问答题母爱是伟大的,也是无私的。据报道,一位瘦弱的母亲是靠卖血资助自己孩子读完大学的。
问答题I think most of us would agree that the world is a shrinking place. On the one hand, this shrinking is highly beneficial. People around the world now enjoy economic, cultural and recreational opportunities which were previously not accessible. On the other hand, the rapid mobility of people, money, information, ideas and commodities generally has provided new opportunities for crime, and new challenges for law enforcement agencies. This will require unprecedented cooperation between nations, and will inevitably generate tensions arising from differences in national values, even within nations, tensions between such values, as privacy and the imperatives of law enforcement will be high in the public agenda. Most probably new organizational forms will emerge to combat new manifestations of criminality.
问答题阅读下面短文,请完成短文后的2项测试任务:(1)从第16~20题后所给的6个选项中为第①~⑤段每段选择1个正确的小标题;(2)从第21—25题后所给的6个选项中选择5个正确选项,分别完成每个句子,并将所选答案的代码(指A、B、C、D、E或F)填在答题纸的相应位置上。Ancient Greek Values ①Ancient Greek civilization has greatly helpe
问答题下面的短文有10处空白,每处空白后的括号内有一个词,请根据短文内容将其正确的形式填入文中,以恢复文章原貌,并在答题卡相应位置上将答案选项涂黑。Ancient Greece The Greeks were the greatest great sailors of their time.Greece has one excellent 41_____ nature feature—the coas
问答题居家养老
问答题Books are to mankind what memory is to individual. They contain the history of our race, the discoveries we have made, the accumulated knowledge and experience of ages; they picture for us the marvels and beauties of nature; help us in our difficulties, comfort us in sorrow and in suffering, change hours of weariness into moments of delight, store our minds with ideas, fill them with good and happy thoughts, and lift us out of and above ourselves.
问答题TO GOOGLE is now in broad usage as a verb for retrieving information from the internet. If the tech giant has its way, “I Googled” will become a standard reply to the question, “How did you get here?” On May 28th Google said it would build 100 prototype driverless cars devoid of pedals, steering wheel or controls save an on/off switch. It is the next stage in its apparent quest to be as ubiquitous on the road as on computer screens.【】People have dreamed about driverless motoring since at least the 1930s, but only in recent years have carmakers such as Mercedes-Benz and Volvo given the matter more thought, kitting out test cars with the sensors and sophisticated software required to negotiate busy roads. Google has roared ahead by designing a driverless car from the ground up.【】But bringing autonomous motoring to the world is proving harder than Google had envisaged. It once promised it by 2017. Now it does not see production models coming out before 2020. The technology is far advanced, but needs shrinking in size and cost—Google’s current test cars, retrofitted Toyota and Lexus models, are said to be packed with $80,000-worth of equipment.【】Google’s latest efforts may have as much to do with convincing the public and lawmakers as refining the technology. The firm stresses the safety advantages of computers being more likely than humans to avoid accidents. The cars will have a top speed of just 25mph and a front end made of soft foam to cushion unwary pedestrians. The benefits could indeed be huge. Driving time could be given over to working, snoozing or browsing the web. Rather than suffer all the costs of owning a car, some people may prefer to summon a rented one on their smartphones whenever they need it. However, the issue of liability in the event of a driverless car crashing has yet to be resolved.【】Turning cars into commodities may not be good news for traditional carmakers. But reinventing motoring as a service fits neatly with Google’s plans to become as big in hardware as in software. And unlike car firms, which talk vaguely of becoming “mobility providers”, Google has pots of cash to make that a reality and no worries about disrupting its current business. Google admits it still has “lots of work to do”. But one day Googling to the shops may be a common activity.
