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提问人:网友siasren 发布时间:2022-01-06
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The writer thought the man might be ______.A.someone who had always been a trampB.someone

The writer thought the man might be ______.

A.someone who had always been a tramp

B.someone who had once worked for him

C.someone who had once been his boss

D.someone he often saw in the park

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更多“The writer thought the man might be ______.A.someone who had always been a trampB.someone”相关的问题
第1题
The man sitting in his car thought the writer and her husband finished shopping in ten min
utes.

A.Right

B.Wrong

C.Doesn't Say

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第2题
Why did the writer wish to go to bed at first?A.His uncle's stories made him sleepy.B.He t

Why did the writer wish to go to bed at first?

A.His uncle's stories made him sleepy.

B.He thought his uncle's stories would be boring.

C.He was really tired from the long journey.

D.He had the habit of going to bed early.

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第3题
When I was young, bedtime was always my favourite part of the day. Wearing soft pajamas an
d with Tom, my stuffed monkey, in my arms, I felt no pressure at all.

I named Tom after my uncle when I compared Tom's long arms and legs to his. One night I ran up to Uncle Tom at a family party and told him I had named my monkey after him. His eyebrows wrinkled in confusion, then a chuckle (咯吱笑) escaped his lips. I guessed he didn't understand how important it was to me.

Even if Uncle Tom didn't think my monkey was special, I certainly did. I dressed him in a white baby nightgown. My mother thought that Tom was the best-dressed stuffed animal in the world.

Yes, he was certainly a fashionable creature. The strong cologne (科隆香水) I used on him years ago made him still smell "pretty".

For a long time, Tom went everywhere with me. He was my best friend, and I told him everything. But when I turned twelve, I realized I was too old for stuffed animals. I thought people would think I was babyish, so I put him in the cupboard with the rest of my teddy bears and dolls. I begged him to understand why I was doing this, but at the same time I longed to talk to him again.

It took me several years to realize that it was OK to miss Tom. I know now that maturity (成熟) doesn't only mean growing up and taking on more responsibility. It also means holding on to your childhood and acting young sometimes.

Which of the following is NOT true according to the text?

A.Bedtime used to be the writer's favourite part of the day because of the stuffed monkey.

B.Uncle Tom liked the stuffed monkey as much as the writer.

C.The writer used to carry the monkey with her wherever she went.

D.Years later the writer realized that it was not wrong to miss Monkey Tom.

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第4题
A lot of attention is being given to children who leave school unable to read or write. I
think there should be equal concern for those who are unable to cope with simple mental arithmetic — particularly girls.

It is often stated that today's children are growing up in a computer world and they don't need the same skills that their grandparents did. But is it any wonder that many young girls trying to cope with budget housekeeping fail for the simple reason they cannot keep accurate checks on their purchases?

Shopping in markets is no source of cheap purchasing unless one is able to keep pace with the apparent mental agility of the vendor.

Must we face the thought that at some time in the distant future everyone will need to carry in their handbag or pocket one of the miniature calculators?

The writer is concerned about______.

A.budget housekeeping.

B.the retail trade.

C.computer skills.

D.mental arithmetic.

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第5题
When I was young, bedtime was always my favourite part of the day. Wearing soft pajamas an
d with Tom, my stuffed monkey, in my arms, I left no pressure at all.

I named Tom after my uncle when I compared Tom's long arms and legs to his. One night I ran up to Uncle Tom at a family party and told him I had named my monkey after him. His eyebrows wrinkled in confusion, then a chuckle(咯咯笑)escaped his lips. I guessed he didn't understand how important it was to me.

Even if Uncle Tom didn't think my monkey was special, I certainly did. I dressed him in a white baby nightgown. My mother thought that Tom was the best-dressed stuffed animal in the world. Yes, he was certainly a fashionable creature. The strong cologne(科隆香水)I used on him years ago made him still smell" pretty".

For a long time, Tom went everywhere with me. He was my best friend, and I told him everything. But when I turned twelve, I realized I was too old for stuffed animals. I thought people would think I was babyish, so I put him in the cupboard with the rest of my teddy bears and dolls. I begged him to understand why I was doing this, but at the same time I longed to talk to him again.

It took me several years to realize that it was Ok to miss Tom. I know now that maturity (成熟)doesn't only mean growing up and taking on more responsibility. It also means holding on to your childhood and acting young sometimes.

Which of the following is NOT true according to the text?

A.Bedtime used to be the writer's favourite part of the day because of the stuffed monkey.

B.Uncle Tom liked the stuffed monkey as much as the writer.

C.The writer used to carry the monkey with her wherever she went.

D.Years later the writer realized that it was not wrong to miss Monkey Tom.

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第6题
When my first wartime Christmas came, I was in basic training in New Jersey and not sure i
f I could make it home for the holiday. Only on the afternoon of December 23 was the list if men who would have three-day posted. I was one of the lucky soldiers.

It was Christmas Eve when I arrived, and a light snow had fallen. Mother opened the front door. I could see beyond her, into the corner of the living room where the tree had always stood. There were lights, all colors, shining against the green of a pine.

"Where did it come from?" I asked.

"I asked the gate boy to cut it ," my mother said, "I wouldn't have one just for myself, but when called--oh, such a rush ! He just brought it in this afternoon." Krysal Star was in its place. A few green branches reached about a little disorderly at the side, I thought, and there was a bit of bare trunk showing in the middle. But the tree filled the room with warm light and the whole house with the pleasant smell of Christmas.

