单选题Enid: Grand Buy Department Store is having its anniversary sale, so I'd take my son to go shopping tomorrow. How long will it take to go there by bus? Greta: ______ But why don't you use the subway? That'd be much faster.
单选题______ on the New World, he felt like crying. A. Land B. Landed C. To land D. Having landed
单选题Photos that you might have found down the back of your sofa are now big business! In 2005, the American artist Richard Prince's photograph of a photograph, Untitled (Cowboy), was sold for $1,248,000. Prince is certainly not the only contemporary artist to have worked with so-called "found photographs" —a loose term given to everything from discarded (丢弃的) prints discovered in a junk shop to old advertisements or amateur photographs from a stranger's family album. The German artist Joachim Schmid, who believes "basically everything is worth looking at", has gathered discarded photographs, postcards and newspaper images since 1982. In his on-going project, Archiv, he groups photographs of family life according to themes: people with dogs; teams; new cars; dinner with the family; and so on. Like Schmid, the editors of several self-published art magazines also champion (捍卫) found photographs. One of them, called simply Found, was born one snowy night in Chicago, when Davy Rothbard returned to his car to find under his wiper (雨刷) an angry note intended for someone else: "Why's your car HERE at HER place?" The note became the starting point for Rothbard's addictive publication, which features found photographs sent in by readers, such as a poster discovered in our drawer. The whole found-photograph phenomenon has raised some questions. Perhaps one of the most difficult is: can these images really be considered as art? And if so, whose art? Yet found photographs produced by artists, such as Richard Prince, may raise endless possibilities. What was the cowboy in Prince's Untitled doing? Was he riding his horse hurriedly to meet someone? Or how did Prince create this photograph? It's anyone's guess. In addition, as we imagine the back-story to the people in the found photographs artists, like Schmid, have collated (整理), we also turn toward our own photographic albums. Why is memory so important to us? Why do we al! seek to freeze in time the faces of our children, our parents, our lovers, and ourselves? Will they mean anything to anyone after we've gone?
单选题______ from a distance, the mountain looks like an old man.
单选题When I read the novel, I can't help ______ my friend Mary.
单选题Under no circumstance______to tell lies to parents.
单选题Speaker A: Don't you think John and Jim are telling the truth? Speaker B: ______. It would be hard to write two compositions so much alike unless one of them were copying from the other. A. It seems likely B. It seems believable C. It doesn't seem true D. It doesn't seem likely
单选题These books are designed to ______ children.
单选题His business is growing so fast that he must ______ more workers.
单选题You should hire a more ______ manager than the one you currently have.
单选题The clouds are gathering. We'd better hurry and ______ the department store in case it rains. A. hand in B. face up to C. head for D. back up
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单选题Sometimes children have trouble ______ fact from fiction and may believe that such things actually exist.
单选题Sometimes children have trouble __________fact from fiction and may believe that such things actually exist.
单选题Wilson: Hello. May I speak to Mary?
Mary: ______
单选题The problem ______ at the meeting next week is of great importance. A. discussed B. to be discussed C. being discussed D. discussing
单选题By the end of this month we _____ ten lessons.
单选题It's highly ______ that he will be promoted to the post of assistant manager. A. like B. liked C. likely D. likelihood
单选题If I could put back the clock, I'll give more thought to ______ for a career.
单选题- Hi. Linda. do you think it's possible to have a talk this afternoon?
- ______ , but I've got a pretty tight schedule this afternoon.
