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[主观题]

He thought this painting of little ______ and let me have it for only 20 yuan.A.priceB.wor

He thought this painting of little ______ and let me have it for only 20 yuan.

A.price

B.worth

C.cost

D.value

答案
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更多“He thought this painting of little ______ and let me have it for only 20 yuan.A.priceB.wor”相关的问题

第1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2题

Is Your Child's Stomach Pain All in His Head?We all know there are times that kids seem to

Is Your Child's Stomach Pain All in His Head?

We all know there are times that kids seem to complain (51) a stomachache to get out of chores(零星活儿)or going to school. Don't be so sure that the pain they (52) is all in their minds. We're learning more now about a condition (53) " functional abdominal pain" that is experienced by millions of kids every day.

Like many teenagers, Kyle Brust makes it a point to do his homework as (54) as he gets home. Unlike most, Kyle often did this with a terrible stomachache. In fact, the (55) often started while he was at school, but getting help there was getting harder.

"Some of my teachers wouldn't let me go, because I'd asked so many times before and they thought I was trying to get out of (56) ," says Kyle.

Kyle's mom Marilyn says she couldn't blame the (57) . After all, she'd taken him to the doctor several times herself, and even they couldn't find anything (58) .

"You know, you're running the tests and nothing's coming up. So, is it in his head, is he just an extremely stressful child? It's just frustrating (59) we're not finding any answers," says Marilyn.

It turns out Kyle was suffering from a condition known (60) functional abdominal pain, that affects as many as one out of every ten kids in this country. Even (61) the cause of the pain may not be obvious, there are real consequences.

"It really does hurt, and these kids really do suffer," says Dr, Campo, MD at Nationwide Children's Hospital. To help (62) , Campo is looking into a new approach. He's conducting clinical trials of an antidepressant(抗抑郁药)that changes the way the body handles a chemical called serotonin(血清素). In a preliminary study, Dr. Campo found that in about eight out of ten (63) , the drug normally used to treat emotional pain worked to ease the pain in the (64) .

"We think about it as being important in anxiety and depression and that's all quite true, but what's really interesting is that 95% of our body's serotonin is in our gut," says Campo.

Campo believes these kids have extremely sensitive intestines(肠), and controlling the effects of serotonin may (65) ease the pain. It seemed to work for Kyle, who is now completely pain free for the first time in years.

1. A. of

B. on

C. at

D. by

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第3题

Is Your Child's Stomach Pain All in His Head? We all know there are times that kids se

Is Your Child's Stomach Pain All in His Head?

We all know there are times that kids seem to complain . ______(51) a stomach ache to get out ofl chores or going to school. Don't be so sure that the pain they __________(52) is all in their minds. We're learn- ing more now about a condition ________ (53) " functional abdominal pain" that is experienced by millions of kids every day.

Like many teenagers, Kyle Brust makes it a point to do his homework: as ___ (54) as he gets home. Unlike most, Kyle often did his with a terrible stomach ache. In fact, the ___ (55) often started while he was at school, but getting help there was getting harder.

"Some of my teachers wouldn't let me go, because l'd asked so many times before and they thought I was trying to get out of __________ (56) , " says Kyle.

Kyle's mom Marilyn says she couldn't blame the __________ (57). After all, she'd taken him to the doctor several times herself, and even they couldn't find anything _(58)

"You know, you're running the tests and nothing's coming up. So, is it in his head, is he just an ex- tremely stressful child? It's just frustrating__(59) we're not finding any answers, " says Marilyn

It turns out Kyle was suffering from a condition known ________ (60)functional abdominal pain, that af- fects as many as one out of every ten kids in this country: Even______(61) the cause of the pain may not be obvious, there are real consequences. .

"It really does hurt, and these kids really do suffer," says Dr. Campo, MD at Nationwide Children's Hospital. To help__(62) , Campo is looking into a new approach. He's conducting clinical trials of an antidepressant that changes the way the body handles a chemical called serotonin_ In a preliminary study, Dr. (:ampo found that in about eight out of ten _________ (63), the drug normally used to treat emotional pain worked to ease the pain in the __________64).

"We think about it as being important in anxiety and depression and that's all quite true, but what's real-ly interesting is that 95% of our body's serotonin is in our gut, " says Campo.

