video platform Youku【C7】______. nearly doubled since its trading debut in December, 2010. Social-networking site Renren hopes to【C8】______$584 million when it【C9】______on the New York Stock Exchange in May. But not all Internet firms are created equal. Despite a passing similarity to U.S. peers, the Chinese newbies are【C10】______by the comparison. Take Youku, which, according to Internet research firm Analysis,【C11】______for just 20% of China’s fragmented online-video space.【C12】______numbers vary, YouTube commands a much larger share of the U.S. online-video market yet it remains unclear【C13】______profitable it is. Renren, meanwhile, started life as a Facebook clone. The user interface looks the same, but in terms of market【C14】______they are different. According to Web analysis firm comScore, in March, Facebook had 153 million active monthly users in the U.S.【C15】______to about 60% of the online population. Renren’s 31 million, up from 24 million at the end of 2010, means it has 7% of Chinese Internet users. That means it has【C16】______to expand but doesn’t have the lock on the market Facebook【C17】______And it faces tough competition if it tries to expand out of its student niche. Meanwhile, its recent surge in users looks.【C18】______It added seven million monthly active users in the first three months of 2011, the same as total【C19】______in 2009 and 2010 combined. That is tough to explain as Renren is facing stiff competition for users.【C20】______Sina’s Weibo microblogging platform. Everyone wants a piece of the Chinese Facebook, but in a competitive sector investors should consider the possibility they are buying a piece of the Chinese Friendster.【C18】

A.unsupportable
B.unacceptable
C.unspeakable
D.unsustainable
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单项选择题

Read the following article and choose the best word, for each space. For questions 26-45, mark one letter A, B, CorD on your Answer Sheet. Internet Clones Youku isn’t the Chinese YouTube and Renren isn’t the Chinese Facebook. That realization hasn’t【C1】______on investors, who continue to pile into Chinese Internet stocks with【C2】______discrimination. The Chinese Internet story certainly is compelling. With more than 450 million online, the Chinese Web boasts more【C3】______than any other in the world. Brokerage CLSA expects that number to increase to more than 800 million by 2013.【C4】______important, rising incomes and low levels of e-commerce penetration mean online sales and advertising should increase.【C5】______an even faster clip. Mainstays of the sector Baidu and Sina have more than doubled in【C6】______in the past 12 months. Online-video platform Youku【C7】______. nearly doubled since its trading debut in December, 2010. Social-networking site Renren hopes to【C8】______$584 million when it【C9】______on the New York Stock Exchange in May. But not all Internet firms are created equal. Despite a passing similarity to U.S. peers, the Chinese newbies are【C10】______by the comparison. Take Youku, which, according to Internet research firm Analysis,【C11】______for just 20% of China’s fragmented online-video space.【C12】______numbers vary, YouTube commands a much larger share of the U.S. online-video market yet it remains unclear【C13】______profitable it is. Renren, meanwhile, started life as a Facebook clone. The user interface looks the same, but in terms of market【C14】______they are different. According to Web analysis firm comScore, in March, Facebook had 153 million active monthly users in the U.S.【C15】______to about 60% of the online population. Renren’s 31 million, up from 24 million at the end of 2010, means it has 7% of Chinese Internet users. That means it has【C16】______to expand but doesn’t have the lock on the market Facebook【C17】______And it faces tough competition if it tries to expand out of its student niche. Meanwhile, its recent surge in users looks.【C18】______It added seven million monthly active users in the first three months of 2011, the same as total【C19】______in 2009 and 2010 combined. That is tough to explain as Renren is facing stiff competition for users.【C20】______Sina’s Weibo microblogging platform. Everyone wants a piece of the Chinese Facebook, but in a competitive sector investors should consider the possibility they are buying a piece of the Chinese Friendster.【C1】

A.dawned
B.realized
C.clarified
D.fell
单项选择题

Read the following article and choose the best word, for each space. For questions 26-45, mark one letter A, B, CorD on your Answer Sheet. Internet Clones Youku isn’t the Chinese YouTube and Renren isn’t the Chinese Facebook. That realization hasn’t【C1】______on investors, who continue to pile into Chinese Internet stocks with【C2】______discrimination. The Chinese Internet story certainly is compelling. With more than 450 million online, the Chinese Web boasts more【C3】______than any other in the world. Brokerage CLSA expects that number to increase to more than 800 million by 2013.【C4】______important, rising incomes and low levels of e-commerce penetration mean online sales and advertising should increase.【C5】______an even faster clip. Mainstays of the sector Baidu and Sina have more than doubled in【C6】______in the past 12 months. Online-video platform Youku【C7】______. nearly doubled since its trading debut in December, 2010. Social-networking site Renren hopes to【C8】______$584 million when it【C9】______on the New York Stock Exchange in May. But not all Internet firms are created equal. Despite a passing similarity to U.S. peers, the Chinese newbies are【C10】______by the comparison. Take Youku, which, according to Internet research firm Analysis,【C11】______for just 20% of China’s fragmented online-video space.【C12】______numbers vary, YouTube commands a much larger share of the U.S. online-video market yet it remains unclear【C13】______profitable it is. Renren, meanwhile, started life as a Facebook clone. The user interface looks the same, but in terms of market【C14】______they are different. According to Web analysis firm comScore, in March, Facebook had 153 million active monthly users in the U.S.【C15】______to about 60% of the online population. Renren’s 31 million, up from 24 million at the end of 2010, means it has 7% of Chinese Internet users. That means it has【C16】______to expand but doesn’t have the lock on the market Facebook【C17】______And it faces tough competition if it tries to expand out of its student niche. Meanwhile, its recent surge in users looks.【C18】______It added seven million monthly active users in the first three months of 2011, the same as total【C19】______in 2009 and 2010 combined. That is tough to explain as Renren is facing stiff competition for users.【C20】______Sina’s Weibo microblogging platform. Everyone wants a piece of the Chinese Facebook, but in a competitive sector investors should consider the possibility they are buying a piece of the Chinese Friendster.【C2】

