填空题He
forgotten
to telephone us when he was unable to come. (用助动词do强调)
填空题______(compare) with our small flat, Bills house seemed like a palace.
填空题procedure
填空题Hymes' theory leads to notion/function-based syllables, and a step further, ______syllabuses. (中山大学2005研)
填空题从供选择的答案中选出应填入下列英文语句中______内的正确答案。 The UNIX system contains several () that comply with the definition of a software tool. Among them are programs that (2) and manipulate text, programs that analyze text files,and programs that format text files to produce high quality hard copy suitable for (3) . One characteristic ofthese tools is that they operate on ordinary text (4) , which means that you can read the input and output files by simply listing them on a (5) . 供选择的答案: (1) terminal (2) keyboard (3) programs (4) programming (5) files (6) directories (7) create (8) build (9) publication (10) painting
填空题
[A] Energising money [B]
The dilemma of smart-card systems[C] The future of money
[D] Sending money home[E] Flashing the plastic
[F] A cash call[G] How to pay in Tokyo
Smart cards and mobile phones are quickly emerging as ways to pay with
electronic cash. 41. ______. Nowadays, some of
the hottest nightclubs have a new trick for checking the identity of their VIP
guests: they send an entry pass in the form of a super bar code to their mobile
phones. Mobile phones are becoming an increasingly popular way to make all sorts
of payments. In America fans of the Atlanta Hawks have been testing specially
adapted Nokia handsets linked to their Visa cards to enter their local stadium
and to buy refreshments. It reckons worldwide payments using mobile phones will
climb from just $ 3.2 billion in 2003 to more than $ 37 billion by
2008. 42. ______. More banking services are also
being offered on mobiles. On February 12th, 19 telephone operators with networks
in over 100 countries said that people would be able to use their handsets to
send money abroad. MasterCard will operate the system in which remittances will
be sent as text messages. Sir John Bond, formerly chairman of the HSBC banking
group and now chairman of Vodafone, has 10rig been convinced that payments and
mobiles would somehow converge. "Mobile phones have the ability to make a
dramatic change to village life in Africa," he says. 43.
______. The various "contactless" payment systems rely on a
technology called "near-field communication" (NFC). But mobile phones can be
much smarter. They can be de-activated remotely; they have a screen which can
show information, like a credit balance and product information; they have a
keyboard to enter information and they can communicate. This means they can also
be used to auth0rise larger payments by entering PIN codes directly on the
handset or topped up with stored credit from an online bank account without
having to go to an ATM. 44. ______. To see the
potential of mobile-phone money, start in Japan. Most Japanese have at least one
credit card, but they tend to stay in their owners' pockets. Housewives
routinely peel off crisp YI0 000 ($ 82) notes to pay for their shopping. Utility
bills and other invoices are dutifully taken to the bank and paid in cash, or
more likely these days at the local convenience store. Yet despite the
popularity of cash, the mobile phone is starting to change even Japan's
traditional habits." However, many smart-card systems do not
work with each other, but that will change on March 18th when 26 railways and 75
bus companies in the greater Tokyo area will begin sharing a new stored-value
system, called Pasmo. This too will be available both as a plastic smart-card or
built into mobile phones. 45. ______. Unlike the
Japanese, Americans prefer to use plastic for their purchases. Cards account for
more than half of all transactions, up from 29% a decade ago, according to
Nilson Report, a trade publication. More than 1.5 billion credit cards are
stuffed into Americans' wallets. The average household has more than ten. Banks
and credit-card firms hope to convert more cash and cheque payments to plastic
with new smart cards. Some versions are already very successful. Many Americans
use EasyPass, in which drivers pay for highway tolls wirelessly.
A decade ago some observers predicted that internet banking would render
retail banking from high-street branches obsolete. But JPMorgan, Bank of America
and others are adamant that people are nowadays using bank branches more than
ever. Even if the phone and the smart card replace cash, who gets to collect the
fees remains open to contention.
填空题Many a player who had been highly thought of ______ from the tennis scene.许多得到高度评价的运动员都已经从网球赛场上消失了。
填空题According to Halliday, a clause is the simultaneous______of ideational, interpersonal, and textual meanings.
填空题根据中文提示,将对话中缺少的内容写在线上。这些句子必须符合英语表达习惯。打句号的地方,用陈述句;打问号的地方,用疑问句。
提示:Alice问Bill现在感觉怎样,今天早上是否看过病。Bill说他睡一觉病就好了。Alice说
Bill家不远处有一家诊所,要他去看好病,以便参加Linda明天的聚会。 Alice: Hello, Bill. It's
Alice.{{U}} (51) {{/U}}? Bill: Not too well, I'm
afraid. Alice:{{U}} (52) {{/U}}? Bill:
No, I didn't. I think I just need some sleep{{U}} (53) {{/U}}.
Alice: Listen, why don't you go to see the doctor? There is a walk-in
clinic on Lincoln Street.{{U}} (54) {{/U}}. Bill: I
don't want to go to see the doctor for a common cold. I know I'll be all right
after a night'ssleep. Alice: But do you still remember we
have a surprise party for Linda tomorrow? Are you sure{{U}} (55)
{{/U}}? Bill: Oh, yes. You are right. I guess I should see a
doctor. Talk to you later. Alice: Take care.
