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[主观题]

People of Burlington are being disturbed by the sound of bells. Four students from Burling

ton College of Higher Education are in the bell tower of the【C1】______and have made up their minds to【C2】______the bells nonstop for two weeks as a protest against heavy trucks which run【C3】______through the narrow High Street. "They not only make it【C4】______to sleep at night, but they are【C5】______damage to our houses and shops of historical【C6】______"said John Norris, one of the protesters.

"【C7】______we must have these noisy trucks on the roads," said Jean Lacey, a biology student, "why don' t they build a new road that goes round the town?" Burlington isn' t much more than a【C8】______village. Its streets were never【C9】______for heavy traffic. Harry Fields also studying【C10】______said they wanted to make as much【C11】______as possible to force the government officials to realize what everybody has to【C12】______"Most of them don' t【C13】______here anyway," he said, "they come in for meetings and that, and the Town Hall is soundproof, so they probably don't【C14】______It's high time they realized the problem." The fourth student, Liza Vernum, said she thought the public were【C15】______on their side, and even ff they weren't they soon would be.

I asked if they were【C16】______that the police might come to【C17】______them.

"Not really," she said, "actually we are【C18】______bell ringers. I mean we are assistant bell ringers for the church. There is no【C19】______against practising. ".

I【C20】______the church with the sound of the bells ringing in my ears.

【C1】

A.college

B.village

C.town

D.church

提问人:网友atskyfly 发布时间:2022-01-07
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更多“People of Burlington are being…”相关的问题
第1题
第二节 完型填空阅读下面短文,从短文后所给各题的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中选出能填入相应空白处的最

第二节 完型填空

阅读下面短文,从短文后所给各题的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中选出能填入相应空白处的最佳选项。

People of Burlington are being disturbed by the sound of bells. Four students from Burlington College of Higher Education are in the bell tower of the 【B1】 and have made up their minds to 【B2】 the bells nonstop for two weeks as a protest (抗议) against heavy trucks which run 【B3】 through the narrow High Street.

"They not only make it 【B4】 to sleep at night, but they are 【B5】 damage to our houses and shops of historical 【B6】 ," said John Norris, one of the protesters.

" 【B7】 we must have these noisy trucks on the reads," said Jean Lacey, a biology student, "why don't they build a new road that goes 【B8】 the town? Burlington isn't much more than a 【B9】 village. Its streets were never 【B10】 for heavy traffic." Harry Fields also studying biology said they wanted to make as much effort as possible to force the 【B11】 to realize what everybody was having to 【B12】 . "Most of them don't 【B13】 here anyway," he said, "they come in for meetings and that, and the Town Hall is soundproof (隔音), 【B14】 they probably don't notice the noise all that much. It's high time they realized the 【B15】 ."

The fourth student, Liza Vemum, said she thought the public were 【B16】 on their side, and even if they weren't they soon would be. I asked if they were afraid that the police might come to 【B17】 them. "Not really," she said, "actually we are 【B18】 bell ringers. I mean we are assistant bell fingers for the church. There is no 【B19】 against practising." I 【B20】 the church with the sound of the hells ringing in my ears.

【B1】

A.college

B.village

C.town

D.church

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第2题
What is the authors attitude towards the Learned Societies occupancy of the Burlington Hou
se?

A.Appreciative.

B.Sympathetic.

C.Satiric.

D.Indifferent.

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第3题
According to the passage, we can infer all of the following EXCEPT that______.A.commercial

According to the passage, we can infer all of the following EXCEPT that______.

A.commercial rents for Burlington House would be beyond the Societies" means

B.the other four societies had faced a dispute similar to that of SAL

C.the Societies feared that they would be forced out of Burlington House

D.the Societies are now offered new sites at affordable rents

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第4题
For incoming freshmen at western Connecticut’s suburban Brookfield High School, lifting a
backpack weighed down with textbooks is about to give way to tapping out notes and touching electronic pages on an iPad. A few hours away, every student at Burlington High School near Boston will also start the year with new school-issued ipads, each loaded with electronic textbooks and other online resources in place of traditional texts. Apple officials say they know of more than districts that have launched what are called “one-to-one” programs.

At Burlington High in suburban Boston, Principal Patrick Larkin says the $ 500 ipads is better than textbooks in the long term, though he said the school will still use traditional texts in some courses if suitable electronic programs aren’t yet available. Larkin said of textbooks, “but they’re pretty much outdated the minute they’re printed and certainly by the time they’re delivered”.

But some experts warn that the districts need to ensure they can support the wireless infrastructure (设施), repairs and other costs that accompany a switch to such a tech - heavy approach. Mark Warschauer, an education and informatics (信息学) professor said, “I think people will like it. I really don’t know anybody in high school that wouldn’t want to get an iPad,” he said. “We’re always using technology at home, then when you’re at school it’s textbooks. So it’s a good way to put all of that together.” Districts are varied in their policies on how they police students’ use.

And the nation’s textbook publishing industry, accounting for $ 5. 5 billion in yearly sales to secondary schools, is taking notice of the trend with its own shift in a competitive race toward developing curriculum specifically for ipads. Jay Dickey, executive director of the Association of American Publishers, schools division, said all of the major textbook publishers are moving toward electronic offerings, but at least in the short term, traditional bound textbooks are here to stay. “I think one of the real key questions that will be answered over the next several years is what sort of things work best in print for students and what sort of things work best digitally.”

The first paragraph is mainly about________________ .

