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填空题如果当时你穿了大衣, you would not have felt cold.
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填空题软硬兼施
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填空题Please make sure that the stipulations in the L/C are ______ exact accordance ______ the terms of the sales contract.
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填空题从供选择的答案中选出应填入下列英文语句中( )内的正确答案。 供选择的答案: (1) manage (2) perform (3) support (4) reduce (5) divided (6) enhance (7) implemented (8) introduce (9) ranked (10) run
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填空题
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填空题Translate the following passage into English.(辽宁大学2007研,考试科目:英语专业基础课) 开门是个神秘的动作:这里面包含有某种未知的情趣,某种进入新的时刻的感觉,一种人类繁琐手续的新形式,这包括对极大的快乐的显露、重聚、和解、久别重逢的恋人的狂喜。就是在悲伤时,开门也会给你带来宽慰,它改变并重新分配人的力量。但是关门要可怕得多。那是声明结局。每一扇门关上都表示某件事的结束。在关门中有不同程度的悲伤。砰的一声把门关上表明软弱。轻轻地关上门常常是生活中最悲剧性的举动。人人都知道,紧跟在关门后面袭来的是极度的痛苦,这时所爱的人虽仍在附近,听得见说话的声音,然而他已经远去了。
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填空题Error is the grammatically incorrect form; ______ appears when the language is correct grammatically but improper in a communicational context.
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填空题We shall cancel the contract if you fail to open the relative L/C ______ the end of this year.
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填空题Directions:In the following text, some sentences have been removed. For Questions 41-45, choose the most suitable one from the list A-G to fit into each of the numbered blanks. There are two extra choices, which do not fit in any of the blanks. Mark your answers on the ANSWER SHEET. Are we, as some popular writers suggest, in an "age of anxiety" ? Have the good old days of afternoon strolls in the park and summer evenings on the porch been replaced with ever-present pressure to work harder and faster and be better than everyone else? The ubiquitous ads for massages, meditation, anti-anxiety drugs, get-away vacations, and the like seem to say that most people today have been pushed near some sort of anxiety breaking point. Are we more anxious today, or do we just complain more? {{U}} {{U}} 1 {{/U}} {{/U}}The data suggest that we may indeed have entered an age of anxiety. {{U}} {{U}} 2 {{/U}} {{/U}}When you experience anxiety, you have feelings of worry, panic, fear, and dread. It is probably the emotional experience you would have if you were suddenly arrested or if you discovered that a diary containing some of your deepest secrets had been passed around among friends. {{U}} {{U}} 3 {{/U}} {{/U}}You probably experienced this type of anxiety if you ever felt you were being followed by a stranger or you narrowly escaped a serious automobile accident. In case of reality anxiety, you are aware of the dangerous situation responsible for your emotional reaction. Predictably, conscious thoughts were not particularly interesting to Freud. Thus he devoted more attention to two other types of anxiety, and in neither case are we consciously aware of the source of our anxiety. {{U}} {{U}} 4 {{/U}} {{/U}} Many neo-Freudian theorists adopted and adapted Freud's ideas about anxiety in their writings. For example, Sullivan considered anxiety a cornerstone of his theory. The Neurotic coping style described by Horney are also said to develop in an effort to reduce and avoid anxiety. {{U}} {{U}} 5 {{/U}} {{/U}} Eventually, Adler, Anna Freud, and other neo-Freudian psychologists expanded anxiety-fighting tactics to include the conscious and deliberate methods people use to deal with their anxiety. As if to acknowledge the Freudian legacy, these theorists often retained the names of the unconscious defense mechanisms when describing conscious efforts to cope with anxiety. A. Neurotic anxiety is experienced when unacceptable id impulses are dangerously close to breaking into consciousness. It is this type of anxiety that leads to ego to use defense mechanisms. Moral anxiety is brought about by the superego in response to id impulses that violate the superego ' s strict moral code. Generally, this is experienced as guilt. B. Investigators also find that not everyone uses the same coping strategies to reduce anxiety. After a lifetime of facing various threatening situation, each of us develops an arsenal of coping strategies that we believe work for us. C. These theorists accepted the Freudian notion that some experiences with anxiety stem from unconscious conflicts, although they emphasized the interpersonal and cultural role in this process more than Freud did. For example, Sullivan said anxiety could be overcome by developing solid relationship with other, what he called interpersonal security. Homey agreed unconscious impulses often triggered anxiety, but largely because they come into conflict with cultural standards. D. To answer this question, one investigator examined average anxiety scores reported in published studies from the 1950s through the 1990s. Not only did anxiety scores rise throughout the five decades. but the 1980s the average American