A.enough
B.much
C.little
D.no
单项选择题

Read the following article and choose the best word, for each space. For questions 26-45, mark one letter A, B, CorD on your Answer Sheet. Internet Clones Youku isn’t the Chinese YouTube and Renren isn’t the Chinese Facebook. That realization hasn’t【C1】______on investors, who continue to pile into Chinese Internet stocks with【C2】______discrimination. The Chinese Internet story certainly is compelling. With more than 450 million online, the Chinese Web boasts more【C3】______than any other in the world. Brokerage CLSA expects that number to increase to more than 800 million by 2013.【C4】______important, rising incomes and low levels of e-commerce penetration mean online sales and advertising should increase.【C5】______an even faster clip. Mainstays of the sector Baidu and Sina have more than doubled in【C6】______in the past 12 months. Online-video platform Youku【C7】______. nearly doubled since its trading debut in December, 2010. Social-networking site Renren hopes to【C8】______$584 million when it【C9】______on the New York Stock Exchange in May. But not all Internet firms are created equal. Despite a passing similarity to U.S. peers, the Chinese newbies are【C10】______by the comparison. Take Youku, which, according to Internet research firm Analysis,【C11】______for just 20% of China’s fragmented online-video space.【C12】______numbers vary, YouTube commands a much larger share of the U.S. online-video market yet it remains unclear【C13】______profitable it is. Renren, meanwhile, started life as a Facebook clone. The user interface looks the same, but in terms of market【C14】______they are different. According to Web analysis firm comScore, in March, Facebook had 153 million active monthly users in the U.S.【C15】______to about 60% of the online population. Renren’s 31 million, up from 24 million at the end of 2010, means it has 7% of Chinese Internet users. That means it has【C16】______to expand but doesn’t have the lock on the market Facebook【C17】______And it faces tough competition if it tries to expand out of its student niche. Meanwhile, its recent surge in users looks.【C18】______It added seven million monthly active users in the first three months of 2011, the same as total【C19】______in 2009 and 2010 combined. That is tough to explain as Renren is facing stiff competition for users.【C20】______Sina’s Weibo microblogging platform. Everyone wants a piece of the Chinese Facebook, but in a competitive sector investors should consider the possibility they are buying a piece of the Chinese Friendster.【C3】

A.experts
B.users
C.sellers
D.programmers
单项选择题

Read the following article and choose the best word, for each space. For questions 26-45, mark one letter A, B, CorD on your Answer Sheet. Internet Clones Youku isn’t the Chinese YouTube and Renren isn’t the Chinese Facebook. That realization hasn’t【C1】______on investors, who continue to pile into Chinese Internet stocks with【C2】______discrimination. The Chinese Internet story certainly is compelling. With more than 450 million online, the Chinese Web boasts more【C3】______than any other in the world. Brokerage CLSA expects that number to increase to more than 800 million by 2013.【C4】______important, rising incomes and low levels of e-commerce penetration mean online sales and advertising should increase.【C5】______an even faster clip. Mainstays of the sector Baidu and Sina have more than doubled in【C6】______in the past 12 months. Online-video platform Youku【C7】______. nearly doubled since its trading debut in December, 2010. Social-networking site Renren hopes to【C8】______$584 million when it【C9】______on the New York Stock Exchange in May. But not all Internet firms are created equal. Despite a passing similarity to U.S. peers, the Chinese newbies are【C10】______by the comparison. Take Youku, which, according to Internet research firm Analysis,【C11】______for just 20% of China’s fragmented online-video space.【C12】______numbers vary, YouTube commands a much larger share of the U.S. online-video market yet it remains unclear【C13】______profitable it is. Renren, meanwhile, started life as a Facebook clone. The user interface looks the same, but in terms of market【C14】______they are different. According to Web analysis firm comScore, in March, Facebook had 153 million active monthly users in the U.S.【C15】______to about 60% of the online population. Renren’s 31 million, up from 24 million at the end of 2010, means it has 7% of Chinese Internet users. That means it has【C16】______to expand but doesn’t have the lock on the market Facebook【C17】______And it faces tough competition if it tries to expand out of its student niche. Meanwhile, its recent surge in users looks.【C18】______It added seven million monthly active users in the first three months of 2011, the same as total【C19】______in 2009 and 2010 combined. That is tough to explain as Renren is facing stiff competition for users.【C20】______Sina’s Weibo microblogging platform. Everyone wants a piece of the Chinese Facebook, but in a competitive sector investors should consider the possibility they are buying a piece of the Chinese Friendster.【C4】

A.As
B.For
C.So
D.Such
单项选择题

Read the following article and choose the best word, for each space. For questions 26-45, mark one letter A, B, CorD on your Answer Sheet. Internet Clones Youku isn’t the Chinese YouTube and Renren isn’t the Chinese Facebook. That realization hasn’t【C1】______on investors, who continue to pile into Chinese Internet stocks with【C2】______discrimination. The Chinese Internet story certainly is compelling. With more than 450 million online, the Chinese Web boasts more【C3】______than any other in the world. Brokerage CLSA expects that number to increase to more than 800 million by 2013.【C4】______important, rising incomes and low levels of e-commerce penetration mean online sales and advertising should increase.【C5】______an even faster clip. Mainstays of the sector Baidu and Sina have more than doubled in【C6】______in the past 12 months. Online-video platform Youku【C7】______. nearly doubled since its trading debut in December, 2010. Social-networking site Renren hopes to【C8】______$584 million when it【C9】______on the New York Stock Exchange in May. But not all Internet firms are created equal. Despite a passing similarity to U.S. peers, the Chinese newbies are【C10】______by the comparison. Take Youku, which, according to Internet research firm Analysis,【C11】______for just 20% of China’s fragmented online-video space.【C12】______numbers vary, YouTube commands a much larger share of the U.S. online-video market yet it remains unclear【C13】______profitable it is. Renren, meanwhile, started life as a Facebook clone. The user interface looks the same, but in terms of market【C14】______they are different. According to Web analysis firm comScore, in March, Facebook had 153 million active monthly users in the U.S.【C15】______to about 60% of the online population. Renren’s 31 million, up from 24 million at the end of 2010, means it has 7% of Chinese Internet users. That means it has【C16】______to expand but doesn’t have the lock on the market Facebook【C17】______And it faces tough competition if it tries to expand out of its student niche. Meanwhile, its recent surge in users looks.【C18】______It added seven million monthly active users in the first three months of 2011, the same as total【C19】______in 2009 and 2010 combined. That is tough to explain as Renren is facing stiff competition for users.【C20】______Sina’s Weibo microblogging platform. Everyone wants a piece of the Chinese Facebook, but in a competitive sector investors should consider the possibility they are buying a piece of the Chinese Friendster.【C5】

