问题 单项选择题

根据短文回答43—45题:__________哟!你看那红的,黑的,白的,青的,嬉笑的,悲哀的,目眦怒得欲裂的面容,无论你怎样褒奖,怎样嫌弃。它们一点儿也不改变。红的还是红的,白的还是白的,目眦欲裂的还是目眦欲裂。人面呢颜色比那纸制的小玩意好而且活动,带着生气。可是你褒奖他的时候,他虽是很高兴,脸上却装出很不情愿的样子;你指责他的时候,他虽是懊恼,脸上偏要显示出乐于纳言的颜色。人面到底是靠不住呀!我们要学做面具,但不要戴它,因为面具后面应当让它空着才好。

第一句话具有统括全文的作用.横线上应填充的文字为:

A.人面却不同

B.纸制的面具则不同

C.纸制的面具更不同那人面

D.人面原不如那纸制的面具

答案

参考答案:D

解析:本题属于表面主旨题。文章结构为“总分总”,从材料最后一句 “人面到底是靠不住呀”可知作者阐述的主体是人面。B、C 选项以面具作为阐述主体,予以排除。文中感慨人面虽然比面具好而且活动,带着生气,却总试图隐藏内心表情,不如面具来得真实。D选项“人面不如面具”与文 意一致。A选项以偏概全,没有提及比较对象“面具”。故正确答案为D。

单项选择题
单项选择题

TEXT B
One thing that distinguishes the online world from the real one is that it is very easy to find things. To find a copy of The Economist in print, one has to go to a news-stand, which may or may not carry it. Finding it online, though, is a different proposition. Just go to Google, type in "economist" and you will be instantly directed to economist.com. Though it is difficult to remember now, this was not always the case. Indeed, until Google, now the world’s most popular search engine, came on to the scene in September 1998, it was not the case at all. As in the physical world, searching online was a hit-or-miss affair.
Google was vastly better than anything that had come before: so much better, in fact, that it changed the way many people use the web. Almost overnight, it made the web far more useful, particularly for non- specialist users, many of whom now regard Google as the internet’ s front door. The recent fuss over Google’s stock market flotation obscures its far wider social significance: few technologies, after all, are so influential that their names become used as verbs.
Google began in 1998 as an academic research project by Sergey Brin and Lawrence Page, who were then graduate students at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California. It was not the first search engine, of course. Existing search engines were able to scan or "crawl" a large portion of the web, build an index, and then find pages that matched particular words. But they were less good at presenting those pages, which might number in the hundreds of thousands, in a useful way.
Mr Brin’s and Mr Page’s accomplishment was to devise a way to sort the results by determining which pages were likely to be most relevant. They did so using a mathematical recipe, or algorithm, called PageRank. This algorithm is at the heart of Google’s success, distinguishing it from all previous search engines and accounting for its apparently magical ability to find the most useful web pages.
Untangllng the web
PageRank works by analysing the structure of the web itself. Each of its billions of pages can link to other pages, and can also, in turn, be linked to. Mr Brin and Mr Page reasoned that if a page was linked to many other pages, it was likely to be important. Furthermore, if the pages that linked to a page were important, then that page was even more likely to be important. There is, of course, an inherent circularity to this formula--the importance of one page depends on the importance of pages that link to it, the importance of wb4ch depends in turn on the importance of pages that link to them. But using some mathematical tricks, this circularity can be resolved, and each page can be given a score that reflects its importance.
The simplest way to calculate the score for each page is to perform a repeating or "iterative" calculation (see article). To start with, all pages are given the same score. Then each link from one page to another is counted as a "vote" for the destination page. Each page’s score is recalculated by adding up the contribution from each incoming link, which is simply the score of the linking page divided by the number of outgoing links on that page. (Each page’s score is thus shared out among the pages it links to.)
Once all the scores have been recalculated, the process is repeated using the new scores, until the scores settle down and stop changing (in mathematical jargon, the calculation "converges"). The final scores can then be used to rank search results: pages that match a particular set of search terms are displayed in order of descending score, so that the page deemed most important appears at the top of the list.

Which of the following is NOT true

A.Each page can be given a score that reflects its importance.

B.In the beginning of rating a page’s relative importance, all pages are given the same score.

C.The importance of one page depends on the importance of pages that link to it, the importance of which depends in turn on the importance of pages that link to them.

D.One page’s score is given totally to another page it links to.