单选题Whyisthemannervous?
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单选题There ______ in the world ______ China is a great country.
A.are no doubt; that
B.are not doubts; if
C.is no doubt; that
D.is not doubt; if
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单选题Whatdoesthewomando?
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单选题What did the man do last weekend?
单选题______ Simon ______ Jack know what has happened. [A] Both... and... [B] Either... and... [C] Either... or...
单选题I often find myself asking my grandmother to tell me stories of people's life that occurred around the start of the Renaissance(文艺复兴). She says she looks forward to the times I show my inquisitive(刨根问底的) personality by asking her all about our family's past when they lived over in Europe, years and years ago. I must do all my responsibilities around the house, which also includes getting my homework done each evening in order for my fun times with my grandmother to always ensue. One particular evening, I remembered doing everything my morn had told me that day to do. This was mainly because grandmother had previously promised this would be the day she would tell me all about the obsequious(谄媚的) and sectarian(宗派的) groups of people who lived back then. As soon as I finished all my responsibilities, I rushed over to her house which was next door to my house. However, as I was running over there as fast as I could, my shoes lost traction which made me fall because the yard was icy from the chilly weather we had the night before. When I got inside of grandmother's house, she quickly noticed the hurt look on my face and began to ask me as to why my body was all bruised. Even though I didn't want to tell her exactly what I had carelessly done on my way over to see her, I did anyway. I didn't want to tell her originally because I knew that she would then try to make me go home without telling me a story, which in my childlike mind was a terrible thing to happen. Go home without hearing a story — no way! I had worked so hard all day long in order to have this reward and nothing, not even my banged up knees and bruised elbows, would keep me from this special time with my grandmother. I told her that I did not have an intractable disease or anything, and those little bruises were things that could be taken care of after our story-time was over. Seeing that I would not give up until I heard a story, my grandmother chuckled as she said, "I had a feeling your intrinsic nature would not give up easily until you got your way." So finally, I got to hear the wonderful story of the experiences that my family dealt with, back in the days when my grandparents lived over in Europe. I can truly say that the story was well worth it, too!
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单选题The new technology has made the mobile more flexible, ______ with the old version. A. compared B. comparing C. compares D. to compare
单选题Jack received a letter this morning ______ that he got the job.[A] telling[B] speaking[C] talking[D] saying
单选题HowfarisDamsonCityfromEdmonton?A.About200km.B.About2,000km.C.About350km.
单选题What do they do for a living now?
单选题Accordingtothepassage,whatisitthatalmosteveryonedoesonSunday?
单选题When a person is
1
about something, it means he is interested in it and wishes to know more about it. There is nothing wrong with curiosity in
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.
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it is good or bad depends on what people are curious about.
Curiosity is sometimes silly or
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. Some people with nothing to do are always
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curiosity about what their neighbors are doing. They are eager
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what they are eating or drinking, what they are bringing home or taking out or
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they have come home so early or late.
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in these things is silly because they are not at all important. It is
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of their business to know what neighbors do or are doing. Such curiosity is something not only foolish but also
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. For most probably, it leads to small talk which often brings harm, shame or disrespect to others, and thus
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their feelings.
On the other
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, there is a noble curiosity—the curiosity of the wise, who wonder at all the great things and try to
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all they can about them. Columbus
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America if he had not been
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. James Watt would not have made the steam engine without his curiosity
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the raising of the kettle lid. All the great
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and inventions in human history have been made
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a result of curiosity. But the curiosity is never about
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things, which have something or nothing
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the happiness of public.
单选题He told us to use our dictionaries to _______any words we didn’t understand.
单选题I first met Mary three years ago when we ______ in a middle school together. A.have worked B.had been working C.were working D.had worked
单选题Maybe 10 years old Elizabeth put it best when she said to her father, "But, Dad, you can't be healthy if you are dead." Dad, in a hurry to get home before dark so he could go for a run, had forgotten to wear his safety belt--a mistake 75% of the US population make every day. The big question is why. There have been many myths about safety belts since their first appearance in cars some forty years ago. The following are three of the most common. Myth Number One: It's best to be "thrown clear" of a serious accident. Truth: Sorry, but any accident serious enough to "throw you clear" is also going to be serious enough to give you a very bad landing, and chances are you'll have travelled through a windshield or door to do it. Studies show that chances of dying after a car accident are twenty-five times greater in cases where people are "thrown clear". Myth Number Two: Safety belts "trap" people in cars that are burning or sinking in water. Truth: Sorry again, but studies show that people knocked unconscious for not wearing safety belts have a greater chance of dying in these accidents. People wearing safety belts are usually protected to the point of having a clear head to free themselves from such dangerous situations, not to be trapped in them. Myth Number Three: Safety belts aren't needed at a speed of less than 30 miles per hour (mph). Truth: When two cars travelling at 30 mph hit each other, an unbelted driver would meet the windshield with a force head first into the ground from a height of 10 meters.
单选题______ the window, my finger was cut unexpectedly.A. It B. As C. That D. What