Flow It疯狂关卡第32消消乐48关怎么过过

《疯狂填字3》关卡攻略:1—98关答案全攻略(36)
来源:当乐网
[提要]《疯狂填字3》关卡攻略。
  第四十九关:
  横1:皮尔斯布鲁斯南主演的一部007电影 黑日危机
  横2:1876年诞生与美国的世界知名啤酒品牌 百威
  横3:古语&秀才不出门&的下句 全知天下事
  横4:著名阿拉伯民间传说 阿拉丁神灯
  横5:主持《星光大道》等节目的央视名嘴 毕福剑
  横6:古希腊主管幸运与繁荣的守护女神 堤喀
  横7:位于台湾与日本之间的群岛 琉球
  横8:曹操诗句&人生几何?&的上句 对酒当歌
  横9:希腊神话中的主神 宙斯
  横10:中医对急性脑血管疾病的统称 中风
  横11:成语,比喻改革制度或变更计划、方法 改弦更张
  横12:成语,形容来者很多,络绎不绝 接踵而至
  横13:杜甫诗句&落花时节又逢君&的上句 正是江南好风景
  纵1:《加勒比海盗》中一艘海盗船的名字 黑珍珠
  纵2:一种用电安全措施 接地
  纵3:代指强大的英雄也有致命的死穴或软肋 阿喀琉斯之踵
  纵4:北美洲国家,玛雅文化发源地之一 危地马拉
  纵5:刘德华在《新上海滩》中饰演的角色 丁力
  纵6:原中正纪念堂的著名牌匾 大中至正
  纵7:2012年被取缔宣扬世界末日的邪教组织 全能神
  纵8:成语,形容夜饮聚会的情景 灯红酒绿
  纵9:上海IT苦逼男聚集地 张江
  纵10:2013假释出狱的著名男歌手 臧天朔
  纵11:田汉、聂耳词曲的电影《桃花劫》插曲 毕业歌
  纵12:世界领先的饮料和休闲食品公司 百事
  纵13:我国古代的一种夜间报时制度 打更
  纵14:成语,形容争辩激烈,言辞锋利 舌剑唇枪
  纵15:著有《伤寒杂病论》的医圣 张仲景
  第五十关:
  横1:老板亲自代言的国内知名团购网站 聚美优品
  横2:李商隐诗句&心有灵犀一点通&的上句 身无彩凤双飞翼
  横3:成语,夫妻或亲朋之间情义完全断绝 恩断义绝
  横4:2012年童星林妙可参演的恐怖片 守株人
  横5:1988年我军恢复军衔制后的最高级别 上将
  横6:成语,谦指自己掌握了微小的技能 薄技在身
  横7:2006年莫文蔚的同名专辑主打歌 如果没有你
  横8:凤凰卫视中文台的当家节目之一 有报天天读
  横9:信徒施给寺庙的赞助费用 香金
  横10:2002年TWINS一首经典广告歌曲 风筝与风
  横11:成语,原指消息不是完全没有原因的 空穴来风
  横12:成语,形容人才出众 百里挑一
  横13:布莱登弗莱瑟的经典系列奇幻动作片 神鬼传奇
  横14:《一起来看流星雨》中楚雨荨的饰演者 郑爽
  纵1:水浒中梁山的大会议室,后改名忠义堂 聚义厅
  纵2:指对社会风俗、教育有不好影响的言行 有伤风化
  纵3:意同&以怨报德&、&忘恩负义& 恩将仇报
  纵4:成语,指做事犹豫,缺乏决断 优柔寡断
  纵5:2009年汤姆汉克斯主演的惊悚悬疑片 天使与魔鬼
  纵6:成语,形容某个人非常有情有义 义薄云天
  纵7:有着平常人所没有的能力、技艺 身怀绝技
  纵8:源自日本的一种饼干类小食品 百奇
  纵9:我国连接俄蒙的最大陆路口岸 满洲里
  纵10:成语,现指保持处子之身 守身如玉
  纵11:《雷雨》中周家的丫鬟 四凤
  纵12:成语,形容极端骄傲自大 目空一切
  纵13:以美军阻击手为题材的系列战争片 双狙人
  纵14:王安石诗句&遥知不是雪&的下句 为有暗香来
  纵15:1982年哈里森福特主演的经典科幻片 银翼杀手
  纵16:成语,形容秋日天空明净,气候凉爽 金风送爽
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> 疯狂歇后语第二波32关卡秀才遇到兵答案
疯狂歇后语第二波32关卡秀才遇到兵答案
  中国的古老传统文化博大精深。我们有论语。歇后语。成语。论语。三字经。等等各种有趣和内涵的表达方式。身为一个中国人。你对中国的传统文化到底了解多少呢。下面小编和大家一起在游戏中来学习中国传统文化之歇后语把。我们在本关所听到的前半句是:秀才遇到兵。
《疯狂歇后语》第一波1-40关答案
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  更多疯狂歇后语攻略答案请转移:
  答案是:有理讲不清
  如果真的是遇上了当兵的,就不必去和他们说理,因为当兵的人只是执行上级的命令或者指示来阻拦和打挠,采取当时顺从或者闪开,然后找当兵的上司或者上司的上司讲理。
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疯狂英语:VIPOF2001(1)
  Elaine chao - the most powerful chinese-american woman in the us
  My parents are wonderfully inspiring people and when I think about how we came to America, I think about their courage and their determination. And so I have great admiration for my parents and for what they've sacrificed for our family. Throughout my career I have had tremendous guidance and counsel from my parents. And they've always reminded me and my sisters of our ethnic heritage and that we should take great pride in our ethnic heritage and that we must never forget where we are from and what our values are. And I have found that to be of tremendous value and of great comfort to me. I feel as if I'm very blessed to understand two worlds. And if I can play a constructive role in helping Americans, white Americans understand the rest of the, the rest of Asian America, and also understand overseas, I think that's, a wonderful thing that a person can do. And 1)conversely when I go backto Asia and I'm able to visit with different people, I'm able to, I hope share with them a viewpoint about America. That's also revealing. I think our world is getting smaller and we need to have much greater understanding of one another.
