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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Obviously you didn't read the (instruct) ______ properly.
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填空题Carrie: How about a walk after supper?Kelly: Yes, ______
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填空题The local government is trying to raise money to (modem) ______ the citys public transport systems.
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填空题In this part,you are asked to translate the following paragraph into English. 从新世纪开始,我国将进入一个全面建设小康社会并加快推进社会主义现代化的新的发展阶段。国民经济将保持持续快速健康发展。经济结构将进行战略性调整,在推进国家工业化的同时,加快国民经济和社会信息化,以信息化带动工业化,全面优化产业结构。西部大开发将迈出实质性步伐,地区经济朝着协调的方向发展。经济体制改革将继续向深层次推进,社会主义市场经济体制会不断完善。科技、教育将有更大发展。对外开放将推进到一个新的水平。精神文明建设和民主法制建设也将继续得到加强。所有这些,将为我们向现代化建设的第三步战略目标奠定坚实的基础。
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填空题One of the important distinctions in linguistics is ______and performance.(人大2006研)
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填空题 The process method provides all the people working on the plane with clean air free _______ heavy strong-smelling smoke.
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填空题I couldnt remember a fairy story to tell the children, so I made ______ one as I went along.
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填空题Chinese to English.(西安交通大学2005研,考试科目:基础英语) 有两三个星期,父亲的这种想法渗透了全家。我们说话不多,但是在日常生活中,我们却尽量以笑容相迎,而不会愁眉苦脸。母亲笑着招待搭伙的人。我也受了感染,在我家的猫面前装出一副笑脸。父亲渴望讨人喜欢已有点发狂了。毫无疑问,在他身上潜伏着那么一点滑稽演员的气质。对待晚上来的那些火车工人,他并不多浪费精力,但他似乎在等待小镇的年轻小伙子和姑娘的到来,为他们表演拿手戏。在饭馆的柜台上放着一只总是装满鸡蛋的铁丝篮子。他想到要为顾客取乐的时候,那篮鸡蛋一定就在眼前。他思想的发展和鸡蛋密切相关,这似乎是先天决定的。总而言之,是一只鸡蛋毁了他对生活的新的激情。一天夜里,我被父亲喉咙里发出的一声怒吼声惊醒了。我和母亲都从床上直坐了起来。母亲用颤抖的手点亮了床头桌上的灯。楼下饭馆的前门“砰”地一声关上了,几分钟后,父亲咚咚地上楼来了。他手中握着一只鸡蛋,抖得像在打冷颤。他眼中射出一种近似疯狂的目光。
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填空题The Deserted Village was written by______.
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填空题Her ______ (fluent) in English gives her an advantage over other girls for the job.
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填空题The school of(15)in English literature and art in the last decades of the(16)century is mainly represented by Walter Pater and Oscar Wilde, with(17)as its chief authority and source of inspiration and(18)as its most popular spokesman.
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填空题When I am asked, "What made you want to be a writer?" , my answer has always been, "Books". First and foremost, now, then, and always, I have been passionate about books. From the time I began to read, as a child, I loved to feel their heft in my hand and the warm spot caused by their intimate weight in my lap: I loved the crisp whisper of a page turning, the musky odor of old paper and the sharp inky whiff of new pages. Leather bindings sent me into ecstasy. I even loved to gaze at a closed book and daydream about the possibilities inside—it was like contemplating a genie"s lamp. Of course, my favorite fairy tale was A Thousand and One Nights—imagine buying your life with stories ! And my favorite cartoons were those where animated characters popped out of books and partied while the unsuspecting humans slept. In books, I could travel anywhere, be anybody, understand worlds long past and imaginary colonies in the future. My idea of a bargain was to go to the public library, wander along the bookshelves, and emerge with a chin-high stack of books that were mine, all mine, for 2 weeks—free of charge.At that time I didn"t think of writing as an activity people admitted doing. I had no living role models—a "real" writer as a long-dead white male, usually with a white beard to match.
