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文学
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填空题Nick Carraway functions as both the narrator and a character in Fitzgerald" s best-known work______.
填空题In this part,you are asked to translate the following paragraph into Chinese.(中国矿业大学2006研,考试科目:基础英语)I am fond of loitering about country churches, and this was so delightfully situated that it frequently attracted me. It stood on a knoll, round which a small stream made a beautiful bend and then wound its way trough a long reach of soft meadow scenery. The church was surrounded by yew trees which seemed almost coeval with itself. Its tall Gothic spire shot up lightly from among them, with rooks and crows generally wheeling about it. I was seated there one still sunny morning watching two laborers who were digging a grave. I was told that the new-made grave was for the only son of a poor widow. While I was meditating on the distinctions of worldly rank which extend thus down into the very dust, the toll of the bell announced the approach of the funeral. They were the obsequies of poverty with which pride had nothing to do. A coffin of plainest materials, without pall or other covering, was borne by some of the villagers. The sexton walked before with an air of cold indifference. There were no mock mourners in the trappings of affected woe, but there was one real mourner who feebly tottered after the corpse. It was the aged mother of the dec eased, the poor old woman whom I had seen seated on the steps of the altar. She was supported by a humble friend, who was endeavoring to comfort her. A few of the neighboring poor had joined the train, and some children of the village were running hand in hand, now shouting with unthinking mirth, and now pausing to gaze with childish curiosity on the grief of the mourner.
填空题As we are now only at the get-acquainted stage, we deem it rather(18)to take into consideration the matter of sole agency. In our opinion, it would be better for both of us to try out a period of cooperation to see how things prove. Also, it would be necessary for you to test the(19)of our products at your end and to continue your efforts in building a larger turnover to(20)the sole agency arrangement.
填空题{{B}}Passage One{{/B}}
{{B}}How to Get Preserved as a Fossil{{/B}} 56. {{U}}Unfortunately the
changes of any animal become a fossil are not very great, and{{/U}} 57. {{U}}the
chances of a fossil then being discovered many thousand of years later are even
less.{{/U}} 58. {{U}}It is not surprising that all the millions of animals that have
lived in the past.{{/U}} 59. {{U}}we actually have fossils of only very
few.{{/U}} 60. {{U}}There are several ways into which animals and
plants may' become fossilized.{{/U}} 61. {{U}}First, it is essential that the
remains are buried, as though dead animals and plants are quickly destroyed{{/U}}
62. {{U}}if they remain exposed the air.{{/U}} Plants rot, while insects and hyenas
cat the flesh and bones of animals. 63. {{U}}Finally, the few remaining bones soon
disintegrate the hot sun and pouring rain.{{/U}} If buried in suitable conditions,
however, animal and plant remains will be preserved. 64. {{U}}The same chemicals
change sand and silt into hard rock will also enter the animal and plant remains
and make them hard too.{{/U}} 65. {{U}}When this happens, we say that they become
fossilized.{{/U}}
填空题When I ______ (come), the typist ______ (type) the material which I ______ (give) her the day before.
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填空题Neither
of them
were
in good health,
but
both
worked
very hard.
填空题What are you going to ______ your new book? 你将给你的新书起什么名字?
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填空题Days and nights are very long on the moon,where one day is as long as two weeks on the earth.
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Benjamin Franklin is known for his ______ (practice) concerns and _____ (politics) enthusiasm.
填空题Directions:
For this part, you are required to write a letter to a company to apply for a position of sales representative. You should write at least 100 words according to the suggestions given below in Chinese:
(1)申请营销专员职位;
(2)说明自己的专业、经历及优势;
(3)请求面谈。
填空题Author______Title______ He felt that his luck was better than usual today. When he had reported for work that morning he had expected to be shut up in the relief office at a clerk"s job, for he had been hired downtown as a clerk, and he was glad to have, instead, the freedom of the streets and welcomed, at least at first, the vigor of the cold and even the blowing of the hard wind. But on the other hand he was not getting on with the distribution of the checks.
填空题尽管天气不好, the football game went on and the audience stayed there, cheering for their favorite players.
