更多"Radio Star( )the English Department"的相关试题:
[单项选择]Radio Star, ( )by the English Department, is very popular with the students.
A. built
B. founded
C. kept
D. found
[单项选择]Radio Star,( )by the English Department, is very popular with the students.
A. built
B. founded
C. kept
D. found
[单项选择]Radio Star, ______ by the English Department, is very popular with the students.
A. built
B. founded
C. kept
D. found
[单项选择]Radio reception wasn't very good because of a disturbance in the atmosphere; the announcer's voice sounded very ______.
A. disputed
B. discarded
C. dismissed
D. distorted
[单项选择]I ______ a very interesting story on the radio this morning.
A. listened
B. heard
C. saw
[单项选择]I ______ a very interesting program on the radio this morning.
A. listened
B. heard
C. heard of
[单项选择]Paul was very eager to see the star singer, and therefore he arrived at the spot of meeting an hour ______ of schedule.
A. in advance
B. in front
C. ahead
D. in excess
[单项选择]A Star Is Born
1 The VLT(Very Large Telescope)is the world’s largest telescope(望远镜)and is taking astronomers(72文学家)further back to the Big Bang than they ever thought possible.Located 2,600 metres up io the Chilean Andes,it has four huge mirrors,each about the size of a London bus.The VLT is SO powerful it Can spot a burning match 10.000 kilometres away.
2 This astonishing power will allow astronomers to see events in space from the birth of stars to the collision(碰撞)of galaxies(星系)on the edge of the cosmos(宇宙).The VLT is giving astronomers their best-ever view of the cosmos.The power of the VLT to see the smallest detail at the furthest distances makes its designers amazed.
3 Take the case of Eta Carinae,one of the most explosive stars in the universe.This star produces ultraviolet laser rays(紫外线)and it will destroy itself in a few million years’time.It is five times brighter than the sun and when it explodes it is going to be a sight worth waiting for 1
4 But it is at distances o
[单项选择]Into the Unknown
The world has never seen population ageing before. Can it cope
Until the early 1990s nobody much thought about whole populations getting older. The UN had the foresight to convene a “world assembly on ageing” back in 1982, but that came and went. By 1994 the World Bank had noticed that something big was happening. In a report entitled “Averting the Old Age Crisis”, it argued that pension arrangements in most countries were unsustainable.
For the next ten years a succession of books, mainly by Americans, sounded the alarm. They had titles like Young vs Old, Gray Dawn and The Coming Generational Storm, and their message was blunt: health-care systems were heading for the rocks, pensioners were taking young people to the cleaners, and soon there would be intergenerational warfare.
Since then the debate has become less emotional, not least because a lot more is known about the subject. Books, conferences and research papers have multiplied. International organ
A. allow people to work longer
B. cut back on health care provisions
C. increase tax revenues
D. start reforms right away