We are sorry to see that some cruel experiments on animals are still carried out in
A)我们痛心地看到一些动物实验仍在进行而且还冠以科学的命称。
B)我们遗憾地看到人们仍在各个科学领域做一些有关动物的残忍实验。
C)我们遗憾地看到人们仍在以科学的名义做一些有关动物的残忍实验。
D)我们遗憾地看到人们仍在以科学的名义在动物身上做一些残忍的实验。
E)我们痛心地看到相关一些科研机构仍在提议有关动物的实验。
A)我们痛心地看到一些动物实验仍在进行而且还冠以科学的命称。
B)我们遗憾地看到人们仍在各个科学领域做一些有关动物的残忍实验。
C)我们遗憾地看到人们仍在以科学的名义做一些有关动物的残忍实验。
D)我们遗憾地看到人们仍在以科学的名义在动物身上做一些残忍的实验。
E)我们痛心地看到相关一些科研机构仍在提议有关动物的实验。
Sorry, but we cannot go to San Diego. Our cousins ______to see us next Sunday.
A.come
B.are coming
C.have come
D.came
Then we walked slowly in the garden, hand in hand, to have a last look at each rock, each tree, each flower. We sat for a while by the small pond which was a favorite place of my grandpa's. "What do you see here, Tommy?" asked the old man. I looked at the water, not knowing what to say, and then replied, "I see something soft and beautiful, Grandpa." He pulled me close to him and said, "It isn't the pond or the trees or the flowers that are beautiful. It is the special place in your heart that makes you feel so." After a while, he continued, "I built the pond, and planted the trees and the flowers a long time ago. I started to build this beautiful home the day my only son was born." He stopped. After a long silence, he murmured(低声说), "One day a terrible war came, and my son, like many other people's sons, went away to fight. Five months later, a telegram came, telling us that my son had passed away...' he couldn't finish his sentence. I saw tears trickle from his eyes. "That afternoon I picked some roses from this place and put them in front of son's portrait (肖像), and said goodbye to him. You know who he was, Tommy?"
"My father?" I asked in a whisper, hoping my grandpa would say no. But he said, "That's rights my dear. ' Ann in arm, we cried. Then the old man held me ups and said softly, "My dear Tom, we axe going to move, but don't say good-bye to our old house, never."
Tom and his grandpa______ the old house.
A.were too sorry to leave
B.were both unwilling to say goodbye to
C.felt sorry when they were in
D.didn't know that they had to leave
听力原文:W: Good morning.
M: Morning, can I help you?
W: Yes, I' d like to join the library. We' re new to the district you see.
M: Certainly. Well all we need is some sort of identification with your name and address on it.
W: Oh dear. We just moved, you see, and everything has my old address.
M: A driving licence, perhaps?
W: No, I don' t drive.
M: Your husband' s would do.
W: Yas, but his licence will stir have the old address on it.
M: Perhaps you have a letter addressed to you at your new house?
W: No, I' m afraid not. We' ye only been there a few days you see and no one' s written to us yet.
M: What about your bank book?
W: That' s just the same. Oh dear, and I did want to get some books out this weekend. We' re going on holiday to relax after the move, you see, and I wanted to take something with me to read.
M: Well, I' m sorry, but we can' t possibly issue tickets without some form. of identification. What about your passport?
W: What? Oh yes, how silly of me. I've just got a new one and it does have our new address. I' ve just been to book our tickets se I have it on me. Just a minute. Here you are.
M: Thank you. Well, that' s all right. Now if you' d like to ge and choose your books your tickets will be ready for you when you come back to the desk to have them stamped out.
W: Oh, thank you. Er, how many books am I allowed to take out?
M: You can take four books out at a time and you also get two tickets to take out magazines or periodicals. Newspapers, I' m afraid can' t be taken out; they have to be read here.
W: Oh that's fine. Thank you very much.
(23)
A.write down one's name and address
B.show some kind of identification with one' s name and address on it
C.give one' s address
D.give one' s driving license
Why do we go wrong about our friends or our enemies? Sometimes what people say hides their real meaning. And if we don't really listen, we miss the feeling behind the words. Suppose someone tells you, "You' re a lucky dog. " Is he really on your side? If he says, "You' re a lucky guy. " or "You' re a lucky gal. " , that's being friendly. But" lucky dog" ? There's a bit of envy in those words. Maybe he doesn't see it himself. But bringing in the "dog" bit puts you down a little. What he may be saying is that he doesn't think you deserve your luck.
"Just think of all the things you have to be thankful for" is another noise that says one thing and means another. It could mean that the speaker is trying to get you to see your problem as part of your life as a whole. But is he? Wrapped up in this phrase is the thought that your problem isn't important. It's telling you to think of all the starving people in the world when you haven't got a date for Saturday night.
How can you tell the real meaning behind someone's words? One way is to take a good look at the person talking. Do his words fit the way he looks? Does what he says square with the tone of voice? His posture? The look in his eyes? Stop and think. The minute you spend thinking about the real meaning of what people say to you may save another mistake.
When the writer recalls the things that happened between him and his friends, he
A.feels happy, thinking of how nice his friends were to him
B.feels he may not have"read" his friends'true feelings correctly
C.thinks it was a mistake to view Jim as a friend
D.is sorry that his friends let him down
—Will you go fishing with me this weekend? —Sorry, ______. Im going to see the dentist.
A.I won"t
B.I can"t
C.I needn"t
D.I mustn"t
A.been
B.gone
C.stayed
—Hello, may I have an appointment with the headmaster? —().
A.Sorry, I don't know you
B.No, you can't
C.Certainly. Wait a minute, please
D.Let me see
A.for a moment
B.in a moment
C.for the moment
D.at the moment