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[填空题]

We hope the driver in this case is arrested and () justice.

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更多“We hope the driver in this case is arrested and () justice.”相关的问题

第1题

We hope the driver in this case is arrested and()justice.A. broken intoB. brought toC.

We hope the driver in this case is arrested and()justice.

A. broken into

B. brought to

C. acted out

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第2题

阅读理解:根据文章内容,判断正误。PEDESTRIAN CRITICALLY INJURED IN WESTWOOD HIT-AND-RUN CRA

阅读理解:根据文章内容,判断正误。

PEDESTRIAN CRITICALLY INJURED IN WESTWOOD HIT-AND-RUN CRASH

A pedestrian was critically injured in a Westwood area car accident near the corner of Wilshire Boulevard and Veteran Avenue early morning on January 5, 2016.

The police said it involved a hit-and-run driver. The car was dark and was last seen traveling east on Ashton Avenue from Veteran Avenue. The investigation is ongoing.

It appears that the driver struck and seriously injured the pedestrian, and left the victim lying in the roadway without even stopping to help or call emergency personnel. Outrageous! Leaving the scene of an injury or fatal crash is a serious crime under California law. California Vehicle Code 20001 (a) states: “The driver of a vehicle involved in an accident resulting in injury to a person, other than himself or herself, or in the death of a person shall immediately stop the vehicle at the scene of the accident.”

We hope the driver in this case is arrested and brought to justice. If you have any information about the suspect or the vehicle, please visit the Hit-and-Run Reward website at hitandrunreward.com to offer a useful tip and become qualified for a $1,000 reward.

操作提示:正确选T,错误选F。

1. A pedestrian was dead in the hit-and-run case.{T; F}

2. Leaving the scene of an injury or fatal crash is not a serious crime under California law.{T; F}

3. The investigation is going on.{T; F}

4. The driver was against the California Vehicle Code 20001.{T; F}

5. Any information about hit-and-run cases provided via hitandrunreward.com can get $1,000 reward.{T; F}

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第3题

根据短文内容判断给出的语句是否正确,正确的写“T”,错误的写“F”。 Pedestrian Critically Injured in Westwood HitandRun Crash A pedestrian was critically injured in a Westwood area car accident near the comer of Wilshire

根据短文内容判断给出的语句是否正确,正确的写“T”,错误的写“F”。

Pedestrian Critically Injured in Westwood HitandRun Crash

A pedestrian was critically injured in a Westwood area car accident near the comer of Wilshire Boulevard and Veteran Avenue early morning on January 5, 2016.

The police said it involved a hitandrun driver. The car was dark and was last seen traveling east on Ashton Avenue from Veteran Avenue. The investigation is ongoing.

It appears that the driver struck and seriously injured the pedestrian, and left the victim lying in the roadway without even stopping to help or call emergency personnel. Outrageous! Leaving the scene of an injury or fatal crash is a serious crime under California law. California Vehicle Code 20001(a)states:“The driver of a vehicle involved in an accident resulting in injury to a person, other than himself or herself, or in the death of a person shall immediately stop the vehicle at the scene of the accident.”

We hope the driver in this case is arrested and brought to justice. If you have any information about the suspect or the vehicle, please visit the HitandRun Reward website at hitandrunreward.com to offer a useful tip and become qualified for a $1,000 reward.

()21. A pedestrian was dead in the hitandrun case.

()22. Leaving the scene of an injury or fatal crash is not a serious crime under California law.

()23. The investigation is going on.

()24. The driver was against the California Vehicle Code 20001.

()25. Any information about hitand run cases provided via hitandrunreward.com can get $1,000 reward.

