His continual severe financial problems kept his mother in a ______ state ofanxiety.A.perp
His continual severe financial problems kept his mother in a ______ state ofanxiety.
A.perpetual
B.eternal
C.everlasting
D.usual
His continual severe financial problems kept his mother in a ______ state ofanxiety.
A.perpetual
B.eternal
C.everlasting
D.usual
第1题
His continual severe financial problems kept his mother in a ______ state of anxiety.
A.perpetual
B.eternal
C.everlasting
D.usual
第2题
His illness first ________ itself as severe stomach pains and headaches.
A.manifested
B.displayed
C.expressed
D.reflected
第3题
A.He was happy after his wife entered his room for the first time in nine years.
B.The lightning made his legs lose the ability to feel and gave him the ability to see.
C.He regained his sight from a head injury when he fell from a tree.
D.The blow that blinded him was very severe, and it took another very severe blow to restore his sight.
第4题
How did Juan Louis start his speech?
A.By reflecting on Americans' previous failures in predicting earthquakes.
B.By noting where the most severe earthquake in U. S. history occurred.
C.By describing the destructive power of earthquakes.
D.By explaining some essential geological principles.
第5题
After having assured their return journey,
the writer and his companion could concentrate
on collecting and film animals. Deciding to 【M1】______
enlist the help the local Indians, they made
their way to a nearby village, in which proved 【M2】______
to be a few dilapidated huts in a pleasant
valley. The Indians they found there worn 【M3】______
remnants of European clothes and had
obviously abandoned their traditional way
of life. They kept a few disease chickens 【M4】______
and skinny cattle instead of hunting for
their meat. The writer' s companion explained
that they were looking for birds and mammals,
particular armadillos, for which they would 【M5】______
pay well. Anyone who could show them inhabited
nests and holes, they have said, would be 【M6】______
well rewarded. The Indians were apathetic
and uncooperative. Noticing the absence of
biting insects, the writer asked whether
they had ever troubled by them, to which 【M7】______
the Indians replied by slowly shaking their
heads. The writer recognized that he 【M8】______
considered that having to live in such a hot,
humid atmosphere would no doubt have 【M9】______
made him lethargic too. The headman explained
the inconvenience of the villagers had, for
severe weeks previously, been contemplating 【M10】______
cutting down a particular tree and until a
decision on this matter was reached, no other
activity could possibly be considered.
【M1】
第6题
(29)Humans have long been aware that our health is linked with our thought, emotions and relationships. Now science is catching up with our suspicion. A new field of scientific investigation has developed. It's the study of how our thoughts and feelings work with our immune and nervous systems.
There are already researchers at medical schools who are devoted to the study. They are discovering surprising connections between mind and body. One researcher has been working will with breast cancer patients. She has been looking at the mental factors in their illness and treatment. (31)She has discovered that women who did not like to talk about the emotions created by their illness had more chance of dying in five years after treatment. Of a group of 52 patients, 16 women died. All 16 women had said they usually found it difficult to talk to people about their illness. So, simply speaking, it is bad for your health to keep negative feeling inside you. You need to talk about them to your family and friends.
Other research sh6ws that stress really can make you sick. People who lead stressful lives are more likely to fall ill with colds and flus and other illnesses. But, if you have lots of good quality relationships with family and friends in your life, then you are less likely to fall ill, even though the circumstance of your life might be difficult.
(30)
A.How people fall ill.
B.The influence of people's emotions on their health.
C.A new method to cure breast cancer.
D.Several ways to keep fit.
第7题
third year in high school that the possibility came into 63(). Until then I' d been bored by everything associated. 64 ()English courses. I found English grammar dull and difficult. I hated the assignments to turn out long. 65() paragraphs that were agony for teachers to read and for me to write.
When our class was assigned to Mr. Fleagle for third-year English, I anticipated another
cheerless year in that most tedious subject. Mr. Fleagle had a reputation among students for
dullness and an 66() to inspire. He 67() very formal, rigid and 68() out of date. To me he looked to be sixty or seventy and excessively prim (正经的、规矩的). He wore primly severe eyeglasses, and his wavy hair was primly cut and primly combed. He wore prim suits with neckties set primly against the collar buttons of his prim white shirts. He had a primly pointed jaw, a primly straight nose, and a prim manner of speaking that was.69() correct and gentlemanly 70() he seemed a comic antique.
61A.while
B.off
C.off and on
D.on
62A.was
B.wasn't
C.Ois
D.isn't
63A.be
B.to be
C.being
D.been
64A.on
B.with
C.to
D.about
65A.vivid
B.live
C.lifeless
D.life
66A.disability
B.unable
C.unability
D.inability
67A.said
B.was said
C.was said to be
D.was said being
68A.hopelessly
B.hopeless
C.hope
D.hopes
69A.such
B.so not
D.very
70A.which
B.SO
C.that
D.then
第8题
Passage 1
Conrad Hilton really wanted to be a banker. Instead, he successfully changed the _1_purchase of a Texas low-end hotel into a multimillion-dollar hotel empire that earned him the _2_ “innkeeper to the world.” Born in New Mexico in 1887, Hilton was 19 when his parents began renting out rooms in their home. The business didn&39;t interest him, however, so he became a _3_ legislator, founded a bank and went off to war. In 1919, after Hilton’s father died, a friend suggested he go to Texas to make his _4_. Hilton ended up in Cisco; when his bank deal there _5_, he headed to a nearby hotel, the Mobley. It _6_ to oil-field workers, so its 40 rooms turned over every eight hours. A week later, Hilton owned it. He soon acquired more hotels—and started to build new ones. His first, the Dallas Hilton, opened in 1925. By the late 1940s, Hilton’s list included the Town House in Beverly Hills and Chicago’s Palmer House, as well as _7_ nightclubs featuring A-list stars. He also expanded internationally. And in 1949, he bought the “greatest of them all”: New York City&39;s magnificent Waldorf- Astoria. Typically American, Hiltons were _8_ too: the first to have rooms with air-conditioning, TVs, ironing boards and sewing kits. Even modern hotel-reservations systems _9_ from one Hilton which was established in 1948. Today the Hilton Hotels Corp. owns some 3,300 _10_ in 78 countries. Last year more than a quarter-billion guests checked in.
A)soured
B) motivated
C) nickname
D) catered
E) previously
F) luxurious
G) properties
H) features
I) fortune
J) evolved
K) casual
L) severe
M) inherited
N) creative
O) state
第1空答案是:
第9题
1.In order to investigate the effect of light on growing plants the scientist____.
A、has to stand in the sun
B、can keep the same plants under different conditions of light
C、takes as many plants as possible
D、both b and c
2.The word "constant" in the first paragraph means____.
A、continual
B、faithful
C、various
D、unchanging
3.What should be kept the same in a "controlled experiment"? ____
A、All the factors.
B、The common factors.
C、The factor under investigation.
D、All factors except the one being investigated.
4.According to the passage, a hypothesis is____.
A、an explanation for a large number of facts likely to be accepted as a truth
B、a factor which explains the facts already known to the scientist
C、an explanation that stands the test of numerous experiments
D、a common explanation that will definitely become a law
第10题
These continual ________ in temperature make it impossible to decide what to wear.
A.fluctuations
B.transformations
C.transitions
D.exchanges