单选题In the bus, Mrs. Smith ______.
单选题In the eyes of the Republicans, the donkey is considered as______.
单选题It was the training that he had as a young man ______ led to his success.
单选题The number of tigers in this area ______ said to be
单选题--The book isn't easy for Jack to understand, is it? -- ______. His foreign language is far better than expected.[A] No, it isn't[B] I'm afraid not[C] I don't think so[D] Yes, it is
单选题David didn't have ______ money left after his vacation; ______.
A.some; and so did she
B.no; and she did so
C.any; neither did she
D.any; she did either
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单选题-- $500, but that is my last offer. --OK, it is a ______. A. cost B. price C. deal D. reward
单选题The purpose of building the Travel Pavilion is to help tourists ______.
单选题Good-bye, Mr. Smith. I'm very pleased ______. A.to meet you B.to have met you C.meeting D.having met yon
单选题Whatarethetwospeakerstalkingabout?
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单选题John was a clever boy, but his parents were poor, and he had to work in his spare time and during his holidays to pay for his education. Despite this, he managed to go to university, but it was so expensive to study there that during the holiday, he found it necessary to do two jobs at the same time in order to earn enough money to pay for his studies.
One summer he managed to get a job in a butcher"s shop during the day time, and another in a hospital at night. In the shop he learned to cut meat up quite nicely, so the butcher often left him to do all the serving while he went into a room behind the shop to do the accounts. In the hospital, on the other hand, he was, of course, allowed to do only the simplest jobs, like lifting people and carrying them from one part of the hospital to another. Both at the butcher"s and at the hospital, John had to wear white clothes.
One evening at the hospital, John had to carry a woman from her bed to the place where she was to have an operation. The woman was already feeling frightened at the thought of the operation before he came to get her, but when she saw John, that frightened her.
"No! No!" She cried, "Not my butcher! I won"t be operated on by my butcher!" and fainted away.
单选题Tom Brennan was working in a Philadelphia office building when he noticed a black bag. The bag contained a book. This chance discovery ended a 12-day search by the Library Company of Philadelphia for a historical treasure, a 120-page diary kept 190 years ago by Deborah Logan, "a woman who knew everybody in her day," James Green, the librarian told the magazine American Libraries. Most of the diary is a record of big events in Philadelphia. It also includes a description of British soldiers burning Washington, D. C. in the war of 1812. She describes President James Madison on horseback as "perfectly shaking with fear" during the troubled days. George Washington, she writes, mistook her for the wife of a Freneh man, and praised her excellent English. The adventure of the lost book began September 4 when Cory Luxmoore arrived from England to deliver the diary of his ancestor (祖先) to the Library Company, which he and his wife considered to be the best home for the diary. Green told American Libraries he had the diary in his possession "about five minutes" when Luxmoore took it back because he had promised to show it to one other person. On returning to his hotel after showing the precious book to Green, Luxmoore was shocked to realize that he had left it in the taxi. Without any delay, Green began calling every taxi company in the city, with no luck. "I've felt sick since then," Luxmoore told reporters. According to Green, no one has yet learned how the diary came to the office building. Tom Brennan received a reward (奖励) of $1,000, Philadelphia gained another treasure for its history, and Luxmoore told reporters, "It's wonderful news. I'm on high./
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单选题Which unit is Bob learning?
单选题What is the aim of this diet program?
单选题He ______ yesterday.
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单选题She once said," When people ask me whether writing has been a hard or easy road I always answer with the famous saying: The end is nothing; the road is all. That is what I mean when I say writing has been a pleasure. I have never faced the type-writer with the thought that one more task had to be done." Like most writers, Willa Cather did not write books for the money that they brought her. but rather for the pleasure that came in their writing. Her works were, like her, simple and full of the vigor of her days in Nebraska, where she grew from childhood to young womanhood and where she developed a deep love for the treeless land of the great plains with its wild flowers, wheat fields and rivers. "It's a rather strange thing about the flat country," she wrote later. "It takes hold of you, or it leaves you perfectly cold. 'A great many people find it very dull: they like a church tower, an old factory, a waterfall, the country all made to look like a German Christmas card... But when I come to the open plains, something happens. I'm home. I breathe differently./