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How does the Extended Get Digit String step differ from the Get Digit String? ()
A . It can be used in conjunction with another step.
B . It allows the application programmer into another section of the application.
C . Most of the Extended Get Digit String variables can be changed while the application is running.
D . It allows the entry of a Boolean expression for the Interruptible and Clear DTMF Buffer on Retry fields.
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How much would the winner get from the bet?
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The French tend to buy fresh meat from the supermarket, where they can inspect the piece before purchasing it.
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We have to get their agreement before we ____ with the plan.
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What kinds of information we can get from boarding pass?
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纠错Although Clyde is formally from Pennsylvania, he finds it difficult to get used tothe cold winters we are having.
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纠错 Although Clyde is formally from Pennsylvania, he finds it difficult to get used to the cold winters we are having .
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From paragraph 1, we can get the information except for
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I think that the messages we get from our environment seem to ___common sense and contradict each other deny.
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We finally get the best of the enemy after a different battle.
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The task will not be fulfilled we get help from other departments.
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听力原文:W: I am sharing a room with three students this semester. Because we come from different countries, we are so different that we aren't getting along very well with each other.
M: We provide a homestay program too. You could choose an American family and live with them next semester.
W: What benefits can a homestay program provide?
M: There are lots of benefits. First, with an American family, the living environment will be relaxing and quiet. Second, you will learn a lot about American culture. Third, it's a perfect way to improve your English. Fourth, you may make good friends with your homestay family. Finally, they will also give you plenty of advice about living in the U. S.
W: Is it expensive to live with an American family?
M: The cost usually runs from $500 to $700 per month, and the contract period may be for a semester or for a year.
W: How should we get along with the host family?
M: Always ask your host family questions when you don't completely understand something, or if you aren't sure that you have understood. Interact frequently with all members of the house- hold and keep good relations with them. Try something new whenever you can, e. g. , food, customs, activities, holiday celebrations, etc.
W: If someone in my host family says something, either out of misunderstanding of or prejudice against my country, what should I do?
M: Don't be angry. Instead, be patient and tactfully educate them about the things they have misunderstood. And remember, always respect others' privacy.
(20)
A.She shares a room with three students and the rent is too high.
B.She isn't getting along well with her roommates.
C.The cost of living with an American family is too high.
D.She feels offended when someone in her host family is prejudiced against her.
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We are late.I expect the film__________by the time we get to the cinema.
A.will already have started
B.would already have started
C.shall have already started
D.has already been started
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Only a few of our features are written by our journalists: we get______of them from freelance writers.
A. none
B. some
C. most
D. all
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We all agree that the teacher should get the computer( ).
repair
repairing
be repaired
repaired
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When were in trouble, we need to get ________ from others.mny moneyB.somedviceC.mny helpD.soWhen were in trouble, we need to get ________ from others.mny money B.somedvice C.mny help D.some chnces
A.many money
B.some advice
C.many help
D.some chances
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We must get to the root of the problem.
A.approach
B.heart
C.cause
D.solution
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Man: Excuse me, could you show me how to get to the public library? Woman: There is a public library around here? Question: What do we learn from the womans reply?
A.She doesn"t know about the public library.
B.She believes there is no pub here.
C.She doesn"t understand the question.
D.The public library is nearby.
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Many changes are taking place in "food style" in the United States. The United States is traditionally famous【36】its very solid and unchanging diet of meat and potatoes. Now we have many【37】alternatives to choose from various ethnic (民族特色的) food, health food, and fast food, in addition to the traditional home-cooked meal.
Ethnic restaurants and supermarkets are commonplace in the United States. Since the United States is a country of immigrants, there is a great variety. Any large American city is filled with restaurants【38】international cooking. Many cities even have ethnic sections: Chinatown, Little Italy, or Germantown. With this vast ethnic choice, we can【39】food from all over the world. This is pleasant for those who come here to travel or to work; they can usually find their【40】specialties.
Health food gained popularity when people began to think more seriously about their physical well-being. Health food is fresh, natural, unprocessed food. It does not【41】preservatives to make it last longer or chemicals to make it taste or look【42】Some health food enthusiasts are vegetarians: They eat no meat; they prefer to get their【43】proteins from other sources, such as beans and rice, cheese and eggs. More and more people are eating healthy food and trying to eat less fat and red meat.
