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已选分类 文学外国语言文学
单选题--- Philip has gone to New Zealand.---- Oh, could you tell me___ ?
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单选题There is a ______ improvement in your pronunciation.
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单选题Nothing is less sensible than the advice of the Duke of Cambridge who is to be reported to have said: "Any change, at any time, for any reason is to be {{U}}deplored{{/U}}."
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单选题The strong tone of US economic recovery is manifested in
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单选题They reached a(n)______to keep their dispute out of the mass medi
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单选题He ______ by his sister at that moment. A. happened to see B. was happened to see C. was happened to be seen D. happened to be seen
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单选题In the final paragraph, what does the author say about Margherita?
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单选题It is well admitted that the high ______ rate is caused in part by failure to communicate.
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单选题My opinion is that the visiting Brazilian football team will______ Chinese football team 6-0.
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单选题The residents living in these apartments have free ______ to the swimming pool, the gym and other facilities.
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单选题Although there are several variations on the exact format that worksheets can take, they are all similar in their ______ aspects.
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单选题The law (I am referring to) requires that everyone (who) (owns) a car (has) accident insurance.
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单选题When he applied for a ______ in the office of the local newspaper he was told to see the manager.
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单选题I keep medicines on the top shelf, out of the children's ______.A. reachB. handC. holdD. place
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单选题"Do you mind______?" "Go ahead. I don't mind. "
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单选题
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单选题Lawn tennis is a good sport, being based on the ancient game of court tennis, which probably came up in Egypt or Persia some 2,500 years ago. Major Walter Wingfield thought that something like court tennis could be played outdoors on lawns, and in December 1873, he introduced his new game, which he called Sphairistike, at a lawn party in Wales. The sport became popular very rapidly, but the strange, difficult name disappeared almost at once, being replaced by the very simple and logical term "lawn tennis". By 1874 the game was being played by British soldiers in Bermuda, and in the early months of that year a young lady named Mary Outerbridge returned from Bermuda to New York, bringing with her the equipment necessary to play the new game. With the help of one of her brothers, she laid out a court on the grounds of the Staten Island Cricket and Baseball Club, and there, in the spring of 1874, Miss Outerbridge and some of her friends played the first game of lawn tennis in the United States. And just two years later, in 1876, the first United States lawn tennis tournament (锦标赛) was held—at Nahant near Boston.
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单选题Global energy demand is expected to triple by mid-century. The earth is unlikely to run out of fossil fuels by then, given its vast reserves of coal, but it seems unthinkable that we will continue to use them as we do now. It's not just a question of supply and price, or even of the disease caused by filthy air. The terrorist assault on the World Trade Center raises other scary scenarios: how much easier would it be to crack open the Trans-Alaska pipeline and how much deadlier would it be to bomb a nuclear plant than to attack a wind arm? Skeptics may recall the burst of enthusiasm for conservation and renewable power when oil prices quadrupled in the 1970s. State-funded energy research and development surged, while tax incentives boosted solar, wind and other alternatives to petroleum and the atom. But when oil supplies loosened and prices dropped in the early 1990s, governments lost interest. In the state of California, subsidies evaporated, pushing wind companies into bankruptcy. Clean energy has long way to go. Only 2.2% of the world's energy comes from "new" renewables such as small hydroelectric dams, wind, solar and geothermal. How to boost that share--and at what pace--is debated in industrialized nations--from Japan, which imports 99.7 % of its oil, to Germany, where the nearby Chernobyl accident turned the public against nuclear plants, to the U.S., where the Bush Administration has strong ties to the oil industry. But the momentum toward clean renewables is undeniable. How soon we reach an era of clean, inexhaustible energy depends on technology. Solar and wind energies are intermittent: When the sky is cloudy or the breeze dies down, fossil fuel or nuclear plants must kick into compensate. But scientists are working on better ways to store electricity from renewable sources. While developed nations debate how to fuel their power plants, however, some 1.6 billion people--a quarter of the globe's population--have no access to electricity or gasoline. Many spend their days collecting firewood and cow dung, burning it in primitive stoves that belch smoke into their lungs. To emerge from poverty, they need modern energy. And renewables can help. From village-scale hydropower to household photovoltaic systems to bio-gas stoves that convert dung into fuel. Ultimately, the earth can meet its energy needs without fouling the environment. "But it won't happen," asserts Thomas Johansson, an energy adviser to the United Nations Development Program, "without political will." To begin with, widespread government subsidies for fossil fuels and nuclear energy must be dismantled to level the playing field for renewables. Moreover, government should pressure utility to meet targets for renewable sources of energy.
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单选题Many teenagers feel no difficulty ______ computer.
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单选题Some of the jobs that the illegal immigrants do as mentioned in the article include the following ______.
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