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An organization hires a contractor who only needs access to email and a group calendar. They donot need administrator access to the computer. Which VPN model is the most appropriate?()
A . Thin Model
B . Thick Client
C . Port Forwarding
D . Clientless Access
E . Layer 3 Network Acce
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An organization hires a contractor who only needs access to email and a group calendar. They do not need administrator access to the computer. Which VPN model is the most appropriate?()
A . Thin Model
B . Thick Client
C . Port Forwarding
D . Clientless Access
E . Layer 3 Network Acce
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Mei Lanfang was an actor who played the role of dan. Together with ____________ , they were acclaimed the “four famed Peking Opera female-role performers.”
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Men first came to Britain probably before the Great Ice Age, who were called____ or the stone age men.
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Patients who were receiving mechanical ventilation were considered _____ if they met the following modified criteria for acute lung injury or the acute respiratory distress syndrome.
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______ there were only five soldiers left at the front, ______ they went on fighting.
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The soldiers were in need of food and medical supplies. Otherwise, they could only resist for two days.
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They were good men ___________.
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The Chamberlain's Men, in Shakespeare's time, were a remarkable group of people-excellent _____who were also business partners and close personal friends.
A.actors
B.students
C.teachers
D.writers
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听力原文: For many years, T-shirts were short sleeved undershirts only for men and boys. T-shirts used to be of one color--white. And since they were worn under shirts, they were generally not seen.
Today things have changed a lot. T-shirts has become colorful and fashionable. It can be seen al most everywhere and on everyone. Women and children wear T-shirts as well as teenagers, university students and men from all walks of life. T-shirts are worn on the playground, on the beach or in town. They can also be worn for work; Because the T-shirts are relatively inexpensive, smart, comfortable and convenient to wear, they have be come one of the newest ideas in fashion over the world.
Although T-shirts are now available in a wide variety of bright materials and styles, the most popular kind is the traditional cotton T-shirts with a slogan or a picture printed on the front. A T-shirt may bear a single word, a popular phrase, pictures of sportsmen, or an advertisement. As T-shirts are becoming more and more popular, new designs are coming up all the time.
When do people usually wear T-shirts?
A.When they take part in sports.
B.When they watch a film.
C.When they go shopping.
D.When they read a hook.
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They were concerned only with their own religious fervor
A.passion
B.belief
C.cree
D.duel
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__________they who did the thorough clening to the clssroom yesterdy.These w__________they who did the thorough clening to the clssroom yesterdy.These were B.Tht ws C.It ws D.Those were
A.These were
B.That was
C.It was
D.Those were
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Jck is one of those men who_________ best eveningnd the most difficult situtions.hsB.hdC.hvJck is one of those men who_________ best eveningnd the most difficult situtions.hs B.hd C.hve D.were
A.has
B.had
C.have
D.were
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The men who race the cars are generally small,with a tight, nervous look.They range from the early 20s to the middle 40s, and it is usually their nerves that go first.
Fear is the driver's constant companion, and tragedy can be just a step behind.Scarcely a man in the 500 does not carry the scars of ancient crashes.The mark of the plastic surgeon is everywhere, and burned skin is common.Sometimes a driver's scars are invisible, part of his heritage.Two young drivers, Billy Vukovich and Gary Bettenhausen, raced in their first 500 in 1968.Less than 20 years before, their fathers also competed against one another on the Indy track-and died there.All this the drivers accept.Over the years, they have learned to trust their own techniques, reflexes, and courage.They depend, too, on a trusted servant-scientific engineering.Though they may not have had a great deal of schooling(an exception is New Zealand's Bruce McLaren, who has an engineering degree), many drivers are gifted mechanics, with a feeling for their engines that amount to kinship.A few top drivers have become extremely wealthy, with six-figure incomes from prize money, endorsements, and jobs with auto-product manufacturers.Some have businesses of their own.McLaren designs racing chassis(底盘).Dan Gurney's California factory manufactured the chassis of three of the first four ears in the 1968 Indy 500, including his own second place car.Yet money is not the only reason why men race cars.Perhaps it isn't even the major reason.Three-time Indy winner(1961,1964,1967)A.J.Foyt, for example, can frequently be found competing on dirty tracks in minor-league races, where money, crowds and safety features are limited, and only the danger is not.Why does he do it? Sometimes Foyt answers, "It's in my blood." Other times he says, "It's good practice." Now and then he replies, "Don't ask dumb questions."
