更多"M: If the traffic was not so bad, I"的相关试题:
[单项选择]
M: If the traffic was not so bad, I could have been home by 6 o’clock.
W: What a pity! Michael was here to see you.
What happened to the man( ).
A. He had a traffic accident.
B. He was held up in traffic.
C. He was missing Michael.
[单项选择]
M: So, what would you like to drink They have beer, wine and juice here.
W: I don’t like alcohol. It makes my face turn red.
What will the woman probably drink ( )
A. Alcohol.
B. Beer.
C. Juice.
D. Wine.
[简答题]Do you like travel to somewhere you have never been or the place you have ever been Why Use specific reasons and examples to support your answer.
[填空题]Mu Zimei’s diaries have so bad influence online that net citizens attack her and refuse to read her sex diaries.
[多项选择]
Section C Conversations
Reading experts have been interested for a long time in
discovering what makes reading material difficult. A great deal of (26)
has been done on the topic. And now most experts (27)
that there are two major (28) in reading
difficulty. One is the (29) of the words found in the
(30) If they are long, (31) or technical
words, the material is more difficult. The other major factor is the
(32) of the sentence. (33)
Some experts have developed ways of measuring the readability or
difficulty of material. (34) These two factors are effective
to measure word difficulty and sentence complexity.
The usualy
purpose of measuring difficulty or readability is to be able to provide suitable
reading material to children at a certain level. (35) In
this way, the material provided can match their reading ability.
[单项选择]
Why They Came
Not many decisions could have been more difficult for a family to make them to say farewell to a community where it had lived for centuries, to abandon old ties and familiar landmarks, and to sail across dark seas to a strange land. Today, when mass communications tell one part of the world all about another, it is quite easy to understand how poverty or tyranny might force people to exchange an old nation for a new one. But centuries ago migration was a leap into the unknown. It was an enormous intellectual and emotional commitment. The forces that moved early immigrants to their great decision — the decision to leave their homes and begin an adventure filled with uncertainty, risk and hardship — must have been of overpowering proportions. As Oscar Handlin states, the early immigrants of America "would collide with unaccustomed problems, learn to understand alien ways and alien languages, manage to survive in a very foreign environment".
A. searching for religious freedom
B. breaking with past cultural inheritance
C. escaping political oppression
D. searching for riches