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“Pay to ABC CO. or order the sum of one thousand US dollars provided that the goods they supply are up to the standard.”该汇票是仍是有效汇票。
A . 正确
B . 错误
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He’s always doing stupid things that end up really _______ one or more of us kids.
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In the article Taking Your Fun , the author has told us that upon every side of us are to be found .
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Firstthings first. one washes his hands and face in the hope that he or she would befree of skin problems all year.
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原文:It is hoped that you would seriously take this matter into consideration and let us have your reply soon.译文:希望你方能够 ,并尽快答复我们
A、严肃整顿这个麻烦
B、认真考虑这件事
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Many of us have had that one teacher that inspired us more than any other. Great teachers are able to bring the best out of every student.
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I hoped to ______ the idea that a community is more than just a bunch of people living in one place.
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And
it’s not just one of us who’ve felt the heavy hand of interference. Oh, no, all
three of us live in constant dread knowing that at any time disaster can
strike.
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CAN ANIMALS BE MADE TO WORK FOR US? Can animals be made to work for us? Some scientists think that one day animals may be trained to do a number of simple jobs that are now done by human beings. The
21. Now many animals can do some simple jobs that are done by human beings.
22. The writer says that 8t a circus we can see animals doing cIever tricks.
23. The trainer usually gives the animal a piece of candy or fruit after it has done the trick.
24. The reward in the passage means "attention paid to a good behavior".
25. Many animals may be trained to do simple jobs if they know who their trainers are.
26. Geese can be used to guard a house.
27. When the pigeon sees a ball which looks different from the others , it makes a noise.
28. Trainer usually spends 40 days or so training a pigeon to inspect sm811 steel balls.
29. An ape is a large monkey.
30. Scientists believe apes may drive buses one day.
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By saying "Let‘s hope that this time it really will be the last one", the father meant that 查看材料
A.he hoped there would be no more wars in the world
B.he wished the Second World War had not happened
C.he hoped people would build more bonfires
D.he wished people would learn many lessons from the war
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One out of every ten persons in the 1978 United States labor force was a teenager, compared by one out of fifteen in 1960.
此题为多项选择题。
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Every one of us, more or less, benefits from the Internet.英译中
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It's found that office workers usually spend one and a half hours every day on ______.
A.real work tasks
B.having lunch
C.commuting
D.socializing
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kindly advise us of the steamers that call_______your port every month.
A.at
B.on
C.in
D.for
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For any Englishman, there can never be any discussion as to who is the world’s greatest dramatist (剧作家).Only one name can possibly suggest itself to him: that of William Shakespeare.Every Englishman has some knowledge, however slight, of the work of our greatest writer.All of us use words, phrases and quotations from Shakespeare’s writings that have become part of the common property of the English-speaking people.Most of the time we are probably unaware of the source of the words we used, rather like the old lady who was taken to see a performance of Hamlet and complained that it was full of well-known proverbs and quotations.
Shakespeare, more perhaps than any other writer, makes full use of the great resources of the English language.Most of us use about five thousand words in our normal use of English; Shakespeare in his works used about twenty-five thousand.
There is probably no better way for a foreigner to appreciate the richness and variety of the English language than by studying the various ways in which Shakespeare used it.Such a study is well worth the effort (it is not, of course, recommended to beginners) even though some aspects of English usage, and the meaning of many words, have changed since Shakespeare’s day.
1).English people _______.
A.have never discussed who is the world’s greatest dramatist
B.never discuss any issue concerning the world’s greatest dramatist
C.are sure who is the world’s greatest dramatist
D.do not care who is the world’s greatest poet and dramatist
2).Every Englishman knows _______.
A.more or less about Shakespeare
B.Shakespeare, but only slightly
C.all Shakespeare’s writings
D.only the name of the greatest English writer
3).Which of the following is true?
A.We use all the words, phrases and quotations from Shakespeare’s writings.
B.Shakespeare’s writings have become the property of those who are learning to speak English.
C.It is likely to be true that people often do not know the origins of the words they use
D.All the words people use are taken from the writings of Shakespeare.
4).What does the word “proverb” mean?
A.Familiar sayings.
