试卷详情
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IELTS(雅思)12
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[单项选择](11)____________get a wonderful view of the Thames
A. the Barbican
B. St John’’s Wood
C. Battersea
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[单项选择](11)____________near London’’s theatres and shops
A. the Barbican
B. St John’’s Wood
C. Battersea
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[多项选择]You should spend no more than 40 minutes on this task.
The downloading of hundreds upon thousands of mp3 files in today’’s society has left many record companies and artists cheated of their income. What’’s your opinion
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[单项选择](A) Malcolm sits by the window.
(B) Malcolm lives in New York
(C) Elsa lives in Florida.
(D) Elsa changed her seat because a man next to her was smoking.
(E) Elsa’’s boyfriend and she still live near Spaceport.
(F) Malcolm still lives a few miles from Spaceport.
(G) Malcolm sold the house and the furniture a few miles from Spaceport and moved to his friend’’s in Florida.
(H) Malcolm has move to New York.
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[简答题] What’’s good for the poor is good for America
Part 1
Although its prosperity depends on a worldwide network of trade, finance and technology, the United States currently treats the rest of the world, and especially the developing world, as if it barely exists. Much of the poorer world is in turmoil, caught in a vicious circle of disease, poverty and political instability. Large-scale financial and scientific help from the rich nations is an investment worth making, not only for humanitarian reasons, but also because even remote countries in turmoil become outposts of disorder for the rest of the world. The biggest priority of next week’’s Genoa Summit should be for the rich countries, above all the United States, to get serious about contributing to global economic development.
The principal goal of foreign policy is now almost containment’’s opposite: helping to ensure that all parts of the world, including the poorest, are integrated into global eco
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[单项选择](11)____________suitable for people who like living high up
A. the Barbican
B. St John’’s Wood
C. Battersea
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[简答题]The dog belongs to (1)____________.
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[多项选择]Part 3
1. What are the improvements on TV program in China
2. What are the differences between day programs and evening programs
3. What are the differences of TV program’’s effect on the children and the elderly between now and past
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[多项选择]Part 1
1. May I have your full name please
2. Could I see your ID card
3. If you could, would you change job
4. What do you like most about your job
5. Which part of the day do you like best
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[单项选择](11)____________quiet in the evening
A. the Barbican
B. St John’’s Wood
C. Battersea
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[简答题] Thigh, robot
People who have suffered debilitating strokes often have to cope with impaired muscles that do not work properly. Even a simple act such as standing up from a chair and walking a few steps can become extremely difficult. Stroke victims often have to rely on wheelchairs, sticks, walking frames and other "orthotic" devices to move about.
But a new generation of active orthotic devices, capable of augmenting or replacing lost muscle function, is in the works. These devices use an assortment of complex computer and mechanical technology, borrowed from the field of robotics, to help patients get around. They are being made possible by the falling prices and improving performance of sensors, computer control systems and battery technology.
As well as benefiting elderly patients with permanent paralysis or muscle dysfunction, such devices could also help people in recovering from "arthroscopic" (literally, "looking within the joi
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[单项选择](11)____________favored mostly by upper-middle class families
A. the Barbican
B. St John’’s Wood
C. Battersea
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[多项选择]1. What kind of sports do you like
2. Do people around you like sports /Do the people in your city like sports What sports do they like
3. What can we get from sports /What are the benefits from sports
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[简答题](11)____________
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[单项选择](11)____________for people prefer grand mansions to garden
A. the Barbican
B. St John’’s Wood
C. Battersea
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[单项选择](11)____________has a walled garden
A. the Barbican
B. St John’’s Wood
C. Battersea
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[单项选择]Rights to remember
NEW HN, CONNECTICUT
One element of this doctrine is what I call "Achilles and his heel". September 11th brought upon America, as once upon Achilles, a schizophrenic sense of both exceptional power and exceptional vulnerability. Never has a superpower seemed so powerful and so vulnerable at the same time. The Bush doctrine asked: "How can we use our superpower resources to protect our vulnerability"
The administration has also radically shifted its emphasis on human rights. In 1941, Franklin Delano Roosevelt called the allies to arms by painting a vision of the world we were trying to make: a post-war world of four fundamental freedoms: freedom of speech, freedom of religion, freedom from want, freedom from fear.
This framework foreshadowed the post-war human-rights construct-embedded in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and subsequent international covenants that emphasised comprehensive protection of civil
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[简答题]Sasha’’s problem:
Has to (21) ____________.
Lecturers are (28) ____________.
Nervous to (30) ____________.