Hearing that he had passed () health examination, he immediately made () call to his pa
A.a; /
B.the; /
C.the; a
D.a; the
A.a; /
B.the; /
C.the; a
D.a; the
第1题
A.he had seen Jesus
B.he was getting impatient
C.he was tired of hearing sisters and deacons praying
D.he was moved by prayer and song in the church
第2题
Why didn't the boy tell his grandmother the truth at first?
A.Because he didn't want his grandmother to be sad.
B.Because he didn't want to go home without hearing a story.
C.Because his grandmother would be very angry.
D.Because his grandmother would tell his morn what he had done.
第3题
Mark Twain said in a loud voice because ______.
A.he wanted his friend to know he had bought a ticket for him
B.he wanted to make himself heard by everyone in the compartment
C.the conductor was standing far away from him
D.the conductor had some trouble in hearing
第4题
Why did the professional conduct committee delay its hearing of the case under question?
A.Because the committee said it had been too busy then.
B.Because the doctor said that he had hurt his back.
C.Because the doctor was too busy with his NHS to his patients.
D.Because the committee was different on the doctor's behavior.
第5题
听力原文: A man had to go to court, and he asked his lawyer which judge would be hearing his case. His lawyer told him and then said "Do you know him?"
The man answered, "No, but I wanted to know his name so that I could send him a dozen bottles of good wine."
The lawyer was terribly shocked. "You can't do that. You would be breaking the law very seriously, and you would be sure to lose the case."
Some weeks later the case was heard, and the man won it. As he was leaving the court, he said to the lawyer, "My gift to the judge was quite successful, wasn't it?"
The lawyer was even more shocked than before, and said, "What? Did you really send him that wine after what I told you?"
"Yes, certainly," answered the man. "But I put my opponent's name on the card which I sent with the wine."
(30)
A.Because he wanted to buy some wine from the judge.
B.Because he wanted to win the case.
C.Because he wanted to send some flowers to the judge.
D.Because he wanted to lose the case.
第6题
Why didn't the boy tellhis grandmother the truth at first?[A]Becausehe didn't want his grandmother to be sad. [B]Becausehe didn't want to go home without hearing a story. [C]Becausehis grandmother would be very angry. [D]Becausehis grandmother would tell his mom what he had done.
第7题
A family doctor charged the Night Home Service (NHS) more than £ 500,000 in seven years for night visits that his patients did not need, a General Medical Council disciplinary hearing was told yesterday.
Jagdeep Gossain charged for up to 540 emergency call-outs a month, increasing his annual salary to close to £200,000 a year and using almost a third of the local health authority's out-of-hours GP budget.
Dr Gossain, 46, had a target list of about 100 patients in his practice at Fulham, southwest London, whom he used repeatedly on claim forms to Ealing, Hammersmith and Hounslow Health Authority.
Nearly all emergency visits conducted by the doctor, who often made up to 40 calls a night, were "clinically inappropriate". He had also duped the GMC into postponing his hearing, before the professional conduct committee, four times by claiming that his bad back made him unfit to attend, Sarah Plaschkes, for the GMC, said.
But that injury had not prevented him enjoying his favourite sport — weightlifting — at an exclusive gym in Heston.
Ms Plaschkes added: "The council submits that Dr Gossain deliberately, dishonestly deceived this professional body by pretending he was too ill to attend the heating when, in fact, he was at a leisure centre."
Between May 1990 and April 1998 he claimed an "inordinate and extraordinary number" of night visits, she said. The average GP makes 50 emergency night calls a year. In September 1997 alone Dr Gossain put in 542 claims.
Ms Plaschkes alleged that it was unjustifiable reward in the sum of about £500,000 from the public purse. Dr Gossain's claims escalated over the years. In 1991 he claimed£1,000; by 1995 the sum had risen to more than £75,000, peaking in 1996 at almost£160,000. Over the seven-year period he allegedly fleeced the NHS of £514,593.
