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If there were a fire in the bunker tanks, you would()
A . close the vent
B . pump out the tank
C . activate the fixed CO
system
D . cut off the heating coil
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Upon underwater detection,there were no apparent defects on the bottom plates,bilge keels,rudder and propeller of the said vessel.This kind of wording usually appeared on().
A . ship surveyor's report
B . a ship's certificate
C . a cargo inspection report
D . a diver survey report
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His hope()when he heard that there were some survivors in the shipwreck.
A . highlighted
B . soared
C . inspired
D . flourished
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There are no other vessels in the vicinity()those at anchor.
A . besides
B . including
C . apart from
D . in addition to
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Upon underwater detection, there were no apparent defects on the bottom plates, bilge keels,rudder and propeller of the said vessel. This kind of wording usually appeared on().
A . ship surveyor's report
B . a ship's certificate
C . a cargo inspection report
D . a dive survey report
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In the 20th century, women were given the right to ______.
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The student said there were a few points in the essay he _____ impossible to comprehend.
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There is no parking in front of the post office. You ___ park there.
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Why were women easily subjected to domestic violence in the past?
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____ no air or water, there would be no life in the world.
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In the early years of the Western Han Dynasty, there were _________ states, which were small in size, mostly desert oases, and also had valleys or basins.
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Bert’s family were hungry. There was no dinner (1) _______the table and no food ...
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There were perpetual spring in the ( ) Age.
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The chief claim to distinction of Shoreditch lies in the fact that the first theaters of London were built there in the seventeenth century.
The Shoreditch Theater was the first real theater to be built in England and was erected within the precincts of Holywell Priory, where the players were outside the jurisdiction of the Lord Mayor, for stage plays were forbidden. Companies of players, however, were springing up all over the country, generally under the protection of some nobleman. Amongst these were the Earl of Leicester's Servants, with James Burbage as their manager. Burbage borrowed - 600 from his father-in-law and built the Shoreditch Theater, a round wooden structure, which was afterwards carefully pulled down by his son Richard and re-erected in Southward as the Globe. Richard was the original creator of most of Shakespeare' s great characters, including Hamlet and appeared to have been one of the greatest actors on the English stage. The site of the Shoreditch Theater has recently been determined by a careful survey and is found to have been partly on the site of a furniture factory at the comer of Curtain Road.
The Curtain was a rival theater and was so named from the fact that it had a curtain which shut off the stage from the auditorium. This theater had associations with Burbage and Green players from the town of Stratford-on-Avon, and later with the son of a Stratford butcher, who was a boy at school when the theater was built. His name was William Shakespeare. He came to London as a young man and was employed at the Curtain in minor parts, but his chief work was adapting plays, from which he proceeded to write them.
Not far away was another theater, the Fortune, aptly-named, for it was owned by Alleyn who made his money from it.
The Shoreditch Theater was built in the shape of ______.
A.an oblong
B.a square
C.a circle
D.a triangle
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There was a greater proportion of men than women in the survey.
A.Right
B.Wrong
C.Not mentioned
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He gave us a () stay at home on the National Day, because there were crowds everywhere in the city.
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One of the good things for men in women's liberation is that men no longer have to pay women the old-fashioned courtesies.
In an article on the new manners, Ms. Holmes says that a perfectly able woman no longer has to act helplessly in public as if she were a model. For example, she doesn't need help getting in and out of cars. "Women get in and out of cars twenty times a day with babies and dogs. Surely they can get out by themselves at night just as easily."
She also says there is no reason why a man should walk on the outside of a woman on the sidewalk. "Historically, the man walked on the inside so he caught the garbage thrown out of a window. Today a man is supposed to walk on the outside. A man should walk where he wants to. So should a woman. If, out of love and respect, he actually wants to take the blows, he should walk on the inside--- because that's where attackers are all hiding these days."
As far as manners are concerned, I suppose I have always been a supporter of women's liberation. Over the years, out of a sense of respect, I imagine, I have refused to trouble women with outdated courtesies.
It is usually easier to follow rules of social behaviour than to depend on one's own taste. But rules may be safely broken, of course, by those of us with the gift of natural grace. For example, when a man and woman are led to their table in a restaurant and the waiter pulls out a chair, the woman is expected to sit in the chair. That is according to Ms. Ann Clark. I have always done it the other way, according to my wife.
