单项选择题

Robots May Allow Surgery in Space
Small robots designed by University of Nebraska researchers may allow doctors on Earth to help perform surgery on patients in space.
The tiny, wheeled robots, 31 are about 3 inches tall and as wide as a lipstick case, can be slipped into small incisions (切口) and computer-controlled by surgeons in different locations. Some robots are 32 with cameras and lights and can send images back to surgeons and others have surgical 33 attached that can be controlled remotely.
"We think this is going to 34 open surgery," Dr. Dmitry Oleynikov said at a news conference. Oleynikov is a specialist 35 computer-assisted surgery at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.
Officials hope that NASA will teach 36 to use the robots soon enough so that surgeries could one day be performed in space.
On earth, the surgeons could 37 the robots themselves from other locations. For example, the robots could 38 surgeons in other places to work on injured soldiers on the front line. Researchers plan to seek federal regulatory (联邦管理局的) 39 early next year. Tests on animals have been successful, and tests on humans in England will begin very soon.
The camera-carrying robots can provide 40 of affected areas and the ones with surgical tools will be able to maneuver (操控) inside the body in ways surgeons" hands can"t. The views from the camera-carrying robots are better than the naked eye, because they send back color images that are magnified (放大). Because several robots can be 41 through one incision, they could reduce the 42 and size of cuts needed for surgery, which would 43 recovery time. This is particularly helpful to those patients who have been debilitated (使虚弱) by long illness.
Eventually, Oleynikov said, the tiny robots may enable surgeons to 44 without ever placing their hands in patients" bodies. "That"s the goal;" Oleynikov said. "It"s getting easier and easier. We can do even more with these 45 "

A.plans
B.ideas
C.devices
D.concepts
题目列表

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单项选择题

Shopping for Clothes
Shopping for clothes is not the same experience for a man as it is for a woman. A man goes shopping because he needs something. His purpose is settled and decided in 1 . He knows what he wants, and his 2 is to find it and buy it. All men simply walk into a shop and ask the assistant for what they want. If the shop has it in stock, the deal can be and often is completed in less than five minutes, with hardly any chat and to everyone"s 3 .
For a man, slight problems may begin when the shop does not have what he wants. In that 4 the salesman tries to sell the customer something else—he offers the nearest to the article required. Good salesman brings out such a substitute with 5 : "know this jacket is not the style you want, sir, but would you like to try it for size. It 6 to be the colour you mentioned." Few men have 7 with this treatment, and the usual response is: "This is the right colour and may be the right size, but I should be 8 my time and yours by trying it on."
For a woman, buying clothes is always done in the 9 way. Her shopping is not often 10 on need. She has never fully decided what she wants, and she is only "having a look round". She is always open to persuasion, willing to try 11 any number of things. Uppermost in her mind is the thought of finding something that 12 thinks suits her. Most women have an excellent sense of value and are always on the look-out for the unexpected 13 . Faced with a roomful of dresses, a woman may easily spend an hour going from one rail to another 14 selecting the dresses she wants to try on. It is a tiresome process, but apparently a(n) 15 one. Most dress shops provide chairs for the waiting husbands.

A.detail
B.advance
C.hurry
D.full
单项选择题

Vibrating Rubber Cellphones
Vibrating rubber cellphones could be the next big thing in mobile communications. They allow people to press the phone to transmit vibrations along with their 16 words. According to a research team at the MIT Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the idea will make 17 more fun.
Many mobile phones can already vibrate instead of ringing 18 you do not want people to know you are getting a call. But these 19 are too simple for subtle (敏感的) communication, 20 Angela Chang of the lab"s Tangible Media Group. "They"re either on or off," she says.
But when you hold Chang"s rubber cellphone, your fingers and thumb wrap around five 21 speakers. They vibrate 22 your skin around 250 times per second. Beneath these speakers sit pressure sensors (传感器), so you can transmit vibration as well as 23 it. When you squeeze with a finger, a vibration signal is transmitted 24 your caller"s corresponding finger, its speed 25 on how hard you squeeze.
Chang says that within a few minutes of being given the phones, students were using the vibration feature to 26 emphasis to what they were saying.
Over time, people even began to transmit their own kind of ad hoe (特别的) "Morse code", which they would repeat back to show they were 27 what the other person was saying. Chang thinks "vibralanguages" could function for the same 28 as texting: sometimes people want to communicate 29 without everyone nearby knowing what they"re saying. "And 30 actually being able to shake someone"s hand when you close a business deal," she says.

A.taken
B.mixed
C.spoken
D.broken
单项选择题

Shopping for Clothes
Shopping for clothes is not the same experience for a man as it is for a woman. A man goes shopping because he needs something. His purpose is settled and decided in 1 . He knows what he wants, and his 2 is to find it and buy it. All men simply walk into a shop and ask the assistant for what they want. If the shop has it in stock, the deal can be and often is completed in less than five minutes, with hardly any chat and to everyone"s 3 .
For a man, slight problems may begin when the shop does not have what he wants. In that 4 the salesman tries to sell the customer something else—he offers the nearest to the article required. Good salesman brings out such a substitute with 5 : "know this jacket is not the style you want, sir, but would you like to try it for size. It 6 to be the colour you mentioned." Few men have 7 with this treatment, and the usual response is: "This is the right colour and may be the right size, but I should be 8 my time and yours by trying it on."
For a woman, buying clothes is always done in the 9 way. Her shopping is not often 10 on need. She has never fully decided what she wants, and she is only "having a look round". She is always open to persuasion, willing to try 11 any number of things. Uppermost in her mind is the thought of finding something that 12 thinks suits her. Most women have an excellent sense of value and are always on the look-out for the unexpected 13 . Faced with a roomful of dresses, a woman may easily spend an hour going from one rail to another 14 selecting the dresses she wants to try on. It is a tiresome process, but apparently a(n) 15 one. Most dress shops provide chairs for the waiting husbands.

A.objective
B.need
C.dream
D.reason
单项选择题

Vibrating Rubber Cellphones
Vibrating rubber cellphones could be the next big thing in mobile communications. They allow people to press the phone to transmit vibrations along with their 16 words. According to a research team at the MIT Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the idea will make 17 more fun.
Many mobile phones can already vibrate instead of ringing 18 you do not want people to know you are getting a call. But these 19 are too simple for subtle (敏感的) communication, 20 Angela Chang of the lab"s Tangible Media Group. "They"re either on or off," she says.
But when you hold Chang"s rubber cellphone, your fingers and thumb wrap around five 21 speakers. They vibrate 22 your skin around 250 times per second. Beneath these speakers sit pressure sensors (传感器), so you can transmit vibration as well as 23 it. When you squeeze with a finger, a vibration signal is transmitted 24 your caller"s corresponding finger, its speed 25 on how hard you squeeze.
Chang says that within a few minutes of being given the phones, students were using the vibration feature to 26 emphasis to what they were saying.
Over time, people even began to transmit their own kind of ad hoe (特别的) "Morse code", which they would repeat back to show they were 27 what the other person was saying. Chang thinks "vibralanguages" could function for the same 28 as texting: sometimes people want to communicate 29 without everyone nearby knowing what they"re saying. "And 30 actually being able to shake someone"s hand when you close a business deal," she says.

A.phoning
B.touching
C.working
D.asking
单项选择题

Robots May Allow Surgery in Space
Small robots designed by University of Nebraska researchers may allow doctors on Earth to help perform surgery on patients in space.
The tiny, wheeled robots, 31 are about 3 inches tall and as wide as a lipstick case, can be slipped into small incisions (切口) and computer-controlled by surgeons in different locations. Some robots are 32 with cameras and lights and can send images back to surgeons and others have surgical 33 attached that can be controlled remotely.
"We think this is going to 34 open surgery," Dr. Dmitry Oleynikov said at a news conference. Oleynikov is a specialist 35 computer-assisted surgery at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.
Officials hope that NASA will teach 36 to use the robots soon enough so that surgeries could one day be performed in space.
On earth, the surgeons could 37 the robots themselves from other locations. For example, the robots could 38 surgeons in other places to work on injured soldiers on the front line. Researchers plan to seek federal regulatory (联邦管理局的) 39 early next year. Tests on animals have been successful, and tests on humans in England will begin very soon.
The camera-carrying robots can provide 40 of affected areas and the ones with surgical tools will be able to maneuver (操控) inside the body in ways surgeons" hands can"t. The views from the camera-carrying robots are better than the naked eye, because they send back color images that are magnified (放大). Because several robots can be 41 through one incision, they could reduce the 42 and size of cuts needed for surgery, which would 43 recovery time. This is particularly helpful to those patients who have been debilitated (使虚弱) by long illness.
Eventually, Oleynikov said, the tiny robots may enable surgeons to 44 without ever placing their hands in patients" bodies. "That"s the goal;" Oleynikov said. "It"s getting easier and easier. We can do even more with these 45 "

