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國軍轉任◆英文
> 99年 - 99 國軍上校以上軍官轉任公務人員考試_少將轉任_一般行政:英文#47367
99年 - 99 國軍上校以上軍官轉任公務人員考試_少將轉任_一般行政:英文#47367
科目:
國軍轉任◆英文 |
年份:
99年 |
選擇題數:
25 |
申論題數:
0
試卷資訊
所屬科目:
國軍轉任◆英文
選擇題 (25)
1 Before_____ the test sheets, the teacher reminds all students that there is no talking during the exam. (A) speaking out (B) coming out (C) handing out (D) bursting out
2 Dr. Mill’s opinions will be particularly influential_____ his position and reputation. (A) by way of (B) in comparison with (C) by virtue of (D) in support of
3 You and your partner are_____ if you share similar life goals and can work together toward them. (A) comparative (B) compatible (C) compelling (D) complicit
4 The restaurant is one of the few_____ for dance parties in the area. (A) venues (B) ventures (C) revenues (D) vendors
5 Whenever a new incinerator is proposed to build, people hold a_____ protesting against building it in their neighborhood. (A) celebration (B) demonstration (C) display (D) parade
6 Nobody seems to pay attention to whether this world will turn out to be a barren planet, but_____ . (A) I do (B) I am (C) I did it (D) I do that
7 The treatment will continue until the patient reaches the point _____he can walk correctly and safely. (A) that (B) how (C) which (D) when
8 The cheerleading squad has_____ reason to feel proud after last night’s stunning performance. (A) each (B) every (C) each other (D) each and every one
9 Italian scientists are worried that a shake-up of the nation’s space agency will put commercial and defense interests ahead of research. (A) Scientists in Italy panic about the new space agency’s profit-based policy and its policy on national security. (B) Scientists in Italy are afraid that their space agency is cutting research budget for profit-making purposes. (C) Business interests and national protection are the priority to the new Italian space agency, which worries scientists in Italy. (D) Italy’s re-organization of the space agency worries scientists with its prior emphasis on business profits and national security.
10 Many Islamists long rejected the concept of elections, which the more radical of them still argue are an infringement on God’s sovereignty. (A) The idea of elections has long been discarded by many Islamists, especially by the fundamentalists, who believe that elections are an intrusion into God’s power. (B) Many Islamists believe that choosing the rulers of a nation is a privilege of those fundamentalists who believe in the sovereignty of God. (C) The idea of choosing the rulers of a nation is acceptable to many Islamists except the more radical believers who reject elections as interference with God’s power. (D) It has been a long time since the concept of elections came to the Islamic world, but to the radical Islamists it has to be rejected because God does not allow it.
11 Thanks to technological advances, concert films are starting to envelop audiences in a way nearly as dramatic as live events, at a fraction of the price. (A) With the advances of technology, concert films can be as dramatic as live events but they cost audiences much less money. (B) With the advances of technology, more and more audiences will prefer concert films to live events since they are as dramatic and yet much cheaper. (C) With the advances of technology, it costs much less money to produce concert films and they can be as enjoyable as live events. (D) With the advances of technology, concert films can stir audiences in the same way as live events but such productions are more costly.
12 Etiquette is a code of behavior based on consideration and thoughtfulness, and it’s a fallacy that only certain people need it. (A) Etiquette, as a code of behavior, is mostly required of people of certain status. (B) Etiquette, as a code of behavior, is synonymous with having considerate thoughts. (C) Etiquette, as a code of behavior, is expected of all walks of life. (D) Etiquette, as a code of behavior, is highly recommendable.
13 We can easily extricate ourselves from the problem of deciding which animals are truly social by simply saying that all sexual animals are social but that they differ enormously in degree. (A) To make the task of deciding the sociality of animals less complicated, we can simply say that all animals that are sexual are, more or less, social. (B) It is not difficult to decide whether an animal is social or not. It can be simply said that the degree of sociality of a certain animal is in proportion to the degree of sexuality of it. (C) If we simply say that all sexual animals are social but that their sexual behaviors differ a lot, then we can easily recoil from the difficult task of deciding which animals are really social. (D) We can easily explain ourselves clearly from the perspective of true sociality. If an animal is sexual, then it is social, and vice versa. However, the degree to which an animal’s sociality is influenced by its sexuality varies greatly.
