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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______ such articles as window glass, porcelain and other breakable things of this nature, the insurance company insures this risk ______ 5/% franchise.
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填空题上个世纪70年代末以来,中国经济持续增长,综合国力不断增强,13亿中国人民的生活不断改善。2004年,世界经济实现了近30年来最快的增长,亚太地区经济增长也创造了2000年以来的最高水平,中国经济增长94%。2004年,中国的进出口总额比3年前翻了一番,达到11,548亿美元;进口总额5,614亿美元,比3年前增长近一倍,其中,同亚太地区成员的贸易额为7,600亿美元,占中国进出口总额的72.7%。截至2004年底,中国累计实际利用外资额达到7,453亿美元,批准外商投资企业50多万个。1990年至2004年,在华外资企业利润汇出额达到2,506亿美元。事实表明,中国经济的发展,不仅造福中国人民,也为世界各国提供了更多的投资机会和更广阔的市场,正在成为亚太地区和世界经济增长的重要推动。
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填空题Boss: Where have you been? It's eight O'clock now.Rose: I'm sorry.____________
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填空题This morning I got up late , so I came to school ten minutes later . A. got up B. late C. so D. later
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填空题______ is a grammar-based language teaching method in which principles of grammatical and lexical gradation are used and new teaching points presented and practiced through situations.
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填空题There is ________ of religion in our country. (free)
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填空题 Cloze (15 minutes) Directions: There are 20 blanks in the following passage. For each blank there are four choices marked A), B), C) and D) on the right side of the paper. You should choose the ONE that best fits into the passage. Then mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a single line through the centre. Although there are many skillful Braille readers, thousands of other blind people find it difficult to learn that system. They are thereby shut __61__ from the world of books and newspapers, having to __62__ on friends to read aloud to them. A young scientist named Raymond Kurzweil has now designed a computer which is a major __63__ in providing aid to the __64__. His machine, Cyclops, has a camera that __65__ any page, interprets the print into sounds, and then delivers them orally in a robot-like __66__ through a speaker. By pressing the appropriate buttons __67__ Cyclops’s keyboard, a blind person can “read” any __68__ document in the English language. This remarkable invention represents a tremendous __69__ forward in the education of the handicapped. At present, Cyclops costs $50,000. __70__, Mr. Kurzweil and his associates are preparing a smaller __71__ improved version that will sell __72__ less than half that price. Within a few years, Kurzweil __73__ the price range will be low enough for every school and library to __74__ one. Michael Hingson, Director of the National Federation for the Blind, hopes that __75__ will be able to buy home __76__ of Cyclops for the price of a good television set. Mr. Hingson’s organization purchased five machines and is now testing them in Maryland, Colorado, Iowa, California, and New York. Blind people have been __77__ in those tests, making lots of __78__ suggestions to the engineers who helped to produce Cyclops. “This is the first time that blind people have ever done individual studies __79__ a product was put on the market, Hingson said. “Most manufacturers believed that having the blind help the blind was like telling disabled people to teach other disabled people. In that __80__, the manufacturers have been the blind ones.” 61. A) up B) down C) in D) off(D) 62. A) dwell B) rely C) press D) urge(B) 63. A) execution B) distinction C) breakthrough D) process(C) 64. A) paralyzed B) uneducated C) invisible D) sightless(D) 65. A) scans B) enlarges C) sketches D) projects(A) 66. A) behavior B) expression C) movement D) voice(D) 67. A) on B) at C) in D) from(A) 68. A) visual B) printed C) virtual D) spoken(B) 69. A) stride B) trail C) haul D) footprint(A) 70. A) Likewise B) Moreover C) However D) Though(C) 71. A) but B) than C) or D) then(A) 72. A) on B) for C) through D) to(B) 73. A) estimates B) considers C) counts D) determines(A) 74. A) settle B) own C) invest D) retain(B) 75. A) schools B) children C) families D) companies(C) 76. A) models B) modes C) cases D) collections(A) 77. A) producing B) researching C) ascertaining D) assisting(D) 78. A) true B) valuable C) authentic D) pleasant(B) 79. A) after B) when C) before D) as(C) 80. A) occasion B) moment C) sense D) event(C)
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填空题Author______Title______ Mr. Bennet was so odd a mixture of quick parts, sarcastic humour, reserve, and caprice, that the experience of three and twenty years had been insufficient to make his wife understand his character. Her mind was less difficult to develop. She was a woman of mean understanding, little information, and uncertain temper.
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填空题From 1790s to 1830s in Britain, there was a sweeping literary shift known as 5 whose chief emphasis was upon freedom of individual self-expression.
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填空题The British scientist Leon Baggrit foresaw a time when computers would be small enough to hold in hand and when computers would be used to help doctors to diagnose and so on.
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填空题论述题(in Chinese only)。(南开大学2011研,考试科目:专业英语)请在以下题中论述他们的代表性译论。(150字以内)彦琮
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填空题I don't care what you do about your job; it's no concern of mine.
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填空题There are still some doubts on the part of the employers.
