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Some of the passengers escaped serious ()in the traffic accident.
A . enquiry
B . wound
C . inquiry
D . injury
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The bus broke down and all the passengers had to()
A . get in
B . get on
C . get off
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线下式站房 the passenger building is located below the platform
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The problem()when the students refused to do their homework.
A、arose
B、aroused
C、rose
D、raised
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The dumping of refuse in a lock is permitted().
A . when approved by the lockmaster
B . when locking downbound
C . at no time
D . during high water only
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ALL PASSENGERS OF DECK NO.2 ARE REQUESTED TO FOLLOW THE CREW MEMBERS WHO WILL ESCORT YOU TO YOUR ASSEMBLY STATIONS. From this sentence you can concluded that the vessel is in().
A . immediate danger to collide with another vessel
B . a situation in which more passengers will embark on board
C . berth and ready to disembark her passengers
D . distre
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A passenger vessel is underway. When may passengers visit the pilothouse? ()
A . Passengers are excluded from the pilothouse while underway
B . Passengers are permitted in the pilothouse during daylight hours only
C . Passengers are permitted to visit the pilothouse when authorized by the Master and officer of the watch
D . Passengers are permitted in the pilothouse when they are escorted by a ship's officer
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The debater giving the speech has the authority to accept or refuse the POI.
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Why does the narrator rephrase his mother’s refusal?
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Why does the girl refuse to eat more beef?
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Who is the president who refused to be elected for the third term?
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I. How did Gulliver get to on the island?A. The ship in which he was travelling ______________________________________.B. The boat with which he tried to ____________________.C. He was the only passenger who _______________________.
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The owner and the captain refused to leave their distressed ship.
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The problem ________ when the students refused to do their homework.
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The driver let the passenger get off at the next station.
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The Russians refused to fight because ______.
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8.The bank refused further _____________ to the company.
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Where is the passenger flying ?
A.Berlin.
B.Bangkok.
C.Moscow.
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The announcement______greatly distressed the waiting passengers.
A.that all flights were cancelled
B.why all flights were cancelled
C.which all flights were cancelled
D.of which all flights were cancelled
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听力原文:Man: One time I picked up a woman who wanted to go out to this landing strip and O'Hare. She said her people were being held captive on the landing strip. My Countrymen, she appeared to be an actress right out of one of those foreign intrigue films, very slender, with blonde hair, very expensively dressed. In this very thick Polish accent, I explained I couldn't drive out to the landing strip. The passenger terminal was the best I can do.
&8226;You will hear another five recordings.
&8226;For each recording, decide who is speaking.
&8226;Write one letter (A--H) next to the number of the recording.
&8226;Do not use any letter more than once.
&8226;You will hear the five recordings twice.
A an electrician
B a waiter
C a bank clerk
D a typist
E a taxi driver
F a postman
G a babysitter
H a bookbinder
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International airlines 【C1】______ the business travelers, the man or woman who regularly jets from country to country as part of the job. This does not necessarily mean that airlines ever abandoned their business travelers. Indeed, companies like Lufthansa and Swissair would rightly argue that they have always catered best 【C2】______ the executive class passengers. But many lines could be 【C3】______ of concentrating too heavily in the recent past on attracting passengers by volume, often at the expense of regular travelers. Too often, they have seemed 【C4】______ for quantity rather than quality.
Operating a major airline in the 1980s is essentially a matter of finding the right mix of passengers.
The airlines need to fill up the back end of their wide-bodied jets with low 【C5】______ passengers, without forgetting that the front end should be filled with people who pay substantially more for their tickets.
It is no coincidence that the two major airline bankruptcies in 1989. were among the companies specializing 【C6】______ cheap flights. But low fares require 【C7】______ full aircraft to make flights economically viable, and in the recent recession the volume of traffic has not grown. Equally the large number of airlines jostling for the available passengers has created a huge excess of capacity. The 【C8】______ result of excess capacity and cut- throat competition driving down fares has been to push some airlines into collapse and leave many others 【C9】______ on the brink.
Against this 【C10】______ background, it is no surprise that airlines are turning increasingly towards the business travelers to improve their rates of return. They have invested much time and effort to establish exactly what the executive demands for sitting apart from the tourists.
High on the list of priorities is punctuality; an executive% time is money. In-flight service is another area where the airlines are jostling for the executive's attention. The free drinks and headsets and better food are all part of the lure.
【C1】______
A.will rediscover
B.have rediscovered
C.rediscover
D.rediscovered
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Potential AIDS victims who refuse to be tested for the disease and then defend their right to remain ignorant about whether they carry the virus are entitled to that right. But ignorance cannot be used to rationalize irresponsibility. Nowhere in their argument is their concern about how such ignorance might endanger public health by exposing others to the virus.
When a disease selectively attacks the socially disadvantaged, such as homosexuals and drug abusers, it seems an injustice beyond rationalization. Such is the case with acquired immune deficiency syndrome.
Some crucial facts: AIDS is a communicable disease. The percentage of those infected with the AIDS virus who will eventually contract the disease is unknown, but that percentage rises with each new estimate. The disease so far has been 100 potential. The latency period between the time the virus is acquired and the disease develops is also unknown.
We now have tests for the presence of the virus that is as efficient and reliable as almost any diagnostic test in medicine. An individual who tests positive can be presumed with near-certainty to carry the virus, whether he has the disease or not.
To state that the test for AIDS is "ambiguous", as a clergyman recently in public, is a misstatement and an immoral act. The test correlates so consistently with the presence of the virus in bacteria cultures as to be considered 100 percent certain by experts.
Everyone who tests positive must understand that he is a potential person for the AIDS virus and has a moral duty and responsibility to prevent others from infection. We are not just dealing with the protection of the innocent but with an essential step lo contain the spread of an epidemic as horrible as any that has befallen modern man.
It may seem unfair to burden the tragic victims with concern for the welfare of others. But moral responsibility is not a luxury of the fortunate, and evil actions committed in despair cannot be condemned out of pity. It is morally wrong for a healthy individual who tests positive for AIDS to be involved with anyone except under the strict precautions now defined as safe sex.
It is morally wrong for someone in a high risk population who refuses to test himself to do other than to assume that he tests positive. It is morally wrong for those who, out of sympathy for the heartbreaking victims of this epidemic, as though well-wishing and platitudes about the ambiguities of the disease are necessary in order to comfort the victims while they contribute to enlarging the number of those victims. Moral responsibility is the burden of the sick as well as the healthy.
As for whether potential AIDS victims carrying the virus, the author suggests that
A.they have the right to. be kept in the dark.
B.they have the right to be protected.
C.ignorance may result in serious consequences.
D.ignorance may bring indifference to the disease.
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Her refusal to obey him greatly incensed him who has never met that kind of opposition before.
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()of the soldiers refused to take part in the raid
A.Two thirds
B.Two third
C.Second third
D.Second thirds