更多"{{B}}What do you do to unwind How "的相关试题:
[多项选择] What do you do to unwind How do you relax your mind
[单项选择]
M: How would you like to move
W: Move What do you mean
M: Move to a new city. I’m thinking of getting another job.
W: But why What’s tile matter with the one you have
M: I don’t have a good future in the job I have. Besides, I think it would be nice to move to a warmer climate. I’m tired of shoveling snow all winter.
W: Where is this new job
M: In California. There won’t be any snow to shovel there, and we can go to the beach all the year round.
W: That sounds pretty good, but What kind of job is it
M: I would be the Director of Research for a big drug company near Los Angeles. I’d get a big raise in salary.
W: That sounds terribly exciting. But how about the children Will they like moving
M: Why not California has many beautiful new schools, and Fred can go skiing up in the mountains.
W: What about Paula I’m sure she won’t want to leave all her
A. It’s too hot.
B. It’s too humid.
C. It snows too much.
D. It snows too little.
[单项选择]What must you do when you receive a present for your birthday You have to sit down and write a thank you note. The words "thank you" are very important, we have to use them all the time. We say them when someone gives us a drink, helps us to pick up things, lends us a book or gives us a present.
Another important word is "please". Many people forget to use it. It is impolite(不礼貌) to ask some one to do something without saying "please". We have to use it when we ask for something, too. It may be a book or a pencil, more coffee or bread, help or advice. It may be in the classroom, at home, or at the bus stop. We have to use "please" to make request(要求) pleasant.
We have to learn to say "sorry", too. When we hurt someone’s feeling, we will have to say we are sorry. When we do something wrong and feel sorry, we will have to use the same word. When we have forgot some thing or broken a promise, we will have to explain with that word, too. "Sorry" is a healing(和解) word. We can
A. Sorry
B. Thank you
C. Please
[简答题]· What do you enjoy most about your work
· Do you have any hobbies
· How did you become interested in reading
[单项选择]
M: I’d like to get a haircut.
W: How do you like you haircut
M: Cut it short in the back, and part it in the middle.
W:Would you like a shampoo
M: No, thanks. But I’d like a shave.
W: OK. I understand.
How does the man like his haircut ( )
A. Cut it short in the back.
B. Part it in the middle.
C. Both A and B.
[单项选择]
{{B}}TEXT B{{/B}}
No matter what you write,
your mother will always believe it’s about her. So said author Ann Beattie
a few years ago at a book talk in Connecticut. You could write about a family of
dogs living on Mars, Beattie went on, and your mother will be convinced that she
is the mother dog. (And who are we kidding, she probably is. )
Amy Tan is a writer who has fully embraced this concept. Her first novel,
The Joy Luck Club, plumbed the gulf between American daughters and their Chinese
mothers. Now, after the death of her own mother, Tan has returned to these
themes with a renewed poignancy and lyricism in The Bonesetters
Daughter.
In recent magazine interviews and the novel’s
foreword, she makes it clear how much she has drawn from her own life. Like her
heroine, Ruth, Tan experienced yearly bouts of psychosomatic laryngitis--unable
to speak for days at a time. And like Ruth, Tan didn’t learn her mothers’ real
A. a book review
B. a novel-adapted film review
C. a scenario
D. a magazine interview
[单项选择]If you are what you eat, then you are also what you buy to eat. And mostly what people buy is scrawled onto a grocery list, those ethereal scraps of paper that record the shorthand of where we shop and how we feed ourselves. Most grocery lists end up in the garbage. But if you live in St. Louis, they might have a half-life you never imagined, as a cultural document, posted on the Internet.
For the past decade, Bill Keaggy, 33, the features photo editor at The St. Louis Post-Dispatch, has been collecting grocery lists and since 1999 has been posting them online at www.grocerylists.org. The collection, which now numbers more than 500 lists, is strangely addictive. The lists elicit twofold curiosity — about the kind of meal the person was planning and the kind of person who would make such a meal. What was the shopper with vodka, lighters, milk and ice cream on his list planning to do with them In what order would they be consumed Was it a he or a she Who had written "
A. Dan Quayle is not alone in misspelling
B. fewer people can spell bananas and bagels correctly
C. misspelling occurs most frequently in writing "potato"
D. some people misspell "sushi" for "suchi", and "shrimp "for "strimp"