1.The statement "it is usually their nerves that go first" means ________.
A.at first they all have a nervous look
B.they often find they can't bear the tension even if they are in good condition
C.someday they find they can't make responses to any risk
D.they can continue their career at most until the middle 40s
2.It can be inferred that a car accident is often coupled with ________.
A.a plastic surgeon
B.a companion
C.a risk
D.a fire
3.The invisible scars of the drivers mentioned in the second paragraph refers to ________.
A.the regrets left by their fathers
B.the fears left by their fathers
C.the cars left by their fathers
D.the heritage left by their fathers
4.Bruce McLaren is different from most of the drivers in that ________.
A.he himself designs chassis
B.he has an engineering degree
C.he manufactures chassis
D.he is a gifted mechanic
5.A.J.Foyt often takes part in minor-league races for ________.
A.prize money
B.blood test
C.cheers from the crowd
D.Enjoyment
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Early in the 16th century men were trying to reach Asia by traveling west from Europe. In order to find Asia they had to find a way past South America. The man who eventually found the way from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific was Ferdinand Magellan.
Magellan sailed from Seville in August 1519 with five ships and about 280 men. Fourteen months later, after spending the severe winter on the coast of Patagonia, he discovered the channel which is now called Magellan's Straits. In November 1520, after many months of dangers from rocks and storms, the three remaining ships entered the ocean on the other side of South America.
They then continued, hoping to reach Asia. Before they arrived at these islands, later known as the Philippines, Magellan was killed in battle. The remaining officers then had to get back to Spain. They decided to sail around Africa. After many difficulties, one ship with eighteen men sailed into Seville three years after leaving. They were all that remained of Magellan's expedition. However, their achievement was great. They were the first men to sail round the world.
The purpose of Magellan's expedition was ______.
A.to become famous at that time
B.to find navigation line from the Atlantic to the Pacific
C.to make a voyage to Asia
D.to carry men to the Seville
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"Equal pay for equal work" is a phrase used by the American women who feel that they are unfairly treated by society. They say it is not right for women to be paid less than men for the same work.
Some people say men have more duties than women. A married man is thought to earn money to support his family and to make the important decision, so it is right for them to be paid more. Some are even against married women working at all. When wives go out to work, they say, the home and children are given no attention to. (80) If women are encouraged by equal pay to take full-time jobs, they will be unable to do the things they are best at doing: making a nice home and bringing up children.
Women who disagree say they want to escape from the limited place which society wishes them to fill and to have freedom to choose between work and home life, or a mixture of the two. Women have the right not only to equal pay but also to equal chances.
The women use the phrase "equal pay for equal work" to ask society to _________.
A.pay men less than women
B.give Women harder work
C.pay men and women the same amount of money for the same work
D.pay people more who do harder work
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Frank Lloyd Wright probably is the greatest architect that the United States has ever produced. He was very【21】and had a natural ability【22】. His buildings were not only beautiful, but they were【23】functional. They fit their purposes very well. Wright's churches,【24】make people feel like【25】. His office buildings make people【26】working, and his houses make people【27】comfortable, at home. However. Wright's beautiful,【28】buildings are not the only reason【29】he is famous. There is another reason.
Frank Lloyd Wright is called the greatest American architect because he started an American style【30】. Most of the architecture in the U. S. before Wright was really European,【31】. Wright's buildings do not【32】old European buildings. They have their own【33】. Wright's ideas about style. are still used in the U. S. and in other parts of the world.
The most important idea in Frank Lloyd Wright's Style. of Architecture is that a building must【34】and the land around it . His houses are often called "grassland houses" because their lines are【35】to the lines on the grass land.【36】the lines of the grassland and the lines of Wright's houses【37】the horzon, the place【38】earth and sky seem to meet. They are horizontal lines. Most European style. houses,【39】, have many vertical lines that form. 90° angles【40】the horizon.
(41)
A.conscious
B.conceited
C.talented
D.content
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The men who conquered Mt. Everest were from ______.
A.Nepal
B.England
C.China
D.a country in Asia
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not only how they were being _9_ but also who was benefiting from the societal pressure to be thin.
