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He will presumably resign in view of the complete failure of the research project. The und

erlined part means______.

A.adequately

B.subsequently

C.probably

D.doubtfully

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更多“He will presumably resign in v…”相关的问题
第1题
听力原文:During the Christmas shopping rush in London, the intriguing story was reported o

听力原文: During the Christmas shopping rush in London, the intriguing story was reported of a tramp who, apparently through no fault of his own, found himself locked in a well-known chain store late on Christmas Eve. No doubt the store was filled with last-minute Christmas shoppers and the staff were dead beating and longing to get home. Presumably all the proper security checks were made before the store was locked and they left to enjoy the three-day holiday untroubled by customers desperate to get last-minute Christmas presents.

However that may be, our tramp found himself alone in the store and decided to make the best of it. There was food, drink, bedding and camping equipment, of which he made good use. There must also have been television sets and radios. Though it was not reported if he took advantage of these facilities , when the shop re-opened, he was discovered in bed with a large number of empty bottles beside him. He seems to have been a man of good humour and philosophic temperament—as indeed vagrants very commonly are. Everyone else was enjoying Christmas, so he saw no good reason why he should not do the same. He submitted, cheerfully enough, to being taken away by the police. Perhaps he had a better Christmas than usual. He was put into prison for seven days. The judge awarded no compensation to the chain store for the food and drink our tramp had consumed. They had, in his opinion, already received valuable free publicity from the coverage the story received in the newspapers and on television. Perhaps the judge had a good Christmas too.

The tramp was locked in the store______

A.for his own mistakes

B.due to a misunderstanding

C.by accident

D.through an error of judgment

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第2题
All Sue Rodriguez wanted was to die with dignity and within the law, but it turned out tha
t she could not do both. Last week the British Columbian woman, totally disabled by amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (肌萎缩性侧索硬化), challenged Canada's law against doctor - assisted suicides and took her life, presumably with the help of drugs administered by a still unidentified physician. The case caused a political and legal furor across Canada not only because the law was challenged, but also because a Member of Parliament was at Rodriguez's side when she died.

Svend Robinson, an enthusiastic right-to-die supporter and Canada's only openly gay federal legislator, retained a criminal lawyer to defend him against possible charges that he encouraged the commission of a crime. The M.P. said he was present during the suicide at Rodriguez' s invitation: "I considered it a privilege and an honor that she trusted me." Rodriguez,43, spent two years challenging the 1892 law that makes doctor-assisted suicide illegal, taking her case all the way to the Supreme Court, which ruled 5 to 4 last September that the law was valid and said its repeal was up to the House of Commons.

The momentum for such a move is strong. Legislators still recall dramatic videotaped testimony offered by Rodriguez before a parliamentary committee in 1992. "I want to ask you, gentlemen," she said in a quavering voice, "If I cannot give consent to my own death, then whose body is this? Who owns my life.'?" Robinson is expected to lead the charge for repeal.

What remains unclear is whether his presence during Rodriguez's suicide makes him vulnerable to legal action; experts say it is not against the law to be present at an assisted suicide. Robinson says he will respect Rodriguez' s wish to keep confidential the identity of the doctor involved, even if an official inquiry insists that he reveal it.

According to the passage, Svend Robinson' s presence during Sue Rodriguez' s suicide ______.

A.resulted in the immediate abolition of the 1892 law

B.created an uproar in Canada

C.made him invulnerable to legal action

D.attracted little attention in Canada

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第3题
behavioural/bɪ'heɪvjər(ə)l/()

A.行为的

B.动作的

C.暗示

D.方法

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第4题
The company president announced he ______next year.A.retireB.retiringC.retires toD.would r

The company president announced he ______next year.

A.retire

B.retiring

C.retires to

D.would retire

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第5题
A.likelyB.presumablyC.frequentlyD.considerably

A.likely

B.presumably

C.frequently

D.considerably

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第6题
He was criticised for his carelessness and ______.A.because he was rudeB.rudenessC.being r

He was criticised for his carelessness and ______ .

A.because he was rude

B.rudeness

C.being rude

D.because of being rude

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第7题
Don’t have him for a friend. He’s ________ a criminal.A) anything butB) but forC) r

Don’t have him for a friend. He’s ________ a criminal.

A) anything but

B) but for

C) rather than

D) nothing but

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第8题
45 Upon learning that he would leave her, she wasA.very happy.B.extremely joyful.C.quite r

45 Upon learning that he would leave her, she was

A.very happy.

B.extremely joyful.

C.quite relieved.

D.in great pain.

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第9题
He arrived very late at night,______ in the early hours this morning.A.in conclusionB.or r

He arrived very late at night,______ in the early hours this morning.

A.in conclusion

B.or rather

C.on the whole

D.by and large

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第10题
This is the weather Scobie loves. Lying in bed he touches his telescope lovingly, turning
a wistful eye on the blank wall of rotting mud-bricks which shuts off his view of the sea.

Scobie is getting on for seventy and still afraid to die; his one fear is that he will awake one morning and find himself dead--Lieutenant-Commander Scobie, O. B. E.. Consequently it gives him a severe shock every morning when the water-carriers shriek under his window before dawn, waking him up. For a moment, he says, he dares not open his eyes. Keeping them fast shut (for fear they might open on the heavenly host) he gropes along the cake-stand beside his bed and grabs his pipe. It is always loaded from the night before and an open matchbox stands beside it. The first whiff of tobacco restores both his composure and his eyesight. He breathes deeply, grateful for reassurance. He smiles. He gloats. Then, drawing the heavy sheepskin which serves him as a bed-cover up to his ears, he sings a little triumphal song to the morning.

Taking stock of himself he discovers that he has the inevitable headache. His tongue is raw from last night’s brandy. But against these trifling discomforts the prospect of another day in life weighs heavily. He pauses to slip in his false teeth. He places his wrinkled fingers to his chest and is comforted by the sound of his heart at work. He is rather proud of his heart. If you ever visit him when he is in bed he is almost sure to grasp your hand in his and ask you to feel it. Swallowing a little, you shove your hand inside his cheap night-jacket to experience those sad, blunt, far-away humps--like those of an unborn baby. He buttons up his pajamas with touching pride and give his imitation roar of animal health--bounding from my bed like a lion--that is another of his phrases. You have not experienced the full charm of the man unless you have actually seen him, bent double with rheumatism, crawling out from between his coarse cotton sheets like a ruin. Only in the warmest months of the year do his bones thaw out sufficiently to enable him to stand erect. In the summer afternoons he walks in the park, his little head glowing like a minor sun, his jaw set in a violent expression of health.

His tiny nautical pension is hardly enough to pay for one cockroach-infested room; he ekes it out with an equally small salary from the Egyptian government, which carries with it the proud title of Bimbashi in the Police Force. Origins he has none. His past spreads over a dozen continents like a true subject of myth. And his presence is so rich with imaginary health that he needs nothing more—except perhaps an occasional trip to Cairo during Ramadhan, when his office is closed and presumably all crime comes to a standstill because of the past.

Scobie liked to have his telescope in bed because ______.

A.he enjoyed looking at the passers-by, even if he could see the sea

B.he refused touching it and looking through it at the wall

C.he refused to accept the fact that he could not see the sea

D.he enjoyed looking at the passers-by, even if he could not see the sea

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