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No sooner had she got home __ she tried on her new coat. A.that B.than C.before D.when

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更多“No sooner had she got home __ …”相关的问题
第1题
______ when she started complaining.A.Not until he arrivedB.Hardly had he arrivedC.No soon

______ when she started complaining.

A.Not until he arrived

B.Hardly had he arrived

C.No sooner had he arrived

D.Scarcely did he arrive

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第2题
From the story of Wang Lina we can learn that______.A.the sooner you go to the countryside

From the story of Wang Lina we can learn that______.

A.the sooner you go to the countryside, the sooner you will be successful

B.local farmers can get big harvests if they learn more knowledge

C.university graduates can also realize their value in rural areas

D.Wang had great difficulty in helping villagers planting organic strawberries

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第3题
Although she said that she would go there with me, she still had a()look on her face.
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第4题
Mary () to go abroad for further education, but she gave it up later.A、is hopingB、was h

Mary () to go abroad for further education, but she gave it up later.

A、is hoping

B、was hoping

C、had hoped

D、has hoped

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第5题
Which of the following statements is NOT true?A.If the mother had taken up the receiver ea

Which of the following statements is NOT true?

A.If the mother had taken up the receiver earlier, she would have known who was on the phone.

B.As soon as the mother changed her clothes, she went to the pond together with the two children.

C.The mother wanted to go home earlier, because she had no interest to do it.

D.They catched the first tadpole to the bank.

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第6题
A.Isn'tsheyourgirlfriend B.TheysaidshehadleftforLondon C.What'stheproblem D.Herofficele

A. Isn't she your girlfriend

B. They said she had left for London

C. What's the problem

D. Her office left you a message

E. Why not invite me, then

F. They said they had phoned Linda

G. The manager of their office had suddenly fallen iii

H. Sorry, I lost my way

A: Are you phoning Linda?

B: Yes. But how did you know?

A: (56)

B: What did they say?

A: (57)

B: What happened?

A: (58) . She had to go and take his place for three days.

B: That's too bad.

A: (59) ?

B: You see, I had arranged for us to have a dinner with a friend tonight.

A: (60) ?

B: Sure. Why not?

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第7题
An old lady in a plane had a blanket(毯子)over her head and she did not want to take i
An old lady in a plane had a blanket(毯子)over her head and she did not want to take i

t off.The air hostess spoke to her, but the old lady said, “I have never been in a plane before , and I am frightened.I am going to keep this blanket over my head until we are back on the ground again!”

Then the captain came.He said, “Madam, I am the captain of this plane.The weather is fine, there are no clouds in the sky, and everything is going very well.”But she continued to hide.

So the captain turned and started to go back.Then the old lady looked out from under the blanket with one eye and said, “I am sorry, young man, but I don’t like planes and I am never going to fly again.But I’ll say one thing, ”She continued kindly, “You and your wife keep your plane very clean!”

(1)An old lady had ________.

A.glasses

B.a blanket over her head

C.a coat

D.a basket

(2)A.She didn’t want to ________.

A.take it off

B.turn it off

C.get on

D.talk about it

(3)________ spoke to her.

A.The air hostess

B.The man next to her

C.her husband

D.one of her friends

(4)The old lady had never been ________ before.

A.abroad

B.home

C.in a plane

D.in hospital

(5)The woman didn’t like planes and she was never going ________.

A.to fly again

B.to travel

C.to go abroad

D.to go home

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第8题
Paying Your WayThere were red faces at one of Britain's biggest banks recently. They
Paying Your Way

There were red faces at one of Britain's biggest banks recently. They had accepted a telephone order to buy £ 100,000 worth of shares from a fifteen-year-old schoolboy (they thought he was twenty-one. The shares fell in value and the schoolboy was unable to pay up. The bank lost £ 20,000 on the deal which it cannot get back because, for one thing, this young speculator does not have the money and, for another, being under eighteen, he is not legally liable for his debts. If the shares had risen in value by the same amount that they fell, he would have pocketed £ 20,000 profit. Not bad for a fifteen-year-old. It certainly is better than delivering the morning newspaper. In another recent case, a boy of fourteen found, in his grandmother's house, a suitcase full of foreign banknotes. The clean, crisp, banknotes looked very convincing but they were now not used in their country of origin or anywhere else. This young boy headed straight to the nearest bank with his pockets filled with notes. The cashiers did not realise that the country in question had reduced the value of its currency by 90%. They exchanged the notes at their face value at the current exchange rate. In three days, before he was found out, he took £ 200,000 from nine different banks. Amazingly, he had already spent more than half of this on taxi- rides, restaurant meals, concert tickets and presents for his many new girlfriends (at least he was generous!) before the police caught up with him. Because he is also under eighteen the banks have kissed goodbye to a lot of money, and several cashiers have lost their jobs.Should we admire these youngsters for being enterprising and showing initiative or condemn them for their dishonesty? Maybe they had managed for years with tiny amounts of pocket money that they got from tight-listed parents. Maybe they had done Saturday jobs for peanuts. It is hardly surprising, given the expensive things that young people want to buy, such as fashionable running shoes and computer games, if they sometimes think up more imaginative ways of making money than delivering newspapers and baby-sitting. These lads saw the chance to make a lot of money and took it.Another recent story which should give us food for thought is the case of the man who paid his six-year-old daughter £ 300 a week pocket money. He then charged her for the food she ate and for her share of the rent and household bills. After paying for all this, she was left with a few coins for her piggy bank.. "She will soon learn the value of money," he said. "There's no such thing as a free lunch. Everything has to be paid for and the sooner she learns that the better." At the other extreme there are fond parents who provide free bed and board for their grown-up children. While even the most hard-hearted parents might hesitate to throw their children out on the streets, we all know of people in their late twenties who still shamelessly live off their parents. Surely there comes a time when every- one has to leave the parental nest, look after themselves and pay their own way in life. But when is it?

