填空题Since he read the book, {{U}}他一直想去那个地方看看{{/U}}。
填空题For more than fifty years we have known, or could have known, that there is an unconsciousness to counterbalance consciousness. Medical psychology has furnished all the necessary empirical and experimental proofs of this. There is an unconscious psychic reality which demonstrably influences consciousness and behavior. All this is known, but no practical conclusions have been drawn from it. We still go on thinking and acting as before, as if we were simplex and not duplex. Accordingly, we imagine ourselves to be innocuous, reasonable and humane. 46 ) We do not think of distrusting our motives or of asking ourselves how the inner man feels about the things we do in the outside world, but actually it is frivolous, superficial, and unreasonable of us, as well as psychically unhygienic, to overlook the reaction and viewpoint of the unconscious. 47) One can regard one's stomach or heart as unimportant or even worthy of contempt, nevertheless overeating and over exertion have consequences which affect the whole man. Yet we think that psychic mistakes and their consequences can be erased by mere words, for "psychic" means less than air to most people. 48) All the same, nobody can deny that without the psyche there would be no world at all and still less a human world. Virtually everything depends on the human soul and its functions. 49) It is worthy of all the attention we can give it, especially today when everyone admits that the weal or woe of the future will be decided neither by attacks of wild animals, nor by natural catastrophes nor by the danger of world-wide epidemics, but rather by the psychic changes in man. Only an almost imperceptible disturbance of equilibrium in a few of our rulers' heads could plunge the world into blood, fire, and radioactivity. The technical means to this destruction are available to both sides. And certain conscious deliberations, uncontrolled by an inner opponent, can be all too easily indulged, as we have already seen from the example of one "leader". The consciousness of modem man still clings so much to outward objects that he believes them exclusively responsible, as if it were on them that decisions depended. 50 ) That the psychic state of certain individuals could free itself for once from the behavior of objects is something that is considered far too little although irrationalities of this sort are observed every day and can happen to everyone.
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填空题[A] a statement you use to convince people that your opinion about something is correct[B] a debate in which a number of people put forward different opinions.[C] a conversation in which people disagree with each other angrily or noisily.
填空题A. The wars between Indian and the settlers
B. Indians were pushed away
C. Indians, once the master of America, now live in their reservation
D. Indians are still fighting for the improvement of their lives
E. The relationship between Indians and the early settlers
F. Indians were ferocious savages
G. Indian"s struggle for their own possessions
1
When Christopher Columbus landed on America"s shores, he encountered copper-shinned people whom he promptly called "Indians". Current estimates indicate that there were over a million Indians inhabiting Indians North American then. There are approximately 800,000 Indians today, of whom about 250,000 live on reservations.
2
The early settlers had an amicable relationship with Indians, who share their knowledge about hunting, fishing and farming with their uninvited guests. The stereotyped stealthy, wicked Indian of Western movies are created by different faithless white man; the Indian was born friendly. Indian lifestyle greatly influenced the whites; whites continue to have defected to join the Indians.
3
Disgust developed between the Indians and the settlers, whose encroachment on Indian lands provoked an era of turbulence. As early as 1745, Indian tribes joined together to drive the French off their land. The French and Indian war did not end until 1763. The Indian had succeeded in destroying most of the settlements. The British, superficially submissive to the Indiana, promised that further migrations west would not extend beyond a specified boundary.
4
Evicted from their lands, or worse still, frankly giving their property to the whites for few baubles, Indians were ruthlessly pushed west. The battle in 1876 at Little Horn river in Montana, in which setting Bull and the Sioux tribes massacred General Custer"s cavalry, caused the whites intensify their campaign against the red man. The battle at Wound Knee, South Dakota, in 1890 put an end to the last vestige of hope for amity between Indians and whites.
5
Although the Bureau of Indian affairs has operated since 1842, presumably for the purpose of guarding Indians "interests", Indian on reservations lead notoriously deprived lives. Due to historical reasons, the majority of Indians are now living in remote rural areas. Most of the Indian nation also retains their traditional way of life and customs. In the multi-ethnic society in Latin America, the Indians is a vulnerable group. There are very few live in cities and towns, with formal employment, the vast majority are still living in the mainland forest, grassland areas, engaged in simple crafts such as agriculture, animal husbandry, forestry, fisheries, divorced from modern society. Indian ghettos suffer from economic backwardness, the difficulties of life, and low levels of health and education, and all aspects of the situation in stark contrast to the mainstream of society, simply unbearable under the dramatic impact of national modernization and economic globalization. In recent times Indians have taken a militant stand and appealed to the courts and the American people to improve their substandard living conditions.
填空题In Hawaii
, people are
friendly
and always
warmly
welcomed
visitors.
A. In Hawaii
B. friendly
C. warmly
D. welcomed
填空题A good artist
like
a good engineer learns
as
many
from his mistakes as from
successes
.
