更多"( ) I like about her is her diligen"的相关试题:
[单项选择]What does Lisa not like about her new apartment
A. It’s too close to the supermarket.
B. She can’t see the beautiful view of the city.
C. It was damaged in a fire.
D. It’s too high in case of a fire.
[填空题]I would like to talk ______ you about her application.
[单项选择]
What does Nancy like best about her job
A. Meeting interesting people in the city.
B. Being able to enjoy the world of nature.
C. Driving in unsettled weather.
D. Taking long drives outside the city.
[单项选择]I don’t regret()her what I thought about her proposal, even if it makes her a little upset.
A. tell
B. to tell
C. told
D. telling
[填空题]You can tell her I would like to see her (person)______if it causes her no trouble.
[单项选择]Does the woman like her job
[单项选择]How does the wife like her son
A. His son is handsome and bright.
B. His son isn’t a good boy.
C. His son is bad.
[填空题]I replied to her that I would like to (accept) ______ her invitation.
[填空题]Her students like her very much.
→She is______.
[单项选择]*Like her white friends Eleanor Roosevelt and
Aubrey Williams, Mary Bethune believed in the
fundamental commitment of the New Deal to
Line assist the black American’s struggle and in the
(5) need for blacks to assume responsibilities to
help win that struggle. Unlike those Of her white
liberal associates, however, Bethune’s ideas had
evolved out of a long experience as a "race
leader." Founder of a small black college in
(10) Florida, she had become widely known by 1935
as an organizer of black women’s groups and as a
civil and political rights activist. Deeply religious,
certain of her own capabilities, she held a rela-
tively uncluttered view of what she felt were the
(15) New Deal’s and her own people’s obligations to
the cause of racial justice. Unafraid to speak her
mind to powerful whites, including the President,
o
A. joining the army and helping America over-throw its Fascist enemies
B. helping America accomplish its egalitarian ideals
C. voting for administration antipoverty programs
D. electing other blacks to government office
E. (E) expressing a belief in racial pride