填空题Provided you don't let it out to anybody, I will tell you the truth.
填空题
填空题In English, the two words cut and gut differ only in their initial sounds and the two sounds are two different______and the two words are a______pair. (北二外2010研)
填空题
填空题
But the new policy has not solved the huge problems inherited ______ the past.
填空题Hans: What do you usually read?John: ______
填空题根据联合国对未来50年气候变化对贫穷国家可能带来的影响的预测,贫穷国家将面临更多的困难,诸如愈演愈烈的洪灾,不断减少的粮食生产,疾病的威胁以及整个生态系统的退化乃至消失,而这正是世界上许多最穷苦的人们赖以生存的环境。
填空题Emergency airplane evacuations happen more often than most people
think: about once every 11 days in the U.S., according to a recent report by the
National Transportation Safety Board. Some situations are more dire than others,
of course, as when the plane is on fire, but in many cases, the biggest
challenge of an evacuation can be the airplane slide. However, it is likely that
some of the injuries happened during the evacuation-not the initial crash. Even
in controlled drills, accidents are common. So, in the unlikely event that you
have to escape from a plane on an inflatable slide, here are some
tips. {{U}} {{U}} 1 {{/U}} {{/U}}Have a
plan: Don't wait until a flight attendant is shrieking
at you to "Get out!" to decide what you're going to do.
{{U}} {{U}} 2 {{/U}} {{/U}}Have another
plan: Your fellow passengers often have trouble
opening the exit hatches-it's not easy, for one thing, and even flight
attendants often run into trouble. {{U}} {{U}} 3
{{/U}} {{/U}}Get out fast: If all hell does
break loose, remember that one of the deadliest mistakes passengers make is to
lunge for their overhead luggage. And yet, even if the cabin is full of smoke,
passengers will almost invariably reach up to get their briefcases and garment
bags. {{U}} {{U}} 4 {{/U}}
{{/U}}Jump: Another big problem usually happens
at the top of the slide. People hesitate or try to sit down before sliding. If
everyone would jump instead, the evacuation could go 50% faster.
{{U}} {{U}} 5 {{/U}} {{/U}}Then get out of the
way: Just like on the playground, the area below the
slide is not a good place to hang out. If you are the first passenger out, then
you should help other people get off. Otherwise, you should get out of the
way. Congratulations! You've survived an emergency
airplane evacuation. Now prepare to reflect on your experience-for hours. After
an evacuation, even a successful one, passengers often have to spend hours in
limbo, waiting for the authorities to release them back into civilization, often
due to bureaucratic or legal paranoia. A. Since a fire can burn
through the fuselage on an airplane in 90 seconds, faster is much, much better.
When everything works right, slides are built to handle 70 passengers per
minute. B. Smoke can also make your first-choice exit suddenly
unusable. So instead of reading the Sky Mall catalog while you're waiting for
the plane to take off, it would be wise to come up with two escape
ways. C. A lot of injuries happen when people hit the ground
and sprain an ankle or break a leg because they came in out of control. Also,
women should avoid wearing spiked heels and pantyhose when they fly.
Pantyhose can melt onto the skin in the heat of a plane fire.
D. Pile-ups at the bottom of the slide can be brutal-and can also make
the slide much steeper for everyone else coming down. E. Chloe,
24, was a passenger on the British Airways flight. "I got to the door, and I
realized I was holding a bamboo hat-and just thought, what am I doing rescuing a
hat from a crashed plane?" she told the Coventry Telegraph. F.
Aviation safety experts, even the most jaded ones, count the rows to their
nearest exits whenever they sit down on a plane. They know that their brain will
not work well under extreme duress, and their eyes will not see well in thick
smoke, so they need to have a sense of their best escape routes before anything
goes wrong.
填空题This is a very (danger) ______ road: there were at least five serious accidents last year.
填空题Mary: How' s the young man?Jane: ______
填空题I"m very glad to meet you here, and I hope we can meet again soon.
