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文学外国语言文学
问答题1. The aim of "Holiday Economy" and its positive effects.
2. Problems derived from "Holiday Economy".
3. My suggestions.
问答题a herculean task
问答题在中国,人们常常把毛主席比作太阳。
问答题Brenda Farmer and Willie Blanscet have sat across from each other on the Butterball bagging line for 17 years, 102 cold, raw turkeys sliding by in front of them every minute. "Me and Willie look at each other and say. "How in the world can anybody eat this much turkey?""
The odds are good that yours may be one.
1. The women, along with workers at another Butterball plant a 90-minute drive away, help produce about a third of the 43 million turkeys the nation will eat today, according to the National Turkey Federation.
This corner of northwest Arkansas is not the land of free-running heritage birds that command $16 a pound. A leisurely morning browsing the farmers" market is not how most people spend a Saturday.
2. In this community of 3,000 on the Arkansas River, where everyone is cheering on the Hillbillies, the high school football team that made it to the state playoffs, turkey is an industry.
And a job at the Butterball plant is one of the most reliable in town.
The median income in Franklin County is just over $30,000 a year. Unemployment is at 7.3 percent. Every week, a dozen or so people show up at the plant looking for work. Maybe two get hired, plant managers said.
It is not easy work. Turkeys need to be stunned and dispatched and gutted. Someone has to cut the oil gland out of the tail. Necks and gizzards and livers have to be cleaned and stuffed into a cavity.
3. During a six-week period that begins in October, the line runs seven days a week to process fresh turkey. It is a period people in town simply refer to as "fresh", and it is grueling.
"It"s a long battle when we"re working fresh, but I at least got some bills paid and Christmas money," Mrs. Farmer said. "I just sit there and hum and sing and talk to my friend Willie. We get through it together."
问答题
问答题 What is making the world so much older? There are two
long-term causes and a temporary blip that will continue to show up in the
figures for the next few decades. {{U}} {{U}} 11 {{/U}}
{{/U}}{{U}}The first of the big causes is that people everywhere are living far
longer than they used to, and this trend started with the industrial revolution
and has been slowly gathering pace{{/U}}. In 1900 average life expectancy at birth
for the world as a whole was only around 30 years, and in rich cotmtries under
50. The figures now are 67 and 78 respectively, and still rising. For all the
talk about the coming old-age crisis, that is surely something to be grateful
for-especially since older people these days also seem to remain healthy, fit
and active for much longer. {{U}} {{U}} 12
{{/U}} {{/U}}{{U}}A second, and bigger, cause of the ageing of societies is that
people everywhere are hang far fewer children, so the younger age groups are
much too small to counterbalance the growing number of older people.{{/U}} This
trend emerged later than the one for longer lives, first in developed countries
and now in poor countries too. In the early 1970s women across the world were
still, on average, having 4.3 children each. The current global average is 2.6,
and in rich countries only 1.6. {{U}} {{U}} 13 {{/U}}
{{/U}}{{U}}The UN predicts that by 2050 the global figure will have dropped to just
two, so by mid-century the world's population will begin to level out{{/U}}. The
numbers in some developed countries have already started shrinking. Depending on
your point of view, that may or may not be a good thing, but it will certainly
turn the world into a different place. The temporary blip that
has magnified the effects of lower fertility and greater longevity is the
babyboom that arrived in most rich countries after the Second World War.
{{U}} {{U}} 14 {{/U}} {{/U}}{{U}}The tinting varied slightly from
place to place, but in America-where the effect was strongest-it covered roughly
the 20 years from 1945, a period when nearly 80 million Americans were born{{/U}}.
The first of them are now coming up to retirement. For the next 20 years those
baby-boomers will be swelling the ranks of pensioners, which will lead to a
rapid drop in the working population all over the rich world.
As always, the averages mask considerable diversity. {{U}} {{U}}
15 {{/U}} {{/U}}{{U}}Most developing countries do not have to worry about
ageing-yet, in the longer term, however, the same factors as in the rich
world-fewer births, longer lives-will cause poorer countries to age
too.{{/U}}
问答题Directions:
You are doing a research project on the future of the printing industry. Write a letter to the industry market analyst Mr. Wang to ask for the challenges the industry is facing, the role of technologies, and the trend in the industry.
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
问答题油漆未干
问答题A lump sum put down at the time of the pupil's entry to cover all or part of the likely fees might attract a reduction of some 15 percent of the fees covered.
问答题发挥各地特色和优势
问答题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}}Enormouschangestookplaceinthelasttwodecadesofthe20thcentury,whichisrevealedinthechangesondinertables.Herearetwopairsofpictures.Youarerequiredto1)describethepictures,2)interpretthepictures,and3)makeacommentuponit.Youshouldwriteabout200wordsneatlyonANSWERSHEET2.
问答题若要我从这两种学习人生的方法中选一个,我仍然会选择前者,也就是从别人的建议中学习。因为我认为,应该利用所有可获得的资源,而家人与朋友的经历就是宝贵的资源。例如,如果我自己准备初次出国旅行,那么有类似出国旅行经验的人所提供的建议对我就很有帮助。正如我们能从历史中学习一样,我们也能从周围人的经验中学习。
问答题你(Li Yuan)在英语学习中遇到了一些困难,希望得到帮助。请给你的英国笔友(Jason)写封信,内容包括:
·介绍你学习英语的经历;
·描述你在英语学习中遇到的困难;
·希望笔友给你一些建议。
问答题
问答题建立市场导向的就业机制
问答题
问答题{{I}}Youshouldwriteabout200wordsneatlyonANSWERSHEETⅡ.{{/I}}温室的花朵经不起风雨
问答题她无论有多累总是设法按时完成工作。
问答题Compare Grief with Tears, Idle Tears, commenting particularly on the treatment of their themes.(30 points)1. GriefBy Elizabeth Barrett BrowningI tell you hopeless grief is passionless;That only men incredulous of despair,Half-taught in anguish, through the midnight airBeat upward to God"s throne in loud accessOf shrieking and reproach. Full desertnessIn souls, as countries, lieth silent-bareUnder the blanching, vertical eye-glareOf the absolute heavens. Deep-hearted man, expressGrief for thy dead in silence like to death:Most like a monumental statue setIn everlasting watch and moveless woeTill itself crumble to the dust beneath.Touch it; the marble eyelids are not wet—If it could weep, it could arise and go.2. Tears, Idle TearsBy Alfred, Lord TennysonTears, idle tears. I know not what they mean,Tears from the depth of some divine despairRise in the heart and gather to the eyes.In looking on the happy Autumn-fields.And thinking of the days that are no more.Fresh as the first beam glittering on a sail.That brings our friends up from the underworld,Sad as the last which reddens over oneThat sinks with all we love below the verge;So sad, so fresh, the days that are no more.Ah, sad and strange as in dark summer dawnsThe earliest pipe of half-awakened birdsTo dying ears, when unto dying eyesThe casement slowly grows a glimmering square;So sad, so strange, the days that are no more.Dear as remembered kisses after death, And sweet as those by hopeless fancy feignedOn lips that are for others; deep as love, Deep as first love, and wild with all regret; O Death in Life, the days that are no more!