  I've never really planned my career. I've always just wanted to number one bring honor to my parents and to bring honor to my family and to contribute to my community. So I've never had a grand plan but I've always wanted to do something worthwhile and to help other people and if I can do that, then I feel very satisfied.
  Hillary clinton:new kid on the block
  Yale Student: We've got one of our own Yale Senators right here with us on stage.
  Only the warmest of welcomes from Yale's graduating class, its 300th. Her address combined humor……
  Hillary Clinton: In all the years since I have been at Yale, the most important thing that I have to say today is that hair matters.
  ……politics and 2)reminiscences from her years as a Yale University law student. But her main theme, a 3)plea for students not to 4)turn away from the political process.
  Hillary Clinton: Bring your values and experiences and insights into politics. Dare to help make, not just a difference in politics, but create a different politics.
  Hillary Clinton: President Bush's extremely large tax plan would spend trillions we don't have and may never have. If we reverse the engines of economic growth by adopting President Bush's tax proposal, I fear that we will reverse the progress we've made by increasing interest rates now and by 5)saddling our children with big debts in the future. I know and respect that President Bush supports faith-based programs but his tax plan should not be one of them. Going forward with a huge tax proposal now is like getting a letter from 6)Ed McMan and going out to buy a 7)yacht. A surplus projection is not a promise. And if the past is any guide, it's not even a likely outcome.
  Hillary Clinton(At National Press Club): This is a very creative, imaginative group. No, I have said that I am not running. And I am having a great time being pres……of being a first-term, being a first-term Senator. You are going to get me into so much trouble.
  Putin-a strong hand
  There was none of the usual 11)fanfare accompanying a presidential entrance. The simple, informal handshakes of the three journalists to send the message to the thousands watching online that this Russian leader is relaxed and accessible and not afraid of the world's questions.
  Over 15,000 Internet users had emailed in advance. Thousands more queries came in during the live webcast. Mr. Putin dealt with everything fluently, but 12)gave little ground politically. Onequestion from Denmark challenged his policy over Chechnya.
