Ask him his books here tomorrow.A. takeB.to takeC.bringD.to bring
A. take
B.to take
C.bring
D.to bring
- · 有5位网友选择 A,占比50%
- · 有3位网友选择 D,占比30%
- · 有2位网友选择 B,占比20%
A. take
B.to take
C.bring
D.to bring
A.To find out if the books she ordered are in.
B.To ask him to attend a Student Federation meeting.
C.To get his schedule of classes for next term.
D.To see if he has time to welcome the new students.
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
Section A
Directions: In this section, you will hear 8 short conversations and 2 long conversations. At the end of each conversation, one or more questions will be asked about what was said. Both the conversation and the questions will be spoken only once. After each question there will be a pause. During the pause, you must read the four choices marked A, B, C and D, and decide which is the best answer.
听力原文:M: I hope I can rely on Peterson to lend me reference books for next week's paper. He's been my classmate ever since high school after all.
W: As far as I know, he usually turns his back on anyone who needs a hand from him.
Q: What does the woman imply?
(12)
A.He can count on his friends for help.
B.His friend will not help him at all.
C.He can ask for help from his friend.
D.Everyone in his class can help him.
Words were a fascination for Roger, and he used to sit in his tank, just thinking about words. If there were a pause in the conversation he would look at you and ask some such question ass "Do you happen to know what 'transubtantiation' is? "If you said you knew, he was very cast down, because he wanted to tell you.
One of his regular visitors was the government officer who went by every six months. Roger would ask him if he knew what a word meant, and then he would have to admit that he didn't and Roger would be every pleased with himself. Taz, as his name was, got very fed up with this.
So, on one occasion, before he went, he spent an evening with the Oxford English Dictionary. He rode in, tied up his horse and went in to see Roger, and Roger said, "Do you happen to know what an 'embolism' is?' and Taz said; "No, I bloody don't." Then Taz asked him" Do you happen to know what a 'letoard' is?" Roger, was upset to be asked a question. He said: SA leotard? I think I saw the skin of one once. "And Taz said: "You bloody didn't. "SO Roger said: "Well, what is a leotard?' Taz said: "Urn not going to bloody tell you. ' He got on his horse and rode off and went to sleep in the desert five miles away.
Some time later he was suddenly woken up by a steely grasp on his coat. Hands picked him up bodily from the ground and held him in the air and shook him. He opened his eyes and it was Roger with his eyes glinting in the moonlight, staring at him and saying: "What’s a bloody leotard?"
The outback town was given a library because ______.
A.it was expanding rapidly
B.Roger was a collector of English words
C.a government official thought it necessary
D.the people of the town had requested one from, the government
When people ask him for help, he never turned his back ______ them.
A.with
B.off
C.from
D.on
A、Because these books are his personal belongings.
B、Because he collected these books for a long time.
C、Because he didn't want to share the books with others.
D、Because the books enabled him to acquire knowledge.
What did Juan ask his roommate to do when he was making his trial speech?
A.Interrupt him whenever he detected a mistake.
B.Focus on the accuracy of the language he used.
C.Stop him when he had difficulty understanding.
D.Write down any points where he could improve.
Born in rude and abject poverty, he never had any education, except what he gave himself, till he was approaching manhood. Not even books wherewith to inform. and train his mind were within his reach. No school, no university, no legal faculty had any part in training his powers. When he became a lawyer and a politician, the years most favourable to continuous study had already passed, and the opportunities he found for reading were very scanty. He knew but few authors in general literature, though he knew those few thoroughly. He taught himself a little mathematics, but he could read no language save his own, and can have had only the faintest acquaintance with European history or with any branch of philosophy.
The want of regular education was not made up for by the persons among whom his lot was cast. Till he was a grown man, he never moved in any society from which he could learn those things with which the mind of an orator to be stored. Even after he had gained some legal practice, there was for many years no one for him to mix with except the petty practitioners of a petty town, men nearly all of whom knew little more than he did himself.
Schools gave him nothing, and society gave him nothing. But he had a powerful intellect and a resolute will. Isolation fostered not only self-reliance but the habit of reflection, and indeed, of prolonged and intense reflection. He made all that he knew a part of himself. His convictions were his own—clear and coherent. He was not positive or opinionated and he did not deny that at certain moments he pondered and hesitated long before he decided on his course. But though he could keep a policy in suspense, waiting for events to guide him, he did not waver. He paused and reconsidered, but it was never his way to go back on a decision once more or to waste time in vain regrets that all he had expected had not been attained. He took advice readily and left many things to his ministers; but he did not lean on his advisers. Without vanity or ostentation, he was always independent, self-contained, prepared to take full responsibility for his acts.
It is said in the second paragraph that Abraham Lincoln ______.
A.was illiterate
B.was never educated
C.was educated very late
D.behaved rudely when he was young
The author began to love books for the following reasons EXCEPT that
A.he began to see something in his mind.
B.he could visualize what he read in his mind.
C.he could go back to read the books again.
D.he realized that books offered him new experience.
W: Oh! Sorry to miss you. But my thirst for knowledge was greater than my pangs of hunger !
M: I've never had that problem. So where were you?
W: My political science class ran overtime.
M: That's been happening quite a bit lately, hasn't it?
W: I guess so. Actually what happens is that a bunch of us hang around for a while after class to talk with our professor and ask him questions.
M: Who is this twenty-first-century Socrates?
W: Professor Hall. Have you heard of him?
M: Hm, he does have a good reputation in the Political Science Department.
W: And a well-deserved one! The same students who fall asleep in discussion groups and seminars fight for front row seats in his lectures.
M: Oh, no! I hope this isn't catching!
W: You can joke. But it's great to have a professor who's not only interesting, but prepared to give up time for students.
M: I know. They're a rare breed. Maybe I should sit in on his class sometime. Do you think he'd care?
W: Not at all. Lots of students bring their friends, and he says he feels flattered.
M: Well, just to be safe, I think I'll bring my lunch along as well.
W: I'll make a good student of you yet.
What was the woman doing at lunchtime?
A.Giving a lecture.
B.Discussing political science.
C.Working on a science problem.
D.Reading books in a library.
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