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If the TV had not been stolen yesterday, we ______ now. A) would watch B) would be watchi

If the TV had not been stolen yesterday, we ______ now.

A) would watch B) would be watching

C) would have watched D) would have been watching

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更多“If the TV had not been stolen …”相关的问题
第1题
I wonder if you have had your color TV ______ .A.repairedB.to repairC.repairD.repairing

I wonder if you have had your color TV ______ .

A.repaired

B.to repair

C.repair

D.repairing

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第2题
You ______ to town to see the film yesterday. It will be on TV tonight.

A、needn’t go

B、should not go

C、had better not go

D、needn’t have gone

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第3题
In the police station I saw the man from which room the thief had stolen the TV set.()
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第4题
By the end of last year, the Oriental TV Tower __________ by millions of people.

A. was visited

B.would be visited

C.has been visited

D.had been visited

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第5题
--- We ______ that you would fix the TV set this week.--- I’m sorry. I ______ to fix it this week, but I’ve been too busy.
--- We ______ that you would fix the TV set this week.

--- I’m sorry. I ______ to fix it this week, but I’ve been too busy.

A、had expected/ had intended

B、are expecting/ had intended

C、expect/intend

D、expected/intend

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第6题
Can ballet change Lives? ____Last night I was worried,very worried

Can ballet change Lives?

21.____Last night I was worried,very worried. I had the job of going to watch amateur ballet dancers performing on stage with one of the UK's top professional ballet companies. A performance like this seemed very risky and! asked myself, 'Are they mad?'Before I tell you the answer,I'll tell you why I had such big doubts.

22.____The idea of mixing amateur and professional dancers started a couple of years ago when two friends with very different jobs found a way of working together. One of the men had created an award-winning TV series. Musicality ,in which amateurs trained to perform. in the musical Chicago. The other man runs a charity called Youth at Risk which works with young people who have serious problems with aggression and antisocial behaviour. Although it was a risk, the two men thought they could make a TV programme in which ballet changed the lives of young people with problems.

23.____Their idea was this: if the young people could accept the strict discipline and challenge of ballet training,it would build their self-esteem and give them new confidence in themselves. The first step was to find suitable teenagers to take part and they asked teachers and youth workers already working professionally with young people at risk, to find candidates for the project. Through them 300 young people joined the programme and although about half dropped out,in the end sixty teenagers appeared on stage in the public performance.

24.____The ballet they chose was Sergei Prokofie's Romeo and Juliet ,choreographed by Sir Kenneth MacMillan. The story of Romeo and Juliet includes family conflict, the generation gap ,gangs, murder ,young love and teenage suicide so it is the perfect mirror for the lives of troubled young people in today's society.

25.____Going back to my original question: 'Are they mad?' The answer is definitely ‘no’. As soon as the ballet started, my worries disappeared. It was amazing how these unlikely dancers were magically transformed into their characters. At the end of the evening I was left with this thought: 'ballet can change lives'. It is a dancing cure, not a talking cure; it is silent so it stops arguments.

A. Why I love going to the ballet

B. Where the idea came from

C. Why I was worried

D. Romeo and Juliet is the perfect choice

E. A new star is born in Chicago

F. How they found the young people

G. My final thoughts

H. A dancer's life

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第7题
I saw an ad for a device that allows your dog to talk to you. Bow Lingual, a Japanese inve
ntion, entered the American market a couple of weeks ago. Named " The Dog Translator," it sold more than 250,000 units before heading here. And dont forget that it was sold at the price of $ 120 each. Its quite simple, really. A radio microphone attaches to your dog s collar, and a handheld receiver "translates" barks into 200 different phrases. The device determines your dogs emotion at the moment: happy, sad, frustrated, on-guard, assertive and needy. (In case you have a dog that barks only in Japanese or Korean, it comes with those translations, too.) As interesting as this new device is—again, I m kicking myself here—any dog owner worth his Milk-Bones knows this might not be all that necessary a purchase. Our dog, Murphy, for instance, has never had any problem whatsoever communicating with us. Not once in 13 years. Odd as it seems, we can figure out quite quickly what s on her mind. Just the cock of her head will often do it. Translation: " Surely you re taking me with you." Sometimes it s a solitary bark at the kitchen door after dinner. Translation: " You forgot my treat, Buster!" And sometimes its 100 barks in a row. Translation: "The mailman is here! The mailman is here! Cant you hear him attacking our house?" But I think I witnessed the ultimate dog communication technique years ago. It was a neighbor s dog. I cant remember the breed or name. All I remember is how bright she was. She had no need for Bow Lingual. Whenever frustrated with her family, which appeared to be quite often, she would stroll into the living room, turn her back to them and sit directly in front of the TV they were watching. And pee. No translation needed. And you need not be smart or rich to figure that out.

We can infer from the passage that sale of "The Dog Translator" in Japan______.

A.was considered a failure

B.was quite successful

C.was relatively satisfactory

D.was relatively unsatisfactory

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第8题
The Internet and TV因特网与电视 Many people are watching spellbound[1] as the Internet grows expone

The Internet and TV

因特网与电视

Many people are watching spellbound[1]as the Internet grows exponentially. What they often do not realize is that the Internet is not only a fascinating new interaction medium, but that it will completely dominate our society.