Campo believes these kids have extremely sensitive intestines, and controlling the effects of serotonin may _(65) ease the pain It seemed to work for Kyle, who is now completely pain free for the first time myears

A.OF

B.ON

C.AT

D.BY

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第4题

We all know there are times that kids seem to complain (51) a stomach ache to get out of c

We all know there are times that kids seem to complain (51) a stomach ache to get out of chores or going to school. Don't be so sure that the pain they (52) is all in their minds. We're learning more now about a condition (53) "functional abdominal pain" that is experienced by millions of kids every day.

Like many teenagers, Kyle Brust makes it a point to do his homework as (54) as he gets home. Unlike most, Kyle often did his with a terrible stomach ache. In fact, the (55) often started while he was at school, but getting help there was getting harder.

"Some of my teachers wouldn't let me go, because I'd asked so many times before and they thought I was trying to get out of (56) ," says Kyle.

Kyle's morn Marilyn says she couldn't blame the (57) . After all, she'd taken him to the doctor several times herself, and even they couldn't find anything (58) .

"You know, you're running the tests and nothing's coming up. So, is it in his head, is he just an extremely stressful child? It's just frustrating (59) we're not finding any answers," says Marilyn.

It turns out Kyle was suffering from a condition known (60) functional abdominal pain, that affects as many as one out of every ten kids in this country. Even (61) the cause of the pain may not be obvious, there are real consequences.

"It really does hurt, and these kids really do suffer," says Dr. Campo, MD at Nationwide Children's Hospital. To help (62) , Campo is looking into a new approach. He's conducting clinical trials of an antidepressant that changes the way the body handles a chemical called serotonin. In a preliminary study, Dr. Campo found that in about eight out of ten (63) , the drug normally used to treat emotional pain worked to ease the pain in the (64) .

"We think about it as being important in anxiety and depression and that's all quite true, but what's really interesting is that 95% of our body's serotonin is in our gut, " says Campo.

Campo believes these kids have extremely sensitive intestines, and controlling the effects of serotonin may (65) ease the pain. It seemed to work for Kyle, who is now completely pain free for the first time in years.

(51)

A.of

B.on

C.at

D.by

点击查看答案

第5题

听力原文:Einstein had a great effect on science and history. An American university presid

听力原文: Einstein had a great effect on science and history. An American university president once said that Einstein had invented a new outlook, a new view of the universe. It may be some time before the average mind understands fully the identity of time and space and so on—but even ordinary men understand now the universe is something larger than ever thought before.

By 1914 the young Einstein had gained world fame. He accepted the offer to become a professor at the Prussian Academy of Science in Berlin. He had few duties, little teaching and unlimited chances for study, but soon his peace and quietness were broken by World War I(WWI).

Einstein hated violence. The great pain and suffering of war affected him deeply, and he sat unhappily in his office doing little. He lost interest in his research. Only when peace came in 1918 was he able to get back to work:

In the years following World War I, honors were increasingly given to him. He became the head of the Caesar Wilhelm Institute of Theoretical Physics. In 1921 he won the Nobel Prize, and he was honored in Germany until the rise of Nazism when he was driven from Germany because he was a Jew.

(30)

A.Everyone understands Einstein's theory today.

B.Einstein achieved more than any other scientists in history.

C.The Theory of Relativity can be quickly learned by everyone.

D.Our ideas about the universe are different today because of Einstein.

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第6题

听力原文:That's how Shown O'Neill looks back on the heart attack he experienced shortly af

听力原文: That's how Shown O'Neill looks back on the heart attack he experienced shortly after his 31st birthday.

"I thought I was in perfect health," Shown says. "I was never sick. I woke up feeling good every morning."

Then on that fateful day in April 2002, he received a giant eye opener. He was working in his yard in Hixson and started having pain in his chest and arms. "I wag pretty sure what it was, but I couldn't believe it could be happening to roe." The good news is that because Shawn recognized the symptoms and went immediately to Memorial Noah Park Hospital, he received the treatment he needed and the damage to his heart muscle was minimal.

"Advances in medicine make it possible for us to stop many heart attacks and keep people alive if they get to the hospital in time," says Dr: Kinsman Wright, medical director of Cardiac Services at Memorial. "We have technology to pinpoint blockage in the cardiac, arteries and several options to open the vessels. And lifestyle. changes and medications are helping people reduce their risk factors."

