填空题When television first began to expand, very few of the people who had become famous as radio commentators were able to be effective on television. Some of the difficulties they experienced when were trying to 【B1】 themselves to the new medium were technical. When working on radio, for example, they had become 【B2】 to seeing on behalf of the listener. This 【B3】 of seeing for others means that the commentator has to be very good at talking. Above all, he has to be able to 【B4】 a continuous sequence of visual images which 【B5】 meaning to the sounds which the listener hears. In the 【B6】 of television, however, the commentator sees everything with the viewer.
His role, therefore, is completely different. He is there to make 【B7】 that the viewer does not miss some point of interest, to help him focus on particular things, and to 【B8】 the images on the television screen. Unlike his radio colleague, he must know the 【B9】 of silence and how to use it at those moments 【B10】 the pictures speak for themselves.
填空题________is the name for oppositeness relation
填空题—Hello, Margaret, this is the tenant of Apartment 10. I guess my kitchen sink is clogged up again, and ______.
—All right, I'll send someone over tomorrow.
填空题我前天收到一封用法语写的信。
填空题She is furious (of) her son' s grades in school, (which) explains why Mark is jealous (of) Julia's high marks (on) the exam.
A. of B. which C. of D. on
填空题(Although) we had been present (at) roughly the same time, Mr. Brown saw the situation quite (diffetrent) from (the way) I saw it.A. Although B. at C. different D. the way
填空题The word unhappy has three morphemes, namely, un-, hap, and -y, of which hap is a ________ morpheme, while un- and -y are ________ morphemes
填空题A. it's full B. Good question C. I bet that was fun D. Good idea E. I used to F. fewer cars G. Look H. HeyA: Why is there never a bus when you want one? B: (56) . There aren't enough buses on this route.A: Sometimes I feel like writing a letter to the paper.B: (57) . You should say that we need more subway lines, too.A. Yeah. There should be more public transportation in general.B: And (58) ! There's too much traffic.A: (59) , is that our bus coming?B: Yes, it is. But look, (60) A: Oh, no! Let's go and get a cup of coffee. We can talk about this letter I'm going to write.
填空题Joe: Do you think Mr. Smith will change his mind? Pat: ______
填空题The
tasks
of the
director
are
greater
than his
assistant
.
填空题I
am going
to
have my letters type
tomorrow afternoon if
I"ve got
them
ready
by then.
填空题About
one-fifth
of
all
the energy
used
in the United States
are
changed into electric power.
填空题If only I could ______ (say) those tactless words of mine.
填空题________ is the father of English poetry and one of the greatest narrative poets of England, whose masterpiece The Canterbury Tales is one of the most famous works in all literature
填空题Hope is what keeps life going. Parents always hope their children will do well. Hope makes us dream. Hope builds in patience. Life teaches us not to despair even in the darkest hour, because after every night there is a day. Nothing remains the same. We have only one choice keep moving on in life and be hopeful.
填空题Manpower Inc. ,with 560,000 workers
填空题Henry: But you mustn't drive too fast.Nancy: ____________
填空题In 1998, a Belgian student named Sacha Klein left Brussels and enrolled as a four-year student at a U.S. university, graduating with a computer-science degree, and landing a summer internship at Virginia-based consulting firm Booz Allen Hamilton, where management liked him enough to offer him a full-time position. Today, he designs information systems for Booz Allen, and studies toward a master"s degree in business.
He is deaf.
1
In 1990, the Americans with Disabilities Act(ADA)opened the door for people like klein to contribute to the U.S. economy in ways no one imagined before. The ADA requires businesses to make accommodations to allow a person with a disability to do a job for which he or she is qualified.
In addition, the ADA requires public facilities to remove architectural barriers that hinder people with disabilities from shopping, going to the theater, or using public toilets.
2
Katherine McCary, president of a business group that promotes hiring people with disabilities, said European managers tell her they want to hire people with disabilities, but that they can"t get to work.
3
Had he stayed in Europe, he said, he would not have been able to become a white-collar professional, but would have been put on track for factory work.
4
A federal hotline offering advice on workplace accommodations went from handling 3, 000 calls per year before the law to 40,000 calls per year in the mid-1990s.
The cost of accommodations turned out to be zero in half the cases and averaged about $500 in the other half, according to the Labor Department
5
Compliance with the law is good for business: 87 percent of consumers prefer to patronize companies that hire people with disabilities, according to a January 2006 survey by the University of Massachusetts. In addition, workers with disabilities could help relieve a labor shortage.
A. Klein thinks attitudes matter, too.
B. Employers report that workers with disabilities are loyal and productive.
C. Klein said he has learned a lot at Booz Allen about teamwork and communication.
D. While one can paint a rosy picture of the U.S. companies embracing people with disabilities, in the early 1990s, the ADA was greeted with panic by the business community, which predicted enormous costs and out-of-control litigation.
E. Since the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, which obligated government agencies to hire people with disabilities, Congress has passed 11 major laws to improve access to education, transportation, technology, and housing.
F. Some experts believe such widespread architectural changes have put the United States ahead of the 44 other countries with disability-discrimination laws.
填空题《复合题被拆开情况》What should you do when a guest make a complaint? First, take your time and listen with 【B1】________After the guest expresses his complaint, you can 【B2】________to show you are listening to
填空题 There is a general expectation that teachers can spot talented children and do something for them. But studies have 1 that teachers do not always 2 gifted children, even those 3 academic talent. In fact, they 4 to identify from 10 to 50 percent of their gifted students.
The first 5 in identifying gifted students is determining the 6 for finding them. If we want to 7 a group of students for an 8 mathematics class, our approach would be different than 9 we are looking for students with high talent 10 a creative-writing program. Specific program needs and requirements, then, 11 the identification process.
Subjective evaluation--teacher 12 , parent referral--should be 13 by standardized tests and other 14 measures of ability. Any 15 for identifying gifted children in a school system should 16 both subjective and objective methods of 17 Classroom behavior, for example, can point 18 children''s ability to organize and use materials and reveal their potential for processing information better than 19 a test situation. Many aspects of creativity and verbal fluency are also best 20 in a classroom or informal setting.