Previous generations knew books, newspapers, telephones and televisions. The first three were essential aids to life, two text-based, the third speech-based. Anyone who was denied access to them was disadvantaged in our society. The picture-based medium, television, helped to bring the world closer to home. But it condemned the viewer to passivity and has been more a hindrance than a help in aiding individuals to develop new skills and capabilities.

The Internet will unite all the traditional media and push them further. Most significantly, this is the first time that pictures will be used interactively for information, communication and development of skills. Even today, everyone who uses the web is able to catch a glimpse of the potential of the medium in this direction.

Our children will grow into a web generation. They won't log onto the Internet occasionally, but will be online all the time. Fortunately they will be significantly more active than the TV-dominated baby boom generation[2]. Those who are denied access to the Internet completely or partially will be enormously disadvantaged. They will be lost in our digital society.

Obviously access will not be as it is today: slow, unstructured, available only through the computer. We will have intelligent tools for tapping undreamt-of possibilities. We can glimpse the beginning of these developments in many places. Shopping over the Internet of the future will be the obvious thing to do, regardless of whether the goods are ultimately delivered or fetched in person. Both the time-short and time-rich[3]will love using the web in this way.

Regardless of whether you agree with our views, you should read on. It is important for every e-tailing and electronic-shopping strategy to understand in detail what dramatic changes the Internet will undergo in the next few years.

Anytime, Anywhere Access

Today "'interface" devices for the electronic world fall into three categories: telephone, PC and television. The telephone and the television were network-orientated devices from the beginning. They had a specific use: speech-based one-to-one communication on the one hand and picture-and-sound-based broadcasts on the other. The PC was initially a stand- alone calculating machine which was gradually networked and became a communication unit. It has been quite a long evolution. Douglas Englebart, the often unacknowledged forefather of the modern PC, not only invented the mouse, but as long ago as 1964 in his Stanford Research Institute, was propagating networking in its primitive forms. His early efforts were precursors of what we now call "hyperlinks" on the Internet. Interestingly even Apple[4]founder, Steve Jobs, who copied much from Englebart and marketed it, did not take this aspect of communication between PCs very seriously at first.

With digitalization (still only partially achieved with the telephone and the television), the three categories, telephone, PC, and TV will merge. This does not mean that multifunctional devices will dominate the market place, although these are clearly possible. After all, a medium like the radio has not disappeared although the radio function has long been integrated into TV sets. For most of today' s radio listeners TV sets are inappropriate. Digitalization of all devices does mean, however, that new applications and functional extensions will be possible. Overall we see three far-reaching changes for Internet access and electronic shopping:

·the comeback of the television;

·an increase in mobile devices; and

·the growth of 'easy use' equipment.

Surrounding these elements of tomorrow's consumer infrastructure are a number of burning questions, e. g. who will provide the operating system which allows them to function? And who will provide the Internet access to them? Fortunately as an e-tailer you can wait and see.

The comeback of television

A debate has been going on for a long time about whether the PC or the television will win as a preferred method of access to the Internet.

A few years ago, a Japanese delegation visiting Silicon Valley[5]asked Regis McKenna: "Which will win—the TV set or the PC?". "The microwave oven" was his stunning reply. We love it, because it not only underlines the fruitlessness of the discussion, but emphasises that—thanks to Moore's law[6]—we will see many more unconventional Internet access devices. We discuss these in more detail below.

Still, television deserves some special attention. With digitalization, it is on a technological collision course with the PC and many people believe that this means that one device will have to go. A long and pointless discussion has begun about whether the greater functionality of the PC or the wider distribution, better graphics and greater ease of operation of the TV set will win through. Combination units are already on the market. So far they have not met with much success.

The reason is simple, the "egg-laying wool-producing milk-providing pig" is impractical. In the foreseeable future there will be a device with a keyboard which primarily specialises in communicating and processing information and which will be compact to a degree or even portable—let's call this a PC. There will be another device that is big, though no longer clumsy looking, that specialises in high-resolution graphics and films—let's simply call this a television. This television can have an infrared keyboard connected to it but usually it will be controlled with its simpler remote-control unit. You will be able to interchange the two units to a certain degree, but the so-called 'look and feel' is clearly optimised to one type of application.

The critical fact is. television is becoming suitable for the Internet. This trend cannot be stopped. Most new and some proven Internet content is strongly picture-based and therefore particularly suited to television. Accessing it will not require a keyboard just as videotext or programme guides do not. The ultimate breakthrough for TV as an Internet device will come with broadband connections. Interactive TV will embrace Internet content as an add-on to TV programmes.

For a long time it has been thought that video on demand (i. e. downloading films for payment), will be interactive TV's "killer application", i.e. the decisive buying-incentive for interactive television. Now it is clear that many people think that they would like video on demand but hardly anyone would pay for such a service at today's prices. Thus the so- called "full service networks' (FSN), based on this (such as Time-Warner's[7]notorious attempt in Orlando) have all failed so far. The good news was that Time-Warner's FSN worked; the bad news was that it cost the company about $12, 000 per connected household.

