百度试题 结果1 题目用that, which或who填空AIDS is a terrible disease has killed many people. 相关知识点: 试题来源: 解析 that/which 反馈 收藏
根据“Within months, it killed more people than any other illness in recorded history”可知,1918年的流行病的死亡人数超过了历史上任何其他疾病,故选D。 (4)题详解: 细节理解题。根据“Ancient Greek historian Thucydides suffered from the disease. Luckily, he got well. He said that birds and ...
But the real reason visitors flood here is for the chance to experience three of the city’s best museums: Victoria and Albert Museum, the National History Museum, and the Science Museum. All of them happen to be within walking distance from one another, so you won’t get wet. Today, i...
SARS is a terrible disease that/which killed many people. `a terrible disease’ refers to things.
most costly war in terms of human life was World War II (1939–45), in which the total number of fatalities, including battle deaths and civilians of all countries, is estimated to have been 56.4 million, assuming 26.6 million Soviet fatalities and 7.8 million Chinese civilians were killed.W...
What's worse, they may come across a vast range of troubles and difficulties in their daily life as a result of their old age and disease but refuse to inform their children who live far away and struggle to make a living. As childre...
5.Malaria (疟疾),the world's most widespread parasitic (寄生虫引起的) disease,kills as many as three million people every year-almost all of whom are under five,very poor,and African.In most years,more than five hundred million cases of illness result from the disease,a...
Measles(麻疹), which once killed 450 children each year and disabled even more, was nearly wiped out in the United States 14 years ago by the universal use of the MMR vaccine(疫苗). But the disease is making a comeback, caused by a growing anti-vaccine movement and misinformation that ...
The epidemic broke out in Spain in late spring of 1918, and in several months, it had killed more people than any other illness in the history. It caused about 50 million deaths in the world, far more than the deaths caused byWorld War I. The epidemic changed societies around the world...