¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿ÉñÖÛʮһºÅ·É´¬ÊÇÖ¸ÖйúÓÚ2016Äê10ÔÂ17ÈÕ7ʱ30·ÖÔÚ¾ÆȪÎÀÐÇ·¢ÉäÖÐÐÄÓɳ¤Õ÷¶þºÅFY11ÔËÔØ»ð¼ý·¢Éä·¢ÉäµÄÔØÈË·É´¬¡£»Ø´ðÏÂÁÐÎÊÌâ¡£

Ïà¶ÔÓÚº£ÄÏÎIJýÎÀÐÇ·¢ÉäÖÐÐÄ£¬¾ÆȪÎÀÐÇ·¢ÉäÖÐÐĵÄÓÅÊÆÖ÷ÒªÔÚÓÚ

A. γ¶ÈµÍ£¬µØÇò×ÔתÏßËٶȴ󣬿ɽÚʡȼÁÏ

B. ¿ÕÖм°Ë®Â½½»Í¨¶¼ºÜ·½±ã£¬±ãÓÚÔËÊä´óÐÍ·¢ÉäÔØÌå

C. ½µË®ÉÙ£¬ÇçÌì¶à£¬ÊʺÏÎÀÐÇ·¢ÉäµÄʱ¼ä¶à

D. ÎÞÈËÇøÃæ»ý¹ã£¬·¢Éäºó²Ðº¡²»Î£¼°ÈËÃÇ°²È«

¡¾´ð°¸¡¿C

¡¾½âÎö¡¿ÊÔÌâ·ÖÎö£ºÎIJýγ¶ÈµÍ¡¢µØÇò×ÔתÏßËٶȴó¡£AÏî´íÎó¡£¾ÆȪÔÚÄÚ½µØÇø£¬Ã»ÓÐË®ÔËÌõ¼þ¡£BÏî´íÎó¡£¾ÆȪδø´ó½ÐÔÆøºò£¬Æøºò¸Éºµ¡¢½µË®ÉÙ£¬ÊʺÏÎÀÐÇ·¢ÉäµÄʱ¼ä¶à¡£CÏîÕýÈ·¡£ÎÀÐÇ·¢Éäºó£¬²Ðº¡²»Ò»¶¨½µÂäµ½ÄÄÓë·¢ÉäÖÐÐÄÈË¿ÚÃܶȴóСÎ޹ء£DÏî´íÎó¡£¹ÊÑ¡C¡£

Á·Ï°²áϵÁдð°¸
Ïà¹ØÏ°Ìâ

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖеØÀí À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£º

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿ µ±Ç°¸÷¹úÐÂÒ»Âֿռ侺ÈüÕýÏòÉî¿ÕÍØÕ¹£¬±»³ÆΪ¡°ÐäÕäµØÇò¡±µÄ»ðÐdzÉΪÐÂÒ»Âֿռ侺ÈüµÄ½¹µã¡£ÓÉÓÚ¸÷¹úÔÚ¿Õ¼ä̽²âÖÐÒ»°ã×ñÑ­¡°Ë­ÏÈÕ¼ÓУ¬Ë­ÏÈ¿ª·¢£¬Ë­ÏÈÊÜÒ桱µÄÔ­Ôò£¬¶àλר¼ÒÔ¤ÑÔ£¬ÔÚδÀ´¼¸¸öÊÀ¼ÍÄÚ£¬¸÷¸ö·¢´ï¹ú¼Ò½«ÔÚ»ðÐÇ¿ª·¢¹ý³ÌÖÐÏÆÆðÒ»³¡Ðµġ°È¦µØÔ˶¯¡±¡£¶Á±í»Ø´ðÏÂÁи÷Ìâ¡£

