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A: What is the weather thmcast (天气预报)for today B: The weather says it will be mostly sunny and hot. Tile temperature (气温) will average (平均) between 34℃ and 35℃. A: I’m afraid we’ll have a very hot summer this year. I don’t know where to go for my summer vacation. B: Why don’t you go to the moumains The weather will be cooler there. A: Good idear Do you often spend summer holidays in the mountains B: Yes. lenjoyeoolerweatherandl can visitmy grandpanents. What’s the weather like today ____________

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男性,32岁,从高处摔下,左腰部落地,BP 88/56mmHg,Hbl20g/L,尿常规红细胞满视野,CT示:左肾下极皮质裂伤,肾周围有血肿。 患者如果行手术治疗,最正确的处理是

A. 经腰部切口
B. 首先切开肾脂肪囊探查肾
C. 首先阻断肾蒂后探查肾
D. 肾术后探查腹腔脏器
E. 肾切除术

男性,20岁,近三月来出现颈部、腋下淋巴结肿大,伴顽固性腹泻,每日十数次稀便,体重明显下降达10公斤,3年前在国外居住期间,因手术而输血 400ml,术后无特殊。 确诊的首选检查是

A. 淋巴结穿刺或活检
B. 骨髓穿刺
C. 血浓缩找恶组细胞
D. PPD试验
E. 抗HIV抗体及CD4淋巴细胞计数

(on die campus) A: Lovely day. isn’t it B: Yes. it’s much betler than yesterday. A: I hope it will last(持续)the whole week. B: I hopeso. too. Buttheweatheristerdbly changeable al thistime of thcyear. A: What’s the weather forecast for tomorrow B: The weatherman predicts (预告)rain tomorrow. A: Oh God!Tbatissobad. I just want tovisit oneofmyold friends tonmerrow. B: You can take an umbrella wkll you. Will it snow tomorrow ____________

We know that he was baptized on April 26, 1564, so that somewhere between April 20 and April 23, four hundred years ago, was born an Englishman who possessed what was probably the greatest brain ever encased in a human skull. William Shakespeare’s work has been performed without interruption for some three hundred and fifty years everywhere in the world. Scholars and students in every land know his name and study his work as naturally as they study their holy books — the Gospels, the Torah, the Koran, and the others. For centuries clergymen have spoken Shakespeare’s words from their pulpits; lawyers have used his sentences in addressing juries; doctors, botanists, agronomists, bankers, seamen, musicians, and, of course, actors, painters, poets, editors, and novelists have used words of Shakespeare for knowledge, for pleasure, for experience, for ideas and for inspiration. It is hard to exaggerate the debt that mankind owes. Shakespeare’s greatness lies in the fact that there is nothing within the range of human thought that he did not touch. Somewhere in his writings, you will find a full-length portrait of yourself, of your father, of your mother, and indeed of every one of your descendants yet unborn. The most singular fact connected with William Shakespeare is that there is no direct mention in his works of any of his contemporaries. It was as though he knew he was writing for the audiences of 1964 as well as for the audiences of each of those three hundred and fifty years since his plays were produced. On his way to the Globe Theater he could see the high masts of the Golden Hind in which Sir Francis Drake had circumnavigated the globe. He lived in the time of the destruction of the Spanish Armada, the era in which Elizabeth I opened the door to Britain’s age of Glorlana, and he must have heard of Christendom’s great victory at Lepanto against the Turks which forever insured that Europe would be Christian. Shakespeare’s era was as momentous as our own. Galileo was born in 1564, the same year in which Shakespeare was born, and only a few years before John Calvin laid the foundation for a great new fellowship in Christianity. And yet Shakespeare in the midst of these great events, only seventy years after the discovery of America, did not mention an explorer or a general or a monarch or a philosopher. The magic of Shakespeare is that, like Socrates, he was looking for the ethical questions, not for answers. That is why there are as many biographies of a purely invented man Hamlet, as there are of Napoleon, Abraham Lincoln, or Franklin D. Roosevelt. We are not sure of many things in this life except that the past has its uses and we know from the history of human experience that certain values will endure as long as there is breath of life on his planet. Among them are the ethics of the Hebrews who wrote the Decalogue, the Psalms, and the Gospels of the Holy Bible, and the marble of the Greeks, the laws of Romans, and the works of William Shakespeare, There are other values which may last through all the ages of man — Britain’s Magna Carta, France’s Rights of Man, and America’s Constitution. We hope so, but we are not yet sure. We are sure of Shakespeare. Ben Johnson was a harsh critic of Shakespeare during his lifetime. They were contemporaries and competitors. Johnson, a great dramatist, did not like it when his play Cataline had a short mn and was replaced by Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar, which had a long run. Yet when Shakespeare died, Johnson was moved to a eulogy which he called "Will Shakespeare": Triumph my Britain. Thou has one to show. To whom all scenes of Europe Homage owe. He was not of an age, but for all time. According to the passage, Shakespeare’s works______.

A. are more popular among certain professions
B. have words serious enough to be used in the court
C. have been popular for centuries
D. were not so popular at his time as they are today

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