题干

图1是小黄家一台快速电热水壶,铭牌如左下表.为了测量它烧水时的实际功率,小黄和父亲合作进行了如下实验:关掉家里所有用电器,将该电水壶装了0.5L、20℃的水,接入家庭电路中,闭合壶的开关,测得壶中的水从20℃上升到100℃所用的时间是7min.同时观察到家中电能表(见图2(b)转过的转数正好为175转(r).

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同类题2

根据短文内容,判断正误。

     "How are you?" is a nice question. It's a friendly way that people in the USA greet each other. But "How are you?" is also a very unusual question. It's a question that often doesn't need an answer. The person who asks "How are you?" hopes to hear the answer "Fine", even if the person's friend isn't fine. The reason is that "How are you?" isn't really a question and "Fine"

isn't really an answer. They are simply other ways of saying "Hello" or "Hi".

     Sometimes, people also don't say exactly what they mean. For example, when someone asks "Do you agree?", the other person might think, "No, I disagree. I think you're wrong..." But it isn't very polite to disagree so strongly, so the other person might say "I'm not sure." It's a nicer way to say that you don't agree with someone.

     People also don't say exactly what they are thinking when they finish talking with other people. For example, many talks over the phone finish when one person says "I have to go now." Often, the person who wants to hang up gives an excuse: "Someone is at the door." "Something is burning on the stove." The excuses might be real, or not. Perhaps the person who wants to hang up simply doesn't want to talk any more, but it isn't polite to say that. The excuse is more polite, and it doesn't hurt the other person.

     Whether they are greeting each other, talking about an idea, or finishing a talk, people don't say exactly what they are thinking. It's an important way that people try to be nice to each other, and it's part of the game of language.

根据短文内容,判断正(T)误(F)。