ÐÐÐÇ

ÖÊÁ¿£¨µØÇòΪ1£©

Ìå»ý£¨µØÇòΪ1£©

ƽ¾ùÃܶȣ¨g/cm3£©

¹«×ª

ÖÜÆÚ

×ÔתÖÜÆÚ

Ëļ¾

¸üÌæ

µØÇò

1£®00

1£®00

5£®52

1Äê

23Сʱ56·Ö

ÓÐ

»ðÐÇ

0£®11

0£®15

3£®96

1£®9Äê

24Сʱ37·Ö

ÓÐ

¡¾1¡¿ÔÚÏÂÊöÌõ¼þÖлðÐÇÓëµØÇò×î½Ó½üµÄÊÇ

A£®ÖØÁ¦¼ÓËٶȴóС B£®ÖçÒ¹½»ÌæµÄÖÜÆÚ C£®±íÃæÎÂ¶È¸ßµÍ D£®¹«×ªÖÜÆÚ

¡¾2¡¿ÈËÀàÉî¿Õ̽²â¶Ô»ðÐÇÇéÓжÀÖÓµÄÔ­ÒòÊÇ

A£®ÓÐÉúÃü´æÔÚ

B£®ÊǾàµØÇò×î½üµÄÐÐÐÇ

C£®ÓÐÖçÒ¹½»Ìæ

D£®ÊÇ°Ë´óÐÐÐÇÖÐ×ÔÈ»»·¾³ÓëµØÇò×îÏà½üµÄÐÐÐÇ

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖеØÀí À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£º

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿Ï±í±íʾӰÏìËĸöÇøÓò¾­¼Ã·¢Õ¹µÄÇøλÒòËØ(¡ñµÄ¶àÉÙ±íʾÓÅÊƵĴóС)¡£¶ÁͼÍê³ÉÏÂÌâ¡£

×ÔÈ»Ìõ¼þ¼°

×ÔÈ»×ÊÔ´

Éç»á¾­¼ÃÒòËØ

ÈË¿ÚºÍÀͶ¯

Á¦×ÊÔ´

λÖᢽ»Í¨

¼°ÐÅÏ¢

¢Ù

¡ñ

¡ñ¡ñ¡ñ

¡ñ¡ñ

¡ñ¡ñ¡ñ¡ñ

¢Ú

¡ñ¡ñ¡ñ¡ñ

¡ñ

¡ñ¡ñ¡ñ

¡ñ¡ñ

¢Û

¡ñ¡ñ¡ñ¡ñ

¡ñ

¡ñ¡ñ

¡ñ¡ñ¡ñ

¢Ü

¡ñ

¡ñ¡ñ¡ñ

¡ñ¡ñ¡ñ

¡ñ¡ñ¡ñ¡ñ

Èç¹ûËĸöÇøÓò·Ö±ðÊÇÎÒ¹úµÄºÚÁú½­¡¢ÉϺ£¡¢ËÄ´¨ºÍÏã¸Û£¬ÏÂÁÐÅÅÐòÓë±íÖÐÊýÂëÏà·ûµÄÊÇ

A.¢ÙºÚÁú½­ ¢ÚÉϺ£ ¢ÛÏã¸Û ¢ÜËÄ´¨

B.¢ÙÏã¸Û ¢ÚËÄ´¨ ¢ÛºÚÁú½­ ¢ÜÉϺ£

C.¢ÙÉϺ£ ¢ÚÏã¸Û ¢ÛËÄ´¨ ¢ÜºÚÁú½­

D.¢ÙËÄ´¨ ¢ÚÏã¸Û ¢ÛÉϺ£ ¢ÜºÚÁú½­

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖеØÀí À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£º

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿ÔĶÁÏÂÃæ²ÄÁÏ£¬ÔÚ¿Õ°×´¦ÌîÈëÊʵ±µÄÄÚÈÝ£¨1¸öµ¥´Ê£©»òÀ¨ºÅÄÚµ¥´ÊµÄÕýÈ·ÐÎʽ¡£

She looks like any other schoolgirl, fresh-faced and full of life. Sarah Thomas is looking forward to the challenge of her new A-level course. But unlike her school friends, 16-year-old Sarah is not spending half-term 1 (rest). Instead, she is earning 6500 a day as 2 model in New York.

Sarah 3 (tell) that she could be Britain¡¯s new supermodel earning a million dollars in the next year. Her father Peter, 44, wants her to give up school to model full-time. But Sarah, 4 has taken part in shows along with top models, wants 5 (prove) that she has brains as well as beauty. She is determined to carry on with her 6 (educate).

She has turned down several 7 (invitation) to star at shows in order to concentrate on her studies. After school she plans to take a year off to model full-time before going to university to get a degree 8 engineering or architecture.

Sarah says, £¢My dad thinks I should take the offer now. But at the moment, school 9 (come) first. I don¡¯t want to get too absorbed in modeling. It is 10 (certain) fun but the lifestyle is a little unreal. I don¡¯t want to have nothing else to fall back on when I can¡¯t model any more.£¢

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖеØÀí À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£º

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿C

For thousands of years£¬man has enjoyed the taste of apples.Apples£¬which are about 85 percent of water£¬grow almost everywhere in the world but the hottest and coldest areas.Among the leading countries in apple production are China£¬France and the United States.

