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大学英语考试
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硕士研究生英语学位考试
填空题Eachofthesewordshasapartner,exceptone.Whichistheoddoneout?
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填空题Whichlettercompletesthediagrambelow?
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填空题OneofLondon"smostbeautifulgardensisbeingtransformedintotheancientSilkRoadthiswintertocelebrateChineseNewYear.The65-acre18-centuryChiswickHouseGardensplayshost1thesecondannualMagicLanternFestival,withover50illuminatedinstallations,1,500lanternsand60,000lightbulbs.CelebratingtheChineseNewYearofTheRooster,thisyear"sthe2is"ExploreTheSilkRoad",aroutethatsawChinatradingitsprecioussilkandothercommoditieswithahugetranscontinentalnetworkduringtheHanDynasty.Itincludesa15-meterilluminatedsculptureoftheHousesofParliament,an3(art)replicaoftheshipthatChineseAdmiralZhengusedonhistradeexplorationsandanambitious,lanternadventureacrosstheSilkRoad,throughEurope,Asia,Arabia,Egypt,Persia,IndiaandAncientChina.The3Dlanternexperienceenjoyedasold-outrunlastyearwithahostofawardsand110,000visitors.Withspringstillnotquiteonthehor4,thisistheperfectwaytoenjoywinterandgetoutofthehousewiththefamily,saysDavidLeeofWeliCreative,whodreamtupthefestivalwithIanXiang."BeautifulChiswickHouseGardensistheperfectbackdropfortheLanternFestival"saysDavid."Itprovidesastunninglocationandcanvasforthesemagnificent,illuminatedlanternsculptures,5leavesvisitorsofallages6(delight)andhungrytosharepictureswithfriends."InChina,artistshavebeenmakingartworksformorethan2,000years,withdesignsbecomingbiggerandmoreambitiouswitheach7(pass)celebration.Londonisnodifferent.Thisyearhasevenmoreinstoreforvisitors,includingvir8realityheadsetsthatallowvisitorstoimaginetheyarerunningwithdinosaursandasyntheticicerink.AswellasAncientEgypt"sexo9pyramids,sphinxandcamels,India,PersiaandAncientRomewillalsobeupinlights,withare-imaginingofTheColosseumandagiantfireroosterproudly10(crow)attheendofwinter.Asguestsenjoymorethan75minutesontheirculturaladventure,theycansamplearangeofinternationalstreetfood,hottipplesanduniquegiftstoremembertheexperience.
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填空题 There is one passage in this section with 10 questions. Read the passage quickly and answer the questions on the Answer Sheet. [1] The rich keep getting richer. According to the latest Forbes ranking of the world's richest people, there are now a record 946 billionaires around the world. They have made their money from everything from telecoms to steel to Chinese food. [2] For the 13th year in a row, Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates is the richest person in the world. His personal fortune rose $ 6bn last year to $ 56bn (£ 29bn). His friend, the investment expert Warren Buffett, was the second richest. His fortune increased by $ 10bn during the year to reach $ 52bn. Both Mr. Gates and Mr. Buffett give a percentage of their fortunes to charity. Third richest is the Mexican telecoms entrepreneur Carlos Slim Helu, who added $19bn to his wealth, and now has $49bn. [3] The total wealth of all the people on the list grew by 35% during the year to $ 3.5 trillion as a result of rising property prices, commodities and stock markets. Luisa Kroll, who helped to compile the list at Forbes, said it was an extraordinary year'. On the previous list, there were just 793 billionaires. [4] The richest Briton on the list is the Duke of Westminster, Gerald Cavendish Grosvenor, at number 55. Grosvenor inherited much of his wealth and is one of the UK's Wealthiest landowners. He is said to be worth $11 bn. Sir Philip Green, the retail entrepreneur who controls British Home Stores and Topshop owner Arcadia is the second richest Briton at number 104 on the list. Sir Philip, 55, has $ 7bn. Next are the property tycoons David and Simon Rueben, who are worth $4.5bn between them and are number 177 on the list. [5] There