题目内容

"A really good relationship should be about being fair and being equal", says psychologist Sidney Crown. "But love is seldom equal." All relationships go through power struggles but, he says, if a love imbalance continues for years, the rot will set in. In love, at least, the silent, withholding type is not always the most powerful. "The strongest one in a relationship is often the person who feels confident enough to talk about their feelings", says educational psychologist Ingrid Collins. "In fact, the person who says 'I love you' first may also be the one who says 'I'm bored with you' first. "Hall believes that much depends on how "I love you" is said and the motivation of the person saying it. "Is it said when they're drank? By saying 'I love you', they really saying 'Do you love me?' If so, wouldn't it just be more honest to say that,". Collins agrees that intention is everything. "It' s not what is said, but how it's said. What it comes down to is the sincerity of the speaker."
What is the main idea of this passage?

A. The importance of "I love you"
B. The meaning of "I love you"
C. The time of saying "I love you".
D. The place of saying "I love you".

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According to the passage, which of the following contributed to the deterioration of the asylum system? Ⅰ. Lack of funds to maintain the asylums. Ⅱ. Influx of more patients than the system was designed to handle. Ⅲ. Lack of effective treatmen

A. Ⅲ only.
B. Ⅰ and Ⅱ only.
C. Ⅰ and Ⅲ only.
D. Ⅰ, Ⅱ, and Ⅲ.

A.norB.orC.and

A. nor
B. or
C. and

A.whereB.whenC.which

A. where
B. when
C. which

听力原文:W: Dr. Smith. I need to ask you about something in Chapter 12. Well it talks about erosion and the deposit of sediment on the deep sea floor, but I'm confused, because, well, for that to happen there would have to be some kind of force down there moving the mud or sand or whatever, right. But l thought there weren't any waves or currents that deep in the ocean.
M: That's not exactly true. It's true that deep down on the ocean floor we won't have the same kinds of currents we find in shallower parts. But we do find what we call turbidity currents. This wasn't in the book but the term came up in class. Do you remember what it means?
W: Umh, turbidity currents? Oh, yeah! Isn't that when sediment like sand or mud gets stirred up and mixes with water and then this mixer kind of flows through the water around it, right?
M: Good!
W: Umh, but I thought that only happened in rivers.
M: Well, yes. This does occur in rivers, but we see turbidity currents deep in the ocean as well.
W: But how do they get started there?
M: Earthquakes mostly, when an earthquake occurs under water, it throws up tremendous, amounts of mud or sand that becomes suspended in a layer of water near the bottom of the ocean. This layer is so much denser and heavier than other ocean water that it flows right down the slopes o f the ocean floor and gains more and more speed as it moves along. Then it's just like the winds blowing across the desert picking up sand from one place and moving it along and finally dropping it somewhere else.
(23)

A. Earthquake.
B. Turbidity currents.
C. Erosion and the deposit of sediment on the deep sea floor.
D. Waves or currents that deep in the ocean.

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