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填空题______, by Ezra Pound, employs the complex association of scholarly lore, anthropology , modern history and personages, private history and Witticism, and obscure literary interpolations in various languages.
填空题Most of her poems were not published ______ her death in 1886. 她的大部分诗作直到1886年她死了之后才发表。
填空题Many job seekers are polite enough to drop their interviewer a note a day or two after they have been interviewed.
填空题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} You are going to read a list of headings
and a text about the Deep Impact by NASA; Choose the most suitable heading from
the list A- F for each numbered paragraph (41 --45). The first paragraph
and the last two paragraphs of the text are not numbered. There is one extra
heading which you don't need to use. Mark your answers on Answer Sheet 1.
A. Revelation of the nature of comets B. A
perfect representative of the comets C. Hoping for the
best D. Right time and right place for the Impact
E. What to expect of this Deep Impact? F. Mystery in the
heavens On Monday at 1:52 a.m. ET, a probe deployed by a NASA
spacecraft 83 million miles from home will smash at 23,000 mph into an ancient
comet the size of Manhattan, blasting a hole perhaps 14 stories deep.
41. ( ) Launched in January, NASA's $333 million
Deep Impact mission is designed to answer questions that scientists have long
had about comets, the ominous icebergs of space. This is the first time any
space agency has staged such a deliberate crash. Scientists hope images
transmitted by the probe and its mother ship will tell them about conditions in
the early solar system, when comets and planets, including Earth, were formed.
The team hopes to release photos of the impact as soon as they are received from
the craft. NASA and observatories across the nation will be releasing
webcasts. 42. ( ) At the very least, NASA
says, knowing how deep the probe dives into the comet could settle the debate
over whether comets are compact ice cubes or porous snow cones. "We need to dig
as deep a hole as possible," says mission science chief Michael A'Hearn of the
University of Maryland. Until now, the closest scientists have come to a
comet was when NASA's Stardust mission passed within 167 miles of the comet Wild
2 last year, collecting comet dust that is bound for a return to Earth in
January. The most famous date with a comet occurred when an international
spacecraft flotilla greeted Halley's comet in 1986. But these quick looks
examined only the comets' dust and Surface; 43. (
) To the ancients, comets were harbingers of doom, celestial
intruders on the perfection of the heavens that presaged disaster. Modern
astronomers have looked on them more favorably, at least since Edmond Halley's
celebrated 1705 prediction of the return of Halley's comet in 1758 and every 75
years thereafter. Today, scientists believe Tempel 1 (named for Ernst Wilhelm
Leberecht Tempel, who first spotted it in 1867 while searching for comets in the
sky over Marseilles, France) and other comets are windows to the earliest days
of the solar system, 4. 6 billion years ago, when planets formed from the dust
disk surrounding the infant sun. 44. ( )
Deep Impact's copper-plated "impactor"--a 39-inch long, 820-pound
beer-barrel-shaped probe--will be "run over like a penny on a train track" when
it crashes, A'Hearn says. The impactor is equipped with a navigation system to
make sure it smacks into the comet in the right location for the flyby craft's
cameras. On Sunday, the flyby spacecraft will release the probe. Twelve minutes
later, it will beat a hasty retreat with a maneuver aimed at allowing a close
flyby, from 5,348 miles away, with cameras pointed. Fourteen minutes after the
impact, the flyby spacecraft will scoot to within a mere 310 miles for a
close-up of the damage. 45. ( ) Ideally,
everything will line up, and the flyby spacecraft will take images of the crater
caused by the impact. It will go into a "shielded" mode as ice and dust batter
the craft, then emerge to take more pictures. "The realistic worst case is
hitting (the comet) but not having the flyby in the right place," A'Hearn says.
"Basically, we have a bullet trying to hit a second bullet with a third bullet
in the right place at the right time to watch. I'd love to have a
joystick(操纵杆) to control the impactor." Planetary scientists
have "no idea" what sort of crater will result, McFadden says. Predictions
range from a deep but skinny shaft driven into a porous snow cone to a football
stadium-sized excavation in a hard-packed ice ball. But
astronomers should have their answer shortly after impact, which should settle
some questions about the comet's crust and interior. Analysis of the
chemistry of that interior, based on the light spectra given off in the impact's
aftermath, could take much longer.
填空题二年级四班
填空题The more
frequent
a child expresses his
interest
in
an activity, the
stronger
it will become.
