题目
Nobody knew ___________ there .
A.how long time l had been
B.how long had l been
C.how long time had l been
D.how long l had been
第2题
Last winter a lot of birds flew here,but nobody here knew where they came.
A)去年无数的鸟儿飞到这儿过冬,但这儿谁也不知道它们是怎么飞到这儿来的。
B)去年这儿有一群自由自在的鸟儿,但人们不知道这些鸟儿飞向何处。
C)去年冬天这儿飞来了许多鸟儿,但没人知道这些鸟儿来自何处。
D)去年冬天有许多鸟儿朝这儿飞,但没人知道这些鸟儿是从什么地方飞来的。
E)后来, 一群鸟儿在这儿过冬,但没人知道它们栖息的地方。
第3题
One morning, when he left home, he said to the servant, “ Here are two bottles of poison (毒药 ) and some nice food in the house. You must take of them. ” With these words, he went out.
But the servant knew that the rich man had said was untrue. After the rich man was away from his home, he enjoyed a nice meal. Because he drank too much, he was drunk and fell to the ground. When the rich man came back, he couldn ’ t find his food and his wine. He became very angry. He woke the servant up. But the servant told his story very well. He said a cat had eaten up everything. He was afraid to be punished, so he drank the poison to kill himself.
1.In the story,() liked wine and good food very much.
A、the rich man
B、the servant
C、both A and B
D、neither A and B
2.The rich man knew that it was() that drank the wine and ate up all the nice food.
A、the cat
B、himself
C、nobody
D、the servant
3.The rich told the servant that there was poison in the two bottles, because ().
A、there was in fact poison in the bottles
B、did not want the servant to drink his wine
C、he wanted to kill the cat
D、he wanted to kill the servant
4.In fact,()ate all the nice food and drank the wine.
A、the servant
B、cat
C、the rich man
D、nobody
5.From the story, we know that the servant is very()
A、lazy
B、bad
C、clever
D、kind
第4题
A.The long distance between his home town and New York.
B.His unpopular character.
C.The high unemployment rate in New York.
D.His criminal recor
D.
第5题
Frank knew he was very ill. He spent days walking, (1 ) as far as thirty miles (2 ) a day, trying to reason with the pain, and strange thoughts in his mind. Then, one night, he made up his (3 ) that he would go to the hospital and ask them to admit him. He reported to out-patients and asked to see a psychiatrist.A junior doctor eventually examined him and (4 ) to Frank's confused account of having been in hospital before, of how he thought he ought to (5 ) again because he was so confused and knew something was very wrong with him. The doctor did not admit him. Frank cannot (6 ) whether he was told that the hospital was full or that they simply did not believe him. "I felt I was completely alone. I thought there was (7 ) there to help." So Frank went back on to the streets to find a future of sleeping outside, the occasional shelter in hospitals, and sometimes prison (8 ) he was picked up for being drunk: drunk because it was the (9 ) way he could forget his condition. Frank had sought help and been turned away. Thousands of others (10 ) him can find no help either. They are the sufferers from long-term mental illness that confuse the minds of their victims.
(1).A、sometimes
B、sometime
C、some time
D、time
(2).A、for
B、at
C、on
D、in
(3).A、head
B、brain
C、mind
D、heart
(4).A、listened
B、heard
C、talked
D、took
(5).A、be admitted
B、admit
C、be admitting
D、have been admitted
(6).A、remind
B、remember
C、recall
D、forget
(7).A、somebody
B、anybody
C、nobody
D、everybody
(8).A、whenever
B、where
C、that
D、why
(9).A、only
B、one
C、bad
D、first
(10).A、as
B、some
C、alike
D、like
第6题
B.False
C.Not Given
The man became very tired when he turned to swim back.A.True
B.False
C.Not Given
When the man finally finished his race, the crowd became angry with him.A.True
B.False
C.Not Given
The man came from a small country far away from Sydney.A.True
B.False
C.Not Given
The man did his best even if he was aware that he had no chance to win.A.True
B.False
C.Not Given
Two swimmers were disqualified because they had started before the official signal was given.A.True
B.False
C.Not Given
The man felt sad when he knew he made one of the slowest Olympic records..A.True
B.False
C.Not Given
It's easy for an athlete to perform well when having nobody to race against .A.True
B.False
C.Not Given
I knew that the man was not able to compete for the medals.A.True
B.False
C.Not Given
The crowd laughed at the man from beginning to end.A.True
B.False
C.Not Given
请帮忙给出每个问题的正确答案和分析,谢谢!
第7题
For five years nobody needed to explain the word "united" to Republicans; it was their biggest strength. The president handed his agenda to Congress and the party leaders delivered the votes. They twisted the arms of small-government conservatives to pass education reforms and Medicare drug benefits. They held their ranks together even as the Iraq occupation was losing supports in 2004. And they picked up seats in two election cycles. But now that company has fallen apart. Members of Congress, tired of being taken for granted by a bossy White House, have lost faith in the president's politican touch.