There are various kinds of apples.But a very few make up the majority of those grown for sale.The three most common kinds grown in the United States are Delicious£¬Golden Delicious£¬and McIntosh.

Apples are different in colour£¬size and taste.The colour of the skin may be red£¬green£¬or yellow.They have various sizes£¬with Delicious apples being among the largest.The taste may be sweet or tart.Generally£¬sweet apples are eaten fresh while tart apples are used to make apple sauce.

Apple trees may grow as tall as twelve metres.They do best in areas that have very cold winters.Although no fruit is yielded during the winter£¬this cold periold is good for the tree.

¡¾1¡¿It can be learned from the text that Delicious apples are________.

A£®grown in France B£®sold everywhere

C£®very big D£®quite sweet

¡¾2¡¿Cold winter weather is good for________.

A£®the growth of apple trees

B£®producing large apples

C£®improving the taste of apples

D£®the increase of water in apples

¡¾3¡¿China£¬France and the United States are considered to________.

A£®be large producers of apples

B£®be large producers of apple sauce

C£®have the longest history in apple production

D£®have the coldest winter among apple producing countries

¡¾4¡¿The underlined word¡°yielded¡±in the last sentence means¡°________¡±£®

A£® improved B£®increased C£®produced D£®sold

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖеØÀí À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£º

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿D

More than half of rich Americans have not shown their full wealth to their children£¬a new survey showed last Tuesday.

The survey£¬published by the Bank of America£¬studied the rich with $3 million or more in assets.It found that ¡°surprisingly few of those surveyed have welldeveloped plans to preserve and pass on their assets to their children¡±£®

The majority of the 457 people surveyed are selfmade£¬firstgeneration rich.Fiftytwo percent of parents have chosen not to tell their children just how wealthy they are£¬and 15 percent have given away nothing about the family wealth.One in three parents said they had never thought to do it.

They are worried that their children would become lazy£¬spend money freely£¬make bad decisions and even become a target for gold diggers.

Only 34 percent strongly agreed that their children would be able to handle any inheritance (ÒŲú) they plan to leave them.

¡°There is an expectation about the wealthy parents that they have a responsibility to pass down their fortune to the next generation£¬¡± said Sallie Krawcheck£¬president of the Global Wealth and Investment Management of the Bank of America.¡°Our research£¬however£¬uncovered changing views of what one generation owes the next.¡±

The trend is led by the world¡¯s richest man Bill Gates£¬who promised in 2008 that he would leave his $58 billion fortune to the charity started by him and his wife£¬the Bill and Malinda Gates Foundation (»ù½ð»á)£¬and not to his children.

¡°We want to give it back to society in the way that it will have the most positive impact£¬¡± he said.

Of his plans for his children£¬Gates said£º¡°I will give the kids some money but not a meaningful percentage...they will need to work but they will feel reasonably taken care of.¡±

¡¾1¡¿We can learn from the passage that________.

A£®rich parents may not know how to manage their inheritance

B£®rich parents don¡¯t equal rich kids£¬at least in the US

C£®American children don¡¯t get to inherit their parents¡¯ wealth

D£®poor children don¡¯t expect themselves to be as rich as their parents

¡¾2¡¿According to the survey£¬most rich Americans________.

A£®think they owe their children nothing

B£®think it best to give their money back to society

C£®doubt their children¡¯s ability to handle wealth

D£®are confident of their children¡¯s ability to handle wealth

¡¾3¡¿The underlined word ¡°they¡± in Paragraph 6 refers to________.

A£®responsible children B£®Bill Gates and his wife

C£®firstgeneration rich D£®rich parents

¡¾4¡¿From the last paragraph£¬we can see that Bill Gates wants to show________.

A£®the trend of leaving no inheritance to children

B£®the positive impact of charity on society

C£®the way of giving back to society

D£®the importance of independence for children

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖеØÀí À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£º

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿(B)

Stress: Good or Bad?

Stress used to be an almost unknown word, but now that we are used to talking about it, I have found that people are beginning to get stressed about being stressed.

