µ±Ç°Î»ÖãºÓ¢ÓïÏÂÔØ >> ×Ô¿¼Ó¢Óï >>È«¹ú¸ßµÈ½ÌÓý×Ôѧ¿¼ÊÔÓ¢ÓïÁ·Ï°Ìâ13
È«¹ú¸ßµÈ½ÌÓý×Ôѧ¿¼ÊÔÓ¢ÓïÁ·Ï°Ìâ13

×ÊÁÏ´óС£º18K
×ÊÁÏÀàÐÍ£º×Ô¿¼Ó¢Óï
ÍÆ¼öÐǼ¶£º
¸üÐÂʱ¼ä£º2010-05-29
±¨¸æ´íÎ󣺵ã´Ë±¨¸æ´íÎó
±êÇ©Çé¿ö£º ×Ô¿¼    Á·Ï°Ìâ   
±êÇ©½âÊÍ£º ×Ô¿¼    Á·Ï°Ìâ   

ÏÂÔØÍ³¼Æ£º62
Ìí¼ÓÖÁä¯ÀÀÆ÷ÊղؼР½øÈëÂÛ̳
¸ü¶àÌýÁ¦Çëµã»÷£º×Ô¿¼ Á·Ï°Ìâ

¼ò½é   

Passage 1
When most people think of Melvil Dewey, they think of the classification system for cataloguing and arranging the books and pamphlets inn libraries that he devised in the second half of the nineteenth century. This system classifies books and other publications into ten major categories, each category being further subdivided by number.

ÏÂÔØµØÖ·














 

ÏÂÔØËµÃ÷

È«¹ú¸ßµÈ½ÌÓý×Ôѧ¿¼ÊÔÓ¢ÓïÁ·Ï°Ìâ13ÒÑͨ¹ý±¾Õ¾²âÊÔ£¬²âÊÔ½á¹ûÇë²Î¿´ËµÃ÷¼°½ØÍ¼¡£
ΪÁË´ïµ½×î¿ìµÄÏÂÔØËÙ¶È£¬ÍƼöʹÓÃÍø¼Ê¿ì³µÏÂÔØ±¾Õ¾Èí¼þ¡£
ÇëÒ»¶¨Éý¼¶µ½×îаæWinRAR²ÅÄÜÕý³£½âѹ±¾Õ¾ÌṩµÄÈí¼þ!
È«¹ú¸ßµÈ½ÌÓý×Ôѧ¿¼ÊÔÓ¢ÓïÁ·Ï°Ìâ13ÊÇÓÉÍøÉÏËѼ¯£¬ÈôÇÖ·¸ÁËÄãµÄ°æÈ¨ÀûÒæ£¬¾´ÇëÀ´ÐÅ֪ͨÎÒÃÇ!

ÏÂÔØÆÀÂÛ

×Öĸ¼ìË÷ A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z »Øµ½¶¥²¿