---Now, where is my purse?

    ---_______! We’ll be late for the picnic.

A. take your time         B. Don’t worry

C. Come on             D. Take it easy

 

【答案】

C

【解析】略

 

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Almost 50 years have passed since one-time beekeeper, Sir Edmund Hillary, became the first man in the world to conquer the world’s highest peak, Mt Everest. In an extraordinarily

   1   exposition (展覽)Auckland Museum pays   2   to this great New Zealander, Sir Edmund Hillary: Everest and Beyond Exhibition at the museum until April 25.

  Hillary reached Mt Everest’s   3   on May 29, 1953—just in time   4   the Queen’s Conation (加冕典禮).

  Now 83 and   5   by New Zealand as its greatest   6   countryman, Sir Edmund, a Knight of the Garter, prefers to be called just   7   Ed. He and his wife June were guests of honor at the exhibition opening in February, coinciding(巧合)with the museum’s 150th birthday.

  Visitors are   8   into his adventure—packed and charitable world through a

   9   treasure chest of his memorabilia(大事記),from a well-worn passport to the ice

   10   he used to climb that mountain.

  A Nepalese schoolhouse, kitchen and Buddhist temple have been   11   to show the place he has   12   40 years of his charitable soul and money to   13   the Himalayan Trust, building schools, hospitals and all manner of infrastructure(基礎(chǔ)設(shè)施)in the   14   stricken country.

  The exhibition also   15   Ed’s climbs in the Southern Alps, a tractor journey he

   16   to the South Pole in 1967 and a trip up the River Ganges by jet boat.   17   the exhibition closes it will go to the United States, to   18   Sir Edmund’s jubilee 50年節(jié))year,

   19   a celebratory party in London and a   20   with his Sherpa friends in Kathmandu.

  1Asimple            Blarge           Cdetailed          Dgreat

  2Aattention           Brespect          Cadmiration        Dhonor

  3Atop              Bpeak           Cheight          Dlevel

  4Aat                Bof             Cfor            Dwith

  5Alooked upon       Bthought about    Clooked up         Dthought out

  6Aliving             Blive           Calive            Dlively

  7Ashort             Bplain           Cas              Dfor

  8Aput              Bpoured          Cled             Ddrawn

  9Aclear              Bdear            Creal            Dnew

  10Aknife              Baxe           Cfork             Dspear

  11Arecreated          Brecycled        Crecovered         Drepaired

  12Aspent           Btaken          Cdevoted          Dused

  13Aby             Bthrough         Cfor            Dfrom

  14Apoverty          Bstorm          Cdisaster          Dearthquakes

  15Acovers           Bshows         Ctells             Dexpresses

  16Apaid             Bdid            Cmade           Dtook

  17AWhile           BIf             CSince           DWhen

  18Asign             Bmark           Cdesign          Dcontinue

  19Abeginning with      Bjoining in       Cending up with    Dadding up to

  20Areunion          Brepetition       Creview           Drecovery

 

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Communications technologies are far from equal when it comes to conveying the truth.The first study to compare honesty across a range of communication media has found that people are twice as likely to tell lies in phone conversations as they are in emails.The fact that emails are automatically recorded—and can come back to puzzle you---appears to be the key to the finding.

       Jeff Hancock of Cornell University in Ithaca, New York, asked 30 students to keep a communications diary for a week.In it they noted the number of conversations or email exchanges they had lasting more than 10 minutes, and confessed to how many lies they told.Hancock then worked out the number of lies per conversation for each medium.He found that lies made up 14 per cent of emails, 21 percent of instant messages, 27 per cent of face-to-face interactions and an astonishing 37 percent of phone calls.

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       Hancock hopes his research will help companies work out the best ways for their employees to communicate.For instance, the phone might be the best medium for sales where employees are encouraged to stretch the truth.But, given his result, work assessment where honesty is a priority, might be best done using email.

Hancock’s study focuses on _______.