In 1998 he claimed ~ 124,591, when the average GP in his health authority claimed£670. Dr Gossain is accused of doing so many night visits that he "could not have provided adequate care and attention" for the patients he visited. It is also said that his ability to provide competent daytime services "was compromised".
Dr Gossain denies serious professional misconduct but, if found guilty, could be struck off the medical register.
A BBC Panorama investigation found that his three children went to private school and he drove a Mercedes with private number plates. His wife, Shashi, a pharmacist, has said that his only crime was to have been a workaholic. The hearing continues.
For what was the doctor in the passage charged?
A.For his incompetence.
B.For his unnecessary services to the patients.
C.For unusually large number of night visits.
D.All the above.
第8题
听力原文: Mr Richards worked in a shop which sold, cleaned and repaired hearing aids. One day an old gentleman entered and put one down in front of him without saying a word. "What's the matter with it?" Mr Richards said. The man did not answer. Of course Mr Richards thought that the man must be deaf and that his hearing aid must be faulty, so he said again, more loudly, "what's wrong with your hearing aid, sir?" Again the man said nothing, so Mr Richards shouted his question again as loudly as he could.
The man then took a pen and piece of paper and wrote: "It isn't necessary to shout when you're speaking to me. My ears are as good as yours. This hearing aid is my wife's, not mine. I've jut had a throat operation, and my problem is not that I can't hear, but that I can't speak."
(23)
A.He wanted to buy a hearing-aid.
B.He wanted to have a hearing-aid repaired.
C.He wanted to get a pen and a piece of paper.
D.He wanted to solve his own problem.
第9题
Why should this be? It's because he's not using his heating ability to help him remember and understand what he's been taught.
Some children get into the habit of learning and remembering things by what they hear. They've got good hearing memories. Other children find it easier to learn and remember things by what they see. They've got good seeing memories. Some children have equally good ability at both seeing and hearing in learning things. Others, less fortunate, seem to have poor hearing and seeing-memories. Most children, I'd say, unknowingly prefer one method over the other for learning and remembering.
But this favoring of one sense over the other is a bad habit and deprives (使......不能) the child of the full use of his natural senses. Mrs. Alien was clearly incredulous when I told her there was nothing wrong with her son's heating. "But he never seems to really understand what he hears, that's what his teachers tell me," she said.
"My psychological examination of William shows he's weak in his hearing memory," I said, "but he has perfectly normal intelligence and can learn in school."
"Our family doctor examined William and he says the boy's hearing was all right. So, that proves you're right on that point," admitted Mrs. Alien. "So how can we help him? My husband and I will do anything you say, Dr. Dursteln."
"You can do a lot to improve William's hearing memory, but it'll take time. You must be patient and not expect results immediately." I cautioned.
I suggested a detailed program for the parents to use at home. I told Mrs. Alien to come back and see me every two weeks so that I could guide her in any problem she had in using my program.
Those who have poor hearing memories______.
A.cannot hear sounds clearly
B.are poor at remembering and understanding what they have learned
C.are poor at learning things by what they have heard
D.have the habit of learning things by what they have heard of
第10题
听力原文: An elderly woman yesterday made a legal claim (索赔) against a department store because it had wrongly accused her of stealing a Christmas card. Mrs. Doss White, 72 years old, is claiming $3000 damages from the store for wrongful arrest and false imprisonment. Mrs. White visited the store while doing Christmas shopping, but did not buy anything. She was followed through the town by a store manager. He had been told that a customer saw her take a card and put it in her shopping bag. He stopped her at a bookstore as she was reading a book. Mrs. White said, "This man, a total stranger, suddenly grasped my bag and asked if he could look in it." She was taken back to the store and shut in a small room in full view of shoppers for 20 minutes until the police arrived. At the police station she was body-searched and nothing was found. Her lawyer said that the department store sent an insincere apology and they insisted that she may have been stealing. The hearing continues today.
What does the story tell us about the old woman?
A.She was found stealing in a bookstore.
B.She caught someone in the act of stealing.
C.She admitted having stolen something.
D.She said she was wrongly accused of stealing.
第11题