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- Bring me the bill, please. - _________A:You are welcome.B:Please wait for a moment, si

- Bring me the bill, please. - _________

A:You are welcome.

B:Please wait for a moment, sir.

C:I'll hurry up.

D:Be quick.

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更多“- Bring me the bill, ple…”相关的问题
第1题
Whenever my uncle came to see me, he____ bring me some candy.

A、 will

B、would

C、was

D、Should

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第2题
—I'm leaving for Shanghai tomorrow.

—_______________________.

A、Bring me a present.

B、Have a pleasant trip!

C、Let's go out for a drink.

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第3题
One day in 1965, when I was a library worker at school, a teacher came to me. She had a student who finished his work before all the others and needed something more difficult for him to do. "Could you help me in the library?"she asked. I said, "Send him along."
Soon, a golden-haired boy appeared. "Do you have a job for me?" he asked. I told him about a system for sorting books. He picked up the idea immediately. Then I showed him some cards for some unreturned books that I thought had been returned but not recorded. Maybe some books were put on wrong places. He said, "Is it a kind of a detective(侦探) job?" I answered yes, and then began his work.
He had found three books with wrong cards by the time his teacher opened the door and said, "Time for rest!" he argued for finishing the finding job, but the teacher won.
The next morning, he arrived early, "I want to finish these books," he said. At the end of the day, when he asked to work with me more often, it was easy for me to say yes.
After a few weeks I found a note on my desk, inviting me to dinner at the boy's home. At the end of a pleasant evening, his mother declared that the family would be moving to another school. Her son's first concern, she said,was leaving the library. "Who will find the lost books?" he asked. When the time came, it was hard to say goodbye.Though at the beginning he had seemed an ordinary boy, his strong feeling of interest had made him different.
Do you know who he is? This boy became a great man of the Information Age: Bill Gates.
(1)、Why did the teacher go to the library to find a job for Bill Gates?
A:Because the teacher found the librarian quite busy.
B:Because Bill Gates wanted to find a job.
C:Because Bill Gates finished his study quickly and had more free time than the others.
D:Because the library needed a new worker.
(2)、What do you know from the passage?
A:Library work was very difficult for Bill Gates.
B:Bill Gates did his job without any difficulty.
C:The librarian was too busy to have a rest.
D:His mother hoped that Bill Gates would stay for his job.
(3)、The sentence "He picked up the idea immediately" means that ______.
A:he learned that system quickly
B:he collected that system quickly
C:he lifted up that system quickly
D:he improved that system quickly
(4)、What was Bill Gates expected to do in the library?
A:Finding the lost cards.
B:Learning the system.
C:Helping the worker with everything in the library.
D:Finding books with wrong cards.
(5)、How did Bill Gates feel when his family would move to another school area?
A:Sad.
B:Pleasant.
C:Worried.
D:Interested.
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第4题
Janet: Hey, how about getting together for a movie tonight?

Danny: Sure.(1)_________.

Janet: Well, let me check the Internet. What about the Interstellar?

Danny: Wow, I learn that it stars Anne Hathaway, my favorite actress.

Janet: Well,(2)_________, but I am more interested in the film director.

Danny: Who is it?

Janet: Christopher Nolan, a British-American film director. You must have watched the Inception, one of his masterpieces.

Danny: Absolutely, that movie took my breath away and I must admit that its director is brilliant.(3)_________.

Janet: Obviously it is a sci-fi film, which features a crew of astronauts who travel through a wormhole in search of a new home for humanity.

Danny: (4)_________.

Janet: The screenplay was written by Christopher and his brother Jonathan Nolan.

Danny: You are such a great fan of sci-fi movie.

Janet: Yeah, I am really into this. So let’s go to this movie and see what exciting experience it will bring to us.

Danny:(5)_________.

A.she is amazing

B.What about the screenplay?

C.Can’t wait to watch it.

D.So could you tell me more about Interstellar?

