日韩亚洲一区中文字幕,日韩欧美三级中文字幕在线,国产伦精品一区二区三区,免费在线欧美性爱链接

      1. <sub id="o5kww"></sub>
        <legend id="o5kww"></legend>
        <style id="o5kww"><abbr id="o5kww"></abbr></style>

        <strong id="o5kww"><u id="o5kww"></u></strong>
        1. A.whenĂ(g)c(din):ٮ(dng)--r(sh),--.@(g)r(sh)--,,ܼȻ.@ӵr.@ǵķN÷.: How silly we are to sit around indoors outside it is so lovely! A. while B. if C. once D. when :D

           

          }Ŀб(𰸺ͽ)

          xоķxm(dng)?sh)~~M,m(dng)?sh)ʽʹ˼ͨ혡ÿһ(g)~~Mÿ~~MһĂ(g)~~MǶġ

          make;  depress ; be modeled after ;  affect ; nor ; approach ;

          in advance; in search of ; worthwhile ; prefer ; devote; 

          astonish ; be intended for; thanks to

           

          91.I looked carefully at the text and realized that it _________ women in the countryside.

          92.I discovered that she had ________ her whole life to her patients and had chosen not to have a family of her own.

          93.You may find it ________ that Charlie was taught to sing as soon as he could speak and dance as soon as he could walk.

          94.He made people laugh at a time when they felt _____, so they could feel more content with their lives.

          95.Tony _________Julia, touched her shoulder and kissed her on the cheek.

          96.The amazing, up-to-date information together with many opportunities for hands-on learning ______ the world come to life in a completely new way for visitors.

          97.Every area of the park ______  life in the days of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table.

          98.All cultures dont greet each other the same way, ______ are they comfortable in the same way with touching or distance between people.

          99.Like so many others, the little tramp and his friend have rushed there _______ gold, but without success

          100.He_______ to stay alone rather than gossip with his co-workers in his spare time.

           

          鿴𰸺ͽ>>


          x⣨}Ѓɹ(ji)16С}ÿС}232֣
          һ(ji)xвϲ}ĿoA, B, C, DĂ(g)x(xing)xѴ
          A
          Have you seen big dogs in stores or restaurants and wondered why they were there? Those dogs might have been guide dogs.
          People who are blind sometimes use guide dogs called seeing-eyes dogs. These special dogs help people get around. They help them do everyday things. Some people who have hearing problems have hearing-ear dogs. These dogs tell their owners when an alarm clock goes off or when the doorbell rings.
          Guide dogs learn to wear something on their backs called a harness. Their owner holds onto it. The dogs learn what words such as l(f)eft and right mean. They learn to never take their owner into traffic.
          Each guide dog trains for months. Then, it spends one month working with its future owner. At that time ,the owner and dog get to know one another and train together!
          Because guide dogs are trained, they are welcome almost anywhere. So, the next time you are out, dont be surprised if you see a dog. It might just be a guide dog!
          46. ______ use guide dogs.
          A. People who want dogs to play with     B. Babies
          C. Anyone wants to                                D. People who cannot hear or cannot see
          47. How long do guide dogs train?______
          A. days           B. weeks                    C. months                     D. They dont train
          48. Guide dogs train with their owner for ______.
          A. two days        B. one week               C. one month                D. one year
          49. Guide dogs can go _______.
          A. almost anywhere  B. only stores     C. anywhere but restaurants   D. only outside places

          鿴𰸺ͽ>>

          xоķxm(dng)?sh)~~M,m(dng)?sh)ʽʹ˼ͨÿһ(g)~~Mÿ~~MһΡĂ(g)~~MǶ

          make;  depress ; be modeled after ;  affect ; nor ; approach ;

           in advance; in search of ; worthwhile ; prefer ; devote; 

          astonish ; be intended for; thanks to

          91.I looked carefully at the text and realized that it _________ women in the countryside.

          92.I discovered that she had ________ her whole life to her patients and had chosen not to have a family of her own.

          93.You may find it ________ that Charlie was taught to sing as soon as he could speak and dance as soon as he could walk.

          94.He made people laugh at a time when they felt _____, so they could feel more content with their lives.

          95.Tony _________Julia, touched her shoulder and kissed her on the cheek.

          96.The amazing, up-to-date information together with many opportunities for hands-on learning ______ the world come to life in a completely new way for visitors.

          97.Every area of the park ______  life in the days of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table.

          98.All cultures dont greet each other the same way, ______ are they comfortable in the same way with touching or distance between people.

          99.Like so many others, the little tramp and his friend have rushed there _______ gold, but without success

          100.He_______ to stay alone rather than gossip with his co-workers in his spare time.