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填空题{{B}}Directions:{{/B}}In the following text, some sentences have been removed. For Questions 41-45, choose the most suitable one from the list A-G to fit into each of the numbered blanks. There are two extra choices, which do not fit in any of the blanks. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1. "Every three months from the beginning of 2008," says Cliff Richard, who was once Britain's answer to Elvis Presley, "I will lose a song." The reason is that in most European countries copyright protection on sound recordings lasts for 50 years, and (now) Sir Cliff recorded his first hit single, "Move It", in 1958. (41)______ One of the big four music firms estimates that about 100m "deep catalogue" (ie, old) albums now sold in Europe each year will have entered the public domain by the end of 2010. Assuming a current wholesale price of $10, that could jeopardise $1 billion of revenues, or about 3% of annual recorded music sales. (42)______ Even once much of the back catalogue has entered the public domain, the big music firms can carry on selling it on CD. They will even benefit from not having to pay anything to the artist or to his estate. They will in many cases still own copyright on the original cover art. But they will face new competition from a host of providers of CDs who may undercut them. And on the internet, public domain music is likely to be free, as much of the copy righted stuff already is on peer-to-peer networks. (43) ______ Artists have rallied to the cause: U2, Status Quo and Charles Aznavour all want the 50-year limit increased. Many more acts will sign a petition this spring. Sir Cliff has spent hours complaining to the commission that composers of songs get copyright for 70 years after their death: more than performers. (44)______ Many people believe that America has gone too far in protecting copyright at the expense of the public good, including, it seems, the commission, which said last year that it saw no need to lift its own 50-year limit. Its deadline for proposals on copyright law has supped from this year to 2006. But governments are likely to weigh in on the issue. France, Italy and Portugal have indicated that they support an extension of the term, and Britain is likely to stick up for its own music major, EMI. Although artists and their estates want longer copyright, the big music firms would benefit from it the most, especially 'in the next couple of decades, says Stephen King, chairman of the Association of United Recording Artists and manager of the Libertines: (45)______. Now they have wised up about making deals. The best guarantee of financial security—safer than clinging on to copyright—is hiring a good lawyer early on. [A] He is unlikely to produce such a big hit in the near future, so more of his attention is directed to revising the old song and selling it to more people. [B] Back in the 1950s, he says, performers got only one-tenth of the share of royalties that they do now. For years, artists have, with good reason, accused big record labels of ripping them off. [C] This month, early recordings by Elvis himself started to enter Europe' s public domain. Over the next few decades a torrent of the most popular tracks from the Beatles, the Rolling Stones and many other artists. will become public property in Europe—to the pleasure of fans and the consternation of the music industry. [D] The music industry also points out that America gives artists almost twice as much copyright protection as Europe. America has repeatedly lengthened copyright terms, with the latest reprieve, the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act of 1998, giving performers protection for 95 years after publication. [E] But when the attention is shifted from Europe to America, artists should feel much better because the length of copyright protection there is even shorter. It seems that the American government is more interested in serving the public than the already very rich artists. [F] Music executives want the European Commission to protect them from such unwelcome competition by extending the copyright term. [G] And that estimate accounts only for songs up to the end of the 1950s. Far more will be at risk as music from the 1960s and 1970s moves out of copyright.
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填空题There are two fields of morphology: the study of______and the study of______.(人大2006研)
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填空题Whether we like it or not, the world we live in has changed a great deal in the last hundred years.
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填空题CHINESE TO ENGLISH.(北京邮电大学2008研,考试科目:英语语言基础) 我们下了车,每人牵着一个孩子,我跟在卡罗琳(Carolyn)的后面上了小路。然后,在小路拐角处转了个弯。我气喘吁吁地抬眼望去,眼前是一片欣欣向荣的景象:似乎是什么人拿了一大桶金子倾倒在山顶和山坡上;深橙色、白色、粉色、淡黄色和油黄色的花蜿蜒盘旋着,像大丝带,十分壮观。颜色各异的花分组种植,舞动着,就像一条条流动着的小河,别具特色。五英亩的花啊! “是谁种的这些花啊?”我问卡罗琳。 “一个女人,”卡罗琳说,“她住在这个花园里,那是她的家。” 卡罗琳指向一座在那一片繁荣中隐藏得很好的A字形房子,它看起来小巧而质朴。我们向房子走去。在庭院里,我们看到一个牌子,上面写着“你要的答案在这里”。
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填空题选择你熟悉的中国现代(1919一1949)翻译家及其代表译论,论述之。
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填空题{{U}}John was so absorbed in his reading{{/U}} that he didn't notice me entering his room.
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填空题{{B}}Passage A{{/B}}{{B}}Directions:{{/B}} {{I}}You will hear a passage about the police in America. Listen to it and fill out the table with the information you've heard for questions 11—15. Some of the information has been given to you in the table. Write only 1 word in each numbered box. You will hear the recording only once.{{/I}} Time ______ [11] 2002 Purpose To test how honest the US public officials are. To recover from a serious ______ [12] scandal. City Miami Los Angeles Number of wallets ______ [13] 20 What's in the wallets? Not mentioned. various amounts of cash, names, addresses and phone numbers. Result Only 21 wallets were turned in, and two of them were without cash. A number of officers were fired or took early ______ [14] after the report. Not a ______ [15] was missing from the wallets which were given to officers.
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