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His example()that everyone can become a useful person in society so long as he is willing to work hard.
A . expresses
B . thinks
C . indicates
D . supplie
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The class ()so happy,for everyone smiles to you.
A . is
B . are
C . being
D . ha
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Not everyone needs to be the group leader, but everyone does have an important role in discussion.
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The owner of the copyright has the right to license or (8) … that right, (8)为
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“The difference between the right word and the almost right word is the difference between lighting and the lightning bug.” T his is from .
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2Thanks to the ___of air transport,everyone is free to go anywhere at any time.
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Meng Jiao ( 孟郊 ), a poet who lived in the Tang dynasty, passed the highest imperial examination right after his first attempt.
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The tort of (6) … is the tort of interfering with another person ’ s right to the enjoyment of his or her own land.
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Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was honored for his effort to fight Civil Rights Movement. In 1964, he won the Nobel Prize for Peace.
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According to the Reform Bill 1832, who got the right to vote? ( )
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In general, everyone is not ________ to admit his dullness.
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No one objected to Harry's presiding over the condominium owner's meeting; what everyone ______ objecting to was his rudeness.
A.were
B.have been
C.was
D.had been
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When the judge returned to the courtroom ,everyone immediately_______up.
A. stood
B. was standing
C. stands
D. had stood
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A beneficiary, in accordance with the provisions of the applicable law, has the right to assign any proceeds to which he may be entitled under his credit which is not stated to be transferable. It is called
(1)( ) transfer of funds.
(2)( ) assignment of credit proceeds.
(3)( ) remittance of the proceeds.
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In the short poem “Bloody men”, a woman waiting for the right man to turn up is compared to a passenger waiting for the right bus to come.()
此题为判断题(对,错)。
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Founding Fathers of the United States created a government to defend rights for everyone. At that time “everyone” only meant____________.
A、white property-owners
B、women
C、people without property
D、slaves
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Everyone in the world can access the Internet using his World Wide Web system
请问这句话怎么翻译?
还有这个using为什么这么用?是动词ing形式作定语么?
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听力原文:LOS ANGELES--Spider-Man caught just about everyone in his web. The superhero's la
听力原文: LOS ANGELES--Spider-Man caught just about everyone in his web. The superhero's latest adventure, Spider-Man 3, smashed box-office records with $148 million in its first three days, according to studio estimates Sunday.
That put it ahead of the previous record debut of $135.6 million set last summer by Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man' s Chest.
With $59.3 million on opening day Friday, Sony's Spider-Man 3 broke the single-day box-office record, also held by Dead Man's Chest with $55.8 million in its first day.
Since it began rolling out overseas on Tuesday, Spider-Man 3 has taken in $227 million in foreign markets, bringing the film's worldwide total to $375 million. In just days, the movie has grossed $117 million more than its whopping $258 million production budget.
In just two days, it also nearly matched the $114.8 million opening weekend of 2002's Spider-Man, which had held the debut record until Dead Man's Chest opened.
Spider-Man 3 reunites director Sam Raimi, who also made the previous two installments, and stars Tobey Maguire and Kirsten Dunst.
How much did Spider-Man 3 take in on its opening day?
A.$148 million.
B.$227 million.
C.$59.3 million.
D.$55.8 million.
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Attention to details is something everyone can and should do--especially in a tight job market. Bob Cross Icy, a human-resources expert notices this in the job applications that come across his desk every day. "It's amazing how many candidates eliminate themselves," he says.
"Resumes arrive with stains. Some candidates don't bother to spell the company's name correctly. Once I see a mistake. I eliminate the candidates," Crossley concludes. "If they cannot take care of these details, why should we trust them with a job?"
Can we pay too much attention to details? Absolutely. Perfectionists struggle over little things at the cost of something larger they work toward. "To keep from losing the forest for the tree." Says Charles Garfield, an associate professor at the University of California, San Francisco, "we must constantly ask ourselves how the details we're working on fit into the larger picture. If they don't, we should drop them and move to something else."
Garfield compares this process to his work as a computer scientist at NASA. "The Apollo Il moon launch was lightly off-course 90 percent of the time," says Garfield. "But a successful landing was still likely because we knew the exact coordinates of our goal. This allowed us to make adjustments as necessary." Knowing where we want to go helps us judge the importance of every task we undertake.
Too often we believe what accounts for others' success is some special secret or a lucky break. But rarely is success so mysterious. Again and again, we see that by doing little things within our grasp well, large rewards follow.
According to the passage, some job applicants were rejected ______.
A.because they eliminated their names from the applicants' list themselves
B.because of their inadequate education as shown in their poor spelling in writing a resume
C.because they failed to give a detailed description of their background in their applications
D.because of their carelessness as shown in their failure to present a clean copy of a resume
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A patent is an exclusive right given to an inventor for his or her invention. In other words, a patent is a monopoly right given to the inventor for the invention. A patent confers on the inventor the right to price and to sell the invention in any way he or she desires, in the United States, patents are granted by the Patent Office for 17 years. Although economists generally condemn monopoly as a form. of market organization since monopoly imposes costs on the economy, patents present a more subtle case for monopoly theory. Specifically, can patent monopolies be justified?