填空题
[A] The rise of a tycoon who is fond of America and South Africa, and who
prints English slogans on his bottles of milk and mineral water, is a snub to
Mr. Ratsiraka. The president, who has dominated politics since 1975—with a few
years' absence in the mid-1990s—steers close to France, the former colonial
power. He has been unwell, and spends much of his time having medical treatment
in Paris. His government, predictably, is accused of widespread corruption. But
he offers stability—and declares that "any other president" would usher in years
of uncertainty.[B] Mr. Ratsiraka might indeed feel aggrieved ff he did lose
power just as the economy is coming right. After a two-decade spell as a
socialist, then a few years of exile, he bounced back into the presidency in
1996 to impose austere neo-liberal reforms. These are now paying off. Many
people are still desperately badly off, living in villages without roads,
electricity or doctors. But, according to an optimistic IMF report on December
13th, the economy may mm out to have enjoyed 6.7% growth this year and inflation
is low.[C] In a high turnout, he took nearly 80% of the votes in the
capital, and well over half in other cities. Results from the less susceptible
countryside are slowly coming in. They narrow the gap, but he still seems to
have a chance of either beating the incumbent, Didier Ratsiraka, outrght or
facing him in a run-off next year.[D] A swelling flow of tourists comes to
the island to see its rainforests, lemurs and tropical beaches. Sales of
textiles to America are doing well, thanks to tariff reductions there. And. in
the past few years. Asian investors have opened dozens of factories in special
export zones around the capital. Mr. Ratsiraka has managed to negotiate debt
relief that almost halves the amount the country spends on servicing its debts.
R is thus able to spend a bit more on schools and hospitals. Incomes in the
cities are clearly up. A good rice harvest this year. and the absence of
cyclones, has eased hanger in the countryside.[E] As mayor, Mr. Ravalomanana
won many citizens' hearts by cleaning up the capital, and seeing to new roads
and street lighting. He oversaw a building boom. the rise of a dozen' flashy new
supermarkets, more policemen on the streets and a cut in crime. He is. known in
the country at large, too. thanks to his Tiko food empire, which delivers
yoghurt and other good things to Madagascar's emerging middle class. His face is
everywhere on T-shirts. baseball caps and bags all parts of a slick campaign
that was helped along by his own radio and television stations. His Christian
fervour, and his job on a council of Protestant churches, have also helped him,
especially among the rural poor.[F] All this is rare good news for Africa.
Might it be risked if there were a change of president? Some point to possible
ethnic tension: Mr. Ravalomanana is from the highland Imerina people, who have a
mix of Asian-settler and African blood, who have never before held political
office over the blacker coastal communities. Others worry that he will have
little support in parliament, and that his business career has not prepared him
for political compromises. A bigger concern, perhaps, is that he might not
seriously undertake to spread the good times enjoyed in the capital into the
impoverished countryside.[G] Excitement is in the air in Madagascar, a vast
island of 15m people off the east coast of Africa. On December 16th, its voters
trudged to the. polls from their homes in highland towns and remote forest
villages to pick a president. Many favoured Mare Ravalomanana, a tycoon who is
also the handsome young mayor of the capital Antananarivo.Order:
填空题He was sentenced to 2 years in prison, and ______ that, all his property was confiscated.
填空题It is ______ (legal) for average citizens in china to own a gun.
填空题He said he felt sorry that he didn't arrive on time. (apologize) ______.
