How many kinds of anxiety are mentioned in the passage?A.Two.B.Three.C.Four.D.Five.
How many kinds of anxiety are mentioned in the passage?
A.Two.
B.Three.
C.Four.
D.Five.
How many kinds of anxiety are mentioned in the passage?
A.Two.
B.Three.
C.Four.
D.Five.
第1题
product is best for your _____ (肤色)?
A、hue
B、ornament
C、complexion
D、pale
第2题
听力原文:M: I had a hard time getting through this novel.
F: I know how you feel. Who can remember the names of 40 different characters.
Q: What does the woman imply?
(17)
A.The novel describes a man with many different kinds of character.
B.Thoro're too many characters in the novel to remember.
C.The man is good at memorizing people's names.
D.She hasn't read the novel yet.
第3题
听力原文:W: Tell me, Peter, what makes Harold's so famous?
M: Well, it's the biggest department store in the UK, and its food hall and Egyptian hall are very famous. People come to Harold's just to see them.
W: What is special about the food hall?
M: It sells many different kinds of food. For example, it has 250 kinds of cheese from all over the world, and more than 180 kinds of bread. Customers also love all the different kinds of chocolate. They buy 100 tons every year.
W: That's amazing, and why is the Egyptian hall so famous?
M: Well, when people see it they feel they're in another world. It looks like an Egyptian building from 4,000 years ago, and it sells beautiful objects. They are not 4,000 years old, of course.
W: Is it true that Harold's produces its own electricity?
M: Yes, it does. 70% ,enough for a small town. To light the outside of the building we use 11,500 light bulbs.
W: Really, tell me, how many customers do you have on an average day? And how much do they spend?
M: About 30,000 people come on an average day. But during the sales, the number increases to 300,000 customers a day. How much do they spend? Well, on average, customers spend about 1.5 million pounds a day. The record for one day is 9 million pounds.
W: 9 million pounds in one day?
M: Yes, on the first day of the January sales.
W: Harold's says it sells everything to everybody everywhere, is that really true?
M: Oh, yes, of course. Absolutely everything.
(23)
A.Enormous size of its stores.
B.Numerous varieties of food.
C.Its appealing surroundings.
D.Its rich and colorful history.
第4题
ll kinds of illnesses,(1)backache to severe headaches, or even more serious complaints such as high blood pressure.
Many of us think(2)stress as something that other people impose on us. We often complain about how other people put us(3)pressure. But we should try not to let such pressure affect us. We should not forget that we are largely responsible for some of the stress ourselves. We sometimes take(4)more work than our bodies and our minds can handle. We should learn to(5)our limitations. We should be aware of which things are really important and which are not.
第5题
A.for
B.from
C.against
D.with
第6题
听力原文: Human beings enjoy challenges. Many of them like physical challenges. They ask themselves questions like these: How fast can I run ? How high can I climb? How deep can I dive? How far can I swim? How long can I hold my breath? How much can I lift? How high can I jump? Because people enjoy challenges, they like to play sports and watch other people play sports. They like climbing, running, diving, lifting, jumping, and so on. Every four years millions of people all over the world enjoy the international sports competitions called the Olympics.
There are challenges that are not physical challenges. There are social and intellectual challenges, too. Leonardo Da Vinci, who lived in Italy during the fifteenth century, enjoyed every possible challenge. He was an artist and painted the well-known picture, the Mona Lisa. He was an inventor who invented a device to let people breathe under water. He was a scientist, and he learned a great deal about human anatomy.
Another kind of challenge faced the Egyptians between 4,000 and 5,000 years ago when they decided to build the first pyramid. They used six million tons of rock. That is enough to build a ten-foot wall around all of France. Four hundred thousand men worked for twenty years to build it.
So, for thousands of years, people accept challenges. Today we still have many challenges before us. Medical science faces the challenges of conquering the many diseases which still attack human beings. Engineers and planners must build new cities and new kinds of transportation. Scientists must develop new forms of energy. And many of us are interested in the challenge of space. We live in an age of challenge.
(30)
A.Intellectual challenge.
B.Social challenge.
C.Physical challenge.
D.Economic challenge.
第7题
In colonial times, why was com bread more common than wheat bread?
A.The colonists preferred com breed.
B.Corn was more abundant.
C.The colonists did not know how to make wheat bread.
D.Com bread did not spoil as rapidly as wheat breed did.
第8题
A.AEBDC
B.BDCAE
C.DABEC
D.BEACD
第9题
Spiders are not insects, as many people think, nor even nearly related to them. One can tell the difference almost at a glance, for a spider always has eight legs and insect never more than six.
How many spiders are engaged in this work in our behalf? One authority on spiders made a census of the spiders in grass field in the south of England, and he estimated that there were more than 2 250 000 in one acre; that is something like 6 000 000 spiders of different kinds on a football pitch. Spiders are busy for at least half the year in killing insects. It is impossible to make more than the wildest guess at how many they kill, but they are hungry creatures, not content with only three meals a day. It has been estimated that the weight of all the insects destroyed by spiders in Britain in one year would be greater than the total weight of all the human beings in the country.
(33)
A.Because they are beneficial insects.
B.Because they destroy insects without hurting us in any way.
C.Because they protect insect-eating animals.
D.Because they include some of the greatest enemies of the human race.
第10题
听力原文: Why, you may wonder, should spiders be our friends? (26)Because they destroy so many insects, and insects include some of the greatest enemies of the human race. Insects would make it impossible for us to live in the world; they would devour all our crops and kill our flocks and herds, if it were not for the protection we get from insect-eating animals. (27)We owe a lot to the birds and beasts which eat insects but all of them put together kill only a fraction of the number destroyed by spiders. Moreover, unlike some of the other insect eaters, (26)spiders never do the harm to us or our belongings.
Spiders are not insects, as many people think, nor even nearly related to them. One can tell the difference almost at a glance, (28)for a spider always has eight legs and insect never more than six.
How many spiders are engaged in this work in our behalf? One authority on spiders made a census of the spiders in grass field in the south of England, and he estimated that there were more than 2 250 000 in one acre; that is something like 6 000 000 spiders of different kinds on a football pitcll. (29)Spiders are busy for at least half the year in killing insects. It is impossible to make more than the wildest guess at how many they kill, but they are hungry creatures, not content with only three meals a day. It has been estimated that the weight of all the insects destroyed by spiders in Britain in one year would be greater than the total weight of all the human beings in the country.
(33)
A.Because they are beneficial insects.
B.Because they destroy insects without hurting us in any way.
C.Because they protect insect-eating animals.
D.Because they include some of the greatest enemies of the human race.