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提问人:网友cloner 发布时间:2022-01-06
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He "took the chair" for all the following reasons EXCEPT that______.A.he got to the chair

He "took the chair" for all the following reasons EXCEPT that______.

A.he got to the chair first

B.he happened to like the seat

C.his wife ordered him to do so

D.he'd walked ahead of his wife

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更多“He "took the chair" for all the following reasons EXCEPT that______.A.he got to the chair”相关的问题
第1题
After sitting down on the chair, he took out a _____ of cigarettes.A.parcelB.packC.pack

After sitting down on the chair, he took out a _____ of cigarettes.

A.parcel

B.pack

C.package

D.packed

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第2题
He asked ____.A.which chair should he takeB.which chair he should takeC.which chair he t

He asked ____.

A.which chair should he take

B.which chair he should take

C.which chair he take

D.which chair he took

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第3题
He" took the chair" for all the following masons EXCEPT that ______.A.he got to the chair

He" took the chair" for all the following masons EXCEPT that ______.

A.he got to the chair first

B.he happened to like the seat

C.his wife ordered him to do so

D.he'd walked ahead of his wife

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第4题
He "took the chair" for all the following reasons EXCEPT that______.A.he got to the chair

He "took the chair" for all the following reasons EXCEPT that______.

A.he got to the chair first.

B.he happened to like the seat.

C.his wife ordered him to do so.

D.he'd walked ahead of his wife.

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第5题
再练一次,长句He took me to a party at his friend’s house where they proceeded to argue for
hours about Web design while I sat on a chair and stared at the ceiling, drunk and bored. 断句,ABC选项哪一项比较合适。 这个句子的意思是:他带我去朋友家里参加派对,他们一连几小时讨论网络设计,而我则被晾在座椅上,醉醺醺地、无聊地望着天花板

A.He took me to a party / at his friend’s house /where they proceeded to argue for hours /about Web design /while I sat on a chair /and stared at the ceiling, drunk and boreD

B.He took /me to a party at his friend’s house where they proceeded to /argue for hours about Web design while I sat on a chair and stared at the ceiling, drunk and boreD

C.He /took me to a party /at his friend’s house where they proceeded to /argue for hours /about Web design while I sat/on a chair and stared /at the ceiling, drunk /and bore

D.

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第6题
One of the good things for men in women's liberation is that men no longer have to
pay women the old-fashioned courtesies.

In an article on the new manners, Ms. Holmes says that a perfectly able woman no longer has to act helplessly in public as if she were a model. For example, she doesn't need help getting in and out of cars. u Women get in and out of cars twenty times a day with babies and dogs. Surely they can get out by themselves at night just as easily.n':--

She also says there is no reason why a man should walk on the outside of a woman on the sidewalk. M Historically, the man walked on the inside so he caught the garbage thrown out of a window. Today a man is supposed to walk on the outside. A man should walk where he wants to. So should a woman. If, out of love and respect, he actually wants to take the blows, he should walk on the inside —' because that's where attackers are all hiding these days.”

As far as manners are concerned, I suppose I have always been a supporter of women's liberation. Over the years, out of a sense of respect, I imagine, I have refused to trouble women with outdated courtesies.

It is usually easier to follow rules of social behavior. than to depend on one's own taste. But rules may be safely broken, of course, by those of us. with:the gift of natural grace. For example, when a man and woman are led to their table in a restaurant and the waiter pulls out a chair, the woman is expected to sit in the chair. That is according to Ms. Ann Clark. I have always done it the other way, according to my wife.

It came up only the other night. I followed the hostess to the table, and when she pulled the chair out I sat on it, quite naturally, since it happened to be the chair I wanted to sit in. I had the best view of the boats.

"Well," my wife said, when the hostess had gone, "you did it again."

"Did what?" I asked, utterly confused.

u Took the chair.n

Actually, since I'd walked through the restaurant ahead of my wife, it would have been awkward, I should think, not to have taken the chair. I had got there first, after all.

Also, it has always been my custom to get in a car first, and let the woman get in by herself. This is a courtesy I insist on as the stronger sex, out of love and respect. In times like these, there might be attackers hidden about. It would be unsuitable to put a woman in a car and then shut the door on her, leaving her at the mercy of some bad fellow who might be hidden in the back seat.

49.It can be concluded from the passage that ―.

A.men should walk on the inside of a sidewalk

B.women are becoming more capable than before

C.in women's liberation men are also liberated

D.it's safe to break rules of social behavior

50.The author was “ utterly confused" because he .

A. took the chair out of habit

B. was trying to be polite

C. was slow in understanding

D. had forgotten what he did

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第7题
She stood before us looking very composed as she gave us good morning. Sabri cleared his t
hroat, and picking up the great key very delicately between finger and thumb -- as if it were of the utmost fragility -- put it down again on the edge of the desk nearest her with the air of a conjurer making his opening dispositions. "We are speaking about your house," he said softly, in a voice ever so faintly curdled with menace. "Do you know that all the wood is..." he suddenly shouted the last word with such force that I nearly fell off my chair, "rotten!" And picking up the key he banged it down to emphasise the point.

The woman threw up her head with contempt and taking up the key also banged it down in her turn exclaiming: "It is not."

"It is." Sabri banged the key.

"It is not." She banged it back.

"It is." A bang.

"It is not." A counter-bang.

All this was certainly not on a very intellectual level, and made me rather ill at ease. I also feared that the key itself would be banged out of shape so that finally none of us would be able to get into the house. But these were the opening chords, so to speak, the preliminary statement of theme.

