首页英语词典UU考试真题

U

英 [juː] 美
  • n. 英语字母中的第二十一个字母;铀(化学元素)

考试真题


The conclusion: by cutting salt intake nationwide, the U.S. could save $10 billion to $24 billion annually in health care costs.

出自-2013年6月阅读原文

Four million people get hired every month in the U.S.

出自-2012年12月阅读原文

What do we learn from the passage about the unemployment figures in the U.S.?

出自-2012年12月阅读原文

But at the same time, nearly half of U.S. carbon emissions come from heating, cooling and powering our homes, offices and other buildings.

出自-2010年6月阅读原文

That was the first mode for a black box, which became a requirement on all U.S. commercial flights by 1960.

出自-2010年6月阅读原文

Since the early 1990s, several clinics have been established in the U.S. to treat heavy Internet users.

出自-2010年6月阅读原文

According to a survey on reading conducted in 2001 by the U.S. National Education Association (NEA), young Americans say reading is important, more important than computers and science.

出自-2013年6月听力原文

A fourth of this year's U.S. grain harvest will go to fuel cars.

2016年6月四级真题(第一套)阅读 Section B

During this decade new forms of entertainment, commerce, research, and communication became commonplace in the U.S.

2017年12月四级真题(第三套)阅读 Section A

If I stayed in the U.S., it'd take two years and cost at least 50,000 dollars in tuition alone.

2019年6月四级真题(第一套)听力 Section B

On the demand side, those trends include the ongoing addition of more than 70 million people a year, a growing number of people wanting to move up the food chain to consume highly grain-intensive meat products, and the massive diversion of U.S. grain to t

2016年6月四级真题(第一套)阅读 Section B

The American Trucking Association lists approximately 3.5 million professional truck drivers in the U.S.

2018年12月四级真题(第三套)阅读 Section C

The company's self-driving cars have done well over a million miles across various states in the U.S., and until now have only reported minor accidents.

2017年6月四级真题(第二套)听力 Section A

Because of these differences, comparing France's consumption with the U.S.'s overstates the gap in economic welfare.

2018年6月六级真题(第三套)阅读 Section C

Health and environmental advocates have long urged U.S.government agencies to tighten the use of some of the 11 chemicals the report cites and called for more studies on their long-term effects.

2015年12月六级真题(第一套)阅读 Section A

hi Rosie, you're a features editor at one of the most widely read women's magazines in the U.

2019年12月六级真题(第一套)听力 Section A

In 2005, as the authors observe, real consumption per person in France was only 60% as high as the U.S., making it appear that Americans were economically much better off than the French on average.

2018年6月六级真题(第三套)阅读 Section C

The study included 386 kindergarteners from schools in the Fast Track Project, a multi-site clinical trial in the U.S that in 1991 began tracking how children developed across their lives.

2018年12月六级真题(第一套)阅读 Section C

The U.S. is also the only advanced economy that does not guarantee workers paid vacation time, and it's one of only two countries in the world that does not offer guaranteed paid maternity leave.

2016年12月六级真题(第一套)阅读 Section B

We believe that the number of people who fit that definition includes the majority of American workers, which prompted us to begin a study of workaholism in the U.S..

2018年12月六级真题(第一套)阅读 Section B

Yet like many college teachers around the U.S., the faculty remain doubtful that their work as educators can be measured by a "learning outcome" such as a graduate's ability to investigate and reason.

2017年6月六级真题(第一套)阅读 Section A

She became an arizona state senator and , in 1981, the first woman to join the u.

2016年高考英语全国卷1 阅读理解 阅读A 原文

And employers are planning on hiring about 17 percent more new graduates for jobs in the U.S.

2020年考研真题(英语二)阅读理解 Section Ⅱ

Congress has obstructed efforts to create a more straightforward visa for agricultural workers that would let foreign workers stay longer in the U.S.

2019年考研真题(英语二)阅读理解 Section Ⅱ

first two hours, now three hours一this is how far in advance authorities are recommending people show up to catch a domestic flight, at least at some major U.S. airports with increasingly massive security lines.

2017年考研真题(英语一)阅读理解 Section Ⅱ

Hagel says we have designed jobs in the U.S. that tend to be "tightly scripted" and "highly standardized" ones that leave no room for "individual initiative or creativity".

2014年考研真题(英语二)阅读理解 Section Ⅱ

In the U.S., it has infected more than one million people, and caused more than 600 deaths and more than 6,000 hospitalizations.

2010年考研真题(英语二)完形填空 Section Ⅰ

It's not popular to say, but one reason their pay has gone up so much is that CEOs really have upped their game relative to many other workers in the U.S.

2020年考研真题(英语二)阅读理解 Section Ⅱ

One oft-debated cure for this labor shortage remains as implausible as it's been all along: Native U.S.

2019年考研真题(英语二)阅读理解 Section Ⅱ

So they compared U.S. cities' average happiness measured by Gallup Polling with the investment activity of publicly traded firms in those areas.

2016年考研真题(英语二)完形填空 Section Ⅰ

Yet the research revealed that the U.S. factories of Honda Nissan, and Toyota achieved about 95 percent of the productivity of their Japanese counterparts a result of the training that U.S. workers received on the job.

2009年考研真题(英语一)阅读理解 Section Ⅱ