It is almost known to all that smoking is bad for people's health.(英译中)
A.had ever known B.has ever known C.knew D.known
A.A. known of
B.B. unknown to
C.C. known for
D.D. unknown for
听力原文:W: The Americans came from America. That's easy, isn't it?
M: I'm sorry to say you are wrong! The Americans came from almost every part of the world. That's to say, mare than 230 million people now call America home, but most of them can trace their families back to other parts of the world. That's why America has long been known as a "melting pot". It is believed that the first to arrive were the American Indians. They came titan Asia in very ancient times, more than 10,000 years ago. There used to be millions of them, but today they only number about 850,000. Half of them live on special land of their own in 31 states, while the others have "melted" in with the rest of America's 230 million people.
W: Do the American Indians have anything to do with the Indians of India?
M: No, nothing. As a matter of fact, the American Indiana came from Siberia.
W: Then, why do people call them Indians?
M: Because when Christopher Columbus made his historic voyage in 1492, he expected to reach India. So he called the people of the New World "Indians" and Indian is the name that has remained till now.
(26)
A.Because Americans love melting pot.
B.Because Americans came from almost every part of the world.
C.Because America is famous for melting pot.
D.Because America contains a large number of people.
根据材料回答9~11题:How long has the author known the barber?[A]Five years. [B]Almost four years. [C]Almost six years.
"We didn't realize there was (6)_____ wrong with it," says Nigel. "It was such a small, (7)_____ dog that rabies didn't (8)_____ my mind". But, six weeks later,23-year-old Andrea was dead. The dog had been rabid. No one had thought it necessary to (9)_____ her anti-rabies treatment. When, back home in England, she began to show the classic (10)_____—unable to drink, catching her breath—her own doctor put it (11)_____ to hysteria. Even when she was (12)_____ into an ambulance, hallucinating, recoiling in (13)_____ at the sight of water, she was directed (14)_____ the nearest mental hospital.
But if her symptoms (15)_____ little attention in life, in death (16)_____ achieved a publicity close to hysteria. Cases like Andrea are (17)_____, but rabies is still one of the most feared diseases known to man. The disease is (18)_____ by a bite of a lick from an (19)_____ animal. It can, in very exceptional circumstances, be inhaled—two scientists died of it after (20)_____ bat dung in a cave in Texas.
A.fancied
B.flashed
C.flopped
D.gasped
A.People know almost nothing about Shakespeare's early life.
B.Shakespeare was already well known before he went to London.
C.People know a lot about Shakespeare's life in London.
D.People know only a little about Shakespeare's life in London.
According to the people at Habitat(住处) for Humanity International(HFHI), there is plenty that can be done. HFHI was founded in 1976 by Millard and Linda Fuller, millionaires who decided their money could best be spent helping people. Since then, HFHI has helped fix and build homes for tens of thousands of people in the United States and over 30 other countries.
HFHI believes that the homes should not be given as charity; instead, the organization follows a system known as partnership housing: The people who will live in the homes work together with volunteers on the construction and then gradually pay off the basic cost of the homes.
These payments, together with contributions, enable HFHI to help other people.
Throughout the world, the number of people who lack housing:【46】.
HFHI stands for:【47】.
The founders of HFHI: two【48】.
The purpose of HFHI: help people【49】.
The system by which HFHI offers help: through【50】.
At the beginning of this century, almost everybody believed in work. But by the end of this century, e might be thinking quite differently. Today, people are divided into social classes in accordance with the types of work they do; tomorrow, t is more than likely we will be divided according to the types of games we play.
This change in the use of our time may give rise to a now profession called" fun specialists," who will fill the same functions as our current career specialists. They will show us how to get the most fun and enjoyment out of our leisure time. Someday people will no longer be known primarily by the work they do.
What do scientists tell us about jobs in foreseeable future?
A.Most people will do hi-tech jobs.
B.People will work with more computers.
C.Very few people will have to work.
D.No people will be working at all.
But twenty years later this same Chaplin became the greatest, best known, and best loved comedian(喜剧演员) in the world. Nearly all visitors to cinema must have seen some of Chaplin's films. People everywhere had sat and laughed at them until the tears ran down their faces. Even people who don't understand English can enjoy Chaplin's films because they are almost silent. It isn't what he says that makes people laugh. His comedy doesn't depend on words or languages. It depends on little actions which mean the same thing to people all over the world. Acting out, without words, of common human situations plays an important part in the dances and plays of many countries. It's a kind of world language.
Chaplin lived most of his life in America and died in Switzerland on Christmas 1977, at the age of eighty-eight. There was sadness all over the world at the news of his death.
Why was young Chaplin waiting outside the back entrances of the theatres?
A.Because he wanted to enjoy a play in the theatre.
B.Because he was hungry and wanted some food.
C.Because he liked to play a part in a play and thus make a living.
D.Because he wished to become a man of business.
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