问答题大学的功能2.大学是否实现了目标3.如何改进
问答题人的生命对于自己来说,很漫长;相对于自然来说,很短暂。在漫长中,有我们无法追悔的东西;在短暂里,有我们梦想成真的渴望。【】“外面的世界很精彩。”大凡远方对我们都具有诱惑,不是诱惑于传说,就是诱惑于美丽。传说也好,美丽也罢,可是去到远方又有远方,这些事物只能让我们作为信息而得知。即使你曾亲睹那异地的美好,但在紧张的生活中,想再次游历谈何容易,于是一些宽广的目标,只能成为今生的向往。【】“多情自古伤离别。”命运让你我相聚相知,可是时间就像那曲终人散的舞会,让我们又相分相离。重逢之日不可知,多少情感还未来得及表达,你我只有拉拉手,道一声“珍重”,从此留下绵绵无期的思念。【】“知足者常乐”,这是一种回避现实、急流勇退的消极心理。其实我们每时每刻都在设计自己的拥有、物欲的追求和精神的享受。然而现实总与设想存在一段距离,让我们不能如愿以偿。【】虽然说“往事不堪回首”,可是我们又能控制自己的几许思绪呢?无须刻意营造什么,往事就会自动找上门来,并且总有一些得失,让我们缅怀或悔恨……【】月亮圆缺缺复圆,花儿开谢谢又开。憧憬在不断的寻找中幻灭,遗憾在不断的幻灭中再现。虽然在我们的人生旅程中,有很多缠绕终生而不能兑现的愿望,但是,如果没有现实与理想的距离让我们去追求,如果没有往昔的过错让我们去追悔,我们就不会走向成熟。
问答题你是李明。你和几个朋友约定明天在人民公园野餐。你们的朋友Peter也应邀参加。你给他写信,告诉他到公园怎么找你们。
问答题over-translation
问答题(46) John Dunlop, dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences from July 1970 to February 1973, thought that the most significant element in Harvard's transition from the 1960s to the 1970s was not the student takeover of University Hall, but the institutional changes unleashed by that event. Dunlop was ideally suited to take charge in the confusing post-bust period. Forceful, self-confident, canny, he became the czar of the interregnum. He sought to restore civil discourse by engaging the faculty in institutional reform. He chaired the University Committee on Governance that Pusey and the Corporation set up in September 1969. (47) From it came a flow of subcommittee reports: on Harvard and money, faculty and student rights and responsibilities, the presidential selection process, the nature and purposes of the University, and the organization and functions of the Governing Boards and the president's office. The committee found a Corporation and a president overwhelmed by day-to-day problems. (48) It proposed that there be vice presidents of finance, administration, development, and government and community affairs, and that a senior academic officer—a chancellor or provost—foster interfaculty programs and speak for the president on matters of educational policy. (49) The authors knew that "the damage of the reputation of the administrative function is so pervasive in the University that the sudden assertion of its importance.., may send shock waves through the community and cause particular concern among Deans. " But they believed that it was essential "to staff and perform properly the neglected service functions" of the University. Derek Bok decided that to plunge at once into centralized administration was "too much. " He agreed on the need for a passel of new vice presidents, but was well aware of the powerful Harvard tradition of autonomous schools and faculties led by baronial deans (He had been one himself). While he had favored the appointment of a provost before he took office, now he had second thoughts. The major responsibility of most university provosts was budgetary: deciding how the financial pie should be sliced. That would reduce the authority of the deans. Even less attractive was the notion of having a provost to deal with educational and academic matters; Bok intended to do that himself. At the same time he was a strong believer in professional expertise. (50) This meant breaking away from Harvard's tradition of administrators whose qualifications consisted in good part of having gone to the College and having close Harvard ties. Bok sought a different type of bureaucrat, of the sort prevalent at other large universities: professionals with outside experience.
问答题You work for a company which is going to buy a set of equipment from Germany. You are asked to translate a lot of specifications and instructions within four months, which is impossible. Therefore you decide to advertise for two experienced translators as soon as possible. Write an e-mail to Mr. Max Remington, the Public Relation's manager. Ask for an advertisement for two translators. (You should use Max @ ge. corn for receiver and P. Wu @ yahoo, com for sender)
1) Explain the reason ;
2) Mention its urgency.
You should write about 100 words.
