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Bond had walked for only a few minutes when it suddenly occurred to him that he was being

followed. There was no evidence for it except a slight tingling(隐隐作痛) of the scalp(头皮) and an extra awareness of the people near him, but he had faith in his sixth sense and he at once stopped in front of the shop window he was passing and looked casually back along 46th Street. Nothing but a lot of miscellaneous people moving slowly on the sidewalks, mostly on the same side as himself, the side that was sheltered from the sun. There was no sudden movement into a doorway, nobody casually wiping his face with a handkerchief to avoid recognition, nobody bending down to tie a shoelace.

Bond examined the Swiss watches in his shop window and then turned and sauntered on. After a few yards he stopped again. Still nothing. He went on and turned fight into the Avenue of the Americans, stopping in the first doorway, the entrance to a women's underwear store where a man in a tan suit with his back to him was examining the black lace pants on a particularly realistic dummy(模型). Bond turned and leant against a pillar and gazed lazily but watchfully out into the street.

And then something gripped his pistol arm and a voice snarled:" All right, Limey. Take it easy unless you want lead for lunch", and he felt something press into his back just above the kidney.

What was there familiar about that voice? The law? The gun? Bond glanced down to see what was holding his right ann. It was a steel hook. Well, if the man had only one arm! Like lightening he turned around, bending sideways and bringing his left fist round in a flailing blow, low down.

There was a smack as his fist was caught in the other man's left hand, and at the same time as the contact telegraphed to Bond's mind that there could have been no gun, there came the well-remembered laugh and the lazy voice saying:" No good, James. The angles have got you."

Bond straightened himself slowly and for a moment he could only gaze into the grinning hawk-life face of Felix Leiterwith blank disbelief, his built-up tension slowly relaxing.

"So you were doing a front tail, you lousy bastard, "he finally said.

Bond realized that he was being followed by means of ______. ()

A.his common sense

B.his sense of humour

C.his sight

D.his sixth sense

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更多“Bond had walked for only a few…”相关的问题
第1题
______ when the phone rang.A.Scarcely I had walked in the doorB.Scarcely had I walked in t

______ when the phone rang.

A.Scarcely I had walked in the door

B.Scarcely had I walked in the door

C.I had walked scarcely in the door

D.I had walked in the door scarcely

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第2题
Mary()in the garden when it began to rain.

A.walked

B.walking

C.was walking

D.had walked

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第3题
The guide was enthusiastic and knowledgeable and we spent a lovely evening wandering
into places which we ________ straight past otherwise.

A. had walked

B. were walking

C. would have walked

D. must have walked

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第4题
He walked ______ whole day,but by 5:30 he had only covered ______ quarter of the distance.

A.the;a

B.a;the

C.the;the

D.a;a

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第5题
I had walked in ahead of Kay, but the shopkeeper pretended ____ me.()

A、 not to see

B、 to not see

C、 not to have seen

D、 to not have seen

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第6题
A recently published systematic review nicely summarizes that().
A recently published systematic review nicely summarizes that().

A.the huge variety of bonding methods used on dental oxide ceramics and their results in laboratory bond strength testing.

B.published clinical trials on bonded oxide ceramic restorations and correlate their results with that of laboratory bond strength testing use the same bonding methods as in the clinical trials.

C. 23 different surface treatments that had been tested still with a wide variation of specific conditions.

D. the vast amount of laboratory research it really is still a significant problem in dentistry to bond reliably to oxide ceramics such as alumina and zirconia ceramics.

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第7题
On the morning of November 18,1735, an earthquake shook Boston, Massachusetts. John Winthr
op, a professor at Harvard College, felt the quake and awoke. "I rose," Winthrop wrote, "and lighting a candle, looked on my watch, and found it to be 15 minutes after four." John Winthrop walked quickly downstairs to the grandfather's clock. It had stopped three minutes before, at 4 ' 11. Except for stopping the clock, the quake had only thrown a key from the mantel to the floor.

The clock had stopped because Winthrop had put some long glass tubes he was using for an experiment into the box for safekeeping. The quake had knocked the tubes over and blocked the pendulum. Winthrop, therefore, had the exact time that the earthquake had hit Boston. He looked at the key on the floor. The quake had thrown it forward in the direction of the quake's motion by a shock coming from the northwest, perhaps in Canada.