填空题英汉互译:英译汉。(国际关系学院英语笔译、口译专业2011研,考试科目:英语翻译基础)I established a new High Level Panel on Global Sustainability, co-chaired by the Presidents of Finland and South Africa. I am sure you will be pleased to know that Administrator of the China Meteorological Administration, and a distinguished alumnus of this university, is a member of the Panel. I have asked this Panel to offer a vision for sustainable development and prosperity for a planet under increasing pressure. I have asked them to find integrated solutions to the global challenges of poverty, climate change, water, food, and energy security. These problems are interconnected. The Panel will report back by the end of 2011. Its work will venture into many issues, many sectors, many cross-cutting areas. I have asked the Panel members to think big, to be bold and ambitious not to shy away from controversy. And I have asked them to be strategic and practical. Their recommendations must be politically viable and lead to tangible progress. Their findings will feed into intergovernmental processes, such as the climate change negotiations. They will play a key part in the Rio 2012 Earth Summit, twenty years after world leaders agreed on Agenda 21, our blueprint for sustainable development.We are seeing some progress on important issues, such as adaptation, technology cooperation and steps to reduce deforestation. I also believe there has been some progress on financing, both on mobilizing 30 billion dollars of fast-start funding over the next three years and also on the 100 billion dollars a year envisioned by 2020. I am, however, concerned about slow progress in other areas. Among them: setting mitigation targets, monitoring and verification , and the future of the Kyoto Protocol. We must not allow momentum to stall. We must not jeopardize the gains we have made.The UNFCCC process must go forward in Cancun in December. I am therefore calling on all member states, all governments of the world to work together in a spirit of compromise and common sense. Progress on adaptation, technology cooperation, deforestation and finance can achieve powerful results, results that can offer hope and change the lives of hundreds of millions of people, particularly the world"s poorest and most vulnerable.
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abrasive
adaptable
bath
behalf
challenge
clear
crowded
distracting
edge
face
find
foot
go
gold
hospital
key
land
live
open
other
patient
ration
recognize
same
soul
take
trace
track
world
worthy
All three winners of this year"s Nobel Prize for Medicine are eminent scientists, but Mario Capecchi is the one with the spiral-staircase stow: the starving, homeless Italian street kid who found his way to America, to Harvard, to Utah, ever the refugee, before finally arriving at eternal glory and the Nobel Prize.
It"s in many ways a familiar tale, Oliver Twist meets Albert Einstein, the pilgrim who comes to the promised land expecting, as he says, "the roads to be paved in
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. What I found actually was just opportunity." But his story also has enough nice serrated edges to
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our theories about genes and genius and what really makes us who we are.
You could say the visionary geneticist had a
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genetic edge. Capecchi"s grandmother was a painter, his uncle a renowned physicist, and his mother Lucy Ramberg an expat American poet
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in a chalet in the Italian Alps when Mario was born in 1937. She had fallen in with a group of bohemian writers who believed, her son says with just a
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of bemusement, that "they could wipe out Fascism and Nazism with a pen." After the Gestapo came in 1941 to take her to Dachau, Mario
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on the streets. He was 4 years old.
All children have their own normal; they have not yet seen any worlds other than their own. Capecchi"s
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was an uncontrolled experiment in resilience. "I never felt sorry for myself," he recalls. "Children are remarkably
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. Put them in a situation, and they simply will do whatever it is they need to do."
For his band of urchins, that meant a cunning methodical pursuit of food and shelter. They worked together like raptors, one child
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the street vendors so another could steal the fruit. Capecchi finally landed in a
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in Reggio Emilia, where he could starve more systematically. The daily
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was a piece of bread and some chicory coffee, and to keep the children from running off, "they
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all of our clothes away." He lay on a bed with no sheets, no blankets, feverish with hunger. It was there he learned the art of
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plotting as he imagined all the ways he might escape and the obstacles he"d
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to do so.
In 1945, when American soldiers liberated Dachau, Lucy went hunting for her son. She scoured hospital records, searching for more than a year before she
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him down. It was on his 9th birthday, Oct. 6, 1946, that the mother he scarcely
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arrived, a new Tyrolean outfit in hand, including the hat with the feather. She took him to Rome, where he had his first
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in six years, and ultimately to the New World, where they settled in Quaker Commune outside Philadelphia.
Creativity, Capecchi once said, comes from "the
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juxtaposition" of life experiences. His old life and new one certainly rubbed each other raw. Some teachers wrote off the feral boy who had never set
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in a school and spoke no English; but others gave him paints and told him to make murals to communicate. One day he was beating up the
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third-graders, since that was what he knew how to do. And soon he was beating up older kids on
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of his peers. "That gave me a position," he says, "some social standing."
Capecchi ultimately
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his way to Harvard, the center of the universe in the early days of molecular biology. But he felt
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by colleagues whose rivalries consumed them as much as their research. So he set off for the University of Utah, where the sight lines suited him better and collegiality was the
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to success. He lives in a house high over a canyon. "I love looking across long distance," he says. "I think it sort of
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up my mind."
This vista is necessary for his work as well as his
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. Capecchi looks at science as a series of circles: the smallest circle is the one in which everyone is doing the
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thing. As you move farther out "fewer people are willing to go there, but you"re charting new area.
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too far. Step out of bounds, and you"re in science fiction. So you have to be careful, But you want to be as close to the
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as possible." When he first proposed manipulating mouse genes to help model disease, the NIH gatekeepers thought he was over the line, "Not
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of pursuit," they said of his grant proposals. Happily Capecchi ignored them. Now he triumphed in spite of his ordeals.
填空题We shall be glad if you see ______ it that amendment is cabled ______ any delay, as our goods have been packed ready ______ shipment for quite some time.
填空题The workers asked for a raise and threatened to go on strike if their request was not ______. 工人们要求加薪,而且威胁说如果要求得不到满足就罢工。