B.Shakespeare’s plays.
C.Complaints.
D.Actors and actresses.
5).Why is it worthwhile to study the various ways in which Shakespeare used English?
A.English words have changed a lot since Shakespeare’s time.
B.By doing so one can be fully aware of the richness of the English language.
C.English words are now being used in the same way as in Shakespeare’s time.
D.Beginners may have difficulty learning some aspects of English usage.
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The Hammurabi Code ensured that every one is equal before the law.()
是
否
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Shortly after the British naturalist, Charles Darwin, published his theory of evolution, a Victorian lady was asked what she thought of the idea that humans and animals were descended from a common ancestor. "Let us hope it is not true," she said. (46)
This story is probably apocryphal, but it illustrates well the attitudes of the time. (47) Many people accept Darwin's view of how we came into being that our bodies evolved through the process of natural selection acting on our genes.
However, Darwin believed evolution was responsible for far more than just our physical characteristics. He saw it as the major influence in shaping our psychology. In- deed, he predicted that "in the distant future, psychology will be based on a new foundation". (48)
To proponents of concepts like free will and personal responsibility, such an idea seems absurd. (49) Their research has revealed increasing evidence that the human mind is made up of innate mechanisms, which control everything from the way we perceive time and space, to how we learn survival techniques and choose mates.
(50) Steven Pinker, Professor of Cognitive Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, likens language ability to computer software, "children learn a new word every 90 minutes of their waking life for years, then they have to figure out how to string them together using a kind of mental computer program. The essence of human language is the ability to convey new ideas by putting words together in different combinations. Since we all have this language 'software' in our minds, we can figure out what others are saying by the meanings of the words and the order in which they are arranged."
A. Today, we are more comfortable with out past.
B. "And, if it is true, let us hope it does not become public knowledge."
C. But a growing number of scientists are questioning the extent to which our behavior. is controlled by our culture.
D. Many people are calling for controls on cloning immedicte1y before the practice is abused.
E. The foundation was, of course, his theory of evolution.
F. Nowhere is this more obvious than our innate ability to learn languages.
(46)
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There are certain people who behave in a quite peculiar fashion during the work of analysis. When one speaks hopefully to them or expresses satisfaction with the progress of the treatment, they show signs of discontent and their condition invariably becomes worse. One begins by regarding this as defiance and as an attempt to prove their superiority to the physician, but late one comes to take a deeper and juster view. One becomes convinced, not only that such people cannot endure any praise or appreciation, but that they react inversely to the progress of the treatment. Every partial solution that ought to result, and in other people does result, in an improvement or a temporary suspension of symptoms produces in them for the time being an intensification of their illness; they get worse during the treatment instead of getting better. They exhibit what is known as a "negative therapeutic reaction".
There is no doubt that there is something in these people that sets itself against their recovery, and its approach is dreaded as though it were a danger. We are accustomed to say that the need for illness has got the upper hand in them over the desire for recovery. If we analyze this resistance in the usual way—then, even after fixation to the various forms of gain from illness, the greater part of it is still left over; and this reveals itself as the most powerful of all obstacles to recovery, more powerful than the familiar ones of narcissistic inaccessibility, a negative attitude towards the physician and clinging to the gain from illness.
In the end we come to see that we are dealing with what may be called a "moral" factor, a sense of guilt, which is finding satisfaction in the illness and refuses to give up the punishment of suffering. We shall be right in regarding this disencouraging explanation as final. But as far as the patient is concerned this sense of guilt is dumb; it does not tell him he is guilty, he feels iii. This sense of guilt expresses itself only as a resistance to recovery which it is extremely difficult to overcome. It is also particularly difficult to convince the patient that this motive lies behind his continuing to be iii; he holds fast to the more obvious explanation that treatment by analysis is not the fight remedy for his case.
According to the author, it would be more reasonable to think that the patients who exhibit dissatisfaction with the treatment are
A.openly resisting the treatment of the physician.
B.intentionally holding the physician in contempt.
C.spontaneously responding contrary to the physician's expectations.
D.purposely disregarding the praise or appreciation by the physician.