A.that
B.where
C.since
D.which
单项选择题

Shopping for Clothes
Shopping for clothes is not the same experience for a man as it is for a woman. A man goes shopping because he needs something. His purpose is settled and decided in 1 . He knows what he wants, and his 2 is to find it and buy it. All men simply walk into a shop and ask the assistant for what they want. If the shop has it in stock, the deal can be and often is completed in less than five minutes, with hardly any chat and to everyone"s 3 .
For a man, slight problems may begin when the shop does not have what he wants. In that 4 the salesman tries to sell the customer something else—he offers the nearest to the article required. Good salesman brings out such a substitute with 5 : "know this jacket is not the style you want, sir, but would you like to try it for size. It 6 to be the colour you mentioned." Few men have 7 with this treatment, and the usual response is: "This is the right colour and may be the right size, but I should be 8 my time and yours by trying it on."
For a woman, buying clothes is always done in the 9 way. Her shopping is not often 10 on need. She has never fully decided what she wants, and she is only "having a look round". She is always open to persuasion, willing to try 11 any number of things. Uppermost in her mind is the thought of finding something that 12 thinks suits her. Most women have an excellent sense of value and are always on the look-out for the unexpected 13 . Faced with a roomful of dresses, a woman may easily spend an hour going from one rail to another 14 selecting the dresses she wants to try on. It is a tiresome process, but apparently a(n) 15 one. Most dress shops provide chairs for the waiting husbands.

A.sadness
B.amusement
C.surprise
D.satisfaction
单项选择题

Vibrating Rubber Cellphones
Vibrating rubber cellphones could be the next big thing in mobile communications. They allow people to press the phone to transmit vibrations along with their 16 words. According to a research team at the MIT Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the idea will make 17 more fun.
Many mobile phones can already vibrate instead of ringing 18 you do not want people to know you are getting a call. But these 19 are too simple for subtle (敏感的) communication, 20 Angela Chang of the lab"s Tangible Media Group. "They"re either on or off," she says.
But when you hold Chang"s rubber cellphone, your fingers and thumb wrap around five 21 speakers. They vibrate 22 your skin around 250 times per second. Beneath these speakers sit pressure sensors (传感器), so you can transmit vibration as well as 23 it. When you squeeze with a finger, a vibration signal is transmitted 24 your caller"s corresponding finger, its speed 25 on how hard you squeeze.
Chang says that within a few minutes of being given the phones, students were using the vibration feature to 26 emphasis to what they were saying.
Over time, people even began to transmit their own kind of ad hoe (特别的) "Morse code", which they would repeat back to show they were 27 what the other person was saying. Chang thinks "vibralanguages" could function for the same 28 as texting: sometimes people want to communicate 29 without everyone nearby knowing what they"re saying. "And 30 actually being able to shake someone"s hand when you close a business deal," she says.

A.since
B.where
C.though
D.when
单项选择题

Robots May Allow Surgery in Space
Small robots designed by University of Nebraska researchers may allow doctors on Earth to help perform surgery on patients in space.
The tiny, wheeled robots, 31 are about 3 inches tall and as wide as a lipstick case, can be slipped into small incisions (切口) and computer-controlled by surgeons in different locations. Some robots are 32 with cameras and lights and can send images back to surgeons and others have surgical 33 attached that can be controlled remotely.
"We think this is going to 34 open surgery," Dr. Dmitry Oleynikov said at a news conference. Oleynikov is a specialist 35 computer-assisted surgery at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.
Officials hope that NASA will teach 36 to use the robots soon enough so that surgeries could one day be performed in space.
On earth, the surgeons could 37 the robots themselves from other locations. For example, the robots could 38 surgeons in other places to work on injured soldiers on the front line. Researchers plan to seek federal regulatory (联邦管理局的) 39 early next year. Tests on animals have been successful, and tests on humans in England will begin very soon.
The camera-carrying robots can provide 40 of affected areas and the ones with surgical tools will be able to maneuver (操控) inside the body in ways surgeons" hands can"t. The views from the camera-carrying robots are better than the naked eye, because they send back color images that are magnified (放大). Because several robots can be 41 through one incision, they could reduce the 42 and size of cuts needed for surgery, which would 43 recovery time. This is particularly helpful to those patients who have been debilitated (使虚弱) by long illness.
Eventually, Oleynikov said, the tiny robots may enable surgeons to 44 without ever placing their hands in patients" bodies. "That"s the goal;" Oleynikov said. "It"s getting easier and easier. We can do even more with these 45 "

A.equipped
B.carried
C.brought
D.taken
单项选择题

Vibrating Rubber Cellphones
Vibrating rubber cellphones could be the next big thing in mobile communications. They allow people to press the phone to transmit vibrations along with their 16 words. According to a research team at the MIT Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the idea will make 17 more fun.
Many mobile phones can already vibrate instead of ringing 18 you do not want people to know you are getting a call. But these 19 are too simple for subtle (敏感的) communication, 20 Angela Chang of the lab"s Tangible Media Group. "They"re either on or off," she says.
But when you hold Chang"s rubber cellphone, your fingers and thumb wrap around five 21 speakers. They vibrate 22 your skin around 250 times per second. Beneath these speakers sit pressure sensors (传感器), so you can transmit vibration as well as 23 it. When you squeeze with a finger, a vibration signal is transmitted 24 your caller"s corresponding finger, its speed 25 on how hard you squeeze.
Chang says that within a few minutes of being given the phones, students were using the vibration feature to 26 emphasis to what they were saying.
Over time, people even began to transmit their own kind of ad hoe (特别的) "Morse code", which they would repeat back to show they were 27 what the other person was saying. Chang thinks "vibralanguages" could function for the same 28 as texting: sometimes people want to communicate 29 without everyone nearby knowing what they"re saying. "And 30 actually being able to shake someone"s hand when you close a business deal," she says.

A.vibrations
B.instructions
C.texts
D.callings
单项选择题

Shopping for Clothes
Shopping for clothes is not the same experience for a man as it is for a woman. A man goes shopping because he needs something. His purpose is settled and decided in 1 . He knows what he wants, and his 2 is to find it and buy it. All men simply walk into a shop and ask the assistant for what they want. If the shop has it in stock, the deal can be and often is completed in less than five minutes, with hardly any chat and to everyone"s 3 .
For a man, slight problems may begin when the shop does not have what he wants. In that 4 the salesman tries to sell the customer something else—he offers the nearest to the article required. Good salesman brings out such a substitute with 5 : "know this jacket is not the style you want, sir, but would you like to try it for size. It 6 to be the colour you mentioned." Few men have 7 with this treatment, and the usual response is: "This is the right colour and may be the right size, but I should be 8 my time and yours by trying it on."
For a woman, buying clothes is always done in the 9 way. Her shopping is not often 10 on need. She has never fully decided what she wants, and she is only "having a look round". She is always open to persuasion, willing to try 11 any number of things. Uppermost in her mind is the thought of finding something that 12 thinks suits her. Most women have an excellent sense of value and are always on the look-out for the unexpected 13 . Faced with a roomful of dresses, a woman may easily spend an hour going from one rail to another 14 selecting the dresses she wants to try on. It is a tiresome process, but apparently a(n) 15 one. Most dress shops provide chairs for the waiting husbands.

