I was knocked out for a few days, but now I'm back on my feet. I ___________.
A、can leave my bed and stand up again.
B、came back on foot.
C、got new feet
D、can’t stand up again.
A、can leave my bed and stand up again.
B、came back on foot.
C、got new feet
D、can’t stand up again.
[A] Stepping off the pavement, he was knocked down by the bus.
[B] He went out shutting the door behind him.
[C] Being sick, I stayed at home.
[D] She hurried into office, carrying documents in hand.
Which italicized part in the following sentences indicates REASON?
[A] Stepping off the pavement, he was knocked down by the bus.
[B] He went out shutting the door behind him.
[C] Being sick, I stayed at home.
[D] She hurried into office, carrying documents in hand.
Bob and Jim once worked in the same factory .One day, Bob lent Jim ten dllars, but then Jim left his work and went to work in another town without giving back the money. Bob did see Jim for a year. And at that time he knew from another friend that Jim was in anther town and staying at a hotel(旅馆). So he went there to see Jim late in the evening. When he got to Ji room, he saw Ji shoes near the door.“Well, he must be in,” he thought, and knocked at the door. There was no answer. He knocked again, and said,“I know you are in, Jim. Your shoes are out here.”
听力原文:W: How did you make out your course? I think it's not a easy job for me.
M: Not for me really. The only thing I haven't understood is the reading we did last night.
Q: How was the man doing in the work?
(14)
A.He has no much trouble.
B.He understands the reading last night.
C.He understands the reading very little.
D.He hasn't been doing much of the reading.
A.enjoyed
B.finished
C.got into
D.went on
They still hadn't come when, just before noon, a man eating in our restaurant wanted a cake. I suggested that I run to the bakery next door to get some, and Johnny readily agreed. Going out of our back door, I knocked on the back door of the bakery and bought a few from the baker's helper. That cake was the only one we sold all day.
After closing, Johnny and I sat discussing things with my daughter, who had been out from serving. "An interesting thing happened just before noon," she said. "The owner of the bakery next door came in and ordered a cake of ours. She wanted to compare it with hers."
We know from the passage that ______.
A.the baker next door came to help with the opening
B.the new restaurant did not prepare all its foods
C.the son and the daughter served at the tables
D.the customers enjoyed the cakes very much
Dearest Julian and Juliette,
You must be back from Africa, I imagine, by now but meanwhile Africa has come to us; with a vengeance, in a frightful hem wave with temperatures day after day of 105, and 80 degrees at night. In my own case, meteorology has been compounded by a spell of ill-health, due to the after-effects on long course of radiation which I had to take this spring. I hadn't told you of this trouble before, since it hadn't seriously interfered with my activities and there seemed to be no point in spreading unnecessary apprehensions. It started in 1960, with a malignant tumour on the tongue. The first surgeon I went to wanted to cut out half the tongue and leave me more or less speechless. I went with him to nay old friend, Dr Max Cutler. Cutler recommended treatment with radium needles and so did the Professors of Radiology and Surgery at the U. of Cal. Medical Centre at San Francisco, whom I consulted. I took the treatment in the early summer of 1960, and it was remarkably successful. The tumour on the tongue was knocked out and has shown no signs of returning. However, as generally happens in these cases, the lymph glands of the neck became involved. I had one taken out in 1962, and this spring another mass appeared. This was subjected to twenty five exposures of radio-active cobalt, an extremely exhausting treatment from which I was just recovering when at last I was able to make the trip to Stockholm and London. Since my return there has been a flare--up of secondary inflammation, to which tissues weakened by radiation are peculiarly liable, often after considerable intervals. Result: I have had to cancel my lecture tour ... Another handicap is my persistent hoarseness due to the nerve that supplies the right-hand vocal cord having been knocked out, either by an infiltration of the malignancy, or by the radiation. I hope this hoarseness may be only temporary, but rather fear I may carry it to the grave.
What the future holds, one doesn't know. In general these malignancies in the neck and head don't do much metastasizing. Meanwhile I am trying to build up resistance with the combination of a treatment which has proved rather successful at the University of Montreal and the University of Manila--the only institutions where it has been tried out over a period of years--and which has been elaborated upon by Professor Guidetti, of the University of Turin, who has read papers on his work at the last two International Cancer Congresses, at Buenos Aires and Moscow. I saw Guidetti while in Turin and was impressed by some of his case-histories, and with Cutler's approval we are carrying out his treatment here. When this damned inflammation dies down, which may be expected to do in a few weeks, I hope to get back to regular work. For the present I am functioning at only a fraction of normal capacity. (515)
Much love to you both from both of us,
Ever your affectionate
Aldous
The author is suffering from ______.
A.cut in his tongue
B.lymph inflammation
C.cancer
D.hoarse voice
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