The mass newspaper depended significantly more on advertising _________ than did their pre
A.revenues
B.incomes
C.avenues
D.outcomes
A.revenues
B.incomes
C.avenues
D.outcomes
A.display
B.dispatch
C.disregard
D.dissolve
A.absorption
B.transmission
C.consumption
D.intercourse
B.She will buy him breakfast.
C.She doesn't know that the man doesn't know how to cook.
D.She is the man's wife.
W: Good evening. Thank you.
M: Now, I noticed van left the Hotel Scandinavia in 1980, and then you had been working in a medium-size restaurant in Finland for about 4 years. What are you now doing in England?
W: I'm spending a few months brushing up my English and getting to know the country better.
M: And you want to work in England too, why?
W: I'm keen on getting some experience abroad, and I like England and English people.
M: I'm the Restaurant Manager and Head Waiter, so you'd be working directly under me. You'd be responsible for bringing in the dishes from the kitchen, serving the drinks, and if necessary looking after the bills. So you'd be kept pretty busy.
W: I'm used to that. In my last position we were busy most of the time, especially in summer.
M: Good. Now, is there anything you'd like to ask about the job?
W: Well, the usual questions, what sort of salary were you thinking of paying?
M: We pay our waiters forty pounds a week, and you would get your evening meal free.
W: I see.
M: Now, you may have wondered why I asked you here so late in the day. The fact is, I would like to see you in action, so to speak. Would you be willing to act as a waitress here this evening for half-an-hour or so? Our first customer will be coming in, let me see, in about ten minutes' time.
W: Well, I'm free this evening otherwise.
M: Good. And in return perhaps you will have dinner with us? Now, let me show you the kitchen first. This way, please...
(23)
A.In Hotel Scandinavia.
B.In a medium- size restaurant in Finland.
C.In a restaurant in England.
D.In the man's house.
B.He wants to be on a diet.
C.He wants to have a smoke.
D.He wants to cut something.
Directions: There are 2 passages in this section. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. You should decide on the best choice.
A well-established distinction in memory theory is that between short-term and long-term memory. The former refers to our ability to do such things as remember telephone numbers long enough to dial them; the latter concerns the wide range of ways in which experiences can affect behavior. many years later. Given the two different kinds of ability, it is reasonable to hypothesize that each is represented differently, in the brain. An experiment was designed to test the hypothesis that long-term memory implies a chemical change in the brain cells while short-term memory involves patterns of impulses in circuits of nerve cells.
One group of rats were taught to run through a maze. Five minutes after learning the task, they were cooled to 5℃, the temperature at which all electrical activity in the brain ceases. They were then kept at this temperature for 15 minutes before being allowed to return to their normal temperature. They were then run through the maze, again.
A second group of rats were taught to run the same maze, and then immediately cooled to 5℃ for 15 minutes. After being allowed to return to their normal temperature, an attempt was made to run the second group through the maze again. It was found that rats in the first group had no difficulty with the maze the second time, suggesting that they did not have to relearn the task. Rats in the second group which was cooled immediately after learning the maze, on the other hand, could not negotiate the maze successfully, i.e., they apparently could not remember what they had learned.
It was concluded from this experiment that short-term memory (in rats, at least) is unlike long-term memory. Short-term memory involves electrical impulses since at a temperature where electrical activity ceases, there is no memory. Long-term memory, in contrast, is unaffected by the disruption of electrical activity and may involve structural changes in brain cells.
What is the main idea of this passage?
A.The difference between short-term memory and long-term memory.
B.The experiments of two groups of rats.
C.The temperature for rats to lose their memory.
D.The importance of memory.
A.temperature affects rats' memory
B.the relationship between temperature and memory is very clear
C.there is distinction between short-term memory and long-term memory
D.rats can relearn the task after forgetting it
A.The First Amendment
B.The Constitution of the United States
C.American Government
D.The Declaration of Independence
A.Religious group need not pay taxes in the United States.
B.President seldom calls on God to bless America and its people.
C.For those who, like Quakers, object to them, oaths can be replaced by a solemn affirmation or declaration.
D.For those whose religion forbids them to fight, performing other services can take the place of being soldiers.
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