  Putin(Interpreter's Voice): I want to thank your correspondent for that question because it reflects perfectly the West's complete lack of understanding of what's going on in the 13)Caucasus and in Chechnya in particular. The Russian army and the Russian people've never waged any 14)campaign against the Chechnyan people.
  But it was the personal answers that were most revealing, his passion for sport and his obsession with Russian history. Even the book he is currently reading is about Russia's imperial past. And from behind the 15)steely 16)gaze, there emerged a surprisingly 17)meek husband.
  Putin(Interpreter's Voice): I can't tell my wife what to do. Our relations are such that if I do, I usually find it backfires. She behaves as she sees fit.
  Not so long ago a live webcast like this from the heart of the Kremlin would have been unthinkable. But that's precisely why Mr. Putin wanted to do it, to counter fears that he might be trying to return Russian to the past and to prove he's a thoroughly modern president.
  Milosevic:still making history
  This is the first time a former head of state is being brought to trial and brought to justice under an international tribunal, the first time ever. And the former Yugoslavian Serbian president Slobodan Milosevic behaved, well, like a head of state. He 18)thumbed his nose at the tribunal. He said that he did not recognize its jurisdiction. He said that this was a politically motivated trial and he generally defied the entire proceedings here. The point of today's first appearance since his transfer here to the Hague on Thursday night was to have the charges read out against him, to ask him whether he understood the charges and to allow him to enter his plea.
  Milosevic, we have been told by his lawyers last night, would refuse to be defended, would have no 20)defense counsel with him and would want to make a statement having said that he decided and he declared that his transfer here was unconstitutional and illegal and he would not cooperate with this tribunal proceeding. Well, the first question the presiding judge asked was whether he wanted to reconsider the fact that he had no defense counsel.
  Milosevic: I consider this tribunal forced tribunal and 21)indictments forced indictments. It is illegal being not appointed by 22)UN General Assembly so I have no need to appoint counsel to illegal order.
  The next question of course was, “Do you want the indictment read out against you or do you 23)waive that right?” Milosevic at that point said, “That's your problem” and to that there was a general 24)titter of amusement and 25)chuckles in the gallery because those who have been following Milosevic for the last ten to 13 years know that this performance was 26)vintage Milosovic. His jaw was 27)jutting out, heseemed to be playing to the gallery back at home. He kept looking at the public gallery basically right into the court-appointed cameras there and he kept trying to say that this was a politically motivated proceeding. He said the justification for this proceeding was to hide what he called, “war crimes that NATO committed against Yugoslavia.”
  The presiding judge kept trying to move the proceedings along cutting him off when the speeches tended to go on and he said, “We now take your answers to say that you have waived your right. You never entered a plea, the court then under its rule entered a plea of not guilty” on Milosevic's behalf and the four counts of crimes against humanity and the violation of laws and customs of war with which he is accused.
  After that Milosevic again tried to make a 28)closing statement, the closingspeech. He was again cut off and at that point rather dramatically, the court guards lowered the curtains that separate the public gallery the press and others who were watching from the courtroom proceedings. He was surrounded by several 29)burly UN guards and he was escorted out of the courtroom and back to his detention 30)cell in the prison.
  Bush and cheney:a yale graduate and a yale dropout
  (Bush speaking at Yale University)
  Bush: As I recall, one of my academic advisers was worried about my selection of 33)such a specialized course. He said I should focuson English. I still hear that quite often. But my critics don't realize I don't make verbal 34)gaffes. I'm speaking in the perfect forms and rhythms of ancient 35)Haiku. I want the entire world to know this: everything I know about the spoken word, I learned right here at Yale.
  In private and increasingly in public, U.S. allies are impatient and angry over George Bush's tendency to walk away from one international treaty after another.
  Bush: Make no mistake about it, I think it's important to move beyond the ABM treaty.
  Already Bush has pulled the U.S. out of the Kyoto agreement on global warming. He said he's ready to scrap theAnti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, a cornerstone of arms control, opposed a treaty setting up an international criminal court and weakened a UN agreement to stop the flow of small arms to conflict zones.
  Lee Hamilton: I think the Unites States more and more now is being seen as the 38)bully on the block……
  Hamilton, formerly a leading voice on foreign affairs in the US Congress, says Bush is only hurting the US by pursuing 39)go-it-alone policies.
