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The tally figures of the loading port are in conformity()ours.
A . to
B . by
C . with
D . against
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Which of the following titles best expresses the ideas of the passage?
A . Needed: a Better Model for Education
B . Gonski: the Advantages and Disadvantages
C . Needed: a Better Model for Funding Schools
D . Gonski: a Funding Model Favored by the Prime Minister
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Refer to the exhibit. Routing updates for the 192.168.1.0 network are being received from all three neighbors. Which statement is correct regarding the result of the con figuration shown? ()https://assets.asklib.com/images/image2/201807301539013573.jpg
A . The router will prefer the next hop of 172.16.1.1 for packets destined for the 192.168.1.0 network.
B . The router will prefer the next hop of 172.26.1.1 for packets destined for the 192.168.1.0 network.
C . The router will adve rtise the 192.168.1.0 network only to 172.30.1.1.
D . The router will advertise the 192.168.1.0 network only to 172.26.1.1.
E . The router will prefer the next hop of 172.26.1.1 for packets except those destined for the 192.168.1.0 network.
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Figure of cargo short-landed in().
A . dispute
B . argue
C . debate
D . discu
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The statistics show that 21% of men are interest in ___________ while the figure for _________ is only 16%.
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Paradox is a figure of speech.
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Which of the following adopts the figure of speech - pun?
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In the Songs of Innocence , “Lamb” was the dominant figure, while in the ______ , the figure of “Tyger” dominated.
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But certainly, for us who understand life, figures are a matter of indifference. Is this a correct sentence?
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The idiom \fall into good hands\ is a ______ as far as figures of speech are concerned.
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Which of the following figures was a member of “竹林七贤” ?
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The material and cross-section of the four columns shown in the figure are all the same. What is the order of instability?http://image.zhihuishu.com/zhs/onlineexam/ueditor/201904/0e41844625fd4a3ebdb6901c268ada2f.png
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Her beautiful hair and figure are some compensation _ her ugly face.
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Which of the following titles in most appropriate to the passage?
A.Polarity Reversal: A Fantastic Phenomenon of Nature
B.Measurement of the Earth's Magnetic-Field Intensity
C.Formation of the Two Poles of the Earth
D.A New Approach to the Study of Geophysics
此题为多项选择题。
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垂直方向不同频率的两个简谐振动合成李萨如图形,其艺术性表现在光滑流畅优美,其实用性是什么? Two simple harmonic oscillations of different frequencies in the vertical direction are combined to form A Lisaru figure. Its artistic expression is smooth and graceful. What is its practicality?
A.根据未知频率求已知频率; Find the known frequency according to the unknown frequency;B.根据已知频率通过简单的切点倍数关系求未知频率; According to the known frequency, the unknown frequency can be obtained by simple tangent multiple relation;C.根据已知频率通过简单的波长倍数关系求未知频率; According to the known frequency, the unknown frequency is obtained through simple wavelength multiple relation;D.根据已知频率通过简单的时间倍数关系求未知频率; The unknown frequency is obtained by a simple time
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The_________of a full stop at the end of the sentence is a deliberate act by the writ
A.A.omission
B.B.exclusion
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【C1】______ nearly a hundred years of powered flight, scientists are still trying to figure out how birds fly.
Researchers have learned that the slapping noise pigeons make when they suddenly take off is the sound of super charged lift. They call it the "clap fling" effect.
Here at SRI International scientists try to duplicate the pigeons' thrust. A flashing strobe reveals the secret.
Scott Stanford, a scientist at SRI, says, You re looking at the clap fling effect, where the two wings will come together and peel apart 【C2】______ each other, thus augmenting lift 【C3】______ drawing air from the top to the bottom. "
This mechanical bug won't get off the ground. 【C4】______ its flapping wings demonstrate a potential propulsion system for robotic birds: man-made rubbery muscle.
Roy Kornbluh works at SRI. "There, I'm turning the voltage on and off, and you can see when the voltage is on, the material is larger 【C5】______ when the voltage is off."
Super computers show high-speed airflows over supersonic aircraft.
But scientists have only begun to see how air flows 【C6】______ really low speeds.
