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把下面的分数都化成分子是1而大小不变的分数.
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同类题2

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有那样一个下午
       不知为什么,这些天来,我常常想起那样的一个下午。
       那是一个夏日的午后,母亲要去给玉米喷药,喊我去,我不情愿地说:“我又不会喷药,让我去干什么?再说我还要看书呢!”
       “不是让你喷药。因为喷壶太沉,我背不上肩,让你去帮我往肩上送送喷壶。”母亲小心地说,“你可以带书去,坐在井边的树阴下看书。”
       我满脸不高兴,又实在想不出搪塞的理由,只好去了。
       没有一丝风,天热得正狠,玉米长得还不及膝,一脚便可以踩折一棵,所以走在田间需要分外小心。我帮母亲背上喷壶后,便坐在树阴下,毫无意识地看着她缓缓地在玉米的隙地间移动。
       喷药是玉米生长期间必须的一道劳动工序,就是用定量的药兑上定量的水装在喷壶里,然后左手操作压杠、右手挥动喷嘴,均匀而细致地为每一棵玉米镀上一层“保护衣”。喷壶灌满至少要三四十斤重,每次回来,母亲的背都是湿透透的,不知道是汗水还是药水。
       “下次不要背那么多了!”我说。
       “傻丫头,好不容易来回跑一趟,太少了不值得。”母亲说。
       “我也试试吧。”我的语气明显缺乏诚意——我实在畏惧喷壶这种充满了怪味的重物,可是我已经18岁了,目睹母亲的劳累而无动于衷,我又感到愧疚。
       “不用了。你不会。再说我已经沾了手,就别染上你了。”母亲说,“你看你的书吧。”
       我在心底暗暗长嘘了一口气,居然觉得如释重负。
       最后一壶药喷完的时候,已经夕阳西下了。
       “怎么样?热不热?”母亲边洗手边问。
       “还好,就是井边的蚊子太多了。”我很随意地说。
       “咬出疙瘩了吗?回家赶紧用清凉油抹抹。”母亲说。
       我们就这样有一句没一句地聊着闲话回了家。回家后的情形我已经记得不太清楚了,只知道母亲吃过饭后就一直躺在竹椅上,一睡一整夜,而我“搂”着电视机一直看到“再见”
       一晃多年过去了,母亲患脑溢血去世也已多年。冥冥之中,我一直清晰地记着这件我们母女生活中最平凡最微不足道的小事。
       其实,这不是一件小事。
       大千世界,父母对儿女的溺爱有各种各样的方式:富贵人家让儿女一掷千金,小康门户让儿女精吃细咽,而我母亲,一个拙辞讷言的农妇,一位年过半百的人母,对我最常见的溺爱就是那个盛夏午后田边井旁的清凉绿阴。
       18岁的我,身体懒惰,心灵肤浅,矫情地谦让之后便是坦然地享受。然而,即使是矫情地谦让,也让母亲感到满足,而我坦然地享受,更使她觉得安慰。
       天底下还有哪一种爱,和母亲的爱是一样的呢?
       “世上只有妈妈好,有妈的孩子像块宝,投进妈妈的怀抱,幸福享不了……”一向喜好咬文嚼字的我,曾经在多种场合对这首歌里“享不了”三个字的用法提出质疑,认为用得实在不规范,意思实在也是表达不到位。
       “怎么不到位?享不了就是享受不完的意思嘛!”一次,一位朋友对我反驳道。
       我怔住了,为自己的迂和愚感到无地自容。如此明白的话,我居然一直愚钝不解,就像那个下午,我坐在树下读一本早已忘记了名字的闲书,而母亲,却背着沉重的喷壶一步一步缓缓地走在玉米的缝隙中,竟然问我“热不热”!
       我眼泪涌了出来。我明白:对我的爱,母亲是一条奔腾不息的大河;对母亲的爱,我则是一条喧嚣浮躁的小溪,永远永远只能是她的支流。

同类题3

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    In 1863, the great novelist Jules Verne wrote a novel called Paris in the Twentieth Century. In the book he used the full power of his great ability to forecast the coming century. Unfortunately, the manuscript (手稿) was lost until his great-grandson happened to discover it lying in a safe where it had been carefully locked away for almost 130 years. Realizing what a treasure he had found, he arranged to have it published in 1994, and it became a bestseller at once.

    Back in 1863, kings still ruled the ancient world in Europe, with so many poor people working in the fields. And steam power was just beginning to change the world. But Verne predicted that Paris in 1960 would have glass skyscrapers, air conditioning, TV, high-speed trains, gas-powered vehicles, and even something similar to the Internet. Verne described life in modem Paris almost without any mistakes.

    Just two years later Verne made another amazing prediction. He wrote From the Earth to the Moon, in which he predicted the details of the task that sent several astronauts to the moon 100 years later in 1969. He correctly predicted the size of the space capsule, the number of astronauts who would carry out the task, the weightlessness that the astronauts would experience, and the final landing in the ocean.

    How was Jules Verne able to predict 100 years into the future successfully? Although he was not a scientist himself, Verne often turned to scientists, asking them questions about their opinions of the future. He collected a vast amount of information about the great scientific discoveries of his time. Verne realized that science would make it possible for many amazing things to appear in the future. The secret of his successful prediction was his belief in the power of science to change society.