child reported higher levels of anxiety than child psychiatric patients in 1950s. E. Although he changed his thinking about anxiety several times during his career, Freud identified three types of anxiety in his last major writing in this area. First, there is reality anxiety, or objective anxiety, which is a response to a perceived threat in the real world. F. What do we do when faced with a potentially stressful situation, such as waiting for your dentist to start drilling or getting ready for a job interview? If you are like most people, you don't just accept the potential pain or fear as part of life. Rather, researchers find that people typically respond to stress-provoking situations with calculated efforts to reduce their anxiety. G. Anxiety and strategies for alleviating anxiety have played an important role in the works of many psychoanalytic theorists. Although anxiety has been defined in many different ways, most researchers would probably agree that it is above all else an unpleasant emotional experience.
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填空题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}}In the following text, some sentences have been removed. For questions 41--45, choose the most suitable one from the list A--G to fit into each of the numbered blank. There are two extra choices, which do not fit in any of the gaps. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1. (1) The maple smoke of autumn bonfires is incense to Canadians. Bestowing perfume for the nose, color for the eye, sweetness for the spring tongue, the sugar maple prompts this sharing of a favorite myth and original etymology of the word maple. (2) The maple looms large in Ojibwa folk tales. The time of year for sugaring-off is "in the Maple Moon." Among Ojibwa, the primordial female figure is Nokomis, a wise grandmother. (3) 41. ______________ (4) Knowing this was s pursuit to the death, Nokomis outsmarted the cold devils. She hid in a stand of maple trees, all red and orange and deep yellow. This maple grove grew beside a waterfall whose mist blurred the trees' outline. As they peered through the mist, slavering wendigos thought they saw a raging fire in which their prey was burning. (5) 42. ______________ (6) For their service in saving the earth mother's life, these maples were given a special gift: their water of life would be forever sweet, and Canadians would tap it for nourishment. (7) 43. ______________ (8) The contention that maple syrup is unique to North America is suspect, I believe. China has close to 10 species of maple, more than any country in the world. Canada has 10 native species. North America does happen to be home to the sugar maple, the species that produces the sweetest sap and the most abundant flow. (9) But are we to believe that in thousands of years of Chinese history, these inventive people never tapped a maple to taste its sap? I speculate that they did. (10) 44. ______________ (11) What is certain is the maple's holdfast on our national imagination. Is leaf was adopted as an emblem in New France as early as 1700, and in English Canada by the mid-19th century. In the fall of 1867, a Toronto schoolteacher named Alexander Muir was traipsing at street a the city, all squelchy underfoot from the soft felt of falling leaves, when a maple leaf alighted to his coat sleeve and stuck there. (12) The word "maple" is from "mapeltreow”, the Old English term for maple tree, with "mapl"--as its Proto-Germanic root, a compound in which the first "m" --is, I believe, the nearly worldwide "ma", one of the first human sounds, the pursing of a baby's lips as it prepares to suck milk from mother's breast. The "ma" root gives rise in many world languages to thousands of words like "mama", "mammary", "maia", and "Amazon." Here it would make "mapl-" mean "nourishing mother tree," that is, tree whose maple sap in nourishing. (13) 45. ______________ [A] The second part of the compound, "apl-", is a variant of Indo-European able "fruit of any tree" and the origin of another English fruit word, apple. So the primitive analogy compares the liquid sap with another nourishing liquid, mother's milk.[B] In one tale about seasonal change, cannibal wendigos-creatures of evil-chased through the autumn countryside old Nokomis, who was a symbol for female fertility. Wendigos throve in icy cold. When they entered the bodies of humans, the human heart froze solid.[C] Here wendigos represent oncoming winter. They were hunting to kill and eat poor Nokomis, the warm embodiment of female fecundity who, like the summer, has grown old.[D] Could Proto-Americas who crossed the Bering land bridge to populate the Americas have brought with them a knowledge of maple syrup? Is there a very old Chinese phrase for maple syrup? Is maple syrup mentioned in Chinese literature? For a non-reader of Chinese, such questions are daunting but not impossible to answer.[E] Maple and its syrup flow sweetly into Canadian humor. Quebeckers have developed a special love for such a nutriment.[F] After it resisted several brushings-off, Muir joked to his walking companion that this would be "the maple leaf for ever!" At home that evening, he wrote a poem and set it to music, in celebration of Canada's Confederation. Muir's song, "The Maple Leaf Forever," was wildly popular and helped fasten the symbol firmly to Canada.[G] But it was only old Nokomis being hidden by the bright red leaves of her friends, the maples. And so, drooling ice and huffing frost, the wendigos left her and sought easier prey.