But Dr. Wright doesn't see any decrease in heart disease. "With people living longer, we're seeing different types of heart disease. We need to keep studying and fighting it on all fronts."

(30)

A.Yes. Because he is never sick.

B.Yes. Because he wakes up feeling good every morning

C.No. Because his heart muscle was severely, damaged.

D.No. Because he suffered a heart attack.

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第7题

根据下列文章,请回答 41~45 题。 Too Late to Regret It When l was a junior I met, a second.y

根据下列文章,请回答 41~45 题。 Too Late to Regret It

When l was a junior I met, a second.year student in my department.He wasn’t tall or good-looking.but he was very nice,attractive and athletic.He had something that I admired;very much.He was natural-warm,and sincere

I disregarded(不顾)、parents’ disapproval.We were very happy together.He picked me up from my dorm every morning,and after class we would sit alongside the stream that ran through campus,or sunbathe(晒太阳)on the lawn.At night he would walk me back to my dorm)He came from a poor family, but in order to make me happy, he borrowed, money from is friend to buy presents and meals for me.Our fellow students Looked up to him as a role model,and the girls envied(妒忌)me.He wasn’t a local’ but wanted to stay here after graduation.I thought we had a future together.

however when I got a part.time job during the summer vacation,people began giving me a lot of pressure,saying that a pretty, intelligent girl like me should find a better guy to spend time with.This was also what my family thought。He spent the summer in his hometown,S0 1 was all by myself.When he got back,I began finding fault with him.But his big heart and warmth soon drove all unpleasant thoughts away.However, I had no idea how badly I had hurt him and that things would get worse.

I had a good part—time job off campus that paid pretty well.With my good performance at school。I also got admission to graduate school at one of China’s best universities.He,on the other hand,did not do so well at school or at work.I had to worry about his living expenses,job and scores.

Almost all my colleagues and friends advised me to break up with him.Then we had a quarrel last June.He was in great pain,and my cold words and bad moods started turning him away.

Graduation time was drawing near, and he said he wanted to go back to his hometown.He said that he couldn’t put up with me anymore.I was’ shocked and looked at him in despair.

True love happens only once,but I found it out too late.

第41题:When did the author fall in love with the boy?

A.After she had a quarrel with him.

B.When she was a junior.

C.When she was a second-year student.

D.After she found a part-time job.

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第8题

A. how much someone wants it to succeed B. a form. of deep thought C. a condition similar

A. how much someone wants it to succeed

B. a form. of deep thought

C. a condition similar to sleep

D. have increased self-control and a reduced sense of pain

E. hypnosis can't reduce or end a patient's pain

F. persons can't be forced to do something they would normally oppose

Hypnosis is commonly described as ______.

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第9题

The Deer’s Death He ran close, and again stood still, stopped by a new fear. Around him th

The Deer’s Death

He ran close, and again stood still, stopped by a new fear. Around him the grass was whispering and alive. He looked wildly about, then down. The ground was black with ants, great energetic ants that took no notice of him, but hurried towards the fighting shape. And as he drew in his breath and pity and terror seized him, the beast fell and the screaming stopped. Now he could hear nothing but a bird singing, and the sound of the rustling (沙沙声) whispering ants.

He peered over at the blackness that twitched with the jerking(抽搐) nerves. It grew quieter. There were small twitches from the mass that still looked vaguely like the shape of a small animal.

It came into his mind that he could shoot it and end its pain; and he raised the gun. Then he lowered it again. The deer could no longer feel; its fighting was a mechanical protest of the nerves. But it was not that which made him put down the gun. It was a swelling feeling of rage and misery and protest that expressed itself in the thought: if I had not come it would have died like this, so why should I interfere? All over the bush things like this happen; they happen all the time; this is how life goes on, by living things dying painfully. I cannot stop it. He was glad that the deer was unconscious and had gone past suffering so that he did not have to make a decision to kill it. At his feet, now, were ants tricking back with pink fragments in their mouths and there was a fresh acid smell in his nose. He sternly controlled the uselessly convulsing(痉挛的) muscles of his empty stomach, and reminded himself: the ants must eat, too.

