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1. He was accused of attempted murder after he ________ used a kitchen knife to attack officials who stormed his house to arrest him.
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220.A ship’s forward draft is 22’-04”and her after draft is 23’-00”. The draft amidships is 23’-04”. This indicates a concentration of weight_____.
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The main difficulty the writer had in reading in her 7th grade was that ______.
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After the war, Schindler says good bye to the Jews from his factory and starts his fugitive life. How about Amon Göth after the war?
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H ow many days after the wedding is the bride expected to return to her family? ( )
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In the film, the peaceful life of a monk __________ the violent life of a murderer.
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Mary washed for a living after her husband died of cancer.
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Of the women writers in the 19th century English literature, ( ) is the only one that deals with the life of the working-class people, represented by her novel Mary Barton.
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Some of the fans chased after the singer’s car to catch a _______ of her.
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1. He was accused of attempted murder after he ________ used a kitchen knife to attack officials who stormed his house to arrest him.
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The absolute construction in the sentence “She ran after chickens, an axe in her hand...” is actually an adverbial of accompaniment.
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The first shiploads of immigrants bound for the territory which is now the United States crossed the Atlantic more than a hundred years after the 15th- and 16th-century explorations of North America.
请将上面这段话翻译成中文,谢谢!
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Eleven days after her son Benjamin's birth by C-section, Linda Coale awoke in the middle of the night in pain, one leg badly swollen. Just【C1】______her doctor returned her phone call asking what to do,she dropped dead【C2】______a blood clot(凝块).
Pregnancy-related deaths like Coale's【C3】______to have risen nationwide over the past decade, nearly tripling in the state with the most careful count-California. And【C4】______they're very rare--about 550 a year out of 4 million births【C5】______--they're nowhere near as rare as they should be. Pregnancy-related death rate is four times【C6】______than a goal the federal government【C7】______for this year. "It's unacceptable," says Dr. Mark Chassin of The Joint Commission, the agency which recently issued a(n)【C8】______to hospitals to take steps to【C9】______mothers-to-be. "Maybe as many as half of these are【C10】______."
Two years after Coale's death near Annapolis,Maryland, her sister says【C11】______that list should be warning women about【C12】______of an emergency, like the clot called deep vein thrombosis(DVT)that can kill【C13】______it breaks out of the leg and moves to the lung. "【C14】______she wanted to do was have her own family, and when she【C15】______gets that privilege, she's no longer【C16】______us," says Clare Johnson, who says her the sister's【C17】______risk was being pregnant at age 35.
Pregnancy-related death【C18】______little public attention in U.S.,【C19】______last year's worry over the flu that killed at least 28 pregnant women. Among the【C20】______preventable causes are massive bleeding, DVT-caused lung disease and uncontrolled blood pressure.
【C1】
A.as
B.for
C.once
D.since
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The young undergraduate was______death because he had murdered four of his classmates.
A.condemned of
B.condemned to
C.condemned for
D.condemned into
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She had to____after the first round because she sprained her wrist.
A、run out
B、drop out
C、draw out
D、come out
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They ignored him,despite his repeated_____that he was not on the scene of murder that evening.
A.assumptions
B.suppositions
C.affirmations
D.confirmations
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Today, the Tower of London is one of the most popular tourist【1】and attracts over three million visitors a year. It was occasionally used as a Royal Palace for the Kings and Queens of England【2】the time of James I who【3】from 1603 to 1625, but is【4】known as a prison and execution place. Within the walls of the Tower, princes have been murdered, traitors【5】, spies shot, and Queens of England beheaded. One of the most famous executions was that of Anne Boleyn in 1536. She was the second wife of Henry VIII. He wanted to【6】her because she could not give him a son, so he accused her of adultery. She was tried and found guilty. She asked to be beheaded with a sword【7】the usual, axe, which can still be seen in the Tower. The sword and executioner were【8】over specially from France and with one【9】the executioner cut off her head.
