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My daughter could walk by () (herself, her) when she was about 2 years old.

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更多“My daughter could walk by () (…”相关的问题
第1题
I will not have it said that I could never teach my daughter proper respect for her elders.(英译中)

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第2题
听力原文:WA Hi. This is Erika Heaton. I'm leaving on vacation soon and I was wondering if
you could hold my mail until I get back.

MA Sure, we can hold mail at the post office for up to one month. Could I have your address and the dates you'd like us to hold your mail?

WA My address is 13 East Deborah Circle, Bountiful, Utah 84010. I'd like you to hold my mail from Wednesday August second until Saturday August twelfth.

MA O.K., Ms. Heaton. We'll hold your mail until August twelfth. After that we'll resume your regular mail delivery schedule. When you come back from vacation, just stop in and pick up the mail from that week.

Where will the woman go?

A.On vacation

B.On a business trip

C.To an international conference

D.To study abroad for the summer

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第3题
听力原文:M: That must have been quite an experience.W: You're right! It's lucky my daughte

听力原文:M: That must have been quite an experience.

W: You're right! It's lucky my daughter was still awake, studying. Her screaming woke us all up. The house was already in flames by then.

Q: What is the woman talking about?

(16)

A.Her daughter was making too much noise in the house.

B.No one could sleep because of their dog Flamet barking.

C.The house was in need of a paint job.

D.The house was burning and the daughter was awake to let the others know.

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第4题
听力原文:What happened to me that day is just unbelievable. The first thing to go wrong wa

听力原文: What happened to me that day is just unbelievable. The first thing to go wrong was that all the parking spaces were taken. So I had to park on the grass, and hoped that I would not get a parking ticket. When I got to the ad- mission office, there was already a long line of students waiting. By the time it was my turn. two of the courses I needed were filled, and I had to go back to my adviser and make out a whole new timetable. Although I did sign up for all my courses, I missed the lunch. The next thing to go wrong was that the bookstore had sold out one of the textbooks required. As I was leaving, I wondered what else could possibly happen, and then there I saw a policeman standing beside my car and writing out a ticket.

Who is the speaker?

A.A student.

B.A teacher.

C.An officer clerk.

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第5题
It was a chilly November evening in New York City, and my daughter and I were walking
up Broadway.Nora noticed a guy sitting inside a cardboard box next to a newsstand.She pulled at my coat sleeve and said, “That man's cold, Daddy.Can we take him home?”

I don't remember my reply, but I do remember a sudden heavy feeling inside me.I had always been delighted at how much my daughter noticed in her world, whether it was birds in flight or children playing.But now she was noticing suffering and poverty.She wasn't even four.

A few days later, I saw an article in the newspaper about volunteers who delivered meals to elderly people.The volunteers went to a nearby school on a Sunday morning, picked up a food package, and delivered it to an elderly person.I signed us up.Nora was excited about it.She could understand the importance of food, so she could easily see how valuable our job was.When Sunday came, we picked up the package and phoned the elderly person we'd been assigned.She invited us right over.

The building was depressing.When the door opened, facing us was a silver-haired woman in an old dress.She took the package and asked if we would like to come in.Nora ran inside.I reluctantly followed.Our hostess showed us some photos of her family.Nora played and laughed.I accepted a second cup of tea.When it came time to say good-bye, we three stood in the doorway and hugged.I walked home in tears.

Where else but as volunteers do you have the opportunity to do something enjoyable that's good for yourself as well as for others? Indeed, the poverty my daughter and I helped lessen that Sunday afternoon was not the woman's alone — it was in our lives, too.Now Nora and I regularly serve meals to needy people and collect clothes for the homeless.Yet, as I've watched her grow over these past four years, I still wonder — which of us has benefited more?

26.The man Nora noticed on that evening was probably ______.

A.asking for food

B.one of those homeless

C.taken home by the author

D.buying a newspaper

27.The author had a sudden heavy feeling (Para.2), because ______.

A.his daughter had noticed the dark side of life

B.he did not want to take the guy home

C.he felt a deep sympathy for the guy

D.his daughter was afraid of what she saw

28.Their volunteer job was to ______.

A.visit poor homes

B.serve meals at a nearby school

C.pick up packages for poor, elderly people

D.deliver food to needy, elderly people

29.The word “us” in the last paragraph refers to ______ .

