填空题I cant seem to ______ you that I love you and Im not going to leave you! 我爱你,不会离开你,你怎么就不明白!
填空题This will be considered an important (basic) ______ for teaching and research.
填空题______ is mainly used to indicate the nature and characteristics of the CIF contract.
填空题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}}Thefollowingparagraphsaregiveninawrongorder.ForQuestions41--45,youarerequiredtoreorganizetheseparagraphsintoacoherentarticlebychoosingfromthelistA--Etofillineachnumberedbox.ThefirstandthelastparagraphshavebeenplacedforyouinBoxes.MarkyouranswersonANSWERSHEET1.[A]Hemphasbeencultivatedbymanyculturesforthousandsofyears.Itproducesfibrewhichcanbemadeintopaper,fuel,oils,textiles,food,andrope.Formanycenturies,itwasessentialtotheeconomiesofmanycountriesbecauseitwasusedtomaketheropesandcablesusedonsailingships;colonialexpansionandtheestablishmentofaworld-widetradingnetworkwouldnothavebeenpossiblewithouthemp.Nowadays,ships'cablesareusuallymadefrom'wireorsyntheticfibres,butscientistsarenowsuggestingthatthecultivationofhempshouldberevivedfortheproductionofpaperandpulp.Accordingtoitsproponents,fourtimesasmuchpapercanbeproducedfromlandusinghempratherthantress,andmanyenvironmentalistsbelievethatthelarge-scalecultivationofhempcouldreducethepressureonCanada'sforests.[B]MuchofCanada'sforestryproductiongoestowardsmakingpulpandpaper.AccordingtotheCanadianPulpandPaperAssociation,Canadasupplies34%oftheworld'swoodpulpand49%ofitsnewsprintpaper.Ifthesepaperproductscouldbeproducedinsomeotherway,Canadianforestscouldbepreserved.Recently,apossiblealternativewayofproducingpaperhasbeensuggestedbyagriculturalistsandenvironmentalists:aplantcalledhemp.[C]Inrecentyears,twomajormovementsforlegalizationhavebeengatheringstrength.OnegroupofactivistsbelievesthatALLcannabisshouldbelegal--boththehempplantandthemarijuanaplant--andthattheuseofthedragmarijuanashouldnotbeanoffense.Theyarguethatmarijuanaisnotdangerousoraddictive,andthatitisusedbylargenumbersofpeoplewhoarenotcriminalsbutproductivemembersofsociety.Theyalsopointoutthatmarijuanaislesstoxicthanalcoholortobacco.[D]However,thereisaproblem:hempisillegalinmanycountriesoftheworld.Thisplant,sousefulforfibre,rope,oil,fuelandtextiles,isaspeciesofcannabis,relatedtotheplantfromwhichmarijuanaisproduced.[E]Theotherlegalizationmovementisconcernedonlywiththehempplantusedtoproducefibre;thisgroupwantstomakeitlegaltocultivatetheplantandsellthefibreforpaperandpulpproduction.Thissecondgrouphashadamajortriumphrecently:in1997,Canadalegalizedthefarmingofhempforfibre.Forthefirsttimesince1938,hundredsoffarmersareplantingthiscrop,andsoonwecanexpecttoseepulpandpaperproducedfromthisnewsource.[F]Inthelate1930s,amovementtobanthedrugmarijuanabegantogatherforce,resultingintheeventualbanningofthecultivationnotonlyoftheplantusedtoproducethedrug,butalsoofthecommercialfibre-producinghempplant.AlthoughbothGeorgeWashingtonandThomasJeffersongrewhempinlargequantitiesontheirownland,anyAmericangrowingtheplanttodaywouldsoonfindhimselfinprison--despitethefactthatmarijuanacannotbeproducedfromthehempplant,sinceitcontainsalmostnoTHC(theactiveingredientinthedrug).[G]Everysecond,1hectareoftheworld'srainforestisdestroyed.That'sequivalenttotwofootballfields.AnareathesizeofNewYorkCityislosteveryday.Inayear,thataddsupto31millionhectares--morethanthelandareaofPoland.Thisalarmingrateofdestructionhasseriousconsequencesfortheenvironment;scientistsestimate,forexample,that137speciesofplant,insectoranimalbecomeextincteverydayduetologging.InBritishColumbia,where,since1990,thirteenrainforestvalleyshavebeenclear-cut,142speciesofsalmonhavealreadybecomeextinct,andthehabitatsofgrizzlybears,wolvesandmanyothercreaturesarethreatened.Logging,however,providesjobs,profits,taxesforthegovernmentandcheapproductsofallkindsforconsumers,sothegovernmentisreluctanttorestrictorcontrolit.