A.time
B.event
C.case
D.situation
单项选择题

Robots May Allow Surgery in Space
Small robots designed by University of Nebraska researchers may allow doctors on Earth to help perform surgery on patients in space.
The tiny, wheeled robots, 31 are about 3 inches tall and as wide as a lipstick case, can be slipped into small incisions (切口) and computer-controlled by surgeons in different locations. Some robots are 32 with cameras and lights and can send images back to surgeons and others have surgical 33 attached that can be controlled remotely.
"We think this is going to 34 open surgery," Dr. Dmitry Oleynikov said at a news conference. Oleynikov is a specialist 35 computer-assisted surgery at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.
Officials hope that NASA will teach 36 to use the robots soon enough so that surgeries could one day be performed in space.
On earth, the surgeons could 37 the robots themselves from other locations. For example, the robots could 38 surgeons in other places to work on injured soldiers on the front line. Researchers plan to seek federal regulatory (联邦管理局的) 39 early next year. Tests on animals have been successful, and tests on humans in England will begin very soon.
The camera-carrying robots can provide 40 of affected areas and the ones with surgical tools will be able to maneuver (操控) inside the body in ways surgeons" hands can"t. The views from the camera-carrying robots are better than the naked eye, because they send back color images that are magnified (放大). Because several robots can be 41 through one incision, they could reduce the 42 and size of cuts needed for surgery, which would 43 recovery time. This is particularly helpful to those patients who have been debilitated (使虚弱) by long illness.
Eventually, Oleynikov said, the tiny robots may enable surgeons to 44 without ever placing their hands in patients" bodies. "That"s the goal;" Oleynikov said. "It"s getting easier and easier. We can do even more with these 45 "

A.scales
B.tools
C.techniques
D.procedures
单项选择题

Vibrating Rubber Cellphones
Vibrating rubber cellphones could be the next big thing in mobile communications. They allow people to press the phone to transmit vibrations along with their 16 words. According to a research team at the MIT Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the idea will make 17 more fun.
Many mobile phones can already vibrate instead of ringing 18 you do not want people to know you are getting a call. But these 19 are too simple for subtle (敏感的) communication, 20 Angela Chang of the lab"s Tangible Media Group. "They"re either on or off," she says.
But when you hold Chang"s rubber cellphone, your fingers and thumb wrap around five 21 speakers. They vibrate 22 your skin around 250 times per second. Beneath these speakers sit pressure sensors (传感器), so you can transmit vibration as well as 23 it. When you squeeze with a finger, a vibration signal is transmitted 24 your caller"s corresponding finger, its speed 25 on how hard you squeeze.
Chang says that within a few minutes of being given the phones, students were using the vibration feature to 26 emphasis to what they were saying.
Over time, people even began to transmit their own kind of ad hoe (特别的) "Morse code", which they would repeat back to show they were 27 what the other person was saying. Chang thinks "vibralanguages" could function for the same 28 as texting: sometimes people want to communicate 29 without everyone nearby knowing what they"re saying. "And 30 actually being able to shake someone"s hand when you close a business deal," she says.

A.answers
B.says
C.interrupts
D.tells
单项选择题

Shopping for Clothes
Shopping for clothes is not the same experience for a man as it is for a woman. A man goes shopping because he needs something. His purpose is settled and decided in 1 . He knows what he wants, and his 2 is to find it and buy it. All men simply walk into a shop and ask the assistant for what they want. If the shop has it in stock, the deal can be and often is completed in less than five minutes, with hardly any chat and to everyone"s 3 .
For a man, slight problems may begin when the shop does not have what he wants. In that 4 the salesman tries to sell the customer something else—he offers the nearest to the article required. Good salesman brings out such a substitute with 5 : "know this jacket is not the style you want, sir, but would you like to try it for size. It 6 to be the colour you mentioned." Few men have 7 with this treatment, and the usual response is: "This is the right colour and may be the right size, but I should be 8 my time and yours by trying it on."
For a woman, buying clothes is always done in the 9 way. Her shopping is not often 10 on need. She has never fully decided what she wants, and she is only "having a look round". She is always open to persuasion, willing to try 11 any number of things. Uppermost in her mind is the thought of finding something that 12 thinks suits her. Most women have an excellent sense of value and are always on the look-out for the unexpected 13 . Faced with a roomful of dresses, a woman may easily spend an hour going from one rail to another 14 selecting the dresses she wants to try on. It is a tiresome process, but apparently a(n) 15 one. Most dress shops provide chairs for the waiting husbands.

A.care
B.skill
C.attention
D.interest
单项选择题

Robots May Allow Surgery in Space
Small robots designed by University of Nebraska researchers may allow doctors on Earth to help perform surgery on patients in space.
The tiny, wheeled robots, 31 are about 3 inches tall and as wide as a lipstick case, can be slipped into small incisions (切口) and computer-controlled by surgeons in different locations. Some robots are 32 with cameras and lights and can send images back to surgeons and others have surgical 33 attached that can be controlled remotely.
"We think this is going to 34 open surgery," Dr. Dmitry Oleynikov said at a news conference. Oleynikov is a specialist 35 computer-assisted surgery at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.
Officials hope that NASA will teach 36 to use the robots soon enough so that surgeries could one day be performed in space.
On earth, the surgeons could 37 the robots themselves from other locations. For example, the robots could 38 surgeons in other places to work on injured soldiers on the front line. Researchers plan to seek federal regulatory (联邦管理局的) 39 early next year. Tests on animals have been successful, and tests on humans in England will begin very soon.
The camera-carrying robots can provide 40 of affected areas and the ones with surgical tools will be able to maneuver (操控) inside the body in ways surgeons" hands can"t. The views from the camera-carrying robots are better than the naked eye, because they send back color images that are magnified (放大). Because several robots can be 41 through one incision, they could reduce the 42 and size of cuts needed for surgery, which would 43 recovery time. This is particularly helpful to those patients who have been debilitated (使虚弱) by long illness.
Eventually, Oleynikov said, the tiny robots may enable surgeons to 44 without ever placing their hands in patients" bodies. "That"s the goal;" Oleynikov said. "It"s getting easier and easier. We can do even more with these 45 "

A.perform
B.follow
C.replace
D.repair
单项选择题

Vibrating Rubber Cellphones
Vibrating rubber cellphones could be the next big thing in mobile communications. They allow people to press the phone to transmit vibrations along with their 16 words. According to a research team at the MIT Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the idea will make 17 more fun.
Many mobile phones can already vibrate instead of ringing 18 you do not want people to know you are getting a call. But these 19 are too simple for subtle (敏感的) communication, 20 Angela Chang of the lab"s Tangible Media Group. "They"re either on or off," she says.
But when you hold Chang"s rubber cellphone, your fingers and thumb wrap around five 21 speakers. They vibrate 22 your skin around 250 times per second. Beneath these speakers sit pressure sensors (传感器), so you can transmit vibration as well as 23 it. When you squeeze with a finger, a vibration signal is transmitted 24 your caller"s corresponding finger, its speed 25 on how hard you squeeze.
Chang says that within a few minutes of being given the phones, students were using the vibration feature to 26 emphasis to what they were saying.
Over time, people even began to transmit their own kind of ad hoe (特别的) "Morse code", which they would repeat back to show they were 27 what the other person was saying. Chang thinks "vibralanguages" could function for the same 28 as texting: sometimes people want to communicate 29 without everyone nearby knowing what they"re saying. "And 30 actually being able to shake someone"s hand when you close a business deal," she says.

A.loud
B.native
C.tiny
D.large
单项选择题

Shopping for Clothes
Shopping for clothes is not the same experience for a man as it is for a woman. A man goes shopping because he needs something. His purpose is settled and decided in 1 . He knows what he wants, and his 2 is to find it and buy it. All men simply walk into a shop and ask the assistant for what they want. If the shop has it in stock, the deal can be and often is completed in less than five minutes, with hardly any chat and to everyone"s 3 .
For a man, slight problems may begin when the shop does not have what he wants. In that 4 the salesman tries to sell the customer something else—he offers the nearest to the article required. Good salesman brings out such a substitute with 5 : "know this jacket is not the style you want, sir, but would you like to try it for size. It 6 to be the colour you mentioned." Few men have 7 with this treatment, and the usual response is: "This is the right colour and may be the right size, but I should be 8 my time and yours by trying it on."
For a woman, buying clothes is always done in the 9 way. Her shopping is not often 10 on need. She has never fully decided what she wants, and she is only "having a look round". She is always open to persuasion, willing to try 11 any number of things. Uppermost in her mind is the thought of finding something that 12 thinks suits her. Most women have an excellent sense of value and are always on the look-out for the unexpected 13 . Faced with a roomful of dresses, a woman may easily spend an hour going from one rail to another 14 selecting the dresses she wants to try on. It is a tiresome process, but apparently a(n) 15 one. Most dress shops provide chairs for the waiting husbands.

