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填空题As the lexical words carry the main content of a language while the grammatical ones serve to link its different parts together, the lexical words are also known as content words and grammatical ones ______.
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填空题Translate the passage into English.(北京大学2004研,考试科目:专业能力) 臣亮言:先帝创业未半,而中道崩殂;今天下三分,益州疲敝,此诚危急存亡之秋也。然侍卫之臣,不懈于内;忠志之士,忘身于外者,盖追先帝之殊遇,欲报之于陛下也。诚宜开张圣听,以光先帝遗德,恢弘志士之气;不宜妄自菲薄,引喻失义,以塞忠谏之路也。 宫中府中,俱为一体;陟罚臧否,不宜异同;若有作奸犯科,及为忠善者,宜付有司,论其刑赏,以昭陛下平明之理;不宜偏私,使内外异法也。侍中、侍郎郭攸之、费依、董允等,此皆良实,志虑忠纯,是以先帝简拔以遗陛下。愚以为宫中之事,事无大小,悉以咨之,然后施行,必得裨补阙漏,有所广益。将军向宠,性行淑均,晓畅军事,试用之于昔日,先帝称之日“能”,是以众议举宠为督。愚以为营中之事,事无大小,悉以咨之,必能使行阵和睦,优劣得所也。亲贤臣,远小人,此先汉所以兴隆也;亲小人,远贤臣,此后汉所以倾颓也。先帝在时,每与臣论此事,未尝不叹息痛恨于桓、灵也!侍中、尚书、长史、参军,此悉贞亮死节之臣也,愿陛下亲之、信之,则汉室之隆,可计日而待也。 臣本布衣,躬耕于南阳,苟全性命于乱世,不求闻达于诸侯。先帝不以臣卑鄙,猥自枉屈,三顾臣于草庐之中,谘臣以当世之事,由是感激,遂许先帝以驱驰。后值倾覆,受任于败军之际,奉命于危难之间,尔来二十有一年矣。先帝知臣谨慎,故临崩寄臣以大事也。受命以来,夙夜忧虑,恐托付不效,以伤先帝之明。故五月渡泸,深入不毛。今南方已定,甲兵已足,当奖帅三军,北定中原,庶竭驽钝,攘除奸凶,兴复汉室,还于旧都。此臣所以报先帝而忠陛下之职分也。至于斟酌损益,进尽忠言,则攸之、依、允等之任也。 愿陛下托臣以讨贼兴复之效,不效则治臣之罪,以告先帝之灵;若无兴德之言,则责攸之、依、允等之慢,以彰其咎。陛下亦宜自谋,以谘诹善道,察纳雅言,深追先帝遗诏。臣不胜受恩感激!今当远离,临表涕零,不知所云。
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填空题______ honest man
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填空题______was successful in two fields of activity which did not seem compatible with one another; he was a very successful businessman and a very remarkable contemporary poet at the same time.
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填空题A teacher is someone who communicates information or skill SO that someone else may learn.Parents are the (51) teachers.Just by living with their child and (52) their every day activities with him,they teach him their language,their values and their man— ners.Information and skills difficult to teach (53) family living are taught in a school by a person (54) special occupation is teaching. Before 1900 it (55) widely assumed that a man was qualified to teach if he could read and write and (56) qualified if he knew arithmetic.With modest (57) like these,it is no (58) that teachers had low salaries and little prestige.Literature and history frequently portray teachers (59) fools and ignoramuses. By the late 1 9th century,there were (60) that the status of teachers was slowly (61) .Great educators such as Mann and Henry Barnard,and innovative thinkers such as Dewey and Parker began to command a (62) that in a few decades had to some (63) permeated classrooms in the United States.Progress was more glacial than meteoric,how ever, (64) the last half of the century. In the 20th century the status of teachers rose as the standards (65) their education rose.By 1950 the average teacher had an education that greatly exceeded that of the average citizen.
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填空题There will be more than three hundreds students taking part in the sports meeting . A. will be B. three hundreds C. taking D. sports meeting
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填空题So great is our passion for doing things for ourselves that we are becoming increasingly less dependent on specialized labor.
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填空题The first electric lamp had two carbon rods from which vapor served to conduct the current across the gap.A. The firstB. from whichC. servedD. across
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填空题A. But why? B. I'm glad to hear it. C. I don't think I've had the pleasure.D. I forgive you. E. Congratulations ! F. Don't worry about it.G. By the way. H. I'm afraid not.
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填空题In R______Assimilation, a following sound is influencing a preceding sound.
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填空题Author______Title______ It was father"s idea that both he and mother should try to entertain the people who came to eat at our restaurant. I cannot now remember his words but he gave the impression of one about to become in some obscure way a kind of public entertainer.
