What favor does Ken want someone to do for him?A.Mark the latest homework.B.Put a notice o
What favor does Ken want someone to do for him?
A.Mark the latest homework.
B.Put a notice on the classroom door.
C.Return some exam papers to his students.
What favor does Ken want someone to do for him?
A.Mark the latest homework.
B.Put a notice on the classroom door.
C.Return some exam papers to his students.
Not long before, my daughter's shoes were scratched with a knife.She burst into36.I took them to the shoemaker to get them37. The young apprentice (学徒) glanced at the opening and said, "38I can do except replace the upper." His master looked at them and said to me, "If you39me, I will add more scratches on both of the shoes." I was40and asked why. He explained, "As if the openings were made41for the sake of special style and reuse." Two days later I found there were indeed more scratches on42shoe, but all the openings were patched (打补丁) by soft red leather with edges sewed by thick thread,43more unique and interesting than ever.I couldn't help but44the master's skill. Another time, my wife's sister's white blouse had been torn, leaving a large opening on the back.My wife45the blouse carefully, and then said, "Let me take it46 _and mend it." Seeing the blouse again, I was shocked: all the torn parts had been sewed up by thin and47thread and they48 a look of ice crystal(冰晶) hanging from a winter's branch.49, she had attached a snowman and a cabin made of flowery cotton rags onto the shirt.I50with praise, "It's just as beautiful as a piece of51!" "I was inspired by that craftsman.Patches are supposed to be52, but a skillful craftsman can make it take on a kind of perfection," replied my wife. Her words inspired me even more: Perfection is53to achieve in everything; Patches are unavoidable, so is human's life.Since you can't54the existence of wound, you should not expect people's55by exposing the wound, which reveals nothing meaningful.
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A、sales order
B、bill of lading
C、sales invoice
D、customer order
W: Yeah, I'm really excited, Jack. I'm going up to New York City for a couple of days.
M: My roommate's going to New York, too. Are you driving? Maybe you two could ride together.
W: No, I'm going to take a train to the Plain Station. I've already got my ticket.
M: So what are you going to do in New York?
W: I'm visiting a friend I met last summer at the music camp. I shared a camp with Laura and she's just moved to Manhattan. So I'm going up to see her new place.
M: You two probably have a lot to talk about? Didn't you tell me you were from New York?
W: No, I'm from California. I've never been to New York before. We are going to hear an opera at Lincoln Center on Saturday night.
M: Wow, I wish I were going with you.
How will Kate travel to New York?
A.She'll ride with the man's roommate.
B.She'll drive her own ear.
C.She'll take a train.
阅读下面短文,从短文后所给各题的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中选出能填入相应空白处的最佳选项。
Money and Love
When the Romantic Movement was still in its first favor, it was a common matter of debate 【B1】 people should marry for love or for money. The young people concerned usually favored love, and their parents usually favored money. In the novels of the period the dilemma was felicitously (巧妙地) solved by the discovery, 【B2】 the last page 【B3】 the apparently penniless heroine was really a great heiress. But in real life young men 【B4】 hoped for this denouement (结局) were apt to be disappointed. Prudent parents, 【B5】 admitting that their daughters should marry for love, took care 【B6】 all the young men they met should be rich. This method was sometimes very successful; it was adopted, for examplem, by my maternal grandfather, who had 【B7】 romantic daughters, none of 【B8】 married badly.
In these days of psychology the matter no 【B9】 looks so simple as it did eighty years ago. We
realize now that money may be the cause, or part of the cause, of quite genuine love; of this there are notable examples in history. Benjamin Disraeli, 【B10】 became lord Beaconsfield, 【B11】 in his youth, poor and struggling and passionately ambitious. He married a rich widow, much 【B12】 than himself, and 【B13】 by the world to be rather silly. Owing 【B14】 her, he was able to make his career a success. A cynical world naturally assumed that he loved her money 【B15】 than he loved her, but in this the world was mistaken; through out the whole of their married life he was deeply and genuinely devoted 【B16】 her. I do not suppose he would have loved her if she had been poor when he first knew her, but the gratitude which he felt for help 【B17】 he owed to her kindly interest in him easily developed into a sincere affection. A great deal of affection is based upon the fact that its object is a help in 【B18】 the purposes of the person who feels it. Men in whom ambition is the leading passion are likely to love women 【B19】 assist them 【B20】 their career, and it would be very shallow psychology to suppose that the love is not real because it has its instinctive root in self-interest.
【B1】
A.whether
B.that
C.which
D./
A.saying
B.talking
C.telling
D.speaking
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