填空题{{B}}Directions: Pick out the appropriate expressions from the eight choices
below and complete the following dialogues by blackening the corresponding
letter on the Answer Sheet.{{/B}}
A. Show me your passport, please.C. I'm here on business.E. You are
welcome.G. Have a pleasant time here.B. Have you got anything to
declare?D. May I have your name?F. Where are you from?H. My God!
What was that?Alan: Welcome to my country, miss. {{U}}(56)
{{/U}}Lucy: I'm from Canada.Alan: {{U}}(57) {{/U}}Lucy:
OK. Here you are.Alan: {{U}}(58) {{/U}}Lucy: No, I haven't got
any dutiable (应纳关税的)things with me.Alan: How long will you be staying
here?Lucy: About a month.Alan: {{U}}(59) {{/U}}Lucy: Thank
you very much.Alan: {{U}}(60) {{/U}}
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填空题de-emphasize devalue decentralize destabilize deregulate demobilize decode depersonalize
填空题The name of the heroine in The Portrait of a Lady is______.
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填空题The idea of building a theme park near the city gained immediate and general ac______ with the public.
填空题The improbable chain of events that leads Alexander Fleming 1. ______ to discover penicillin in 1928 is the stuff which scientific myths 2. ______ are made. It was a discovery that would change the course of the history. The active ingredient in that mold, which Fleming named penicillin, turned to be an infection-fighting agent of 3. ______ enormous potency. When it was finally recognized as what it was--the efficacious life-saving drug in the world--penicillin 4. ______ would alter forever the treatment of bacterial infections. By the middle of the century, Fleming's discovery spawned a huge phar- 5. ______ maceutical industry, churning out synthetic penicillin that would conquer some of man-kind's most ancient scourges, including syphilis, gangrene, and tuberculosis. When he died a heart attack in 1955, he was mourned by 6. ______ the world and buried as a national hero in the crypt of St. Paul's Cathedral in London. Although Fleming's scientific work in and of itself may not have reached great, his singular contribution 7. ______ changed the practice of medicine. He deserves our utmost recog- nition. At the same time, we must bear on mind that the 8. ______ "Fleming Myth", as he called it, embodies the accomplishments of many giants of anti-biotic development. Fleming is but a cho- sen representative for the likes of Florey, Chain, Domagk, and Waksman, many of who remain, sadly, virtual unknowns. 9. ______ Their achievements have made the world a better, healthier place. In commemorating Fleming, and we commemorate them 10. ______ all. How does it happen that children learn their mother tongue so well? When we compare with adults learning a foreign 11. ______ language, we often find this interesting fact. A little child without knowledge or experience often succeeds to a complete 12. ______ master of the language. A grown-up person with fully developed 13. ______ mental powers, in most cases, may end up in a faulty and inex- 14. ______ act command. What accounts of this difference? 15. ______ Despite other explanations, the real answer in my opinion lies partly with the child himself, partly in the behavior of the 16. ______ people surround him. In the first place, the time of learning the 17. ______ mother tongue is the most favorably of all, namely, the first 18. ______ years of life. A child hears it speak from morning till night and, 19. ______ what is more important, always in its genuine form, with the right pronunciation, right intonation, right use of words and right structure. He drinks all the words and expressions which come to 20. ______ him in a fresh,ever-bubbling spring.There is no resistance: there is perfect assimilation.
填空题I am ready to ______ his ability to pay. (certify, attest, witness, vouch for)
填空题And much of the land ______ question is not naturally good for rice growing.