填空题People in China generally agree that it is important to celebrate the country"s rich history, but its culture police think there is too much of the wrong kind of celebrating going on. Two agencies, the Ministry of Culture and the State Administration of Cultural Heritage, have banned the promotion of " negative historical figures or literary works" for tourism purposes, theoretically ending a longstanding practice by Chinese cities of playing up their ties to racy cultural icons like the lustful Ximen Qing through festivals, theme parks and merchandise.A few lucky destinations in China, like Mao"s hometown of Shaoshan in Hunan province, are blessed with the notoriety of a state-approved celebrity, allowing them to rake in tourism dollars. But for most Chinese towns, bringing in tourists is hard work, which is made easier if they can stake a claim to someone famous, whether real, mythical or literary. Disputes can flare up among towns claiming to be the original homes of the same popular character. Just before the Ministry of Culture announced the new rules, Loufan county in Shanxi declared itself hometown of the Monkey King, challenging the same claim made first by Lianyungang City in Jiangsu, according to a recent article on Xinhua"s English-language website.Critics say that this kind of cultural infighting is embarrassing to China, especially when attracting foreign dollars is the motive. It is better if these cities manage and protect their own cultural heritage and intangible cultural resources, rather than compete with each other and humiliate themselves.In the past, tourist stunts by Chinese towns have been heavily frowned upon by the public. A sex theme park in southwestern China was demolished before it even opened, after inciting widespread condemnation. Earlier this year, public outcry forced government officials in Zhangjiajie to back away from plans to rename a local mountain " Avatar Hallelujah Mountain" after the popular Hollywood movie. The latest crackdown, however, goes further than any one campaign and promises to lay out strict guidelines for what is appropriate cultural celebration in the coming weeks.
填空题Theres a huge amount of ex______ pressure pushing him to ensure that the resolution becomes policy.
填空题These flowers are extremely ______ (attract) in winter.
填空题When I walked around the classroom. I noticed the students do their homework.
填空题______defines the poet as " man speaking to men," and poetry as " the spontaneous overflow of powerful feelings which originates in emotion recollected in tranquility. "
填空题The price and quantity for the goods of each transaction are to be fixed ______ negotiations by both parties.Each transaction is subject ______ Party As confirmation.
填空题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} You are going to read a list of headings
and a text about network etiquette. Choose the most suitable heading from the
list A -- F for each numbered paragraph (41-45). The first and last paragraphs
of the text are not numbered. There is one extra heading which you don't
need to use. Mark your answers on Answer Sheet 1.
The first two stages in the development of civilized man were
probably the invention of primitive weapons and the discovery of fire, although
nobody knows exactly when he acquired the use of the latter.
41)______Animals have a few cries that serve as signals, but even the
highest apes have not been found able to pronounce words, even with the most
intensive professional instruction. The superior brain of man is
apparently a necessity for the mastering of speech. When man became sufficiently
intelligent, we must suppose that he gradually increased the number of cries for
different purposes. It was a great day when he discovered that speech could be
used for narrative. There are those who think that in this respect picture
language preceded oral language. A man could draw a picture on the wall of his
cave to show in which direction he had gone, or what prey he hoped to catch.
42)______ Two important stages came not so long before the dawn
of written history. The first was the domestication of animals; the second was
agriculture. Agriculture made possible an immense increase in the number of the
human species in the regions where it could be successfully practiced.
43)______ 44)______ These inventions and
discoveries—fire, speech, weapons domestic animals, agriculture, and writing
made the existence of civilized communities possible. From about 3000 B.
C. until the beginning of the Industrial Revolution less than two hundred years
ago there was no technical advance comparable to these. During this long
period man had time to become accustomed to his technique, and to develop the
beliefs and political organizations appropriate to it. There was, of course, an
immense extension in the area of civilized life. At first it had been confined
to the Nile, the Euphrates, the Tigris, and the Indus, but at the end of the
period in question it covered much the greatest part of the inhabitable globe. I
do not mean to suggest that there was no technical progress during the time.
45)______A. Probably picture language and oral language developed side by
side. I am inclined to think that language has been the most important single
factor in the development of man.B. Another fundamental technical advance
was writing, which, like spoken language, developed out of pictures, but as soon
as it had reached a certain stage, it was possible to keep records and transmit
information to people who were not present when the information was given.C.