  On 40)Wednesday at a conference in Geneva, the U.S. undermined another international agreement. This one spearheaded by Canada to enforce a treaty banning biological weapons.
  Critics say in the long run the U.S. will pay a price for taking a “my way or the highway” kind of approach to foreign and defense policy. They say that as a superpower with interests all around the world, the U.S. has as much to gain as any country from a global system based on international law and cooperation.
  Most important, congratulations to the class of 2001. To those of you who received honors, awards, and distinctions, I say, well done. And to the C students, I say, you, too can be President of the United States. A Yale degree is worth a lot, as I often remind Dick Cheney, who studied here, but left a little early. So now we know, if you graduate from Yale, you become President. If you drop out, you get to be Vice President.
  Well, the U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney is back in hospital in Washington after complaining of new chest pains. Medical staff at the hospital say he's suffering from a partly 42)blocked 43)artery but he didn't have a heart attack. Mr. Cheney suffered a mild heart attack last November and in 1988 he had 44)quadruple 45)bypass surgery to clear 46)clogged arteries.
  The vice president spent the night in hospital after doctors performed an urgent procedure on Monday to clear a partly blocked artery.
  Dr.Jonathan Reiner (47)Cardiologist at George Washington Hospital): The question is how serious are his heart problems? You know the vice president has had 48)coronary disease for several decades now. You know certainly for about 25 years. So he has 49)chronic, chronic coronary artery disease. This is you know what affects millions of people in this country.
  Dick Cheney is one of the most influential and best-connected men in Washington, a driven workaholic, successful businessman, a very successful politician. But his health poses problems. He suffered his fourth heart attack less than a 50)fortnight after being elected vice-president. President Bush 51)deflected questions about Mr. Cheney's latest trip to hospital.
  Bush: ……precautionary measures……
  Dick Cheney is the 52)linchpin of the Bush administration. And the doctors say there's a 40% chance of his heart problems recurring within six months.
  Vice President Dick Cheney returns to work today. He's a tough guy. He's got a new heart device, a 53)defibrillator, which is designed to correct an irregular heartbeat. The implantable 54)cardioverter defibrillator is set to correct a rapid heartbeat and also if necessary to administer an electrical impulses to return the heartbeat to normal. He has a long history, Mr. Cheney does, of coronary disease. He suffered four heart attacks since 1978. He went to the hospital there on Saturday had this done and he's going to report to work here this morning and a lot of us are hoping Mr. Cheney's health remains OK.
  Chirac: tough times ahead
  The French President Jacques Chirac is facing, will face, one of the toughest tests of his political career. In a televised interview on 55)Bastille Day, he will defend himself against an investigation into his personal finances that has shocked the French country.
  The net is closing on the Chirac family with news that Claude Chirac, the president's daughter and media advisor, has been questioned by magistrates over some $400,000 spent on holidays in hard cash over a three-year period when Jacques Chirac was mayor of Paris.
  Judges want to know where this vast mountain of cash came from and they're likely to question the president's wife Bernadette and they're making moves to go after the president himself even though he's head of state and has legal immunity. The question is will he agree to face questioning? Public opinion has shifted dramatically. A poll this week found that some two thirds of French citizens want their president to answer the judges' questions.
  Now Jacques Chirac says that much of this cash came from the special or secret fund which he had access to when he was a minister. The trouble is he left the government some four years earlier. And so the French people are being asked to believe that every night for around four years Jacques Chirac would go to bed with some 200,000 pounds stashed under his mattress. The other problem is: do people really think that the special funds were designed so that ex-ministers and their 56)coterie could travel the world in luxury?
  It's hard to overstate the significance of the 57)tussle now going on between president and his would-be inquisitors. Tomorrow Paris celebrates Bastille Day, a day when France's armed forces parade through the capital. This year Jacques Chirac as never before seems to be in need of their protection.
  Happy events
  Cuban President Fidel Castro marking his 75th birthday in Venezuela with a party hosted by his friend and singing partner President Hugo Chavez. Mr. Castro was toasted with champagne and cake at a celebration that went on for some hours. Venezuela is a 58)staunch supporter of Cuba. Back in Havana, Cubans celebrated Mr. Castro's birthday without him or cake or songs. They had some marching though.
