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(3)  This proposal will give you some information about RealCline: how it works, why it is better than o_________________(92) cinema, and how it can be used in other ways. I believe you will be a______________(93) by the RealCine experience, and will agree that this is an e____________________(94) technology that must be d______________(95) further.

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BEIJING - High school graduates from quake-hit Yushu county, Qinghai province will have greater opportunities to enter college due to favorable policies from the Ministry of Education.

Students who sit this year's college entrance examination in Yushu will receive additional test points and colleges ___31___ (instruct) to give preference to students from the area ___32___ they meet minimum admission requirements, the ministry said in a notice published on ___33___ website on Saturday.

Even for those who fail this year's exam, the education department in Qinghai will offer the students ___34___ (vary) opportunities to continue their education ___35___ receive vocational training, according to the ministry.

In China, the college entrance exam ___36___ (hold) in early June every year. About 1,000 students from Yushu's senior high schools are expected to sit this year's exam along with students from ___37___ the country.

___38___ 7.1 magnitude earthquake hit Yushu of Qinghai on April 14, killing at least 2,200 people and leaving some 13,000 ___39___ (injure).

On Saturday, Premier Wen Jiabao paid his second visit to Yushu ___40___ the quake and presided over a meeting on reconstruction work.

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One of the many things we take for granted in the twentieth century is the speedy collection and delivery of letters to and from all parts of the world at __31___cheap rates.

A husband away ___32___ a business trip can write home to his wife two thousand miles away knowing that the letter will reach ___33____ in a few days. His special air-letter may cost him less than ____34____ loaf of bread or his own bus fare to work.

This service, however, is a favor of comparatively recent origin. Until modern times the cost of sending letters privately was so great that the ___35____ of a letter was a considerable event and might even cost financial hardship to the receiver ___36___ had to bear the charges. ___37____the Middle Ages on, there were indeed special messengers who ____38____(carry)state correspondence, and other messengers employed to travel with news between the great monasteries or the great merchants' houses, but for centuries there was no official post service by which private letters could be sent. It was not until 1840 ___39____ the official organization known as the Penny Post ___40____ (establish)in Great Britain and gave ordinary people cheap and efficient postal deliveries.

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I had an unusual conversation with a woman about physical limitations. Nancy suffered   31  a serious disease and she could no longer walk. She spent her   32   (wake) hours in a wheelchair.

“I’m not ‘confined (限制)’ to a wheelchair,” she insisted one day. “It doesn’t confine me but   33   (set) me free.”

She asked me, “Do you want to know   34   reason for living?”

“What is it?” I wondered.

“To liberate people. To set them free. Before I got my wheelchair,” she explained, “I had trouble getting around. Now I can go places! However I can free people, I want to do   35  .”

“People speak of being ‘shut in,’” she continued. “People   36   are confined to a room or a house or a bed are not ‘shut in.’ They’re ‘shut out’ – shut out of activities and shut out of people’s lives. So my aim is to liberate people, to set them free, however I can.”

Because of her disease, Nancy now helps people find ways of gaining more physical   37   (free).

Listen to these words from Darwin P. Kingsley: “You have powers you never dreamed   38  . You can do things you never thought you   39  do. There are no limitations in   40   you can do except the limitations of your own mind.”

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Child labor has been a problem for many years. Over a hundred years ago, Charles Dickens shocked many of his readers when    31   (describe)the conditions under which young children worked in British factories.    32    conditions Dickens described continue, almost unchanged today, in many parts of the world. The only difference is    33    today’s employment of children is confined to small industries and family businesses, such as hotels, restaurants and    34    (particular) farms, rather than to large factories. The children not only receive nothing or very    35   for their long hours of work, but also they    36    (prevent) from attending school. Therefore, when they become older they are    37   (able) to do any other kind of work.

The solution    38    the problem of child labour is clearly better laws to protect young children greater supervision (監(jiān)督) of industry and heavier fines for    39    who break the laws. Only    40    this way can young boys and girls be allowed to enjoy the most valuable time of their lives --- childhood.

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Scientists have found “significant” amounts of water in a crater (火山口) at the moon’s south pole, a major   31   (discover) that will dramatically revise the description of the moon   32   a dead world and likely make it a more attractive destination for future human space missions.

    “The moon is alive,” declared Anthony Colaprete, the chief scientist for the Lunar Crater Observation and Sensing Satellite mission,   31   used a rocket on Oct. 9 to punch a hole about 100 feet across in the moon’s surface, and then measured about 25 gallons of water in the form of vapor and ice.   31   that’s not enough to swim in, it could indicate sufficient water in permanently shaded craters at the poles for future astronauts to live off the land.

    NASA’s plans, currently under review by the Obama administration, call for   31   return to the moon at the end of the next decade, and   31   (construct) of a lunar base in which astronauts could live and work for months at a time.

    The presence of large quantities of water would make that plan more   31   (practice), since water could be used for drinking, breathing and even making rocket fuel.   31  , a resource-rich moon could also serve as the perfect low-gravity launch-pad (發(fā)射臺) for missions that would carry astronauts and   31   families elsewhere in the solar system,   31   (realize) the dreams of generations of science-fiction writers.