A.happens
B.is
C.changes
D.comes
单项选择题

Robots May Allow Surgery in Space
Small robots designed by University of Nebraska researchers may allow doctors on Earth to help perform surgery on patients in space.
The tiny, wheeled robots, 31 are about 3 inches tall and as wide as a lipstick case, can be slipped into small incisions (切口) and computer-controlled by surgeons in different locations. Some robots are 32 with cameras and lights and can send images back to surgeons and others have surgical 33 attached that can be controlled remotely.
"We think this is going to 34 open surgery," Dr. Dmitry Oleynikov said at a news conference. Oleynikov is a specialist 35 computer-assisted surgery at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.
Officials hope that NASA will teach 36 to use the robots soon enough so that surgeries could one day be performed in space.
On earth, the surgeons could 37 the robots themselves from other locations. For example, the robots could 38 surgeons in other places to work on injured soldiers on the front line. Researchers plan to seek federal regulatory (联邦管理局的) 39 early next year. Tests on animals have been successful, and tests on humans in England will begin very soon.
The camera-carrying robots can provide 40 of affected areas and the ones with surgical tools will be able to maneuver (操控) inside the body in ways surgeons" hands can"t. The views from the camera-carrying robots are better than the naked eye, because they send back color images that are magnified (放大). Because several robots can be 41 through one incision, they could reduce the 42 and size of cuts needed for surgery, which would 43 recovery time. This is particularly helpful to those patients who have been debilitated (使虚弱) by long illness.
Eventually, Oleynikov said, the tiny robots may enable surgeons to 44 without ever placing their hands in patients" bodies. "That"s the goal;" Oleynikov said. "It"s getting easier and easier. We can do even more with these 45 "

A.at
B.on
C.with
D.in
单项选择题

Robots May Allow Surgery in Space
Small robots designed by University of Nebraska researchers may allow doctors on Earth to help perform surgery on patients in space.
The tiny, wheeled robots, 31 are about 3 inches tall and as wide as a lipstick case, can be slipped into small incisions (切口) and computer-controlled by surgeons in different locations. Some robots are 32 with cameras and lights and can send images back to surgeons and others have surgical 33 attached that can be controlled remotely.
"We think this is going to 34 open surgery," Dr. Dmitry Oleynikov said at a news conference. Oleynikov is a specialist 35 computer-assisted surgery at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.
Officials hope that NASA will teach 36 to use the robots soon enough so that surgeries could one day be performed in space.
On earth, the surgeons could 37 the robots themselves from other locations. For example, the robots could 38 surgeons in other places to work on injured soldiers on the front line. Researchers plan to seek federal regulatory (联邦管理局的) 39 early next year. Tests on animals have been successful, and tests on humans in England will begin very soon.
The camera-carrying robots can provide 40 of affected areas and the ones with surgical tools will be able to maneuver (操控) inside the body in ways surgeons" hands can"t. The views from the camera-carrying robots are better than the naked eye, because they send back color images that are magnified (放大). Because several robots can be 41 through one incision, they could reduce the 42 and size of cuts needed for surgery, which would 43 recovery time. This is particularly helpful to those patients who have been debilitated (使虚弱) by long illness.
Eventually, Oleynikov said, the tiny robots may enable surgeons to 44 without ever placing their hands in patients" bodies. "That"s the goal;" Oleynikov said. "It"s getting easier and easier. We can do even more with these 45 "

A.astronauts
B.farmers
C.actors
D.divers
单项选择题

Vibrating Rubber Cellphones
Vibrating rubber cellphones could be the next big thing in mobile communications. They allow people to press the phone to transmit vibrations along with their 16 words. According to a research team at the MIT Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the idea will make 17 more fun.
Many mobile phones can already vibrate instead of ringing 18 you do not want people to know you are getting a call. But these 19 are too simple for subtle (敏感的) communication, 20 Angela Chang of the lab"s Tangible Media Group. "They"re either on or off," she says.
But when you hold Chang"s rubber cellphone, your fingers and thumb wrap around five 21 speakers. They vibrate 22 your skin around 250 times per second. Beneath these speakers sit pressure sensors (传感器), so you can transmit vibration as well as 23 it. When you squeeze with a finger, a vibration signal is transmitted 24 your caller"s corresponding finger, its speed 25 on how hard you squeeze.
Chang says that within a few minutes of being given the phones, students were using the vibration feature to 26 emphasis to what they were saying.
Over time, people even began to transmit their own kind of ad hoe (特别的) "Morse code", which they would repeat back to show they were 27 what the other person was saying. Chang thinks "vibralanguages" could function for the same 28 as texting: sometimes people want to communicate 29 without everyone nearby knowing what they"re saying. "And 30 actually being able to shake someone"s hand when you close a business deal," she says.

A.on
B.above
C.over
D.against
单项选择题

Shopping for Clothes
Shopping for clothes is not the same experience for a man as it is for a woman. A man goes shopping because he needs something. His purpose is settled and decided in 1 . He knows what he wants, and his 2 is to find it and buy it. All men simply walk into a shop and ask the assistant for what they want. If the shop has it in stock, the deal can be and often is completed in less than five minutes, with hardly any chat and to everyone"s 3 .
For a man, slight problems may begin when the shop does not have what he wants. In that 4 the salesman tries to sell the customer something else—he offers the nearest to the article required. Good salesman brings out such a substitute with 5 : "know this jacket is not the style you want, sir, but would you like to try it for size. It 6 to be the colour you mentioned." Few men have 7 with this treatment, and the usual response is: "This is the right colour and may be the right size, but I should be 8 my time and yours by trying it on."
For a woman, buying clothes is always done in the 9 way. Her shopping is not often 10 on need. She has never fully decided what she wants, and she is only "having a look round". She is always open to persuasion, willing to try 11 any number of things. Uppermost in her mind is the thought of finding something that 12 thinks suits her. Most women have an excellent sense of value and are always on the look-out for the unexpected 13 . Faced with a roomful of dresses, a woman may easily spend an hour going from one rail to another 14 selecting the dresses she wants to try on. It is a tiresome process, but apparently a(n) 15 one. Most dress shops provide chairs for the waiting husbands.

A.experience
B.is
C.interest
D.patience
单项选择题

Robots May Allow Surgery in Space
Small robots designed by University of Nebraska researchers may allow doctors on Earth to help perform surgery on patients in space.
The tiny, wheeled robots, 31 are about 3 inches tall and as wide as a lipstick case, can be slipped into small incisions (切口) and computer-controlled by surgeons in different locations. Some robots are 32 with cameras and lights and can send images back to surgeons and others have surgical 33 attached that can be controlled remotely.
"We think this is going to 34 open surgery," Dr. Dmitry Oleynikov said at a news conference. Oleynikov is a specialist 35 computer-assisted surgery at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.
Officials hope that NASA will teach 36 to use the robots soon enough so that surgeries could one day be performed in space.
On earth, the surgeons could 37 the robots themselves from other locations. For example, the robots could 38 surgeons in other places to work on injured soldiers on the front line. Researchers plan to seek federal regulatory (联邦管理局的) 39 early next year. Tests on animals have been successful, and tests on humans in England will begin very soon.
The camera-carrying robots can provide 40 of affected areas and the ones with surgical tools will be able to maneuver (操控) inside the body in ways surgeons" hands can"t. The views from the camera-carrying robots are better than the naked eye, because they send back color images that are magnified (放大). Because several robots can be 41 through one incision, they could reduce the 42 and size of cuts needed for surgery, which would 43 recovery time. This is particularly helpful to those patients who have been debilitated (使虚弱) by long illness.
Eventually, Oleynikov said, the tiny robots may enable surgeons to 44 without ever placing their hands in patients" bodies. "That"s the goal;" Oleynikov said. "It"s getting easier and easier. We can do even more with these 45 "

A.develop
B.control
C.build
D.make
单项选择题

Vibrating Rubber Cellphones
Vibrating rubber cellphones could be the next big thing in mobile communications. They allow people to press the phone to transmit vibrations along with their 16 words. According to a research team at the MIT Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the idea will make 17 more fun.
Many mobile phones can already vibrate instead of ringing 18 you do not want people to know you are getting a call. But these 19 are too simple for subtle (敏感的) communication, 20 Angela Chang of the lab"s Tangible Media Group. "They"re either on or off," she says.
But when you hold Chang"s rubber cellphone, your fingers and thumb wrap around five 21 speakers. They vibrate 22 your skin around 250 times per second. Beneath these speakers sit pressure sensors (传感器), so you can transmit vibration as well as 23 it. When you squeeze with a finger, a vibration signal is transmitted 24 your caller"s corresponding finger, its speed 25 on how hard you squeeze.
Chang says that within a few minutes of being given the phones, students were using the vibration feature to 26 emphasis to what they were saying.
Over time, people even began to transmit their own kind of ad hoe (特别的) "Morse code", which they would repeat back to show they were 27 what the other person was saying. Chang thinks "vibralanguages" could function for the same 28 as texting: sometimes people want to communicate 29 without everyone nearby knowing what they"re saying. "And 30 actually being able to shake someone"s hand when you close a business deal," she says.

