The doctor took my temperature and ________ to my heart.A. listensB. will listenC. has
A. listens
B. will listen
C. has listened
D. listened
- · 有5位网友选择 A,占比50%
- · 有3位网友选择 D,占比30%
- · 有1位网友选择 C,占比10%
- · 有1位网友选择 B,占比10%
A. listens
B. will listen
C. has listened
D. listened
(30)
A.I can't think when my head aches.
B.I didn't get my headaches when I went away.
C.My headache doesn't seem to be getting any better.
D.It took a while, but my head finally stopped hurting.
A.listen
B.will listen
C.has listened
D.listened
iting a memo to Mary Tong at Human Resources. Please put the sentences in order to help her complete the memo. Jenny 昨天请了病假。她正在给人力资源部的 Mary 写备忘录。请把下列信息填入备忘录。 Mary Tong, Human Resources Sick leave certificate I attach the doctor’s note. 22 May, 2016 I was sick yesterday, so I couldn’t come to work. Memo TO: 76______________ From: Jenny Deng, Sales Date: 77______________ Subject: 78______________ Message: 79______________ In order to receive sick pay, I need to send in my doctor’s note. 80______________ Please confirm that the cost of the medicine is covered by the company health scheme. Thank you. Jenny Deng
One day a bookseller(书商)let a big box of books fall on his foot. “Go to see the doctor,“ said his wife. “No, “he said. “I‘ll wait until the doctor comes into the shop next time. Then I‘ll ask him about my foot. If I go to see him, I‘ll have to pay him.“
On the next day the doctor came into the shop for some books. When the bookseller was getting them ready, he told the doctor about his bad foot. The doctor looked at it.“You must put that foot in hot water every night. Then you must put something on it,“ said the doctor.
He took out a piece of paper and wrote on it. “Buy this and put it on the foot before you go to bed every night,“ he said.“Thank you,“ said the bookseller. “And now, sir, here are your books.““How much?“ said the doctor.“Two pounds.““Good,“ said the doctor. “I shall not have to pay you anything.““Why?“ asked the bookseller.“I told you about your foot. I want two pounds for that. If people come to my house, I ask them to pay one pound for a small thing like that. But when I go to their houses, I want two pounds. And I came here, didn‘t I?“
1)、What happened to the bookseller one day?
A.He lost a box of books.
B.His foot was wounded by a box of books.
C.He lent the doctor a box of books.
D.He sold out all his books.
2)、The bookseller‘s wife asked him ______.
A.to go out for some medicine
B.to send somebody for a doctor
C.to go to see the doctor
D.to wait for the doctor to come
3)、The bookseller didn‘t take his wife‘s advice because ______.
A.he was afraid of the doctor
B.he didn‘t like to take medicine
C.he couldn‘t walk by himself
D.he didn‘t want to pay the doctor
4)、The doctor paid ______ for the books.
A.one pound
B.two pounds
C.nothing
D.something
5)、The bookseller paid ______ money for seeing the doctor in the end.
A.more
B.less
C.the same amount of
D.no
A、compound sentence
B、simple sentence
C、complex sentence
D、compound-complex sentence
M: I come from the Rez, an Indian reservation. I grew up there, lived there until 18.
I lived on and off the reservation for the next 6 or 7 years during college. I lived there after I graduated, worked at a high school exchange program. I thought I do that kind of job to support my writing. Day jobs that require no emotional investment beyond 8 hours a day where I wouldn't need to bring work home. I didn't want to be part of management or anybody important at the job. I wanted to be completely replaceable, that is what I thought I would be doing for most of my life and writing. Then I got a ground and my first book got a frontpage review in the New York Times Book Review.
W: When did writing enter your life?
M: Books are always being in my life. My dad love books and most of what he read were westerns-spy novels, mysteries. I grew up loving books, copying my father's love for books. But nobody has showed me a book written by an Indian, not even one piece of poem. Nothing. At that time I was going to be a physician. I loved math and science. I got to college, couldn't handle physiology, and was looking around for options and took a poetry writing class for fun.
W: Poetry was your way in?
M: Yes, that's where I started. I took the class and honestly, I just thought it would be an easy grade. But I completely underestimated poetry and what it would do to me and the realm of possibility for it. I took the class and was hooked about ten minutes after reading my first contemporary poem.
(20)
A.He might do some evening teaching.
B.He could bring unfinished work home.
C.He might have time to pursue his interests.
D.He could invest more emotion in his family.
A.how did the teacher react
B.what did the doctor do
C.why did she examine you
D.did she listen to you
1. The scholars met once a year to exchange experiences. 2. Foreign ships are not allowed to fish in our territorial water. 3. I went to the doctor for an advice about my health. 4. The letter contained an important information. 5. In the afternoon I did some baby-sittings, for it is a fun looking after children. 6. The congregation was not numerous that night, but they seemed to be listening attentively to my lecture. 7. Poultries are dear in the city. 8. The board of director is shaking heads at the chairman’s speech. 9. The militias were called out to guard the borderland. 10. Such brilliant authors are really genii of our times. 11. The merchandises have arrived undamaged. 12. On hearing the death of my professor, I sent my sympathy. 13. He is relating to the children his experience as explorer. 14. The Middle Ages was a time of feudal rivalries. 15. The clipping of the hedges was usually burnt. 16. There were some looker-ons by the roadside, but they didn’t inform the police of the accident. 17. I like to stay long in the park. The green foliages are really restful. 18. In the garden she took a lot of photography. 19. We will have to finish a 12-pages assignment in a week. 20. Luggages are not allowed to be left here.
M: I come from the Raze, an Indian reservation. I grew up there, lived there until 18. I lived on and off the reservation for the next 6 or 7 years during college. I lived there after I graduated, worked at a high school exchange program. I thought I' d do that kind of job to support my writing. Day jobs that require no emotional investment beyond 8 hours at day where I wouldn’t need to bring work home. I didn’t want to be part of management or anybody important at the job. I wanted to be completely replaceable, that is what I thought I would be doing for most of my life and writing. Then I got a ground and my first book got a front-page review in the New York Times' Book Review.
W: When did writing enter your life?
M: Books have always been in my life. My dad loved books and most of what he read were westerns -- spy novels, mysteries. I grew up loving books, copying my father’s love for books. But nobody has showed me a book written by an Indian, not even one piece of poem. Nothing. At that time I was going to be a physician. I loved math and science. I got to college, couldn’t handle physiology, and was looking around for options and took a poetry writing class for fun.
W: Poetry was your way in?
M: Yes, that’s where I started. I took the class, and honestly, I just thought it would be an easy grade. But I completely underestimated poetry and what it would do to me and the realm of possibility for it. I took the class and was hooked a bout ten minutes after reading my first contemporary poem.
Why did Sherman Aleksy only take day jobs?
A.He could bring unfinished work home.
B.He might have time to pursue his interests.
C.He might do some evening teaching.
D.He could invest more emotion in his family
The earthquake struck rich and poor alike. This was a doctor's home in surgery. One week on his family are still retrieving what they can. It isn't much. But it's so much harder on the poor. In the hills outside Muzaffarabad a man complains all he's had to eat is biscuits. 14-year-old Javed took me onto the roof of what had been his house, now crushed to a few feet of rubble. "This earthquake killed my sister", he told me, "and my mother was badly injured". His home today, like countless others here, is a grimy camp.
The total casualties have surpassed ______.
A.38,000
B.60,000
C.68,000
D.98,000
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