A.in
B.at
C.on
D.by
单项选择题

Read the following article and choose the best word, for each space. For questions 26-45, mark one letter A, B, CorD on your Answer Sheet. Internet Clones Youku isn’t the Chinese YouTube and Renren isn’t the Chinese Facebook. That realization hasn’t【C1】______on investors, who continue to pile into Chinese Internet stocks with【C2】______discrimination. The Chinese Internet story certainly is compelling. With more than 450 million online, the Chinese Web boasts more【C3】______than any other in the world. Brokerage CLSA expects that number to increase to more than 800 million by 2013.【C4】______important, rising incomes and low levels of e-commerce penetration mean online sales and advertising should increase.【C5】______an even faster clip. Mainstays of the sector Baidu and Sina have more than doubled in【C6】______in the past 12 months. Online-video platform Youku【C7】______. nearly doubled since its trading debut in December, 2010. Social-networking site Renren hopes to【C8】______$584 million when it【C9】______on the New York Stock Exchange in May. But not all Internet firms are created equal. Despite a passing similarity to U.S. peers, the Chinese newbies are【C10】______by the comparison. Take Youku, which, according to Internet research firm Analysis,【C11】______for just 20% of China’s fragmented online-video space.【C12】______numbers vary, YouTube commands a much larger share of the U.S. online-video market yet it remains unclear【C13】______profitable it is. Renren, meanwhile, started life as a Facebook clone. The user interface looks the same, but in terms of market【C14】______they are different. According to Web analysis firm comScore, in March, Facebook had 153 million active monthly users in the U.S.【C15】______to about 60% of the online population. Renren’s 31 million, up from 24 million at the end of 2010, means it has 7% of Chinese Internet users. That means it has【C16】______to expand but doesn’t have the lock on the market Facebook【C17】______And it faces tough competition if it tries to expand out of its student niche. Meanwhile, its recent surge in users looks.【C18】______It added seven million monthly active users in the first three months of 2011, the same as total【C19】______in 2009 and 2010 combined. That is tough to explain as Renren is facing stiff competition for users.【C20】______Sina’s Weibo microblogging platform. Everyone wants a piece of the Chinese Facebook, but in a competitive sector investors should consider the possibility they are buying a piece of the Chinese Friendster.【C6】

A.value
B.population
C.quantity
D.quality
单项选择题

Read the following article and choose the best word, for each space. For questions 26-45, mark one letter A, B, CorD on your Answer Sheet. Internet Clones Youku isn’t the Chinese YouTube and Renren isn’t the Chinese Facebook. That realization hasn’t【C1】______on investors, who continue to pile into Chinese Internet stocks with【C2】______discrimination. The Chinese Internet story certainly is compelling. With more than 450 million online, the Chinese Web boasts more【C3】______than any other in the world. Brokerage CLSA expects that number to increase to more than 800 million by 2013.【C4】______important, rising incomes and low levels of e-commerce penetration mean online sales and advertising should increase.【C5】______an even faster clip. Mainstays of the sector Baidu and Sina have more than doubled in【C6】______in the past 12 months. Online-video platform Youku【C7】______. nearly doubled since its trading debut in December, 2010. Social-networking site Renren hopes to【C8】______$584 million when it【C9】______on the New York Stock Exchange in May. But not all Internet firms are created equal. Despite a passing similarity to U.S. peers, the Chinese newbies are【C10】______by the comparison. Take Youku, which, according to Internet research firm Analysis,【C11】______for just 20% of China’s fragmented online-video space.【C12】______numbers vary, YouTube commands a much larger share of the U.S. online-video market yet it remains unclear【C13】______profitable it is. Renren, meanwhile, started life as a Facebook clone. The user interface looks the same, but in terms of market【C14】______they are different. According to Web analysis firm comScore, in March, Facebook had 153 million active monthly users in the U.S.【C15】______to about 60% of the online population. Renren’s 31 million, up from 24 million at the end of 2010, means it has 7% of Chinese Internet users. That means it has【C16】______to expand but doesn’t have the lock on the market Facebook【C17】______And it faces tough competition if it tries to expand out of its student niche. Meanwhile, its recent surge in users looks.【C18】______It added seven million monthly active users in the first three months of 2011, the same as total【C19】______in 2009 and 2010 combined. That is tough to explain as Renren is facing stiff competition for users.【C20】______Sina’s Weibo microblogging platform. Everyone wants a piece of the Chinese Facebook, but in a competitive sector investors should consider the possibility they are buying a piece of the Chinese Friendster.【C7】

