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I said nothing, ______ I had no idea about it.A.beforeB.thoughC.as

I said nothing, ______ I had no idea about it.

A.before

B.though

C.as

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更多“I said nothing, ______ I had n…”相关的问题
第1题
Frankly speaking, I’d rather you()nothing about it for the time being

A.would say

B.had said

C.say

D.said

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第2题
听力原文:M: I thought that you were going to the convention in Atlanta last Saturday. You
said it many times before.

W: I was planning to, but I haven't been feeling well, so I stayed at home and did nothing else.

Q: Where was the woman last Saturday?

(16)

A.In Atlanta.

B.At a convention centre.

C.In a hospital.

D.At home.

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第3题
听力原文:I've already mentioned to the director about the signing of the agreement three t
imes this month. Each time he said he was ready, but nothing happens.

(28)

A.The director has already signed the agreement.

B.The director has read the agreement for three times.

C.The director is not in and cannot sign the agreement.

D.The director is not ready to sign the agreement.

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第4题
听力原文:Yes, the course content does look good in the brochure. I know in a sense I shoul

听力原文: Yes, the course content does look good in the brochure. I know in a sense I shouldn't complain. After all it's a chance to enhance my skills and knowledge. And that's welcome at times. But it's still a bit of gamble, isn't it? I just have to hope it really does improve my chances of hanging on to my job here. It's a bit frightening, to tell you the truth, with so many pople having to go. After g0 years in a company, you don't want to think about being out of work, do you? But I really wish the brochure would tell you more. It looks good, as I said, but there's no detail, nothing on the time or the teachers. So I feel a bit in the dark really.

(21)

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第5题
I will tell you what literature is! No—I only wish I could. But I cant. Gleams can be thro
wn on the secret, inklings given, but no more. I will try to give you an inkling. And, to do so, I will take you back into your history, or forward onto it. That evening when you went for a walk with your faithful friend, the friend from whom you hid nothing—or almost nothing...! You were, in truth, somewhat inclined to hide from him the particular matter which monopolized your mind that evening, but somehow you contrived to get on to it, drawn by an overpowering fascination. And as your friend was sympathetic and discreet, and flattered you by a respectful curiosity, you proceeded further and further into the said matter, growing more and more confidential, until at last you cried out, in a terrific whisper: "My boy, she is simply miraculous!" At that moment you were in the domain of literature.

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第6题
"When one of the doctors criticizes(批评) me, I get defensive. I feel like a child again,

"When one of the doctors criticizes(批评) me, I get defensive. I feel like a child again, being scolded, and I want to explain that I' m not wrong. "says Viola, a nurse. This s a common reaction(反应) to criticism, but not a good one. There are better ways of dealing with criticism.

1. Try to be objective (客观) . When Sol was criticized by his new employer for not having made a sale, Sol' s reaction was to feel sorry for himself. "I had put everything I had into making that sale," Sol says, "and I felt that I had failed as a person. I had to earn through experience not to react like that to each failure. "

2. Take time to cool down. Rather than reacting immediately to criticism, take some time to think over what was said . Your first question should be whether the criticism is fair from the other person' s position. The problem may be a simple misunderstanding of what you did or your reasons for doing it.

3. Take positive(积极的) action. After you cool down, consider what you can do about the situation. The best answer may be "nothing". "I finally realized that my boss was having personal problems and taking them out on me because I was there," says Sheila. "His criticisms didn' t really have anything to do with my work, so nothing I said or did was going to change them. " In Sheila' s case, the best way to deal with it was to leave her job. However, that' s an extreme reaction. You may simply explain your opinion without expecting an in-depth discussion. You may even decide that the battle isn' t worth fighting this time. The key, in any case, is to have a reasonable plan.

When Sol was criticized by his employer, he______

A.argued bitterly with his employer

B.was angry and gave up his job

C.was sorry for what he did

D.was sad and self-pitying

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第7题
The angry woman sat in the station office. "The railway should pay me $12. "She said to Ha
rry, the man who【21】the ticket. "My ticket was【22】May 22nd, and there was【23】train from Jersey that night. My daughter and I had to stay in a hotel. It cost me$12."

Harry was worried. He remembered【24】the woman a return ticket. After he【25】the Jersey timetable for May 22nd, he knew she was right. However, had he made【26】mistake?【27】what to do, he smiled at the child, "Did you have a nice holiday in Jersey?" he said to her. "Yes," she answered shyly. "The seashore was【28】and I can swim【29】!"

"That's fine," said Harry. "My little girl can't swim a bit yet. Of course, she's only three..."

Harry turned to the mother, "I remember your ticket, madam," he said. "30 you didn't get one for your daughter,【31】you?"

"Well," the woman looked at the child. "I mean she hasn't started【32】yet. She is only four. "

"A four-year-old child【33】have a ticket, madam. A child's return ticket to Jersey costs $13.50. So if the railway pays your hotel bill, you will【34】. $1.50. The law is the law, but since the mistake was【35】..."

Saying nothing, the woman stood up, took the child's hand and left the office.

(41)

A.bought

B.sold

C.got

D.paid

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第8题
The U. S. government has been covering up evidence of extraterrestrial visits for more tha
n 50 years, an array of 20 retired Air Force, Federal Aviation Administration and intelligence officers said recently. They demanded Congress hold hearings on what they say is longstanding secret U.S. involvement with UFOs and extraterrestrials.

