W: My son has got a pain in his ear for days.
M: Let’s have a look. Ah yes, he has got something in his ear. I’ll have to take.
[听力原文]
W: My son has got a pain in his ear for days.
M: let’s have a look. Ah yes, he has got something in his ear. I’ll have to take it out.
[听力原文]
W: My son has had a pain in his ear for days.
M: Let’s have a look. Ah yes, he has got something in his ear. I’ll have to fake it out.
My father was a very intelligent man. He got his college degree in mathematics and physics, meaning he had a very cognitive reasoning sense. He was logical. He belonged to Mensa, the organization comprised of the people with the highest IQs in the world, I can remember as a child some of the questions that dad would pose to my brothers and me that came from assorted Mensa tests. I entered college in 1971, at the University of Kentucky. I attended in part due to a music scholarship, but pissed it away by not applying myself. I was sure that dad was the most upset father. I didn’t finish school. I was too young to realize what a college degree could bring me. I transferred to a college close to home for my second year, but it was no use. As the years went by, Dad didn’t hesitate to remind me that I was never too old to go back to college. I never listened to him. I was married, had a young child, and was busy living my own life. Finally, in the spring of 1986, when I ha
A. A Bachelor Degree of Science.
B. A Bachelor Degree of Arts.
C. A four year degree in mathematics.
D. A four year degree in physics.
我来回答: