更多"Who likes running"的相关试题:
[填空题]Blanc likes to watch football games. He also likes to watch basketball games.
→Blanc likes to watch ______ football games ______ basketball games.
[填空题]Jack likes driving in a high speed.
Jack likes to drive______.
[单项选择]He likes playing football.
A. So am I.
B. So did I.
C. So do I.
[单项选择]The girl likes . and ( ).
A. tomatos, chicken
B. tomatoes, chickens
C. tomatoes, chicken
D. tomato, chickens
[单项选择]Laurie likes reading something ()she eats
A. unless
B. while
C. that
D. for
[单项选择]The Uses of Difficulty
The brain likes a challenge—and putting a few obstacles in its way may well boost its creativity.
A)Jack White, the former frontman of the White Stripes and an influential figure among fellow musicians, likes to make things difficult for himself. He uses cheap guitars that won’t stay in shape or in tune. When performing, he positions his instruments in a way that is deliberately inconvenient, so that switching from guitar to organ mid-song involves a mad dash across the stage. Why Because he’s on the run from what he describes as a disease that preys on every artist: “ease of use”. When making music gets too easy, says White, it becomes harder to make it sing.
B)It’s an odd thought. Why would anyone make their work more difficult than it already is Yet we know that difficulty can pay unexpected dividends. In 1966, soon after the Beatles had finished work on “Rubber Soul”, Paul McCartney looked into the possibility of going to America to record the
[单项选择] No company likes to be told it is contributing to the moral decline of a nation. "Is this what you intended to accomplish with your careers " Senator Robert Dole asked Time Warner executives last week. "You have sold your souls, but must you corrupt our nation and threaten our children as well " At Time Warner, however, such questions are simply the latest manifestation of the soul-searching that has involved the company ever since the company was born in 1990. It’s a self-examination that has, at various times, involved issues of responsibility, creative freedom and the corporate bottom line.
At the core of this debate is chairman Gerald Levin,56,who took over for the late Steve Ross in 1992. On the financial front, Levin is under pressure to raise the stock price and reduce the company’s mountainous debt, which will increase to $17.3 billion after two new cable deals close. He has promised to sell off some of the property and restructure the company, but investors are waiting im
A. Luce is a spokesman of Time Warner.
B. Gerald Levin is liable to compromise.
C. Time Warner is united as one in the face of the debate.
D. Steve Ross is no longer alive.