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已选分类 文学外国语言文学英语语言文学
填空题将下列短文译成汉语。(首都师范大学2010研,考试科目:英语翻译基础)A very large number of people cease when quite young to add anything to a limited stock of judgments. After a certain age, say 25, they consider that their education is finished.
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填空题the lion"s share
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填空题The sound[d]can be described with"______, alveolar stop/plosive".
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填空题The news of the Presidents warlike speech yesterday pushed the stock market to a sharp rise of ______ 120 points.
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填空题Every time they have an argument,his wife threatens ______ him. 每次吵架,妻子总是扬言要离开他。
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填空题He changed his whole conception of human nature, and became for the first time deeply ______that Puritanism does not make for human happiness.(convince)
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填空题BTs prices for national and international calls are now among the lowest in the world, although local call prices are n______ near the cheapest.
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填空题A. Isn't she your girlfriendB. They said she had left for LondonC. What's the problemD. Her office left you a messageE. Why not invite me, thenF. They said they had phoned LindaG. The manager of their office had suddenly fallen iiiH. Sorry, I lost my wayA: Are you phoning Linda?B: Yes. But how did you know?A: (56) B: What did they say?A: (57) B: What happened?A: (58) . She had to go and take his place for three days.B: That's too bad.A: (59) ?B: You see, I had arranged for us to have a dinner with a friend tonight.A: (60) ?B: Sure. Why not?
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填空题A. Time sometimes stops B. Moving in slow motion C. We" re tricked by tech D. Speeding up with age E. Time doesn"t fly F. Time follows mood G. Lost in music Ever felt like time stands still while you"re waiting for something, or that as you get older, the years slip through your fingertips with much more ease? With swaths of tech around us and virtually everything being available on demand, it"s a very real possibility that our body clocks and perception of time have changed. 1 As an old saying goes, "Time flies when we"re having fun." In reality, though, we know fully well that it does not. Nevertheless, psychologist James Kellaris conducted his own experiment to find out whether there"s any math to the saying. He had people listen to a piece of music they liked, and when he later asked them how much time they thought had passed, the listeners" estimates were usually longer. Kellaris suggested that when we"re enjoying ourselves, we pay more attention to the event and our minds perceive that as extra time. 2 A recent study has suggested that technology, too, is capable of altering our perception of time. Researchers found that 60% of 18-30 year-olds check their smartphones compulsively for updates, with each glance taking with it bits and pieces of the day. Having so much information readily available at out fingertips speeds up our internal clock. Likewise, each time we check Facebook or log in to Twitter, we subconsciously note the time, making us more aware of how much of it has passed in our day-to-day habits. 3 It"s commonly said that as we get older, time passes in the "blink of an eye". When young and fresh-faced, we"re constantly discovering new and exciting things that we"ve not experienced before, and we naturally pay a lot more attention to them. As we get older, though, those "new" experiences grow pale. By extension, time seems to pass more quickly. 4 If it felt like time was standing still, that might be because your brain genuinely thought it was. The "optical" illusion of time standing still is something that happens when our eyes move quickly from one point to another. According to Kielan Yarrow and a whole host of other psychologists, when our gaze fixes suddenly on the second hand of a clock, our perception of time stretches slightly backwards to compensate for that movement. As a result, your mind tells you that you"ve been looking at the second hand for longer, and thus fills in the blank with what it thinks should be there. 5 Many like to think that they"re not ruled by their emotions, but they do affect our bodies more than you think—at least in terms of how we perceive time. For a few years now, psychologists have carried out studies on the subject and have concluded that individuals experiencing negative emotions concentrate more on the passing of time than those who are in a good mood, which makes a particularly anxiety-filled moment seem longer. That might explain why after we argue, the room"s tension-ridden atmosphere makes time seem to drag on and on.
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填空题He tried to learn Greek but soon got tired of it and gave up it . A. tried to B. soon C. tired of it D. gave up it
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填空题______, by Ezra Pound, employs the complex association of scholarly lore, anthropology , modern history and personages, private history and Witticism, and obscure literary interpolations in various languages.
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填空题Most of her poems were not published ______ her death in 1886. 她的大部分诗作直到1886年她死了之后才发表。
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填空题Many job seekers are polite enough to drop their interviewer a note a day or two after they have been interviewed.