Professor Max Platzer of the Naval Postgraduate School, says, "The flapping wing is generating a thrust, this way, this is the basic physics of the phenomenon."
It's pelicans--not pigeons--the Navy is looking at. The Navy is looking at the smooth easy flight of pelicans low over water--called "ground effect." Researchers at the Naval Postgraduate School are trying to imitate the pelican's efficiency.
Assistant Professor Kevin Jones of the Naval Postgraduate School says, " 【C7】______ flapping the wings, symmetrically, we're 【C8】______ effect imitating ground effect. We now have the same feature a bird sees when it's flying, over a ground plane."
An electric motor drives the flapping wings. Researchers here are working 【C9】______ ways to beam power to the tiny bird.
David Jenn of the Naval Postgraduate School says, "There's no battery inside of here, so we're going to set this inside the radar beam, and the energy is extracted from the radar beam and will be used to propel the motor."
Scientists are learning it's one thing to build an airplane, 【C10】______ quite another to build a bird.
【C1】______
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Emily Dickinson&39;s poems have no titles, hence are always quoted by their ______.
A.topic sentence
B.first line
C.last line
D.theme
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听力原文:M: Excuse me. I'm looking for this book. It's in the list of titles but I couldn't find it on the shelf.
W: Let me see. Oh, it's been checked out. It's due on June 26. If you want us to reserve it for you, please fill out this card.
Q: Why can't the man find the book he wants?
(18)
A.It won't come out until June 26.
B.It hasn't been returned by the borrower.
C.It is not available unless it has been reserved.
D.It was withdrawn from the shelf as a back issue.
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No one knows exactly how many disabled people there are in the world, but estimates suggest the figure is over 450 million. The number of disabled people in India alone is probably more than double the total population of Canada.
In the United Kingdom, about one in ten people have some disability. Disability is not just something that happens to other people: as get older, many of us will become less mobile, hard of hearing or have failing eyesight.
Disablement can take many forms and occur at any time of life. Some people are born with disabilities. Many others become disabled as they get older. There are many progressive disabling diseases. The longer time goes on, the worse they become. Some people are disabled in accidents. Many others may have a period of disability in the form. of a mental illness. All are affected by people's attitude towards them.
Disabled people face many physical barriers. Next time you go shopping or to work or visit friends, imagine how you would manage if you could not get up steps, or on to buses and trains. How would you cope if you could not see where you were going or could not hear the traffic? But there are other barriers: prejudice can be even harder to break down and ignorance inevitably represents by far the greatest barrier of all. It is almost impossible for the able-bodied to fully appreciate what the severely disabled go through, so it is important to draw attention to these barriers and sow that it is the individual person and their ability, not their disability, which counts.
The first paragraph points out that ______.
A.there are many disabled people in the world
B.the number of disabled people in India is the greatest
C.India has much more disabled people than Canada
D.it is impossible to get an exact figure of the world' s disabled people
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Judging by the $23 billion it earned last year, these should be the best of times for Shell, the Anglo-Dutch energy giant that ranks third among the top five Western oil companies. But Wall Street isn't celebrating. Instead, analysts are worried that buried beneath the record profit figures are worrying signs of a business in decline.
That's because Shell hasn't been able to find nearly as much oil and gas as it's now pumping out of the ground. In fact, it hasn't even come close—replacing only 60% to 70% of what it produced in 2005 and only 19% in 2004. Shell has had reserve problems for years—a controversy over improperly booked assets forced it to reduce estimated reserves by roughly 30% and led to the resignation of its CEO, Phil Watts, in 2004. But what's troubling now is that Shell is falling way behind rivals like Exxon and BP despite spending billions more each year on exploring and drilling new wells. Last year Exxon replaced 112% of production; BP came up with 95%. "I have never seen anything like this," says Fadel Gheit, a veteran energy analyst with Oppenheimer & Co. "Shell used to represent the gold standard in this industry, but lately they can't get their act together."
To be sure, Shell still has huge assets—nearly 12 billion barrels. But in the oil and gas industry, reserve replacement is the best guide to whether a company will be able to maintain-or grow-production in the future. So not replacing what you pump, says longtime industry observer Matthew Simmons, "is like eating your seed corn. If you're not finding new oil, you're just liquidating what you've got." Indeed, Shell's daily production figures have been weak lately, falling 6.7 % in 2005, to 3.52 million barrels a day.
