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[主观题]

I had no idea that you were coming. So I didn't meet you at the airport.

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更多“I had no idea that you were coming. So I didn't meet you at the airport.”相关的问题

第1题

I had no idea that you were here.()
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第2题

I had no idea he was there, I met him ______.A.by chanceB.with interestC.in secretD.on pur

I had no idea he was there, I met him ______.

A.by chance

B.with interest

C.in secret

D.on purpose

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第3题

— Hi, Sam.You came to school late.What happened?—______.I had a bad luck.

A.I’m sorry to hear that

B.I’ve no idea

C.Terrific

D.Forget it

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第4题

-What a beautiful dress in the window! - ____.
A.I have no idea about it

B.Yes, really. If I had the money, I'd buy it

C.You can't wear it

D.There's no money to buy it

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第5题

Can ballet change Lives? ____Last night I was worried,very worried

Can ballet change Lives?

21.____Last night I was worried,very worried. I had the job of going to watch amateur ballet dancers performing on stage with one of the UK's top professional ballet companies. A performance like this seemed very risky and! asked myself, 'Are they mad?'Before I tell you the answer,I'll tell you why I had such big doubts.

22.____The idea of mixing amateur and professional dancers started a couple of years ago when two friends with very different jobs found a way of working together. One of the men had created an award-winning TV series. Musicality ,in which amateurs trained to perform. in the musical Chicago. The other man runs a charity called Youth at Risk which works with young people who have serious problems with aggression and antisocial behaviour. Although it was a risk, the two men thought they could make a TV programme in which ballet changed the lives of young people with problems.

23.____Their idea was this: if the young people could accept the strict discipline and challenge of ballet training,it would build their self-esteem and give them new confidence in themselves. The first step was to find suitable teenagers to take part and they asked teachers and youth workers already working professionally with young people at risk, to find candidates for the project. Through them 300 young people joined the programme and although about half dropped out,in the end sixty teenagers appeared on stage in the public performance.

24.____The ballet they chose was Sergei Prokofie's Romeo and Juliet ,choreographed by Sir Kenneth MacMillan. The story of Romeo and Juliet includes family conflict, the generation gap ,gangs, murder ,young love and teenage suicide so it is the perfect mirror for the lives of troubled young people in today's society.

25.____Going back to my original question: 'Are they mad?' The answer is definitely ‘no’. As soon as the ballet started, my worries disappeared. It was amazing how these unlikely dancers were magically transformed into their characters. At the end of the evening I was left with this thought: 'ballet can change lives'. It is a dancing cure, not a talking cure; it is silent so it stops arguments.

A. Why I love going to the ballet

B. Where the idea came from

C. Why I was worried

D. Romeo and Juliet is the perfect choice

E. A new star is born in Chicago

F. How they found the young people

G. My final thoughts

H. A dancer's life

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第6题

【D10】SPEAKER A: 【D8】______ SPEAKER B: WHAT"S THE PROBLEM? SPEAKER A: I CAN"T FIND THE PL

【D10】

SPEAKER A: 【D8】______ SPEAKER B: WHAT"S THE PROBLEM? SPEAKER A: I CAN"T FIND THE PLACE I"M LOOKING FOR. SPEAKER B: WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR? SPEAKER A: 【D9】______ SPEAKER B:YOU DON"T KNOW WHERE THE THEATER IS? SPEAKER A: I"M COMPLETELY LOST. SPEAKER B: DO YOU HAVE ANY IDEA WHERE THE MALL IS? SPEAKER A: YES, I DO. SPEAKER B: 【D10】______ SPEAKER A: I DIDN"T KNOW THE MALL HAD A MOVIE THEATER. SPEAKER B: IT"S NEWLY OPENE

D. A. THE MALL HAS ITS OWN MOVIE THEATER.

B. I NEED YOUR ASSISTANC

E.

C. I"M GOING TO THE MALL.

D. I AM TRYING TO GO SEE A MOVI

E.

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第7题

【D8】SPEAKER A: 【D8】______ SPEAKER B: WHAT"S THE PROBLEM? SPEAKER A: I CAN"T FIND THE PLA

【D8】

SPEAKER A: 【D8】______ SPEAKER B: WHAT"S THE PROBLEM? SPEAKER A: I CAN"T FIND THE PLACE I"M LOOKING FOR. SPEAKER B: WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR? SPEAKER A: 【D9】______ SPEAKER B:YOU DON"T KNOW WHERE THE THEATER IS? SPEAKER A: I"M COMPLETELY LOST. SPEAKER B: DO YOU HAVE ANY IDEA WHERE THE MALL IS? SPEAKER A: YES, I DO. SPEAKER B: 【D10】______ SPEAKER A: I DIDN"T KNOW THE MALL HAD A MOVIE THEATER. SPEAKER B: IT"S NEWLY OPENE

D. A. THE MALL HAS ITS OWN MOVIE THEATER.

B. I NEED YOUR ASSISTANC

E.

C. I"M GOING TO THE MALL.

D. I AM TRYING TO GO SEE A MOVI

E.