are 29 British citizens on the list. Virgin founder Sir Richard Branson is number 230 with $3.8bn; David Sainsbury of the grocery family is 432nd with $2.2bn; newspaper owner Viscount Rothermere, Jonathan Harmsworth, is number 618 with $1.6bn and James Dyson also has $1.6bn. Harry Potter author JK Rowling is right at the bottom of the list with a fortune valued at $1 bn. There are two others who have made their money from a very different type of publishing ; Richard Desmond the former soft porn publisher, who now owns the Daily Express, is 754th on the list with $1.3bn in the bank and Paul Raymond, who owns Escort, Mayfair and Razzle magazines, is also worth $1 bn. [6] The list shows growing wealth in both China and India, the two dynamic economies driving global economic growth. Another 14 people from India joined the fist. With a total of 36 billionaires, India has now overtaken Japan, which has 24, as home to the most billionaires in Asia. There are three Indians in the top 20, led by Lakshmi Mittal, an Indian citizen who lives in London and who is number five on the list with $ 32bn. [7] There were 13 Chinese newcomers including Li Wei, the founder of Synear Food Hold ing. Her company is one of China's largest producers of frozen food and is an official supplier to the Beijing Olympics in 2008. [8] The US still has 44% of the world billionaires but its share is getting smaller, Russia is also rising fast and has 53 billionaires according to Forbes. The Wal-Mart family dropped from the top 20, after a difficult year for the world's largest retailer. [9] The average billionaire is 62 years old and 60% of the people on the list made their money from scratch. Around 100 unmarried men are included among the world's wealthiest. At the top of the list of bachelors are Google founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin—unmarried at 33 and 34 respectively, they are both worth $16.6bn and are number 26 in the overall list. Other interesting bachelors are Russian metals tycoon Mikhail Prokhorov, in 38th place with an estimated fortune of $13.5bn; and divorced James Packer, who has a more modest $5.5bn media fortune. [10] One of the more interesting rich people on the list is the accordion-playing, fire-breathing founder of Cirque du Soleil, Guy Laliberte, at number 664 on the list. The 47-year-old Canadian founded his circus-based, animal-free acrobatic show in t984 and still keeps 95% of the business. His fortune is estimated at $1.5bn. The richest woman, at number 12, is 84-year-old L'Oreal heiress Liliane Bettencourt, with a fortune of $ 20.7bn. Chat show queen Oprah Winfrey is believed to be worth $1.5bn. QUESTIONS 51-55: For answers 51-55, mark Y(for YES) if the statement agrees with the information given in the passage; N (for NO) if the statement contradicts the information given in the passage; NG (for NOT GIVEN) if the information is not given in the passage.
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填空题71.WhydocouplesinRussiaoftencontinuetolivetogetherafteradivorce?Becausethereisa________72.WhatdoChinesecoupleshavetodoifonlyonepartnerwantstoendthemarriage?Theyhavetofindsomeoneto________73.WhyisdivorceinAustralianoweasy?Becauseallonehastodoischangeone"s________74.WhatmusthusbandsinIsraeldobeforethewedding?Theymust________75.Whichcountryallowsitscitizentomarrymorethanoneperson?________