In general, economists complain about the costs of monopoly because they believe that the same industry could be organized competitively. A patent monopoly grant for 17 years presents a different problem. That is, the purpose of the patent system is to encourage invention. The issue is not monopoly versus competition but, more fundamentally, invention versus no invention. Is the world better off with the invention, even though it is monopolized for 17 years? In other words, what are the costs and benefits of a patent?
Consider the simple case of a new consumer product with a positive demand, such as a camera utilizing a new exposure process. The costs of the patent monopoly are simply the deadweight costs of monopoly measured by the lost consumers' surplus from the 17-year patent monopoly. This cost must be assessed carefully in the context of an invention, however. What are the benefits of the patent system? First, there is the increase in consumer well-being brought about immediately by a desirable invention. In 17 years, the patent monopoly ends, and a second source of benefits arises: The price of cameras will fall to a competitive level, and consumers will reap the benefits of the camera at a lower price. In sum, theory of monopoly helps us to assess the costs and benefits of the patent. One can quibble about patent monopolies, arguing, for example, that they are granted for too long a time.
In the end, the patent system creates goods and services and technologies that did not previously exist. In this respect it is a valuable System for the economy. The patent system also underscores the importance of property rights to ideas as a source of economic growth and progress.
The first paragraph mainly______.
A.focuses on business monopoly
B.tells us about the patent system in America
C.discusses a special form. of market organization
D.defines what a patent is and its function
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One night when Mr. Robinson was asleep,he was woken up by some strange noise outside his house.“Thieves,”he thought. Jumping out of bed,he took his gun and hurried to the bedroom window. The room was not shining and the night was rather dark. But he could see a white shape. It looked like a man in the garden. He pointed his gun at it,fired and went back to bed. Early in the morning,he went down to the garden. His shirt was hanging from a tree. He had washed it the day before and hung it on the tree do dry. It had a hole right through the middle. Mr. Robinson was really frightened out of his life when he saw it and began to tremble(颤抖)。 His neighbour arrived at that moment.“How are you today,Mr,Robinson?”he asked in an anxious voice. “You don’t look well.”
“I’m all right,thank you,”said Mr. Robinson. “But I’m lucky to be alive. You see that shirt there?”
“Yes?”said the neighbour.
“If I’d been wearing that shirt last night,”said Mr. Robinson,“I’d be a dead man now.”
1、When Mr. Robinson jumped out of his bed and went to the window,he saw ________ in the garden.
A、a thief
B、something like a man
C、a white shirt on a tree
D、nothing
2、Who had hung the shirt on the tree the day before________
A、A thief.
B、Mr. Robinson himself.
C、Mr. Robinson’s neighbour
D、Mr. Robinson’s wife.
3、After firing the gun,Mr. Robinson________
A、went back to bed
B、went to the garden to see what it was
C、felt no longer afraid
D、looked for the shirt he had washed the day before
4、The next morning Mr. Robinson’s neighbour came and saw him looking________
A、surprised
B、unhappy
C、sick
D、angry.
5、The title“A Narrow Escape”suggests that one has________
A、succeeded in escaping to escape
B、failed.
C、run away
D、only just avoided death
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It’s important that everyone on the project keeps to the _____.
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One silly question I simply can't stand is "How do you feel?". Usually the question is asked of a man in action --- a man on the go, walking along the street, or busily working at his desk. So what do you expect him to say? He'll probably say, "Fine, I'm all right," but "you've put a bug in his ear" -- maybe now he's not sure. If you are a good friend, you may have seen something in his face, or his walk, that he overlooked that morning. It starts him worrying a little. First thing you know, he looks in a mirror to see if everything is all right, while you go merrily on your way asking someone else, "How do you feel?"
Every question has its time and place. It's perfectly acceptable, for instance, to ask "How do you feel?" if you're visiting a close friend in the hospital, But if the fellow is walking on both legs, hurrying to make a train, or sitting at his desk working, it's no time to ask him that silly question.When George Bernard Shaw, the famous writer of plays was in his eighties, someone asked him "How do you feel?" Shaw put him in his place. "When you reach my age," he said, "either you feel all right or you're dead."
1.According to the writer, greetings, such as "How do you feel?" ____.
A、show one's consideration for others
B、are a good way to make friends
C、are proper to ask a man in action
D、generally make one feel uneasy
2.The question "How do you feel?" seems to be correct and suitable when asked of ____.
A、a man working at his desk
B、a person having lost a close friend
C、a stranger who looks somewhat worried
D、a friend who is ill
3.The writer seems to feel that a busy man should ____.
A、be praised for his efforts
B、never be asked any question
C、not be bothered
D、be discouraged from working so hard
4.George Bernard Shaw's reply in the passage shows his ____.
A、cheerfulness
B、cleverness
C、ability
D、politeness
5.“You've put a bug in his ear ”means that you've ____.
A、made him laugh
B、shown concern for him
C、made fun of him
D、given him some kind of warning
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58、在古代,任何人都有接受教育的权利。 In ancient China, everyone has the right to receive education.