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提问人:网友heysein 发布时间:2022-01-06
[主观题]

The English proverb ‘_______ the rod and spoil the child’ means that if you deep from

punishing the child, you will spoil its character.

A、rule

B、rug

C、clap

D、spare

简答题官方参考答案 (由简答题聘请的专业题库老师提供的解答)
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更多“The English proverb ‘_______ the rod and spoil the child’ means that if you deep from”相关的问题
第1题
Have you ever heard this proverb in English? "Better be ________ than pitied."
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第2题
【简答题】Put the English proverb " Like father, like son." into Chinese.
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第3题
Which English proverb can find a Chinese proverb as its exact equivalent?

A、An apple a day keeps the doctor away.

B、You can't have your ckae and eat it too.

C、Haste makes waste.

D、Don't put off until tomorrow what you can do today.

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第4题
ultimate commit highlight envy sample diversity recapture remarkable historic involve Have you ever heard this proverb in English? "Better be ________ than pitied."
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第5题
An English proverb says that time is money. I consider it's wrong. Why? Because we all know that we can earn money by work but can not in any way get back time in anyway. For this reason, we may say t

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第6题
The English equivalent for the Chinese proverb “覆水难收” is ______.

A.It’s no use crying over the spilt water

B. It’s no use crying over spilt milk

C.It’s no use collecting the spilt milk

D.It’s no use collecting the spilt water

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第7题
Manners can be quite different in different countr...

Manners can be quite different in different countries. In China when people (11) , they often ask each other "Where are you going?" or "Have you had your meal?" But in England the (12) is usually about the weather. English people do not ask others about their ages and never ask how much money they (13) . It is rude to ask "How old are you?", especially to a woman. When someone tells you "Your English is good", you are expected to say "Thank you." If your (14) is "Oh, no, my English is poor" or "Not at all", you will make the speaker (15) very awkward. Try to remember the proverb: When in Rome, do as the Romans do.

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第8题
This is an amusing short story which illustrates how little people sometimes know about their mother
tongue. The narrator is a woman, a p______ in a taxi whose driver is a Pakistani man e______ to learn English by asking his passengers about new words. Struggling to e______ the meanings of a proverb and an idiom, she realizes how little she really knows about the v______ of her native language and also w______ what kind of answers other, probably equally i______, native passengers might give. In the end she is left hoping that the driver has a d______ and that he will use it to teach himself rather than depend on the native speakers for e______.
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第9题
Tongue-tied Several weeks ago I was riding in a cab when the driver's eyes caught mine in the

Tongue-tied

Several weeks ago I was riding in a cab when the driver's eyes caught mine in the rear view mirror and he said, "Excuse me, Miss? Can you help me?"

As any hard-bitten city dweller knows, the correct answer to a question like "Can you help me?" should always be some version of "It depends." I chirped, "Sure."

"Thank you," he said. He passed a slip of yellow paper into the back seat.

I stared at the paper, wondering. Was this a joke? A threat? Hand-printed on the paper in tiny block letters was this:

proverb

peculiar

idiomatic

"Please," he said. "What is the meaning of these words?"

I stared at the words in the distressed way you might stare at party guests whose faces you've seen somewhere before but whose names have escaped your mind. Proverb? Peculiar? Idiomatic? How on earth should I know? It's one thing to use a word, it's another to explain it. I resorted to shifting the topic.

"Where did you get these words?"

The driver explained that he was Pakistani. He listened to the radio as he drove and often jotted down unfamiliar, fascinating words whose meanings and spellings he then sought from his passengers.

"Peculiar," he said. "What does this mean?"

I could manage that one. "Strange," I said. "Odd. Often with a hint of something suspicious."

"Thank you, Miss. And idiomatic?"

I cleared my throat. "Um, it's a, well, um. It involves a peculiar use of the language."

I thought my use of peculiar was kind of clever. He looked confused, a reminder that clever's not clever if it doesn't communicate.

"Uh, let's see. 'Idiomatic' is related to the word 'idiom'. An idiom's something that's used in, say, a particular part of the country or by a particular group of people. People who aren't part of that group aren't likely to use it and might not understand it."

Watching his puzzled look, I did what a person often does when at a loss for the right words: I went on talking, as if a thousand vague words would add up to one accurate definition.

"Can you give me an example?"

I racked my brains. "Gapers block ," I said. A peculiarly Chicago phrase.

But did it really qualify as idiomatic? I had no idea because the longer I thought about idioms the less sure I was what they were.

"And proverb?"

I should have told the poor man right then that I might be misleading him down the proverbial path, whatever that really means, but instead I said, "I think a proverb is kind of like an aphorism. But not quite."

"A what?"

"Never mind. A proverb is a condensed saying that teaches you a lesson."

"An example?"

The meter clicked off a full 20 cents while I searched madly through my mind. "Haste makes waste?" I finally whimpered.

But was that a proverb? Wait. Weren't proverbs actually stories, not just phrases? While I was convincing myself they were, he said, "Can an idiom be a proverb?"

I could answer that. Just not right now, now when it mattered, now when the fate of a curious, intelligent immigrant hung on the answers he assumed would fall from a native speaker's tongue as naturally as leaves from an October tree. So I retreated.

"Do most of your passengers give you answers when you ask for definitions?"

"Oh, yes, Miss. Very interesting definitions."

Until that moment, I'd been so inspired by the driver's determination to learn English, so enthralled by the chance to indulge my curiosity about words with another curious soul, that I didn't fully grasp the potential for linguistic fraud committed in this man's cab. Now I could barely allow myself to imagine what kind of deformed English he was being fed by cowards like me who couldn't simply say, "I don't really know my own language."

I can only trust that someone as curious as he is also owns a dictionary. And that he figures out that, no matter what his passengers may say, haste doesn't always make waste at the gapers block.

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