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填空题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} You are going to read a list of headings and a text about the Deep Impact by NASA; Choose the most suitable heading from the list A- F for each numbered paragraph (41 --45). The first paragraph and the last two paragraphs of the text are not numbered. There is one extra heading which you don't need to use. Mark your answers on Answer Sheet 1. A. Revelation of the nature of comets B. A perfect representative of the comets C. Hoping for the best D. Right time and right place for the Impact E. What to expect of this Deep Impact? F. Mystery in the heavens On Monday at 1:52 a.m. ET, a probe deployed by a NASA spacecraft 83 million miles from home will smash at 23,000 mph into an ancient comet the size of Manhattan, blasting a hole perhaps 14 stories deep. 41. ( ) Launched in January, NASA's $333 million Deep Impact mission is designed to answer questions that scientists have long had about comets, the ominous icebergs of space. This is the first time any space agency has staged such a deliberate crash. Scientists hope images transmitted by the probe and its mother ship will tell them about conditions in the early solar system, when comets and planets, including Earth, were formed. The team hopes to release photos of the impact as soon as they are received from the craft. NASA and observatories across the nation will be releasing webcasts. 42. ( ) At the very least, NASA says, knowing how deep the probe dives into the comet could settle the debate over whether comets are compact ice cubes or porous snow cones. "We need to dig as deep a hole as possible," says mission science chief Michael A'Hearn of the University of Maryland. Until now, the closest scientists have come to a comet was when NASA's Stardust mission passed within 167 miles of the comet Wild 2 last year, collecting comet dust that is bound for a return to Earth in January. The most famous date with a comet occurred when an international spacecraft flotilla greeted Halley's comet in 1986. But these quick looks examined only the comets' dust and Surface; 43. ( ) To the ancients, comets were harbingers of doom, celestial intruders on the perfection of the heavens that presaged disaster. Modern astronomers have looked on them more favorably, at least since Edmond Halley's celebrated 1705 prediction of the return of Halley's comet in 1758 and every 75 years thereafter. Today, scientists believe Tempel 1 (named for Ernst Wilhelm Leberecht Tempel, who first spotted it in 1867 while searching for comets in the sky over Marseilles, France) and other comets are windows to the earliest days of the solar system, 4. 6 billion years ago, when planets formed from the dust disk surrounding the infant sun. 44. ( ) Deep Impact's copper-plated "impactor"--a 39-inch long, 820-pound beer-barrel-shaped probe--will be "run over like a penny on a train track" when it crashes, A'Hearn says. The impactor is equipped with a navigation system to make sure it smacks into the comet in the right location for the flyby craft's cameras. On Sunday, the flyby spacecraft will release the probe. Twelve minutes later, it will beat a hasty retreat with a maneuver aimed at allowing a close flyby, from 5,348 miles away, with cameras pointed. Fourteen minutes after the impact, the flyby spacecraft will scoot to within a mere 310 miles for a close-up of the damage. 45. ( ) Ideally, everything will line up, and the flyby spacecraft will take images of the crater caused by the impact. It will go into a "shielded" mode as ice and dust batter the craft, then emerge to take more pictures. "The realistic worst case is hitting (the comet) but not having the flyby in the right place," A'Hearn says. "Basically, we have a bullet trying to hit a second bullet with a third bullet in the right place at the right time to watch. I'd love to have a joystick(操纵杆) to control the impactor." Planetary scientists have "no idea" what sort of crater will result, McFadden says. Predictions range from a deep but skinny shaft driven into a porous snow cone to a football stadium-sized excavation in a hard-packed ice ball. But astronomers should have their answer shortly after impact, which should settle some questions about the comet's crust and interior. Analysis of the chemistry of that interior, based on the light spectra given off in the impact's aftermath, could take much longer.
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填空题二年级四班
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填空题The more frequent a child expresses his interest in an activity, the stronger it will become.
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填空题People in China generally agree that it is important to celebrate the country"s rich history, but its culture police think there is too much of the wrong kind of celebrating going on. Two agencies, the Ministry of Culture and the State Administration of Cultural Heritage, have banned the promotion of " negative historical figures or literary works" for tourism purposes, theoretically ending a longstanding practice by Chinese cities of playing up their ties to racy cultural icons like the lustful Ximen Qing through festivals, theme parks and merchandise.A few lucky destinations in China, like Mao"s hometown of Shaoshan in Hunan province, are blessed with the notoriety of a state-approved celebrity, allowing them to rake in tourism dollars. But for most Chinese towns, bringing in tourists is hard work, which is made easier if they can stake a claim to someone famous, whether real, mythical or literary. Disputes can flare up among towns claiming to be the original homes of the same popular character. Just before the Ministry of Culture announced the new rules, Loufan county in Shanxi declared itself hometown of the Monkey King, challenging the same claim made first by Lianyungang City in Jiangsu, according to a recent article on Xinhua"s English-language website.Critics say that this kind of cultural infighting is embarrassing to China, especially when attracting foreign dollars is the motive. It is better if these cities manage and protect their own cultural heritage and intangible cultural resources, rather than compete with each other and humiliate themselves.In the past, tourist stunts by Chinese towns have been heavily frowned upon by the public. A sex theme park in southwestern China was demolished before it even opened, after inciting widespread condemnation. Earlier this year, public outcry forced government officials in Zhangjiajie to back away from plans to rename a local mountain " Avatar Hallelujah Mountain" after the popular Hollywood movie. The latest crackdown, however, goes further than any one campaign and promises to lay out strict guidelines for what is appropriate cultural celebration in the coming weeks.
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填空题Theres a huge amount of ex______ pressure pushing him to ensure that the resolution becomes policy.
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