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填空题I realized, to my embarrassment, that I had eaten the e______ of exactly half a cake.
填空题{{B}}Direction: Pick out the appropriate expression from the eight choices and
complete the following dialogue by blackening the corresponding letter on the
answer sheet.{{/B}}
A. Of course not. B. What's wrong with you?
C. I'm so glad you could come. D. Yes, but why? E.
Just so-so. F. Thank you!
G. But he panned to. H. Why don't you...
填空题He walks as if he (have) ______ a wooden leg.
填空题In the days when coal was so
widely
used,
no one
realized how soon and how
complete
oil would replace
it
.
填空题______is the technical name for the oppositeness relation.
填空题汉译英。(大连海事大学2009研,考试科目:基础英语) “吹面不寒杨柳风”,不错的,像母亲的手抚摸着你。风里带来些新翻的泥土气息,混着青草味儿,还有各种花的香都在微微润湿着的空气里酝酿。鸟儿将窠巢安在繁花嫩叶当中,高兴起来了,呼朋引伴地卖弄清脆的喉咙,唱出宛转的曲子,与轻风流水庆和着。牛背上牧童的短笛,这时候也成天嘹亮地响。 雨是最寻常的,一下就是两三天。可别恼。看,像牛毛,像花针,像细丝,密密地斜织着,人家屋顶上全笼着一层簿烟。树叶子却绿得发亮,小草儿也青得逼你的眼。傍晚时候,有撑起伞慢慢走着的人;还有地里工作的农夫,披着蓑,戴着笠。他们的房屋,稀稀疏疏的,在雨里静默着。 天上风筝渐渐多了,地上孩子也多了。城里乡下,家家户户,老老小小,也赶趟儿似的,一个个都出来了。舒活舒活筋骨,抖擞精神,各做各的一份儿事去了。“一年之计在于春”,刚起头儿,有的是工夫,有的是希望。
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。 For years, users toiling under the 640 KB (1) memory constraints of MS-DOS have sufFered severe memory (2) problems. Help is available now from DOS extenders. This software technique enables MS-DOS programs to access up to 16 MB of (3) memory on an 80286-based PC and up to 4 GB on an 80386-based PC. (4) 3.0 from Microsoft Corp. is the most widely publicized package to use a DOS (5) . 供选择的答案: (1) extender (2) expanded (3) internal (4) argument (5) conventional (6) management (7) protected (8) X-window (9) Windows (10) security
填空题The fact that many people have an______(instinct)dread of snakes puzzles scientists.
填空题A. There is nothing more disappointing than arriving at an airport overseas to discover that your baggage has been left behind. At best you will have to put up with wearing the clothes you stand up in for hours or days, until the airline reunites you with your luggage. At worst, you may be in a different climate zone, thousand of miles from home and forced to wear wholly unsuitable clothes.
B. Even efficient transfer airports, such as Amsterdam, Copenhagen, Singapore and Zurich have their bad days. The risk of baggage being lost when changing planes is higher than average at certain airports. Even the United States has problems— Miarni airport is well known for luggage going missing when transatlantic passengers make immediate connections for destinations in Latin America.
C. In normal circumstances the system works well. But extra security checks at airports and problems with air traffic combine to cause delayed flights. All this can cause the baggage system to fail. Then there is the possibility of human error, or an accident in which the destination label is torn off.
D. The system works like this. Airlines insist on exaggerated check-in times (which require passengers to report to the airport as given time before departure) designed to allow sufficient time for baggage to pass through the airport and be loaded on to the plane. Minimum connecting times (MCTs) are the shortest time it takes to transfer between two flights. These, too, are exaggerated to allow for baggage transfers.
E. Although airlines rarely reveal how many cases they lose, it is a fact of life that sooner or later regular travelers will be parted from their luggage. Even the best airlines slip up from time to time, and it is impossible for any carrier to guarantee that a passenger"s checked luggage will go on the same flight, particularly when a journey calls for one or more changes of aircraft.
F. These problems can become severe at large transfer airports, known as "hubs", because of the large number of bags that are processed. Last year, for example, London"s Heathrow airport handled more than 41 million passengers, of whom nine million were changing planes. British Airways alone handled two million transfer passengers at Heathrow, with most making the one-mile transfer between Terminal 1 (for Domestic and European flights) and Terminal 4 (for long-distance flights).