It seems clear that an offer of a television including elements of so-called "lazy Interactivity" represents a sensible step forward. This provides:

·additional information windows: for example interrupting long-winded live broadcasts such as Oscar award-ceremonies, coronations, slow sports like golf or baseball, concerts with news

·'buy' buttons in advertising and events;

·direct voting capabilities; and

·interaction in live auctions.

These offers can be linked to a picture-in-picture segmentation or windows within the television screen. For example, users in the UK of Sky's digital TV offer will be familiar with the ability to change camera angles and call up player statistics while watching sporting events.

A big problem for TV-based Internet access today is still the lack of standardisation of the necessary set-top boxes. As consumers don't want to risk having to buy several of these boxes, many are playing a waiting game. Now PCs have become so cheap in the US that it will soon be possible, for under 400 dollars, to put a simple PC on the television set and to solve the rest of the problem with software.

The future for television as a medium is firm but the future for many television broadcasters is uncertain. Cable-TV players in some countries have got used to a pay-TV model. The advent of broad-band technology, allowing TV to be watched on the Internet threatens all this—as it becomes possible to charge subscription fees on the Internet.

Broadcast. com[8], taken over by Yahoo[9]in spring 1999, has shown what is possible on the web using streaming technology. Broadcast. com, amongst others, has acquired Internet rights for sports' broadcasts and is waiting for these to become accessible via TV sets at which point it will be in direct competition with traditional broadcasters.

For e-tailers and e-shopping suppliers this means that, within the foreseeable future, they will be able to reach the whole television-watching community. They will, of course, have competition from television broadcasters like home-shopping channel, which is moving the opposite way into the Internet. Note that as they prepare to migrate to TV, Internet sites must be adapted to be TV-acceptable with larger fonts, more pictures and navigable without a keyboard!

Notes

[1] spellbound: 人们处在一种痴迷的状态,观看着,着迷的。形容词作状语表示状态。e.g.He went home tired and sad.(他回到家,疲惫不堪,心情沮丧。)

[2] baby boom generation: 泛指出生率高的一代。

[3] time-short and time-rich: 时间紧的人和时间宝贵的人。

[4] Apple: Apple公司,美国的一家微型计算机公司,位于加利福尼亚的Cupertino,1976年4月1日由Steve Jobs和Steve Wozniak创建。

[5] Silicon Valley: 硅谷,美国加利福尼亚州森尼维附近圣克拉拉山谷内的一个地区。

[6] Moore's law: 摩尔定律。

[7] Time-Warner:(美国)时代华纳服务网站。

[8] Broadcast. com:. com域名,专用于商业的Internet域名。

[9] Yahoo: Yahoo网点,一个著名的Internet信息检索网点,由斯坦福大学David Filo和Jerry Yang开发而成,它的URL地址为:http://www. yahoo. com/。

Choose the best answer for each of the following:

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第9题
图2-2所示电路中,u1=400sinωtV,u2=-300sinωtV,则u=()。

A.700sinωtV

B.500sinωtV

C.100sinωtV

D.50sinωtV

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第10题
At 13 years old, Keith Peiris is the world's youngest CEO(Chief Executive Officer). But h

At 13 years old, Keith Peiris is the world's youngest CEO(Chief Executive Officer). But he says that there is nothing different about him compared to other children his age.

Keith launched(开办)a website for his own company at the age of 10. While other children were receiving awards for their achievements, Peiris was giving scholarships from Cyberteks Design, his own company, to pupils at his school.

Though he's just a teenager, he is already experiencing the pains of adult life.

Peiris is about 1.5 metres tall with big brown eyes and curly (卷曲的)jet-black hair. "His big eyes show his intelligence. They show his wisdom," said Christine St Pierre, a journalist from the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.

When he was asked for an exclusive (独家的)interview, Peiris looked at his watch and said, "20 minutes, 30 minutes at most, OK?"

He has the air of a real businessman who treasures every minute of his time.

Cyberteks Design mainly serves North America. But since Peiris visited China, he said he would try to find a way to cater for(迎合) China's Shanghai market as well.

"China is growing and in the next 10 to 20 years it will be among the top countries for business. Now China's become a member of the WTO, Shanghai will have more business opportunities ," said the young businessman.

"At the moment it is hard to compete with local companies in Shanghai because of the cost, especially of hardware."

"At first, my age will be the largest issue, but in the end that won't be important," he added, "Once I get more and more clients(客户),we will build a reputation(信誉) and people will take me more seriously."

Peiris answers questions quickly and is very articulate (表达能力强的)for his age. He said he had come to know Shanghai pretty well through TV programmes shown on CNN before his trip.

He added, "When I was about five, my father gave me my own computer and started teaching me a few things about how to use it. I have not seen any parents do that for their children."

Keith Peiris is now ______.

A.a student

B.CEO of a company

C.doing business in Shanghai

D.both A and B

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第11题
潮气量(tidel volume,TV)

潮气量(tidel volume,TV)

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