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第4题

A warm, dusty wind was blowing over Marseilles from the south. Where it paused, it left a
thin layer of fine Sahara sand; a bit of unwanted Africa, e-qually unwanted by France. Clive stood with the racing driver at the ships rail, watching the cars being loaded. One of his machines was already on board. "I hope this wind will have changed by the time we get there," the driver said, staring up at the cream-coloured sky. These conditions wouldnt be any good for racing. There was keen concern in his look. Clive smiled, though he was a bit puzzled. "Itll hardly trouble us," he said. Buenos Aires is about 7,000 miles away. Surprise came over the drivers face. "Is that so? We should leave it behind, then, shouldnt we?" They talked for a time about Argentina. Clive was going on business, the driver to take part in a motorrace. It was his first major event outside Europe. It was when he mentioned the date of the race December 30 and added as an afterthought, "Ive never raced in winter before", that Clive switched the conversation to the young man. He was a mechanical engineer by profession, fully trained, twenty-six years old. Motorracing was his great love, and he was currently driving for a French manufacturer. He spoke well enough, so Clive guessed that he had had a normal education. But something seemed to have gone wrong or was different these days. Here he was, going to Argentina, but without much idea where it was. When he spoke of a cousin of his, who worked in South Africa, "Is there any chance of this ship calling there?" Clive realised that the man had no map of the world in his mind. He had plans to race in South Africa and in Japan. To him, they were places on the planet, and probably that was all. Clive was interested because the man seemed cheerfully unconscious of any disadvantage. Worse he might have thought everyone was in the same boat. Dust blew into their faces. Clive said, "This wind from the Sahara..." but he didnt go on. Was there any point? So far as this young man was concerned, it might have been a wind from China. Were there many people, he wondered, who didnt know where they were going, or even where they were?

Why were they both at Marseilles that day? ______

A.Their ship for Buenos Aires left from Marseilles.

B.They were there to see a French motorrace.

C.Their ship had put into shelter from a dust storm.

D.They had gone there to fetch the racing cars.

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第5题

When someone commits a criminal act, we always hope the punishment will match the offense.
But when it comes to one of the crudest crimes—animal fighting—things __26__ work out that way. Dog-fighting victims are __27__ and killed for profit and “sport,” yet their criminal abusers often receive a __28__ sentence for causing a lifetime of pain. Roughly half of all federally-convicted animal fighters only get probation (缓刑).

Some progress has been made in the prosecution(起诉)of animal fighters. But federal judges often rely heavily on the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines when they __29__ penalties, and in the case of animal fighting, those guidelines are outdated and extremely __30__ .

Some progress has been made in the prosecution(起诉)of animal fighters. But federal judges often rely heavily on the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines when they __29__ penalties, and in the case of animal fighting, those guidelines are outdated and extremely __30__ .

Along with this effort, we’re working with animal advocates and state and federal lawmakers to __33__ anti-cruelty laws across the country, as well as supporting laws and policies that assist overburdened animal __34__ that care for animal fighting victims. This help is__35__ important because the high cost of caring for animal victims is a major factor that prevents people from getting involved in cruelty cases in the first place.

A) convenient

B) creates

C) critically

D) determine

E) direction

F) hesitate

G) inadequate

H) inspired

I) method

J) minimal

K) rarely

L) shelters

M) strengthen

N) sufferings

O) tortured

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第6题

听力原文:M: Sara, I've been looking forward to our yearly campout for three weeks. It's go
ing to be a wonderful day for hiking tomorrow. The great outdoors. Camping under the stars. This is the life.

W: Yeah, but Paul, I'm a little bit worried about the weather though. Tile weatherman said it was going to rain later tonight.

M: Ah. Nonsense. Nothing can spoil our adventure. Those weather reports are never light.

W: And it said there was a chance of high winds.

M: Ah. Don't worry.

W: Listen! It's thundering. Did you remember to bring our raincoats just in case, like I told you? It's going to rain.

M: Uh... no. I left them on the front porch.

W: Oh! Terrible! It's beginning to rain heavily. What are we going to do now?

M: We'll have to sleep in the car! Hurry get in!

W: SO, Paul, what are we going to do now?

M: How about playing a card game?

W: Uhh. I left them next to the picnic table. Hey, you don't want me to go out in this rain and get them, do you?

M: No. That's okay. So what now?

W: Well, we could head down the mountain and stay at that hotel we passed on the way up, or go horse.