A.have
B.had
C.was
D.has
单项选择题

Read the following article and choose the best word, for each space. For questions 26-45, mark one letter A, B, CorD on your Answer Sheet. Internet Clones Youku isn’t the Chinese YouTube and Renren isn’t the Chinese Facebook. That realization hasn’t【C1】______on investors, who continue to pile into Chinese Internet stocks with【C2】______discrimination. The Chinese Internet story certainly is compelling. With more than 450 million online, the Chinese Web boasts more【C3】______than any other in the world. Brokerage CLSA expects that number to increase to more than 800 million by 2013.【C4】______important, rising incomes and low levels of e-commerce penetration mean online sales and advertising should increase.【C5】______an even faster clip. Mainstays of the sector Baidu and Sina have more than doubled in【C6】______in the past 12 months. Online-video platform Youku【C7】______. nearly doubled since its trading debut in December, 2010. Social-networking site Renren hopes to【C8】______$584 million when it【C9】______on the New York Stock Exchange in May. But not all Internet firms are created equal. Despite a passing similarity to U.S. peers, the Chinese newbies are【C10】______by the comparison. Take Youku, which, according to Internet research firm Analysis,【C11】______for just 20% of China’s fragmented online-video space.【C12】______numbers vary, YouTube commands a much larger share of the U.S. online-video market yet it remains unclear【C13】______profitable it is. Renren, meanwhile, started life as a Facebook clone. The user interface looks the same, but in terms of market【C14】______they are different. According to Web analysis firm comScore, in March, Facebook had 153 million active monthly users in the U.S.【C15】______to about 60% of the online population. Renren’s 31 million, up from 24 million at the end of 2010, means it has 7% of Chinese Internet users. That means it has【C16】______to expand but doesn’t have the lock on the market Facebook【C17】______And it faces tough competition if it tries to expand out of its student niche. Meanwhile, its recent surge in users looks.【C18】______It added seven million monthly active users in the first three months of 2011, the same as total【C19】______in 2009 and 2010 combined. That is tough to explain as Renren is facing stiff competition for users.【C20】______Sina’s Weibo microblogging platform. Everyone wants a piece of the Chinese Facebook, but in a competitive sector investors should consider the possibility they are buying a piece of the Chinese Friendster.【C8】

A.spend
B.raise
C.save
D.invest
单项选择题

Read the following article and choose the best word, for each space. For questions 26-45, mark one letter A, B, CorD on your Answer Sheet. Internet Clones Youku isn’t the Chinese YouTube and Renren isn’t the Chinese Facebook. That realization hasn’t【C1】______on investors, who continue to pile into Chinese Internet stocks with【C2】______discrimination. The Chinese Internet story certainly is compelling. With more than 450 million online, the Chinese Web boasts more【C3】______than any other in the world. Brokerage CLSA expects that number to increase to more than 800 million by 2013.【C4】______important, rising incomes and low levels of e-commerce penetration mean online sales and advertising should increase.【C5】______an even faster clip. Mainstays of the sector Baidu and Sina have more than doubled in【C6】______in the past 12 months. Online-video platform Youku【C7】______. nearly doubled since its trading debut in December, 2010. Social-networking site Renren hopes to【C8】______$584 million when it【C9】______on the New York Stock Exchange in May. But not all Internet firms are created equal. Despite a passing similarity to U.S. peers, the Chinese newbies are【C10】______by the comparison. Take Youku, which, according to Internet research firm Analysis,【C11】______for just 20% of China’s fragmented online-video space.【C12】______numbers vary, YouTube commands a much larger share of the U.S. online-video market yet it remains unclear【C13】______profitable it is. Renren, meanwhile, started life as a Facebook clone. The user interface looks the same, but in terms of market【C14】______they are different. According to Web analysis firm comScore, in March, Facebook had 153 million active monthly users in the U.S.【C15】______to about 60% of the online population. Renren’s 31 million, up from 24 million at the end of 2010, means it has 7% of Chinese Internet users. That means it has【C16】______to expand but doesn’t have the lock on the market Facebook【C17】______And it faces tough competition if it tries to expand out of its student niche. Meanwhile, its recent surge in users looks.【C18】______It added seven million monthly active users in the first three months of 2011, the same as total【C19】______in 2009 and 2010 combined. That is tough to explain as Renren is facing stiff competition for users.【C20】______Sina’s Weibo microblogging platform. Everyone wants a piece of the Chinese Facebook, but in a competitive sector investors should consider the possibility they are buying a piece of the Chinese Friendster.【C9】

A.registers
B.lists
C.posts
D.issues
单项选择题

Read the following article and choose the best word, for each space. For questions 26-45, mark one letter A, B, CorD on your Answer Sheet. Internet Clones Youku isn’t the Chinese YouTube and Renren isn’t the Chinese Facebook. That realization hasn’t【C1】______on investors, who continue to pile into Chinese Internet stocks with【C2】______discrimination. The Chinese Internet story certainly is compelling. With more than 450 million online, the Chinese Web boasts more【C3】______than any other in the world. Brokerage CLSA expects that number to increase to more than 800 million by 2013.【C4】______important, rising incomes and low levels of e-commerce penetration mean online sales and advertising should increase.【C5】______an even faster clip. Mainstays of the sector Baidu and Sina have more than doubled in【C6】______in the past 12 months. Online-video platform Youku【C7】______. nearly doubled since its trading debut in December, 2010. Social-networking site Renren hopes to【C8】______$584 million when it【C9】______on the New York Stock Exchange in May. But not all Internet firms are created equal. Despite a passing similarity to U.S. peers, the Chinese newbies are【C10】______by the comparison. Take Youku, which, according to Internet research firm Analysis,【C11】______for just 20% of China’s fragmented online-video space.【C12】______numbers vary, YouTube commands a much larger share of the U.S. online-video market yet it remains unclear【C13】______profitable it is. Renren, meanwhile, started life as a Facebook clone. The user interface looks the same, but in terms of market【C14】______they are different. According to Web analysis firm comScore, in March, Facebook had 153 million active monthly users in the U.S.【C15】______to about 60% of the online population. Renren’s 31 million, up from 24 million at the end of 2010, means it has 7% of Chinese Internet users. That means it has【C16】______to expand but doesn’t have the lock on the market Facebook【C17】______And it faces tough competition if it tries to expand out of its student niche. Meanwhile, its recent surge in users looks.【C18】______It added seven million monthly active users in the first three months of 2011, the same as total【C19】______in 2009 and 2010 combined. That is tough to explain as Renren is facing stiff competition for users.【C20】______Sina’s Weibo microblogging platform. Everyone wants a piece of the Chinese Facebook, but in a competitive sector investors should consider the possibility they are buying a piece of the Chinese Friendster.【C10】

