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A. From English into Chinese: CIP

A. From English into Chinese:

CIP

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更多“A. From English into Chinese: …”相关的问题
第1题
The language spoken in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland, howe
ver, remains English, and not British, though we do sometimes say British English to distinguish it ________ American English.

A. between

B. with

C. from

D. against

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第2题
The core lexicon of basic English is ().A. made up of French wordsB. from Latin and Gr

The core lexicon of basic English is ().

A. made up of French words

B. from Latin and Greek

C. derived from Celtic

D. of Germanic origin

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第3题
—I’m from the Physics Department. Are you from the EnglishDepartment?— _________
—I’m from the Physics Department. Are you from the EnglishDepartment?— _________

A. Yes, I’m English

B. Yes, I’m British

C. No, I’m a computer major

D. No, I don’t come from England

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第4题
2015年12月英语四级考试卷一听力题第10题答案

What made English a widely used language?

A. It has words from many languages.

B. Its popularity with the common people.

C. The influence of the British Empire.

D. The effect of the Industrial Revolution.

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第5题
Many words from Chinese and English are different in both the denotational meanings and connotational meanings. Which of the following is an example for this?()

A.龙/dragon

B.猫头鹰/owl

C.狐狸/fox

D.猪/pig

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第6题
English Language DevelopmentOld English, until 1066Immigrants from Denmark and NW Germany

English Language Development

Old English, until 1066

Immigrants from Denmark and NW Germany arrived in Britain in the 5th and 6th Century A. D., speaking in related dialects belonging to the Germanic and Teutonic branches of the Indo-European language family. Today, English is most closely related to Flemish, Dutch, and German, and is somewhat related to Icelandic, Norwegian, Danish, and Swedish. Icelandic, unchanged for 1,000 years, is very close to Old English. Viking(北欧海盗) invasions, begun in the 8th Century, gave English a Norwegian and Danish influence which lasted until the Norman Conquest(诺曼底人的军事征服) of 1066.

Old EnglishWords—The Angles came from an angle-shaped land area in contemporary Germany. Their name "Angli" from the Latin and commonly-spoken, pre - 5th Century German mutated into the Old English "Engle". Later, "Engle" changed to "Angel-cyn" meaning "Angle-race" , by A.D. 1000, changing to "Engla-land". Some Old English words which have survived intact include: feet, geese, teeth, men, women, lice, and mice. The modern word "like" can be a noun, adjective, verb, and preposition. In Old English, though, the word was different for each type: gelica as a noun, geic as an adjective, lician as a verb, and gelice as a preposition.

Middle English, from 1066 until the 15th Century

The Norman Invasion and Conquest of Britain in 1066 and the resulting French Court of William the Conqueror gave the Norwegian-Dutch influenced English a Norman-Parisian-French effect. From 1066 until about 1400, Latin, French, and English were spoken. English almost disappeared entirely into obscurity during this period by the French and Latin dominated court and government. However, in 1362, the Parliament opened with English as the language of choice, and the language was saved from extinction. Present-day English is approximately 50% Germanic (English and Scandinavian) and 50% Romance (French and Latin).

Middle EnglishWords -- Many new words added to Middle English during this period came from Norman French, Parisian French, and Scandinavian. Norman French words imported into Middle English include: catch, wage, warden, reward, and warrant. Parisian French gave Middle English: chase, guarantee, regard, guardian, and gage. Scandinavian gave to Middle English the important word of law. English nobility 'had titles which were derived from both Middle English and French. French provided: prince, duke, peer, marquis, viscount, and baron. Middle English independently developed king, queen, lord, lady, and earl. Govermnental administrative divisions from French include county, city, village, justice, palace, mansion, and residence. Middle English words include town, home, house, and hall.

Early Modern En$11sh, from the 15th Century to the 17th Century

During this period, English became more organized and began to resemble the modem version of English. Although the word order and sentence construction was still slightly different, Early Modem English was at least recognizable to the Early Modem English speaker. For example, the Old English "To us pleases sailing" became "We like sailing." Classical elements, from Greek and latin, profoundly influenced work creation and origin. From Greek, Early Modem English received grammar, logic, arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, and music. Also, the "tele -" prefix meaning "far" later used to develop telephone and television was taken.

Modem English, from the 17th Century to Modern Times

Modem English developed through the efforts of literary and political writings, where literacy was uniformly found. Modem English was heavily influenced by classical usage, the emergence of the university- educated class, Shakespeare, the common language found in the East Midlands section of present-day England, and an organized effort to document and standardize English. Current inflections h

A.Y

B.N

C.NG

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第7题

The young man () teaches us English is from America.

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第8题
FROM ENGLISH INTO CHINESE:(5%) 1.PNTR

FROM ENGLISH INTO CHINESE:(5%)

1.PNTR

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第9题
From Chinese into English (5%) (1)世界银行

From Chinese into English (5%)

(1)世界银行

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第10题
Translate the following sentences from English into Chinese.

Translate the following sentences from English int

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