___him a few words of Italian? The waiter.
A.Who taught
B.Who did teach
C.What did he teach
D.Whom did he teach
A
A.Who taught
B.Who did teach
C.What did he teach
D.Whom did he teach
A
第1题
Eighty years【C6】______, Chaplin is still here. In a 1995 worldwide survey of film critics, Chaplin was voted【C7】______greatest actor in the movie history. He was the first,【C8】______the last, person to control【C9】______aspect of the filmmaking process--【C10】______his own studio and producing, directing, writing and editing the movies he starred in. In the first few decades of the 20th century,【C11】______weekly movie-going was the national【C12】______, Chaplin more or less helped【C13】______an industry into an art. In 1916,his【C14】______year in films, his salary of $10, 000 a week made him the highest-paid actor --【C15】______the highest-paid person- in the world.【C16】______1920, the Chaplin craze, accompanied by a flood of Chaplin dances, songs, dolls, comic books and cocktails, was【C17】______everywhere. Filmmaker Mack Sennett thought【C18】______"just the greatest artist who ever lived. "Other early admirers【C19】______George Bernard Shaw, Marcel Proust, and Sigmund Freud.【C20】______1981 to 1987, IBM used the Tramp as the logo to advertise its venture into personal computers.
【C1】
A.for
B.in
C.by
D.with
第2题
【C1】
A.applicant
B.candidate
C.participant
D.competitor
第3题
M: Could you give me five minutes, Sarah? I need to make a call to my accountant first. Also, did my wife call by any chance?
W: No, I don't think she did, but I am not sure. I had to step out for a few minutes earlier to pick up something from the X-ray Department on the second floor. Do you want me to call her and see if she did? M: No, that's fine. I'm sure she would have left a message on my pager if she did. Anyway, please give me five minutes before sending in the next patient.
What is the man's occupation?
A.Physician.
B.Accountant.
C.Receptionist.
D.X-ray technician.
第4题
The guard said, "You've just missed one. A train goes every hour. The next one is at ten o'clock."
"That's all right," they said, "We'll go and have a drink." So off they went to a bar (酒吧间). A minute or two after ten o'clock they came running and asked the guard, "Has the train gone?"
"Yes," the guard said. "It went at ten, as I told you. The next one is at eleven o'clock."
"That's all right," they said again. "We'll go and have another drink." So they went back to the bar.
They missed the eleven o' clock train in the same way. Then the guard said, "Now, the next train is the last one. If you miss that train, you won't get to London tonight."
Twelve o'clock came, and the last train was just starting out when the three of them came out of the bar running as fast as they could. Two of them got in the train just as it was leaving, but the third one didn't run fast enough, and the train went out leaving him behind. He stood there looking at the train and laughing, as if (好像) to miss a train was the best joke in the world. The guard went up to him and said," I told you that this was the last train. Why didn't you come earlier?"
The man kept laughing until tears came into his eyes. Then he caught hold of the guard and said, "Did you see the two men get into the train and leave me here?"
"Yes, I did."
"Well, I was the only one to leave for London. They were here only to see me off?
The guard told the three people that there ______.
A.was a train in the evening
B.were trains all night
C.was a train every sixty minutes
D.were no train in the evening
第5题
The guard said, "You've just missed one. A train goes every hour. The next one is at ten o'clock."
"That's all right," they said, "We'll go and have a drink." So off they went to a bar (酒吧间). A minute or two after ten o'clock they came running and asked the guard, "Has the train gone?"
"Yes," the guard said. "It went at ten, as I told you. The next one is at eleven o' clock."
"That's all right," they said again. "We'll go and have another drink." So they went back to the bar.
They missed the eleven o' clock train in the same way. Then the guard said, "Now, the next train is the last one. If you miss that train, you won't get to London tonight."
Twelve o'clock came, and the last train was just starting out when the three of them came out of the bar running as fast as they could. Two of them got in the train just as it was leaving, but the third one didn't run fast enough, and the train went out leaving him behind. He stood there looking at the train and laughing, as if (好像) to miss a train was the best joke in the world. The guard went up to him and said, "I told you that this was the last train. Why didn't you come earlier?"
The man kept laughing until tears came into his eyes. Then he caught hold of the guard and said, "Did you see the two men get into the train and leave me here?"
"Yes, I did."
"Well, I was the only one to leave for London. They were here only to see me off!"
The guard told the three people that there ______.
A.was a train in the evening
B.were trains all night
C.was a train every sixty minutes
D.were no train in the evening
第6题
听力原文:M: Hello.
W: Hello, Dad?
M: Yes... Alice! How are you? Is there anything wrong?
W: Oh, no. I just wanted to call and see how you and Mom were. It' s been quite a while since I saw you last time.
M: Oh, we' re both fine. Your mother is down at the new shopping center shopping.
W: For a new dress?
M: No, for shoes this time, I think. How' s Jack?
W: He's fine. He likes his work and was given a raise last month by Mr. Davis. We were all pretty pleased about that.
M: Yes, I think you should be. And how are the children?
W: Well, Billy' s back home from school today. It' s nothing serious, just a bad cold. And it' s his birthday, too!
M: Oh, I thought his birthday was May 24th.
W: No, the twenty-third.
M: Well, that' s too bad. Tell him we' 11 send him a present.
W: All right. Sally' s still taking dancing lessons.
M: She must be pretty good by now. I' d like to see her sometime. And how is Ted?
W: He' s OK, too. He loves working on cars and has a part time job at the garage now.
M: Well, it' s certainly good to hear your voice. When are you coming for a visit?
W: Not for a few months, I' m afraid. But I hope we can come for a few weeks this summer, probably in July.
M: That would be nice. Call again soon.
