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填空题Remember ______ (meet)me tonight.
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填空题The film,though ______,is not likely to engage the attention of a ______ audience. 尽管这部电影很有趣,但不可能吸引住善于思考的观众。
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填空题Everyone lives by selling something. In the light of this statement, teachers live by selling knowledge, philosophers by selling wisdom and priests by selling comfort.
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填空题The English novel began to prosper in 18th century as a new literary genre. In this period there appeared a number of great novelists such as ______, Daniel Defoe, and ______.
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填空题British car workers did not earn nearly enough m______ to buy the products they were turning out.
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填空题A. I think so.B. With pleasure.C. Please take it easy.D. Yes, but why?E. Sure you can.F. It's very kind of you!G. Never mind.H. Not too ba
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填空题I ______ this oil painting much more now that you have explained it to me. 现在你已经把这幅油画给我作了讲解,我就更懂得欣赏它了。
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填空题他别无选择 but to lay facts before the public exactly as they occurred.
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填空题A clause that takes a subject and a finite verb, and at the same time stands structurally alone is known as a______clause.
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填空题I ______ (tell) to attend a meeting yesterday.
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填空题The Agency Agreement has been drawn up for a (18) of one year, automatically (19) on expiration for a similar period unless a written notice is given to the (20) .
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填空题Good human relations can solve many problems, but poor human relations can make your life miserable.
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填空题From antiquity to modern times, the nation has always been a product of informa- tion management. The ability to impose taxes, proclaim laws, count citizens and raise an army lies at the heart of statehood. Yet something new is afoot. These days demo- cratic openness means more than that citizens can vote at regular intervals in free and fair elections. They also expect to have access to government data. The state has long been the biggest generator, collector and user of data. It keeps records on every birth, marriage and death, compiles figures on all aspects of the economy and keeps statistics on licenses, laws and the weather. (41)______ But now citizens and non-governmental organizations the world over are pressing to get access to public data at the national, state and municipal level-and sometimes government officials enthusiastically support them. (42)______ America is in the lead on data access. On his first full day in office Barack Obama issued a presidential memorandum ordering the heads of federal agencies to make available as much information as possible, urging them to act "with a clear presumption: in the face of doubt, openness prevails". Mr. Obama's directive caused a flurry of activity. (43) ______. It is all on a public website, data.gov. And more information is being released all the time. Within 48 hours of data on flight delays being made public, a website had sprung up to disseminate them. Providing access to data "creates a culture of accountability", says Vivek Kundra, the federal government's CIO. One of the first things he did after taking office was to create an online "dashboard" detailing the govern ment's own $70 billion technology spending. Now that the information is freely available, Congress and the public can ask questions or offer suggestions. (44)______ All this has made a big difference. "There is a cultural change in what people expect from government, fu- elled by the experience of shopping on the internet and having real-time access to financial information," says John Wonderlich of the Sunlight Foundation, which promotes open government. (45)______ Chris Vein, San Francisco's CIO, insists that providing more information can make government more effi- cient. California's generous "sunshine laws" provide the necessary legal backing. Among the first users of the newly available data was a site called "San Francisco Crimespotting" that layers historical crime figures on top of map information. People now often come to public meetings armed with crime maps to demand police patrols in their particular area.[A] This was all the more remarkable since the Bush administration had explicitly instructed agencies to do the opposite.[B] Yet until recently all these data have been locked tight. Even when publicly accessible they were hard to find, and aggregating lots of printed information is notoriously difficult.[C] The economic crisis has speeded up that change, particularly in state and city governments.[D] It is now possible to obtain figures on job-related deaths that name employers, and to get annual data on migration free. Some information that was previously available but hard to get at now comes in a computer- readable format.[E] The model will be applied to other areas, perhaps including health-care data, says Mr Kundra-provided that looming privacy issues can be resolved.[F] "Government information is a form of infrastructure, no less important to our modem life than our roads, electrical grid or water systems," says Carl Malamud, the boss of a group called Public.Resource.Org that puts government data online.[G] It allows users to play around with the data and spot hidden trends.
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填空题A. highly profitable B. turned in C. for the right jobs Phrases: A. has also become a 1 business B. candidates were the right people 2 C. look at the pieces of paper 3 Job seekers in Britain say employers are paying less attention to applicants" degrees and certificates. They are making their own entrance exams to test ability. They are concerned about decreasing standards of job seekers, because many university graduates with good degrees have shown a terrible inability to spell, and work out simple sums. The chairman of the Standing Conference of Employers of Graduates, told our correspondent: "We don"t 4 to us, but we look at the people with real abilities." A senior executive with the Bank of England said that many companies were making their own intelligence tests so they could be sure that 5 . In the Civil Service, only about 200 out of 2,000 candidates are chosen after the rest have been knocked out by the Service"s own examinations and interviews. Forged certificates, printed in Germany, have been discovered recently. These forged certificates are not easy to distinguish from the real ones, and can be bought at £25 a piece. Making fake degrees 6 . Fake degrees and diplomas, including Ph.D. degrees, can be obtained for as little as £20 upwards. Some so-called "universities" and "colleges" are even selling these attractive diplomas.
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填空题A large collection of contemporary photographs, including some taken by Mary are on display at the museum.A.A large collectionB.includingC.areD.at
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填空题Those shirts are too small for the twin brothers.We ______. 这些衬衫这对双胞胎兄弟穿着太小了。我们一定买些大号的。
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