The Tower was also the【10】of one of London's most famous mysteries. King Edward IV died in 1483. His elder son, Edward, became king【11】his father's death. Young Edward lived in the Tower, and the Duke of Gloucester,【12】protector, persuaded Edward s brother, Richard, to come and live there so that they could play together. But then the Duke【13】that he was the new king, and he was crowned instead of the twelve-year-old Edward,【14】himself Richard III.
After that, the boys were seen less and less and eventually disappeared.【15】said that they were suffocated in bed by pillows being【16】their mouths. It is believed that Richard ordered their deaths,【17】it has never been proved. In 1674, workmen at the Tower discovered two【18】which were taken away and buried in Westminster Abbey in 1678. The【19】were examined in 1933 and were declared to be those of two children,【20】the age of the Princes.
(1)
A.seats
B.scenes
C.grounds
D.sights
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Before high school teacher Kimberly Rugh got down to business at the start of a recent school week, she joked with her students about how she'd had to clean cake out of the corners of her house after her 2-year-old son's birthday party. This friendly combination of chitchat took place not in front of a blackboard but in an, E-mail message that Rugh sent to the 145 students she's teaching at the Florida Virtual School, one of the nation's leading online high schools. The school's motto is "any time, any place, any path, any pace."
Florida's E-school attracts many students who need flexible scheduling, from young tennis stars and young musicians to brothers Tobias and Tyler Heeb, who take turns working on the computer while helping out. with their family's clam-farming business on Pine Island, off Florida's southwest coast. Home-schoolers also are well represented. Most students live in Florida, but 55 hail from West Virginia, where a severe teacher shortage makes it hard for many students to take advanced classes. Seven kids from Texas and four from Shanghai round out the student body.
The great majority of Florida Virtual Schoolers—80 percent—are enrolled in regular Florida public or private high schools. Some are busy overachievers. Others are retaking classes they barely passed the first time. The school's biggest challenge is making sure that students aren't left to sink or swim on their own. After the school experienced a disappointing course completion rate of just 50 percent in its early years,Executive Director Julie Young made a priority out of what she calls "relationship-building," asking teachers to stay in frequent E-mail and phone contact with their students. That personal touch has helped. The completion rate is now 80 percent.
Critics of online classes say that while they may have a limited place, they are a poor substitute for the face-to-face contact and socialization that take place in brick-and-mortar classrooms. Despite opportunities for online chats, some virtual students say they'd prefer to have more interaction with their peers.
Students and parents are quick to acknowledge that virtual schooling isn't for everyone. "If your child's not focused and motivated, I can only imagine it would be a nightmare," says Patricia Haygood of Orlando, whose two daughters are thriving at the Florida school. For those who have what it takes, however, virtual learning fills an important niche. "I can work at my own pace, on my own time," says Hackney. "It's the ultimate in student responsibility."
Kimberly Rugh Talked about her son's birthday party ______ .
A.with her friends
B.with her colleagues
C.in the classroom
D.in an E-mail massage sent to her students
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On April the 18th, 1960, it was a few minutes after 5 o'clock in the morning. Most people in San Francisco were a-sleep, but the rattling of the milkmen's carts and bottles meant that the city was waking to another busy day.
At that moment the land suddenly moved. The vibration was so strong that great buildings fell down, including the new seven-million-dollar City Hall, which the community had good reason to be proud of. Main water pipes burst. Cooking stoves overturned and electric wires flashed. The fires which started caused damage in large areas of the city.
What had happened.'? The rocks had broken apart along nearly three hundred miles of a crack in the earth of California, a feature of the physical map of that region known as a "fault".
The damage was greatest in San Francisco which was near the center of the fault. Many buildings were destroyed by fire or by the earthquake itself, and hundreds of people were killed. Many people also died from diseases which broke out in the dirty camps later occupied by homeless people. The fires got out of control and, before they died out, four square mi-les of the city were burnt out.
The loss of property was serious. The loss from fire alone amounted to 400,000,000 dollars, more than nine-tenths of the total damage. In those days this was an enormous sum.
The effects of the earthquake were widespread. Rivers and streams began to run in new directions and their flow pat-terns were changed. Trees six feet in diameter were uprooted within half a mile of the central break. An area of wet fields on the side of a hill actually moved half a mile downwards. A road which crossed the fault burst apart and a gap of 21 feet remained between the broken ends.
