For whom has he helped to raise funds?A.War victims.B.Flood victims.C.People who are starv
For whom has he helped to raise funds?
A.War victims.
B.Flood victims.
C.People who are starving.
D.People who have got AIDS.
For whom has he helped to raise funds?
A.War victims.
B.Flood victims.
C.People who are starving.
D.People who have got AIDS.
The anti-smoking rinse itself tastes rather pleasant. But if you light up within 6 to 8 hours of smoking it, your cigarette will taste like burnt rubber and you won't smoke past the first puff, explains Dr. Sebastian Ciancio, director of the Center for Dental Studies at the University of Buffalo.
Ciancio is heading up a pilot study in which 10 smokers, each of whom normally smoke at least a pack of cigarettes a day, are rinsing their mouths three times daily with the anti-smoking solution. Another 10 are getting a placebo. Prior to this study, only the inventor had tested the anti-smoking rinse—a chemist who does not wish to be identified—and a few of his friends, who say it enabled them to quit smoking.
And Ciancio has no shortage of volunteers: The waiting list to participate in the study is already full. "People arc desperate," he says. If the pilot study is successful, it will be expanded.
Not only might the patented formulation deter smoking, Ciancio adds, but it also appears to reduce plaque, gingivitis, and halitosis. Manufacturing the rinse, he estimates, would cost approximately the same as conventional mouthwashes.
How many smokers are participating in the pilot study now?
A.10.
B.21.
C.over
D.20
The possible research of family trees is based on the fact that ______.
A.genetics has achieved a breakthrough
B.genetic information contained DNA can be revealed now
C.each individual carries a unique record of whom he is and how he is related to others
D.we can use DNA to prove how distant an individual is to a family, a group or a population
?Write a letter with 120-140 words.
A. Whom did he go with?
B. I low long has he been there?
C. Has he ever been there before?
D. Where is Jon?
E. no news is good news.
F. Have you heard from him?
A:【5】
B: He has gone to England.
A:【6】
B: He has been there for half a year.
A:【7】
B: Of coupe! He lived there before he came to China.
A:【8】
B: He went there with his wife.
A:【9】
B: No. I haven't.
A: Oh. well.【10】
(30)
______ the teacher's help, he has made great progress.
A.At
B.Under
C.With
D.On
A.otherwise
B.in spite of
C.provided that
D.that
第二节 完形填空
阅读下面短文,从短文后所给个题的四个选项([A]、[B]、[C]和[D])中选出能填入相应的空白处的最佳答案。
Money and Love
When the Romantic Movement was still in its first favor, it was a common matter of debate (36) people should marry for love or for money. The young people concerned usually favored love, and their parents usually favored money. In the novels of the period the dilemma was felicitously (巧妙地) solved by the discovery, (37) the last page (38) the apparently penniless heroine was really a great heiress. But in real life young men (39) hoped for this denouement (结局) were apt to be disappointed. Prudent parents, (40) admitting that their daughters should marry for love, took care (41) all the young men they met should be rich. This method was sometimes very successful; it was adopted, for example, by my maternal grandfather, who had (42) romantic daughters, none of (43) married badly.
In these days of psychology the matter no (44) looks so simple as it did eighty years ago. We realize now that money may be the cause, or part of the cause, of quite genuine love; of this there are notable examples in history. Benjamin Disraeli, (45) became lord Beaconsfield, (46) in his youth, poor and struggling and passionately ambitious. He married a rich widow, much (47) than himself, and (48) by the world to be rather silly. Owing (49) her, he was able to make his career a success. A cynical world naturally assumed that he loved her money (50) than he loved her, but in this the world was mistaken; through out the whole of their married life he was deeply and genuinely devoted (51) her. I do not suppose he would have loved her if she had been poor when he first knew her, but the gratitude which he felt for help (52) he owed to her kindly interest in him easily developed into a sincere affection. A great deal of affection is based upon the fact that its object is a help in (53) the purposes of the person who feels it. Men in whom ambition is the leading passion are likely to love women (54) assist them (55) their career, and it would be very shallow psychology to suppose that the love is not real because it has its instinctive root in self-interest.
36. [A] whether
[B] that
[C] which
[D] /
Bob has made a thorough study of this subject. He ______ be able to help you.
A.ought to
B.must
C.need
D.was
An eyewitness' testimony is sometimes inaccurate because _________
[A] he is of the same race as the suspect
[B] he is shown photos of many similar faces
[C] he lacks the professional help from the police
[D] he has a small number of suspects in the lineup