正确答案: A

noticed

题目:She seemed to have detected some anger in his voice.

解析:【解析】句意为:她似乎在他的声音中已经察觉到些许愤怒。detect“察觉,发现”,四个选项:notice“注意,通知”;hear“听,听到”;realize“认识到,意识到”;get“得到,变得”。

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学习资料的答案和解析:

  • [单选题]This kind of material can resist heat and moisture.
  • repel

  • 解析:【答案】D【解析】repel“抗御,抵拒”:This coating repels moisture.这层涂料能防潮。delete“删除”:delete the second paragraph删去第二段。compel“强迫”:compel sb.to do sth.强迫某人做某事。constrain“迫使”:He was constrained to agree.他被迫同意。这三项都不能用于本题。

  • [单选题]What was Ponzi’s crime?
  • 回答下面的题目:From Ponzi to MadoffThe year was 1920.The country was the United States of America.The man’s name was Charles Ponzi.Ponzi told people to stop depositing money in a savings account.Instead,they should give it to him to save for them.Ponzi promised to pay them more than the bank.For example,a savings account might pay you$5 a year for every$1 00 you deposit.Ponzi,however,would pay you $40 a year for every $1 00 you gave him to hold.Many people thought this was a good plan.They began to give their money to Ponzi.How could Ponzi make so much money for people? This is what he did with the money people gave him:He used some of that money to pay other people who gave him money.However,he also kept a lot of the money for himself.Soon he had $250 million.This was a kind of theft,and it was against the law.The people who gave him their money didn’t think anything was wrong.Ponzi paid them every month,just like a bank.Ponzi continued this way of working for two years.Then one day,he didn’t have enough money to pay all the people.They discovered his crime,and he went to prison for froud.Ninety years later,people began to hear about a businessman in New York named Bernard Mad off.People said he gave good advice about money.They said when they gave him their money,he paid them a lot more than the bank.Mad off helped hospitals,schools,and individuals earn money.Over a period of 40 years,people gave him$1 70 billion.However,no one investigated what he did with themoney.The people who gave Mad off their money also didn’t think anything was wrong because he paid them every month.One day,Mad off didn’t have enough money to pay all the people he needed to pay.That’s when people discovered how Madoff worked:He was taking money from some people to pay other people, just the way Charles Ponzi did.However,this time,instead of losing millions of dollars,people lost billions.Madoff was accused of fraud,and United States government officials arrested him.He didn’t have to go on trial because he said he was guilty.In 2009,a judge sentenced him to 150 years in prison.Bernard Madoff’s crime was even bigger than Ponzi’s.It was the biggest fraud in history.The lesson of this story is clear:When something seems too good to be true,it probably is !For every$100 Ponzi promises to pay people__________.

  • He didn’t pay people the interests.

  • 解析:句意:庞齐犯了什么罪?本题的关键字是crime,在文章第二段找到相关句为本段最后一句They discovered his crime,and he went to prison for fraud从中我们可以看到,他是因为诈骗入狱的。四个选项中D项他没有给人们支付利息属于诈骗,所以本题选D。

  • [单选题]第55题应选:
  • 回答下面的题目:Exercise Being Good or BadCan exercise be a bad thing? Sudden death during or soon after strenuous exertion on the squash court or on the army training grounds, is not unheard of. 51 trained marathon runners are not immune to fatal heart attacks. But no one knows just 52 common these sudden deaths linked to exercise are. The registration andinvestigation of such 53 is very patchy; only a national survey could determine the true 54 of sudden deaths in sports. But the climate of medical opinion is shifting in 55 of exercise, for the person recovering from a heart attack as 56 as the average lazy individual. Training can help the victim of a heart attack bylowering the 57 of oxygen the heart needs at any given level of work 58 the patient can do more before reaching the point where chest pains indicate a heart starved of oxygen. The question is, should middle-aged people, 59 .particular, be screened for signs of heart disease before 60 vigorous exercise?Most cases of sudden death in sport are caused by lethal arrhythmias in the beating of the heart, often in people 61 undiagnosed coronary heart disease. In North America 62 over 35 is advised to have a physical check-up and even an exercise electrocardiogram. The British, on the whole, think all this testing isunnecessary. Not many people die from exercise, 63 , and ECGs ( 心电图 ) are notoriously inaccurate. However, two medical cardiologists at the Victoria Infirmary in Glasgow, advocate screening by exercise ECG for people over 40, or younger people 64 at risk of developing coronary heart disease. Individuals showing a particular abnormality in their ECGs 65 , they say, a 10 to 20 times greater risk of subsequently developing signs of coronary heart disease, or of sudden death.第51题应选:

  • favor

  • 解析:【解析】句意为:__________锻炼的意见正在转变。四个选项:favor“有利于”,短语in favor of“赞同,有利于”;positive“积极的”;inclination“爱好,意向,倾向”;indication“表明,迹象,象征”。

  • [单选题]第65题应选:
  • 回答下面的题目:Exercise Being Good or BadCan exercise be a bad thing? Sudden death during or soon after strenuous exertion on the squash court or on the army training grounds, is not unheard of. 51 trained marathon runners are not immune to fatal heart attacks. But no one knows just 52 common these sudden deaths linked to exercise are. The registration andinvestigation of such 53 is very patchy; only a national survey could determine the true 54 of sudden deaths in sports. But the climate of medical opinion is shifting in 55 of exercise, for the person recovering from a heart attack as 56 as the average lazy individual. Training can help the victim of a heart attack bylowering the 57 of oxygen the heart needs at any given level of work 58 the patient can do more before reaching the point where chest pains indicate a heart starved of oxygen. The question is, should middle-aged people, 59 .particular, be screened for signs of heart disease before 60 vigorous exercise?Most cases of sudden death in sport are caused by lethal arrhythmias in the beating of the heart, often in people 61 undiagnosed coronary heart disease. In North America 62 over 35 is advised to have a physical check-up and even an exercise electrocardiogram. The British, on the whole, think all this testing isunnecessary. Not many people die from exercise, 63 , and ECGs ( 心电图 ) are notoriously inaccurate. However, two medical cardiologists at the Victoria Infirmary in Glasgow, advocate screening by exercise ECG for people over 40, or younger people 64 at risk of developing coronary heart disease. Individuals showing a particular abnormality in their ECGs 65 , they say, a 10 to 20 times greater risk of subsequently developing signs of coronary heart disease, or of sudden death.第51题应选:

  • have

  • 解析:【解析】根据空格后时态可知,此处缺少一个一般现在时态的谓语动词,根据语法和句意,D项符合句意。

  • [单选题]请在第____处填上正确答案。
  • 根据以下资料,回答下面的题目。 请在第____处填上正确答案。

  • extensive   

  • 解析:此句意为:制造太能电池,必须进行……半导体加工。A项extensive“广阔的,广泛的”,B项interactive“互相作用的,相互影响的”,C项selective“精选的”,D项intensive“加强的,强烈的”。文中意思应为大量的半导体加工,故本题选A。

  • [单选题]She likes to visit exotic islands.
  • interesting   


  • [单选题]The earthquake that hit the eastern half of the United States two centuries ago is the biggest“mid—plate”one in history.
  • 根据以下资料,回答下面的题目。 Oklahoma is an area often experiencing natural disasters.

  • not mention

  • 解析:题意:200多年前袭击美国东半部的地震是最大的板块中间类型的地震。文中并未提及200多年前袭击美国东半部的地震是最大的板块中间类型的地震。故选C。

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