E.What’s playing?
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第5题
In The Disuniting of America: Reflections on a Multicultural Society, Revised and Enlarged Edition (W. W. Norton) Schlesinger provides deep insights into the crises of nationhood in America. A new chapter assesses the impact both of radical multiculturalism and radical monoculturalism on the Bill of rights. Written with his usual clarity and force, the book brings a noted historian' s wisdom and perspective to bear on America' s "culture wars".
Schlesinger addresses the questions: What holds a nation together? And what does it mean to be an American? Describing the emerging cult of ethnicity, Schlesinger praises its healthy effect on a nation long shamed by a history of prejudice and narrow-mindedness. But he warns against the campaign of multicultural advocates to divide the nation into separate ethnic and racial communities. From the start, he observes, the United States has been a multicultural nation, rich in its diversity but held together by a shared commitment to the democratic process and by the freedom of intermarriage. It was this national talent for assimilation that impressed foreign visitors like Alexis de Tocqueyille and James Bryce, and it is this historic goal that Schlesinger champions as the best hope for the future. Schlesinger analyzes what he sees as grim consequences of identity politics: the widening of differences. Attacks on the First Amendment, he argues, threaten intellectual freedom and, ultimately, the future of the ethnic groups. His criticisms are not limited to the left. As a former target of McCarthyism, be understands that the radical right is even more willing than the radical left to re strict and weaken the Bill of Rights.
The author does not minimize the injustices concealed by the "melting pot" dream. The Disuniting of America is both academic and personal, forceful in argument, balanced in judgment. It is a book that will no doubt anger some readers, but it will surely make all of them think again. The winner of Pulitzer Prizes for history and for biography, an authoritative voice of American liberalism, Schlesinger is uniquely positioned to bring bold answers and healing wisdom to this passionate debate over who we are and what we should become.
According to Schlesinger, the United States is ______.
A.a melting pot
B.a nation with diverse cultures held together by the democratic process
C.a federation of ethnic and racial communities
D.a nation with various ethnic and racial groups
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第6题
“Let’s go down once more, push your enter key...” says a volunteer helping senior citizens work a web session on the Internet.
David Lansdale has found a way to spark up the lives of the elderly. He gets them wired to the Internet.
“If you hit your enter key, it will bring up this particular email...”
Pauline Allen is one of those who have started using the Internet, “I thought I was through with life, I was ready for a rocking chair, because I was 86 years old. And I haven’t found the rocking chair, yet. ”
“You found the keyboard ?” asked the reporter. “That’s right, I found the keyboard.”
The average age of Lansdale’s students is around 68. All are in nursing homes or assisted care homes. He used family relationships to introduce them to the World Wide Web.
David Lansdale says, “Here they are in California, the family was back in New York, the opportunity to connect, to cross the time and space, was an incredibly precious opportunity for them.”
“I hear you are so beautiful.” Lillian Sher dictates e -mail to a newborn great-granddaughter. Working with one another, the seniors learn as a group. They learn to master the Internet and to overcome what Lansdale calls the maladies of the institutionalized: loneliness, helplessness, boredom, and cognitive decline.
Mary Harvey says, “Bingo just doesn’t appeal to me. But this does, believe me, this does. ”
Ninety-four year old Ruth Hyman is a star pupil and instructor. She says, “When I send a letter to my grandchildren, and great grandchildren, they hang it up in their offices, just like I used to hang their drawings on my refrigerator. Ha, ha. ”
David Lansdale says, “There’s a collective benefit. There is an element, a tremendous element of therapy. Remember we started as a support group. ”
Dixon Morehouse says, “I just wish I were 15 years old and getting to learn all this.” The seniors call their weekly meetings Monday Night Live. And many say the meetings have given them new life.
Ruth Hyman says, “Three years ago, they told me I wasn’t going to live. But I showed them, and got work, and I’ve worked ever since. ”
1、The suitable title of this news story is ()
A、Lonely Senior Citizens and Their Volunteers
B、Senior Citizens in Nursing Homes
C、Senior Citizens Surf the Web for Health of Mind and Body
D、How Senior Citizens Learn to use Computer
2、What does the phrase “spark up ” mean?
A、light up
B、fire
C、bring
D、encourage
3、By saying “I thought I was through with life, I was ready for a rocking chair, because I was 86 years old And I haven’t found the rocking chair yet.” Pauline Allen means ()
A、she used to think she was too old to do anything、But now she doesn’t think so
B、she is eager to look for a rocking chair to sit on
C、she would rather die in her rocking chair
D、she is too old and finds life is meaningless
4、Why did Mary Harvey’s grandchildren and great grandchildren hang her letter up in their offices?
A、Because there was a picture in her letter
B、Because she used to hang their letters up
C、Because they were proud of her
D、Because they liked to read the letter every day
5、Which of the following is NOT mentioned as the advantage of a web session on the Internet?
A、It can make senior citizens become closer to their family
B、It can contribute to family’s occasional visit to the seniors
C、It serves as a therapy
D、It can bring the senior citizens self-confidence