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填空题Ineverycountryinthedevelopedworld,waistlinesareexpandingasprosperitygrows.Aroughguidetonationalincomecanbeobtainedfromtheaveragedressortrousersize.InEurope,obesityhasincreasedby10to40percentinmostcountriesoverthepastdecadeandsimilarincreaseshavebeenseenintheUnitedStates,AustraliaandtheFarEast.FigurespresentedattheInternationalCongressonObesityinParisdemonstratethatobesityisglobalepidemic.However,asatableofthefattestandthinnestnationsshows,theproportionofthepopulationwhoareobesevarieswidelyacrosstheglobefromthediminutiveChinesetothebulkySamoans.Obesityisnotmerelyareflectionofthecaloriesonaplate.Itisinfluencedbygenes,culture,physicalactivityandsocialattitudes.InBritain,15percentofmenand16.5percentofwomenareclassifiedasobese,morethantwice,theproportionin1998,whentheequivalentfigureswere6percentofmenand8percentofwomen.Morethanone-thirdofwomenandalmosthalfofmenareconsideredoverweight.Yet,asanation,weareeatingnomorethanwedidtwodecadesago.TheexpandingBritishwaistlineislinkedtoadeclineinphysicalactivity.Morecarsandvideorecordershavemeantmoreflab.InChina,alargelyrurallifestylewhichmakesheavyphysicaldemandscombinedwithalow-fatrice-baseddietkeepsthepopulationthin.IntheUS,wherepeoplecommutetoofficesinair-conditionedcarsandonlybreakintoasweatwhenthepizzadeliveryislate,averageseatsizeshaveincreased.Culturalfactorsalsoplayapart.InSamoaandneighbouringislandsinthePacific,obesityhaslongbeenregardedassymbolofhighstatusandprosperityandisseenasattractiveasaresult.Inrecentyears,therehavebeensingsthatthesetraditionalnotionsarechangingasmoreWesternisedideasofanattractivebodysizetakehold.Despitetheenormousinternationalrangeinratesofobesity,onlyabout20percentofdifferencesinbodyshapecanbeattributedtogenes,accordingtoProfessorJohnGarrow,editoroftheEuropeanJournalofClinicalNutrition."IfitwerethecasethattheChineseandJapanesehadsomethingintheirgenesthatkeptthemthin,theywouldn'tbecometallerandfatterwhentheymigratedtotheUS,butmigrationstudiesshowthattheydo,"saysProfessorGarrow."Humanbeingsnowliveto70or80whentheyweredesignedtoliveto20or30fromsubsistenceagriculturewherescratchingalivingwasprettydifficult.Nowthatwearelivingtoastaggeringagewithfoodavailable24hoursaday,itissurprisingthatwearenotallobese."EstimatesbytheWorldHealthOrganisation'staskforceonobesitysuggestthatthisisnotmerefantasy.By2007,therewerearound26millionobeseadultsintheUS.Ifthepresenttrendcontinues,theentirepopulationwillbeobesein35yearsunlessAmericanscanbepersuadedtocurbtheirappetites.PercentageofpopulationwhoareobeseMenWomenChina1.21.6Japan1.72.7Sweden5.39.1Netherlands8.48.3NewZealand10.013.0Australia11.513.2Finland14.011.0England15.016.5CzechRepublic16.020.0FormerWestGermany17.019.0USA20.025.0FormerEastGermany21.027.0Lithuania22.045.0Samoa58.476.8Questions71to75:CompletethefollowingtablewithNOMORETHANFIVEWORDSforeachblank,accordingtothepassage.WhyobesityhasbecomeaglobalproblemMainPoints▲Increased(71)▲Declinein(72)/sedentarylifestyle.▲(73)▲Humanbeingsweredesignedtoliveto(74)▲Foodisnowavailable(75)
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填空题Today, many old buildings are being torn down so new ones can be built. But some older buildings are both beautiful and interesting. They need to be saved. The city of San Antonio, Texas, was settled by the Spanish in the early 1700s. Later, it was governed by Mexico. If you go to San Antonio, you can see many missions or churches that were built by the Spanish. All were started between 1720 and 1731. You can also find other buildings from early periods in the history of Texas. Some of these buildings are still standing because a group of women worked to save them. In 1924, the city of San Antonio was going to cement over the San Antonio River and turn it into an underground sewer. A group of women felt that the beauty of San Antonio should be preserved. They formed a club to keep the river from being destroyed. The women saved the river. Then they worked together to preserve several old buildings that were going to be torn down. In the 1930s, the women saved an old mill and granary. They raised money to buy these buildings by giving tea parties and selling cakes. More recently, the ladies in San Antonio have worked to save a Spanish convent. They could not afford to buy the whole building, so they paid for only half. Even so, the women are still looking for other old buildings to save. They want people to know about the city"s long and interesting history.