M: Hmm, why don't we just make the best of it here and hope the weather clears.

W: That's a good idea.

(23)

A.Hiking.

B.Mountain biking.

C.Fishing.

D.Traveling somewhere.

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第7题

Drug Warriors Billy White was wearing a jacket with the word "POLICE" printed on the back

Drug Warriors

Billy White was wearing a jacket with the word "POLICE" printed on the back, and jeans. His piece was a Glock, a nine-millimeter pistol New Haven Police Department standard issue. Around him, White recognized state cops, special agents from the DEA, officers from the U.S. Marshal's office, FBI special agents, and other police detectives like himself. There were anti-drug case agents from the ATF, and intelligence officers from the police departments of nearby cities. White looked around. These were his people, his soldiers, the ones who would be by his side on the front lines. This was the New Haven Drug Gang Task Force, and Lieutenant Billy White was in charge of it.

It was 3 a.m., and most of the men had been up since the morning before. But none of them would sleep that night either. They had a big day ahead of them. Hours earlier, White had been in his office, preparing warrants. Meanwhile, the New Haven Airport had quietly filled with federal agents, flying in from New York and Washington, DC. They had then gathered at the western corner of the city. The team's field headquarters that night would be an empty building on the very edge of town. The 300-man team of federal agents, state police, and local police had gathered to discuss the next step in the war on drugs.

White listened as his friend Kevin Kline, an FBI special agent and one of the original members of the task force, was speaking to the law enforcement army. Kline laid out the battle plan for the morning's drug bust: the agents were to organize themselves into squads, forming arrest teams and back-up crews. The teams assigned to carry out raids received arrest packets containing the names, addresses, and photographs of each suspect, as well as search warrants issued by the federal court. At 5:3o a.m., the teams were to split up, each reporting to their designated sites to prepare for the final stage of the operation: making the arrests.

As he listened, White asked himself the same question that everyone else in the room must have been thinking. Could the team pull off a successful bust? Born and raised in New Haven, White still remembered a time when New Haven was considered a peaceful town. In 1960, only six murders, four rapes, and 16 robberies were reported. But soon, the drug gangs set up shop, and the turf wars began. With the gangs came gang violence: drive-by shootings, innocent victims killed, murders in broad daylight. In 199o, there were 31 murders, 168 rapes, and 1784 robberies. "Back then it was hell," White recalls. "I thought, 'What are we doing?'"

At exactly 6 a.m., the task force executed a coordinated sweep, arresting 29 out of the 32 people on the list. The arrests in the New Haven area all proceeded without incident. Afterwards, FBI special agent Robert Grispino was struck by the cops' intense emotion. "It was quite a sight," he told reporters. "With some of the New Haven cops, there were tears in their eyes." Billy White, of course, was among them. "We got some big fish, too, guys that handled multi, multi, multi kilos," says White. Of the 29 arrested, about 13 were Colombian citizens. The task force had successfully arrested many of the importers and distributors that had connections with source companies. "The core organization that they arrested here in New Haven had direct connections with Miami, San Juan, and Cali," says Grispino.

Meanwhile, the entire Cali cartel leadership has been arrested by a Colombian police squad. Eight of the top nine Cali drug lords have given themselves up to Colombian authorities or been killed in gunfights with police. Today, New Haven residents are once again venturing out into the streets. The neighborhoods feel safer. In fact, the task force's operations have proven to be so successful that they have attracted national attention. As for Billy White and his team, they continue to do what they have always done. "I think we can win the war on drugs," says White. "I'll probably be gone by then. But I think someday, we'll work our way out of a job, and there won't be any more gangs left in this city."

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第8题

Why do we invest so much hope in new technology and why are we so disappointed when the Ne
xt Big Thing turns out to be just a new computer? This is what I'm asking myself after Apple's 【C1】______ over hyped product introduction. This time around the Next Big Thing is called an iPad. It's 【C2】______ an oversize iPod Touch, and it will be great for watching movies, reading books, and browsing the Web.