A.disappointed
B.encouraged
C.flattered
D.restricted
单项选择题

Read the following article and choose the best word, for each space. For questions 26-45, mark one letter A, B, CorD on your Answer Sheet. Internet Clones Youku isn’t the Chinese YouTube and Renren isn’t the Chinese Facebook. That realization hasn’t【C1】______on investors, who continue to pile into Chinese Internet stocks with【C2】______discrimination. The Chinese Internet story certainly is compelling. With more than 450 million online, the Chinese Web boasts more【C3】______than any other in the world. Brokerage CLSA expects that number to increase to more than 800 million by 2013.【C4】______important, rising incomes and low levels of e-commerce penetration mean online sales and advertising should increase.【C5】______an even faster clip. Mainstays of the sector Baidu and Sina have more than doubled in【C6】______in the past 12 months. Online-video platform Youku【C7】______. nearly doubled since its trading debut in December, 2010. Social-networking site Renren hopes to【C8】______$584 million when it【C9】______on the New York Stock Exchange in May. But not all Internet firms are created equal. Despite a passing similarity to U.S. peers, the Chinese newbies are【C10】______by the comparison. Take Youku, which, according to Internet research firm Analysis,【C11】______for just 20% of China’s fragmented online-video space.【C12】______numbers vary, YouTube commands a much larger share of the U.S. online-video market yet it remains unclear【C13】______profitable it is. Renren, meanwhile, started life as a Facebook clone. The user interface looks the same, but in terms of market【C14】______they are different. According to Web analysis firm comScore, in March, Facebook had 153 million active monthly users in the U.S.【C15】______to about 60% of the online population. Renren’s 31 million, up from 24 million at the end of 2010, means it has 7% of Chinese Internet users. That means it has【C16】______to expand but doesn’t have the lock on the market Facebook【C17】______And it faces tough competition if it tries to expand out of its student niche. Meanwhile, its recent surge in users looks.【C18】______It added seven million monthly active users in the first three months of 2011, the same as total【C19】______in 2009 and 2010 combined. That is tough to explain as Renren is facing stiff competition for users.【C20】______Sina’s Weibo microblogging platform. Everyone wants a piece of the Chinese Facebook, but in a competitive sector investors should consider the possibility they are buying a piece of the Chinese Friendster.【C11】

A.accounts
B.makes
C.signs
D.takes
单项选择题

Read the following article and choose the best word, for each space. For questions 26-45, mark one letter A, B, CorD on your Answer Sheet. Internet Clones Youku isn’t the Chinese YouTube and Renren isn’t the Chinese Facebook. That realization hasn’t【C1】______on investors, who continue to pile into Chinese Internet stocks with【C2】______discrimination. The Chinese Internet story certainly is compelling. With more than 450 million online, the Chinese Web boasts more【C3】______than any other in the world. Brokerage CLSA expects that number to increase to more than 800 million by 2013.【C4】______important, rising incomes and low levels of e-commerce penetration mean online sales and advertising should increase.【C5】______an even faster clip. Mainstays of the sector Baidu and Sina have more than doubled in【C6】______in the past 12 months. Online-video platform Youku【C7】______. nearly doubled since its trading debut in December, 2010. Social-networking site Renren hopes to【C8】______$584 million when it【C9】______on the New York Stock Exchange in May. But not all Internet firms are created equal. Despite a passing similarity to U.S. peers, the Chinese newbies are【C10】______by the comparison. Take Youku, which, according to Internet research firm Analysis,【C11】______for just 20% of China’s fragmented online-video space.【C12】______numbers vary, YouTube commands a much larger share of the U.S. online-video market yet it remains unclear【C13】______profitable it is. Renren, meanwhile, started life as a Facebook clone. The user interface looks the same, but in terms of market【C14】______they are different. According to Web analysis firm comScore, in March, Facebook had 153 million active monthly users in the U.S.【C15】______to about 60% of the online population. Renren’s 31 million, up from 24 million at the end of 2010, means it has 7% of Chinese Internet users. That means it has【C16】______to expand but doesn’t have the lock on the market Facebook【C17】______And it faces tough competition if it tries to expand out of its student niche. Meanwhile, its recent surge in users looks.【C18】______It added seven million monthly active users in the first three months of 2011, the same as total【C19】______in 2009 and 2010 combined. That is tough to explain as Renren is facing stiff competition for users.【C20】______Sina’s Weibo microblogging platform. Everyone wants a piece of the Chinese Facebook, but in a competitive sector investors should consider the possibility they are buying a piece of the Chinese Friendster.【C12】

