更多"The crop circles were thought to be"的相关试题:
[单项选择]
W: John, I thought you were. going to leave early today to take your son to the show.
M: I’m stilt planning to. But I can’t leave until I finish typing all the letters.
W: Can you leave that until tomorrow
M: No. The boss wants them to be finished by tomorrow morning.
W: How many have you got left
M: About five.
W: Why don’t you just go ahead. John I’ll do the letters for you.
M: Thank you very much, Janet. You’re so kind.
Where arc the speakers( ).
A. In a classroom.
B. In a theater.
C. In an office.
[单项选择]
W: Oh, you are here, John. I thought you were swimming with the others.
M: I changed my mind at the last minute.
What does John mean( ).
A. He will go swimming.
B. He likes swimming very much.
C. He didn’t go swimming.
[单项选择]Your English is quite good. I thought you were American-______.
A. If that doesn’t make things worse
B. If I do say so myself
C. I’ll take that as a compliment
D. I mean that as a compliment
[单项选择]
It’s not that we thought things were fine. It’s just that this year there were no fixes to the messes we made—no underwater off-well caps, no AIG bailouts, no reuniting the island castaways in a church and sending them to heaven. We had to idly watch things completely fall apart, making us feel so pathetic that planking seemed like a cool thing to do. This was the year of the meltdown.
If a meltdown could happen at a nuclear reactor in Japan—a country so obsessed with keeping up to date that its citizens annually get new cell phones and a new Prime Minister—we should have known we were all doomed. Meltdowns happened to the most unlikely victims. Everyone was so vulnerable to meltdowns that even Canadians rioted, though they did it only so the rest of the world wouldn’t feel bad about their riots.
It didn’t take a tsunami; anything could trigger a meltdown. Greece, a country so economically insignificant that its biggest gl
A. triggered off
B. recovered
C. realized
D. restated
[单项选择]It’s not that we thought things were fine. It’s just that this year there were no fixes to the messes we made—no underwater off-well caps, no AIG bailouts, no reuniting the island castaways in a church and sending them to heaven. We had to idly watch things completely fall apart, making us feel so pathetic that planking seemed like a cool thing to do. This was the year of the meltdown.
If a meltdown could happen at a nuclear reactor in Japan—a country so obsessed with keeping up to date that its citizens annually get new cell phones and a new Prime Minister—we should have known we were all doomed. Meltdowns happened to the most unlikely victims. Everyone was so vulnerable to meltdowns that even Canadians rioted, though they did it only so the rest of the world wouldn’t feel bad about their riots.
It didn’t take a tsunami; anything could trigger a meltdown. Greece, a country so economically insignificant that its biggest global financial contribution to this century was that N
A. We could spare our effort to change them.
B. We could watch things fall apart leisurely.
C. We were incapable of doing anything.
D. We could stay cool in face of messes.
[单项选择]
M: I thought that you were going to the convention in Atlanta last Saturday.
W: I was planning to, but I haven’t been feeling well, so I Stayed home.
Where did the woman go last Saturday ()
A. She went to Atlanta.
B. She went to a convention.
C. She went to a hospital.
D. She stayed home.
[单项选择]A. He lost his watch.
B. He thought the meeting was for a different day.
C. His history class ended 20 minutes late.
D. He was not paying attention to the time.