单选题Does Jim often go to school ______ his father's car?
单选题--Must I stay at home and take care of her ?--No, you ______.
单选题—It isn't my pen. Whose is it? —It's ______.
A. he
B. him
C. his
单选题I saw him ______ into your room when you were not in. A. go B. to go C. went
单选题The ______ talking to Mr. Wang is very kind.
单选题Jenny usually does not get up very early, ______ she?
单选题We decided to have the party in the garden ______ in the hall.
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单选题The long message on the answering machine may annoy people.
单选题When I came into the classroom, the teacher ______ something on the blackboard.
单选题There ______ two glasses of water on the table.
单选题在本节中,你将听到15个对话,每个对话有一个问题。请从[A]、[B]、[C]三个选项中选出答案,并标在试卷的相应位置。每段对话后有15秒钟的停顿,以便回答问题和阅读下一问题及其选项。每段对话读两遍。
下面,请听这些对话。
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单选题Mr. Johnson began to work the ______ he entered the room.
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单选题"Where is the university?" is a question many visitors to Cambridge ask, but no one can give them a clear answer for there is no wall to be found around the university. The university is the city. You can find classroom building, libraries, museums and offices of the university all over the city. And most of its members are the students and teachers or professors of the thirty-one colleges.
Cambridge was already a developing town long before the first students and teachers arrived about 800 years ago. It grew up by the river Granta, as the Cam was once called. A bridge was built over the river as early as 875.
In the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries more and more land was used for college buildings. The town grew much faster in the nineteenth century after the opening of the railway in 1845. Cambridge became a city in 1951 and now it has a population (人口) of over 100,000. Many young students want to study at Cambridge. Thousands of people from all over the world come to visit the university town. It has become a famous place all around the world.
单选题B If you do not use your arms or your legs for some time, they become weak; when you start using them again, they slowly become strong again. Everyone knows this, and nobody would think of questioning this fact. Yet there are many people who do not seem to know that memory (记忆) works in the same way. When someone says he has a good memory, he really means that he keeps his memory in practice by often exercising it. If a friend says that his arms and legs are weak, we know that it is his own fault (过错). But if he tells us that he has a poor memory, many of us think that his parents are to blame (责怪), and few of us think that it is as much his own fault as if it was his arms or legs that were weak. Have you ever noticed that people who cannot read and write usually have better memories than people who can? This is because those illiterate people have to remember things; they cannot write them down in a little notebook. They have to remember dates, prices, names, songs and stories; so their memory is being exercised all the time. So if you want a good memory, learn from those people: practise remembering.
