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填空题We know we have to read "between the lines" to
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the most out of anything. Marking up is also a useful practice, but you shouldn"t mark up a book
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isn"t yours. Librarians who lend you books
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you to keep them clean, and you should.
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you decide that I am right about the usefulness of marking books, you will have to buy them. There are two ways
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which one can
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a book. The first is the property fight you establish by paying for it, just as you pay for clothes and furniture. But this act of purchase is only the prelude to possession. Full ownership
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only when you have made it a part of yourself, and the best way to make yourself a part of it is by writing in it. An illustration may make the point clear. You buy a beefsteak and transfer it from the butcher"s icebox to your own. But you don"t own the beefsteak in the most important sense
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you consume it and get it into your bloodstream. I am arguing that books, too, must be
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in your bloodstream to do you any good.
There are three
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of book owners. The first has all the standard sets and best sellers-unread, untouched. The second has a great many books—a few of them read through, most of them dipped into, but all of them
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clean and shiny as the day they were bought. The third has a few books or many—every one of them dogeared and dilapidated.
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is marking up a book indispensable to reading? First, it
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you awake. I mean wide awake. In the second place, reading if it is active, is thinking, and thinking tends to express itself in
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. Finally, writing helps you remember the thoughts you
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, or the thoughts the author expressed.
填空题WhatsubjectdidFredstayupallnightpreparingfor?
填空题Whenbasketballwasinvented,itwasintendedtobe
填空题{{B}}Part A{{/B}}
{{I}} You will hear a passage about women' s rights. Listen and complete the sentences in questions 1~5 with the information you have heard. Write not more than 3 words in each box. You will hear the recording twice. You now have 25 seconds to read the sentences in question.{{/I}}
填空题Wheredoesstudentsstresscomefromsometimes?
填空题WhatdidSchubert'sfatherdo?
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Michigan Weather Report
Chicago is reporting light
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The temperature at Ann Arbor Airport is
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Tomorrow morning the sun will rise at
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The pollution index today is
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The weekend is likely to be
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填空题WhydidMissGreengotoseeherdoctor?
填空题InwhichcitydoesMr.Hoodwork?
填空题[此试题无题干]
填空题Companies and individuals who don't have a strategy to export more, or to ______ (involve) in foreign markets, are shutting themselves out of the lion's share of economic opportunity in our world.
填空题Atcollege,Johnisgoingto______.
填空题After millennia of growth which was so slow that each generation hardly noticed it, the cities are suddenly racing off in every direction. The world population goes up by two percent a year, city population goes up by four percent a year, but in big cities the rate may be as much as five and six percent a year. (61) To give only one example of almost visible acceleration. Athens today grows by three dwellings and 100 square meters of road every hour. There is no reason to believe that this pace will slacken. (62) As technology gradually swallows up all forms of work, industrial and agricultural, the rural areas are going to shrink, just as they have shrunk in Britain, and the vast majority of their people will move into the city. In fact, in Britain now only about four or five percent of people live in rural areas and depend upon them; all through the developing world the vanguard of the rural exodus has reached the urban fringes already, and there they huddle in shanty towns. We are heading towards an urban world. (63) This enormous increase will go ahead whatever we do, and we have to remember that the new cities devour space. People now acquire far more goods and things. (64) There is a greater density of household goods, they demand more services such as sewage and drainage. Above all, the car changes everything: rising incomes and rising populations can make urban car density increase by something like four and five percent in a decade; traffic flows rise to fill whatever scale of highways are provided for them. The car also has a curious ambivalence: it creates and then it destroys mobility. The car tempts people further out and then gives them the appalling problem of getting back. It makes them believe they can spend Sunday in Brighton, but makes it impossible for them to return before, say, two in the morning. (65) People go further and further away to reach open air and countryside which continuously recedes from them, and just as their working weeks decline and they begin to have more time for leisure, they find they cannot get to the open spaces or the recreation or the beaches which they now have the time to enjoy.
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填空题Thelivingroomcanalsofunctionas
填空题WhattypeofprogramisChineseMothers?
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