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Users on the 192.168.1.0/24 network must access files located on the Server 1. What route could be configured on router R1 for file requests to reach the server?()
A . ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 s0/0/0
B . ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 209.165.200.226
C . ip route 209.165.200.0 255.255.255.0 192.168.1.250
D . ip route 192.168.1.0 255.255.255.0 209.165.100.250
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I know nothing()about it.
A . whatever
B . whichever
C . whoever
D . whomever
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Users on the 192.168.1.0/24 network must access files located on the Server 1. What route could be configured on router R1 for file requests to reach the server()。
A . ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 s0/0/0
B . ip route 0.0.0.0 0.0.0.0 209.165.200.226
C . ip route 209.165.200.0 255.255.255.0 192.168.1.250
D . ip route 192.168.1.0 255.255.255.0 209.165.100.250
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Water is__________ because it desires nothing and contends for nothing.
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The policeman __________ his shoulders as if to say there was nothing he could do about the matter.
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There was nothing they could do about it but ______.
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The sentence "A revealing trail of debris could give the game away"(Lines 2-3, Paragraph 1
The sentence "A revealing trail of debris could give the game away"(Lines 2-3, Paragraph 1)shows that
A.the athletes who cheat will lose the game because of a trail of debris.
B.the athletes who cheat have to give up the game because of a trail of debris.
C.a trail of debris will help catch out the athletes who cheat.
D.a trail of debris will help the athletes avoid the game.
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Nothing to port
A.勿偏左
B.勿偏右
C.无舵效
D.右满舵
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1 tried to think what could have happened,but nothing suggested itself.()
A.我尽力回想到底发生了什么事情,但就是什么也想不起来
B.我尽力回想到底发生了什么事情,但就是没有什么建议
C.我尽力去想可能发生的事情,但就是没有什么建议
D.我尽力去想可能发生了什么样的事情,但就是什么也想不起来
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he expressed her strong determination that nothing could () her to give up her career as a teacher.
A. induce
B. deduce
C. reduce
D. attract
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All flights ______ because of the snowstorm, many passengers could do nothing but take the train.
A.had been canceled
B.have been canceled
C.were canceled
D.having been canceled
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I missed the last bus. I could do nothing but______in the village for the night.
A.to stay
B.stay
C.staying
D.stayed
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I felt ______ to death because I could make nothing of the chairman's speech.
A.fatigued
B.tired
C.exhausted
D.bored
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I felt____to death because I could make nothing of the chairman's speech.
A.fatigued
B.tired
C.exhausted
D.bored
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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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We felt______ to death because we could make nothing of the lecturer's speech.
A.exposed
B.tired
C.exhausted
D.bored
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(). Nothing much.
—
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All flights______because of the snowstorm, many passengers could do nothing but take the train.
A.had been cancelled
B.having been cancelled
C.were cancelled
D.have been cancelled
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’Nothing ws beyond thencient Chinese’ () mens ______.ncient Chinese were cpble of everything B.ncient Chinese could do very little C.ifncient Chinese could not do it, others could not either D.ncient
A.ancient Chinese were capable of everything
B.ancient Chinese could do very little
C.if ancient Chinese could not do it, others could not either
D.ancient Chinese people could do everything better than Scottish people
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"I saw nothing," the woman replied.
A.The woman replied that I had saw nothing.
B.The woman replied that she had saw nothing.
C.The woman replied that she had seen nothing.
D.The woman replied if she had saw nothing.
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The hed of homelnd security indicted tht ______.the worrybout terroristttck wsThe hed of homelnd security indicted tht ______.the worrybout terroristttck ws totlly unnecessry B.the government hd been well prepred for possible security problem C.the government hd been too optimisticbout itsnti-terrorism efforts D.the legisltors usully could do nothing except mking empty tlks
A.the worry about terrorist attack was totally unnecessary
B.the government had been well prepared for possible security problem
C.the government had been too optimistic about its anti-terrorism efforts
D.the legislators usually could do nothing except making empty talks
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Can online education ever be education of the very best sort? Not long ago I watched an online course. The instructor was intelligent and learned. But the course wasn t great and could never have been. There were students on hand, but the class seemed addressed to no one in particular. There was nothing you could get from that course that you couldn t get from a good book on the same subject. A truly memorable college class is a cooperation between teacher and students. It s a one-time-only event. Learning at its best is collective work. In real courses the students and teachers come together and create a vital atmosphere of learning. I don t think an Internet course ever will.
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Through controlled ving free-radical polymerization (CRP), molecular weight distribution could be narrowed greatly, and PDI could be near to 1.()
是
否
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All trains having been cancelled because of the snowstorm, many passengers could do nothing but at the station()
A.staying
B.stayed
C.stay
D.to stay