W: OK, Dad. Nice talking to you and glad everything' s all right. Give Mom our love.
M: All right. Good-bye.
W: Good-bye, Dad.
Why did Alice call her father?
A.She wanted to invite her parents to Billy' s birthday party.
B.She wanted to tell him that everything was OK with the children.
C.She wanted to know if everything was OK with her parents.
D.She wanted to tell him that she and her family were coming to see him in July.
第7题
Improve Computer-research Skills
Like many college students, Jose Juarez carries around a pocket-sized computer that lets him watch movies, surf the Internet and text—message his friends.
He's part of "Generation M" — those born after 1985 who【51】up connected to everything from video game to cellphones.
"For us, it's everyday life," said Juarez, 18, a freshman【52】California State University at Sacramento (CSUS).
【53】, educators are now saying that not all Generation M-ers can synthesize the piles of in- formation they're accessing.
"They're geeky, but they don't know what to【54】with their geekdom(滑稽)," said Barbara O'Connor, a Sacramento State communications studies professor who has been involved in a nationwide【55】to improve students' computer-research skills.
In a recent nationwide test to【56】their technological "literacy" — their ability to use the Internet to complete class assignments — only 49 percent correctly evaluated a set of Web sites for objectivity , authority and timeliness (合时) . Only 35 per cent could correctly narrow an overly【57】Internet search.
About 130 Sacramento State students, including Juarez, participated in the experimental test,【58】to 6,300 college students across the country.
The hour-long assessment test is conducted by Educational Testing Service. It is a web-based scavenger hunt (拾荒游戏)【59】simulated Internet search engines and academic databases that spit out purposely misleading information.
"They're very good a【60】in and using the Internet, but don't always understand what they get back," said Linda Golf, head of instructional services for the CSUS library.
"You see an open search box, you type in a few words and you【61】the button," said Golf, who is involved in the testing.
"They take at face value【62】shows up at the top of the list as the best stuff." Educators say that these sloppy research skills are troubling.
"We look at that as a foundational skill, in the same way we【63】math and English as a foundational skill," said Lorie Roth, assistant vice-chancellor for academic programmes in the CSU system.
Measuring how well students can "sort the good【64】the bad" on the Internet has become a higher priority for CSU, Roth said.
CSU is considering【65】a mandatory assessment test on technological literacy for all freshmen, much as it has required English and math placement tests since the 1980s.
Students in freshman seminars at Sacramento State were asked to take the test early in the semester and were expected to finish another round this week to measure their improvement.
(51)
A.brought
B.built
C.stood
D.grew
第8题
Man of Few Words
Everyone chases success, but not all of us want to be famous.
South African writer John Maxwell Coetzee is_______(51) for keeping himself to himself. When the 63-year-old was named the 2003 Nobel Prize winner for literature earlier this month, reporters were warned that they would find him "particularly difficult to_______(52)".
Coetzee lives in Australia but spends part of the year teaching at the University of Chicago. He seemed_______(53) by the news that he won the US$1.3 million prize. "It came as a complete surprise. I wasn't even aware they were due to make the announcement," he said.
His_______(54) of privacy led to doubts as to whether Coetzee will attend the prize-giving in Stockholm, Sweden, on December 10.
But despite being described as_______(55) to track down, the critics agree that his writing is easy to get to know.
Born in Cape Town, South Africa, to an English-speaking family, Coetzee_______(56) his breakthrough in 1980 with the novel "Waiting for the Barbarians (野蛮)". He_______(57) his place among the world's leading writers with two Booker prize victories, Britain's highest honour for novels. He first_______(58) in 1983 for the "Life and Times of Michael K", and his second title came in 1999 for "Disgrace".
A major theme in his work is South Africa's former apartheid (种族隔离) system, which divided whites from blacks._______(59) with the problems of violence, crime and racial division that still exist in the country, his books have enabled ordinary people to understand apartheid_______(60) within.
"I have always been more interested in the past than the future," he said in a rare interview. "The past_______(61) its shadow over the present. I hope I have made one or two people think_______(62) about whether they want to forget the past completely."
In fact this purity in his writing seems to be_______(63) in his personal life. Coetzee is a vegetarian, a cyclist rather than a motorist and doesn't drink alcohol.
But what he has_______(64) to literature, culture and the people of South Africa is far greater than the things he has given up. "In looking at weakness and failure in life,"the Nobel prize judging panel said, "Coetzee's work_______(65) the divine (神圣的)spark in man."
第 52 题
A.looked after
B.well known
C.locked
D.protected
第9题
W: It started in 1861, on July 4th when Lincoln gave his first major speech, right?
M: Yes, in the speech he presented the northern reasons for the war. It was, he said, to preserve democracy, Lincoln suggested that this war was a noble campaign that would determine the future of democracy throughout the world. For him the issue was whether or not this government of the people, by the people could maintain its integrity, could it remain complete and survive its domestic foes. In other words, could a few discontented individuals and by that he meant those who led the southern rebellion, could they break up the government and put an end to free government on earth?
W: The best way for the nation to survive was to crush the rebellion, right?
M: At the time, he was hopeful that the war wouldn't last long and the slave owners would be put down forever, but he underestimated how difficult the war would be. It would be harder than any the Americans had thought before or since, largely because the north had to break the will of the southern people, not just by its army. But Lincoln rallied northerners to a deep commitment to the cause and achieved the success.
(23)
A.Advantages of the north in the Civil War.
B.Civilian opposition to the Civil War.
C.Reasons to justify fighting the Civil War.
D.Military strategy used in the Civil War.
第10题
We dont understand the passage _______there are few new words in it.
A.Because
B.Though
C.Since
第11题
Apparently, Jim's father was ______ by his words and yelled at him immediately.
A.put out
B.put away
C.put down
D.put across