单选题How many suggestions have you got from the text?ATwo.BThree.CFour.DFive.

单选题
How many suggestions have you got from the text?
A

Two.

B

Three.

C

Four.

D

Five.


参考解析

解析:
根据文章内容可知,第二段到第六段都是作者给出的建议。所以文章共给出了五点建议。

相关考题:

Student A:I feel sick.Student B:______Student A:I'm not sure,but I have got a bad headache. A: I'm sorry to hear that.B: How are you feeling now?C: How long have you been sick?D: Do you have a temperature?

How many more exercise-books do you have()? A、to correctB、to be correctedC、for correctingD、corrected

The author compares cells with water balloons in order to ______.A. make you think of summerB. help you visualize the cellsC. show how rubber is elasticD. show how many shapes cells can have

There are different ways in which people try to deal with the problem of energy. One way is the greater production of common energy sources, such as coal, oil and gas. The trouble with these sources, however, is that they are not renewable.Another way is energy conservation ( 节能 ), which means using energy more efficiently ( 有效地 ). In some very cold countries people build special houses to save energy. They place materials between the inside and the outside of the walls of the house to keep the cold out and the warmth in. The house is heated by the lights, the body heat of the people and the other equipment in it.Finally, renewable energy sources are used even though they are often expensive to develop. One form. of these is geothermal energy. In certain parts of the world the temperature of the earth increases thirty degrees centigrade with each kilometer down. At six kilometers, therefore, it rises to nearly two hundred degrees. To get the heat, water is pumped ( 压;抽 ) down into the rocks and back up to the surface. Heat from the earth is already used in certain countries.1、How many ways of dealing with the energy problem are discussed in the text? ( )A、Two.B、Three.C、Four.D、Five.2、From the text we learn that coal( ).A、is quite easy to produceB、is not used most efficientlyC、is the most common source of energyD、could be renewed only by new technology3、The writer tells about the "special houses" because they( ).A、show the excellent skills of the buildersB、serve as an example of energy conservationC、are heated by different sources of energyD、are warmer than other types of houses4、The underlined words "geothermal energy" in the third paragraph mean ( ).A、renewable sourceB、 underground sourceC、 heat inside the earthD、 temperature of the earth5、At a place where the surface temperature is 15°C, how deep do you have to dig so as to get a temperature of 75 °C ? ( )A、One km.B、 Two km.C、 Three km.D、 Four km

(作文)1.What is your biggest dream?2.Why do you have it? For how long have you got it?3.What are your plans to achieve your dream?

From the attached resume, you can see that I have learned several programming courses and the scores suggested that I have got profound theoretical knowledge about programming.

_______ will it take you from your school to the library?A、How farB、How soonC、How longD、How many

—My whole body feels weak and I've got a headache. — ( )?A. How long ago did you get it thisB. How long have you been like thisC. How soon have you got itD. How soon have you liked this

—I can't see the words on the blackboard. —Perhaps you need _( )A. How long ago did you get it thisB. How long have you been like thisC. How soon have you got itD. How soon have you liked this

“________have you visited the Great Wall?” “Twice.” A.How soonB.How oftenC.How many timesD.How long

How many ________ do you want to have? A.childB.childrenC.childsD.childrens

How many holds do you have?

How many books do you have? I have ______ book .That's ______ English book. A、a,anB、a,oneC、on,anD、one,one

Please state how you have benefited from your work experience。

How many children does the woman have?A. Two.B. Three.C. Five.

——Guess what ,we’ve got our visas for a short —term visit to the UK this summer. ——How mice! you a different culture then.A.will be experiencingB.have experiencedC.have been expriencingD.will have experienced

根据下列内容,回答211-215题。A house is the most expensive thing most people will ever buy.Very few people have enough money of their own to buy a house,so they have to borrow money from a bank.Borrowing moneyfrom a bank to buy a house is called“take a mortgage”.The bank usually lends money or gives a me.gage for twenty—five years.Houses are so expensive that many people nowadays have to borrow as much as$50,000.In other words,they will have a$50,000 mortgage.How can you get a mortgage? When you find a house you like.you go to a bank.The bank will research you financial history and decide if they think you are a good risk.They will want to know what kind of job you have,what kind of salary you make and how long you have had the job.They will a]so want to know how much money you have.In addition.the banks will require a down payment.Depending Oil which state you live in,the bank may require as much as 30%of the price of the house as a down payment.The bank will then lend you the rest of the money to buy the house.Many people are never able to buy a house because they can not save enough money for thedown payment.What does a house mean in the United States.? __________A.It is a dream which many people can hardly realizeB.It is so expensive that many people can not really buy themC.It is the most important property that many people try to buyD.It doesn’t belong to people if they can not borrow morley from the bank

―――I feel sick,doctor.――____.―――I'm not sure,but I have got a bad headache.A.How long have you been sick?B.I'm sorry to hear thaC.How are you feeling now?D.Do you have a fever?