A.But
B.Despite
C.While
D.If
单项选择题

Read the following article and choose the best word, for each space. For questions 26-45, mark one letter A, B, CorD on your Answer Sheet. Internet Clones Youku isn’t the Chinese YouTube and Renren isn’t the Chinese Facebook. That realization hasn’t【C1】______on investors, who continue to pile into Chinese Internet stocks with【C2】______discrimination. The Chinese Internet story certainly is compelling. With more than 450 million online, the Chinese Web boasts more【C3】______than any other in the world. Brokerage CLSA expects that number to increase to more than 800 million by 2013.【C4】______important, rising incomes and low levels of e-commerce penetration mean online sales and advertising should increase.【C5】______an even faster clip. Mainstays of the sector Baidu and Sina have more than doubled in【C6】______in the past 12 months. Online-video platform Youku【C7】______. nearly doubled since its trading debut in December, 2010. Social-networking site Renren hopes to【C8】______$584 million when it【C9】______on the New York Stock Exchange in May. But not all Internet firms are created equal. Despite a passing similarity to U.S. peers, the Chinese newbies are【C10】______by the comparison. Take Youku, which, according to Internet research firm Analysis,【C11】______for just 20% of China’s fragmented online-video space.【C12】______numbers vary, YouTube commands a much larger share of the U.S. online-video market yet it remains unclear【C13】______profitable it is. Renren, meanwhile, started life as a Facebook clone. The user interface looks the same, but in terms of market【C14】______they are different. According to Web analysis firm comScore, in March, Facebook had 153 million active monthly users in the U.S.【C15】______to about 60% of the online population. Renren’s 31 million, up from 24 million at the end of 2010, means it has 7% of Chinese Internet users. That means it has【C16】______to expand but doesn’t have the lock on the market Facebook【C17】______And it faces tough competition if it tries to expand out of its student niche. Meanwhile, its recent surge in users looks.【C18】______It added seven million monthly active users in the first three months of 2011, the same as total【C19】______in 2009 and 2010 combined. That is tough to explain as Renren is facing stiff competition for users.【C20】______Sina’s Weibo microblogging platform. Everyone wants a piece of the Chinese Facebook, but in a competitive sector investors should consider the possibility they are buying a piece of the Chinese Friendster.【C13】

A.where
B.when
C.what
D.how
单项选择题

Read the following article and choose the best word, for each space. For questions 26-45, mark one letter A, B, CorD on your Answer Sheet. Internet Clones Youku isn’t the Chinese YouTube and Renren isn’t the Chinese Facebook. That realization hasn’t【C1】______on investors, who continue to pile into Chinese Internet stocks with【C2】______discrimination. The Chinese Internet story certainly is compelling. With more than 450 million online, the Chinese Web boasts more【C3】______than any other in the world. Brokerage CLSA expects that number to increase to more than 800 million by 2013.【C4】______important, rising incomes and low levels of e-commerce penetration mean online sales and advertising should increase.【C5】______an even faster clip. Mainstays of the sector Baidu and Sina have more than doubled in【C6】______in the past 12 months. Online-video platform Youku【C7】______. nearly doubled since its trading debut in December, 2010. Social-networking site Renren hopes to【C8】______$584 million when it【C9】______on the New York Stock Exchange in May. But not all Internet firms are created equal. Despite a passing similarity to U.S. peers, the Chinese newbies are【C10】______by the comparison. Take Youku, which, according to Internet research firm Analysis,【C11】______for just 20% of China’s fragmented online-video space.【C12】______numbers vary, YouTube commands a much larger share of the U.S. online-video market yet it remains unclear【C13】______profitable it is. Renren, meanwhile, started life as a Facebook clone. The user interface looks the same, but in terms of market【C14】______they are different. According to Web analysis firm comScore, in March, Facebook had 153 million active monthly users in the U.S.【C15】______to about 60% of the online population. Renren’s 31 million, up from 24 million at the end of 2010, means it has 7% of Chinese Internet users. That means it has【C16】______to expand but doesn’t have the lock on the market Facebook【C17】______And it faces tough competition if it tries to expand out of its student niche. Meanwhile, its recent surge in users looks.【C18】______It added seven million monthly active users in the first three months of 2011, the same as total【C19】______in 2009 and 2010 combined. That is tough to explain as Renren is facing stiff competition for users.【C20】______Sina’s Weibo microblogging platform. Everyone wants a piece of the Chinese Facebook, but in a competitive sector investors should consider the possibility they are buying a piece of the Chinese Friendster.【C14】

A.share
B.influence
C.position
D.fame
单项选择题

Read the following article and choose the best word, for each space. For questions 26-45, mark one letter A, B, CorD on your Answer Sheet. Internet Clones Youku isn’t the Chinese YouTube and Renren isn’t the Chinese Facebook. That realization hasn’t【C1】______on investors, who continue to pile into Chinese Internet stocks with【C2】______discrimination. The Chinese Internet story certainly is compelling. With more than 450 million online, the Chinese Web boasts more【C3】______than any other in the world. Brokerage CLSA expects that number to increase to more than 800 million by 2013.【C4】______important, rising incomes and low levels of e-commerce penetration mean online sales and advertising should increase.【C5】______an even faster clip. Mainstays of the sector Baidu and Sina have more than doubled in【C6】______in the past 12 months. Online-video platform Youku【C7】______. nearly doubled since its trading debut in December, 2010. Social-networking site Renren hopes to【C8】______$584 million when it【C9】______on the New York Stock Exchange in May. But not all Internet firms are created equal. Despite a passing similarity to U.S. peers, the Chinese newbies are【C10】______by the comparison. Take Youku, which, according to Internet research firm Analysis,【C11】______for just 20% of China’s fragmented online-video space.【C12】______numbers vary, YouTube commands a much larger share of the U.S. online-video market yet it remains unclear【C13】______profitable it is. Renren, meanwhile, started life as a Facebook clone. The user interface looks the same, but in terms of market【C14】______they are different. According to Web analysis firm comScore, in March, Facebook had 153 million active monthly users in the U.S.【C15】______to about 60% of the online population. Renren’s 31 million, up from 24 million at the end of 2010, means it has 7% of Chinese Internet users. That means it has【C16】______to expand but doesn’t have the lock on the market Facebook【C17】______And it faces tough competition if it tries to expand out of its student niche. Meanwhile, its recent surge in users looks.【C18】______It added seven million monthly active users in the first three months of 2011, the same as total【C19】______in 2009 and 2010 combined. That is tough to explain as Renren is facing stiff competition for users.【C20】______Sina’s Weibo microblogging platform. Everyone wants a piece of the Chinese Facebook, but in a competitive sector investors should consider the possibility they are buying a piece of the Chinese Friendster.【C15】