The stress is starting to show. Republicans are beginning to look and sound like their own caricature(漫画)of the Democrats: disorganized, off message and unsure of their identity. Fearful of defeat in November, GOP candidates are uncertain how to pull themselves together in the eight months left before the elections. The toughest question: whether to run, as they have in the past, as Bush Republicans, or to push the, president out of their campaigns. "What I've tried to tell people is that a political storm is gathering, and if we don't do something to stop it, we'll be in the minority a year from now," says Rep. Ray La Hood from Illinois. "But some people still don't get it."
The president won't have an easy time persuading Republicans to stick with him. Second-term presidents often suffer a six-year slump, losing seats for their party at this point. Bush has actually been lucky in one respect. He held his party together longer than most two-term presidents. Johnson kept control for just eight months until he suffered defeat on the issue of home rule for the District of Columbia in 1965, when Democrats took him on—and won.
Some candidates are happy to stand beside Bush, as long as nobody actually sees them together. Locked in a tight race for re-election, Sen. Mike DeWine chose not to accompany Bush on one trip to his home state of Ohio last month. A week later he attended a private fund-raiser with the president in Cincinnati—out of sight of photographers and reporters.
While listening to Bush's pep talk, the Republicans______.
A.were inspired by the president to hold together
B.lost interest in the frequently heard content
C.disagreed with the president on his slogan
D.felt impatient with the slow speech
第8题
One Sunday evening when I was eight years old my parents and I were riding in the back seat of my rich uncle's car. We had been out for a ride and now we were back in the Bronx, headed for home. Suddenly, another car sideswiped us. My mother and aunt shrieked. My uncle swore softly. My father, in whose lap I was sitting, said out the window at the speeding car, "That's all right. Nothing but a few Jews in here." In an instant I knew everything. I knew there was a world beyond our streets, and in that world my father was a hu- miliated man, without power or standing.
When I was sixteen a girl in the next building had her nose straightened; we all went together to see Selma Shapiro lying in state, wrapped in bandages from which would emerge a person fit for life beyond the block. Three buildings away a boy went downtown for a job, and on his application he wrote "Anold Brown" instead of "Anold Braunowiitz." The newsswept through the neighborhood like a wild fire. A nose job? A name change? What was happening here? It was awful; it was wonderful. It was frightening; it was delicious. Whatever it was, it wasn't standstill. Things felt lively and active. Self-confidence was on the rise, passivity on the wane. We were going to experience challenges. That's what it meant to be in the new world. For the first time we could imagine ourselves out there.
But who exactly do I mean when I say we? I mean Arnie, not Selma. I mean my brother, not me. I mean the boys, not the girls. My mother stood behind me, pushing me forward. "The girl goes to college, too," she said. And I did. But my going to college would not mean the same thing as my brother's going to college, and we all knew it. For my brother, college meant going from the Bronx to Manhattan. But for me? From the time I was fourteen I yearned to get out of the Bronx, but get out into what? I did not actually imagine myself a working person alone in Manhattan and nobody else did either. What I did imagine was that I would marry, and that the man I married would get me downtown. He would brave the perils of class and race, and somehow I'd be there alongside him.
In the passage, we can find the author was_______.
A.quite satisfied with her life
B.a poor Jewish girl
C.born in a middle-class family
D.a resident in a rich area in New York
第9题
For five years nobody needed to explain the word "united" to Republicans; it was their biggest strength. The president handed his agenda to Congress and the party leaders delivered the votes. They twisted the arms of small-government conservatives to pass education reforms and Medicare drug benefits. They held their ranks together even as the Iraq occupation was losing supports in 2004. And they picked up seats in two election cycles. But now that company has fallen apart. Members of Congress, tired of being taken for granted by a bossy White House, have lost faith in the president's political touch.
The stress is starting to show. Republicans are beginning to look and sound like their own caricature(漫画) of the Democrats: disorganized, off message and unsure of their identity. Fearful of defeat in November, GOP candidates are uncertain how to pull themselves together in the eight months left before the elections. The toughest question: whether to run, as they have in the past, as Bush Republicans, or to push the president out of their campaigns. "What I've tried to tell people is that a political storm is gathering, and if we don't do something to stop it, we'll be in the minority a year from now," says Rep. Ray LaHood from Illinois. "But some people still don't get it."
The president won't have an easy time persuading Republicans to stick with him. Second-term presidents often suffer a six-year slump, losing seats for their party at this point. Bush has actually been lucky in one respect. He held his party together longer than most two-term presidents. Johnson kept control for just eight months until he suffered defeat on the issue of home rule for the District of Columbia in 1965, when Democrats took him on—and won.
Some candidates are happy to stand beside Bush, as long as nobody actually sees them together. Locked in a tight race for re-election, Sen. Mike DeWine chose not to accompany Bush on one trip to his home state of Ohio last month. A week later he attended a private fund-raiser with the president in Cincinnati—out of sight of photographers and reporters.
While listening to Bush's pep talk, the Republicans______.
A.were inspired by the president to hold together
B.lost interest in the frequently heard content
C.disagreed with the president on his slogan
D.felt impatient with the slow speech
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