Gulliver's Travels was written by ______.
A.Jonathan Swift
B.Charles Dickens
C.Henry Fielding
D.Daniel Defoe
时间:2023-01-21 17:51:58
相似题目
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If the dispersion of a given fiber is 17ps/nm*km at 1550 nm and zero at 1310 nm, then what is the accumulated dispersion of an ITU wavelength after it travels 200 km?()
A . 0 ps/nm
B . 340 ps/nm
C . 200 ps/nm
D . 3400 ps/nm
E . More information is needed.
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If the dispersion of a given fiber is 17ps/nm*km at 1550 nm and zero at 1310 nm, then what is the accumulated dispersion of an ITU wavelength after it travels 200 km? ()
A . 0 ps/nm
B . 340 ps/nm
C . 200 ps/nm
D . 3400 ps/nm
E . More information is needed.
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() thrust and resistance equal each other, the ship always travels at a constant speed.
A . As long as
B . As far as
C . As well as
D . Unle
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A scatter plot that shows a trend line that travels down to the right would demonstrate what type of correlation?
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As one of the greatest satirists in the 18th century, ( ) made use of satire to attack social evils and call for social changes in his Gulliver's Travels.
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Gulliver' s Travels tells about the adventures of Gullliver through the fairy tale of fantasy which is a great satire on ( ).
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The Houyhnhnms depicted by Jonathan Swift in Gulliver's Travels are________.
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He didn't notice the earth travels around the sun.
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Who are the people Gulliver met during the travels?
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The person who travels around the world is a _________.(globetrot)
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The structure travels anterior to root of lung is
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1.San travels a lot( )
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The speed__________ light travels is said to be the maximum in the universe.
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Who is the author of Gulliver's Travels?
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Gulliver’s Travels gives an unparalleled ____ depiction of vices of his age.
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听力原文:Sudanese opposition leader Sadeqal-Mahdi, who travels to Washington next week, sa
听力原文: Sudanese opposition leader Sadeqal-Mahdi, who travels to Washington next week, says he will push the Bush administration to urge both sides in his country's civil war to make peace and create a true democracy. In an interview with Reuters news agency, Mr. Mahdi says the United States can play an important role in pressuring both sides to reach a just peace through political talks, not war-fare.
Last week, Secretary of State Colin Powell visited the region and promised to try harder to end the Sudanese war, which has killed an estimated two million people. It pits the Muslim north against the largely Christian and animist south.
Sudan's President Omar Hassan Al-Bashir and rebel leader John Garang are to hold proximity talks Saturday in Nairobi along with east African leaders trying to mediate an end to the 18 year conflict. In addition to the Kenyan host, President Daniel-arap Moi, the Ugandan, Ethiopian and Eritrean leaders are to attend the session.
Who has visited Sudan last week?
A.Sadeqal-Mahdi.
B.Colin Powell.
C.Omar Hassan AL-Bashir.
D.President Bush.
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The earth is not the only【C1】______that travels around the sun. With it are eight other planets, fellow members of the sun's family.
Two of them are【C2】______while the other six【C3】______from the sun than the earth is. The farther they are, the longer【C4】______they【C5】______around the sun. People noticed long ago that these traveling bodies moved around in the sky【C6】______definite paths. It is a【C7】______called gravity that【C8】______them in their paths.
We know that every little bit of matter in the【C9】______pulls upon every other bit of mater. The pull between two bodies is【C10】______to the product of their masses. Because the sun is so large that pulls【C11】______the sun and the planets are thus great. If it【C12】______not for these pulls, the planets【C13】______off into space. In the same way【C14】______exists a pull between the earth and the moon, which keeps the moon【C15】______in its orbit around our planet, the earth. The gravity holds you to its surface, and pulls back to it the ball which you【C16】______into the air. Of course the ball also pulls【C17】______the larger earth, but the earth is so much larger that the pull【C18】______.
Now remember that large bodies exert a greater pull on any body than smaller ones which contain【C19】______material. But each object in the universe, no matter how small, pulls on all other objects【C20】______extent.
【C1】
A.thing
B.body
C.matter
D.substance
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将考生文件夹下的TODAY文件夹中的MORNING.txt文件移动到文件夹下EVE-NING文件夹中,并改名为NIGHT.wri。
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__________ A) She is going to Venice. B) She travels around the world. C) She likes to collect postcards. D) She is going on vacation.
