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大学英语考试
大学英语考试
全国英语等级考试(PETS)
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问答题相比之下,大多数受过教育的人把他们的幸福跟大自然联系在一起,并且为了保护自我而努力保护大自然。
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问答题Replacethedotswithawordtomakefivenewwords.
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问答题为了能最大限度地利用现有资源,每个人都应有接触到图书馆里新书的机会。(hay access to)
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问答题我宁愿同朋友行走在黑暗中,电不愿独自徘徊在光亮处。(would rather…than)
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问答题How often does he use the public swimming pool?
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问答题在毒奶粉丑闻曝光后,家长们为该给孩子吃什么而忧虑。(expose; be concerned about)
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问答题Direction: You wish to enroll in a PhD course (of your choice) at a UK university. You have already written a letter to the university asking for information but have received no reply. Write a letter to the university explaining your concern, because the course starts in less than two months. You need to know if you can still enroll, and you also require further information about the course, including the cost. Write a letter of about 100 words in an appropriate style on the answer sheet. Do not write any postal addresses. Do not sign your own name at the end of the letter.
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问答题Today's Tomorrow Par Moon Today the seed - Tomorrow the grain Today the planting - Tomorrow the gain Today's now - Tomorrow's then Today's children - Tomorrow's men Today's darkenss - Tomorrow's light Tonight's blindness - Tomorrow's sight Today's sword - Tomorrow's plough. Tomorrow's now You should write no less than 180 words. Now write the composition on the Answer Sheet.
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问答题当获胜的足球队捧着奖杯归来的时候,全城的人都出动欢迎他们。(turn out)
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问答题Engineers and designers are already designing craft capable of propelling us beyond Earth"s orbit, the Moon and the planets. They"re designing interstellar spaceships capable of travel across the vast emptiness of deep space to distant stars and new planets in our unending quest to conquer and discover. Our Universe contains over a billion galaxies; star cities each with a hundred billion inhabitants. Around these stars must exist planets and perhaps life. The temptation to explore these new realms is too great.
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问答题好的教师知道他们的职责不单是向学生灌输知识,他们深切体会到教学工作不只是授课。(more than)
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问答题即使她们得到提升,薪水仍可能比做同样工作的男人少。(even if,less than)
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问答题Reuters: the Business of News One of the world's biggest suppliers of news and financial information, Reuters Group PLC, has a worldwide network of 2000 journalists and provides news stories, photographs and videos to newspapers, televisions and Internet sites. Although it is better known as a press agency, Reuters in fact makes most of its profits through promoting financial information such as currency rates and stock prices to bankers and investors all over the world. The history of Reuters goes hand in hand with improvements in communication technology. Reuters was established by Paul Julius Reuter-originally a bookseller in Germany. He set up a service using carrier pigeons to fly stock prices between Aachen in Germany, where the German telegraph line ended, and Brussels in Belgium, where the Belgian telegraph line began. In 1851, London had an important place in the global telegraphic network, because of which Reuter moved into an office near the London stock exchange from where he supplied investors in London and Paris with stock prices over the new Dover-Calais telegraph line. He expanded the service to include news items and had offices throughout Europe by the late 1850s. As overland and undersea cables were laid, the business of Reuters expanded to the Far East in 1872 and South America in 1874. Its reputation also grew with a number of scoops. For example, Reuters was the first in Europe to announce President Lincoln's death in 1865. Reuter retired in 1872 and the company changed its name to Reuters Ltd. In 1923, Reuters began to use teleprinters to distribute news to London newspapers and to supply news to Europe. After the growing pressure from the British government for Reuters to serve British interests, the company was restructured in 1941 in order to maintain its independence as agency. (69) At the same time, in the face of competition from American agencies after World War Two, Reuters expanded its financial information services. In 1964, Reuters introduced Stockmaster, which transmitted stock information from around the world onto computer screens. In 1973, the launch of the Reuters monitor created an electronic marketplace for foreign currency by displaying currency rates in real time. Reuters expanded this to include news and other financial information. This was followed by the Reuters monitor dealing service in 1981, which allowed foreign currency traders to trade directly from their own computers. In the 1990s, Reuters continued to develop information systems, including multimedia and online services. It bought a number of companies, including a television company which was called Reuters Television, which provides news, sports, business and entertainment via satellite to broadcasters in more than 90 countries. (70) Today's Reuters is still based on its Trust Principles, which state that news and information from the company must be independent and free from bias. Reuters'journalists have to provide accurate and clear descriptions of events so that individuals, organizations and governments can make their own decisions based on facts. Answer the following questions according to the passage.1.How does Reuters get most of its money?