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Beauty has always been regarded as something praiseworthy. Almost everyone thinks attractive people are happier and have more respectable jobs. But in the executive(主管的) circle,   31   can become a disadvantage.

While attractiveness is a positive factor for a man on his way up the executive ladder, it is   32 

(harm) to a woman. Handsome male executives are considered having more honesty than plainer men; effort and ability usually lead  33  their success. Attractive female executives are considered to have less honesty than unattractive  34  ;people do not connect their success with ability   35  with factors such as luck. All unattractive women executives are thought to have more honesty and to be more capable than the attractive female executives. However, interestingly, the rise of the unattractive overnight successes  36  (connect) more to personal relationships and less to ability.

Attractive women are not thought to be able. This is true even in politics. Anne Bowman, a writer,

  37  recently made a study, asked 125 undergraduate students to rank two groups of photographs, one of men and one of women, in order of attractiveness. And then the students were told the photographs were of candidates for political offices. They were asked to rank them again, in the order they would vote  38  them. The results showed that attractive males  39  (complete) defeated unattractive men, but the women   40  (rank) most attractive by the students unchangeably received the fewest votes.

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科目: 來源: 題型:閱讀理解

閱讀下面短文,按照句子結構的語法性和上下文連貫的要求,在空格處填入一個適當?shù)脑~或使用括號中詞語的正確形式填空,并將答案填寫在答題卷標號為31-40的相應位置上。

The president’s message to students was simple: study hard, pay attention in class and embrace the opportunity to learn.

"We can have the most dedicated teachers, the most   31   (support) parents and the best schools in the world. And none of it will make a difference; none of it will matter,   32  all of you fulfill(履行) your responsibilities," Mr. Obama said.

It was a presidential talk  33  (deliver) at a time of economic uncertainty for many American families. Mr. Obama said he understood the tensions   34  many students faced. But that was no excuse  35  neglecting their homework or cutting class or dropping out of school.

Critics of the president strongly criticized the speech as an effort by the White House to promote the president's domestic agenda. Some parents  36  (tell) their children to resist the address.

A Colorado student stayed away,   37  (think) their parents should be  38  to push them more in their education rather than the president.

But   39   mother in North Carolina said she thought the   40  (speak) could have a positive impact. "When kids get to hear something about motivation from someone like that, it's fantastic," she said.

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科目: 來源: 題型:閱讀理解

閱讀下面短文,按照句子結構的語法性和上下

文連貫的要求,在空格處填入一個適當?shù)脑~或使用括號中詞語的正確形式填空,并將答案填寫在答題卡標號為31~40的相應位置上。

       At the age of 17, Swedish Alfred Nobel spoke five languages fluently. Nobel became an   31   (invent)and businessman, and at the time of his death on December 10, 1896, he had 355 patents worldwide ——  32   of them was the patent on dynamite(炸藥). Furthermore, he had started 87 companies all over the world. According to   33   will, Alfred Nobel's enormous fortune was to be used   34   (establish) prizes to award those   35    had done their best to benefit mankind in the fields of physics, chemistry, medicine, literature and peace. The first Nobel Prizes were awarded in 1901, five years   36   Nobel died. In 1969, another prize was added "The Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel".

       The Nobel Laureates(獲得者)  37    ( announce) at the beginning of October each year. A couple of months later, on December 10,   38   anniversary of Alfred Nobel's death, they receive their prizes from the Swedish King —— a Nobel diploma, a medal, and 10 million Swedish crowns per prize. All Nobel Prizes are awarded in Stockholm, Sweden,   39   for the Nobel Peace Prize, which is awarded in Oslo, Norway. When Alfred Nobel was alive, Norway and Sweden were united under one monarch(君主),     40   1905 when Norway became an independent kingdom with its own king.

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科目: 來源: 題型:閱讀理解

閱讀下面短文,按照句子結構的語法性和上下文連貫的要求,在空格處填入一個適當?shù)脑~或使用括號中詞語的正確形式填空,并將答案填寫在答題卡標號為31~40的相應位置上。

In ancient times the most important examinations were spoken, not written. In the schools of ancient Greece and Rome, testing usually consisted    31    saying poetry aloud or giving speeches.

In the European universities of the Middle Ages, students    32    (work) for advanced degrees had to discuss questions in their field of study with people who had made a special study of the subject.

Generally,   33   , modern examinations are written. The written examination,

   34    all students are tested on the same questions, was    35   (probable) not known until the nineteenth century. Perhaps it came into existence with the great increase    36    population and the development of modern industry. A room full of candidates for a state examination,    37    (time) exactly by electric clocks and carefully watched over by managers, appears like a group of workers at an automobile factory. Certainly, during examinations teachers and students    38    (expect) to act like machines.

One type of test is sometimes called as “objective” test.    39   is intended to deal with facts, not personal opinions. To make up    40    objective test the teacher writes a series of questions, each of which has only one correct answer. Along with each question the teacher writes the correct answer and also three statements that look like answers to students who have not learned the material properly.

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