A.using
B.turning
C.receiving
D.sending
单项选择题

Shopping for Clothes
Shopping for clothes is not the same experience for a man as it is for a woman. A man goes shopping because he needs something. His purpose is settled and decided in 1 . He knows what he wants, and his 2 is to find it and buy it. All men simply walk into a shop and ask the assistant for what they want. If the shop has it in stock, the deal can be and often is completed in less than five minutes, with hardly any chat and to everyone"s 3 .
For a man, slight problems may begin when the shop does not have what he wants. In that 4 the salesman tries to sell the customer something else—he offers the nearest to the article required. Good salesman brings out such a substitute with 5 : "know this jacket is not the style you want, sir, but would you like to try it for size. It 6 to be the colour you mentioned." Few men have 7 with this treatment, and the usual response is: "This is the right colour and may be the right size, but I should be 8 my time and yours by trying it on."
For a woman, buying clothes is always done in the 9 way. Her shopping is not often 10 on need. She has never fully decided what she wants, and she is only "having a look round". She is always open to persuasion, willing to try 11 any number of things. Uppermost in her mind is the thought of finding something that 12 thinks suits her. Most women have an excellent sense of value and are always on the look-out for the unexpected 13 . Faced with a roomful of dresses, a woman may easily spend an hour going from one rail to another 14 selecting the dresses she wants to try on. It is a tiresome process, but apparently a(n) 15 one. Most dress shops provide chairs for the waiting husbands.

A.losing
B.wasting
C.spending
D.giving
单项选择题

Robots May Allow Surgery in Space
Small robots designed by University of Nebraska researchers may allow doctors on Earth to help perform surgery on patients in space.
The tiny, wheeled robots, 31 are about 3 inches tall and as wide as a lipstick case, can be slipped into small incisions (切口) and computer-controlled by surgeons in different locations. Some robots are 32 with cameras and lights and can send images back to surgeons and others have surgical 33 attached that can be controlled remotely.
"We think this is going to 34 open surgery," Dr. Dmitry Oleynikov said at a news conference. Oleynikov is a specialist 35 computer-assisted surgery at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.
Officials hope that NASA will teach 36 to use the robots soon enough so that surgeries could one day be performed in space.
On earth, the surgeons could 37 the robots themselves from other locations. For example, the robots could 38 surgeons in other places to work on injured soldiers on the front line. Researchers plan to seek federal regulatory (联邦管理局的) 39 early next year. Tests on animals have been successful, and tests on humans in England will begin very soon.
The camera-carrying robots can provide 40 of affected areas and the ones with surgical tools will be able to maneuver (操控) inside the body in ways surgeons" hands can"t. The views from the camera-carrying robots are better than the naked eye, because they send back color images that are magnified (放大). Because several robots can be 41 through one incision, they could reduce the 42 and size of cuts needed for surgery, which would 43 recovery time. This is particularly helpful to those patients who have been debilitated (使虚弱) by long illness.
Eventually, Oleynikov said, the tiny robots may enable surgeons to 44 without ever placing their hands in patients" bodies. "That"s the goal;" Oleynikov said. "It"s getting easier and easier. We can do even more with these 45 "

A.keep
B.meet
C.enable
D.force
单项选择题

Vibrating Rubber Cellphones
Vibrating rubber cellphones could be the next big thing in mobile communications. They allow people to press the phone to transmit vibrations along with their 16 words. According to a research team at the MIT Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the idea will make 17 more fun.
Many mobile phones can already vibrate instead of ringing 18 you do not want people to know you are getting a call. But these 19 are too simple for subtle (敏感的) communication, 20 Angela Chang of the lab"s Tangible Media Group. "They"re either on or off," she says.
But when you hold Chang"s rubber cellphone, your fingers and thumb wrap around five 21 speakers. They vibrate 22 your skin around 250 times per second. Beneath these speakers sit pressure sensors (传感器), so you can transmit vibration as well as 23 it. When you squeeze with a finger, a vibration signal is transmitted 24 your caller"s corresponding finger, its speed 25 on how hard you squeeze.
Chang says that within a few minutes of being given the phones, students were using the vibration feature to 26 emphasis to what they were saying.
Over time, people even began to transmit their own kind of ad hoe (特别的) "Morse code", which they would repeat back to show they were 27 what the other person was saying. Chang thinks "vibralanguages" could function for the same 28 as texting: sometimes people want to communicate 29 without everyone nearby knowing what they"re saying. "And 30 actually being able to shake someone"s hand when you close a business deal," she says.

A.for
B.to
C.from
D.with
单项选择题

Shopping for Clothes
Shopping for clothes is not the same experience for a man as it is for a woman. A man goes shopping because he needs something. His purpose is settled and decided in 1 . He knows what he wants, and his 2 is to find it and buy it. All men simply walk into a shop and ask the assistant for what they want. If the shop has it in stock, the deal can be and often is completed in less than five minutes, with hardly any chat and to everyone"s 3 .
For a man, slight problems may begin when the shop does not have what he wants. In that 4 the salesman tries to sell the customer something else—he offers the nearest to the article required. Good salesman brings out such a substitute with 5 : "know this jacket is not the style you want, sir, but would you like to try it for size. It 6 to be the colour you mentioned." Few men have 7 with this treatment, and the usual response is: "This is the right colour and may be the right size, but I should be 8 my time and yours by trying it on."
For a woman, buying clothes is always done in the 9 way. Her shopping is not often 10 on need. She has never fully decided what she wants, and she is only "having a look round". She is always open to persuasion, willing to try 11 any number of things. Uppermost in her mind is the thought of finding something that 12 thinks suits her. Most women have an excellent sense of value and are always on the look-out for the unexpected 13 . Faced with a roomful of dresses, a woman may easily spend an hour going from one rail to another 14 selecting the dresses she wants to try on. It is a tiresome process, but apparently a(n) 15 one. Most dress shops provide chairs for the waiting husbands.

A.same
B.similar
C.opposite
D.clever
单项选择题

Vibrating Rubber Cellphones
Vibrating rubber cellphones could be the next big thing in mobile communications. They allow people to press the phone to transmit vibrations along with their 16 words. According to a research team at the MIT Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the idea will make 17 more fun.
Many mobile phones can already vibrate instead of ringing 18 you do not want people to know you are getting a call. But these 19 are too simple for subtle (敏感的) communication, 20 Angela Chang of the lab"s Tangible Media Group. "They"re either on or off," she says.
But when you hold Chang"s rubber cellphone, your fingers and thumb wrap around five 21 speakers. They vibrate 22 your skin around 250 times per second. Beneath these speakers sit pressure sensors (传感器), so you can transmit vibration as well as 23 it. When you squeeze with a finger, a vibration signal is transmitted 24 your caller"s corresponding finger, its speed 25 on how hard you squeeze.
Chang says that within a few minutes of being given the phones, students were using the vibration feature to 26 emphasis to what they were saying.
Over time, people even began to transmit their own kind of ad hoe (特别的) "Morse code", which they would repeat back to show they were 27 what the other person was saying. Chang thinks "vibralanguages" could function for the same 28 as texting: sometimes people want to communicate 29 without everyone nearby knowing what they"re saying. "And 30 actually being able to shake someone"s hand when you close a business deal," she says.

A.depends
B.bases
C.puts
D.focuses
单项选择题

Shopping for Clothes
Shopping for clothes is not the same experience for a man as it is for a woman. A man goes shopping because he needs something. His purpose is settled and decided in 1 . He knows what he wants, and his 2 is to find it and buy it. All men simply walk into a shop and ask the assistant for what they want. If the shop has it in stock, the deal can be and often is completed in less than five minutes, with hardly any chat and to everyone"s 3 .
For a man, slight problems may begin when the shop does not have what he wants. In that 4 the salesman tries to sell the customer something else—he offers the nearest to the article required. Good salesman brings out such a substitute with 5 : "know this jacket is not the style you want, sir, but would you like to try it for size. It 6 to be the colour you mentioned." Few men have 7 with this treatment, and the usual response is: "This is the right colour and may be the right size, but I should be 8 my time and yours by trying it on."
For a woman, buying clothes is always done in the 9 way. Her shopping is not often 10 on need. She has never fully decided what she wants, and she is only "having a look round". She is always open to persuasion, willing to try 11 any number of things. Uppermost in her mind is the thought of finding something that 12 thinks suits her. Most women have an excellent sense of value and are always on the look-out for the unexpected 13 . Faced with a roomful of dresses, a woman may easily spend an hour going from one rail to another 14 selecting the dresses she wants to try on. It is a tiresome process, but apparently a(n) 15 one. Most dress shops provide chairs for the waiting husbands.