In recent years, stress(1)______(regard) as a cause of a whole range of medical problems, from high blood pressure to mental illness. But like so many other things, it is only too much stress(2)______ does you harm. It is time you considered that if there were no stress in your life, you would achieve a little. If you are stuck at home with no stress, then your level of performance will be low. Up to a certain point, the more stress you are under, the (3)_____(good) your performance will be. Beyond a certain point, though , further stress will only lead to exhaustion, illness and finally a breakdown. You can tell when you are over the top and on the downward slope, by asking yourself (4)_______ number of questions. Do you, for instance, feel that too much is being expected of (5)______, and yet find it impossible to say no? Do you find yourself getting impatient or(6) _____(annoy) with people over unimportant things?... If the answer to all those questions is yes, you had better(7)______(control ) your stress, as you probably are under more stress than is good for you.

To some extent you can control the amount of stress in your life. Doctors have worked out a chart showing how much stress is involved in various events. Getting married is 50, pregnancy 40, moving house 20, Christmas 12,etc. If the total stress in your life is over 150, you are twice as likely (8)_______ (get )ill.

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖеØÀí À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£º

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿Ò£¸Ð£¨RS)¡¢µØÀíÐÅϢϵͳ£¨GIS)¡¢È«Çò¶¨Î»ÏµÍ³£¨GPS)µÈµØÀíÐÅÏ¢¼¼Êõ£¬ÒÑ ¹ã·ºÓ¦ÓÃÓÚ¹úÃñ¾­¼ÃµÄ¸÷¸ö²¿ÃÅ£¬Ò²Öð½¥×ß½øÆÕͨÈ˵ÄÉú»î¡£¾Ý´ËÍê³ÉÏÂÁÐСÌâ¡£

¡¾1¡¿²»Í¬µÄµØÎïºÍµØÎïµÄ²»Í¬×´¿öÓв»Í¬µÄ·´ÉäÂÊ£¬ÒÀ´ËÔ­Àí£¬¿ÉÒÔÀûÓÃÒ£¸ÐµÄ¹¤×÷ÓÐ

A.¹ÀË㹤ҵÉú²ú×ÜÖµ B.ÅжÏÈË¿Ú·Ö²¼ C.ÅжÏË®ÌåÎÛȾ D.·ÖÎö³ÇÊдóÆøÎÛȾ

¡¾2¡¿ÒªÏëËæʱ֪µÀ×Ô¼ºËù´¦µÄµØÀíλÖã¬ÐèÒªÓµÓÐ

A.GPSÐźŽÓÊÕ»ú B.Êý×ÖµØÇò C. GIS D. RS

¡¾3¡¿¿ÉÒÔÖÆ×÷µØÀíͼ¼þµÄ¼¼ÊõÊÇ

A.GPRS B.GIS C.RS D.GPS

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖеØÀí À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£º

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿¸ù¾Ý¶ÌÎÄÄÚÈÝ£¬´Ó¶ÌÎĺóµÄÑ¡ÏîÖÐÑ¡³öÄÜÌîÈë¿Õ°×´¦µÄ×î¼ÑÑ¡ÏѡÏîÖÐÓÐÁ½ÏîΪ¶àÓàÑ¡Ïî¡£

It is a great truth that once we truly understand and accept it, life is no longer difficult. Most people do not fully see this truth. 1 It seems to them that their difficulties represent a special kind of suffering especially forced upon them or their families, their class, or even their nation.

2 Problems, depending on their nature, cause us sadness or loneliness or regret or anger or fear. These are uncomfortable feelings, often as painful as any kind of physical pain. And since life causes an endless series of problems, life is always difficult and is full of pain as well as joy.

3

4 When we desire to encourage the growth of the human spirit, we encourage the human ability to solve problems, just as in school we set problems for our children to solve. 5 As Benjamin Franklin said, £¢Those things that hurt, instruct.£¢ It is for this reason that wise people learn not to fear but to welcome the pain of problems.

A. Problems are the serious test that tells success from failure.

B. Life is not a trap set for us by God so that he can condemn us for failing.

C. It is through the pain of meeting and working out problems that we learn.

D. Yet, it is in this whole process of solving problems that we understand the meaning of life.

E. Instead they complain about their problems and difficulties as if we understand the meaning of life.

F. We can participate in problem-solving collaboration(ºÏ×÷) groups.

G. What makes life difficult is that the process of facing and solving problems is a painful one.

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

ͬ²½Á·Ï°²á´ð°¸