A.the author and the old woman

B.the giver and receiver of the help

C.the author and his daughter

D.the author and the guy in the box

30.The best title for this passage might be “______.”

A.A Loving Kid

B.A Lesson in Caring

C.Volunteers at Work

D.How to Help the Needy

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第6题
听力原文:W1: Mrs. Smith, I am wondering if I could take a day off tomorrow if it's all rig
ht with you.

W2: All right! But you've called in sick 3 times this week.

W1: I know. Mrs. Smith. I'm really sorry. But my daughter is ill in the hospital and I want to take care of her.

W2: Oh, I am sorry to hear that, I hope she can get well soon. Don't forget to bring the doctor's note the day after tomorrow.

What is the woman asking for?

A.A notebook

B.A day's leave

C.A business trip

D.Mr. Smith's permission to take care of her mother

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第7题
听力原文:My daughter and I had been searching for the origins of my grandfather, Alfred De

听力原文: My daughter and I had been searching for the origins of my grandfather, Alfred Denny, for several years. We had nothing definite except that he married Minerva Ann Hamilton in Michigan in 1860.

When I was a small child, my father had given me the address of his "Aunt Maggie," Mrs. William Rarick of Everson, Washington. She and I exchanged letters for about three years while I was still a youngster. My father died without giving any further information about his relatives.

About eighty-five years after my correspondence with Aunt Maggie, I decided to see if I could pick up the trail and find out exactly how she fit into the family puzzle. By then I was in my nineties so I knew the odds were not on my side, but I called the telephone operator for a number of anybody by the name of Rarick in the town of Everson, Washington. She told me they have a Charles Rarick and an L. Rarick. I asked her to ring Charles, but there was no answer so I asked her to try L. Rarick.

A woman answered and I said, "Hello, this is Carleton Denny. I am trying to locate relatives of Margaret Rarick."

The lady on the telephone took a long breath and hesitantly said, "She was my grandmother."

I learned that Aunt Maggie was my grandfather's half sister. The "L" stood for Luella, who still used her maiden name. I had found my family.

Where and when was my grandfather married?

A.In Washington in 1885.

B.In Washington in 1860.

C.In Michigan in 1885.

D.In Michigan in 1860.

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第8题
听力原文:W: Roger, I've got a problem. You know my daughter Jane is 16 years old now. And
we've begun talking about college. She says she wants to go, but her grades are slipping and no matter how I urge her to study. All she seems interested in are clothes and boys. We're not wealthy, you know. And it won't be easy for us to afford the tuition if she can't get a scholarship. Is going to college the best choice for her right now?

M: Do you mean that she doesn't seem ready for college? Then you'd better have a serious talk with her about college. To my mind it's quite normal for girls of her age to show a lot of interests in fashion and dating, but as a mother you have a right to expect her to pay attention to her studies too. You should ask her how serious she is about college and how hard she's willing to work for it. Jane may be much firmer than you realize. But if not, tell her she should think about putting college off for a while. That could give her the push she needs to take her education seriously. And if you decide she should wait, she can get a job or take classes at a community college. She may be just one of those who need to see a bit of real life before they settle down.

W: Sounds like a good idea.

What's the woman's problem?

A.Her daughter shows no interest in going to college.

B.Her daughter is not interested in her studies and has poor grades.

C.Her daughter does not think going to college: is the best choice for her.

D.Her daughter wants to get a job.

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第9题
Show Love by Knitting My mother knew how to knit, but she never taught me. She assumed, as

Show Love by Knitting

My mother knew how to knit, but she never taught me. She assumed, as did many women of her generation, that knitting was no longer a skill worth passing down from mother to daughter. A combination of feminism, consumerism and household gadgetry made many women feel that such homely accomplishments were now obsolete. My Grandmother still knitted, though, and every Christmas she made a pair of socks for my brother and me, of red wool. They were the ones we wore under our ice skates, when it was really important to have warm feet.

Knitting is a nervous habit that happens to be productive. It helped me quit smoking by giving my hands something else to do. It is wonderful for depression because no matter what else happens, you are creating something beautiful. Time spent in front of the television or just sitting is no longer time wasted.