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填空题PavarottiDiesAged71TheItalianoperastarLucianoPavarottidiedathishomeinModena,aged71.Thetenor,whohelpedtakeoperatoanewmassaudience,hadbeendiagnosedwithpancreaticcancerlastyearandhadfurthertreatmentinAugust2007.Hismanager,TerriRobson,saidPavarottidiedat5amonSeptember6."Themaestrofoughtalong,toughbattleagainstthepancreaticcancerwhicheventuallytookhislife.Characteristically,heremainedpositiveuntilfinallysuccumbingtothelaststagesofhisillness,"Mr.Robsonsaidinastatement.PavarottiwasconsideredbysomecriticstohavebeenthegreatesttenorsinceEnricoCaruso.Hemadehisprofessionaldebutin1961,asRodolfoinPuccini'sLaBohemeattheoperahouseinReggioEmilia.HismostcelebratedperformancecameatNewYork'sMetropolitanOperaHouse,wherehehitninehighCsinDonizetti'sLafilleduregiment.ButPavarottireachedanewglobalaudienceduringthe1990footballWorldCup,whenhisinterpretationofthePucciniariaNessunDonnawaschosenasthetournament'sthemetune.Itbecameaninternationalbit.Later,EssentialPavarottibecamethefirstclassicalalbumtoreachNumber1intheUKcharts.The1990WorldCupwasalsothevenueofthefirstofthehugelypopularThreeTenorconcertsthatPavarottiperformedwithPlacidoDomingoandJoseCarreras.Hismosthigh-profileperformanceinBritainwasthePavarottiintheParkconcert,inarain-soddenHydeParkin1991.Hisfriend,Diana,PrincessofWales,wasinthefrontrow.Likemanyoperastars.Pavarottialsohadareputationforbeingdemanding.AtaRoyalVarietyperformanceinEdinburgh,hereportedlydemandedafullyfittedkitchentobebuiltintohishotelsuite.Healsofrequentlycancelledconcertsatshortnotice.Buthealsoraisedmillionsofpoundsforgoodcausesaroundtheworldinanumberofcharityperformances.Domingoledthetributestohisfellowtenor."IalwaysadmiredtheGod-givengloryofhisvoice."hesaid."IalsolovedhiswonderfulsenseofhumorandonseveraloccasionsduringourconcertswithJoseCarreraswehadtroublerememberingthatweweregivingaconcertbeforeapayingaudience,becausewehadsomuchfunbetweenourselves."TheBritishtenorRussellWatsontoldGMTVthatPavarottiwas"withoutquestion"themanwhobroughtoperatothepeople."TheWorldCupwastheThreeTenorsledbyPavarotti,withaveryentertainingversionofNessunDonna.Infact,it'snowcalled'Pavarotti'sNessonDorma',"Watsonsaid."Hisvoicewassodistinctivethatyouonlyneededtolistentoacoupleofbarsandyouknewitwashim,hehadincrediblepowerandcontrol./
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填空题What does ‘ a little bird,mean in the following conversation? Give the answer in Chinese. —A little bird told me that your mother is having her seventieth birthday soon. —Yes, she is. I was planning to organise a surprise party, but now it is still up in the air.
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填空题How many minutes is it before 12 noon if 90 minutes ago it was four times as many minutes past 9 am?
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填空题Proofread the passage as required: Each indicated line contains a maximum of one error. Correct the passage in the following way for a right line, put the sign "√" in the corresponding blank for a wrong word, underline the wrong word and write the correct one in the blank for a missing word, mark the position of the missing word with the sign "∧" and write the word you believe to be missing in the blank for an unnecessary word, cross the unnecessary word with the sign "—" and put the word with the sign "—" in the blank. Write the answers on the answer sheet. Rupert Brooke Rupert Brooke, one of the leading poets of his generation, wasrenowned as a romantic, unlike many of his contemporaries who 82. ______specialized in writing about the pointless of war. 83. ______ He was born in 1887, the son of a House Master at Rugby,where Rupert attended both the preparatory and main schools. Whenhe went up to Cambridge in 1906 as a classics scholar, he fared badly 84. ______in his examinations as his interests laid in literature and theater. 85. ______During his time at Cambridge, his wit and good looks ensured hisplace as a member of the elite circle of intellectuals study there. 86. ______ After university he went to study German in Munich, falling inlove with a sculptress there and working feverishly to begin his first 87. ______volume of poetry, which produced a profit within a few weeks of itspublication in 1911. With his early success, Brooke often felt unsettled as he 88. ______struggled to come to term with the underlying contradictions in his 89. ______character. Many times his free spirits and bohemianism conflicted 90. ______directly with the innate Puritanism he had inherited from his mother. 91. ______Because of these he would sometimes distance himself from hisfellows and adopt an irrational suspicious attitude towards them.
