Telephone books in the United States
have white, blue and yellow pages. The white pages list people with phones
by last name, the blue pages contain numbers of city services, government
agencies and public schools. Businesses and professional (专业的) services
are listed in a special section, the yellow pages. To make a long-distance
call, you need an area code. Each area in the U. S. has an area code. The
area covered by one area code may be small or large. For example, New York
City has one area code, but so does the whole state of Oregon. If you want to
know the area code of a place, you can look it up in the area code map, which is
printed in the front of the white pages. There are a lot of
publlic telephones in the US. They have their own numbers. If you are making a
long-distance call on a pubic telephone and run out of money A. In the blue pages. B. In the white pages. C. In the yellow pages. D. In a special section.
更多"Passage Two
Telephone boo"的相关试题:
[单项选择] Passage Two
Telephone books in the United States
have white, blue and yellow pages. The white pages list people with phones
by last name, the blue pages contain numbers of city services, government
agencies and public schools. Businesses and professional (专业的) services
are listed in a special section, the yellow pages. To make a long-distance
call, you need an area code. Each area in the U. S. has an area code. The
area covered by one area code may be small or large. For example, New York
City has one area code, but so does the whole state of Oregon. If you want to
know the area code of a place, you can look it up in the area code map, which is
printed in the front of the white pages. There are a lot of
publlic telephones in the US. They have their own numbers. If you are making a
long-distance call on a pubic telephone and run out of money A. show how big the ares is B. make long-distance call C. check the telephone book D. make telephone call only in New York city
[填空题] Passage Two
At two minutes to noon in September 1 of 1923, the great clock in Tokyo
stopped. (82) Tokyo Bay shook as if huge rug had been pulled from under it. (83)
Towered, above the bay, the 4000-meter Mount Fuji stood above a deep trench in
the sea. (84) It was from this trench where the earthquake came at a
magnitude of 8.3 on the Richter scale. Huge waves swept over the
city. (85) Boats were driven inland, and buildings and people were dragged
out sea. (86) The tremors dislodged part of a hillside, which gave way,
brushing trains, stations and bodies the wafer below. (87) Three massive
shocks wrecked the of Tokyo and Yokohama and, during the next six hours,
there were more than 100 aftershocks. The casualties were
enormous, but there were also some lucky survivors. (88) The most
remarkably was a woman who was having a bath in her room at the Tokyo Grand
Hotel. (89) As for the hotel collapsed, sh
[单项选择] Passage 2
Nearly two thousand years have passed
since a census decreed by Caesar Augustus became part of the greatest story ever
told. Many things have changed in the intervening years. The hotel industry
worries more about overbuilding than overcrowding, and if they had to meet an
unexpected influx, few inns would have a manger to accommodate the weary guests.
Now it is the census taker that does the traveling in the fond hope that a
highly mobile population will stay put long enough to get a good sampling.
Methods of gathering, recording, and evaluating information have presumably been
improved a great deal. And where then it was the modest purpose of Rome to
obtain a simple head count as an adequate basis for levying taxes, now batteries
of complicated statistical series furnished by governmental agencies and private
organizations are eagerl A. mobility B. wealth C. population D. census takers
[单项选择] Passage 2
The two claws of the mature American
lobster are decidedly different from each other. The crusher claw is short and
stout; the cutter claw is long and slender. Such bilateral asymmetry, in which
the fight side of the body is, in all other respects, a mirror image of the left
side, is not unlike handedness in humans. But where the majority of humans are
right-handed, in lobsters the crasher claw appears with equal probability on
either the right side or left side of the body. Bilateral
asymmetry of the claws comes about gradually. In the juvenile fourth and fifth
stages of development, the paired claws are symmetrical and cutter like.
Asymmetry begins to appear in the juvenile sixth stage of development, and the
paired claws further diverge toward well-defined cutter and crusher claws during
succeeding stages. An intriguing aspect A. irrefutable considering the authoritative nature of Emma’s observations B. likely in view of present evidence C. contradictory to conventional thinking on lobster-claw differentiation D. purely speculative because it is based on scattered research and experimentation
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