I love breathing life into the patterns. It's true magic, finding a neglected, dog-eared old book with the perfect snowflake design, buying the same German town knitting worsted my grandmother used in the exact blue to match my daughter's eyes, taking it on the train with me every day for two months, working feverishly to get it done by Christmas, staying up late after the stockings are filled to sew in the sleeves and weave in the ends.

Knitting has taught me patience. I know that if I just keep going, even if it takes months, there will be a reward. When I make a mistake, I know that a temper tantrum will not fix it, that I just have to go back and take out the stitches between and start over again.

People often ask if I would do it for money, and the answer is always a definite no. In the first place, you could not pay me enough for the hours I put into a sweater. But more important, this is an activity I keep separate from such considerations. I knit to cover my children and other people I love in warmth and color. I knit to give them something earthly that money could never buy.

Knitting gives my life an alternative rhythm to the daily deadline. By day I can write about Northern Ireland or the New York City Police Department and get paid for it, but on the train home, surrounded by people with laptops, I stage my little rebellion. I take out my old knitting bag and join the centuries of women who have knitted for love.

Which of the following reasons does NOT explain the fact that "Knitting was no longer a skill worth passing down from mother to daughter"?______.

A.The struggle of women for equal rights.

B.The belief that it is good to buy and use a lot of goods.

C.The plain feature of knitting.

D.The introduction of domestic devices.

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第10题
听力原文:M: Excuse me, Ms. Sherwin, could I speak to you for a few minutes?W: Well, please

听力原文:M: Excuse me, Ms. Sherwin, could I speak to you for a few minutes?

W: Well, please sit down.

M: Thank you. Uh..., it's about my wife.

W: Yes, go on.

M: She's ill and has to go to hospital tomorrow. But we have a young baby, you know.

W: Yes, Jerry. Is it anything serious?

M: The doctors say it's just a minor operation. But it has to be done as soon as possible. And...the problem is my daughter.

W: In what way, Jerry?

M: Well, my wife will be in hospital for several days, so there's nobody to look after my daughter. That's why I'd like to have a few days off. From tomorrow.

W: I see. You need a few days off to look after your daughter while your wife is in hospital.

M: Yes, will that be all right?

W: I'm sure it will, Jerry. All I want to do now is to make sure that there's someone to cover for you while you're away. Uh...how long did you say you'll need?

M: Just a few days. My wife should be out of hospital by next Thursday, so I can be back on Friday.

W: Well, perhaps you'd better stay at home on Friday, as well. Just to give your wife a few extra days to rest after the operation.

M: That's very kind of you, Ms. Sherwin.

W: Don't mention it.

(23)

A.Teacher and student.

B.Employer and employee.

C.Friends.

D.Classmates.

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第11题
I have certainly seen lots of changes in my lifetime! I look around my home and see "mod c
ons" that I could never have dreamed of 50 or 60 years ago. I spent the early part of childhood in a cottage without running water or electricity and yet these days, I feel paralyzed if there is a power cut for even just an hour or two! So, I have changed too. Things that I couldn't even imagine in the past now seem quite normal.

Businessmen can travel from London to New York in three hours and lots of people exceed the seventy-mile-per-hour speed limit on motorways. A person of 75 is not old these days. A serious illness does not mean certain death because there have been so many advances in medical science. We no longer need to be afraid of contracting diseases like polio or smallpox. I can speak to my son in Australia from my own sitting room here in Manchester, watch athletes running a race on the other side of the world without moving from my own home and I can even do my shopping while I sit here in an armchair. I never need to worry about food going bad in the warm weather and, at the flick of a switch, I can have a hot meal in a couple of minutes. So, it seems, the quality of life has greatly improved since my own childhood.

I'm not convinced, however, that people are happier today than they were 50 years ago. We are certainly materially better off than we were but most people still seem to be weighed down by problems. My daughter and her family are a good illustration. They have a spacious, comfortable home with every labor-saving device you can think of. There's a washing machine, a clothes dryer, a food processor, a vacuum cleaner and all sorts of other household items which are designed to save time but it seems to me that my daughter and her husband just spend all that "saved" time working! They never relax and are always complaining of being tired and "stressed".

What is the passage mainly about?

A.How life has improved.

B.How life has become worse.

C.A comparison of life now and that in the past.

D.Memory of life in the past.

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