A.equal
B.due
C.used
D.according
单项选择题

Read the following article and choose the best word, for each space. For questions 26-45, mark one letter A, B, CorD on your Answer Sheet. Internet Clones Youku isn’t the Chinese YouTube and Renren isn’t the Chinese Facebook. That realization hasn’t【C1】______on investors, who continue to pile into Chinese Internet stocks with【C2】______discrimination. The Chinese Internet story certainly is compelling. With more than 450 million online, the Chinese Web boasts more【C3】______than any other in the world. Brokerage CLSA expects that number to increase to more than 800 million by 2013.【C4】______important, rising incomes and low levels of e-commerce penetration mean online sales and advertising should increase.【C5】______an even faster clip. Mainstays of the sector Baidu and Sina have more than doubled in【C6】______in the past 12 months. Online-video platform Youku【C7】______. nearly doubled since its trading debut in December, 2010. Social-networking site Renren hopes to【C8】______$584 million when it【C9】______on the New York Stock Exchange in May. But not all Internet firms are created equal. Despite a passing similarity to U.S. peers, the Chinese newbies are【C10】______by the comparison. Take Youku, which, according to Internet research firm Analysis,【C11】______for just 20% of China’s fragmented online-video space.【C12】______numbers vary, YouTube commands a much larger share of the U.S. online-video market yet it remains unclear【C13】______profitable it is. Renren, meanwhile, started life as a Facebook clone. The user interface looks the same, but in terms of market【C14】______they are different. According to Web analysis firm comScore, in March, Facebook had 153 million active monthly users in the U.S.【C15】______to about 60% of the online population. Renren’s 31 million, up from 24 million at the end of 2010, means it has 7% of Chinese Internet users. That means it has【C16】______to expand but doesn’t have the lock on the market Facebook【C17】______And it faces tough competition if it tries to expand out of its student niche. Meanwhile, its recent surge in users looks.【C18】______It added seven million monthly active users in the first three months of 2011, the same as total【C19】______in 2009 and 2010 combined. That is tough to explain as Renren is facing stiff competition for users.【C20】______Sina’s Weibo microblogging platform. Everyone wants a piece of the Chinese Facebook, but in a competitive sector investors should consider the possibility they are buying a piece of the Chinese Friendster.【C16】

A.market
B.vacancy
C.room
D.place
单项选择题

Read the following article and choose the best word, for each space. For questions 26-45, mark one letter A, B, CorD on your Answer Sheet. Internet Clones Youku isn’t the Chinese YouTube and Renren isn’t the Chinese Facebook. That realization hasn’t【C1】______on investors, who continue to pile into Chinese Internet stocks with【C2】______discrimination. The Chinese Internet story certainly is compelling. With more than 450 million online, the Chinese Web boasts more【C3】______than any other in the world. Brokerage CLSA expects that number to increase to more than 800 million by 2013.【C4】______important, rising incomes and low levels of e-commerce penetration mean online sales and advertising should increase.【C5】______an even faster clip. Mainstays of the sector Baidu and Sina have more than doubled in【C6】______in the past 12 months. Online-video platform Youku【C7】______. nearly doubled since its trading debut in December, 2010. Social-networking site Renren hopes to【C8】______$584 million when it【C9】______on the New York Stock Exchange in May. But not all Internet firms are created equal. Despite a passing similarity to U.S. peers, the Chinese newbies are【C10】______by the comparison. Take Youku, which, according to Internet research firm Analysis,【C11】______for just 20% of China’s fragmented online-video space.【C12】______numbers vary, YouTube commands a much larger share of the U.S. online-video market yet it remains unclear【C13】______profitable it is. Renren, meanwhile, started life as a Facebook clone. The user interface looks the same, but in terms of market【C14】______they are different. According to Web analysis firm comScore, in March, Facebook had 153 million active monthly users in the U.S.【C15】______to about 60% of the online population. Renren’s 31 million, up from 24 million at the end of 2010, means it has 7% of Chinese Internet users. That means it has【C16】______to expand but doesn’t have the lock on the market Facebook【C17】______And it faces tough competition if it tries to expand out of its student niche. Meanwhile, its recent surge in users looks.【C18】______It added seven million monthly active users in the first three months of 2011, the same as total【C19】______in 2009 and 2010 combined. That is tough to explain as Renren is facing stiff competition for users.【C20】______Sina’s Weibo microblogging platform. Everyone wants a piece of the Chinese Facebook, but in a competitive sector investors should consider the possibility they are buying a piece of the Chinese Friendster.【C17】