问答题请根据下表写一篇英文短文,谈谈合理利用互联网的问题。内容如下;应该做的事:阅读新闻;搜索学习资料;使用下载软件、音乐或电影等不应该做的事:沉湎于网络游戏;透漏个人信息;随意结交网友;访问黄色网页等注意: 1)根据要点进行说明,不要逐句翻译;2)字数:100左右;3)开头已经给出(不计入字数);4)参考词汇:下载—download 软件—software娱乐—entertainment黄色网页—pornographic web pages 网络游戏—onlineSame3 Make the Best of Internet We all know that different people go on the Internet for different purposes______________________
问答题House of Commons
问答题下面的短文有10处空白,每处空白后的括号内有一个词,请根据短文内容将其正确的形式填入文中,以恢复文章原貌,并在答题卡相应位置上将答案选项涂黑。Communication People can improve the quality of their lives life and their relationships with good communication skills.But, if
问答题Electronic or "cyber" warfare holds the promise of destroying an army's-or even a whole nation's--ability to function without hurting human life. The technology is reaching the point, however, where cyber warfare may be decisive in its own right. 46) In highly centralized military operations, communications and data management have become essential tools linking individual small units and the central command structure. The neutron bomb is one of the most horrid weapons ever devised: It doesn't damage property; it only kills higher life-forms. 47) Wouldn't the opposite be wonderful, a device like the robot's ray in The Day the Earth Stood Stills which melts down weapons but not soldiers? Electronic or "cyber" warfare--hacking into an enemy's computers, jamming radio transmissions, and tile like. The United States has very good electronic warfare capabilities, but has used them only to support conventional military operations. 48) Before we imagine what such a "cyberwar" scenario might be like, let's briefly look at how electronic warfare developed. During the Civil War, operations conducted by the Union army against the Confederate telegraph system foretold modern twentieth-century electronic warfare. Union operatives penetrated Confederate lines to tap into and read military traffic on the Confederate telegraph system. 49) Not only did these operations yield valuable intelligence information, but some operators even began sending bogus messages to sow confusion in the Confederate ranks. Just before World War I, radio communication seemed like a real boon to naval operations because it allowed ship-to-ship and ship-to-shore communications, especially in bad weather. Before this time, flags or light blinkers with limited range provided the only means of communication between ships. Naval ship captains, however, were aware that a sophisticated set of shore-based equipment could locate ships by their radio transmission. By listening to the transmissions, the enemy could ascertain the number and type of ships even if they could not decode actual messages. For this reason, the U. S. Navy was particularly resistant to using radio. However, U. S. military observers aboard British warships soon saw that the tactical advantages of radio outweighed the intelligence losses. Electronic warfare grew rapidly in World War II with the advent of radar. 50) Monitoring radar frequencies allowed spoofing or jamming of enemy radar and led to major units and equipment devoted solely to countermeasures and counter-countermeasures. Gathering intelligence from radio transmissions also increased greatly. Today, every modem nation has the capability to monitor, jam, or otherwise interfere with an adversary's radio communications. Most nations have also developed jam-resistant communications and intelligence-gathering equipment. Electronic or "cyber" warfare holds the promise of destroying an army's-or even a whole nation's--ability to function without hurting human life. The technology is reaching the point, however, where cyber warfare may be decisive in its own right. 46) In highly centralized military operations, communications and data management have become essential tools linking individual small units and the central command structure. The neutron bomb is one of the most horrid weapons ever devised: It doesn't damage property; it only kills higher life-forms. 47) Wouldn't the opposite be wonderful, a device like the robot's ray in The Day the Earth Stood Stills which melts down weapons but not soldiers? Electronic or "cyber" warfare--hacking into an enemy's computers, jamming radio transmissions, and tile like. The United States has very good electronic warfare capabilities, but has used them only to support conventional military operations. 48 ) Before we imagine what such a "cyberwar" scenario might be like, let's briefly look at how electronic warfare developed. During the Civil War, operations conducted by the Union army against the Confederate telegraph system foretold modern twentieth-century electronic warfare. Union operatives penetrated Confederate lines to tap into and read military traffic on the Confederate telegraph system. 49 ) Not only did these operations yield valuable intelligence information, but some operators even began sending bogus messages to sow confusion in the Confederate ranks. Just before World War I, radio communication seemed like a real boon to naval operations because it allowed ship-to-ship and ship-to-shore communications, especially in bad weather. Before this time, flags or light blinkers with limited range provided the only means of communication between ships. Naval ship captains, however, were aware that a sophisticated set of shore-based equipment could locate ships by their radio transmission. By listening to the transmissions, the enemy could ascertain the number and type of ships even if they could not decode actual messages. For this reason, the U. S. Navy was particularly resistant to using radio. However, U. S. military observers aboard British warships soon saw that the tactical advantages of radio outweighed the intelligence losses. Electronic warfare grew rapidly in World War II with the advent of radar. 50 ) Monitoring radar frequencies allowed spoofing or jamming of enemy radar and led to major units and equipment devoted solely to countermeasures and counter-countermeasures. Gathering intelligence from radio transmissions also increased greatly. Today, every modem nation has the capability to monitor, jam, or otherwise interfere with an adversary's radio communications. Most nations have also developed jam-resistant communications and intelligence-gathering equipment.
问答题绝大多数人是不会把“欺骗”一词和科学联系在一起的。如今科学受到如此尊重,原因之一在于科学家的形象是一个冷静地收集数据、不带任何偏见、寻找真理的人。在辩论中,不管谈的是关于智力、学校教育、偏见,还是能量,通常说一声“科学上是这么说的”,对方就不作声了。
但是,很久以来,科学界一直承认“欺骗因素”的存在,即许多科学家倾向于将数据加工以获取想要得到的结果。在当今科学界的几乎每一个有争议的领域,种族与智力的论战,核能的辩论等等,都可以见到这种倾向。
因此,我们既要倾听“科学”对事物的看法,又不能毫不怀疑地接受。
问答题ESP
问答题一些小报极力迎合一部分读者的低级趣味以便赚钱。
