1、I notified (B级)him that the meeting had been postponed.
2、 He emphasized a feasible (B级)plan which can be accepted by the both sides.
3、We should never content (B级)ourselves with only a little knowledge.
4、 We should contemplated (B级)the problem from all sides.
5、His new girlfriend had omitted (B级)to tell him that she was married.
6、 If you want my advice, you should revise (B级)your plan for the trip to Beijing.
7、He has a very outgoing personality (B级)and makes friends very easily.
8、 The room was furnished (B级)with the simplest essentials, a bed, a chair, and a table
9、His novel depicts an ambitious American.
10、Smoking is inhibited (A级)in public places.
11、He is assigned to oversee the production of the assembly lines.
12、Soldiers have to obey orders.
13、 Are you positive that there’s been no mistake?
14、An exhaustive investigation of the facts proves the contrary.
15、He resented being called a foreigner.
16、The Arctic Ice is Thawing Father Christmas may have to move his “workshop” from the North Pole because global warming is thawing the ice beneath his feet and his reindeers'' feet as well. His “workshop” is in dire straits. The “platform” for the “workshop” is melting, said Stefan Norris of the World Wildlife Fund environmental group''s Arctic Program. An eight-nation report by 250 scientists published recently predicted the Arctic Ocean could be ice-free in summer by 2100 because of a build-up of heat-trapping gases in the atmosphere, mainly from burning fossil fuels in cars or factories. The North Pole is getting more and more inhabitable to Father Christmas. ___1___. Young people learn that Father Christmas'' “workshop” produces millions of gifts delivered by him on a flying, reindeer-drawn sleigh. Hollywood movies like "The Polar Express" tried to make viewers believe that Father Christmas lives at the North Pole. ___2___. The "Fortress of Solitude" is near the North Pole that could be under threat in a warmer world. Alan Boldt, spokesman of the Danish Ministry of Science, suggested ways to rescue Father Christmas. ___3___. Another alternative, he argued, would be building some electrical facilities to ensure the ice stays on the North Pole for him. "This should be a subject for the United Nations," he said. “Danmark could build windmills to provide Father Christmas with power." Denmark says Father Christmas’s real home is Greenland, which will help, Denmark thinks, to strengthen its position in claiming the sovereignty over the Pole. ___4___. "Doesn''t he already speak Danish?" Boldt said frostily when asked if Father Christmas would be forced to learn Danish if Denmark won international recognition of its claim to the Pole. Last month''s Arctic report said the region is warming twice as fast as the rest of the globe, partly because dark ground or water, once uncovered, soaks up more heat than ice or snow. Finland has been most favored by Father Christmas and it has about 500,000 tourists a year to visit its Christmas center in Rovaniemi in Lapland6. ___5___. A.However, Nordic nations all reject it by claiming that their countries are his home.B.Therefore the North Pole is the most attractive place in the world.C.If Denmark’s claim were accepted internationally, it would have the legal right to search for oil and gas at the North Pole.D.One of them would be building a giant floating ice rink for the workshop if the Pole thaws.E.Maybe Father Christmas has already moved to Rovaniemi.F.He may have to move from the North Pole within our children''s lifetimes.
17、 Bill gates: Unleashing your creativity I’ve always been an optimists and I suppose that is rooted in my belief that the power of creativity and intelligence can make the world a better place. For as long as I can remember, I’ve loved learning new things and solving problems. So when I sat down at a computer for the first time in seventh grade, I was hooked. It was a chunky old teletype machine and it could barely do anything compared to the computers we have today. But it changed my life. When my friend Paul Allen and I started Microsoft 30 years ago, we had a vision of “a computer on every desk and in every home,” which probably sounded a little too optimistic at a time when most computers were the size of refrigerators. But we believed that personal computers would change the world. And they have. And after 30 years, I’m still as inspired by computers as I was back in seventh grade. I believe that computers are the most incredible tool we can use to feed our curiosity and inventiveness – to help us solve problems that even the smartest people couldn’t solve on their own. Computers have transformed how we learn, giving kids everywhere a window into all of the world’s knowledge. They’re helping us build communities around the things we care about and t