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第8题

【D9】SPEAKER A: 【D8】______ SPEAKER B: WHAT"S THE PROBLEM? SPEAKER A: I CAN"T FIND THE PLA

【D9】

SPEAKER A: 【D8】______ SPEAKER B: WHAT"S THE PROBLEM? SPEAKER A: I CAN"T FIND THE PLACE I"M LOOKING FOR. SPEAKER B: WHAT ARE YOU LOOKING FOR? SPEAKER A: 【D9】______ SPEAKER B:YOU DON"T KNOW WHERE THE THEATER IS? SPEAKER A: I"M COMPLETELY LOST. SPEAKER B: DO YOU HAVE ANY IDEA WHERE THE MALL IS? SPEAKER A: YES, I DO. SPEAKER B: 【D10】______ SPEAKER A: I DIDN"T KNOW THE MALL HAD A MOVIE THEATER. SPEAKER B: IT"S NEWLY OPENE

D. A. THE MALL HAS ITS OWN MOVIE THEATER.

B. I NEED YOUR ASSISTANC

E.

C. I"M GOING TO THE MALL.

D. I AM TRYING TO GO SEE A MOVI

E.

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第9题

A gloomy afternoon saw me taking my routine path through that construction site. For the w
alker s convenience, a set of stone steps had been built, which were fairly steep. That was the place I found myself behind a husband and wife climbing up the steps with each other s support. The couple seemed to be farmers in their forties. The wife in a red coat was walking with a stick, an empty trouser leg swaying below. With one hand on his shoulder, she leaned almost entirely on her husband, who carefully kept balance with her and carried her other stick. They limped(跛行)their way upward with great difficulty. My curiosity urged me to overtake them and look back over my shoulder secretly. The glance sent a shiver through me, which produced a sensation I had never experienced before. The husband himself was also disabled—blind in both eyes! What struck me even more was the smile they both wore on their faces, such a happy smile as could only be seen from brides and bridegrooms. With few words between them, they smilingly helped each other struggle upwards. Then I noticed there were patches on their clothes, and their cloth shoes were homemade, worn-out but tidy. How could such sweet smiles reconcile(使和谐)with the patched clothing or the physical handicap? I got quite puzzled. When they advanced far ahead I still couldn t tear my eyes away from them, I was moved and my heart filled with admiration. At that moment I suddenly realized how superficial my idea of happiness had been! To me it had always been associated with wealth, fame and power, the poor and the lowly having no share of it. However, happiness can be found in very ordinary life. I witnessed it on the weather-beaten faces of the husband and wife who had shared happiness and misfortune together. There is always happiness when there is an unfailing mutual support between two persons in love.

How did the husband and wife climb up the steps?

A.They didn" t help each other.

B.They climbed up the steps with ease.

C.They limped their way upward with each other" s support.

D.They climbed up the steps depending on a stick.

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第10题

Sometime in the early 1990s I was treating a woman in an intensive chemical dependency gro
up. Let s call her "Grace." Grace was a flight attendant and had been suspended from her job with a major airline due to her untreated alcoholism. After the eight week program, I suggested to her it might be a good idea to solidify her foundation in recovery before returning to work as she would be working in a high - risk environment (serving alcohol, being out of town alone, etc.). Grace, however, returned to work shortly after completing treatment. One day while she was departing from a plane at the end of long day a major craving for alcohol overpowered her. There she was, in the Los Angeles International Airport pulling her roller-bag behind her when this massive craving to drink came over her. She tried to just "think through it," or "just forget about it," but it was way too powerful. It was so powerful, in fact, that she had resigned to herself that she would just go drink. On her way to the bar in the airport, Grace had a moment of sanity. She stopped, picked up the airport paging phone and said, "Will you please page friends of Bill W.," she paused, quickly looking around for an empty gate, "to come to Gate 12?" Within minutes, over the paging system in the LA International Airport came, " Will friends of Bill W. please come to Gate 12." Most people in recovery know that asking if you are a friend of Bill W. is an anonymous way to identify yourself as a member of AA. In less than five minutes there were about fifteen people at that gate from all over the world. That brought tears of amazement, relief and joy to Grace. They had a little meeting there in that empty gate, total strangers prior to that moment. Grace discovered that two of those people had gotten out of their boarding lines and missed their flights to answer that call for help. They had remembered what they had seen on many walls of meeting rooms: "When anyone, anywhere reaches out their hand for help, I want the hand of AA to be there and for that I am responsible." Grace did not drink that day. I would venture to guess that none of the people who came to Gate 12 drank that day either.

The author of the passage is a______.

A.patient

B.doctor

C.flight attendant

D.airline manager

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第11题

I was nervous—desperately nervous—about becoming car-free. But eight months ago our car wa
s hit, and the damage was so bad it had to be given up. And that s when I had an idea. Why not just give up having a car at all? The more I thought about it, the more sensible it seemed. We have a railway station behind our house, a tube station 10 minutes walk away, and a bus stop at the end of the street. If any family in Britain could live without a car, I reasoned, then surely we were that family? But my new car-free plan wasn t shared by my family. My teenage daughters were shocked. How would they get to and from university? (A bus, I suggested.)What would their friends think about our family being "too poor to afford a car" ? (I wasn t that bothered what they thought, and I suggested they take the same approach.) My friends, too, were astonished at our plan. Wasn t a car essential, when you had children? What would happen if someone got seriously ill overnight and needed to go to hospital (erm...an ambulance?). People smiled, as though this was another of my mad ideas, before saying they were sure I d soon realise that a car wasn t a luxury, it was a necessity. Eight months on, I wonder whether we 11 ever own a car again. The idea that you "have" to own a car, especially if you live in a city, is all in the mind. I live—and many other people do too—in a community that has never been better served by public transport, and yet car ownership has never been higher. Do I really need a car? The answer, for me, turned out to be no, and Im a lot richer because I dared to ask the question.

The author decided to live a car-free life______.

A.after his car was damaged beyond repair

B.after he was hurt in a terrible car accident

C.because maintaining a car was too costly

D.because the traffic jam was too much for him

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