It came up only the other night. I followed the hostess to the table, and when she pulled the chair out I sat on it, quite naturally, since it happened to be the chair I wanted to sit in. I had the best view of the boats.
"Well," my wife said, when the hostess had gone, "you did it again."
"Did what?" I asked, utterly confused.
"Took the chair."
Actually, since I'd walked through the restaurant ahead of my wife, it would have been awkward, I should think, not to have taken the chair. I had got there first, after all.
Also, it has always been my custom to get in a car first, and let the woman get in by herself. This is a courtesy I insist on as the stronger sex, out of love and respect. In times like these, there might be attackers hidden about. It would be unsuitable to put a woman in a car and then shut the door on her, leaving her at the mercy of some bad fellow who might be hiding in the back seat.
It can be concluded from the passage that ______.
A.men should walk on the inside of a sidewalk
B.women are becoming more capable than before
C.in women's liberation men are also liberated
D.it's safe to break rules of social behaviour
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In the past, women were______the right to vote.
A.deprived
B.denied
C.reject
D.returned
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— I herd tht there were lot of shoutsnd scremst yesterdy’s prty. It must hve been terrib— I herd tht there were lot of shoutsnd scremst yesterdy’s prty. It must hve been terrible. — Oh, no. ________, I enjoyed every minute.On the contrry B.In the end C.s result D.On the other hnd
A.On the contrary
B.In the end
C.As a result
D.On the other hand
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Last weekend, sportsmen and women of an unusually hardy disposition descended on Sherborne, a pretty Dorset town. There, they swam twice around Sherborne Castle's lake, cycled 180kin and then ran a marathon. The winners of this gruelling race—Britain's inaugural Ironman triathlon—were rewarded with a spot in a prestigious race in Hawaii, where yet more pain awaits.
For a sport barely known in Britain five years ago, triathlon has grown at a sprinter's pace. This year the British Triathlon Association, the governing body, will sanction some 450 triathlons, duathlons (running and biking) and aquathlons (running and swimming). These vary from tough races aimed at endurance junkies to shorter events designed to lure newcomers. By far the most successful is the London triathlon, which, three weeks ago, brought 8,000—half of them first-timers—to the Royal Victoria Dock in east London. That made it the world's biggest.
There are echoes of the jogging craze of the early 1980s. Both sports are American exports; both have grown partly thanks to television coverage. Inclusion in the Olympic and Commonwealth games has conferred credibility and state funding on triathlon. Even better, Britain's professional triathletes are doing rather well on the international circuit.
There are practical reasons for the growth of the sport, too. Nick Rusling, event director of the London triathlon, points out that established events such as the London marathon and Great North Run are hugely over-subscribed (this year the marathon received 98,500 applications for 36,000 places). Triathlon offers a more reliable route to exhaustion, and a fresh challenge to athletes who are likely to cross-train anyway.
The sport will not soon supplant "the great suburban Everest", as Chris Brasher, founder of the London marathon, described his event. The sport's tripartite nature means that putting on events is fiendishly complex, a fact reflected in high entry fees: competitors at last weekend's Ironman race forked out £220. Shorter events are cheaper, but participants must still provide their own bicycles and wetsuits and pay for training. Compared with the inhabitants of Newham, the London borough where this year's London triathlon was held, competitors appeared overwhelmingly white and middle class.
Another drag on growth is a shortage of suitable venues in a small island—a problem exacerbated by safety fears. But that ought to be less of a hindrance in future. Two court decisions, in 2003 and earlier this year, have firmly established that the owners of large bodies of water may not be held responsible when adults injure themselves as a result of extravagant sporting actions.
The meaning of the word "gruelling" in the first paragraph is most close to ______.
A.competitive
B.exhausting
C.grand
D.gruesome
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There were two small rooms in the house,()served as a bathroom.
A、the smaller of which
B、the smallest of which
C、the smallest of them
D、smallest of that
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The following authors were women writers who wrote novels in the late 19th and early 20thcentury with the exception of().
A.Emily Dickinson
B.Edith Wharton
C.Willia Cather
D.Kate Chopin
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There ______(be) no hospital is our town in the past.填复数还是单数?(was or were)
There ______(be) no hospital in our town in the past.填复数还是单数?(was or were)原题有个地方打错了。
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There are no two leaves which are the same in the world