A.relied
B.done
C.related
D.based
单项选择题

Robots May Allow Surgery in Space
Small robots designed by University of Nebraska researchers may allow doctors on Earth to help perform surgery on patients in space.
The tiny, wheeled robots, 31 are about 3 inches tall and as wide as a lipstick case, can be slipped into small incisions (切口) and computer-controlled by surgeons in different locations. Some robots are 32 with cameras and lights and can send images back to surgeons and others have surgical 33 attached that can be controlled remotely.
"We think this is going to 34 open surgery," Dr. Dmitry Oleynikov said at a news conference. Oleynikov is a specialist 35 computer-assisted surgery at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.
Officials hope that NASA will teach 36 to use the robots soon enough so that surgeries could one day be performed in space.
On earth, the surgeons could 37 the robots themselves from other locations. For example, the robots could 38 surgeons in other places to work on injured soldiers on the front line. Researchers plan to seek federal regulatory (联邦管理局的) 39 early next year. Tests on animals have been successful, and tests on humans in England will begin very soon.
The camera-carrying robots can provide 40 of affected areas and the ones with surgical tools will be able to maneuver (操控) inside the body in ways surgeons" hands can"t. The views from the camera-carrying robots are better than the naked eye, because they send back color images that are magnified (放大). Because several robots can be 41 through one incision, they could reduce the 42 and size of cuts needed for surgery, which would 43 recovery time. This is particularly helpful to those patients who have been debilitated (使虚弱) by long illness.
Eventually, Oleynikov said, the tiny robots may enable surgeons to 44 without ever placing their hands in patients" bodies. "That"s the goal;" Oleynikov said. "It"s getting easier and easier. We can do even more with these 45 "

A.rule
B.information
C.fortune
D.approval
单项选择题

Shopping for Clothes
Shopping for clothes is not the same experience for a man as it is for a woman. A man goes shopping because he needs something. His purpose is settled and decided in 1 . He knows what he wants, and his 2 is to find it and buy it. All men simply walk into a shop and ask the assistant for what they want. If the shop has it in stock, the deal can be and often is completed in less than five minutes, with hardly any chat and to everyone"s 3 .
For a man, slight problems may begin when the shop does not have what he wants. In that 4 the salesman tries to sell the customer something else—he offers the nearest to the article required. Good salesman brings out such a substitute with 5 : "know this jacket is not the style you want, sir, but would you like to try it for size. It 6 to be the colour you mentioned." Few men have 7 with this treatment, and the usual response is: "This is the right colour and may be the right size, but I should be 8 my time and yours by trying it on."
For a woman, buying clothes is always done in the 9 way. Her shopping is not often 10 on need. She has never fully decided what she wants, and she is only "having a look round". She is always open to persuasion, willing to try 11 any number of things. Uppermost in her mind is the thought of finding something that 12 thinks suits her. Most women have an excellent sense of value and are always on the look-out for the unexpected 13 . Faced with a roomful of dresses, a woman may easily spend an hour going from one rail to another 14 selecting the dresses she wants to try on. It is a tiresome process, but apparently a(n) 15 one. Most dress shops provide chairs for the waiting husbands.

A.on
B.with
C.by
D.people
单项选择题

Vibrating Rubber Cellphones
Vibrating rubber cellphones could be the next big thing in mobile communications. They allow people to press the phone to transmit vibrations along with their 16 words. According to a research team at the MIT Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the idea will make 17 more fun.
Many mobile phones can already vibrate instead of ringing 18 you do not want people to know you are getting a call. But these 19 are too simple for subtle (敏感的) communication, 20 Angela Chang of the lab"s Tangible Media Group. "They"re either on or off," she says.
But when you hold Chang"s rubber cellphone, your fingers and thumb wrap around five 21 speakers. They vibrate 22 your skin around 250 times per second. Beneath these speakers sit pressure sensors (传感器), so you can transmit vibration as well as 23 it. When you squeeze with a finger, a vibration signal is transmitted 24 your caller"s corresponding finger, its speed 25 on how hard you squeeze.
Chang says that within a few minutes of being given the phones, students were using the vibration feature to 26 emphasis to what they were saying.
Over time, people even began to transmit their own kind of ad hoe (特别的) "Morse code", which they would repeat back to show they were 27 what the other person was saying. Chang thinks "vibralanguages" could function for the same 28 as texting: sometimes people want to communicate 29 without everyone nearby knowing what they"re saying. "And 30 actually being able to shake someone"s hand when you close a business deal," she says.

A.change
B.add
C.switch
D.shift
单项选择题

Robots May Allow Surgery in Space
Small robots designed by University of Nebraska researchers may allow doctors on Earth to help perform surgery on patients in space.
The tiny, wheeled robots, 31 are about 3 inches tall and as wide as a lipstick case, can be slipped into small incisions (切口) and computer-controlled by surgeons in different locations. Some robots are 32 with cameras and lights and can send images back to surgeons and others have surgical 33 attached that can be controlled remotely.
"We think this is going to 34 open surgery," Dr. Dmitry Oleynikov said at a news conference. Oleynikov is a specialist 35 computer-assisted surgery at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.
Officials hope that NASA will teach 36 to use the robots soon enough so that surgeries could one day be performed in space.
On earth, the surgeons could 37 the robots themselves from other locations. For example, the robots could 38 surgeons in other places to work on injured soldiers on the front line. Researchers plan to seek federal regulatory (联邦管理局的) 39 early next year. Tests on animals have been successful, and tests on humans in England will begin very soon.
The camera-carrying robots can provide 40 of affected areas and the ones with surgical tools will be able to maneuver (操控) inside the body in ways surgeons" hands can"t. The views from the camera-carrying robots are better than the naked eye, because they send back color images that are magnified (放大). Because several robots can be 41 through one incision, they could reduce the 42 and size of cuts needed for surgery, which would 43 recovery time. This is particularly helpful to those patients who have been debilitated (使虚弱) by long illness.
Eventually, Oleynikov said, the tiny robots may enable surgeons to 44 without ever placing their hands in patients" bodies. "That"s the goal;" Oleynikov said. "It"s getting easier and easier. We can do even more with these 45 "

A.views
B.conclusions
C.solutions
D.models
单项选择题

Shopping for Clothes
Shopping for clothes is not the same experience for a man as it is for a woman. A man goes shopping because he needs something. His purpose is settled and decided in 1 . He knows what he wants, and his 2 is to find it and buy it. All men simply walk into a shop and ask the assistant for what they want. If the shop has it in stock, the deal can be and often is completed in less than five minutes, with hardly any chat and to everyone"s 3 .
For a man, slight problems may begin when the shop does not have what he wants. In that 4 the salesman tries to sell the customer something else—he offers the nearest to the article required. Good salesman brings out such a substitute with 5 : "know this jacket is not the style you want, sir, but would you like to try it for size. It 6 to be the colour you mentioned." Few men have 7 with this treatment, and the usual response is: "This is the right colour and may be the right size, but I should be 8 my time and yours by trying it on."
For a woman, buying clothes is always done in the 9 way. Her shopping is not often 10 on need. She has never fully decided what she wants, and she is only "having a look round". She is always open to persuasion, willing to try 11 any number of things. Uppermost in her mind is the thought of finding something that 12 thinks suits her. Most women have an excellent sense of value and are always on the look-out for the unexpected 13 . Faced with a roomful of dresses, a woman may easily spend an hour going from one rail to another 14 selecting the dresses she wants to try on. It is a tiresome process, but apparently a(n) 15 one. Most dress shops provide chairs for the waiting husbands.