14 The company is evaluating the new market to see if figures of average incomes and distribution channels are convincing enough to merit a launch. (A) The company is trying to figure out the new market’s buying power and distribution capacity. (B) The company is trying to help the new market to increase its average incomes and distribution channels. (C) The company is making a launch because of the new market’s great potential for buying and distribution. (D) The company is breaking into the new market by finding high-income buyers and distribution channels.
15 Social competence is a skill we often take for granted. (A) We often consider social competence to be a skill that needs to be taught. (B) We often assume that social competence is a skill that comes with us effortlessly. (C) Social competence is a skill we take from God. (D) Some people are gifted at the skill of relating to people. “In Bogota, Colombia, there is said to be what amounts to a college for pickpockets,” says Det. Kenneth Kleinlein, a pickpocket-prevention specialist with the New York City police special-fraud squad. The course of study reportedly lasts some six to eight weeks at the “School of the Ten Bells,” named for its final exam. A mannequin, dressed in a man’s vested suit, is said to hang by a wire from the ceiling. Stuffed in each of the suit’s ten pockets are valuables, and attached to each pocket is a bell. The “students” must extract all the contents without jingling a bell. “If they can do it, they ‘graduate’ and fan out to Boston, New York, and other big US cities,” says Kleinlein. Crime experts say that pickpockets focus on department stores, buses and railroad stations, sports stadiums, parades—wherever there are crowds. Most work in teams, watching you to see where you put your wallet after a transaction. Or in a crowd they may “fan” you, running feather-like fingers over your clothes until they locate your wallet.
16 According to the passage, what should students do before graduating from the “School of the Ten Bells”? (A) They have to stuff the suit’s pockets with valuables. (B) They have to get things from the mannequin’s pockets without triggering the alarm. (C) They have to dress up the mannequin with a vested suit. (D) They have to ring the bells attached to the mannequin’s pockets ten times.
17 According to the passage, which of the following would probably NOT be a feature of pickpockets’ habits? (A) They like to work with partners while stealing. (B) They like to observe people putting aside their wallet. (C) They like to go to colleges to sharpen their skills. (D) They like to go to crowded sports events to look for targets.
18 Which of the following can best replace the phrase “fan out” in the last sentence of the first paragraph? (A) fly (B) scatter (C) drive (D) flee
19 What is this passage mainly about? (A) How cooking was invented. (B) Why people refused to make fire with imagination. (C) How people learned to kindle and preserve fire. (D) Why it was never easy for people to make fire for daily uses.
20 Why did some tribes in Tasmania, the Andaman Islands, and New Guinea travel to beg fire from their neighbors? (A) They thought it was easier and more reliable to borrow fire from their neighbors. (B) They thought it was profane but practical to beg fire from their neighbors. (C) They thought it was too much trouble to start fire by means of their own. (D) They thought it was improper for them to rekindle something as sacred as fire.
21 On what occasion will people in modern societies make fire and view it as something sacred? (A) In the Olympic Games (B) When fire can be quickly drilled (C) When suitable flints and kindling are ready to be used (D) In memory of our past honors
22 (A) The genes of a species of whales were mutating. (B) In addition, certain species of whales have accelerated their growth. (C) Obvious examples are the changes in the fish population around Borneo in the Pacific. (D) Some animals have changed their genes so radically that they have to be classified as a new species.
23 (A) Some have even crawled into beds and waited for their preys there. (B) No one can predict how this will affect the survival of the species. (C) In addition, certain species of whales have accelerated their growth. (D) Obvious examples are the changes in the fish population around Borneo in the Pacific.
24 (A) The genes of a species of whales were mutating. (B) Some have even crawled into beds and waited for their preys there. (C) Obvious examples are the changes in the fish population around Borneo in the Pacific. (D) Some animals have changed their genes so radically that they have to be classified as a new species.
25 (A) The genes of a species of whales were mutating. (B) Some have even crawled into beds and waited for their preys there. (C) No one can predict how this will affect the survival of the species. (D) In addition, certain species of whales have accelerated their growth.
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