          鿴𰸺ͽ>>

          x⣨}Ѓɹ(ji)16С}ÿС}232֣

          һ(ji)xвϲ}ĿoA, B, C, DĂ(g)x(xing)xѴ𰸡

          A

          Have you seen big dogs in stores or restaurants and wondered why they were there? Those dogs might have been guide dogs.

          People who are blind sometimes use guide dogs called seeing-eyes dogs. These special dogs help people get around. They help them do everyday things. Some people who have hearing problems have hearing-ear dogs. These dogs tell their owners when an alarm clock goes off or when the doorbell rings.

          Guide dogs learn to wear something on their backs called a harness. Their owner holds onto it. The dogs learn what words such as l(f)eft and right mean. They learn to never take their owner into traffic.

          Each guide dog trains for months. Then, it spends one month working with its future owner. At that time ,the owner and dog get to know one another and train together!

          Because guide dogs are trained, they are welcome almost anywhere. So, the next time you are out, dont be surprised if you see a dog. It might just be a guide dog!

          46. ______ use guide dogs.

          A. People who want dogs to play with     B. Babies

          C. Anyone wants to                                 D. People who cannot hear or cannot see

          47. How long do guide dogs train?______

          A. days           B. weeks                    C. months                     D. They dont train

          48. Guide dogs train with their owner for ______.

          A. two days        B. one week               C. one month                D. one year

          49. Guide dogs can go _______.

          A. almost anywhere  B. only stores     C. anywhere but restaurants   D. only outside places

          鿴𰸺ͽ>>

          գ20С}ÿС}1.5M30֣
          xģմȻ4160}oĂ(g)x(xing)ABCDxx(xing)ڴ}όԓ(xing)Ϳ
          At a young age, her doctor told Patti Wilson she was an epilepticdߣ. Her father was a morning jogger. One day she   31   and said, Daddy, what Id really love to do is run with you every day, but Im afraid I cant do it. Her father   32    her to start running.
          Thats just what they did every   33  . It was a   34   experience for them. After a few weeks, Patti said, still smiling, Daddy, what Id really love to do is break the worlds long-distance running record for  35   .
          Her father   36    The Guinness Book of World Records and found that the farthest distance any woman had run was 80 miles. As a freshman in high school, Patti    37   , Im going to run from Orange County up to San Francisco(about 400 miles). As a sophomore꼉(j)W(xu), she went   38   , Im going to run to Portland, Oregon(about 1,500 miles). As a junior Ill run to St. Louis(about 2,000 miles). As a senior Ill run to the White House (about 3,000 miles).
          In   39   of her disease, Patti was as ambitiousҰĵģ as she was enthusiastic. She looked at being an epileptic as simply an   40  . She focused not on what she had   41   , but on what she had left.
          That year, together with her father, she completed her   42   to San Francisco wearing a T-shirt that   43  , I love Epileptics.
          In her sophomore year, Pattis classmates got behind her. They made a huge poster that read, Run, Patti, Run! This has since   44   her motto and the title of a book she has written. During this marathon, she broke a bone in her foot. A doctor told her that she had to   45     her run. But Patti said she wasnt running for herself; she was   46   to break the chains on the brains that limited so many others. She asked the doctor   47    or not there was a way she could keep running. He said he could wrap it in adhesiveճτ  48   putting it in a castʯࣩ, but he   49   her that it would be extremely painful. She told the doctor to wrap it up.
          Later, after four months of running from the West Coast to the East Coast, Patti arrived in Washington and shook the hand of the President of the United States. She told him, I wanted people to know that epileptics are normal human beings with   50   lives.
          31. A. smiled  B. cried   C. laughed      D. wept
          32. A. agreed  B. suggested   C. encouraged D. promised
          33. A. afternoon     B. morning     C. night   D. evening
          34. A. terrible B. fortunate    C. dangerous       D. wonderful
          35. A. women B. men    C. students      D. patients
          36. A. questioned   B. checked      C. inspected    D. interviewed
          37.A. broadcasted   B. told    C. informed        D. announced
          38. A. up B. forward      C. on      D. upon
          39. A. honor B. view       C. favor  D. charge
          40. A. accident       B. coincidence       C. influence    D. inconvenience
          41. A. lost      B. dropped     C. improved   D. received
          42. A. distance       B. task    C. run     D. study
          43. A. showed B. said    C. wrote  D. read
          44. A. come    B. become      C. gone       D. went
          45. A. continue      B. stop    C. keep      D. struggle
          46. A. working       B. jogging      C. walking   D. running
          47. A. whether       B. when  C. if D. where
          48. A. in addition to      B. in spite of   C. instead of   D. regardless of
          49. A. asked    B. warned       C. advised      D. comforted
          50. A. common      B. unique       C. special       D. normal

          鿴𰸺ͽ>>


          ͬ(x)(c)