A.if
B.when
C.how
D.why
How do you know that the oil pressure is a bit low?
A.The warning light flashes only when the car runs at fast speed.
B.The warning light flashes only when the car is slowing down.
C.The warning light flashes continuously.
D.The warning light flashes when the engine idles.
A、It's similar in meaning to…
B、I can't remember the word but it's like….
C、I've forgotten the word.
D、I only know Chinese for the word.
When should oral promises only be accepted?
A.When your lawyer confirms the honesty of the salesperson.
B.When you know the salesperson personally and believe their words.
C.When money is not involved.
D.When they are accompanied by a written agreement.
---When are you going on holiday? ---_______.
A、Only one-week holiday
B、Next week.
C、They haven’t decided where to go
D、With my wife.
H: Good evening, David. I'm so glad to have you here.
D: It's my pleasure. Thanks for inviting me on the show.
H: David, have you often been on the radio shows?
D: Oh yes, quite often. To be frank, I love to be on the show.
H: Why?
D: You know, I want to know what people think about the TV series and about me, my acting, etc.
H: Ok, David, let's first talk about the character you played in The X-Files. The character, whose name is Mulder, is supposed to be a believer. He deals with those unbelievable, weird, often bizarre things and events. He must be, I mean, Mulder, someone who really believes in the things he meets in order to keep on probing into those mysteries.
D: That's true. Remember those words said by Mulder? "What is so hard to believe? Whose intensity makes even the most skeptical viewer believe the paranormal and outrageous government conspiracies, with every reason to believe that life in the persistent survey is driving us out of our terrestrial field, etc. etc?"
H: Fabulous. I guess, David, your contribution to the hit series is credibility. Now, let's talk about your personal experience. From what I have read, I know that starting from your hildhood, you're always a smart boy — went to the best private schools, accepted to most of the IVY colleges, not bad for a low-or middle-class kid from a broken family on New York's low eastside. So much to my surprise, when you, who were on your way to a doctor to Yale to fulfill acting classes and get beaten by the buck...
D: You bet, my mother was really surprised when I decided to give up all that in order to become an actor.
H: Sure, but talking about Mulder, the believer in The X-Files, what about you, David? Do you believe it all in real life, the aliens, people from outer space, you know, UFOs, government conspiracies, all the things that the TV series deal with?
D: Well, government conspiracies are, I think, a little far-fetched because, I mean, it's very hard for me to keep a secret with a friend of mine. And you're going to tell me the entire government is going to come together and hide the aliens from us? I found that hard to believe. In terms of aliens, I think that the arts are, there must be...
H: But you could believe in aliens?
D: Oh yeah.
H: The character you played in The X-Files, Fox Mulder is so dark and moody. Are you dark and moody in life?
D: I think so. I think what they wanted was somebody who could be this hearted, driven person, but not behave in that way. And therefore be hearted and driven, but also appear to be normal and not crazy at the same time. And I think that I could, I can, I cannot for that.
H: What haunts you now? What drives you now?
D: What drives me is failure and success and all those things, so...
H: Where are you now? Are you haunted and driven? Failed or successful? Which?
D: Yeah, both.
H: All of the above?
D: I always feel like a failure.
H: Do you mean now you feel like a failure?
D: Yeah, I mean sometimes, you know, like, I come back to New York, so it's like, everything is different, so I lie in bed and think — two years ago, three years ago, very different; maybe I'm doing well — but then I think, you know, there're just so many of other things that I want to do and...
H: Your father and mother divorced when you were 11. Does that have effect on your life today that you recognize?
D: Well, yeah. I think that the only way to think of it is that, you know, people are saying your wound is your gold. You know, wherever you hurt,
A.He had excellent academic records at school and university.
B.He was once on a PhD programme at Yale University.
C.He received professional training in acting.
D.He came from a single-parent family.
Through the videocenferencing, not only your voice but also your face, the surroundings and any other graphic and phisical __1__ can be captured and transmitted through the communication system with or without wires. Of course, when you go into the details, the technology involved is very __2__ and the subject matter littered with jargon. Such as ISDN (Integrated Services Digital Network), POTS (Plain Old Telephone Service) or the __3__ behind bandwidth, latency and isochrony which are used to explain how videoconferencing works.Good people communication is __4__ in any business, and the more interaction you can achieve, the more likely it is that your __5__ will be the right ones. Videoconferencing not only allows you to speak to people in different locations, but also note __6__ expressions and gestures that let you know what the other person is really thinking. Meetings are made more __7__ by sharing documents and computer applications that a simple telephone cannot __8__.__9__, organizations are discovering the competitive advantages and the power of videoconferencing. With advances in performance, economical pricing, the ability to __10__ essential meeting tools and connectivity to global telephone networks and standardized videoconferencing protocols, videoconferencing is now a practical reality for any organization.
A) fortunately
B) effective
C) images
D) articulate
E) facial
F) manage
G) decisions
H) connect
I) advanced
J) integrate
K) progressive
L) concepts
M)pictures
N) increasingly
O) important
听力原文:M: I was young once myself, you know. I know what it's like to be young.
W: But you don't know what it's like to grow up in our world, Mr. Perkins.
M: I grew up during the war, young lady.
W: Exactly. You had a brave new world to fight for, didn't you? But what have we got to look forward to? Pollution and population explosion, if we are not destroyed first by the H bomb.
M: But you'll survive like all the generations before us. Progress is just moving a little bit faster. That's all.
W: Really, Mr. Perkins? Progress, as you call it, can change things completely in a few years these days. You know that perfectly well. Can't you see how pointless your business world must seem to young people like me?
M: In any event, we have to go on living, Ann. And living means working. The young will realize that one day. They'll learn. They'll grow up.
W: You think we should grow up to be like you, don't you, Mr. Perkins? I know you do. I know you'll laugh at us when we talk about universal love and understanding between people. When people demonstrate about what is happening in other countries, you'll say, "What right have they to interfere? It's none of their business." But it is our business, Mr. Perkins. We are all responsible for one another these days, whatever our race, or color, or nationality.
M: I agree, Ann. But so many of your so-called international demonstrations only make misunderstanding worse. A lot of you are so sure you got the answer to everything. You won't accept any guidance at all from older people.
W: But it's very difficult for older people to give proper guidance when, as people often say, they had no experience of being young today. It's no use their saying I never behaved like that when I was young. They didn't have the same kind of problems. That's what the generation gap is all about.
M: Well, I don't think the generation gap in this country is as great as you make out. In fact, I suspect many young people go to their parents for advice just as often as they go to friends of their own age.
W: You know, Mr. Perkins, I am almost frightened of getting older. Will I be talking like this to my children one day?
(47)
A.Because he could avoid being killed by the H-bomb.
B.Because he had a new world to fight for.
C.Because he was able to enjoy a pollution-free life.
D.Because he succeeded in setting up his own business.
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