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第7题
听力原文:W:Hello,Parkson college.May I help you?M:Yes.I'm looking for information on cours
听力原文:W:Hello,Parkson college.May I help you?
M:Yes.I'm looking for information on courses in computer programming.I would need it for the fourth semester.
W:Do you want a day or evening course?
M:Well,it would have to be an evening course since I work during the day.
W:Aha.Have you taken any courses in data processing?
M:No.
W:Oh.Well,data processing is a course you have to take before you can take computer programming.
M:Oh,I see.Well,when is it given? I hope it's not on Thursdays.
W:Well,there's a class that meets on Monday evenings at seven.
M:Just once a week?
W:Yes.But that's almost three hours from seven to nine forty-five.
M:Oh.Well,that's all right.I could manage that.How many weeks does the course last?
W:Mmmm,let me see.Twelve weeks.You start the first week in September,and finish…,oh,just before Christmas,December 21st.
M:And how much is the course?
W:That's three hundred dollars including the necessary computer time.
M:Aha.Okay.Ah,where do I go to register?
W:Registration is on the second and third of September.between 6 and 9 in Frost Hall.
M:Is that the round building behind the parking lot?
W:Yes.That's the one.
M:Oh,I know how to get there.Is there anything that I should bring with me?
W:No,just your checkbook.
M:Well,thank you so much.
W:You are very welcome. Bye!
M:Bye!
Question 19.Why does the man choose to take an evening course?
Question 20.What does the man have to do before taking the course of computer programming?
Question 21.What do we learn about the schedule of the evening course?
Question 22.What does the man want to know at the end of the conversation?
(23)
A.He prefers the smaller evening classes.
B.He has signed up for a day course.
C.He has to work during the day.
D.He finds the evening course cheaper.
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第8题
Anna is our only daughter. My wife and I have two sons, and Anna is the youngest in the family, but she's twenty-five now. Anna was not well when she was little. It was a very worrying time and she stayed at home a lot. She was seen first by the local doctors, and then she was sent to a specialist in Cardiff where she was diagnosed as diabetic. It was my wife who mainly took care of her then. I am not very good at looking after little children. I suppose I am a bit traditional in that way. But when she grew up a bit, we spent a lot of time together. We loved walking and talking and discussing life. We still love it today. We get on very well. Although she looks like me (tall, dark hair, dark eyes and dark skin), she takes after her mother: she is artistic and musical, and like her mother she's attractive. She loves looking after animals - she has two dogs, three cats and a goat. She lives in a little house in the country. I like animals too. I like riding and hunting, but Anna hates hunting. She thinks it's cruel. We discuss it a lot. She is quiet and a bit shy with strangers. I am more outgoing and I love meeting new people. But she's not boring - actually, she's very funny. She always has lots of stories of her life in the country. She's an art and music teacher in a little village school. She is very good-natured. Anna says we brought her up well, and she's going to bring her children up to be honest and loyal. But I think she was easy to bring up. I don't remember ever telling her off.
1.According to the passage, when Anna was a child, she ().
2. It can be inferred from the passage the author thinks looking after little children is ().
3. What does 'take after' mean in the first sentence of Para. 2?
4. My daughter and I have little in common in terms of ().
5. From the passage, we can see the author's description of his daughter is ().
(1).A、got an illness
B、was very queer
C、didn't look like the author
(2).A、his advantage
B、mainly a woman's responsibility
C、really enjoyable
(3).A、look after
B、be different from
C、look like
(4).A、loving walking and talking
B、character
C、loving animals
(5).A、affectionate
B、humorous
C、critical

请帮忙给出正确答案和分析,谢谢!
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第9题
We are profoundly ignorant about the origins of language and have to content ourselves with more or less plausible speculations. We do not even know for certain when language arose, but it seems likely that it goes back to the earliest history of man, perhaps haft a million years ago. We have no direct evidence, but it seems probable that it took the earliest forms of human cooperation. In the Ice Ages of the Pleistocene(更新世) period, our earliest human ancestors established the Old Stone Age culture; they made stone tools and, later, tools of bone, ivory, and antler; they made fire and cooked their food; they hunted big game, often by methods that called for considerable cooperation and coordination. As their material culture gradually developed, they became artists and drew pebbles as well as wonderful paintings of animals on the walls of caves. It is difficult to believe that the makers of these Paleolithic(旧石器时代的) cultures lacked the power of speech. It is a long step, admittedly, from other earliest flint weapons to the splendid spear of the late Stone Age: the first crude flints date back perhaps to 500,000 B.C., while the finest achievements of Old Stone Age man are later than 100,000 B. C.; and in this period we can envisage a corresponding development of language, from the most primitive and limited language of the earliest human groups to a fully developed language in the flowering time of Old .Stone Age culture.
How did language arise in the first place? There are many theories about this, based on various types of indirect evidence, such as the language of children, the language of primitive societies, the kinds of changes
that have taken place in language in the course of recorded history, the behavior. of higher animals like chimpanzees, and the behavior. of people suffering from speech defects. These types of evidence may provide us with pointers, but they all suffer from limitations.
When we consider the language of children, we haw to remember that their situations are quite different from those of our earliest human ancestors because the child, growing up in an environment where there is al- ready a fully developed language, is surrounded by adults who use that language and are teaching it to him. For example, it has been shown that the earliest words used by children are mainly the names of things and people ("doll," "spoon," "Mummy"), but this fact does not prove that the earliest words of primitive man were also the names of things and people. When the child learns the name of an object, he may then use it to express his wishes or demands.
"Doll!" often means,. "Give me my doll!" or "I've dropped my doll. Pick it up for me!" The child is us- ing language to get things done, and it is almost an accident of adult teaching that the words used to formulate the child's demands are mainly nouns instead of words like "Bring!" "Pick Up!" and so on.
Theories of the origin of language include all of the following EXCEPT______.
A.communication among primitive men
B.the need to communicate
C.the language of children
D.the first man's extensive vocabulary
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第10题
How often()Bill ()football?A.does, playsB.does, playC.is, play
How often()Bill ()football?
A.does, plays
B.does, play
C.is, play
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第11题
英译汉:Can I pay my water and electri city bill shere()。
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