The woman now took the key and held it up as if she were swearing by it. "The house is a good house," she cried. Then she put it back on the desk. Sabri took it up thoughtfully, blew into the end of it as if it were a sixshooter, aimed it and peered along it as if along a barrel. Then he put it down and fell into an abstraciton. "And suppose we wanted the house." he said, "which we don't, what would you ask for it?"

"Eight hundred pounds."

Sabri gave a long and stagy laugh, wiping away imaginary tears and repeating "Eight hundred pounds" as if it were the best joke in the world. He laughed at me and I laughed at him, a dreadful false laugh. He slapped his knee. I rolled about in my chair as if on the verge of acute gastritis. We laughed until we were exhausted. Then we grew serious again. Sabri was still as fresh as a daisy. I could see that. He had put himself into the patient contemplative state of mind of a chess player.

"Take the key and go," he snapped suddenly, and handing it to her, swirled round in his swivel chair to present her with his back; then as suddenly he completed the circuit and swivelled round again. "What!" he said with surprise. "You haven't gone." In truth there had hardly been time for the woman to go. But she was somewhat slow-witted, though obstinate as a mule: that was clear. "Right," she now said in a ringing tone, and picking up the key put it into her bosom and turned about. She walked off stage in a somewhat lingering fashion. "Take no notice, "whispered Sabri and busied himself with his papers.

The woman stopped irresolutely outside the shop, and was here joined by her husband who began to talk to her in a low cringing voice, pleading with her. He took her by the sleeve and led her unwillingly back into the shop where we sat pointedly reading letters. "Ah! It's you," said Sabri with well-simulated surprise. "She wishes to discuss some more," explained the cobbler in a weak conciliatory voice, Sabri sighed.

"What is there to speak of? She takes me for a fool." Then he suddenly turned to her and bellowed. "Two hundred pounds and not a piastre more."

It was her turn to have a paroxysm of false laughter, but this was rather spoiled by her husband who started plucking at her sleeve as if he were persuading her to be sensible. Sabri was not slow to notice this. "You tell her," he said to the man. "You are a man and these things are clear to you. She is only a woman and does not see the truth. Tell her what it is worth!"

The writer felt "ill at ease" because ______.

A.the proceedings seemed inappropriate to the occasion

B.he was afraid that the contestants would become violent

C.he felt that no progress was likely to be made

D.he was not accustomed to such stupidity

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第8题
The mid-sixties saw the start of a project that, along with other similar research, was to
teach us a great deal about the chimpanzee mind. This was Project Washoe, conceived by Trixie and Allen Gardner. They purchased an infant chimpanzee and began to teach her the signs of ASL, the American Sign Language used by the deaf. Twenty years earlier another husband and wife team, Richard and Cathy Hayes, had tried, with an almost total lack of success, to teach a young chimp, Vikki, to talk. The Hayess undertaking taught us a lot about the chimpanzee mind, but Vikki, although she did well in IQ tests, and was clearly an intelligent youngster, could not learn human speech. The Gardners, however, achieved spectacular success with their pupil, Washoe. Not only did she learn signs easily, but she quickly began to string them together in meaningful ways. It was clear that each sign evoked, in her mind, a mental image of the object it represented. If, for example, she was asked, in sign language, to fetch an apple, she would go and locate an apple that was out of sight in another room.

Other chimps entered the project, some starting their lives in deaf signing families before joining Washoe. And finally Washoe adopted an infant, Loulis. He came from a lab where no thought of teaching signs had ever penetrated. When he was with Washoe he was given no lessons in language acquisition—not by humans, anyway. Yet by the time he was eight years old he had made fifty-eight signs in their correct contexts. How did he learn them? Mostly, it seems, by imitating the behavior. of Washoe and the other three signing chimps, Dar, Moja and Tam. Sometimes, though, he received tuition from Washoe herself. One day, for example, she began to swagger about bipedally, hair bristling, signing food! food! food! in great excitement. She had seen a human approaching with a bar of chocolate. Loulis, only eighteen months old, watched passively. Suddenly Washoe stopped her swaggering, went over to him, took his hand, and moulded the sign for food (fingers pointing towards mouth). Another time, in a similar context, she made the sign for chewing gum—but with her hand on his body. On a third occasion Washoe picked up a small chair, took it over to Loulis, set it down in front of him, and very distinctly made the chair sign three times, watching him closely as she did so. The two food signs became incorporated into Loulis's vocabulary but the sign for chair did not. Obviously the priorities of a young chimp are similar to those of a human child!

Chimpanzees who have been taught a language can combine signs creatively in order to describe objects for which they have no symbol. Washoe, for example, puzzled her caretakers by asking, repeatedly, for a rock berry. Eventually it transpired that she was referring to brazil nuts which she had encountered for the first time a while before. Another language-trained chimp described a cucumber as a green banana. They can even invent signs. Lucy, as she got older, had to be put on a leash for her outings. One day, eager to set off but having no sign for leash, she signaled her wishes by holding a crooked index finger to the ring on her collar. This sign became part of her vocabulary.

The example of Washoe being sent to fetch an apple which is in another room indicates that______.

A.chimps may have more than one way to fetch food

B.chimps can associate one sign with another in a meaningful way

C.chimps can learn the signs of ASL, the American Sign Language used by the deaf

D.chimps have their particular ways for finding what they want

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第9题
The author "took the chair" for all the following reasons EXCEPT thatA.he got to the chair

The author "took the chair" for all the following reasons EXCEPT that

A.he got to the chair first.

B.he happened to like the seat.

C.his wife ordered him to do so.

D.he'd walked ahead of his wife.

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