America's【44】toward meals is changing, too. The traditional big breakfast and dinner at 6:00 p.m. are losing popularity. People are rediscovering the social importance of tood. Dinner with family or friends is again becoming a very【45】way of enjoying and sharing. Like so many people in other cultures, many Americans are taking time to relax and enjoy the finer tastes at dinner, even if they still rush through lunch at a hamburger stand.
(36)
A.at
B.in
C.for
D.to
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From the last two paragraphe,we get the impression that
A. people feel disappointed with the US share market.
B. most people have confidence in the Silicon Valley,s future.
C. a large number of workers are made redundant.
D. millionaires in the Valley are all bankrupted earlier this year
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In the college-admissions wars, we parents are the true fighters. We're pushing our kids to get good grades, take SAT preparatory courses and build resumes so they can get into the college of our first choice. We say our motives are selfless and sensible. A degree from Stanford or Princeton is the ticket for life. If Aaron and Nicole don't get in, they're forever doomed. Gosh, we're delusional.
I've twice been to the wars, and as I survey the battlefield, something different is happening. It's the one-upmanship among parents. We see our kids' college rating as medals proving how well or how poorly we've raised them. But we can't acknowledge that our obsession is more about us than them. So we've contrived various justifications that turn out to be half-truths, prejudices or myths. It actually doesn't matter much whether Aaron and Nicole go to Stanford.
Admissions anxiety afflicts only a minority of parents. It's true that getting into college has generally become tougher because the number of high-school graduates has grown. From 1994 to 2006, the increase is 28 percent. Still, 64 percent of freshmen attend schools where acceptance rates exceed 70 percent, and the application surge at elite schools dwarfs population growth. Take Yale. In 1994, it accepted 18.9 percent of 12,991 applicants; this year it admitted only 8.6 percent of 21,000.
We have a full-blown prestige panic; we worry that there won't be enough medals to go around. Fearful parents prod their children to apply to more schools than ever. "The epicenters (of parental anxiety) used to be on the coasts, Boston, New York, Washington, Los Angeles", says Tom Parker, Amherst's admissions dean. "But it's radiated throughout the country".
Underlying the hysteria is the belief that scarce elite degrees must be highly valuable. Their graduates must enjoy more success because they get a better education and develop better contacts. All that's plausible and mostly wrong. "We haven't found any convincing evidence that selectivity or prestige matters", says Ernest T. Pascarella of the University of Iowa, co author of "How College Affects Students", an 827-page evaluation of hundreds of studies of the college experience. Selective schools don't systematically employ better instructional approaches than less-selective schools, according to a study by Pascarella and George Kuh of Indiana University. Some do; some don't. On two measures professors' feedback and the number of essay exams selective schools do slightly worse.
In the author's eyes, parents pushing their kids to an elite degree are ______.
A.aggressive
B.misguided
C.reasonable
D.failing
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()no modern telecommunications, we would have to wait for weeks to get news from around th
A.Were there
B.If there are
C.If there have been
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The more we get together, () we’ll be.
A.A.the more happy
B.B.the happier
C.C.the happiest
D.D.the most happy
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There are many problems in our modern world. One very()serious problem is energy. We get a great () of energy we need from coal, gas, and oil. However, the () of energy which we use is () every year, and we only have enough coal, gas, and oil for the next twenty or thirty years. How will we live () the energy which these things give us? Scientists are looking for () to this problem. They are looking for new () to produce energy. For example, they are working with new ways to () energy from the light and heat of the sun. They are also working with plans which produce energy from () of the oceans. All of the new methods () scientists are finding are still very expensive, but perhaps they will help solve our energy problems () the future.
1.A.number
B.group
C.price
D.deal
2.A.effect
B.amount
C.course
D.program
3.A.increase
B.increasing
C.had increased
D.is increasing
4.A.without
B.improve
C.producing
D.strength
5.A.key
B.a direction
C.a solution
D.service
6.A.cost
B.method
C.branch
D.pound
7.A.Show
B.pay
C.save
D.produce
8.A.property
B.remedy
C.welfare
D.movements
9.A.So that
B.which
C.whose
D.Of which
10.A.at
B.for
C.In
D.from