  In Johannesburg a double celebration for Nelson Mandela.
  “Happy Birthday Mr. Mandela, may your dreams all come true, may your face see the sunshine, happy birthday to you……”
  Schoolchildren helped surprise the former South African president who turned 83 years old on Wednesday. The day also marks Mandela's third wedding anniversary.
  1) conversely ad. 反过来,相反地  2) reminiscence n. 回忆,怀旧  3) plea n. 请求  4) turn away 避开  5) saddle v. 使负重担,强加  6) Ed McMan 埃德?麦克曼恩。在美国有一家专门赌博公司Publishers Clearing House,这家公司会给大批人寄信,声称收信人已经被选中,将会赢得大奖。 其实这是一家已收订杂志为主要业务的企业,收信人只有订阅杂志才会有中奖的机会,而中奖的机会只是几百万分之一、甚至几千万分之一,中大奖的机会更是微乎其微。而埃德?麦克曼恩一直以来都是这家公司的形象代言人,很多信都以他的名义发出。希拉里在这里用他的名字是说收到他的信并不代表中奖,是很不可靠的。  7) yacht n. 游艇  8) Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty《反弹道导弹条约》。简称ABM,是前苏联和美国于1972年签署的一项双边条约。按照该条约的规定,美国不能发展和部署导弹防御系统。  9) arsenal n. 军火库  10) sanction n. 制裁  11) fanfare n. 响亮的喇叭声;夸耀  12) give ground 退让,让步  13) Caucasus n. 高加索。俄罗斯西南部一个地区,位于黑海、亚速海同里海之间,车臣就是在这一地区内。  14) campaign n. 战役,战争  15) steely a. 钢铁般的  16] gaze [geiz] n. 凝视,端详  17) meek a. 温顺的,亲切的  18) the tribunal 即United Nations War Crimes Tribunal,联合国战犯法庭,也就是联合国前南战犯法庭,又称“海牙国际战犯法庭”。1993年,联合国安理会决定建立一个国际法庭,主要审判前南斯拉夫境内克罗地亚和波斯尼亚的战争罪犯。法庭设在荷兰的海牙。  19) thumb one's nose at 对……表示蔑视  20) defense counsel 辩护律师  21) indictment n. 起诉,控告 22) UN General Assembly 联合国安理会  23) waive v. 放弃,不坚持  24) titter n. 窃笑  25)chuckle n. 咯咯地笑 26) vintage n. 特点  27) jut out 向外伸,向外突出  28) closing statement 最终陈述。指在法庭上双方或其代表律师所作的最后陈述词。  29) burly a. 高大结实的,魁梧的  30) cell n. 单人牢房  31) grueling a. 使人精疲力竭的,折磨的  32) fumble v. 犯错,笨手笨脚  33) such a specialized course: 指下一句讲的俳句。  34) gaffe n. 失言  35) Haiku n. 俳句。一种无韵节的三行诗,每行五或七字,五个音节。  36) scrap v. 废弃  37) toss v. 抛  38) bully n. 恶霸,恃强凌弱 39) go it alone 独自干,独自干活  40) Wednesday 指7月25日。  41) alma mater 母校注释:  42) block v. 阻碍,堵塞  43) artery n. 主动脉  44) quadruple a. 四倍的,四重的 45) bypass surgery 心脏搭桥手术 46) clog v. 阻塞  47) cardiologist n. 心脏病专家 48) coronary artery disease 冠状动脉心脏病  49)chronic a. 慢性的 50) fortnight n. 两个星期  51) deflect v. 转移,引开  52)linchpin 关键人物 53) defibrillator n. 去纤颤器  54) cardioverter n. 心律转变器  55) Bastille Day 巴士底日。即7 月14日,法国国庆日,1789年法国大革命时在这一天攻克了当时作为国家监狱的巴士底狱,因此这一天被称为巴士底日。  56) coterie n. (由兴趣或背景情况相同的人形成、社交往来密切频繁的)小圈子  57) tussle n. 争议  58) staunch a. 忠实的,可靠的
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