单选题pirate()A验船师B理货员C验货师D海盗
单选题
pirate()
A
验船师
B
理货员
C
验货师
D
海盗
参考解析
解析:
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When reality __(1)__ hard to take, there’s an __(2)__ to a parallel universe a virtual world without end __(3)__ real people create online personas called avatars. Anything is possible.Catherine Smith showed CBS News correspondent Jerry Bowen that her avatar has red hair and big nice cool glasses.This is my deck__(4)__ the beach, and I’ve got neighbors that have a giant pirate ship, Smith explained.Smith can’t __(5)__ a beach house in real life. But in Second Life, the online game __(6)__by her employer, Linden Lab, she and nearly 100,000 other subscribers who payYou can go skydiving and not be afraid of dying; you could become a wild animal, __(7)__ that you could never do in real life, she said.__(8)__ as this may be to believe, there is real money changing hands among the players in these games, Bowen reports. An estimated 6 million a month.What we have here is a virtual loft of sorts that we created for the artist Regina Spektor, says Ethan Kaplan of Warner Bros. Records, which has set up shop to __(10)__ the pop singer’s music.Our goal with Second Life is to make it better than real life in a lot of ways, says Phillip Rosedale, Linden Lab’s CEO and founder.(1)A、getB、getsC、isD、was(2)A、routeB、wayC、escapeD、retreat(3)A、thatB、whichC、whenD、where(4)A、being overlookedB、overlookingC、overlookedD、overlook(5)A、helpB、gettingC、affordD、for(6)A、createdB、inventedC、creatingD、inventing(7)A、someB、nothingC、anythingD、something(8)A、TrueB、HardC、TruthD、Had(9)A、isB、wasC、areD、were(10)A、publicalB、pubC、publicizeD、public
阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中选出可以填入空白的最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。The True Story of Treasure IslandIt was always thought that Treasure Island was the product of Robert Louis Stevenson’s imagination. 36, recent research has found the true story of this exciting work.Stevenson, a Scotsman, had lived 37 for many years. In 1881he returned to Scotland for a38 .With him were his American wife Fanny and his son39 .Each morning Stevenson would take them out for a long 40 over the hills. They had been 41 this for several days before the weather suddenly took a turn for the worse. Kept indoors the heavy rain, Lloyd felt the days 42 .To keep the boy happy, Robert asked the boy to do some 43 .One morning, the boy came to Robert with a beautiful map of an island, Robert 44 that the boy had drawn a large cross in the middle of 45. “What’s that?” he asked. “That’s the 46 treasure,” said the boy. Robert suddenly 47 something of an adventure story in the boy’s48 .While the rain was pouring, Robert sat down by the fire to write a story. He would make the 49a twelve-year-old boy, just like Lloyd. But who would be the pirate(海盗)?Robert had a good friend named Henley, who walked around with the50of a wooden leg. Robert had always wanted to 51 such a man in a story.52 Long John Silver, the pirate with a wooden leg, was 53 .So, thanks to a 54September in Scotland, a friend with a wooden leg, and the imagination of a twelve-year-old boy, we have one of the greatest 55stories in the English language.36. A. HoweverB. Therefore C. Besides D. Finally
According to Mark Twain, in river towns up and down the Mississippi, it was every boy's dream to some day grow up to be ______. A.Methodist preacherB.a justice of the peaceC.a riverboat pilotD.a pirate on the Indian ocean
单选题It seems obvious that you don"t give away your product for free but this is exactly what indie rock group The Crimea did earlier this year. The band"s reasoning goes like this: more people will download the free album than would pay for it. Therefore more people will heat. The Crimea"s music. These people will then pay money for concerts by the band and perhaps buy a T-shirt or other merchandise. If the band play regular concerts to crowds of 200 or 300 people they can make more money than they would from sales of a CD. There will always be some people who want something they can hold in their hands so they will release the CD into the shops too—but making money through sales of their music isn"t the top priority.The story illustrates the creative thinking going on in the music business in response to dramatic changes over the last few years in the way that people buy music. Sales of music digitally—to computer, phones and MP3 players rose to $2 billion in 2006—an increase of almost 100 percent on the previous year—yet overall record company sales are down. People are simply not buying CDs in record shops in anything like the numbers they used to.This trend looks set to continue, so the big question for the music industry is whether they can successfully manage the move to being primarily a digital industry without profits falling to unacceptable levels.There are both positive and negative signs. On the plus side, more and more people are buying music on mobile phones, which allows people to make impulse purchases—they can buy a song as soon as they hear it. Research by the UK mobile operator 3 suggested that 75 percent of 16 to 24-year-olds wanted to buy a track they liked as soon as they heard it. With so much competition for people"s disposable income, a product that you can sell immediately is a big advantage.The bad news for record companies, however, is the amount of music that is downloaded illegally. Piracy—usually in the form of cheaply copied CD—has long been an issue for the music business but the Internet means music can be copied and distributed freely through file-sharing sites on a large scale than ever before.It is this situation that leads bands to start giving away their music for free and promises to make the next few years a very interesting time in the music business.What effect has the Internet had on music piracyAIt has made it easier to fight piracy.BIt has increased the number of pirate CDs available.CIt has made it easier to illegally copy music.DIt has reduced the number of pirate CDs available.