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问答题Translate the following sentences into English by using the word or words given in brackets. Remember to write your answers on the answer sheet.
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问答题Humans have lost the evolutionary race. We are born without wings. It's a crucial omission and we are making the environment pay for it. We like to think we're the bee's knees of the natural world but we're nothing more than bumbling flatfoots. That's why kookaburras laugh and midges torment us. We are grounded for life and, in our frustration, we're wrecking the planet. Wings might seem just fun and frippery, but they would also save the environment. If we could fly, we would not be trampling ecosystems underfoot. Natural habitats that now get bulldozed would flourish because we wouldn't need roads. There would be no demand for cars, so there wouldn't be emissions problems. The common housefly travels 300 times its body length in one second. (1) If in a few generations we could match that, we would reach 2,000 kilometres per hour, which would make ozone-destroying aircraft and land-gabbing airports unnecessary: Society would benefit enormously if we could fly. Our philosophy about the private ownership of land would have to change because fences would become useless. (2) Nets wouldn't stop people flying into your garden-as anyone knows who has tried in vain to keep birds out of fruit crops. And domestic rooftops would become public resting places. The justice system would not need to guard expensive prisons because felons would simply have their wings clipped. Sports stadia would consist of only the pitch, with spectators hovering over the action. Stairs escalators and lifts would be as superfluous as bridges and tunnels. Buildings would have smaller ground plans and, instead, rise upwards, with entrance porches on every level. (3) If we had wings, not only would we not need to plunder so much of the Earth's resources, but we'd also be better guardians of the environment. Woodland would not be cut down because trees would be vital resting places as we flitted through the troposphere. We'd be more aware of the changes to Earth as we survived it daily from on high. And we'd soon appreciate any changes to air quality at all heights. There would be some drawbacks. (4) Clothing would have to be tight and aerodynamic-but our perception of human beauty would soon change so that we'd delight at a glimpse of wings with colorful feathers. Demand for the best addresses would push the prices of mountain eyries skyhigh. Electricity pylons and overhead cables would have to go. There would, inevitably, be the occasional crash landing in rush hour as soaring commuters got spun by the wing-tip vortices of others. But it would be worth these minor hassles. The dinosaurs clearly recognised, the merits of wings, and went so far as to evolve into birds. That left us to inherit the Earth-an inheritance we seem determined to fritter away. Humans clearly have an intuitive inkling of the need to fly. It comes up again and again, in nursery tales and sophisticated mythology from all over the world. If we had evolved wings, the world would have been blessed. (5) For the sake of the planet, biologists should stop growing ears on the backs of mice and start putting feathers between our shoulders, before it's too late. Time's running out. Must fly.
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问答题肥胖者会喜欢在月球跳跃,因为人在月球的重量是其在地球的六分之一。(less than)
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问答题爆炸力相当强大,方圆二十英里的树木均被炸毁。(so...that)
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问答题Directions: You are applying for admission to an English Course. Write a letter to introduce yourself, and you want to gain an application. You should write about I00 words on answer sheet 2. Do not sign your own name at the end of the letter. Use "Li Ming" instead. You do not need to write the address.
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问答题If GIBE-FADE=81,then DICE-CEDE=?
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问答题在谈到如何能取得成功时,Blair强调创造机遇比等待机遇更重要。(put emphasis on)
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