A.nobody
B.someone
C.surprise
D.everyone
单项选择题

Robots May Allow Surgery in Space
Small robots designed by University of Nebraska researchers may allow doctors on Earth to help perform surgery on patients in space.
The tiny, wheeled robots, 31 are about 3 inches tall and as wide as a lipstick case, can be slipped into small incisions (切口) and computer-controlled by surgeons in different locations. Some robots are 32 with cameras and lights and can send images back to surgeons and others have surgical 33 attached that can be controlled remotely.
"We think this is going to 34 open surgery," Dr. Dmitry Oleynikov said at a news conference. Oleynikov is a specialist 35 computer-assisted surgery at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.
Officials hope that NASA will teach 36 to use the robots soon enough so that surgeries could one day be performed in space.
On earth, the surgeons could 37 the robots themselves from other locations. For example, the robots could 38 surgeons in other places to work on injured soldiers on the front line. Researchers plan to seek federal regulatory (联邦管理局的) 39 early next year. Tests on animals have been successful, and tests on humans in England will begin very soon.
The camera-carrying robots can provide 40 of affected areas and the ones with surgical tools will be able to maneuver (操控) inside the body in ways surgeons" hands can"t. The views from the camera-carrying robots are better than the naked eye, because they send back color images that are magnified (放大). Because several robots can be 41 through one incision, they could reduce the 42 and size of cuts needed for surgery, which would 43 recovery time. This is particularly helpful to those patients who have been debilitated (使虚弱) by long illness.
Eventually, Oleynikov said, the tiny robots may enable surgeons to 44 without ever placing their hands in patients" bodies. "That"s the goal;" Oleynikov said. "It"s getting easier and easier. We can do even more with these 45 "

A.created
B.changed
C.inserted
D.presented
单项选择题

Vibrating Rubber Cellphones
Vibrating rubber cellphones could be the next big thing in mobile communications. They allow people to press the phone to transmit vibrations along with their 16 words. According to a research team at the MIT Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the idea will make 17 more fun.
Many mobile phones can already vibrate instead of ringing 18 you do not want people to know you are getting a call. But these 19 are too simple for subtle (敏感的) communication, 20 Angela Chang of the lab"s Tangible Media Group. "They"re either on or off," she says.
But when you hold Chang"s rubber cellphone, your fingers and thumb wrap around five 21 speakers. They vibrate 22 your skin around 250 times per second. Beneath these speakers sit pressure sensors (传感器), so you can transmit vibration as well as 23 it. When you squeeze with a finger, a vibration signal is transmitted 24 your caller"s corresponding finger, its speed 25 on how hard you squeeze.
Chang says that within a few minutes of being given the phones, students were using the vibration feature to 26 emphasis to what they were saying.
Over time, people even began to transmit their own kind of ad hoe (特别的) "Morse code", which they would repeat back to show they were 27 what the other person was saying. Chang thinks "vibralanguages" could function for the same 28 as texting: sometimes people want to communicate 29 without everyone nearby knowing what they"re saying. "And 30 actually being able to shake someone"s hand when you close a business deal," she says.

A.controlling
B.asking
C.discussing
D.following
单项选择题

Shopping for Clothes
Shopping for clothes is not the same experience for a man as it is for a woman. A man goes shopping because he needs something. His purpose is settled and decided in 1 . He knows what he wants, and his 2 is to find it and buy it. All men simply walk into a shop and ask the assistant for what they want. If the shop has it in stock, the deal can be and often is completed in less than five minutes, with hardly any chat and to everyone"s 3 .
For a man, slight problems may begin when the shop does not have what he wants. In that 4 the salesman tries to sell the customer something else—he offers the nearest to the article required. Good salesman brings out such a substitute with 5 : "know this jacket is not the style you want, sir, but would you like to try it for size. It 6 to be the colour you mentioned." Few men have 7 with this treatment, and the usual response is: "This is the right colour and may be the right size, but I should be 8 my time and yours by trying it on."
For a woman, buying clothes is always done in the 9 way. Her shopping is not often 10 on need. She has never fully decided what she wants, and she is only "having a look round". She is always open to persuasion, willing to try 11 any number of things. Uppermost in her mind is the thought of finding something that 12 thinks suits her. Most women have an excellent sense of value and are always on the look-out for the unexpected 13 . Faced with a roomful of dresses, a woman may easily spend an hour going from one rail to another 14 selecting the dresses she wants to try on. It is a tiresome process, but apparently a(n) 15 one. Most dress shops provide chairs for the waiting husbands.

A.deal
B.bargain
C.surprise
D.people
单项选择题

Robots May Allow Surgery in Space
Small robots designed by University of Nebraska researchers may allow doctors on Earth to help perform surgery on patients in space.
The tiny, wheeled robots, 31 are about 3 inches tall and as wide as a lipstick case, can be slipped into small incisions (切口) and computer-controlled by surgeons in different locations. Some robots are 32 with cameras and lights and can send images back to surgeons and others have surgical 33 attached that can be controlled remotely.
"We think this is going to 34 open surgery," Dr. Dmitry Oleynikov said at a news conference. Oleynikov is a specialist 35 computer-assisted surgery at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.
Officials hope that NASA will teach 36 to use the robots soon enough so that surgeries could one day be performed in space.
On earth, the surgeons could 37 the robots themselves from other locations. For example, the robots could 38 surgeons in other places to work on injured soldiers on the front line. Researchers plan to seek federal regulatory (联邦管理局的) 39 early next year. Tests on animals have been successful, and tests on humans in England will begin very soon.
The camera-carrying robots can provide 40 of affected areas and the ones with surgical tools will be able to maneuver (操控) inside the body in ways surgeons" hands can"t. The views from the camera-carrying robots are better than the naked eye, because they send back color images that are magnified (放大). Because several robots can be 41 through one incision, they could reduce the 42 and size of cuts needed for surgery, which would 43 recovery time. This is particularly helpful to those patients who have been debilitated (使虚弱) by long illness.
Eventually, Oleynikov said, the tiny robots may enable surgeons to 44 without ever placing their hands in patients" bodies. "That"s the goal;" Oleynikov said. "It"s getting easier and easier. We can do even more with these 45 "

A.amount
B.pressure
C.rate
D.level
单项选择题

Vibrating Rubber Cellphones
Vibrating rubber cellphones could be the next big thing in mobile communications. They allow people to press the phone to transmit vibrations along with their 16 words. According to a research team at the MIT Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the idea will make 17 more fun.
Many mobile phones can already vibrate instead of ringing 18 you do not want people to know you are getting a call. But these 19 are too simple for subtle (敏感的) communication, 20 Angela Chang of the lab"s Tangible Media Group. "They"re either on or off," she says.
But when you hold Chang"s rubber cellphone, your fingers and thumb wrap around five 21 speakers. They vibrate 22 your skin around 250 times per second. Beneath these speakers sit pressure sensors (传感器), so you can transmit vibration as well as 23 it. When you squeeze with a finger, a vibration signal is transmitted 24 your caller"s corresponding finger, its speed 25 on how hard you squeeze.
Chang says that within a few minutes of being given the phones, students were using the vibration feature to 26 emphasis to what they were saying.
Over time, people even began to transmit their own kind of ad hoe (特别的) "Morse code", which they would repeat back to show they were 27 what the other person was saying. Chang thinks "vibralanguages" could function for the same 28 as texting: sometimes people want to communicate 29 without everyone nearby knowing what they"re saying. "And 30 actually being able to shake someone"s hand when you close a business deal," she says.

A.fact
B.plan
C.reason
D.trip
单项选择题

Shopping for Clothes
Shopping for clothes is not the same experience for a man as it is for a woman. A man goes shopping because he needs something. His purpose is settled and decided in 1 . He knows what he wants, and his 2 is to find it and buy it. All men simply walk into a shop and ask the assistant for what they want. If the shop has it in stock, the deal can be and often is completed in less than five minutes, with hardly any chat and to everyone"s 3 .
For a man, slight problems may begin when the shop does not have what he wants. In that 4 the salesman tries to sell the customer something else—he offers the nearest to the article required. Good salesman brings out such a substitute with 5 : "know this jacket is not the style you want, sir, but would you like to try it for size. It 6 to be the colour you mentioned." Few men have 7 with this treatment, and the usual response is: "This is the right colour and may be the right size, but I should be 8 my time and yours by trying it on."
For a woman, buying clothes is always done in the 9 way. Her shopping is not often 10 on need. She has never fully decided what she wants, and she is only "having a look round". She is always open to persuasion, willing to try 11 any number of things. Uppermost in her mind is the thought of finding something that 12 thinks suits her. Most women have an excellent sense of value and are always on the look-out for the unexpected 13 . Faced with a roomful of dresses, a woman may easily spend an hour going from one rail to another 14 selecting the dresses she wants to try on. It is a tiresome process, but apparently a(n) 15 one. Most dress shops provide chairs for the waiting husbands.