填空题
A teacher is someone who communicates information or skill so
that someone else may learn. Parents are the {{U}}(51) {{/U}} teachers.
Just by living with their child and {{U}}(52) {{/U}} their everyday
activities with him, they teach him their language, their values and their
manners. Information and skills difficult to teach {{U}}(53) {{/U}}
family living are taught in a school by a person {{U}}(54) {{/U}}
special occupation is teaching. Before 1900 it {{U}}(55)
{{/U}} widely assumed that a man was qualified to teach if he could read and
write and {{U}}(56) {{/U}} qualified if he knew arithmetic. With modest
{{U}}(57) {{/U}} like these, it is no {{U}}(58) {{/U}} that
teachers had low salaries and little prestige. Literature and history frequently
portray teachers {{U}}(59) {{/U}} fools and ignoramuses.
By the late 19th century, there were {{U}}(60) {{/U}} that the
status of teachers was slowly {{U}}(61) {{/U}}. Great educators such as
Mann and Henry Barnard, and innovative thinkers such as Dewey and Parker began
to command a {{U}}(62) {{/U}} that in a few decades had to some
{{U}}(63) {{/U}} permeated classrooms in the United States. Progress was
more glacial than meteoric, however,{{U}} (64) {{/U}} the last half of
the century. In the 20th century the status of teachers rose as
the standards {{U}}(65) {{/U}} their education rose. By 1950 the average
teacher had an education that greatly exceeded that of the average
citizen.
填空题
填空题The president promised to keep all the board members ______ of the negotiations.(inform)
填空题And where there are agents, can counteragents be far behind: spies who might like to
keep tabs on
the activities of your electronic butlers?
填空题Our efforts have not led to the solution to the problem, but have, at least, contributed to the improvement of the situation.
填空题The newspaper reported that Williams would face life in prison if he were convicted ______ attempted murder.
填空题Translate the following English passage into Chinese.(对外经济贸易大学2010研,考试科目:基础英语)The economist Alan Krueger, author of a new book called "What Makes a Terrorist?" explores this phenomenon with a systematic study of the evidence. He concludes that terrorists, political extremists and those who commit hate crimes are often relatively well-to-do.This is a difficult thing to prove, not least because each of those categories is controversial and there is a world of difference between, say, Northern Ireland and Sri Lanka, Krueger dips into different sources of data, each one imperfect, trying to build up a compelling picture from opinion polls, biographies of terrorists and broader studies.Opinion polls from Gaza and the West Bank, conducted last week show that students and professionals are more likely than the unemployed or laborers to say that terrorism can be justified, and more likely to deny that a suicide bombing in a Tel Aviv night club should be described as "a terrorist act".When a graduate student at Princeton, the young economist Claude Berrebi gathered data on more than 40 Palestinian suicide bombers: he concluded that they were far better educated than the typical Palestinian, and also richer. Krueger offers a complementary picture using biographies of 129 fighters killed in action, although not necessarily while attempting a terrorist attack. They, too, were somewhat better educated and less likely to be poor than the typical young Lebanese man of the time.All in all, the research that Krueger gathers together suggests that if there is a link between poverty, education and terrorism, it is the opposite of the one popularly assumed. We should not be surprised to find that terrorists can add up, read, and even write prescriptions.
填空题Peter: I'd like to order a large pizza with Canadian bacon and pineapple.Waiter: __________________
填空题
填空题在六十年代晚期
填空题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} This part consists of a short passage. In this passage,
there are altogether 10 mistakes, one in each underlined sentence or part of a
sentence. You may have to change a word, add a word or just delete a word. If
you change a word, cross it out with a slash (—) and write the correct word near
it. If you add a word, write the missing word between the words (in brackets)
immediately before and after it. If you delete a word, cross it out with a slash
(—). Put your answers in the ANSWER SHEET.
(46){{U}}Clonaid, a company associated by a group that believes
extraterrestrials created mankind, announced Friday that it had produced the
first clone of a human being.{{/U}} According to the spokeswoman, it is a baby
girl who appears to have been born healthy. (47) As we know,
{{U}}cattle, mice, sheep and other animals have been cloned in the past years with
mixing success.{{/U}} (48) {{U}}All cloned animals have displayed defects later in
life.{{/U}} (49) {{U}}Scientists fear same could happen with cloned humans.{{/U}} (50)
{{U}}The company Clonaid is viewed skeptical by most scientists, who doubt the
group's technical ability to clone a human being.{{/U}} (51) {{U}}But the Clonaid
spokeswoman said an dependent expert will confirm the baby's clone status
through DNA testing.{{/U}} (52) {{U}}Clonaid is lead by Brigitte
Boisselier a former deputy director of research at the Air Liquide Group, a
French producer of industrial and medical gases.{{/U}} (53) {{U}}Clonaid is also
linked to a sect called the Raelians whose founder, Claude Vorihon, describes
himself for a prophet and calls himself Rael.{{/U}} (54) {{U}}The group believes
cloning could extend human life for hundred of years.{{/U}} In fact, Clonaid has
been racing the Italian fertility doctor Severion Antinori to produce the first
cloned baby. (55) {{U}}Antinori said in last month he expected one of his patients
to give birth to a cloned baby in January.{{/U}}