The California earthquake is remembered because it was so sudden and because it occurred in a city, where the dam-age and destruction were plainly visible and where many people were killed simultaneously. Actually, deaths on American roads from car accidents are now greater in almost any week of the year, but we are so accustomed to road accidents that we do not pay much attention to them.
Scientists and engineers studied the effects of the San Francisco earthquake. The city was rebuilt, and new features were introduced to strengthen buildings and maintain a constant water supply in the event of. another earthquake. The water mains were fitted with control values which would enable water to travel by different routes round broken places. Large underground tanks were constructed to supply water if normal supplies could not be tapped. Special measures were taken to prevent fires, which often do more damage than earthquakes themselves.
The San Francisco earthquake provided scientists with valuable information, since the effects of the break were visible and reports of the incident were an important contribution to the world's store of knowledge about earthquakes.
The main cause of the great loss of property 'after the San Francisco earthquake in 1960 is______.
A.falling buildings
B.broken pipes
C.fires
D.floods
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Mary stopped __________ with Henry after the death of her mother.
responding
corresponding
pounding
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The men and women of Anglo-Saxon England normally bore one name only. Distinguishing epithets were rarely added. These might be patronymic, descriptive or occupational. They were, however, hardly surnames. Heritable names gradually became general in the three centuries following the Norman Conquest in 1066. It was not until the 13th and 14th centuries that surnames became fixed, although for many years after that, the degree of stability in family names varied considerably in different parts of the country.
British surnames fall mainly into four broad categories: patronymic, occupational, descriptive and local. A few names, it is true, will remain puzzling: foreign names, perhaps, crudely translated, adapted or abbreviated; or artificial names.
In fact, over fifty percent of genuine British surnames derive from place names of different kinds, and so they belong to the last of our four main categories. Even such a name as Simpson may belong to this last group, and not to the first, had the family once had its home in the ancient village of that name. Otherwise, Simpson means "the son of Simon", as might be expected.
Hundreds of occupational surnames are at once familiar to us, or at least recognizable after a little thought: Arther, Carter, Fisher, Mason, Thatcher, Taylor, to name but a few. Hundreds of others are more obscure in their meanings and testify to the amazing specialization in medieval arts, crafts and functions. Such are "Day", (Old English for breadmaker) and "Walker" (a fuller whose job was to clean and thicken newly, made cloth).
All these vocational names carry with them a certain gravity and dignity, which descriptive names often lack. Some, it is true, like "Long", "Short" or "Little", are simple. They may be taken quite literally. Others require more thinking: their meanings are slightly different from the modern ones. "Black" and. "White" implied dark and fair respectively. "Sharp" meant genuinely discerning, alert, acute rather than quick-witted or clever.
Place-names have a lasting interest since there is hardly a town or village in all England that has not at some time given its name to a family. They may be picturesque, even poetical; or they may be pedestrian, even trivial. Among the commoner names which survive with relatively little change from old-English times are "Mil ton" (middle enclosure) and "Hilton" (enclosure on a hill).
Surnames are said to be ______ in Anglo-Saxon England.
A.common
B.vocational
C.unusual
D.descriptive
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In the sentence“After the plane took off,Jessica still stood there crying.”,what is th
A.A.”,what is the function of the underlined part?()
B.B.It's a prepositional phrase, functioning as an adverb
C.C.It's not a phrase, but an adverbial clause
D.D.I's not a phrase, but an independent clause
E.E.It's a prepositional phrase, functioning as the subject
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The following paragraph of an event involves the description of: A girl on my daughter’s team jumped in the pool, grabbed the sock, and swam after Elizabeth. She grabbed Elizabeth’s foot. “You have to put the sock on,” the girl screamed. Elizabeth treaded water while her teammate put on the sock.
A、Scenes
B、Actions
C、Feelings and emotions
D、/
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The people loved her so much that they nicknamed her “Evita”, and long after her death, many Argentines continue to ________ her.