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He came to dinner and my mom fixed a roast, prime rib ,pie, yoghurt, drinks, and that kind of _,and it was really good.
A . meat
B . stuff
C . staff
D . dish
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In regard to a hub and spoke Frame-Relay data network, what kind of physical network is it classified as?()
A . point-to-point
B . broadcast multi-access
C . nonbroadcast multipoint
D . nonbroadcast multi-access
E . broadcast point-to-multipoint
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It is the news ()most parents of the hope that there is a safe and socially approved road to a kind of life they themselves have not had, but their children can.
A . that deprive
B . that it deprives
C . that deprives
D . when it deprive
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Cloisonné is a traditional art widely known in and outside China. It is a kind of superb local expertise from_______.
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Important ____ his dictionary was, it was regarded as a matter of no account in his time.
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Last year China ’ s saving rate was 54 percent of GDP, according to China Daily. T he U.S. rate, including households and corporations, was a mere 12 percent of GDP. W hat kind of statistics are used in the statement.
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5 It was very windy on Friday. There was a lot of ____ on Friday.
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Since it was produced, The Last Night of Ballyhoo has gotten a great reputation and it was performed in ______ during the Olympic Games.
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The big advantage of establishing a(n) _____ in a foreign country is that it gives the firm a much greater ability to build the kind of subsidiary company that it wants.
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The most prevalent kind of literature in feudal England was ____. It was a long composition, sometimes in verse, sometimes in prose, describing the life and adventure of a noble hero, usually a knight.
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Last year China’s saving rate was 54 percent of GDP, according to China Daily. The U.S. rate, including households and corporations, was a mere 12 percent of GDP. What kind of statistics are used in the statement.
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What kind of a person was Carl? And what was he?
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It was very kind _____________ to say such nice things to get her out of the embarras
A.A.of him
B.B.for him
C.C.with him
D.D.to him
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Most young people enjoy some form. of physical activity. It may be walking, cycling or swimming, in winter, or skating or skiing. It may be a game of some kind -- football, hockey, golf or tennis. It may be mountaineering.
These who have a passion【C1】______climbing high and difficult mountains are often【C2】______with astonishment. Why are men and women【C3】______to suffer cold and hardship, and to【C4】______on high mountains? This astonishment is caused, probably, by the difference between mountaineering and other forms of activity【C5】______which men give their leisure.
Mountaineering is a sport and not a game. There are no man-made rules, as there are for【C6】______games as golf and football. There are, of course, rules of different kinds which it would be dangerous to【C7】______, but it is this freedom from man-made rules【C8】______makes mountaineering attractive to many people. Those who climb mountains are free to use their own【C9】______.
If we【C10】______mountaineering with other more familiar sports, we might think that one big difference is【C11】______mountaineering is not a" team work". We should be mistaken in this. There are it is true , no" matches"【C12】______"teams" of climbers, but when climbers are on a rock face linked by a rope on which their lives may【C13】______, there is obviously teamwork.
A mountain climber knows that he may have to fight forces that are stronger and more powerful than man. He has to fight【C14】______of nature. His sport requires high mental and【C15】______qualities.
A mountain climber【C16】______to improve in skill year after year. A skier is probably past his best by the age of thirty, and most international tennis champions【C17】______in their early twenties. But it is not【C18】______for men of fifty or sixty to climb the highest mountains in the Alps. They may take more【C19】______than younger men, but they probably climb with more skill and less【C20】______of effort, and they certainly experience equal enjoyment.
【C1】
A.for
B.in
C.to
D.of
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听力原文:W: I hope you liked the novel I lent you. I wasn't sure whether it was the kind of book you'd be interested in.
M: I had the same doubt first, but once I started it I simply couldn't put it down.
Q: What does the man mean?
(15)
A.He doubts the woman will like the novel.
B.He'll lend the woman the novel after he has read it.
C.He enjoyed reading the novel.
D.He hasn't started reading the novel yet.
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It is a kind of cat- like meat- eating animal.
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A) It is the largest of its kind<p>B) It is going to be expanded</p><p>C) It is displaying more fossil specimens</p><p>D) It is staring an online exhibition</p>
A、<p>It is the largest of its kind</p>
B、<p>It is going to be expanded</p>
C、<p> It is displaying more fossil specimens</p>
D、<p> It is staring an online exhibition</p>
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Have you ever dreamed of traveling in space? It was impossible a hundred years ago, nor was it 50 years ago. With the coming of the Space Age, man’ s dream of visiting the moon has come true.
The journey to the moon has been the first step towards future explorations in space. The distance between the moon and the Earth is very short indeed when compared with the distances between Earth and the other planets. Mars, the nearest planet to Earth is of miles away ! Traveling to the planets or travels between planets will be man’ s next aim. Such travels will be more difficult than the trip to the moon and certainly more exciting.
Recently, two American unmanned spacecraft, Vikings 1 and 2, landed on Mars in an attempt to discover whether that planet had any life on it. So far the presence of life on Mars has neither been proved nor ruled out. Russian space-probes have discovered that the surface of Venus is so hot that it is almost certain that there is no life there. Also the atmosphere of Venus is extremely, dense and the pressure is nearly a hundred times greater than the pressure of the Earth’s atmosphere.
