题目内容

How many different kinds of emotions do you feel You may be (21) to find that it is very hard to specify all of them. Not only (22) hard to describe in words, they are difficult to (23) . As a result, two people rarely (24) all of them. However, there are a number of (25) emotions that most people experience. When we receive something that we want, or something happens (26) we like, we usually feel joy or happiness. Joy is a positive and powerful emotion, (27) for which we all strive. It is natural to want to be happy, and all of us (28) happiness. As a general (29) , joy occurs when we reach a (30) goal or obtain a desired object. (31) people often desire different goals and objects, it is (32) that one person may find joy in repairing an automobile, (33) another may find joy in solving a math problem. Of course, we often share (34) goals or interests, and therefore we can experience joy together. This may be in sports, in the arts, in learning, in raising a family, or in (35) being together. When we have difficulty (36) desired objects or reaching desired goals we experience (37) emotions such as anger and grief. When little things get in our way, we experience (38) frustrations or tensions. For example, if you are dressing to go out (39) a date, you may feel frustration when a zipper breaks or a button fails off. If you really want something to happen, and you feel it (40) happen, but someone or something stops it, you may become quite angry.

A. shocked
B. astounded
C. surprised
D. bewildered

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The importance of the personal competence and success in life. 2. My experience on my way to success. 3. My opinion on how to promote personal success. My Approach to Personal Success

本位货币可以自由铸造与流通,辅币却不能自由铸造。( )

A. 对
B. 错

How many different kinds of emotions do you feel You may be (21) to find that it is very hard to specify all of them. Not only (22) hard to describe in words, they are difficult to (23) . As a result, two people rarely (24) all of them. However, there are a number of (25) emotions that most people experience. When we receive something that we want, or something happens (26) we like, we usually feel joy or happiness. Joy is a positive and powerful emotion, (27) for which we all strive. It is natural to want to be happy, and all of us (28) happiness. As a general (29) , joy occurs when we reach a (30) goal or obtain a desired object. (31) people often desire different goals and objects, it is (32) that one person may find joy in repairing an automobile, (33) another may find joy in solving a math problem. Of course, we often share (34) goals or interests, and therefore we can experience joy together. This may be in sports, in the arts, in learning, in raising a family, or in (35) being together. When we have difficulty (36) desired objects or reaching desired goals we experience (37) emotions such as anger and grief. When little things get in our way, we experience (38) frustrations or tensions. For example, if you are dressing to go out (39) a date, you may feel frustration when a zipper breaks or a button fails off. If you really want something to happen, and you feel it (40) happen, but someone or something stops it, you may become quite angry.

A. search to
B. search of
C. search
D. search for

The idea of humanoid robots is not new, of course. They have been part of the imaginative landscape ever since Karl Capek, a Czech writer, first dreamed them up for his 1921 play "Rossum’s Universal Robots". (The word "robot" comes from the Czech word for drudgery, robota. )Since then, Hollywood has produced countless variations on the theme, from the sultry False Maria in Fritz Lang’s silent masterpiece "Metropolis" to the wittering C-3PO in "Star Wars" and the ruthless assassin of "Terminator". Humanoid robots have walked into our collective subconscious, colouring our views of the future. But now Japan’s industrial giants are spending billions of yen to make such robots a reality. Their new humanoids represent impressive feats of engineering: when Honda introduced Asimo, a four-foot robot that had been in development for some 15 years, it walked so fluidly that its white, articulated exterior seemed to conceal a human. Honda continues to make the machine faster, friendlier and more agile. Last October, when Asimo was inducted into the Robot Hall of Fame in Pittsburgh, it walked on to the stage and accepted its own plaque. At two and a half feet tall, Sony’s QRIO is smaller and more toy-like than Asimo. It walks, understands a small number of voice commands, and can navigate on its own. If it falls over, it gets up and resumes where it left off. It can even connect wirelessly to the internet and broadcast what its camera eyes can see. In 2003, Sony demonstrated an upgraded QRIO that could run. Honda responded last December with a version of Asimo that runs at twice the speed. In 2004, Toyota joined the fray with its own family of robots, called Partner, one of which is a four-foot humanoid that plays the trumpet. Its fingers work the instrument’s valves, and it has mechanical lungs and artificial lips. Toyota hopes to offer a commercial version of the robot by 2010. This month, 50 Partner robots will act as guides at Expo 2005 in Aichi, Japan. Despite their sudden proliferation, however, humanoids are still a mechanical minority. Most of the world’s robots are faceless, footless and mute. They are bolted to the floors of factories, stamping out car parts or welding pieces of metal, machines making more machines. According to the United Nations, business orders for industrial robots jumped 18% in the first half of 2004. They may soon be outnumbered by domestic robots, such as self-navigating vacuum cleaners, lawn mowers and window washers, which are selling fast. But neither industrial nor domestic robots are humanoid. From the passage we may infer that the Toyota’s Partner ______.

A. is much better than any other robots
B. is no more than a mechanic device
C. may be put into mass production
D. may speak like man

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