Judging from his manners at the party, he doesn't seem much education.A.to receiveB.to be
Judging from his manners at the party, he doesn't seem much education.
A.to receive
B.to be receiving
C.to have received
D.to have been received
Judging from his manners at the party, he doesn't seem much education.
A.to receive
B.to be receiving
C.to have received
D.to have been received
Judging from his accent, I can ______ that he is from the south.
A.speak
B.look
C.tell
D.show
Judging from his accent, I can______ that he is form. the south.
A.speak
B.look
C.tell
D.show
A、Judged by
B、Judging by
C、Judging through
D、Judged from
Judging from his accent, I can ______ that he is from the south.
A.speak
B.look tell
C.tell
D.show
?
his accent, he must be from the south.
A) Concerned B) Determined
C) Judging by D) Decided by
Woman: Where on earth are we?
Man: Judging by all the traffic, I'd say we're near the heart of the downtown area.
Question: What do we learn from the conversation?
A.They have got to the busy area of the town.
B.They have been held up by the traffic.
C.They are not sure where they are.
D.They find it hard to get out of the traffic.
______his appearance, he comes from a well-off family.
A.Judged from
B.To judge from
C.Judging from
D.Having been judging from
A、poet; 5th; judging a painting
B、writer; 5th; judging a painting
C、official; 6th; judging a painting
D、historian; 6th; judging a painting
The quick adoption of the scheme may have indicated less about the state lawmakers' respect for working people than about a fear of risking their anger. In the 1880s the United States was a land sharply divided between the immensely wealthy and the very poor. Henry George was accurate in describing the era as one of" progress and poverty. "In a society, in which factory owners rode in private Pullmans while ten-year-olds slaved in the mines, strong anti-capitalist feeling ran high. Demands for fundamental change were common throughout the labor press. With socialists demanding an end to" wage slavery" and anarchists singing the praises of the virtues of dynamite, middle of-the-roarers like Samuel Gompers and McGuire seemed attractively mild by comparison. One can imagine practical capitalists seeing Labor Day as a bargain: a one-day party certainly cost them less than paying their workers decent wages.
Judging from the passage, McGuire was ______.
A.a moderate labor leader
B.an extreme-anarchist in the labor movement
C.a devoted socialist fighting against exploitation of man by man
D.a firm anti-capitalist demanding the elimination of wage slavery
Man of Few Words
Everyone chases success, but not all of us want to be famous.
South African writer John Maxwell Coetzee is_______(51) for keeping himself to himself. When the 63-year-old was named the 2003 Nobel Prize winner for literature earlier this month, reporters were warned that they would find him "particularly difficult to_______(52)".
Coetzee lives in Australia but spends part of the year teaching at the University of Chicago. He seemed_______(53) by the news that he won the US$1.3 million prize. "It came as a complete surprise. I wasn't even aware they were due to make the announcement," he said.
His_______(54) of privacy led to doubts as to whether Coetzee will attend the prize-giving in Stockholm, Sweden, on December 10.
But despite being described as_______(55) to track down, the critics agree that his writing is easy to get to know.
Born in Cape Town, South Africa, to an English-speaking family, Coetzee_______(56) his breakthrough in 1980 with the novel "Waiting for the Barbarians (野蛮)". He_______(57) his place among the world's leading writers with two Booker prize victories, Britain's highest honour for novels. He first_______(58) in 1983 for the "Life and Times of Michael K", and his second title came in 1999 for "Disgrace".
A major theme in his work is South Africa's former apartheid (种族隔离) system, which divided whites from blacks._______(59) with the problems of violence, crime and racial division that still exist in the country, his books have enabled ordinary people to understand apartheid_______(60) within.
"I have always been more interested in the past than the future," he said in a rare interview. "The past_______(61) its shadow over the present. I hope I have made one or two people think_______(62) about whether they want to forget the past completely."
In fact this purity in his writing seems to be_______(63) in his personal life. Coetzee is a vegetarian, a cyclist rather than a motorist and doesn't drink alcohol.
But what he has_______(64) to literature, culture and the people of South Africa is far greater than the things he has given up. "In looking at weakness and failure in life,"the Nobel prize judging panel said, "Coetzee's work_______(65) the divine (神圣的)spark in man."
第 52 题
A.looked after
B.well known
C.locked
D.protected
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