Let me()the case carefully before I draw a conclusion.
_____
Steer the wheel carefully and keep a sharp lookout () .
Directions:
Study the following charts carefully and write an essay in 160-200 words. In the essay you should cover the following three points:
(1)Effect of the country’s growing poaching cases on its precious wild lives.
(2)Possible reasons for the effect.
(3)Your suggestions for wildlife protection.
Practice 13 Think carefully about the issue presented in the following excerpt and the assignment below.
—In any contest between power and patience, bet on patience.
—W.B, Prescott
Assignment: Which is a more powerful force of social change: power or patience? Write an essay in which you answer this question and support your position logically with examples from literature, the arts, history, politics, science and technology, current events, or your experience or observation.
When a crankshaft has to be handled outside the engine, it should be carefully supported in a manner which will avoid () high bending moments on it.
Study the exhibit below carefully: If the configuration shown below is added to Router1, which three route entries will EIGRPadvertise to neighboring routers?() router eigrp 10 network 10.0.0.0 eigrp stub
Please tell your officers()them carefully.
Read the passage carefully to find the answers for Questions 1 to 5. Answer each question in a maximum of 10 words. Remember to write the answers on the Answer Sheet.
In the United States also there were great changes, though the causes here were due only in part to the war; they sprang mainly from technical progress, and the development of mass-production, in which the United States henceforth was to lead the world. The cheap automobile, pioneered by Henry Ford, is a good example. In 1915 the United States contained 2.5 million cars; in 1920, 9 million. Only the new mass-production techniques made it possible to build all these cars and only the growing practice of “easy-payments” made it possible to sell them. By 1925 three out of four cars, new and old, were sold in this way. About the same proportion was covered against the weather; ten years earlier, forty-nine cars out of fifty were open ones.
The last fact is important. The car had not only become cheap; it had become a comfortable room on wheels not just a means of transport. First in the United States, then in Britain and other countries, the car began to revolutionize everyday life. People no longer had to live near their work or close to a railway station. So began, in earnest, the problem which is still with us. The town centers, once full of life and sociability, began to wither; evening found them dead and deserted, nothing but bright shop windows and locked doors. The car brought many far-reaching consequences and it was blamed, rightly or wrongly, for the decline in churchgoing and the increase in immorality. More recently, it meant the virtual end of horse drawn transport and a growing threat to the supremacy of the railroad.
Questions:
1.What is the main cause for the great changes in the U.S.?
2.the United States, 20 million cars could be sold in 1925 because of ______?
3.What does “the last fact” refer to in the second paragraph?
4.What is the main idea of this passage?
5.According to the writer, it is doubtful whether the car should be responsible for ______?
When a crankshaft () outside the engine, it should be carefully supported in a manner which will avoid imposing high bending moments on it.