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填空题Although no longer slavers after the Civil War, American blacks took no significant part in the life of white America except as servants or laborers. Many thousands of them emigrated from the war-ravaged South to the North from 1865 to 1915 in the hope of finding work in the big industrial cities. Whole communities of blacks crowded together into ghettos in New York City, Chicago and Detroit, where once the poor white immigrants had lived. These ghettos, neglected by the city authorities, became slums. The schools to which black children went were hopelessly inadequate. Unemployment in black ghettos remained consistently higher than in white communities. 41. Serious problems with black ghettos.______ Stable family life was difficult to maintain.42. The extreme poverty of the blacks.______ In the late 1970s, nearly a third of all blacks still belonged to the so-called "underclass", they are so "under-privileged" and poor that they cannot seize the opportunity for advancement.43. Efforts to put an end to racial discrimination.______ Race relations in the USA continue to be a thorny problem,44. Improvements in Ives of the blacks.______ Despite some setbacks, race relations are improving.45. Prevailing violence in solving racial problems.______ It is said that television had an enormous influence on frustrated and hitter blacks, for it showed them bow much better whites on the whole lived than blacks. At the end of the 1960s, there were serious riots in many cities. The violence quickly died down. Blacks began to use their votes to exert political pressure. Cities like Atlanta (Georgia), Gary (Indiana), and Los Angeles (California) elected black mayors. Integration of schools, despite resistance from white groups, goes on, and the proportion of blacks in American colleges has increased dramatically in the last 20 years. There are reasons to maintain a cautious optimism that progress in race relations will continue.[A] It has been estimated that there are more than 20 million Americans in this category, 10% of the population, including many millions of whites.[B] Blacks are gaining in self-confidence. In more and more areas they are winning control of their communities, and their standard of living is going up faster than that of the poor whites. It is still a hard struggle. There is still prejudice and even some hatred, but in most walks of American life there are now more blacks than ever before.[C] The era of blatant discrimination ended in the 1960s through the courageous actions of thousands of blacks participating in peaceful marches and sitins, to force Southern states to implement the Federal desegregation laws in schools and public accommodations. Down came the "whites only" notices in bused, hotels, trains, restaurants, sporting events, restrooms and on park benches that once could be found everywhere throughout the South. Gone were the restrictions that prevented blacks voting, Gone, too, were the hideous lynchings, which since the Civil War had caused the death of thousands of innocent blacks—hanged without trial by white mobs. However, even today, poor, uneducated lacks do not always receive the same degree of justice that the more affluent and better educated can expect.[D] Many blacks chose to keep silent about their unfairness instead of resorting to violence. But their silence was also problem provoking: on the one hand, silence would build up a lot of complaints and hatred in their minds, thus resulting in a negative approach to life and everything; on the other hand, silence would give the whites an impression that the blacks take the reality for granted and put. more racial discrimination on them.[E] Unemployed fathers would on occasion walk out of their homes and never return. Children neglected by their parents turned in some instances to drugs and crimes. There are more than 700 murders a year in cities like New York, Detroit, Los Angeles and Houston, and most of these deaths are of blacks killed by blacks. The black ghettos are dangerous both for blacks and non-blacks.[F] Radical blacks like the Black panthers demanded a free black state within the Union, and advocated violence to achieve that end and to protect themselves against what they felt was police brutality toward blacks. For a while, violence overshadowed the influence of the greatly respected pacifist black, Martin Luther King, Jr. , who had provided the inspiration and leadership for those devoted to a peaceful change and whose murder in 1968 stunned America.