Text 4 When you go to bed,is it because you're tured or because you need to get up at a certain time and want to make sure you get enough sleep?Everyone has a chronotype,which is the sleep cycle that their body would naturally prefer,if left to its own devices.But society forces its own chronotype on people,too.Maybe your prefer to sleep from 2 a.m.t0 10 a.m.But if you have a typical 9-to-5 workday,to get eight hours,you'd probably need to sleep from something like 11 p.m.t0 7 a,m.Individuals'sleep is surely shaped by their jobs,their families,and their habits.But a new study shows that society can shape sleep broadly,on a population level,as well.In the paper,published in Science Advances,Olivia Walch,Amy Cochran,and Daniel Forger of the University of Michigan look at data gathered from a smartphone app to see how sleep cycles vary in different countries and among different demographics.What country people lived in didn't have any noticeable effect on when they woke up,but it was linked to what time they went to bed.And what time they went to bed was linked to how much sleep they got.So in the countries that got less sleep on average,like Japan and Brazil,it was because they were going to bed later,not because they were waking up earlier than people in countries that got more sleep on average,like the Netherlands and Belgium,where people have earlier bedtimes.But it's notable in pointing out bedtime as a problem area.A lot of the research and discussion about the tension between sleep and society has focused on the morning-how the 9-to-5 workday isn't suitable for everyone's internal clocks,how starting the school day later can help teens,who have notoriously late chronotypes,how exposing yourself to light in the moming can help keep your intemal clock wound in a way that promotes good sleep.Bedtime,meanwhile,seems like it should be more of a choice.You wake up to go somewhere,or to start fulfilling responsibilities,and you go to bed when you decide to,based on a complex calculus of how tired you are,how much sleep you want to get,and whether the chapter you were just reading in your book ended on a cliffhanger.But when people are deciding to go to bed differs significantly across societies,it seems there's something cultural at play here,too.The paper published by the professors from University ofMichigan shows that____A.many people use smartphones before going to sleepB.the countries where people live may decide when they get upC.Japanese go to bed later and wake up laterD.people in some European countries enjoy longer sleep time

Text 4 When you go to bed,is it because you're tured or because you need to get up at a certain time and want to make sure you get enough sleep?Everyone has a chronotype,which is the sleep cycle that their body would naturally prefer,if left to its own devices.But society forces its own chronotype on people,too.Maybe your prefer to sleep from 2 a.m.t0 10 a.m.But if you have a typical 9-to-5 workday,to get eight hours,you'd probably need to sleep from something like 11 p.m.t0 7 a,m.Individuals'sleep is surely shaped by their jobs,their families,and their habits.But a new study shows that society can shape sleep broadly,on a population level,as well.In the paper,published in Science Advances,Olivia Walch,Amy Cochran,and Daniel Forger of the University of Michigan look at data gathered from a smartphone app to see how sleep cycles vary in different countries and among different demographics.What country people lived in didn't have any noticeable effect on when they woke up,but it was linked to what time they went to bed.And what time they went to bed was linked to how much sleep they got.So in the countries that got less sleep on average,like Japan and Brazil,it was because they were going to bed later,not because they were waking up earlier than people in countries that got more sleep on average,like the Netherlands and Belgium,where people have earlier bedtimes.But it's notable in pointing out bedtime as a problem area.A lot of the research and discussion about the tension between sleep and society has focused on the morning-how the 9-to-5 workday isn't suitable for everyone's internal clocks,how starting the school day later can help teens,who have notoriously late chronotypes,how exposing yourself to light in the moming can help keep your intemal clock wound in a way that promotes good sleep.Bedtime,meanwhile,seems like it should be more of a choice.You wake up to go somewhere,or to start fulfilling responsibilities,and you go to bed when you decide to,based on a complex calculus of how tired you are,how much sleep you want to get,and whether the chapter you were just reading in your book ended on a cliffhanger.But when people are deciding to go to bed differs significantly across societies,it seems there's something cultural at play here,too.In the following part immediately after this text,the author will most probably focus on____A.what sleep patterns people have in different countriesB.the impact of culture on people's sleepC.whether it is influential to read books before sleepD.how many choices people have on bedtime

What are some of the questions you should ask yourself when analyzing your existing Domino NSF application for modernizing with XPages?()A、All of the belowB、How much UI code do you have?C、How complex are your subs and functions?D、How do you use Rich Text, if any at all?

How()do you have?A、many baggageB、much baggagesC、many baggagesD、much baggage

单选题A:Do you have any suggestions about it? B:()ANo, I have no ideaBLet me give you a handCAfter I read it in detail, will tell you my opinion

单选题How many times have I told you()football on the street?Ado not playBnot to have playedCnot to playDnot your playing

问答题If you count from one to two hundred, how many eight’s will you meet on the way?

问答题If you count from 1 to 100, how many “8”s will you pass on the way?

单选题There's a lot of food left over from the party; you ____ so many dishes.Awould have preparedBneedn 't have preparedCmight have preparedDcouldn't have prepared