A.a program to promote ipads marketing in new school year

B.a program to spread electronic learning in new school year

C.a plan of how to use ipads in the coming school education

D.a plan of how to oppose IT technique in the coming school teaching

What’s the problem for ipads to be used in schools at presentA.Some students wouldn’t like to have ipads in schools.

B.The ipads are too expensive for school students to buy.

C.Most experts oppose the idea that ipads replace paper textbooks.

D.The ipads may be unavailable for some traditional courses.

The underlined sentence in the passage implies that .A.traditional textbooks are behind the times before they are printed

B.traditional textbooks possibly need to he printed again before delivered

C.contents of traditional textbooks can’t be renewed in time as electronic ones do

D.the ipads can deliver information much more rapidly than printed textbooks

From the passage we can draw conclusion that .A.more students tend to use printed textbooks rather than electronic ones

B.textbook publishing houses will develop more electronic textbooks of their own

C.it is impossible for the ipads to be widely used in schools in the future

D.electronic textbooks will take the place of printed ones in new school year

请帮忙给出每个问题的正确答案和分析,谢谢!

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第5题
补全短文:下面的短文有5处空白,短文后有6个句子,其中5个取自短文,请根据短文内容将其分别放回原有位置,以恢复文章原貌。

Wrongly Convicted Man and His Accuser Tell Their Story。

NEW YORK,NY, January 5,2010. St.Martin’s Press has announced the release of the paperback edition of Picking Cotton, a remarkable true story of what novelist John Grisham calls an “account of violence, rage, redemption(救赎),and, ultimately forgiveness.”

The story began in 1987, in Burlington, North Carolina, with the rape of a young while college student named Jennifer Thompson. During her ordeal, Thompson swore to herself that she would never forget the face of her rapist, a man who climbed through the window of her apartment and assaulted her brutally.________(1) When the police asked her if she could identify the assailant(袭击者) from a book of mug shots, she picked one that she was sure was correct, and later she identified the same man in a lineup.

Based on her convincing eyewitness testimony, a 22-year-old black man named Ronald Cotton was sentenced to prison for two life terms. Cotton’s lawyer appealed the decision, and by the time of the appeals hearing, evidence had come to light suggesting that the real rapist might have been a man who looked very like Cotton, an imprisoned criminal named Bobby Poole._______ (2) Jennifer Thompson looked at both men face to face, and once again said that Ronald Cotton was the one who raped her.

Eleven years later, DNA evidence completely exonerated(证明……清白) Cotton and just as unequivocally(明确地) convicted Poole, who confessed to the crime. ________(3) “The man I was so sure I had never seen in my life was the man who was inches from my throat, who raped me, who hurt me, who took my spirit away, who robbed me of my soul,” she wrote. “And the man I had identified so surely on so many occasions was absolutely innocent.”

_______ (4) Remarkably both were able to put this tragedy behind them, overcome the racial barrier that divided them, and write a book, which they have subtitled “Our memoir of injustice and redemption.”

Nevertheless, Thompson says, she still lives “with constant pain that my profound mistake cost him so dearly______ (5)”

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第6题
根据以下材料,回答题Wrongly Convicted Man and His Accuser Tell Their StoryNEW YORK, NY, Jan

根据以下材料,回答题

Wrongly Convicted Man and His Accuser Tell Their Story

NEW YORK, NY, January 5,2010. St, Martin"s Press has announced the release of the paperback edition of Picking Cotton, a remarkable true story of what novelist John Grisham calls an "account of violence, rage, redemption (救赎), and, ultimately forgiveness".

The story began in 1987, in Burlington, North Carolina, with the rape of a young white college student named Jennifer Thompson. During her ordeal, Thompson swore to herself that she would never forget the face of her rapist, a man who climbed through the window of her apartment and assaulted her brutally.46________ When the police asked her if she could identify the assailant (袭击者) from a book of mug shots, she picked one that she was sure was correct, and later she identified the same man in a lineup.

Based on her convincing eye witness testimony, a 22-year-old black man named Ronald Cotton was sentenced to prison for two life terms. Cotton"s lawyer appealed the decision, and by the time of the appeals hearing, evidence had come to light suggesting that the real rapist might have been a man who looked very like Cotton, an imprisoned criminal named Bobby Poole. 47________ Jennifer Thompson looked at both men face to face, and once again said that Ronald Cotton was the one who raped her.

Eleven years later, DNA evidence completely exonerated (证明……清白 ) Cotton and just as unequivocally (明确地) convicted Poole, who confessed to the crime.48________ "The man I was so sure I had never seen in my life was the man who was inches from my throat, who raped me, who hurt me, who took my spirit away, who robbed me of my soul," she wrote. "And the man I had identified so surely on so many occasions was absolutely innocent."

49________ Remarkably both were able to put this tragedy behind them, overcome the racial barrier that divided them, and write a book, which they have subtitled "Our memoir of injustice and redemption".

Nevertheless, Thompson says, she still lives "with constant pain that my profound mistake cost him so dearly.50________"

回答(46)题 查看材料

A.Jennifer Thompson decided to meet Cotton and apologize to him personally.

B.Many criminals are sent to prison on the basis of accurate testimony by eye witnesses.

C.I cannot begin to imagine what would have happened had my mistaken identification occurred in a capital case.

D.Another trial was held.

E.Thompson was shocked and devastated.

F.During the attack, she made an effort to memorize every detail of his face, looking for scars, tattoos (纹身), or other identifying marks.

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第7题
Nepali people
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第8题
British people tend to invite all kinds of people home.
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第9题
Was it snowing when people left?()
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