A.buys
B.sells
C.enjoys
D.enters
单项选择题

Read the following article and choose the best word, for each space. For questions 26-45, mark one letter A, B, CorD on your Answer Sheet. Internet Clones Youku isn’t the Chinese YouTube and Renren isn’t the Chinese Facebook. That realization hasn’t【C1】______on investors, who continue to pile into Chinese Internet stocks with【C2】______discrimination. The Chinese Internet story certainly is compelling. With more than 450 million online, the Chinese Web boasts more【C3】______than any other in the world. Brokerage CLSA expects that number to increase to more than 800 million by 2013.【C4】______important, rising incomes and low levels of e-commerce penetration mean online sales and advertising should increase.【C5】______an even faster clip. Mainstays of the sector Baidu and Sina have more than doubled in【C6】______in the past 12 months. Online-video platform Youku【C7】______. nearly doubled since its trading debut in December, 2010. Social-networking site Renren hopes to【C8】______$584 million when it【C9】______on the New York Stock Exchange in May. But not all Internet firms are created equal. Despite a passing similarity to U.S. peers, the Chinese newbies are【C10】______by the comparison. Take Youku, which, according to Internet research firm Analysis,【C11】______for just 20% of China’s fragmented online-video space.【C12】______numbers vary, YouTube commands a much larger share of the U.S. online-video market yet it remains unclear【C13】______profitable it is. Renren, meanwhile, started life as a Facebook clone. The user interface looks the same, but in terms of market【C14】______they are different. According to Web analysis firm comScore, in March, Facebook had 153 million active monthly users in the U.S.【C15】______to about 60% of the online population. Renren’s 31 million, up from 24 million at the end of 2010, means it has 7% of Chinese Internet users. That means it has【C16】______to expand but doesn’t have the lock on the market Facebook【C17】______And it faces tough competition if it tries to expand out of its student niche. Meanwhile, its recent surge in users looks.【C18】______It added seven million monthly active users in the first three months of 2011, the same as total【C19】______in 2009 and 2010 combined. That is tough to explain as Renren is facing stiff competition for users.【C20】______Sina’s Weibo microblogging platform. Everyone wants a piece of the Chinese Facebook, but in a competitive sector investors should consider the possibility they are buying a piece of the Chinese Friendster.【C18】

A.unsupportable
B.unacceptable
C.unspeakable
D.unsustainable
单项选择题

Read the following article and choose the best word, for each space. For questions 26-45, mark one letter A, B, CorD on your Answer Sheet. Internet Clones Youku isn’t the Chinese YouTube and Renren isn’t the Chinese Facebook. That realization hasn’t【C1】______on investors, who continue to pile into Chinese Internet stocks with【C2】______discrimination. The Chinese Internet story certainly is compelling. With more than 450 million online, the Chinese Web boasts more【C3】______than any other in the world. Brokerage CLSA expects that number to increase to more than 800 million by 2013.【C4】______important, rising incomes and low levels of e-commerce penetration mean online sales and advertising should increase.【C5】______an even faster clip. Mainstays of the sector Baidu and Sina have more than doubled in【C6】______in the past 12 months. Online-video platform Youku【C7】______. nearly doubled since its trading debut in December, 2010. Social-networking site Renren hopes to【C8】______$584 million when it【C9】______on the New York Stock Exchange in May. But not all Internet firms are created equal. Despite a passing similarity to U.S. peers, the Chinese newbies are【C10】______by the comparison. Take Youku, which, according to Internet research firm Analysis,【C11】______for just 20% of China’s fragmented online-video space.【C12】______numbers vary, YouTube commands a much larger share of the U.S. online-video market yet it remains unclear【C13】______profitable it is. Renren, meanwhile, started life as a Facebook clone. The user interface looks the same, but in terms of market【C14】______they are different. According to Web analysis firm comScore, in March, Facebook had 153 million active monthly users in the U.S.【C15】______to about 60% of the online population. Renren’s 31 million, up from 24 million at the end of 2010, means it has 7% of Chinese Internet users. That means it has【C16】______to expand but doesn’t have the lock on the market Facebook【C17】______And it faces tough competition if it tries to expand out of its student niche. Meanwhile, its recent surge in users looks.【C18】______It added seven million monthly active users in the first three months of 2011, the same as total【C19】______in 2009 and 2010 combined. That is tough to explain as Renren is facing stiff competition for users.【C20】______Sina’s Weibo microblogging platform. Everyone wants a piece of the Chinese Facebook, but in a competitive sector investors should consider the possibility they are buying a piece of the Chinese Friendster.【C19】

A.increases
B.additions
C.expansions
D.decreases
单项选择题

Read the following article and choose the best word, for each space. For questions 26-45, mark one letter A, B, CorD on your Answer Sheet. Internet Clones Youku isn’t the Chinese YouTube and Renren isn’t the Chinese Facebook. That realization hasn’t【C1】______on investors, who continue to pile into Chinese Internet stocks with【C2】______discrimination. The Chinese Internet story certainly is compelling. With more than 450 million online, the Chinese Web boasts more【C3】______than any other in the world. Brokerage CLSA expects that number to increase to more than 800 million by 2013.【C4】______important, rising incomes and low levels of e-commerce penetration mean online sales and advertising should increase.【C5】______an even faster clip. Mainstays of the sector Baidu and Sina have more than doubled in【C6】______in the past 12 months. Online-video platform Youku【C7】______. nearly doubled since its trading debut in December, 2010. Social-networking site Renren hopes to【C8】______$584 million when it【C9】______on the New York Stock Exchange in May. But not all Internet firms are created equal. Despite a passing similarity to U.S. peers, the Chinese newbies are【C10】______by the comparison. Take Youku, which, according to Internet research firm Analysis,【C11】______for just 20% of China’s fragmented online-video space.【C12】______numbers vary, YouTube commands a much larger share of the U.S. online-video market yet it remains unclear【C13】______profitable it is. Renren, meanwhile, started life as a Facebook clone. The user interface looks the same, but in terms of market【C14】______they are different. According to Web analysis firm comScore, in March, Facebook had 153 million active monthly users in the U.S.【C15】______to about 60% of the online population. Renren’s 31 million, up from 24 million at the end of 2010, means it has 7% of Chinese Internet users. That means it has【C16】______to expand but doesn’t have the lock on the market Facebook【C17】______And it faces tough competition if it tries to expand out of its student niche. Meanwhile, its recent surge in users looks.【C18】______It added seven million monthly active users in the first three months of 2011, the same as total【C19】______in 2009 and 2010 combined. That is tough to explain as Renren is facing stiff competition for users.【C20】______Sina’s Weibo microblogging platform. Everyone wants a piece of the Chinese Facebook, but in a competitive sector investors should consider the possibility they are buying a piece of the Chinese Friendster.【C20】

A.with
B.for
C.to
D.from
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