问题 单项选择题

人体的不同部位同时分别触及两相带电体所发生的触电称为()。

A.跨步电压触电

B.单相触电

C.两相触电

答案

参考答案:C

填空题

阅读下面的文字,完成问题。

  公元2008年5月12日14时28分——人类将永远铭记这个时刻。

  一场特大地震,突袭了四川,震动了全国,震惊了世界。

  从那一刻起,一些陌生的地名反复出现在我们眼前:汶川、北川、映秀……从此,这些地方就揪紧了你我的心。网络上每一条惊人的短讯,电视里每一句动情的话语,断壁残垣下每一束渴求的目光,无不震撼着你我的灵魂,无不令人潸然泪下!

  从那一刻起,一切都有了再认识。从第一时间亲临现场指挥救灾的 * * ,到第一支翻山越岭突进汶川的军队;从一支支空降灾区的伞兵,到一批批赶赴救援的自愿者;从一笔笔饱含真情的捐助,到一场场撼人心魄的义演……大灾面前,我们民族的大善大爱、大情大义、大智大勇瞬间得以集合;国家的意义,子弟兵的内涵,同胞手足的概念,一次次在你我心中刷新!

  2008年5月19日,国殇祭奠日。这一天,警笛长鸣,国旗半降,行人驻足,举国同悲——所有中国人都为遇难同胞做起了“头七”。我们明白,越是危难时刻,越需要镇定、勇气与爱心;越是危难时刻,越凸显中 * * 的团结、坚强和伟大!

  “汶川加油!四川加油!中国加油!”生生不息的顽强和不屈,穿透内心的阴霾,划过震后的废墟,向未来传递出无限的希望!

给下列加粗字写上正确的拼音。

(   )记 (   )生 断壁残(   ) (   )然泪下

问答题

(46) When Newman prepared his discourses, the view that a university was more than a place for teaching universal knowledge, that it was also a place for professional education and primarily a place for the "endowment of learning" or research, was prevalent enough for him to reassert the older Oxford position. He was aware of the pressure being exerted on Oxford and Cambridge to provide greater opportunities for teaching that was related to investigation and not to character formation. (47) For centuries scholars and scientists had sought openings within universities for work that was not necessarily directly related to the teaching of young persons or at least teaching dominated by literary, theological and mathematical subjects. There were some successes, and new histories of Oxford and Cambridge universities are uncovering more. Even within the collegiate system, where teaching tutors rather than research professors predominated, research was never altogether out of the question for universities. (48) A life spent in teaching will at some point shade over into research, or perhaps it is better to say "study," since research is systematic study in a given area of knowledge and its subsequent dissemination, although not necessarily through the medium of the lecture hall. But although university professors wrote books, some of them original treatises and not texts, and learned papers were produced by classicists, philosophers and scientists, the overall intellectual environment was as Newman wished, whether in England or Scotland. The research function had not been raised to the level of an ideology. There was no p culture of research that put a premium on originality and stressed the importance of discovery and a division of intellectual labour. It was not an era of Ph.D. candidates and graduate schools, extra-mural grants and contract research. University appointments were not made because potential fellows and chairholders were evaluated for their original contributions to knowledge or could be praised for being on the cutting edge of intellectual life. (49) Learned. yes; but that most often meant an impressive command of existing knowledge with no expectation that scholarly work of seminal importance to a particular field of inquiry was some day likely to emerge and—most importantly—be systematically diffused. The principal institutional victories of Victorian researchers and their predecessors lay elsewhere, in the creation of learned societies, botanical gardens, museums, libraries and specialized institutions.
If the "object" of a university "was ... scientific and philosophical discovery, I do not see why a university should have students," wrote Newman. The teaching of students had assumed new importance during Newman’s lifetime. In arguing for the traditional view that research, while a possible function for universities, should always be secondary, Newman was reflecting important internal transformations that had occurred in his youth. (50) The new examinations culture introduced at Oxford by the reforms of 1800 and developed earlier at Cambridge had reinforced teaching and strengthened the hold of colleges on the university’s pedagogical mission, and a new generation of students, of which Newman was one, had in effect demanded more attention from dons and stimulated many of the changes that improved the intellectual standing of the ancient universities of England.