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文学
问答题We do not make mistakes on the basis of race of color. We do not make them because we are male or female, young or old. We do not make mistakes of choice or judgment because we want to make mistakes. We make them because we are human. Mistakes, bad judgments, the stupid things we do are all a part of being human. We cannot hide from who we are. We should not hide from what we do. When we acknowledge our mistakes or errors and face up to our human shortmings, no one can use them against us.
问答题LDC
问答题Outline:A. The great importance of tourist industry for China;B. Problems with China's management of our tourist industry;C. My suggestions on how to improve travel management, especially the travel in big holidays.
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问答题我们将加强U生态文明建设/U、坚持绿色、低碳发展理念,加强资源节约和生态环境保护,大力发展绿色产业和节能环保产业。
问答题innovation-incentive mechanism
问答题Directions: Your friend Mike is a college student, and he is wondering whether he should take a part-time job in a big IT company. Write a letter to him to offer your opinions and suggestions on the issue. You should write about 100 words on Answer sheet 2. Do not sign your name at the end of the letter. Use "Li Hua" instead. You do not need to write the address.
问答题Directions:Studythefollowingtablecarefullyandwriteanarticleonthechangesofpeople'sdailyexpensesinXcity.Inyourarticle,youshouldcoverthefollowingpoints:1)describethechanges,2)analysethereasonsandgiveyourcomments.Youshouldwrite160~200wordsneatlyonAnswerSheet2.
问答题budget deficit
问答题Directions:
You have just received a short message from your father informing that your mother is very ill and you want to ask for one week"s leave. Write a note (便笺) to your Office Head Mr. Wang about it.
You should write about 100 words on ANSWER SHEET 2.
Do not sign your own name at the end of the note. Use "Li Ming" instead.
Do not write the address.
问答题For most of human history, the dominant concerns about energy have centered on the benefit side. Inadequacy of energy resources of the technologies for harvesting, converting, and distributing those resources has meant insufficient energy benefits to human beings and hence inconvenience, and constraints on its growth. The 1970's, then, represented an turning point, Energy was seen to be getting costlier in all respects. It began to be believable that excessive energy costs could pose threats on a par with those of insufficient supply. It also became possible to think that expanding some forms of energy supply could create costs exceeding the benefits. The crucial question at the beginning of the 1990's is whether the trend that began in the 1970's will prove to be temporary or permanent. Is the era of cheap energy really over, or will a combination of new resources, new technology and changing geopolitics bring it back? One key determinant of the answer is the staggering scale of energy demand brought forth by 100 years of population growth and industrial demand. Except for the huge pool of oil underlying the Middle East, the cheapest oil and gas are already gone. Even if a few more giant oil fields are discovered, they will make little difference against consumption on today's scale.Oil and gas will have to come increasingly,for most countries,from deeper in the earth and from imports whose reliability and affordability cannot be guaranteed.
问答题Outlines: 1) Brief introduction of the sandstorms in North China. 2) Analyze the reasons. 3) My suggestions.
问答题资源节约型与环境保护型社会
问答题Translate the following passage into Chinese. Write your translation on the ANSWER SHEET.(20 points) Although art historians have spent decades demystifying Van Gogh"s legend, they have done little to diminish his vast popularity. Auction prices still soar, visitors overpopulate Van Gogh exhibitions, and The Starry Night remains * ubiquitous on dormitory and kitchen walls. So complete is Van Gogh"s global * apotheosis that Japanese tourists now make pilgrimages to Auvers to sprinkle their relatives" ashes on his grave. What accounts for the endless appeal of the Van Gogh myth? It has at least two deep and powerful sources. At the most primitive level, it provides a satisfying and nearly universal revenge fantasy disguised as the story of heroic sacrifice to art. Anyone who has ever felt isolated and unappreciated can identify with Van Gogh and hope not only for a spectacular redemption but also to put critics and doubting relatives to shame. At the same time, the myth offers an alluringly simplistic conception of great art as the product, not of particular historical circumstances and the artists" painstaking calculations, but of the naive and spontaneous outpourings of a mad, holy fool. * ubiquitous;existing or found everywhere * apotheosis; the raising of a person to the highest possible honour and glory
问答题1.上大学的费用(tuition and fees)可以通过多种途径解决。 2.哪种途径适合我(说明理由)。
问答题Directions: In this part, you are asked to write an essay according to the information below. You should write more than 150 words neatly on ANSWER SHEET 2.近年来,火车提速一直是一个热门话题。对此,有些人持肯定态度,认为火车提速能带来很多便利。但也有些人持否定态度,他们认为火车提速带来的弊要多于利。请谈谈你的看法。
问答题Should We Trace and Reclaim Cultural Relics Lost Overseas?1.有人赞同到海外追回流失的文物; 2.有人则反对;3.你的看法。
问答题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}}
Your son kicked his ball through your neighbor's window. Write a letter to tell your neighbor
1) your regret at hearing the news,
2) your intention to compensate for the damage,
3) your apology.
You should write about 100 words on Answer Sheet 2. Do not sign your own name at the end of the letter. Use "Li Ming" instead. You de not need to write the address.
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问答题Despite the web, we watch more television than ever.
In the chaos of today"s media and technology brawl- iPod vs. Zune, Google vs. Yahoo, windows vs. Linux, Intel vs. AMD--we can declare one unlikely winner. Standing tall in a field of new tech wonders, it"s a geezer technology that are invented in the 1920s and commercialized in the 1940s, and it"s still more powerful than any thing created since. (1)
As you try to figure out where consumer infotech is going, and what it means for society, remember this big, central reality: People just want more television.
If you doubt it, look at today"s biggest news in tech. It continually centers on new ways to bring consumers the thing they crave above all else. (2)
Sony flooded the recent Consumer Electronics Show with products that put Intemet video on your TV set, as did almost every other consumer electronics company. At the simultaneous Macworld Expo, Apple chief Steve Jobs introduced Apple TV. which does the same thing.
Verizon said it will soon offer live TV on cellphone screens. It will also sell full-length programs for viewing whenever you want. Put it all together, and we have achieved a nirvana that didn"t exist even a year ago: unlimited television available 24 / 7 on every screen you own.
It"s no surprise, of course. (3)
Ever since the basic facts of steadily multiplying processor power and bandwidth became apparent, seers have confidently predicted this day. They just as confidently predicted what it would mean: traditional television"s demise.
Once the World Wide Web appeared in the mid-1990s, the future looked very clear. Boring old TV, the scheduled programs that come to you through a coaxial cable or satellite dish or antenna, would fade away.
(4)
Which is exactly the opposite of what has happened. Despite many Net Age alternatives, we Americans today watch more boring old TV than ever, which is saying something.
How can that be? My theory is the Two-Liter Coke Principle. The Coca--Cola company discovered long ago that if it could get people to bring home bigger bottles of Coke, those people would drink more than they used to. Just getting more Coke in front of them increased their consumption. It seems to be the same with TV. Put more of it in front of people-- over 100 channels in many homes--and people will watch more.
Seen from this perspective, the latest announcements of new TV-related technology look simply like additional ways to put more TV in front of American consumers. The supposed threat from the Internet was that we"d cut back on TV as we spent more time on MySpace or in Second Life. We may well spend more time on such new Net attractions, but we"re unlikely to take that time away from video viewing. We"re more likely to cut back on things we consider less important, like sleep.
(5)
No one has evaluated TV better than the great New Yorker essayist E. B. White, who in 1938 wrote, "We shall stand or fall by television, of that I am sure."
We still don"t know which it wilt be, but his assessment looks truer than ever.