This passage suggests that ______.

A.John Winthrop had difficulty in sleeping

B.earthquakes are common in Boston

C.Boston was a center for clock-making

D.John Winthrop was a scientist

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第8题
B.根据课文内容在每个空白处填入一个恰当的词。Two men walked slowly, one after another, throu

B.根据课文内容在每个空白处填入一个恰当的词。

Two men walked slowly, one after another, through the shallow water of a stream. 61 they could see were stones and earth. The 62 ran cold over their feet. They had blanket packs 63 their backs. Suddenly, the man who followed 64 over a stone. He hurt his foot badly and called: “Hey, Bill, I’ve hurt my foot.” Bill 65 straight on without looking back. The man was 66 in the empty land, but he was not lost. He knew the way to their camp, where he would find food and bullets. He struggled to his 67 and limped on. Bill would be waiting for him there, and 68 they would go south to the Hudson Bay Company. He had not eaten for days. Often he 69 to pick some small berries and put them into his 70. The berries were tasteless, and did not satisfy, but he knew he must eat them.

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第9题
When he was young, Jacob Lawrence often walked more than sixty blocks from his home in the
Harlem section of New York City to the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Jacob wanted to be an artist, and he believed that studying the famous painting hanging in that museum would help him.

The year was 1930. The depression (经济萧条) had brought hard times.

As he walked through Harlem, Jacob noticed the people on the sidewalks. He looked hard at the churches, the funeral parlors and barbershops. Jacob stored those images in his mind, along with the images of paintings he saw in the museum.

Jacob came from a poor family. His mother believed there was little chance that her son could grow up to be a successful painter. She wanted him to aim for something more practical. But Jacob's teacher in an after-school art program saw that the youngster was talented. Alston showed him how to use poster paints and crayons (蜡笔) to make masks and stage sets.

As time passed, Alston let Jacob rent work space in his own studio. That was an exciting place for a young black man struggling to become an artist. Many creative people gathered there to talk about art and literature and history.

From these conversations, Jacob learned that history books often ignored the accomplishments of African Americans. He decided to paint a series of pictures dramatizing the story of a black hero. He chose Toussaint, a slave from the Caribbean island of Haiti, who had helped free his people from French ruling.

Many people admired Jacob's pictures, but he needed more than admiration. To help his family, he often had to work at jobs that took him away from painting. Then something encouraging happened. The government set up the Federal Art Project to help struggling artists survive the depression, and a sculptor (雕刻家) named Augusta got Jacob a job with the project. For eighteen months, Jacob was paid a salary to paint pictures. For the first time, he felt like a professional artist.

All of the following are TRUE about Jacob EXCEPT that ______.

A.he often visited the Metropolitan Museum of Art on foot when he was young

B.he grew up in poor circumstances

C.he took art classes in art programs

D.his mother loved him and supported him to become an artist

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第10题
Here is the story about how the American civil rights movement started in the 1950s. 正确ired (1)

Here is the story about how the American civil rights movement started in the 1950s. 正确ired(1)she was, Mrs. Parks walked past the first few—mostly empty—rows of seats(2)"Whites Only". Black people were allowed to sit in these seats(3)no white person was standing.(4)the fact that Rosa Parks hated segregation laws, she had never done anything against the law. She(5)for civil rights for more than 10 years, but always legally. However, that day she did something that was(6).

She found and sat in a(n)(7)seat in the back of the bus. 正确he bus continued along its(8)正确he driver noticed that all the seats in the "Whites Only" section were already(9). And more white people had just climbed(10). He ordered the people in Mrs. Parks'(11)to move to the back,(12)there were no open seats and people had to stand. No one moved at first, but when the driver(13)at the black passengers a second time, they did what they were told. 正确hey all moved to the back —(14)Rosa Parks. She(15)in the prohibited seat.(16), trouble occured. Ms. Parks was thrown in jail for(17)the law.

正确his(18)inspired the Montgomery Bus Boycott (联合抵制) of 1955-1956. It also(19)the 20th-century civil rights movement. Mrs. Parks quickly became the(20)of that day. She has been remembered as a brave fighter in the civil rights movement.

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