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In the first part of Gulliver's Travels, Gulliver told this experience in ____.
A.A. Lilliput
B.B. Brobdingnag
C.C. Houyhnhnm
D.D. England
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4. Which statement is true about the earth’s movement? A. The earth spins and travels around the sun at the same time. B. One day is the time it takes the earth to travel around the sun once. C. One year is the time it takes the earth to spin around once. D. It is impossible to measure the earth’s movement.
A、答案A
B、答案B
C、答案C
D、答案D
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A body that’s moving with a constant speed travels once around a circular path. Which of the following is/are true concerning the motion?I. The displacement is zero. II. The average speed is zero. III
A.I only
B.I and II
C.I and III
D.II and III
E.II only
F.III only
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An editorial in the paper argues that a person only should be allowed to attend school if the marginal cost of educating that person is less than the marginal benefit of educating that person. The wri
A.normative economics
B.positive economics
C.negative economics
D.economic naturalism
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The history of ice cream is amystery. No one knows exactly how and when people began to eat it. There is onestory that the Roman emperor Nero (A.D. 37—68) sent slaves to the mountains tobring back snow. The snow was served to him sweetened with honey and fruit pulp.Marco Polo (1254—1324) tasted flavored ices, too, during his famous travels inthe Far East. He brought the recipes back toItaly.
Recipesfor ices spread fromItalyto the rest of Europe in the 1500’s. The chefs of kings constantly experimentedwith new combinations to please their masters, and at some point cream andbutter were added to the recipes for ice. The new dish was called cream ice.Cream ice, molded into amusing shapes, began to be served on the tables ofkings across Europe. Louis XIV (1638—1715)surprised his court with a dessert of eggs in cups of silver and gilt. Theeggs, of course, were really cream ice.
Graduallycream ice took the name it has today. One of the earliest advertisements forice cream was put in a New Yorkpaper in 1786. The ad announced that “Ladies and gentlemen may be supplied withice- cream every day at the City Tavern by their humble servant, Joseph Crowe.”But ice cream was still not an everyday event. It was usually presented infancy shapes at the end of dinner parties. Policy Madison (1768—1849) was famous for herimaginative dinners, and she was the first to serve ice cream at the WhiteHouse. When her guests came into the dining room, they found a table coveredwith delicious dishes, and in the center of the table, a huge mound of pink icecream on a silver platter.
Icecream was such a delicacy because it was so hard to make. At first it wasbeaten and then shaken by hand in a pan of salt and ice until it became firm. Afreezer that was cranked by hand was developed around 1846. Making ice creamwas still a chore, but cranking the freezer was much easier and faster thanshaking the mixture in a pan.
“Icecream socials” became a popular way to entertain friends. Everyone helped turnthe crank of the freezer, and homemade peach or strawberry ice cream was thereward. The development of the continuous freezer in the 1920’smade the manufacture of ice cream very quick and economical. It soon was easierto buy packaged ice cream than to make it at home. Eskimo pies and popsiclesbegan to be sold at the same time.
Possiblyice cream cones began with the World’s Fair in 1893. Vendors there sold FriedIce Cream. The ice cream was covered with a fritter batter and then quicklydipped in very hot lard or olive oil. Putting the ice cream in an alreadyprepared cone was the next step. Today there are many novelty products, fromfrozen drumsticks to ice cream pies.
16.According to the passage, which of thefollowing served ice cream disguised as eggs?
A. Policy Madison
B. Joseph Crowe
C. Louis XIV
D. Marco Polo
17.Newspaper advertisements for ice cream first appeared in_________.
A.1846
B.1893
C.1768
D.1786
18.The text would most probably be found in_________.
A. a history book
B. anadvertisement
C. a cookingbook
D. an encyclopedia
19. The main purpose of the writer is to_________.
A. explain how ice cream was invented
B. tell us the history of ice cream
C. describe why ice cream is so popular
D. persuade us the difficulties involved inmaking ice cream
20.Ice cream was so delicious, the reason is that_________.
A. it was difficult tomake
B. it was easy to make
C. it was beaten andthen shaken
D. it was complicated tomake