填空题Choose the correct headings.(15 points) The following passage has six paragraphs A -F. Choose the correct heading for each paragraph from the list of headings below. Note there are more headings than paragraphs, so you will not use them all. Write the correct number a —h in blanks 1-5. List of Headings a. Vanishing topsoil influences farm productivities. b. Water is being polluted by chemical fertilizers. c. Advantages and disadvantages of fuel produced from crop residues. d. Negative environmental effects were incurred by subsidies. e. Environmental damages were even worsened by government policies. f. Fertilizer use is recommended in some countries. g. A modest cut in subsidies is adopted in some countries. h. Removal of certain subsidies achieves some positive results.Example Answer Paragraph A d A All these activities may have damaging environmental impacts. For example, land clearing for agriculture is the largest single cause of deforestation; chemical fertilizers and pesticides may contaminate water supplies; more intensive farming and the abandonment of fallow periods tend to exacerbate soil erosion; and the spread of monoculture and use of high-yielding varieties of crops have been accompanied by the disappearance of old varieties of food plants which might have provided some insurance against pests or diseases in future. B Soil erosion threatens the productivity of land in both rich and poor countries. The United States, where the most careful measurements have been done, discovered in 1982 that about one-fifth of its farmland was losing topsoil at a rate likely to diminish the soil"s productivity. The country subsequently embarked upon a program to convert 11 percent of its cropped land to meadow or forest. Topsoil in India and China is vanishing much faster than in America. C Government policies have frequently compounded the environmental damage that farming can cause. In the rich countries, subsidies for growing crops and price supports for farm output drive up the price of land. The annual value of these subsidies is immense:about $250 billion, or more than all World Bank lending in the 1980s. To increase the output of crops per acre, a farmer"s easiest option is to use more of the most readily available inputs; fertilizers and pesticides. Fertilizer use doubled in Denmark in the period 1960 - 1985 and increased in The Netherlands by 150 percent. The quantity of pesticides applied has risen too; by 69 percent in 1975 - 1984 in Denmark, for example, with a rise of 115 percent in the frequency of application in the three years from 1981. D In the late 1980s and early 1990s some efforts were made to reduce farm subsidies. The most dramatic example was that of New Zealand, which scrapped most farm support in 1984. A study of the environmental effects, conducted in 1993, found that the end of fertilizer subsidies had been followed by a fall in fertilizer use(a fall compounded by the decline in world commodity prices, which cut farm incomes). The removal of subsidies also stopped land-clearing and over-stocking, which in the past had been the principal causes of erosion. Farms began to diversify. The one kind of subsidy whose removal appeared to have been bad for the environment was the subsidy to manage soil erosion. E In less enlightened countries, and in the European Union, the trend has been to reduce rather than eliminate subsidies, and to introduce new payments to encourage farmers to treat their land in environmentally friendlier ways, or to leave it fallow. It may sound strange but such payments need to be higher than the existing incentives for farmers to grow food crops. Farmers, however, dislike being paid to do nothing. In several countries they have become interested in the possibility of using fuel produced from crop residues either as a replacement for petrol(as ethanol)or as fuel for power stations(as biomass). Such fuels produce far less carbon dioxide than coal or oil, and absorb carbon dioxide as they grow. F They are therefore less likely to contribute to the greenhouse effect. But they are rarely competitive with fossil fuels unless subsidized—and growing them does no less environmental harm than other crops.
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:Bill对Alice说他正在准备渔具(fishing
tools)要和朋友去钓鱼。Alice问Bill是否真的喜欢钓鱼,什么时候有了这个爱好。Bill说他小的时候,父亲带他到河边看他钓鱼,那时他就发现钓鱼很有趣。
Alice: What are you doing here? Bill :{{U}} (51)
{{/U}}. Alice : What for? Bill: I'm going to
fish with some of my friends. Alice :{{U}} (52)
{{/U}}? Bill: Yes. I like fishing after school and on
Sundays. Alice :{{U}} (53) {{/U}}? Bill:
Long ago. You know, my father is fond of and very good at fishing.{{U}} (54)
{{/U}}, he took me to the riverside to see him fishing.{{U}} (55)
{{/U}}. Well, what's your hobby? Alice : I'm very keen on
making home movies. But I haven't got a movie camera. I'll buy one of my own
someday.
填空题
填空题An advertiser should know ______ the customers ______ and what factors influence their buying decisions.
填空题
