The figure like 1/10/2005 in British English will be understood as January 10,2005,while i
A.正确
B.错误
A.正确
B.错误
此题为判断题(对,错)。
A.正确
B.错误
A、FGH
B、CEH
C、FGDC
D、CEGF
E、DEG
Many artists today are in what is called applied art. They use
their ability in advertise, interior decoration, or some similar job.【1】______
But people in business which hire the artists for that kind of work 【2】______
say that simple artist ability is not enough. There are lots of young【3】______
people who have that. But not enough of them who know anything 【4】______
about physics, or mechanical things, or math.
To be a druggist you have to study chemistry. You can't learn
chemistry without knowing something about algebra.
How about a nurse? One of the requiring subjects in a course of 【5】______
nursing is known to material medica. In materia me dica you'll 【6】______
learn how to figure out doses and prepare for medicines. Algebra is 【7】______
important in doing the figuring. Too many student nurses flunk out
of the course because of their weak math.
It's the same for many trades. If you want to be a crafts-man, 【8】______
a machinist, a molder, and a patternmaker, you'll need algebra and 【9】______
geometry and even trigonometry.
Even you want to go into business for yourself, you'll need 【10】______
math. Business today, whether it is running a little gas station or a
big factory, takes good management. Good management takes mathematics
【M1】
In the afternoon, we have two classes. Classes are over at 3:30, and I get home at 4:00. But sometimes I don't ___4___ school so early because I play basketball on the playground. I have supper at about 6:00. After supper I do my homework. I often watch TV, but sometimes I ___5___ to do some reading and the story books are very interesting. I usually go to bed at about 10:00 p.m.
1、A、leave
B、at
C、like
D、breakfast
E、start
2、A、leave
B、at
C、like
D、breakfast
E、start
3、A、leave
B、at
C、like
D、breakfast
E、start
4、A、leave
B、at
C、like
D、breakfast
E、start
5、A、leave
B、at
C、like
D、breakfast
E、start
根据以下内容回答题:
When I was a boy,children always objected(1)wearing school uniform. but teacherswere(2)on it because they said all of US looked(3).0therwise,they said,children would compete with(4)and the poorer children would be unhappy because people would see how poor they were.In recent years,however,many schools have(5)the idea of making children wear uniform. but funnily enough,now that children can wear(6)they like,they have adopted a uniform. of their own.When some journalists visited a London school,they found that aU the boys and girls were dressed in jcans.One girl said she would rather die than wear a coat instead of a jersey because(7)wants to look different(8)the other children in the class.Parents may not be as happy about th.is as children,but they(9)to be,because this new kind of uniform. is one that the children like,not something they have been forced to wear,and it is also(10)cheaper than school uniform. used to be.
请回答(1)题: 查看材料
A.against
B.to
C.for
D.on
(1)
A.about
B.after
C.for
D.over
The fans are wrong. More than anything else, digital cameras are radically【4】what photography means and what it can be. The venerable medium of photography【5】we know, it is beginning to seem out of【6】with the way we live. In our computer and camcorder【7】, saving pictures as digital【8】and watching them on TV is no less practical — and in many ways more【9】than fumbling with rolls of film that must be sent off to be【10】.
Paper is also terribly【11】. Pictures that are incorrectly framed,【12】, or lighted are nonetheless committed to film and ultimately processed into prints.
The digital medium changes the【13】. Still images that are【14】digitally can immediately be shown on a computer【15】, a TV screen, or a small liquid crystal display (LCD) built right into the camera. And since the points of light that【16】an image are saved as a series of digital bits in electronic memory,【17】being permanently etched onto film, they can be erased, retouched, and transmitted【18】.
What’s it like to【19】with one of these digital cameras? It’s a little like a first date — exciting, confusing and fraught with【20】.
(1)
A.rather than
B.let alone
C.much less
D.so as to
Dear Mr Lee
Subject: Faulty HP 5590 Scanners
Three months ago, our training center bought 10 HP 5590 scanners from your company --- see our order number G868281. Until (1), these scanners worked properly. (2 ), we have started to notice that fuzzy image is becoming increasingly common with these scanners.(3) , this is a problem with this model that appears only after a few months' service. This is not satisfactory.
This matter is causing us great (4), since we need to scan a lot of documents every day. We should,(5 ), like you to replace all of the machines that we bought, with your newer model HP 5591 scanners,(6) , we understand, do not have the same design fault.
(7)you know, we do a lot of business with your company, and we have always (8) pleased with your service. It would be a great (9)if this good relationship is spoiled.
I look forward to (10)your reply soon.
Yours sincerely
Willow Zeng
Willow Zeng
General Manager
, much less one as severe as hers. To them a disability was physical, something you could see. They knew her as a happy, normal child. That's how it is with a learning disability -you don't see obvious physical symptoms.
But as she grew out of preschool, she would pretend to read-I knew she was pretending because the book was upside down. She withdrew into her own world where she could fantasize about being a ballet dancer, a Broadway actress or a figure skater. In the real world, ballet classes and music lessons led only to confusion, frustration and, ultimately, disappointment.
As for school, there was no way she could be included in a mainstream classroom. I went through every special school in New York, only to be told over and over: "She doesn't belong here." The last blow came a few months after the diagnosis, when I was at a pay phone on 72nd Street, waiting for an answer from the very last school on my list. Finally a cold voice came on-I can still hear it-and said: "I'm sorry, but we feel this isn't the place for her." I hung up and stared at the phone in tears.
I had lived my life as the daughter of Henry Ford II, and for the first time in my life I faced a problem that neither money nor position could solve. I nearly gave up, but I knew I couldn't. Without me, my daughter stood no chance of making it.
21 .According to the first paragraph, Allegra's problem was _ .
A. psychological B. obvious C. physical D. invisible
22. Allegra was disabled in that _.
A. she was unable to learn like a normal child
B. she was always reading with her book upside down
C. she isolated herself from other children in her class
D. she was living in her dreams in conflict with the real world
23 .The expression "a mainstream classroom"(para. 3) refers, to _.
A. the last blow B. the last school
C. special schools D. normal education
24. It can be inferred from the last paragraph that _.
A. the author would ask Henry Ford II for help
B. the author would continue to help her daughter
C. the author would leave New York for the sake of her daughter
D. the author had to use money or position to deal with the problem
25.The phrase "making it" (para. 4) probably means _.
A. becoming a figure skater B. becoming a ballet dancer
C. becoming successful D. getting proper treatment