Privately, Shell execs say the company's decision to cut spending for exploration when oil prices bottomed out in the late 1990s is partly to blame for the anemic numbers now. Shell CEO Jeroen Vander Veer insists that projects like those on Sakhalin Island off Siberia and in Nigeria and the Gulf of Mexico will enable the company to start catching up with peers in the years ahead. It won't be easy. "If you're not adding to reserves, you have a problem," says Sanford Bernstein analyst Oswald Clint. "Shell will have to run twice as hard just to stay in place."
According to the passage, the decline of Shell
A.is a hidden process.
B.is caused by the profit last year.
C.is the estimation of Wall Street.
D.is the fault of the CEO.
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They are said to be reluctant to forsake the pleasures of single life. But nothing could be further from the truth; British women are much more attached to marriage than their European counterparts, around 95.1 percent of British women have married at least once by age 49, the highest figure in the European Union. Only 91.2 percent of British men have walked up the aisle by the same age.
Meanwhile, the much discussed trend for delaying marriage until later in life--blamed on career women reluctant to have children--may actually reflect a return to the historical norm.
The average age of first marriage in Europe 200 years ago was 28, the same as British brides in 1998, according to a paper for the National Family and Parenting Institute, the independent thinktank set up by Jack Straw to advise on family issues.
"The public conversation about marriage has often been conducted in an atmosphere fraught with anxiety that can easily tip over into what commentators have described as a moral panic," the report, comparing European trends in marriage, adds.
"Changes in the marriage rate and in the way people form. relationships are part and parcel of a society where change is rapid and individuals feel helpless in the face of new developments; yet it is vital that these issues can be discussed without blame."
The paper does not include divorce rates. In 1997 Britain had the highest divorce rate in Europe, although by 1999 the rate had fallen to the level of the late 1980s.
Despite much political consternation about the family, the report suggests British attitudes are more socially conservative than those of many EU counterparts.
Nine out of 10 couples in Britain living with their children are married, compared to half in Finland. And while cohabiting is becoming the norm for European twentysomethings, "change has happened much more rapidly across the whole of the EU than in the UK", the report finds. Around a third of British under-thirties live with a partner, but it is closer to half in France and 40 per cent in Germany.
"This report is about let's bring a cool head to this debate," said Gill Keep, head of policy at the institute. "It is much easier to take the panic out of the discussion if you look at it in a comparative way; things that you think are destroying your own society are actually common trends and they may not be that destructive."
She said that despite anxiety over later marriages--the average age of first-time brides rose from 23 in the postwar period to 28 for women and 30 for men by 1999--historically this would have seemed normal.
Social historian Christina Hardyment said that in the nineteenth century couples would not marry until they could afford to support a household. "Women below the middle classes would always work in some capacity, mainly in domestic service, and it made sense to save; people think of kings and queens and nobility being married off at 12 but that was highly unusual," she said.
It is a well-known fact that British women are unwilling to abandon single life for a marriage.
A.True
B.False
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Are you worried by the rising crime rate? If you are, then you probably know that your house, possessions and persons are increasingly in danger of suffering from the tremendous rise in the cases of burglary and assault. Figures indicate that there is an ever-increasing crime rate but it is only too easy to imagine "it will never happen to me". Unfortunately, statistics show that it really can happen to you and, if you live in a large city, you run twice the risk of being a victim.
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Anyone who takes an interest in the crime rate will, according to the text, be aware that ______ .
A.more burglars are being caught that ever before
B.people have more possessions to worry about nowadays
C.burglars are more at risk that they used to be
D.homes are more likely to be broken into nowadays
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Among the most popular books being written today are those which are usually classified as science fiction. Hundreds of titles are published every year and are read by all kinds of people.Furthermore,
A、Hundreds of titles are published every year.
B、All kinds of people love it.
C、Some of the most successful films of recent years have been based on science fiction stories.
D、Science fiction can be found in books written hundreds of years ago.