1.One of Britain's biggest banks recently ____

A、received a telephone order to buy shares for a twenty-one year old

B、lost a lot of money because the shares they bought fell in value

C、bought quite a lot of shares for a customer and caused him to lose money

D、lost money as its young customer did not have the money to pay his debts

2.According to the passage, the young customer would have ____

A、earned £ 20,000, if the shares had gone up in value by the same amount they fell

B、paid his debts, if he had had the money to do so

C、continued to cheat banks, if he had not been found out

D、to go to prison, if he did not pay the money back

3.The writer's attitude to the example of the two boys who cheated the banks is ____

A、positive

B、questioning

C、neutral

D、negative

4.The reason why the man paid his daughter £300 a week pocket money and then required her to pay for her living expenses was that he wanted her to learn ____

A、to bear the hardships of life

B、how to live comfortably on her own pocket money

C、the value of money

D、how to save money

5.It can be concluded from the article that the writer believes that ____

A、parents should give more pocket money to their children

B、children should leave the parental nest as soon as possible

C、grown-up children should support themselves

D、children should learn to be economical

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第9题
Mr. Brown was at the theatre. He had got his ticket at the moment, so he had not been ahle
to choose his seat. He now found that he was in the middle of a group of American la- dies, some of them middle-aged and some of them quite old. They clearly all knew each other well, as before the curtain went up on the play they had come to see, they all talked and joked a lot together.

The lady sitting on Mr. Brown's left, who was about sixty years old, seemed to be the happiest and the most interesting of the American group, and after the first act of the play, she apologized to him for the noisiness of her friends. He answered that he was very glad to see American ladies so really enjoying their visit to England, and so they had a friendly talk. Mr. Brown's neighbour explained what they doing there.

"You know, I have known these ladies all my life," she said. "We all grew up together back in our hometown in the United States. They have all lost their husbands~ and call themselves the Merry Widows. It is a sort of club, you know. They go to a foreign country every summer or two and have a lot of fun. They always go everywhere together. I have wanted to join their club for a long time, but I was not able to become a member until the spring of this year."

The group of American ladies enjoyed the play in a theatre in______.

A.Britain

B.America

C.their club

D.their hometown

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第10题
A poor traveler stopped under the tree to eat the boiled rice and vegetables which he brou
ght with him. A few meters away, there was a small shop by the side of the road where a woman was frying fish and selling it to travelers. The woman watched the poor traveler carefully, and when he finished his food and began to go, she shouted rudely, "You have not paid me for the fried fish?

"But I have not had any fried fish!" he said.

"But everyone can see that you enjoyed the smell of my fried fish with your rice and veg- etables," said the woman, "If you had not smelled the fish, your meal would not have been so pleasant !"

Soon a crowd collected, and although they supported the poor traveler, they had to ad- mit that wind was blowing from the shop to the place where he had eaten, and that it had carried the smell of the fried fish to him.

Finally, the woman took the poor traveler to a judge, who said, "The woman says that the traveler ate his meal with the smell of her fried fish. The traveler agrees that the wind was blowing the smell of her fried fish to his nose while he was eating, so he must pay for it." "What does your fried fish cost?" he asked the woman.

"Twenty-five cents a plate," she answered delighted.

"Then go outside together," said the judge. "There the traveler must hold up a twenty five-cent piece so that a shadow(影子) falls on the woman's hand. The price of the smell of a plate of fried fish is the shadow of twenty-five cents."

Why did the traveler refuse to pay the woman for the fried fish? Because______.

A.he was poor

B.he was rude

C.he was supported by a crowd

D.he hadn't eaten her fried fish at all

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