G. You should choose direct flights whenever possible and check in well before the official time. If a change of plane is unavoidable, or makes your flight less expensive, then try to fly the same airline throughout. Try to allow more connecting time by taking an earlier flight to the transfer airport, and make sure you label your luggage inside and out with your home and holiday addresses. Don"t forget to include the flight numbers. If, after all this, your luggage still goes missing, you must contact the appropriate airline official in the baggage hall and complete a property irregularity report (PIR). This must be done before leaving the airport.
Order:
A→41→42→43→44→45→G
填空题______ is a credit that is added another banks (usually the advising bank) confirmation to the beneficiary. This constitutes a definite responsibility of ______ in addition to the undertaking of the issuing bank.
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填空题Her doctor was ______ in not sending her straight to a specialist. 都是医生的过错,没有把她送到专科医生那里治疗。
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 blanks. There are two extra choices, which do not
fit in any of the blanks. Mark your answers on the ANSWER SHEET. Given all the roiling debates about how America's children
should be taught, it may come as a surprise to learn that students spend less
than 15% of their time in school. While there's no doubt that school is
important, a clutch of recent studies reminds us that parents are even more so.
A study published earlier this month by researchers at North Carolina State
University, Brigham Young University and the University of California-Irvine,
for example, finds that parental involvement-checking homework, attending school
meetings and events, discussing school activities at home-has a more powerful
influence on students' academic performance than anything about the school the
students attend. {{U}} 1 {{/U}}______ So parents matter-a point made
clear by decades of research showing that a major part of the academic advantage
held by children from affluent families comes from the "concerted cultivation of
children" as compared to the more laissez-faire (let children do what they want)
style of parenting common in working-class families. But this research also
reveals something else: that parents, of all backgrounds, don't need to buy
expensive educational toys or digital devices for their kids in order to give
them an edge. {{U}} 2 {{/U}}______ But not just any
talk. Although well-known research by psychologists Betty Hart and Todd Risley
has shown that professional parents talk more to their children than
less-affluent parents-a lot more, resulting in a 30 million "word gap" by the
time children reach age three-more recent research is refining our sense of
exactly what kinds of talk at home foster children's success at school. For
example, a study conducted by researchers at the UCLA School of Public Health
and published in the journal Pediatrics found that two-way adult-child
conversations were six times as potent in promoting language development as
interludes in which the adult did all the talking. {{U}} 3
{{/U}}______ The content of parents' conversations with kids
matters, too. Children who hear talk about counting and numbers at home start
school with much more extensive mathematical knowledge. {{U}} 4
{{/U}}______ While the conversations parents have with their
children change as kids grow older, the effect of these exchanges on academic
achievement remains strong. And again, the way mothers and fathers talk to their
middle-school students makes a difference. Research by Nancy Hill, a professor
at Harvard University's Graduate School of Education, finds that parents play an
important role in what Hill calls "academic socialization"—setting expectations
and making connections between current behavior and future goals (going to
college, getting a good job). {{U}} 5 {{/U}}______ A.
As they grow older, this feeling helps middle- and upper-class kids develop into
assertive advocates for their own interests, while working-class students tend
to avoid asking for help or arguing their own case with teachers.
B. They don't need to drive their offspring to enrichment classes or
test-prep courses. What they need to do with their children is much simpler:
talk. C. Engaging in these sorts of conversations, Hill
reports, has a greater impact on educational accomplishment than volunteering at
a child's school or going to PTA (parent-teacher association) meetings, or even
taking children to libraries and museums. D. And a third study
concludes that schools would have to increase their spending by more than $1,000
per pupil in order to achieve the same results that are gained with parental
involvement (not likely in this stretched economic era).
E. Engaging in this reciprocal back-and-forth gives children a chance to try out
language for themselves, and also gives them the sense that their thoughts and
opinions matter. F. Another study, published in the Review of
Economics and Statistics, reports that the effort put forth by parents has a
bigger impact on their children's educational achievement than the effort
expended by either teachers or the students themselves. G.
Psychologist Susan Levine, who led the study on number words, has found that the
amount of talk young children hear about the spatial properties of the physical
world-how big or small or round or sharp objects are-predicts kids'
problem-solving abilities as they prepare to enter kindergarten.
填空题Author____Title____ The wrinkled sea beneath him crawls: He watches from his mountain wall, And like a thunderbolt he falls.
填空题I was just preparing to go to bed when the telephone bell rang.
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填空题She has a (consider) ______ amount of influence on the president.
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填空题Language can never be separated from society. Apart from society there is no language.