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填空题Find the one letter that will end the first word and start the second word of the two pairs of words. The same letter must be used for both pairs of words. JA ______ AlL STRA ______ HEN
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填空题A knowledge of differences between cultures in an ever-shrinking globalized world are becoming one of the essential skills that modern "citizens of 81.______ the world" need to possess in order to work and learn effectively. At a superficial level this involves know about food or body taboos. 82.______ For example, some cultures don't eat meat, cows can be sacred, the head must not be touched. But while it is important to know about these things, if this is what your intercultural knowledge stops, 83.______ you'll still end up offending people or misunderstood. 84.______ More important than superficial behavior is the value system of a culture. The cultural aware individual needs to have not only a 85.______ knowledge of publicly visible behaviors and stating beliefs, but also 86.______ an awareness of the underlain value system of cultures that shape 87.______ those behaviors and stated beliefs. Of course, these belief systems can be very different from one's own, and it's not very easy to label other people's behaviors and beliefs 88.______ as strange. It is more difficult to accept that one's own ways of behaving, 89.______ which seem perfectly normal, can be seen as strange and even rude in another culture. But if one tries to observe one's own culture objectively 90.______ and have an understanding of why other cultures do things differently, it is inevitable that cultural mistakes will be made.
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填空题A Day in My Very Wealthy Life The first thing I did just as I (21) in my favorite house this morning was to (22) the fabulous view from my bedroom window. Then I did an hour's exercise with my personal fitness trainer while my housekeeper prepared my breakfast. After a luxurious (23) , I spent some time with my secretary and told her to send cheques to all the (24) I support. (25) I was leaving the house, a special delivery arrived. It was a present from my secret admirer. I didn't get to the airport until midday, so I (26) the pilot to use our fastest plane and take me to my favorite city. During the (27) , I had a light lunch and looked at photographs of my last holiday. As soon as we landed, I (28) a dear friend of mine who has just finished her latest film and arranged to meet her for dinner later. I spent the afternoon doing what I love doing most. When I met my friend at the restaurant, I was (29) , so I ordered all my favorite things on the menu. As we were leaving the restaurant, I (30) somebody I'd always wanted to meet. It was the perfect end to a perfect day.
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填空题Start at the beginning: Civil Service clerk, temporary, at the local Ministry of Works depot in my hometown, can't get any lower than that. At the base of the bureaucratic pyramid, buried alive in fact, the temporary clerk is the navy of the Civil Service, without status or security. When I took the job I'd only worked in factories, and so I was a bit in awe of the office world I was about to enter. As an apprentice, queuing in the spotless corridor on Thursday outside the wage windows, peering in at the comparative purity of desks and paper and slick, dandified staff, you got a queer, dizzy sensation. My brother was a clerk himself, at the Council House, but I never connected him with this Thursday vision. On my first day as a clerk, going down the street with my brother, I confessed how nervous I was." Listen,"he said, " you can write your name, can't you? You can add up? Then you can be a clerk. " It was true. The depot was a big old house near the city centre, with the offices upstairs. My boss had a room at the front to himself, and behind him was a door leading to my den, which contained three others. This boss, a big, bumbling, embarrassed man, addressed us all with the "Mr. " fixed firmly between, as if to maintain his distance. Everyone accepted his remoteness as inevitable, something which struck me as weird from the beginning, especially as you had to go to and fro behind his chair to the outer door every time you went anywhere. The boss sat through it all encased in silence and dignity, like an Under Secretary. Holed up in the back room it was snug and at first I liked it, till the novelty wore off and the chronic, stagnant boredom began to take over. An old man, the only other temporary, made tea in the corner where he sat, and he did all the menial labouring jobs, stamping and numbering timesheets, sorting vouchers: so at first I helped him. The other two did the more skilled entering and balancing, working on wage sheets and other mysteries I never penetrated. It seemed to culminate, their activity, in the grand climax of pay-day, which was Friday. Then the boss, for an hour or so, came out of his fastness and was nearly human. He would march in smiling with the box stuffed full of money, and together they would count and parcel it. Out went the box again, stuffed with pay envelopes. The old man was treated with amiable contempt by the established clerks, who asserted their superiority now and again, and, as the old man was deaf, kept up a running commentary, half fun and half malice, which they evidently found necessary to break the monotony. Before long I needed it as much as they did. The worst aspect of a clerk's existence was being rubbed into me: it's how prison must be. At first you don't even notice, then it starts to bite in. Because of the terrible limitation of your physical freedom-chained to a desk is right-you are soon forced to make your own amusements in order to make life bearable. You have to liven it up. And with the construction comes inevitably an undertow of bitterness and all kinds of petty behaviour arise out of the robbing frustration, the enforced closeness. Plenty of it is malicious. Another clerical job, at a builder's merchants, was redeemed to some extent by the fact that you were actually in the warehouse, among storemen, sales reps, and all the tangible, fascinating paraphernalia of the trade. Racks and bins and lofts stacked with it. One occupational hazard facing a clerk is always the sense of futility he struggles against, or is more often just overwhelmed by. Unlike even the humblest worker on a production line, he doesn't produce anything. He battles with phantoms, abstracts; runs in a paper chase that goes on year after year, and seems utterly pointless. How can there be anything else other than boredom in it for him?
