更多"In 1935, $0 percent of Harlem’s fam"的相关试题:
[填空题]In 1935,______of Harlem’s families were unemployed.
[填空题]In 1935,______ of Harlem’s families were unemployed.
[单项选择]What is the percent of the traditional families in the United States at present
A. 10%
B. 25%.
C. 35%.
D. 50%.
[单项选择]Why were Thorpe’s medals taken away from him
A. Because someone found out that Thorpe had been using drugs.
B. Because it was found out that Thorpe had once been an amateur athlete.
C. Because Thorpe’s fame began to decline after the Olympic Games.
D. Because it was found out that at one time Thorpe had been a professional athlete.
[填空题]On three walls of old Egyptian tombs, there were some paintings with flowers and beauties.
[填空题]In Yugoslavia, the late 1960s and early 1970s were marked by improved relations with other countries, regardless of their political ______. (orient)
[单项选择]Conversation TwoWhy were Matt’s models once used on the news
A. They presented better images than the real pictures
B. The spacecraft camera got damaged and failed to take any pictures
C. The television studio was trying some new ideas
[简答题]The 1980s were harsh times for many of Britain’s traditional industries, steel, coal, chemicals, shipbuilding, heavy engineering, car assembly ... all these industries, and many more, declined rapidly. The old industrial regions like North--East England, South Wales became areas of factory closures and high unemployment.
[单项选择]—What would you wish to do if you were a college student again
—That’s very hard to say, but I wish I ()when I was a college student.
A. has not studied psychology
B. had studied psychology
C. did study psychology
D. studied psychology
[单项选择]The Chamberlain’s Men, in Shakespeare’s time, were a remarkable group of people-excellent ______ who were also business partners and close personal friends.
A. actors
B. students
C. teachers
D. writers
[单项选择]It’s not that we thought things were fine. It’s just that this year there were no fixes to the messes we made—no underwater off-well caps, no AIG bailouts, no reuniting the island castaways in a church and sending them to heaven. We had to idly watch things completely fall apart, making us feel so pathetic that planking seemed like a cool thing to do. This was the year of the meltdown.
If a meltdown could happen at a nuclear reactor in Japan—a country so obsessed with keeping up to date that its citizens annually get new cell phones and a new Prime Minister—we should have known we were all doomed. Meltdowns happened to the most unlikely victims. Everyone was so vulnerable to meltdowns that even Canadians rioted, though they did it only so the rest of the world wouldn’t feel bad about their riots.
It didn’t take a tsunami; anything could trigger a meltdown. Greece, a country so economically insignificant that its biggest global financial contribution to this century was that N
A. indifferent
B. optimistic
C. pessimistic
D. puzzled