单选题. Questions 1 and 2 are based on the news report you have just heard.1.
单选题《复合题被拆开情况》 Soot—also known as black carbon—heats up the atmosphere because it absorbs sunlight. But for years the institutions that focus on climate policy have played down the role of pollutants such
单选题《复合题被拆开情况》 As you crest 到达 a rise on Mississippi’s Highway 63, a calm brown waterway flows beneath the bridge, and cranes and derricks 油井架 are revealed in the distance. The near view gives the region
单选题Throughout history,poverty is the normal condition of man, wrote Robert Heinlein,a science-fiction writer.Until the 18th century,global GDP per person was stuck between $725 and $1,100,around the same
单选题. Questions 19 to 21 are based on the passage you have just heard.4.
单选题. Questions 8 to 11 are based on the conversation you have just heard.1.
单选题Cash is unlikely to go away soon.Coins and paper 26_____ remain the most popular ways to pay for things in most countries.But in the long term,cash appears to be in a 27_____ battle with electronic pa
单选题. Questions 23 to 25 are bused on the passage you have just heard.8.
单选题《复合题被拆开情况》 The world as we know it, some believe, needs fossil fuel to grow. "Global demand for energy is rising, driven by growing population with rising living standards," reads the Shell website. A
单选题《复合题被拆开情况》 Immigration is regarded by the public as the biggest issue facing British society, a major new survey taking stock of the state of the country reveals. One in three people believes tension
单选题. Most kids grow up learning they cannot draw on the walls. But it might be time to unlearn that training—this summer, a group of culture addicts, artists and community organizers are inviting New Yorkers to write all over the walls of an old house on Governor's Island. The project is called Writing On It All, and it's a participatory writing project and artistic experiment that has happened on Governor's Island every summer since 2013. "Most of the participants are people who are just walking by or are on the island for other reasons, or they just kind of happen to be there," Alexandra Chasin, artistic director of Writing On It All, tells Smithsonian. com. The 2016 season runs through June 26 and features sessions facilitated by everyone from dancers to domestic workers. Each session has a theme, and participants are given a variety of materials and prompts and asked to cover surfaces with their thoughts and art. This year, the programs range from one that turns the house into a collaborative essay to one that explores the meaning of exile. Governor's Island is a national historic landmark district long used for military purposes. Now known as "New York's shared space for art and play," the island, which lies between Manhattan and Brooklyn in Upper New York Bay, is closed to cars but open to summer tourists who flock for festivals, picnics, adventures, as well as these "legal graffiti (涂鸦)" sessions. The notes and art scribbled (涂画) on the walls are an experiment in self-expression. So far, participants have ranged in age from 2 to 85. Though Chasin says the focus of the work is on the activity of writing, rather than the text that ends up getting written, some of the work that comes out of the sessions has stuck with her. "One of the sessions that moved me the most was state violence on black women and black girls," says Chasin, explaining that in one room, people wrote down the names of those killed because of it. "People do beautiful work and leave beautiful messages."1. What does the project Writing On It All invite people to do? ______
单选题《复合题被拆开情况》 On the day the Daily Express announces; "The secret to why humans grow old has been discovered by scientists in Britain, paving the way towards radical new treatments for age-related diseas
单选题[此试题无题干]
单选题《复合题被拆开情况》 Three children in every classroom have a diagnosable mental health condition. Half of these are behavioural disorders, while one third are emotional disorders such as stress, anxiety and de
单选题. Questions 23 to 25 are bused on the passage you have just heard.8.
