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[单选题]

– Do you know who he is?–He ______ familiar,but I’m not sure who he is.

A.tastes

B. feels

C. smells

D. looks

答案
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更多“ – Do you know who he is?–He ______ familiar,but I’m not sure who he is.”相关的问题

第1题

Who's the woman who's standing behind Jack? 一 ________________________ A. Do

Who's the woman who's standing behind Jack?

一 ________________________

A. Do you know how long Jack's going to be in town?

B. Which one? The one with the big hat?

C. He is my uncle, John's father.

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第2题

Julie: Do you know everybody here? Paul: No. Hardly anybody.Julie: How do you know Sam?Pau

Julie: Do you know everybody here?

Paul: No. Hardly anybody.

Julie: How do you know Sam?

Paul: He' s a friend of Mark' s. How do you know him?

Julie: Sam and I go to the same gym.

Paul: He ' s a nice guy. ______

Julie: About a year or so.

Paul: Who else do you know here?

Julie: Well, there' s Sam' s girlfriend, Clare . . .

A.How long have you known him?

B.What do you know about him?

C.How well do you know him?

D.Why do you want to know him?

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第3题

听力原文:M: Do you know where Mr. Brown is?W: He's in with the manager.M: I wonder what th

听力原文:M: Do you know where Mr. Brown is?

W: He's in with the manager.

M: I wonder what they are talking about.

W: The next stage of the project, I think.

Who are the two speakers?

A.Mr. Brown' s colleagues.

B.Mr. Brown' s workers.

C.Mr. Brown' s students.

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第4题

听力原文:Do you know who was hired as the new project manager?(A) They' re still deciding.

听力原文:Do you know who was hired as the new project manager?

(A) They' re still deciding.

(B) No, he couldn' t manage that issue.

(C) I think Matthew likes that project.

(32)

A.

B.

C.

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第5题

听力原文:Do you know why Mr. Cruz is coming tomorrow?(A)I' II ask Jane about that.(B)Mr. C

听力原文:Do you know why Mr. Cruz is coming tomorrow?

(A) I' II ask Jane about that.

(B) Mr. Cruz is the head of our team.

(C) Sure, I know who he is.

(34)

A.

B.

C.

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第6题

听力原文:W Min-soo, I'll be going out of town for business next week. I was wondering if y
ou could watch my cat for the seven days that I'm gone.

M Your cat? I didn't know you had one. Sorry, but I'm actually allergic to cats.

W Yeah, he stays inside most of the time. Well, do you know anyone who could watch him? I asked my brother, and he can't do it either.

M Why don't you put him in a kennel or boarding house? I don't think it would be too expensive to put your cat there for a week. But first, I'll try calling my little sister. I think she likes cats.

How long will the woman be gone?

A.Five days

B.Seven days

C.Ten days

D.Fourteen days

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第7题

听力原文:W: My guest today is the artist, Alan Carey, who over the last thirty years has e
stablished himself as one of the country's leading sculptors, making a range of fascinating objects out of metal, stone and other materials. Alan, welcome.

M: Hello.

W: But you don't come from an artistic background, do you, Alan?

M: Oh, absolutely not. If my father had had anything to do with it, I'd never have gone in for sculpture because he was an accountant and ideally he wanted me to join his finn, or if not, go into insurance or banking. But none of these ideas appealed to me, I'm afraid. I'd been doing sculpture as a hobby through my teenage years and, although my parents encouraged me in that, it didn't seem like a prospective career at the time, at least not to my father.

W: But he got a sculptor to look at your work at one point, didn't he?

M: Oddly enough, yes. We went to see a man who taught sculpture in a big London art school who said, "Well, let's have a look at the work", and this chap looked at it and said to my father, "Your son will never be any good, you know", and my father was rather relieved and said to me, "You see, you can do it as a hobby". And then, when we got home he said, "Well, what do you want to do?" and I didn't know … engineering? … architecture? I considered various things, even geology, but finally, in the end, after I’d got a maths degree, I said, "What I really want to do is sculpture, you know" and he said, "Well, you'd better do it then."

W: So, he gave in in the end?

M: He did. But I'm glad it happened that way, that I had to struggle to do it, because he made me dedicate myself to sculpture and do the job properly. He had the idea that art was for amateurs, and that was the one thing that I did not want to be. I wanted to do it as a professional. I knew he was wrong, so I set out to prove it. And, you know, I'm sure that if I had joined his firm, I'd have done it in a half-hearted way which he wouldn't have approved of anyway. And I must say, after I'd decided to become a sculptor, he couldn't have been more supportive.

W: And so you went on to Art College. Did you enjoy it?

M: At the beginning, I appreciated it a lot because we had a different teacher every term. This meant you got a good grounding in the basics because you picked up different things from each one. You know, it might be the material they worked in, for example, or their technique, or whatever. But eventually I got fairly restless because it was a five-year course and by about half-way through I was getting a bit fed up because it was extremely traditional in terms of approach and I was looking for something more out of the ordinary.

W: So this was what led you to Harold Morton?

M: Yes, he was the most advanced sculptor of the time, and he was really doing very different things which I found exciting. And so I sent him some photos of my work, on the off-chance, and amazingly he offered me a part-time job and so I managed to combine that with the final years of college, which made all the difference.

W: And how would you sum up that experience, what did you get out of it?