      A.the consequences of lying in various communications media

      B.the success of communications technologies in conveying ideas

      C.people are less likely to lie in instant messages

      D.people’s honesty levels across a range of communications media

Hancock’s research finding surprised those who believed that _____.

      A.people are less likely to lie instant messages

      B.people are unlikely to lie in face-to-face interactions

      C.people are most likely to lie in email communication

      D.people are twice as likely to lie in phone conversations

According to the passage, why are people more likely to tell the truth through certain media of communication?

      A.They are afraid of leaving behind traces of their lies

      B.They believe that honesty is the best policy

      C.They tend to be relaxed wh en using those media

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      B.suitable media should be chosen for different communication purposes

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Communications technologies are far from equal when it comes to conveying the truth.The first study to compare honesty across a range of communication media has found that people are twice as likely to tell lies in phone conversations as they are in emails.The fact that emails are automatically recorded—and can come back to puzzle you---appears to be the key to the finding.
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B.people are unlikely to lie in face-to-face interactions

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To tweet, or not to tweet?

A guide to the social networking/ microblogging service Tewitter

SINCE its creation in 2006, Twitter, the social networking service, has taken cyber space by storm. At first glance it might seem like Facebook, but Twitter is in a league of its own, connecting people with fast-paced updates. It has become a place for activities, celebrities, businesses and everyday people to let others know about videos, opinions, interesting news, advertisements-and, yes what they are eating for lunch.

Twitter: n. a free social networking service that connects users through fast-paced status updates.

Twitter-er: n. one who uses Twitter.

Tweet: n. short updates or messages, of 140 characters or less, wh ich are posted on your profile and sent to your followers.

Retweet (RT): n. unofficial Twitter feature that indicates a re-posting of a tweet from another user. Often uses the text RT@username (of the original source) before the post.

Follower: n. one who receives another user’s updates on his or her Twitter profile.

Direct message: n. a private message sent from one Twitter-er to another.

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Keep in mind that Twitter doesn’t directly offer photo hosting. You will need to use a third-party site like TwitPic (www.twitip.com) to upload your photos. Other sites, like TwitVid (tweetdeck.com/beta) can be used to post videos.

If you th ink the Twitter Web Site too complicated, try a Twiiter client—Tweetdeck(tweetdeck. Com/beta) and the Mac-only Tweetie(www. stebits. com)are popular, and both also are available as iPhone apps(應(yīng)用程序).

Even without an iphone, you can update you Twitter on the go. After adding your phone number to your Twitter account, you can text updates to 40404(check Twitter’s Web site for numbers to use outside the United States)

But no matter how you tweet, remember that people can see what you post, and Twitter might not be the best place to complain about your boss, even if you make your Twitter private, your followers may not share your sense of discretion.

       Twitter is crowded with celebrith accounts. The famous , who once avoided the media in their private lives, are posting everything on Twitter for all the cyber world to see, gathering followers in the millions. Who’s leading the celebrity pack? TwitterCounter(www.twittercounter.com), a site that tracks the most popular Twitter users, lists Ashton Kuntcher and former fashion model, as the nost popular Twitter-er with, as of our publication date, 2,691,112 followers.

Title: To tweet, or not to tweet?

Introductionto Twitter

(71)     in 2006, twitter, the soclal networking service, has enjoyed(72)    among the cyber world.

Basic Twitter(73)    

●twitter

●twitter-er

●tweet

●retwwet

(74)     to tweet your tweets

●Follow a two-step tweeting process, according to the (75)    of Darren Rowse.

●Use a third-party site to upload your photos and post videos.

●Try Twitter clients to help you (76)   Twitter, among which the Tweet-deck and the Mac-only Tweetie are well (77)    .

●Add your phone number to your Twitter account if you don’t have an iPhone.

●Be(78)   of what you post even if your twitter is made private

Celebrity twitter-ers

Celebrties now are (79)    about tweeting, among whom Ashton Kutcher is the most popular, (80)    by the largest number of twitter users.

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