Scientists believe that in the future, space stations can be built in space. These stations can act as stop-over points in space. Spacecraft can refuel at these stations and get their supply of air, food and water.
Spaceships of the future will be bigger and faster. They will be able to carry passengers for trips to the moon or planets.
Man may in the future find planets which have the same conditions as those we have on Earth, and make them his home. However such a possibility is still in the distant future. At the same time, Man should realize that the Earth will be his only home for a long time and begin to value and care for it.
Which of the following statements is true?
A.Recently, two American astronauts have landed on Mars.
B.The surface of Mars is very hot.
C.The journey to the moon started the future exploration in space.
D.There is life in Venus.
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1 For the Greeks, beauty was a virtue: a kind of excellence. Persons then were assumed to be what we now have to call-lamely, enviously whole persons. If it did occur to the Greeks to distinguish between a person's "inside" and "outside," they still expected that inner beauty would be matched by beauty of the other kind. The well-born young Athenians who gathered around Socrates found it quite paradoxical that their hero was so intelligent, so brave, so honorable, so seductive-and so ugly. One of Socrates' main pedagogical acts was to be ugly-and teach those innocent, no doubt splendid-looking disciples of his how full of paradoxes life really was.
2 They may have resisted Socrates' lesson. We do not. Several thousand years later, we are more wary of the enchantments of beauty. We not only split off-with the greatest facility-the "inside" (character, intellect) from the "outside" (looks); but we are actually surprised when someone who is beautiful is also intelligent, talented, good.
3 It was principally the influence of Christianity that deprived beauty of the central place it had in classical ideals of human excellence. By limiting excellence (virtus in Latin) to moral virtue only, Christianity set beauty adrift-as an alienated, arbitrary, superficial enchantment. And beauty has continued to lose prestige. For close to two centuries it has become a convention to attribute beauty to only one of the two sexes: the sex which, however fair, is always Second. Associating beauty with women has put beauty even further on the defensive, morally.
4 A beautiful woman, we say in English, but a handsome man. "Handsome" is the masculine equivalent of-and refusal of-a compliment which has accumulated certain demeaning overtones, by being reserved for women only. That one can call a man "beautiful" in French and in Italian suggests that Catholic countries-unlike those countriesshaped by the Protestant version of Christianity-still retain some vestiges of the pagan admiration for beauty. But the difference, if one exists, is of degree only. In every modern country that is Christian or post-Christian, women are the beautiful sex-to the detriment of the notion of beauty as well as of women.
The author means _________ by "whole persons" in Para. 1.
A.persons of beauty
B.persons of virtue
C.persons of excellence
D.none of the above
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Mary: Tom, would you like to go to a party this Saturday? Tom:(). What kind of party? Mary: It&39;s a birthday party.
A.Sounds good
B.Looks nice
C.Seems all right
D.Feels excellent
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I don't know how I became a writer, but I think it was because of a certain force in me that had to write and that finally burst through and found a channel. My people were of the working class of people. My father, a stone-cutter, was a man with a great respect and veneration for literature. He had a tremendous memory, and he loved poetry, and the poetry that he loved best was naturally of the rhetorical kind that such a man would like. Nevertheless it was good poetry, Hamlet's Soliloquy, Macbeth, Mark Antony's “Funeral Oration”, Grey's “Elegy”, and all the rest of it. I heard it all as a child; I memorized and learned it all.
He sent me to college to the state university. The desire to write, which had been strong during all my days in high school, grew stronger still. I was editor of the college paper, the college magazine, etc. , and in my last year or two I was a member of a course in playwriting which had just been established there. I wrote several little one-act plays, still thinking I would become a lawyer or a newspaper man, never daring to believe I could seriously become a writer. Then I went to Harvard, wrote some more plays there, became obsessed with the idea that I had to be a playwright, left Harvard, had my plays rejected, and finally in the autumn of 1926, how, why, or in what manner I have never exactly been able to determine. But probably because the force in me that had to write at length sought out its channel, I began to write my first book in London. I was living all alone at that time. I had two rooms--a bedroom and a sitting room--in a litter square in Chelsea in which all the houses had that familiar, smoked brick and cream-yellow-plaster look.
We may conclude, in regard to the author's development as a writer, that his father ________.
A.made an important contribution
B.insisted that he choose writing as a career
C.opposed his becoming a writer
D.insisted that he read Hamlet in order to learn how to be a writer
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More than 13,000 McDonald's restaurants in America will use a new kind of cooking oil to ______.
A.lower the costs of the products
B.make its food taste better than ever before
C.cure the heart disease
D.do good to the health of consumers
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Because___, it is not easy to get a consensus on the precise kind of stuffing for the royal bird()
A.cooking varies with families
B.cooking varies with the regions where one lives
C.cooking varies with families and with the regions where one lives
D.cooking is so difficult
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Because of his kindness and love,he was viewed as a good friend by the kids.(英译中)