M: Well, we talked about art a lot. He taught me that a sculptor's studio is quite different from an art college. I had to do drawing at college, a subject I never really understood, and when I got back, he would criticise what I'd done. And from him, I learnt how a sculptor draws, because I was being taught by painters, who are looking at things in a different way.

W: And I suppose it was thanks to him that you started doing abstract art?

M: Well, yes it was, because I don't do sculptures of people or animals, they are not meant to be lifelike. So they are examples of what, I suppose, you'd call abstract art. They are meant to mean something, to make you think.

Questions:

11.What did Alan's father do?

12.Which degree did Alan get first?

13.Which statement is true about Alan and his father?

14.Which stat

A.Sculptor.

B.Accountant.

C.Banker.

D.Insurance agent.

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第8题

听力原文:M: My son is turning sixteen, and I don't know what to get him for his birthday.
Do you have any idea what kids like these days?

W: Well, I have a nephew who is about the same age as your son. He told me that having a cell phone is in these days.

M: A cell phone? What do kids need cell phones for? It's not like they need it for business or anything. Plus, my wife would never go for the idea because it costs too much.

W: Well, you asked me what kids like, and I am telling you that they all want cell phones.

Who is the man planning to get a present for?

A.His wife.

B.His son.

C.His nephew.

D.The woman.

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第9题

听力原文:My father was 44 and knew he wasn't going to make it to 45. He wrote me a letter

听力原文: My father was 44 and knew he wasn't going to make it to 45. He wrote me a letter and hoped that something in it would help me for the rest of my life.

Since the day I was 12 and first read his letter, some of his words have lived in my heart. One part always stands out. "Right now, you are pretending to be a time-killer. But I know that one day, you will do something great." Knowing that my dad believed in me gave me permission to believe in myself: "You will do something great." He didn't know what that would be, and neither did I, but at times in my life when I've felt proud of myself, I remember his words and wish he were here so I could ask, "Is this what you were talking about, Dad? Should I keep going?"

A long way from 12 now, I realize my father would have been proud when I made any progress. Lately, though, I've come to believe he'd want me to move on to what comes next: to be proud of, and believe in, someone else. It's time to start writing my own letters to my children. Our children look to us with the same unanswered question we had. Our kids don't hold back because they're afraid to fail — they're only afraid of failing us. They do not worry about being disappointed. Their fear — as mine was until my father's letter — is of being a disappointment.

Give your child permission to succeed. If you don't have children, then write a letter to someone who looks up to you. You know who they are. They're writing for you to believe in them. I always knew my parents loved me. But trust me: That belief will be more complete, that love will be more real, and their belief in themselves will be greater if you write the words on their hearts: "Don't worry; you'll do something great." Not having that blessing from their parents may be the only thing holding them back.

Questions 26 to 29 are based on the passage you have just heard.

26. What happened to the speaker as mentioned in the passage?

27. According to the speaker, what are children afraid of?

28. What do we know about the speaker from the passage?

29. What is the main purpose of the passage?

(33)

A.He lost his father when he was young.

B.He worked hard before he read his father's letter.

C.He asked his father's permission to believe in himself.

D.He knew what his father wanted to do from the very beginning.

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第10题

Larry had stolen some money, but the police had caught him and he had been put in prison.
Now his trial was about to begin, and he felt sure that he would be found guilty and sent to prison for a long time.

Then he discovered that an old friend of his was one of the members of the jury at his trial. Of course, he didn't tell anybody, but he managed to see his friend secretly one day. He said to him, "Karl, I know that the jury will find me guilty. I cannot hope to be found not guilty of taking the money—that would be too much to expect. But I should be grateful to you for the rest of my life if you could persuade the other members of the jury to add a strong recommendation for mercy to their statement that they consider me guilty."

"Well, Larry," answered Karl, "I shall certainly try to do what I can for you as an old friend, but of course I cannot promise anything. The other eleven people of the jury look terribly strong-minded to me."

Larry said that he would quite understand if Karl was not able to do anything for him, and thanked him warmly for agreeing to help.

The trial went on and in the end the jury found Larry guilty, with a strong recommendation for mercy, as Larry had wished. Of course Larry was very pleased. When some time after the trial Karl went to visit him in prison, Larry thanked him warmly and asked Karl how he managed to persuade the other members of the jury to recommend mercy.

"Well, Larry," Karl answered, "as I thought, those eleven people were very difficult to persuade, but I managed it in the end by tiring them out. Do you know, those fools had all wanted to find you not guilty!"

Which phrase best defines a "jury"?

A.A person who works in a court.

B.A policeman.

C.A judge.

D.A group of people who decide if someone on trial is guilty or not guilty.

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第11题

听力原文:Peter's uncle lived in the country. Once Peter went to stay with him for a few we

听力原文: Peter's uncle lived in the country. Once Peter went to stay with him for a few weeks. Whenever they went for a walk or for a drive in the car and they passed somebody, his uncle waved. Peter was surprised, and said," George, you know everybody here. Where did you meet them all?"

"I don't know all these people, "said his uncle.

"Then why do you wave to them?" asked Peter.

"Well , Peter, "answered his uncle," When I wave to someone and he knows me, he is pleased. He continues his journey with a happier heart. But when ! wave to someone and he doesn't know me, he is surprised and says to himself, ' Who is that man? Why did he wave to me?' So he has something to think about during the rest of his journey, and it makes his journey seem shorter. So I make everybody happy."

(30)

A.The brother of Peter's father or mother.

B.One of the sons of Peter' s aunt.

C.One of Peter's nephews.

D.Peter's friend.

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