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填空题A. Anything wrong with you? B. That"s splendid! C. you have to work, not go watching football. D. You look very excited. E. I can quite believe it. F. I say, couldn"t we all go and see it and shout for Jan"s team? G. you must pay much attention to listening and speaking. H. Don"t mention it. Fred=A; Mr. Smith=B; Bob=C A: Oh, Mr. Smith, are you very busy? B: Well, I was just going to give Bob a private lesson, but what"s the matter? 1 A: I must tell you my news. Jan has been chosen to play football for London against Oxford University. B: 2 He must be very pleased about it, isn"t he? A: Yes, he is, although he doesn"t say much. The match is at three o"clock next Thursday. C: 3 B: We mustn"t give no attention to our work, Bob. If you want to learn English, 4 C: But sir, you needn"t sit in a classroom to learn English. Why, I went to see a football match last Saturday and I learned a lot of words I had never heard in this classroom. B: 5
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填空题 Joe is not good in sports, but when it comes ____ arithmetic he's the best in the class.
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填空题Neither the clerks nor the manager ______ (know)anything about the accident.
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填空题{{U}}Under no circumstances{{/U}} will we use nuclear weapons first.
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填空题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} In the foll6wing article, some sentences have been removed. For Question 41—45, choose the most suitable one the list A—G to fit into each of the numbered blank. There are extra choices, which do not fit in any of the gaps. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1. (10 points) Is Harvard worth it? Conventional wisdom says yes. But with the price of a degree from America's most famous university and other elite private colleges now surpassing $125,000, many families — and a number of economists — aren't so sure. Here's a look at the evidence. For American's high school, seniors, April is the cruelest month. That's when colleges flood the postal system with news of who has won a place in next fall's freshman class. For more than a few families, a difficult decision will follow: Is it worth paying some $125,000 to give their child an education at an elite best private college? Or would her future be just as bright if she went to less expensive school? 41. ______ Certainly many neurotic boomer parents — and their stressed-out resume-building teenagers — assume that it is always better to choose Harvard over Big State U. because of Harvard' s presumably superior educational environment, better alumni connections, and more lucrative (profitable) on-campus recruiting opportunities. 42. ______ It's also true that if you want a career in big leading firms in the US, a gilt-edged diploma is a distinct advantage. Then again, there's plenty of anecdotal evidence that an elite education is hardly necessary. The majority of top CEOs (chief executive officer) surveyed by FORTUNE in 1990 did not attend an elite college. 43. ______ The academic evidence is murky to start with the basics: College pays. On average, a person with an undergraduate degree now earns almost twice as much as someone with only a high school diploma, up from 1.5 times in 1975. The economic literature on the payoff of graduating from an elite college, however, as opposed to any college, is far less conclusive. Several studies during the past decade found a connection between higher future earnings and attendance at a college with high SAT scores. Most of the research concluded that for each 100-point increase in the average SAT score, a graduate could expect a 3% to 7% increased in lifetime's earnings. 44. ______ You would expect graduates of selective schools — which attract successful students — to have successful careers. (It would be stunning if they didn't.) What such studies do not measure is how an individual's earnings are affected by the choice of college. Researchers found that those who went to the more prestigious schools reported higher earnings. 45. ______ Admissions offices at elite schools include many other criteria in their decisions — grades, extracurricular activities, recommendations, essays, interviews. These factors may reveal abilities, like good communication skills, that are far more valuable in the workplace than a perfect 1600. Because economists have no data on these traits, they term them" unobserved." But they are hardly unimportant. Until recently, no one had tried to control for unobserved characteristics in measuring the effect of an elite education on earnings. [A] What is less clear to many parents and their college-bound youngsters is whether it makes economic sense to attend an elite school with a total four-year price tag big enough to buy a nice suburban house in many parts of the country. [B] So what kind of return is there likely to be on that $125,000 investment? And how does it compare with the return on a less expensive but also less prestigious education? [C] These questions have no easy answers. Of course, that's not the impression you get from the $500-million-a-year college-admissions industry, with its magazine rankings, test prep courses, and guidebooks. [D] But the studies compared schools, not people. [E] School selectivity, measured by the average SAT score of the students at a school, doesn't pay off in a higher income over time. [F] It's true that big law firms, major teaching hospitals, and investment banks — even the offices of FORTUNE — are stuffed with Ivy Leaguers. [G] But SAT scores are not everything.
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填空题Tom: Thank you ever so much for the book you sent me.Peter: ______
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填空题By a______, we mean the forms of linguistic signs beer no natural relationship to their meaning.
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