题目内容 (请给出正确答案)
[单选题]

选择最佳译文:He is lying on his back, fixing his eyes on the shining stars in the sky.

A.他坦腹高卧,遥望星空,神游无际。

B.他仰卧着,注视天空中闪烁的星星。

C.他卧在他背上,将他的眼睛固定在天空闪烁的星星上。

D.他躺在那儿,看着天空中闪闪的星星。

查看答案
如搜索结果不匹配,请 联系老师 获取答案
您可能会需要:
您的账号:,可能会需要:
您的账号:
发送账号密码至手机
发送
更多“选择最佳译文:He is lying on his back…”相关的问题

第1题

The traffic lights were red when the driver reached them. To the surprise of his passenger, the car did not slow down. Unexpectedly the passenger was thrown forward in the vehicle as the driver put on his brakes at the last moment. The car stopped just in time.

"Sorry, I didn't notice the light. I thought it was green until I saw that it was the top light which was shining."

This strange story is quite true. About ten men in every hundred are color blind in some way; women are luckier——only about one in two hundred suffers from color blindness.

In some cases, a man may not be able to see deep red. He may think that red, orange and yellow are all the same as green.

People often like one color more than others. Blue is the color of the sky and sea. Green makes us think of fields and trees. Red is the color of blood and makes some people think of danger. Black is the color of night. In the dark we cannot see what is around us so we are sometimes afraid of the unknown and do not like black as a color.

Among the traffic lights, red light is placed ______.

A.at the bottom

B.in the middle

C.at the top

D.below the green light

点击查看答案

第2题

____________ He wore a purple robe. He usually sat in his bright eastern palace early in the morning and made ready to start his daily journey across the sky.During the day he drove his carriage of gold and ivory,and brought light, life and love to the great world below.Late in the afternoon he came to the end of his journey in the far western sea and got on his golden boat to return to his eastern home.

A.Apollo and his sister Artemis could also bring death with their arrows.

B.Apollo was the sun-god.

C.Apollo stood for youthful and manly beauty.

D.Apollo was the god of music and poetry.

点击查看答案

第3题

Aspects of the Sun Since the beginning of time, human beings have been fascinated by the dramas unfolding in the firmament above--the shifting arch of the sun, the changing faces of the moon, the regular patterns of stars turning as the seasons change. The study of these subtle patterns and relationships in the cosmos evolved into Astronomy (or "law of the stars"), one of the oldest of the sciences. While different cultures, religions, and scientific theories all offer contrasting explanations for cosmic phenomena, there is one point on which they all agree: there would be no life on Earth if not for the sun. Modern science has now proven that the sun, whose reliable path across the sky gives us the contours of our days and the duration of our nights, is the focal point of our solar system. The sun is, in fact, a star that is nearly 110 times the size of Earth and comprises more than 99% of the solar systems mass, which creates enough gravitational pull to extend to the outer reaches of our solar system and keep all manner of matter (planets, asteroids, meteors and even dust) in orbit. Like other stars, the sun is made up of various gases, the most prevalent being hydrogen at around 74%, and helium at around 25%. Because the suns gravitational force inward is equal to that of its thermal pressure outward, it is in a state of hydrostatic equilibrium, which causes the sun to compress into a sphere. While the sun is a near perfect sphere and appears to the naked eye as a precise and sharply defined yellow circle against the sky (hence its ancient astronomical symbol of a circle with a point at its center), it does not actually have a definite edge or boundary. Instead, the density of its gases decreases exponentially with distance from the core. Like most stars, the sun generates heat and energy via nuclear fusion, which takes place in the core at the center of the sun. This energy must travel through a number of different layers before it reaches the photosphere, the first layer of the suns atmosphere, where it escapes into space as sunlight. It is the photosphere that we see when we look at the sun. The layer is about 100 km thick, which is relatively thin compared to other solar layers, and is much cooler than the suns outermost atmospheric layer called the corona. One of the suns greatest mysteries is the incredible heat of the corona. Usually heat decreases with distance from the core; this is true for the sun until you reach the corona, which becomes suddenly hotter by a factor of nearly 200 times that of the photosphere. The exact process of heating and maintaining the corona is still one of the unsolved solar mysteries that continue to fascinate and perplex scientists today. Another solar mystery is the curious nature of solar flares. Equivalent to millions of 100-megaton hydrogen bombs detonated simultaneously, solar flares are the most intense and energetic explosions that occur in our solar system. (A) These explosions occur on the suns photosphere and are difficult to view through the layers bright emissions, even with specialized equipment. Solar flares are directly linked to another more easily observable solar phenomenon--sunspots. With the invention of the telescope in 1608, astronomers were finally able to look into the face of the sun and see that it is not a perfect and unchanging yellow disc as they had expected, but that it is often marred by discernibleble mishes or dark spots. (B) These dark areas are the coolest regions on the suns photosphere and are characterized by intense magnetic activity. The frequency of sunspot occurrences follows an eleven-year solar or sunspot cycle. (C) At the minimum end of the cycle, there is very little sunspot activity and at the maximum end, there might be hundreds of visible sunspots. An increased number of sunspots indicates a correlated increase in solar flare activity. (D) This period of activity can pose a serious danger to satellites and astronauts. One solar flare can emit enough magnetic energy to cause serious damage to a satellite, or change the satellites orbit. It can also shake the Earths magnetic field and cause dangerous surges in power lines, resulting in blackouts over large areas. Because of these dangers and our increasing reliance on satellites, it has become even more important for scientists to understand the nature of solar weather and to determine more accurate methods of predicting solar activity.