With the development of civilization, primitive people who lived in caves at
that time badly needed a language, which would help them to communicate with one
another.D. The origin of language is also obscure. No doubt it began very
gradually.E. In fact, there was progress--there were even two inventions of
very great importance, namely, gunpowder and the mariner's compass--but neither
of these can be compared in their revolutionary power to such things as speech
and writing and agriculture.F. These were, at first, only those in which
nature fertilized the soil after each harvest. Agriculture met with violent
resistance from the pastoral nomads, but the agricultural way of life prevailed
in the end because of the physical comforts it provided.G. But industry was
a step in human progress to which subsequently there was nothing comparable
until our own machine age.
填空题He was a ______ person in spite of his great success. 尽管他很成功,他却是个很谦虚的人。
填空题{{U}}Provided you don't let it out to anybody{{/U}}, I will tell you the truth.
填空题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}}You are going to read a text about the state of
college students' mental health, followed by a list of examples. Choose the best
example from the list A-F for each numbered subheading (41-45). There is one
extra example which you do not need to use. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET
1.
The state of college students' mental health continues to
decline. What's the solution? In the months before Massachusetts
Institute of technology sophomore Elizabeth Shin died, she spoke with seven
psychiatrists and one social worker. The psychiatrists diagnosed major
depression; the therapist recommended hospitalization. Shin told a dean that she
was cutting herself and let a professor know that she wanted to commit suicide.
The housemaster of her dorm and two of her friends stayed up nights to watch
her. But it wasn't enough. On April 10, 2000, Elizabeth Shin locked her dorm
room door and set her clothes on fire. Four days later, she was dead.
{{B}}41. Many colleges are running into thorny situation.{{/B}}
Her parents, Kisuk and Cho Hyun Shin, filed suit against MIT, charging its
employees with gross negligence and wrongful death. It's an extreme case, but it
illustrates a problem facing many other schools, as more and more students line
up at counseling centers requiring increasingly intensive therapy or medication
or both. {{B}}42. Students with substantial personality
problems.{{/B}} The number of freshmen reporting less than average
emotional health has been steadily rising since 1985, according to the newest
data from an annual nationwide survey by the University of California-Los
Angeles. Reasons for the decline of college students' mental
health College therapists cite several reasons for the apparent
deterioration in student mental health. Not only has this generation grown up in
the much-maligned era of the disintegrating American family, it is also more
used to therapy and so more likely to seek help. As competition to get into
college gets tougher, students burn out before they even get there. And kids
with severe psychological problems, who in the past wouldn't even have made it.
to college, now take psychotropic drugs that help them succeed.
{{B}}43. The soaring number of visitors to college
psychiatrists.{{/B}} Colleges first created counseling centers for
students who needed career and academic advice, says Robert Gallagher, author of
the counseling center survey and former director of the University of
Pittsburghs' services. As psychological counseling took over, the centers' other
advising functions were packed off to other parts of the campus.
{{B}}44. Inadequacies of college therapy services.{{/B}} The
ballooning caseloads mean there isn't the time or the staff to offer long-term
therapy to any but the most troubled. "You can't just load up with the first 100
students and see them regularly without having openings for new people," says
Gallagher. Instead, colleges focus on getting students over immediate
crises. {{B}}45. What's the solution?{{/B}} Some
schools have tried filling the gap by getting more involved in students' lives.
The University of South Carolina, the University of Nevada-Reno, and Texas
A 30 percent reported at least one
student suicide on their campus last year. [C] "If a student
tells you she took five extra pills over the weekend," says Gertrude Carter,
director of psychological services at Bennington College in Vermont, "it's hard
to tell if that's a grab for attention or an actual threat." [D]
New statistics show that many freshmen arrive on campus depressed and anxious
and feel worse as the year progresses. At the same time, colleges must also
negotiate the legal and emotional pitfalls of caring for their charges, not
children but not yet fully adults. [E] In response to the task
force report, MIT is putting together support teams of physicians, other
health-care professionals, and experienced counselors to spend time in the
dorms; socializing with the students and keeping an eye on them.
[F] One Yale student suffering from anxiety during his sophomore year
rarely saw the same counselor twice. "It felt like the person I was talking to
wasn't really there," he says. After five sessions, he stopped going. "I
wouldn't want to go there again," he says, "but what else is there?"
填空题English______of the 19th century flourished in the forties and in the early fifties.
填空题Wordsmith
填空题国际儿童节
填空题She could not remember what she had dreamed of, {{U}}不管她怎样努力{{/U}}.