A. like
B. as
C. many
D. successes
填空题Their ______ of the plan made us satisfied. (approve)
填空题Pre______ investigation shows that the tank is not leaking, but this has to be confirmed by detailed tests.
填空题Discoveriesinscienceandtechnologyarethoughtby"untaughtminds"tocomeinblinding________orastheresultofdramaticaccidents.SirAlexanderFlemingdidnot,aslegendwouldhaveit,lookatthe________onapieceofcheeseandgettheideafor________thereandthen.Heexperimentedwith________substancesfornineyearsbeforehemadehis________.Inventionsandinnovationsalmostalwayscomeoutoflaborioustrialanderror.Innovationislikesoccer;eventhebestplayersmissthegoalandhavetheirshotsblockedmuchmorefrequentlythanthey________.The________isthattheplayerswhoscoremostaretheoneswhotakethemostshotsatthegoal—andsoitgoeswithinnovationinanyfieldofactivity.The________differencebetweeninnovatorsandothersisoneofapproach.Everybodygetsideas,butinnovatorswork________ontheirs,andtheyfollowthemthroughuntiltheyprovepracticableorotherwise.Whatordinarypeopleseeasfanciful________,professionalinnovatorsseeassolidpossibilities?
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In the late 1960's many people in North America turned their
attention to environmental problems, and new steel-and-glass skyscrapers were
widely criticized. 41) __________. Skyscrapers are also lavish
comsumers, and wasters of electric power. In one recent year, the addition of 17
million square feet of skyscraper office space in New York City raised the peak
daily demand for electricity by 120 000 kilowatts—enough to supply the entire
city of Albany, New York, for a day. 42) __________. The heat
loss(or gain) through a wall of half-inch plate glass is more than ten times
that through a typical masonry wall filled with insulation board. To lessen the
strain on heating and air-conditioning equipment, builders of skyscrapers have
begun to use double glazed panels of glass, and reflective glasses coated with
silver or gold mirror films that reduce glare as well as heat gain. However,
mirror-walled skyscrapers raise the temperature of the surrounding air and
affect neighboring buildings. 43) __________. If fully occupied,
the two World Trade Center towers in New York City would alone generate 2.25
million gallons of raw sewage each year—as much as a city the size of Stanford,
Connecticut, which has a population of more than 109000.
Skyscrapers also interfere with television reception, block bird flyways,
and obstruct air traffic. 44) __________. 45) __________.[A]
Glass-walled skyscrapers can be especially wasteful.[B] Tall buildings are
an inevitable building form and part of the contemporary landscape.[C] In
Boston in the late 1960's, some people even feared that shadows from skyscrapers
would kill the grass on Boston Common.[D] Skyscrapers put a severe strain on
a city's sanitation facilities, too.[E] Still, people continue to build
skyscrapers for all the reasons that they have always built them—personal
ambition, civic pride, and the desire of owners to have the largest possible
amount of rentable space.[F] Some of these ideas may soon appear in the city
as a more holistic approach is taken in balancing environmental and social
factors with the economics of building development.[G] Ecologists pointed
out that a cluster of tall buildings in a city often overburdens public
transportation and parking lot capacities.
填空题5.That kind of attitude, putting the interests of others before her own, has earned a lot of pr______ for Steffi.
填空题If they {{U}}will not accept{{/U}} a check, we {{U}}shall have{{/U}} to pay {{U}}the cash{{/U}}, though it {{U}}would be{{/U}} much trouble for both sides.
A. will not accept B. shall have C. the cash D. would be
填空题He is the ______ (honor) chairman of the Writers Union.
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Though the temptation was _____, John tried hard not to reach for the cake. (resist)
填空题ULittle did I expect that Uncle Sam would die so soon/U. I found him in good health when I called on him only a couple of weeks ago.
填空题Translation.(吉林大学2005研,考试科目:英语语言实践)Television—the most pervasive and persuasive of modern technologies, marked by rapid change and growth—is moving into a new era, an era of extraordinary sophistication and versatility, which promises to reshape our lives and our world.It is an electronic revolution of sorts, made possible by the marriage of television and computer technologies. The word "television", derived from its Greek(tele:distant)and Latin(vision:sight)roots, can literally be interpreted as sight from distance. Very simply put, it works in this way: through a sophisticated system of electronics, television provides the capability of converting an image(focused on a special photo-conductive plate within a camera)into electronic impulses which can be sent through a wire of cable. These impulses, when fed into a receiver(television set), can then be electronically reconstituted into that same image.Television is more than just an electronic system however. It is a means of expression, as well as a vehicle for communication, and as such becomes a powerful tool for reaching other human beings. The field of television can be divided into two categories determined by its means of transmission. First, there is broadcast television, which reaches the masses through broad-based airwave transmission of television signals. Second, there is non-broadcast television, which provides for the needs of individuals or specific interest groups through controlled transmission techniques.
填空题A few mirrors can instantly ______ this room and make it seem a much larger and lighter one.
填空题He was burning with ______ to know what was happening. 他对于所发生的事情极为好奇。