【C3】______ for some of us who sat in the audience watching Steve Jobs introduce the device, the whole thing felt like a 【C4】______ . The iPad is a perfectly good product. It's reasonably 【C5】______ , and after spending a few minutes with one, I'm pretty sure I'll buy one for myself and probably 【C6】______ second one for my kids to watch movies on road trips.

Then why are we so【C7】______? The case is that at the very 【C8】______ , we had hoped a tablet from Apple would do something new. Jobs and his 【C9】______ kept using words like "breakthrough" and "magical", but the iPad is 【C10】______ It might turn out to be magical for Apple, because 【C11】______ Jobs is really doing here is trying to【C12】______the personal computer with a closed appliance that runs software only from Apple's online App Store. So instead of selling you a(n) 【C13】______ and never hearing from you again, Apple gets a(n) 【C14】______ revenue stream with iPad as you keep【C15】______more apps. That really is "magical" for Apple's bottom line, anyway.

And that's 【C16】______ . What's wrong, or at least interesting, is why some of us 【C17】______ so much more from a new gadget. I suspect this is because for some people, myself 【C18】______ , technology has become a kind of 【C19】______ . We may not believe in God anymore, but we still need mystery and wonder. We need the magic 【C20】______ .

【C1】

A.late

B.last

C.latter

D.latest

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第9题

Every year about 4,000,000 Americans are arrested and accused of crimes ranging from theft
and traffic violations to murder. The Supreme Court(最高法院) has ruled that anyone charged with a crime has certain rights under the law. Do you know what your rights are if you are arrested? Here are four of them.

First, as soon as the police arrest a person, they must tell him of his right to remain silent. Under the taw, he is not required to answer their questions.

Second, the police must tell him of his right to have a lawyer. The state or city government will pay a lawyer to take the case of a suspect who cannot afford one.

Third, the Fifth Amendment(修正案) to the Constitution says that no person has to be a wit ness against himself. This means that the suspect does not. have to speak against himself.

Fourth, a person cannot be tried for the same crime twice. ff a person has been found innocent, he cannot be arrested again, brought to court, and retried for the same: crime.

What does the word "ruled" mean?

A.governed

B.guided

C.decided

D.controlled

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第10题

Real Policemen hardly recognize any resemblance between their lives and what they see on T
V.

The first difference is that a policeman's real life revolves around criminal law. He has to know exactly what actions are crimes and what evidence can be used to prove them in court. He has to know nearly as much law as a professional lawyer, and what is more, he has to apply it on his feet, in the dark and rain, running down a street after someone he wants to talk to.

Little of his time is spent in chatting, he will spend most of his working life typing millions of words on thousands of forms about hundreds of sad, unimportant people who are guilty of stupid, petty crimes.

Most television crime drama is about finding the criminal: as soon as he's arrested, the story is over. In real life, finding criminals is seldom much of a problem. Except in very serious eases like murders and terrorist attacks little effort is spent on searching.

Having made an arrest, a detective really starts to work. He has to prove his case in court and to do that he often has to gather a lot of evidence.

The third big difference between the drama detective and the real one is the unpleasant pressures: first, as members of a police force they always have to behave absolutely in accordance with the law; secondly, as expensive public servants they have to get results. They can hardly ever do both. Most of the time some of them have to break the rules in small ways.

If the detective has to deceive the world, the world often deceives him. Hardly anyone he meets tells him the truth. And this separation the detective feels between himself and the rest of the world is deepened by the simplemindedness—as he sees it—of citizens, social workers, doctors, law-makers, and judges, who, instead of eliminating crime punish the criminals less severely in the hope that this will make them reform. The result, detectives feel, is that nine-tenths of their work is recatching people who should have stayed behind bars. This makes them rather cynical.

A policeman has to be trained in criminal law because ______.

A.lie must be able to tell when and where a crime is committed

B.he must justify the arrests he makes of criminals

C.he must behave as professional lawyers do

D.he must work hard to help reform. criminals

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第11题

I asked my friend if we should tip the driver when the bus tour ended.(periodic sente
I asked my friend if we should tip the driver when the bus tour ended.(periodic sente

nce)

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