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Every year, one student a our high school wins a scholarship that __________ one year of college.
A. improves
B. subsidizes
C. obliges
D. inflicts
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The phrase "litmus test" is in bad odor for good reason: politicians should be judged on a variety of positions, not just one. But deep down, nearly every voter has at least one litmus test— an issue so personally important that a politician who fails the test is forever tainted, or at least excluded from consideration for the presidency.
I inherited my one litmus test from my father, Jim Alter, who flew 33 harrowing missions over Nazi Germany during World War 11. My father is not just a veteran who by all odds should not have survived. He is a true patriot. His litmus test is the proposal to amend the Constitution to ban flag burning, which will come up for a vote next week in the U. S. Senate. For dad—and me—any member of Congress who supports amending the Bill of Rights for the first time in the history of this country for a nonproblem like flag burning is showing serious disrespect for our Constitution and for the values for which brave Americans gave their lives. Such disrespect is a much more serious threat than the random idiots who once every decade or so try (often unsuccessfully) to burn a flag.
Our understandable outrage at flag burning shouldn't turn our brains to mush. "I feel the same sense of outrage, but I would not amend that great shield of democracy (the Constitution) to hammer a few miscreants," Colin Powell said when the issue last came up (his position has not changed). "The flag will be flying proudly long after they have slunk away." Powell argues that a constitutional ban on flag burning is a sign of weakness and fear.
John Glenn, another of the thousands of combat veterans against the amendment (they have banded together in a group called Veterans Defending the Bill of Rights), notes that "those 10 amendments we call the Bill of Rights have never been changed or altered by one iota, not by one word, not a single time in all of American history. There was not a single change during any of our foreign wars, and not during recessions or depressions or panics. Not a single change when we were going through times of great emotion and anger like the Vietnam era, when flag after flag was burned or desecrated. There is only one way to weaken our nation. The way to weaken our nation would be to erode the freedom that we all share."
Actually, even during the Vietnam War, flag burning was rare. By one count, there have been only 45 such incidents in 200 years, and fewer than half a dozen since it was outlawed in 1989. Should the Constitution be amended, however, the incidence of flag burning is expected to surge as a form. of civil disobedience. What began as a phony issue designed to prove patriotism (usually on the part of those who never served, the primary sponsors) could become a real concern.
The flag-burning amendment, which already passed the House, is apparently just short of the 67 needed in the Senate. With one or two absences, the amendment would be approved. It would then go to the states for ratification, where its chances for approval appear good.
Senators afraid of being seen as soft on flag burners should just adopt the Hillary Clinton dodge: support for a statute, but not an amendment. Another law is a dopey idea (an earlier one was struck down by the Supreme Court), but it's politically safe and better than perverting the Constitution.
To make matters worse, the amendment is vaguely worded, which led to fatuous debate in the Senate over whether a woman wearing a skimpy bathing suit patterned with stars and stripes was guilty of desecration. Bloggers wondered the same thing about President Bush's new habit of autographing flags when he shakes hands on rope lines. Unconstitutional? With a war on and a hundred other pressing problems, it's nice to see our elected representatives focused on what really counts.
The usual litmus tests-abortion, gun control, Iraq-shouldn't be. Reasonable and sincere people can disagree, w
A.The effectiveness of litmus test is greatly undermined by its failure to judge politicians on a variety of positions.
B.It's unfair to exclude a politician who fails a certain litmus test from the presidency.
C.Current litmus tests like abortion or gun control are not reliable indicators of public opinions.
D.Some specific litmus tests on certain issues axe fundamental in shaping people' s judgment of politicians.
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Quite a number of corporations have experienced many unexpected troubles concerning company or product names. Moreover, even attempts to change names have led to bad problems.It should be obvious that careful planning and study of one's potential market is necessary because the choice of names can be every bit as important as product or package improvement.
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By every one of them I"d prove myself a 6 .
A.teacher
B.doctor
C.winner
D.fool
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The definition of culture as the comprehensive features that distinguish one group of people from another will allow us to talk about ____.
A.a universal culture
B.cultural differences
C.cultural universals
D.a specific problem
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There is a various of programs that one can see on every channel.()
是
否