第9空答案是:
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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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The Chamberlain's Men, in Shakespeare's time, were a remarkable group of people-excellent ______ who were also business partners and close personal friends.
A.actors
B.students
C.teachers
D.writers
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The next time the men were taken up onto the deck, Kunta made a point of looking at the man behind him in line, the one who lay beside him to the left when they were below. He was a Serer tribesman much older than Kunta, and his body, front and back, was creased with whip cuts, some of them so deep and festering that Kunta, felt badly for having wished sometimes that he might strike the man in the darkness for moaning se steadily in his pain. Staring back at Kunta, the Serer's dark eyes were full of fury and defiance. A whip lashed out even as they stood looking at each other—this time at Kunta, spurring him to move ahead. Trying to roll away, Kunta was kicked heavily in his ribs. But somehow he and the gasping Wolof managed to stagger back up among the other men from their shelf who were shambling toward their dousing with bucked of seawater.
A moment later, the stinging saltiness of it was burning in Kunta's wounds, and his screams joined those of others over the sound of the drum and the wheezing thing that had again begun marking time for the chained men to jump and dance for the toubob. Kunta and the Wolof were so weak from their new beating that twice they stumbled, but whip blows and kicks sent them hem hopping clumsily up and down in their chains. So great was his fury that Kunta was barely aware of the women singing "Toubob fa!" And when he had finally been chained hack down in his place in the dark hold, his heart throbbed with a lust to murder toubob.
Every few days the eight naked toubob would again come into the stinking darkness and scrape their tubs full of the excrement that had accumulated on the shelves where the chained men lay. Kunta would lie still with his eyes staring balefully in hatred, following the bobbing orange lights, listening to the toubob cursing and sometimes slipping and tailing into the slickness underfoot—so plentiful now, because of the increasing looseness of the men's bowels, that the filth had begun to drop off the edges of the shelves down into the aisleway.
The last time they were on deck, Kunta had noticed a man limping on a badly infected leg. This time the man was kept up on deck when the rest were taken back below. A few days later, the women told the other prisoners in their singing that the man's leg had been cut off and that one of the women had been brought to tend him, but that the man had died that ,fight and been thrown over the side. Starting then, when the toubob came to clean the shelves, they also dropped red-hot pieces of metal into pails of strong vinegar. The clouds of acrid steam left the hold smelling better, but soon it would again be overwhelmed by the choking stink. It was a smell that Kunta felt would never leave his lungs and skin.
The steady murmuring that went on in the hold whenever the toubob were gone kept growing in volume and intensity as the men began to communicate better and better with one another. Words not understood were whispered from mouth to ear along the shelves until someone who knew more then one tongue would send back their meaning. In the process, all of the men along each shelf learned new words in tongues they had not spoken before. Sometimes men jerked upward, bumping their heads, in the double excitement of communicating with each other and the fact that it was being done without the toubeb's knowledge. Muttering among themselves for hours, the men developed a deepening sense of intrigue and of brotherhood. Though they were of different villages and tribes, the feeling grew that they were not from different peoples or places.
The living conditions for the Blacks in the salve ship were ______.
A.adequate but primitive
B.inhumane and inadequate
C.humane but crowded
D.similar to the crew's quarters
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A根据下面短文回答下列问题。One evening Mrs. Evans asked her husband to take her to a very expensive restaurant in the city because some film stars (影星) and famous people were there sometimes. She wanted to see these people.Soon after they had ordered their meal (点餐), a very attractive (引人注目) man and a woman came into the restaurant and sat down at a table nearby. They were having beautiful clothes, and Mrs. Evans said to her husband, "Look at them, Mike. I’m sure I’ve seen their pictures in a magazine (杂志)"Later, Mrs. Evans asked the waiter (服务员), "Who are they""Oh, they aren’t famous." The waiter answered."Really How do you know that" Mrs. Evans said in surprise."Because they asked me who you were," the waiter answered.The waiter told Mrs. Evans they were not famous because he knew them before.
[A] True
B. False
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Why did Jenny kept her old love letters Becuse she loved some of the men who wrote to hWhy did Jenny kept her old love letters Becuse she loved some of the men who wrote to her. B.Becuse she thought they were prt of her life. C.Becuse her dughter often plyed with them.
A.Because she loved some of the men who wrote to her.
B.Because she thought they were a part of her life
C.Because her daughter often played with them.