(46)John Callahan, a former FAA division chief of accidents and investigations, said he was directed by CIA officers to cover up a Nov. 18, 1986, incident involving a UFO and a Japanese airliner near Anchorage, Alaska. Michael Smith, a former U.S. Air Force air traffic controller stationed near Klamath Falls, Ore., in the 1960s and early 1970s, reported seeing a UFO hovering at 80,000 feet one night. "I was told you keep it to yourself," he said. "NORAD(North American Aerospace Defense Command) called me one night to say there&39;s a UFO coming up the California coastline. I asked them what to do. (47)"

Donna Hare, a NASA design illustrator with secret clearance, said UFOs were routinely airbrushed out of high altitude photos of the Earth before being released to the public.

(48)Apollo astronauts, she said, had spotted UFOs, but they "are told to keep this quiet and not to talk about it, "she said. Karl Wolf, an Air Force sergeant who was assigned to the National Security Agency, said that mysterious structures were discovered on the far side of the moon when the United States was mapping its surface before the 1969 lunar landing.(49).

(50)Despite the government&39;s refusal to discuss the issue, several witnesses have also told of being stationed at military bases or near silos containing nuclear missiles when a UFO swung by. Afterward, military officers would discover the missiles had been temporarily deactivated.

(46)

A. They said nothing, not to write it down.B. The 20 witnesses, it is said, were a fraction of the 400 people who are willing to testify.C. The Pentagon does not comment on UFOs, expect to say they do not exist and that such objects really are high altitude balloons or military aircraft.D. "We always airbrush them out before we release them to the public," one technician told her.E. These have been retrieved from a purported crash in July 1947.F. These photos too were culled out of the public record.

(47)

A. They said nothing, not to write it down.B. The 20 witnesses, it is said, were a fraction of the 400 people who are willing to testify.C. The Pentagon does not comment on UFOs, expect to say they do not exist and that such objects really are high altitude balloons or military aircraft.D. "We always airbrush them out before we release them to the public," one technician told her.E. These have been retrieved from a purported crash in July 1947.F. These photos too were culled out of the public record.

(48)

A. They said nothing, not to write it down.B. The 20 witnesses, it is said, were a fraction of the 400 people who are willing to testify.C. The Pentagon does not comment on UFOs, expect to say they do not exist and that such objects really are high altitude balloons or military aircraft.D. "We always airbrush them out before we release them to the public," one technician told her.E. These have been retrieved from a purported crash in July 1947.F. These photos too were culled out of the public record.

(49)

A. They said nothing, not to write it down.B. The 20 witnesses, it is said, were a fraction of the 400 people who are willing to testify.C. The Pentagon does not comment on UFOs, expect to say they do not exist and that such objects really are high altitude balloons or military aircraft.D. "We always airbrush them out before we release them to the public," one technician told her.E. These have been retrieved from a purported crash in July 1947.F. These photos too were culled out of the public record.

(50)

A. They said nothing, not to write it down.B. The 20 witnesses, it is said, were a fraction of the 400 people who are willing to testify.C. The Pentagon does not comment on UFOs, expect to say they do not exist and that such objects really are high altitude balloons or military aircraft.D. "We always airbrush them out before we release them to the public," one technician told her.E. These have been retrieved from a purported crash in July 1947.F. These photos too were culled out of the public record.

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第9题
听力原文:A farmer who lived in a small village suffered from the severe pain in his stomac

听力原文: A farmer who lived in a small village suffered from the severe pain in his stomach. The doctor in the village had tried a number of treatments but been unable to cure him. The farmer decided to see a doctor in the nearest town. As he loved' money badly and spent as little as possible, he thought he would find out what he would have to pay this doctor. He was told that his patient had to pay three pounds for the first visit and one pound for the second visit. The farmer thought about this for a long time. As he came into the doctor's room, he said, "Good morning, doctor. Here I am again. The doctor was a little surprised. Then he asked the farmer a few questions, examined his chest and took the pound which the farmer insisted on giving him. The doctor said with a smile. "Well, sir. There is nothing new. Please continue to take the same medicine I gave you the first time you came to see me."

For what reason did the farmer go to see a doctor in the town?

A.He wanted to pay less money.

B.The town was not far from his home.

C.The doctor in the village failed to cure him.

D.The doctor in the village refused to treat him again.

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第10题
听力原文:In 1955, Walt Disney himself opened the first Disney Park in the USA, Los Angeles

听力原文: In 1955, Walt Disney himself opened the first Disney Park in the USA, Los Angeles. Later Disney world was opened in Florida in 1971. It cost between $500 and $600 million to build. Tokyo Disney Park opened in Japan in 1983, and Europe Disney opened in France in 1992.

Now Hong Kong is going to build a Disney Park and it will be open in 2005. More than 80% of Hong Kong's population would like to visit the Disney Park when it is opened. The adult admission fee is between 32 to 38 American dollars. But about half of the people thought the adult admission fee was too high. The children's admission fee is not known yet. But children may not mind paying any entrance fee. "If I start saving money: now, I'll have enough money to pay the entrance fee in five years time," said Mary, a 12 years old girl, "I can't take my son to the Disney Park in the USA," said Mrs. Sally, mother of a small boy, "that's why I agree to the government's plan to build one here. Then I'll be able to take my son there. The admission fee of just under one hundred dollars is nothing compared with the price of an air ticket to the USA."

(30)

A.In France.

B.In Tokyo.

C.In America.

D.In Hong Kong.

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