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文学
问答题Directions: In this part, you are required to
write an essay of no less than 150 words. The essay should be based on the
title: Go on a Diet.
问答题Logical subject(中山大学2011年研)
问答题Directions:
You have been rejected by a company and you think it was due to your being a girl/boy. Write a letter of complaint to the President of the board of directors of the company to express your indignation.
You should write about 100 words on ANSWER SHEET Ⅱ. Do not sign your own name at the end of the letter. Use "Li Ming" instead. Do not write the address.
问答题Blank verse
问答题If we can simply pen our life in a world which we like and is beneficial both to others and to ourselves, that will be our fortune and happiness.
问答题体育运动展示了运动员的技能,也展现了其精神面貌。对于观众而言,哪一方面更有吸引力呢?谈谈你的看法。
问答题Recent legal research indicates that incorrect identification is a major factor in many miscarriages of justice. 46)It also suggests that identification of people by witnesses in a courtroom is not as reliable as commonly believed. Recent studies do not support the degree of faith judges, jurors, lawyers and the police have in eyewitness evidence. The Law Commission recently published an educational paper, " Total Recall? The Reliability, of Witness Testimony', as a companion guide to a proposed code of evidence. The paper finds that commonly held perceptions about how our minds work and how well we remember are often wrong. But while human memory is fragile and subject to change, it should not be underestimated. Both common sense and research say memory declines over time. The accuracy of recall and recognition are at their best immediately after encoding the information, declining at first rapidly, then gradually. 47) The longer the delay, the more likely it is that information obtained after the event will interfere with the original memory, which reduces accuracy. The paper says subsequent interviews or media reports can create such distortions. "People are particularly susceptible to having their memories modified when the passage of time allows the original memory to fade, and will be most susceptible if they repeat the misinformation as fact. " 48) Witnesses may see or read information after the event, then integrate it to produce something other than what was experienced, significantly reducing the reliability of their memory of an event or offender. "Further, witnesses may strongly believe in their memories, even though aspects of those memories are verifiably false. " The paper says it is generally agreed that the memories of adults and children are fallible. Nevertheless, even preschoolers can form reliable memories. Young children depend on context to promote memory, and spontaneously report less. Children may recall more information with adequate support, but the type of support and questioning is critical. Methods of drawing out information have to be carefully monitored. Although research shows the accuracy of both adults and children can be affected by leading or suggestive questions, the ability to resist the influence of external suggestion increases with age. 49) Children may change their account of an event, not because their memory has altered but because they wish to comply with the suggestion of an adult in authority, or because they interpret repeated questioning as an indication their first response is .judged wrong. 50) The paper says further research is required into interview techniques and conditions under which false memories and reports of abuse are most likely to arise. It seems that deciding whether any memory is to be finally assessed as reliable or the treacherous ally of invention will largely remain a challenge for judges and juries.
问答题a. The bees swarmed in the garden. b. The garden swarmed with bees.
问答题Please describe error analysis procedures in second language research.
问答题Describe standards of calculating freight on liners.
问答题So, why is it so hard to throw in the towel, even when on some level you know you should? For one thing, it's embarrassing to admit to others that you've bitten off more than you can chew, or that you've made an error of judgment. No one likes to be thought of as a'quitter. 'For another, quitting means accepting the unrecoverable costs—all the time and energy that you've already put into reaching your goal that you can never get back.
Of course, once you realize that you probably won't succeed, or that success isn't worth the unhappiness your project is causing you, it shouldn't matter what the unrecoverable costs are. If your job, your advanced degree, or your unfinished novel has taken up some of the best years of your life, it doesn't make sense to give them even more years. That will only make you miserable.
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问答题1)describethechart,and2)stateyourownopinion.Youshouldwriteabout150words.WriteyouressayontheANSWERSHEET.
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问答题Euthanasia can be either active or passive: (46) Active euthanasia means that a physician or other medical personnel take a deliberate action that will induce death, such as administering an overdose of morphine, insulin , or barbiturates, followed by an injection of curare. Passive euthanasia means letting a patient die for lack of treatment, or suspending treatment that has begun. Examples of passive euthanasia include taking patient off a respirator (a breathing apparatus) or removing other life -support systems. Stopping the food supply--usually intravenous feeding to comatose patients--has also been used. A good deal of the controversy about mercy killing stems from the decision - making process. Who decides if a patient is to die? This issue has not been established legally. (47) In the United States the matter is left to state law, which usually allows the physician in charge to suggest the option of death to a patient' s relatives, especially if the patient is brain - dead. In an attempt to make decisions about when their own lives should end, several terminally iii patients in the early 1990s used a controversial suicide device , developed by Dr. Jack Kevorkian, to end their lives. In parts of Europe, the decision - making process has become very flexible. (48) Even in cases that are not terminal, patients have been put to death without their consent at the request of relatives or at the insistence of physicians. Many capes of involuntary euthanasia in valve older people. Newborn infants suffering from incurable conditions are also routinely allowed to die. The principle underlying this practice is that such individuals have a concept that "life not worthy of life". This concept was devised in Germany during the Nazi regime (1933 -45) , when numerous killings of the aged, mentally iii, handicapped, and others were authorized by the state. In countries where involuntary euthanasia is not .legal , the court systems have proved very lenient in dealing with medical personnel who practice it. (49) Courts have also been somewhat lenient with friends or relatives who have assisted terminally iii patients to die or who have, in some cases ,killed them directly. Medical advances in recent decades have made it possible to keep terminally ill people alive far beyond any hope of recovery or improvement. For this reason the "living will" has come into common use in the United States as part of the right - to - die principle. (50) Most states now legally allow the making of such wills that instruct hospitals and physicians to suspend treatment in hopeless cases or to re fuse futile life - support measures when chances of recovery are nonexistent. The 20th - century euthanasia movement began in England in 1935, with the founding of the Voluntary Euthanasia Legislation Society. In the United States the Society for the Right to Die was founded in 1938.
问答题Directions:
Write a letter to a museum"s staff to ask for some information about a historical exhibition. You should include the details you think necessary.
You should write about 100 words. Do not sign your own name at the end of the letter; use "Li Ming" instead. Do not write the address.
问答题Young Blifil(from; Tom Jones)
问答题She refused to hand over the car keys to her husband until he had promised to wear his safety belt.
问答题Read the following poem and write a short essay based on the following questions in about 100 words:(8 points)Thoughts in a Zooby Countee Cullen(1903 ~ 1946)They in their cruel traps, and we in ours, Survey each other"s rage, and pass the hours Commiserating each the other"s woe,To mitigate his own pain"s fiery glow.Man could but little proffer in exchangeSave that his cages have a larger range.That lion with his lordly, untamed heartHas in some man his human counterpart.Some lofty soul in dreams and visions wrapped,But in the stifling flesh securely trapped.Gaunt eagle whose raw pinions stain the barsThat prison you, so men cry for the stats!Some delve down like the mole far underground,(Their nature is to burrow, not to bound).Some, like the snake, with changeless slothful eye,Stir not, but sleep and smoulder where they lie.Who is most wretched, these caged ones, or we.Caught in a vastness beyond our sight to sec?Questions:A)What does the first line "They in their cruel traps, and we in ours" imply about the theme of this poem? How is the theme developed in this poem?B)The poem is marked with vivid imagery. Please comment on the animal images and tell the symbolic meanings they each convey.C)What kind of reaction to life does this poem display? How universal is the poet"s emotional experience?D)Considering the fact that the poet is regarded as "perhaps the most representative voice of the Harlem Renaissance," how does the poem specifically relate to African Americans" experience in the United States?
问答题CAL(大连外国语学院2008研)