The word "they" in the passage refers to

A.computers.

B.desires.

C.humans.

D.relationships.

点击查看答案

第4题

Jones Beach

Connecticut is beautiful in early June. The rolling hills are green and beckoning, the leaves on the trees full and deep. The land is fertile, washed and nourished by the spring rains; and in the rich soil of gardens, peas and carrots are appearing. The mornings are warm and clear, the sun rising early so that by midday you can get a taste of the summer heat that will follow in July and August.

On a day like this, on a Wednesday morning in early June, it is possible to feel free; for school is over for the year and the summer lies ahead. And so, on this Wednesday morning, you get up early in the morning and go out for a drive in your car, because you like that, it's fun. You drive along a little country road, the top of your car down, and you feel the chili of the early morning air , as the wind blows all around you. You feel the chill in your neck and behind your ears, but the sun is getting higher in the sky; it will be warmer soon. You feel your hair being blown in a thousand directions, and that's fine. It's good to feel the long brown hair blowing around your ears, it's good sometimes to look down onto the road next to your car and see the shadow of the car, with you inside, and your hair blowing in the wind. You drive through patches of sunlight and shade; the air is dry, so you feel the difference. And you feel free, being free.

It is hard to be free. It is probably one of the hardest things in the world, because the world doesn't leave much room for freedom. There isn't much space given you, there aren't many people around you who are free. Everyone has miles to go and things to do, and the world catches you up, it carries you along, it doesn't give you much room. But it's also so easy to be free. Being free is probably one of the easiest things in the world, too, only almost nobody realizes it. Because we are free: we were born free, we live free, and we will die free. Only we don't realize it. There is always so much going on, perhaps, always so much to do, that we never stop and look at what's happening. Until some day, some Wednesday morning in early June, when you get up in the morning when it's still chilly and you go for a drive in your car, along a country road, through little towns, past little homes and farmhouses, and suddenly you realize it, you know it: you are free, free always, free forever.

That is all it takes. You like to drive, you like driving your little sports car with the top down, and that's all it takes. And you find yourself getting high, as. high as the sky, because it is wonderful to be there, in that time and in that place, and you would exchange it for none other. You feel elated just by driving, and you begin to think that maybe they're all wrong, maybe all the ones who have taught you are wrong. Because they've taught you that what goes up always comes down. That's physics, after all, that's science and knowledge, and when an apple falls from a tree, it's going to hit someone who's sitting beneath. That's the way things are. But you begin to wonder. Maybe things don't have to be that way. Maybe it's possible to go up and never come down, to stay up, to be always up, to be always elated.

Maybe there is a place there, a place that the birds know, a place which men have reached for. Maybe it really does exist, and if you could find it you would never leave, you would never need to leave or want to leave, because the place is perfect and you feel wonderful there. So you drive along, out driving just for the fun of driving, and then maybe you say to yourself, "The hell with that place, things are fine here. I like it here. "For you feel good, there, feel good driving along, and you think you could probably feel good any place doing anything. The hell with the birds, let them have their place, because you've got yours, and you like it fine. The hell with wondering and worrying. School's out, it was

A.Y

B.N

C.NG

点击查看答案
热门考试 全部 >
相关试卷 全部 >
账号:
你好,尊敬的上学吧用户
发送账号至手机
密码将被重置
获取验证码
发送
温馨提示
该问题答案仅针对搜题卡用户开放,请点击购买搜题卡。
马上购买搜题卡
我已购买搜题卡, 登录账号 继续查看答案
重置密码
确认修改
谢谢您的反馈

您认为本题答案有误,我们将认真、仔细核查,
如果您知道正确答案,欢迎您来纠错

警告:系统检测到您的账号存在安全风险

为了保护您的账号安全,请在“上学吧”公众号进行验证,点击“官网服务”-“账号验证”后输入验证码“”完成验证,验证成功后方可继续查看答案!

微信搜一搜
上学吧
点击打开微信
警告:系统检测到您的账号存在安全风险
抱歉,您的账号因涉嫌违反上学吧购买须知被冻结。您可在“上学吧”微信公众号中的“官网服务”-“账号解封申请”申请解封,或联系客服
微信搜一搜
上学吧
点击打开微信