"It's not like the one you used to find," my mother went on, "Yours were always in good shape. I suppose the gate boy didn't know where to look . But I couldn't be critical."

"Don’t worry," I told him, "It’s perfect."

It wasn't of course, but at the moment I realized for the first time: all Christmas tree are perfect.

From the passage we can infer that ______.

A.the writer spent his first Christmas during the war

B.all the soldiers did not go home for Christmas during the war

C.all the soldiers had three-day passes

D.the writer did not want to go home for Christmas at first

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第7题
Baker had never thought of becoming a writer until he was in the eleventh grade.()
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第8题
Kevin Rogers used to be my boss. At that time he was a hard-working, up-and-coming busines
sman and a real slave-driver, always telling us we had to sell more and more. As soon as I could, I got a job with another company. The last time I saw Rogers was more than ten years ago. At least that's what I thought until last Thursday. But now I'm not so sure.

I was on my way back to my office in the center of town. There is a small park nearby which I sometimes walk through after lunch. It is empty, except for an unshaven, shabby-looking man on one of the benches. He looked about fifty years old and was wearing an old, gray overcoat. It was a cold, wintry day, and he was shivering.

"It's been a long time since I had a meal. Can you help me?" he said. There was something about his voice that sounded familiar. I gave him a few coins and he mumbled something about being grateful. As he stumbled past me, I looked at his face closely, I wondered where I had seen him before. Then it hit me. Could it possibly be…? No! Impossible, I thought. I watched him walking away. He was the same height as Rogers but looked a lot thinner than I remembered. Then, as he left {he park and turned down the street, I caught sight of his face again, this time in profile. The nose was the same as Rogers', too. I almost followed him but something made me stop. I just couldn't be sure. But the resemblance was very close.

Yesterday I rain into someone who had worked for Rogers at the same time I did, and had stayed on longer. I started telling him about the man I had seen in the park. For a moment I thought it was our old boss. The voice, the nose, and even the face were just like Rogers, but it couldn't have been, "Rogers must be the director of a big company by now" I said.

My ex-colleague shook his head. "I thought you knew."

"Knew? Knew what? What are you talking about?"

"Rogers was sent to prison six years ago. He's probably out by now. For all I know he's sleeping on park benches and begging money from passers-by."

It seems that when Rogers was the writer's boss, the writer ______.

A.rather liked Rogers

B.admired Rogers' ability to sell

C.thought Rogers was lazy

D.was not very happy in his job

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第9题
When my first wartime Christmas came, I was in basic training in New Jersey and not sure i
f I could make it home for the holiday. Only on the afternoon of December 23 was the list if men who would have three-day posted. I was one of the lucky soldiers.

It was Christmas Eve when I arrived, and a light snow had fallen. Mother opened the front door. I could see beyond her, into the corner of the living room where the tree had always stood. There were lights, all colors, shining against the green of a pine.

"Where did it come from?" I asked.

"I asked the gate boy to cut it," my mother said, "I wouldn't have one just for myself, but when called—oh, such a rush! He just brought it in this afternoon." Krysal Star was in its place. A few green branches reached about a little disorderly at the side, 1 thought, and there was a bit of bare trunk showing in the middle. But the tree filled the room with warm light and the whole house with the pleasant smell of Christmas.

"It's not like the one you used to find," my mother went on, "Yours were always in good shape. I suppose the gate boy didn't know where to look. But I couldn't be critical."

"Don't worry," I told him, "It's perfect."

It wasn't of course, but at the moment I realized for the first time: all Christmas tree are perfect.

From the passage we can infer that ______.

A.the writer spent his first Christmas during the war

B.all the soldiers did not go home for Christmas during the war

C.all the soldiers had three-day passes

D.the writer did not want to go home for Christmas at first

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第10题
We learn from the second paragraph that ______.A.the writer thinks that the specialists' c

We learn from the second paragraph that ______.

A.the writer thinks that the specialists' complains have some reasons

B.anything that the computer does can be regarded as thought

C.it is not Very difficult to define thought

D.computers play chess in exactly the same way as humans

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第11题
A little girl was given so many picture books on her seventh birthday that her father thou
ght his daughter should give one or two of her new books to a litter neighbor boy named Robert.

Now, taking books, or anything else, from a little girl is like taking candy from a baby, but the father of the little girl had his way and Robert got two of her books. "After all, that leaves you with nine", said the father, who thought he was a philosopher and a child psychologist, and couldn't shut his big stupid mouth on the subject.

A few weeks later, the father went to his library to look up "father" in the Oxford English Dictionary, to feast his eyes on(饱眼福) the praise of fatherhood through the centuries, but he couldn't find volume F~G and then he discovered that three others were missing, too—A~B, L~M, V~Z. He began to search his household, and learned what had happened to the four missing volumes.

"A man came to the door this morning", said his little daughter, "and he didn't know how to get from here to Torrington, or from Torrington to Winsted, and he was a nice man, much nicer than Robert, and so I gave him four of your books. After all, there are thirteen volumes in the Oxford English Dictionary, and that leaves you with nine".

How does the writer feel about taking picture books from a little girl?

A.This sort of thing is quite common.

B.It makes no difference to a child.

C.It is nothing to be surprised at.

D.It may hurt the girl's feelings.

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