填空题Despite the ______ words with which the Bill Was presented to Parliament it is a complete sham.虽然他把议案交给国会时语言美妙动听,但是这是个大骗局。
填空题In cognitive linguistics, ______ is the process of classifying our experiences into different categories based on commonalities and differences.
填空题Old people are always saying that the young people are not (51) they were. The same comment is (52) from generation to generation and it is always (53) . It has never been truer than it is today. The young are better educated. They have a lot more money to spend and enjoy (54) freedom. They grow up more quickly and are not so (55) on their parents. Events which the older generation remember vividly are (56) more than past history, This is as it should be. Every new generation is (57) from the one that preceded it. Today the difference is very marked indeed. The old always assume that they know best for the simple (58) that they have been (59) a bit longer. They don't like to feel that their values are being questioned or threatened. And this is precisely what the (60) are doing. They are questioning the (61) of their elders and disturbing their complacency. They take leave to (62) that the older generation has created the best of all possible worlds. What they reject more than (63) is conformity. Office hours, for instance, are nothing more than enforced slavery. Wouldn't people work best if they were given complete freedom and (64) ? And what (65) the clothing? Who said that all the men in the world should (66) drab grey suits? If we turn our (67) to more serious matters, who said that human differences can best be solved through conventional politics or by violent means? Why have the older generation so often used (68) to solve their problems? Why are they are so unhappy and guilt-ridden in their personal lives, so obsessed with mean ambitions and the desire to amass more and more (69) possessions? Can anything be right with the rat-race? Haven't the old lost (70) with all that is important in life?
填空题Translate the following sentences into Chinese. Tell what translation technique you use in translating each of them.(北工业大学2006研,考试科目:综合英语2
Example:New Zealand had no knowledge of this and had not been consulted on these reported plans.
新西兰不知道这件事,也没有人同它商讨过这些传闻的计划。
The government is doing its best to ease the tension in that area.
填空题The ______ purpose of scientific discourse is not the mere presentation of information and thought, but rather its actual communication. (fundament)
填空题The natural environment still manages to fill us with a sense of awe and amazement. Despite the amount of scientific knowledge mankind has gathered, nature still holds great mysteries that we may never be able to unravel. This complexity has continually daunted man.
1
______
As a result, we have distanced ourselves from the earth, even though our survival is completely dependent on it. We are now trying to regain our close connection to nature.
2
______Referred to as "natural architecture", it aims to create a new, more harmonious, relationship between man and nature by exploring what it means to design with nature in mind.
The roots of this movement can be found in earlier artistic shifts like the "land art" movement of the late nineteen sixties. Although this movement was focused on protesting the austerity of the gallery and the commercialization of art, it managed to expand the formal link between art and nature.
3
______
The movement is characterized the work of a number of artists, designers and architects that express these principles in their work. The pieces are simple, humble and built using the most basic materials and skills.
4
______The forms are stripped down to their essence, expressing the natural beauty inherent in the materials and location. The movement has many forms of expression that range from location-based interventions to structures built from living materials. However, all of the works in the movement share a central distinctive spirit that demonstrates a respect and appreciation for nature.
These works are meant to comment on architecture and provide a new framework to approach buildings and structures. They aim to infuse new ideas into architecture by subverting the idea that architecture should shelter nature.
5
______We see the branches, the rocks and all the materials for what they are. We understand that these structures won"t exist forever. The materials will evolve over time, slowly decomposing until no evidence remains. These features are intentional, provoking viewers to question the convention of architecture. The designers aren"t suggesting that architecture must conform to their vision, they are just providing ideas that they hope will inspire us all to rethink the relationship between nature and the built environment.
A. This has helped develop a new appreciation of nature in all forms of art and design.
B. Instead, the structures deliberately expose the natural materials used in the building process.
C. The core concept of the movement is that mankind can live harmoniously with nature, changing and using it for our needs
D. There is an emerging art movement that is exploring mankind"s desire to reconnect to the earth, through the built environment.
E. Because of this, the results often resemble native architecture, reflecting the desire to return to a less technological world.
F. In frustration, we try to control nature by enforcing order.