A.before
B.after
C.as
D.by
单项选择题

Vibrating Rubber Cellphones
Vibrating rubber cellphones could be the next big thing in mobile communications. They allow people to press the phone to transmit vibrations along with their 16 words. According to a research team at the MIT Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the idea will make 17 more fun.
Many mobile phones can already vibrate instead of ringing 18 you do not want people to know you are getting a call. But these 19 are too simple for subtle (敏感的) communication, 20 Angela Chang of the lab"s Tangible Media Group. "They"re either on or off," she says.
But when you hold Chang"s rubber cellphone, your fingers and thumb wrap around five 21 speakers. They vibrate 22 your skin around 250 times per second. Beneath these speakers sit pressure sensors (传感器), so you can transmit vibration as well as 23 it. When you squeeze with a finger, a vibration signal is transmitted 24 your caller"s corresponding finger, its speed 25 on how hard you squeeze.
Chang says that within a few minutes of being given the phones, students were using the vibration feature to 26 emphasis to what they were saying.
Over time, people even began to transmit their own kind of ad hoe (特别的) "Morse code", which they would repeat back to show they were 27 what the other person was saying. Chang thinks "vibralanguages" could function for the same 28 as texting: sometimes people want to communicate 29 without everyone nearby knowing what they"re saying. "And 30 actually being able to shake someone"s hand when you close a business deal," she says.

A.something
B.anything
C.nothing
D.thing
单项选择题

Robots May Allow Surgery in Space
Small robots designed by University of Nebraska researchers may allow doctors on Earth to help perform surgery on patients in space.
The tiny, wheeled robots, 31 are about 3 inches tall and as wide as a lipstick case, can be slipped into small incisions (切口) and computer-controlled by surgeons in different locations. Some robots are 32 with cameras and lights and can send images back to surgeons and others have surgical 33 attached that can be controlled remotely.
"We think this is going to 34 open surgery," Dr. Dmitry Oleynikov said at a news conference. Oleynikov is a specialist 35 computer-assisted surgery at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.
Officials hope that NASA will teach 36 to use the robots soon enough so that surgeries could one day be performed in space.
On earth, the surgeons could 37 the robots themselves from other locations. For example, the robots could 38 surgeons in other places to work on injured soldiers on the front line. Researchers plan to seek federal regulatory (联邦管理局的) 39 early next year. Tests on animals have been successful, and tests on humans in England will begin very soon.
The camera-carrying robots can provide 40 of affected areas and the ones with surgical tools will be able to maneuver (操控) inside the body in ways surgeons" hands can"t. The views from the camera-carrying robots are better than the naked eye, because they send back color images that are magnified (放大). Because several robots can be 41 through one incision, they could reduce the 42 and size of cuts needed for surgery, which would 43 recovery time. This is particularly helpful to those patients who have been debilitated (使虚弱) by long illness.
Eventually, Oleynikov said, the tiny robots may enable surgeons to 44 without ever placing their hands in patients" bodies. "That"s the goal;" Oleynikov said. "It"s getting easier and easier. We can do even more with these 45 "

A.take
B.decrease
C.set
D.waste
单项选择题

Shopping for Clothes
Shopping for clothes is not the same experience for a man as it is for a woman. A man goes shopping because he needs something. His purpose is settled and decided in 1 . He knows what he wants, and his 2 is to find it and buy it. All men simply walk into a shop and ask the assistant for what they want. If the shop has it in stock, the deal can be and often is completed in less than five minutes, with hardly any chat and to everyone"s 3 .
For a man, slight problems may begin when the shop does not have what he wants. In that 4 the salesman tries to sell the customer something else—he offers the nearest to the article required. Good salesman brings out such a substitute with 5 : "know this jacket is not the style you want, sir, but would you like to try it for size. It 6 to be the colour you mentioned." Few men have 7 with this treatment, and the usual response is: "This is the right colour and may be the right size, but I should be 8 my time and yours by trying it on."
For a woman, buying clothes is always done in the 9 way. Her shopping is not often 10 on need. She has never fully decided what she wants, and she is only "having a look round". She is always open to persuasion, willing to try 11 any number of things. Uppermost in her mind is the thought of finding something that 12 thinks suits her. Most women have an excellent sense of value and are always on the look-out for the unexpected 13 . Faced with a roomful of dresses, a woman may easily spend an hour going from one rail to another 14 selecting the dresses she wants to try on. It is a tiresome process, but apparently a(n) 15 one. Most dress shops provide chairs for the waiting husbands.

A.exhausting
B.boring
C.enjoyable
D.graceful
单项选择题

Vibrating Rubber Cellphones
Vibrating rubber cellphones could be the next big thing in mobile communications. They allow people to press the phone to transmit vibrations along with their 16 words. According to a research team at the MIT Media Lab in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the idea will make 17 more fun.
Many mobile phones can already vibrate instead of ringing 18 you do not want people to know you are getting a call. But these 19 are too simple for subtle (敏感的) communication, 20 Angela Chang of the lab"s Tangible Media Group. "They"re either on or off," she says.
But when you hold Chang"s rubber cellphone, your fingers and thumb wrap around five 21 speakers. They vibrate 22 your skin around 250 times per second. Beneath these speakers sit pressure sensors (传感器), so you can transmit vibration as well as 23 it. When you squeeze with a finger, a vibration signal is transmitted 24 your caller"s corresponding finger, its speed 25 on how hard you squeeze.
Chang says that within a few minutes of being given the phones, students were using the vibration feature to 26 emphasis to what they were saying.
Over time, people even began to transmit their own kind of ad hoe (特别的) "Morse code", which they would repeat back to show they were 27 what the other person was saying. Chang thinks "vibralanguages" could function for the same 28 as texting: sometimes people want to communicate 29 without everyone nearby knowing what they"re saying. "And 30 actually being able to shake someone"s hand when you close a business deal," she says.

A.look
B.imagine
C.suppose
D.assume
单项选择题

Robots May Allow Surgery in Space
Small robots designed by University of Nebraska researchers may allow doctors on Earth to help perform surgery on patients in space.
The tiny, wheeled robots, 31 are about 3 inches tall and as wide as a lipstick case, can be slipped into small incisions (切口) and computer-controlled by surgeons in different locations. Some robots are 32 with cameras and lights and can send images back to surgeons and others have surgical 33 attached that can be controlled remotely.
"We think this is going to 34 open surgery," Dr. Dmitry Oleynikov said at a news conference. Oleynikov is a specialist 35 computer-assisted surgery at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.
Officials hope that NASA will teach 36 to use the robots soon enough so that surgeries could one day be performed in space.
On earth, the surgeons could 37 the robots themselves from other locations. For example, the robots could 38 surgeons in other places to work on injured soldiers on the front line. Researchers plan to seek federal regulatory (联邦管理局的) 39 early next year. Tests on animals have been successful, and tests on humans in England will begin very soon.
The camera-carrying robots can provide 40 of affected areas and the ones with surgical tools will be able to maneuver (操控) inside the body in ways surgeons" hands can"t. The views from the camera-carrying robots are better than the naked eye, because they send back color images that are magnified (放大). Because several robots can be 41 through one incision, they could reduce the 42 and size of cuts needed for surgery, which would 43 recovery time. This is particularly helpful to those patients who have been debilitated (使虚弱) by long illness.
Eventually, Oleynikov said, the tiny robots may enable surgeons to 44 without ever placing their hands in patients" bodies. "That"s the goal;" Oleynikov said. "It"s getting easier and easier. We can do even more with these 45 "

A.exist
B.run
C.drill
D.work
单项选择题

Robots May Allow Surgery in Space
Small robots designed by University of Nebraska researchers may allow doctors on Earth to help perform surgery on patients in space.
The tiny, wheeled robots, 31 are about 3 inches tall and as wide as a lipstick case, can be slipped into small incisions (切口) and computer-controlled by surgeons in different locations. Some robots are 32 with cameras and lights and can send images back to surgeons and others have surgical 33 attached that can be controlled remotely.
"We think this is going to 34 open surgery," Dr. Dmitry Oleynikov said at a news conference. Oleynikov is a specialist 35 computer-assisted surgery at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.
Officials hope that NASA will teach 36 to use the robots soon enough so that surgeries could one day be performed in space.
On earth, the surgeons could 37 the robots themselves from other locations. For example, the robots could 38 surgeons in other places to work on injured soldiers on the front line. Researchers plan to seek federal regulatory (联邦管理局的) 39 early next year. Tests on animals have been successful, and tests on humans in England will begin very soon.
The camera-carrying robots can provide 40 of affected areas and the ones with surgical tools will be able to maneuver (操控) inside the body in ways surgeons" hands can"t. The views from the camera-carrying robots are better than the naked eye, because they send back color images that are magnified (放大). Because several robots can be 41 through one incision, they could reduce the 42 and size of cuts needed for surgery, which would 43 recovery time. This is particularly helpful to those patients who have been debilitated (使虚弱) by long illness.
Eventually, Oleynikov said, the tiny robots may enable surgeons to 44 without ever placing their hands in patients" bodies. "That"s the goal;" Oleynikov said. "It"s getting easier and easier. We can do even more with these 45 "

A.plans
B.ideas
C.devices
D.concepts
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