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填空题 David Cameron, 40, the leader of Britain's Conservative Party, just looks handsome. His appeal has propelled the Tories to a consistent lead in opinion polls for the first time since Tony Blair's 1997 victory. That has infused Britain's Conservatives with a sensation so unfamiliar, they barely recognize it: optimism. Surprised at this turn of fortune, some are already mythologizing the man behind it. {{U}} {{U}} 6 {{/U}} {{/U}}Indeed, Cameron and his wife Samantha-the daughter of a baronet-are among London's most sought-after party guests. Actually, Cameron has more in common with a certain British politician than he does with J.F.K. Whether nodding elegantly to recovering drug addicts at a health center north of Aberdeen or charming Scottish journalists on the train journey to Edinburgh, the person whom Cameron resembles more than any other is a young Blab'. He has the same brow-furrowing desire not only to understand those with whom he is having conversation with, but to empathize with them; the same rootless accent that in Britain indicates an easy start in life. {{U}} {{U}} 7 {{/U}} {{/U}}. Yet the time might be ripe for Cameron. Every second week he makes a raid from what he calls "the Westminster bubble" to some farther-flung area of the kingdom, meeting as many people as possible. "Obviously," he says, "in politics, people want to have a look at you and understand who you are and what makes you tick." That's where the trouble begins. It's easy enough to locate Cameron's heart; that's with his family. He and Samantha have three children under 5 and he says he spends most of his home life "knee-deep in nappies and crying children." {{U}} {{U}} 8 {{/U}} {{/U}}Unlike Blair and Brown, Cameron doesn't show a strong love for the U.S. And in a departure from his predecessors, Cameron rarely invokes the name of the Conservative's biggest icon: Margaret Thatcher. "To me, Mrs. Thatcher-it's all a long time in the past," says Cameron. "People are voting at the next election who were born after Mrs. Thatcher left office." Many Conservatives of Cameron's generation believe that their party needs to reclaim the middle ground so brilliantly colonized by Blair and distance itself from the fiercely ideological course it charted during the Thatcher era. "We're seen as the nasty party," says Barker, a member of Cameron's campaign team. {{U}} {{U}} 9 {{/U}} {{/U}}He's also promoting a doctrine he calls "modem, compassionate Conservatism," which is "about helping those people who can get left behind." In a nod to a nation where opposing global warming has become a semi-religions duty, he claims to be more environmentally friendly than Labour. Cameron's slogan in local elections last May was "Vote blue, go green." That sort of talk has worried some of the party faithful, but Cameron wants his big ideas to appeal across party lines. "You have to do what Bill Clinton did and build a big tent," says Dale. But even Dale would like Cameron to signal to traditional Tories that "the old issues will be treated as seriously as the new ones."{{U}} {{U}} 10 {{/U}} {{/U}}So far, though, Cameron has avoided making many explicit policy statements, relying instead on warm and fuzzy ideas like a belief in "social responsibility" that he says will empower business, individuals and local government. A. Gordon Brown, is troubled by a more leaden style, a darker visage and a government that is losing popularity, largely because of the mess in Iraq. B. To change that image, Cameron has engaged in conspicuously un-Conservative-like behavior, traveling widely and posting a confessional blog at www.webcameron.org.uk. C. The wellsprings of his political conviction are harder to trace. D. But in Britain's red-meat political and media landscape, such a warm and fuzzy style is rarely enough. Popular attitudes to politicians are still set by the tabloids. E. And like Blair a decade ago-when he was dumping his party's traditions to appeal to a wider constituency-Cameron inspires suspicion as well as excitement. F. Iain Dale, who writes a Conservative blog, speaks of Cameron's "Kennedyesque glamour." He thinks that Cameron has a lot in common with J. F. Kennedy. G. That might mean an open repetition of the Tories' traditional claim to be the party of low taxation. Or-always a favorite with the right wing-blaming the European Union for Britain's ills.
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填空题The Victorian Age in English literature was largely an age of prose, especially of the______.
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填空题A. No, I didn'tB. How about MondayC. I had a very nice weekendD. What about youE. Sort ofF. I feel tired todayG. That sounds like a funH. I bet you studiedRomel: Hi, Nicole. Did you have a good weekend?Nicole: Yes, I did. But (56) .Romel: Really? Why?Nicole: Well, on Saturday I cleaned the house and played tennis. Then on Sunday I hiked in the country.Romel: And (57) , too.Nicole: Yeah. I studied on Sunday evening. (58) ?Romel: Well, I didn't clean the house and I didn't study. I stayed in bed and watched TV.Nicole: (59) , but did you exercise?Romel: (60) . I played golf on my computer!
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填空题It looks ______ it would rain.
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填空题Nowadays most companies don't judge an employee simply 根据其所受的教育.
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填空题A man of humble ______,Lincoln eventually became President of the United States through his own efforts.林肯出身贫寒,但他通过自己的努力最终成为美国总统。
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