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填空题human
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填空题clen ch
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填空题汉译英。(南京师范大学2008研,考试科目:基础英语) 劳动的家庭是有规律有组织的。我的祖父是一个中国标本式的农民,到八九十岁还非耕田不可,不耕田就会害病,直到临死前不久还在地里劳动。祖母是家庭的组织者,一切生产事务由她管理分派。每年除夕,分派好一年的工作以后,天还没亮,母亲就第一个起身烧火做饭去了,接着听见祖父起来的声音,接着大家都离开床铺,喂猪的喂猪,砍柴的砍柴,挑水的挑水。母亲在家庭里极能够任劳任怨,她的和蔼的性格使她从没有打骂过我们一次,而且也没有和任何人吵过架。因此,虽在这样的大家庭里,长幼叔伯妯娌相处都很和睦。母亲同情贫苦的人——这是她朴素的阶级意识——虽然自己不富裕,还周济和照顾比自己更穷的亲戚。她自己是很节省的。父亲有时吸点旱烟,喝点酒,母亲管束着我们,不允许我们沾染上一点。母亲那种劳动简朴的习惯,母亲那种宽厚仁慈的态度,至今还在我心中留有深刻的印象。
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填空题对口支援
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填空题CHINESE TO ENGLISH. 湖泊奇妙无比。苍鹭(Heron)在岸边缓缓漫步,翠鸟(Kingfisher)和杜鹃欢叫着从阳光里飞入树荫,火鸡模样的大鸟在枯枝间忙碌,鹰在头上盘旋。我们毋庸为时间担忧,可以从容地欣赏周围的一切。我乘坐的独木舟船头坐着个男孩,他用简陋的弹弓(sling)发射石弹击打飞鸟。他摆出漂亮的架势瞄准飞鸟,却一次又一次地偏离目标;鸟总是飞出他的射程。他把弹弓塞回衬衣内。我移开目光。 湖水与河水都如热带雨林中的树叶那样乳浊;那水是面纱,是窗帘,是画屏。
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填空题当谈到细节时 he is very careful.
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填空题
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填空题I mink it is ______ unlikely that he will get the job;however, it may be worth a try. 我想他不太可能得到那份工作,然而也许值得一试。
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填空题It seems the young Albert Einstein was never exactly an ordinary child. When he was given a c______ at the age of five, it ignited his i______ . Not only was the young Albert passionately c______, he was also remarkably p______ and would not easily give up on a problem. Alberts development was also s______ by the company of intelligent adults such as an uncle of his who was an engineer and a medical student who was a friend of the family. Einstein was i______ to take up mathematics by Euclidean geometry. His true g______ lay in his ability to express c______ ideas in simple language. By the age of twenty-six Einstein had already produced his most famous work, although he never stopped looking for answers.
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