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填空题Inthissection,youwillhearapassagewhichwillbereadonlyonce.Youarerequiredtofillintheblankswiththeexactwordsyouhavejustheard.Remembertowritetheanswersontheanswersheet.Oneofthemostinterestingdevelopmentsinthetoymarkethasbeenthe{{U}}(21){{/U}}inthatmosttraditionaloftoys:trainsets.Modelsofallsorts,butespeciallyrailways,were{{U}}(22){{/U}}inthe1980sand1990s,buttheyhavebecomebigbusinessinthelastfewyears.InBritaintherehasalwaysbeenastronginterestinrailways,ascanbeseenfromthenumberofpeoplewhogo"trainspotting"--{{U}}(23){{/U}}aboutlocomotivesandtrainmovements.ThisalsoexplainswhyBritainisthelargestmodelrailwaymarketinEurope.Moderntrainsetsareintroducingchildren,whomayneverhavetraveledonarealtrain,tothejoysofrailwaymodeling.Forparents,modelrailwaysarea{{U}}(24){{/U}}tocomputersandvideogames.Modeltrainsaremorelastingthanothertoys,andtheirqualityis{{U}}(25){{/U}}.Thishasaddedtotheir{{U}}(26){{/U}}withbothparentsandchildren.Interestingly,the{{U}}(27){{/U}}ofpurchasersofmodelrailwaystodayareadults,notchildren.BythatIdonotmeanthatparentsbuymodelrailwaysfortheirchildren,although{{U}}(28){{/U}}thishappensagreatdeal.Imeanadultswhoarewillingtospendalotofmoneyonminiaturelocomotivesand{{U}}(29){{/U}}partoftheirchildhood.Purchasersofmodeltrainsareoften{{U}}(30){{/U}},suchasbankersandbusinessexecutives.
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填空题"Home, sweet home" is a phrase that expresses an essential attitude in theUnited States. Whether the reality of life in the family house is sweet or no sweet. 【M1】______The cherished ideal of home has great importance for many people. This ideal is a vital part of the American dream. This dream, dramatized in the history of nineteenth century European settlers of the American West, was in find apiece of place, build a house for one's family, and start a farm. These small 【M2】______households were portraits of independence: the entire family-mother, father, children, 【M3】______even grandparents—live in a small house and working together to support each 【M4】______other. Anyone understood the life and death, importance of family cooperation and 【M5】______hard work. Although most people in the United States no longer live on farms, but the ideal 【M6】______of home ownership is just as strong in the twentieth century as it was in the nineteenth. When U. S. soldiers came home before World War II. for example, they 【M7】______dreamed of buying houses and starting families. But there was a tremendous boom in 【M8】______home building. The new houses, typically it the suburbs, were often small and moreor less identical, but it satisfied a deep need. Many regarded the single-family 【M9】______house as the basis their way of life. 【M10】______
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填空题Distributetheremainingnumbers17and912aroundthenodessothateachofthesixlinesoffournumbersaddupto26.
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填空题Readthestatementsbelow.Thenanswerthequestion.NoneofthefourJonesbrothersisthesameheight.Nobrotheristallerthanabrotherwhoisolder.Thebrothers"namesareDon,Dan,Dave,andDick.DaveistallerthanDanandDick.DonisolderthanDave.DanisshorterthanDick.WhichbrotherisolderthanDanbutyoungerthanDave?
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填空题 Proofread the passage as required. Each indicated line contains a maximum of one error. Correct the passage in the following way: for a correct line, put the sign "V" in the corresponding blanks; for a wrong word,underline the wrong word and write the correct one in the blank; for a missing word, mark the position of the missing word with tlw sign “^” and write the word you bdieve to be missing in the blank ; for an unnecessary word, cross the unnecessary word with the sign “ / ” and put the word with the sign in the blank. Write the answers on the answer sheet.
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