The shape had grown small. Now it looked like nothing to be recognized. He saw the blackness thin, and bits of white showed through, shining in the sun—yes, there was the sun just up. Then the boy looked at those insects. A few were standing and gazing up at him with small glittering eyes. “Go away!” he said to the ants coldly. “I am not for you—not just yet, at any rate.”

He bent over the bones and touched the sockets(孔) in the skull: that was where the eyes were, he thought suspiciously, remembering the liquid eyes of a deer.

That morning, perhaps an hour ago, this small creature had been stepping proud and free through the bush even as he himself had done. Proudly stepping the earth, it had smelt the cold morning air. Walking like kings, it had moved freely through this bush, where each blade of grass grew for it alone, and where the river ran pure sparkling water for it to drink.

And then—what had happened? Such a sure swift footed thing could surely not be trapped by a swarm of ants?

How was the deer when the boy first saw it?

A.It was already dead in the bush.

B.It was still on its feet.

C.It was lying on the ground dying.

D.It was fighting the ants to a finish.

点击查看答案

第10题

The Deer's DeathHe ran close, and again stood still, stopped by a new fear. Around him the

The Deer's Death

He ran close, and again stood still, stopped by a new fear. Around him the grass was whispering and alive. He looked wildly about, then down. The ground was black with ants, great energetic ants that took no notice of him, but hurried towards the fighting shape. And as he drew in his breath and pity and terror seized him, the beast fell and the screaming stopped. Now he could hear nothing but a bird singing, and the sound of the rustling (沙沙声) whispering ants.

He peered over at the blackness that twitched with the jerking(抽搐) nerves. It grew quieter. There were small twitches from the mass that still looked vaguely like the shape of a small animal.

It came into his mind that he could shoot it and end its pain; and he raised the gun. Then he lowered it .again. The deer could no longer feel; its fighting was a mechanical protest of the nerves. But it was not that which made him put down the gun. It was a swelling feeling of rage and misery and protest that expressed itself in the thought: if I had not come it would have died like this, so why should I interfere? All over the bush things like this happen; they happen all the time; this is how life goes on, by living things dying painfully. I cannot stop it. He was glad that the deer was unconscious and had gone past suffering so that he did not have to make a decision to kill it. At his feet, now, were ants tricking back with pink fragments in their mouths and there was a fresh acid smell in his nose. He sternly controlled the uselessly convulsing(痉挛的) muscles of his empty stomach, and reminded himself: the ants must eat too.

The shape had grown small. Now it looked like nothing to be recognized. He saw the blackness thin, and bits of white showed through, shining in the sun-- yes, there was the sun just up. Then the boy looked at those insects. A few were standing and gazing up at him with small glittering eyes. "Go away!" he said to the ants coldly. "I am not for you not just yet, at any rate."

He bent over the bones and touched the sockets(孔) in the skull: that was where the eyes were, he thought suspiciously, remembering the liquid eyes of a deer.

That morning, perhaps an hour ago, this small creature had been stepping proud and free through the bush even as he himself had done. Proudly stepping the earth, it had smelt the cold morning air. Walking like kings, it had moved freely through this bush, where each blade of grass grew for it alone, and where the river ran pure sparkling water for it to drink.

And then--what had happened? Such a sure swift footed thing could surely not be trapped by a swarm ofants?

How was the deer when the boy first saw it?

A.It was already dead in the bush.

B.It was still on its feet.

C.It was lying on the ground dying.

D.It was fighting the ants to a finish.

点击查看答案

第11题

The Deer's Death He ran close, and again stood still, stopped by a new fear. Around him th

The Deer's Death

He ran close, and again stood still, stopped by a new fear. Around him the grass was whispering and alive. He looked wildly about, then down. The ground was black with ants, great energetic ants that took no notice of him, but hurried towards the fighting shape. And as he drew in his breath and pity and terror seized him, the beast fell and the screaming stopped. Now he could hear nothing but a bird singing, and the sound of the rustling (沙沙声) whispering ants.

He peered over at the blackness that twitched with the jerking(抽搐) nerves. It grew quieter. There were small twitches from the mass that still looked vaguely like the shape of a small animal.

It came into his mind that he could shoot it and end its pain; and he raised the gun. Then he lowered it again. The deer could no longer feel; its fighting was a mechanical protest of the nerves. But it was not that which made him put down the gun. It was a swelling feeling of rage and misery and protest that expressed itself in the thought: if I had not come it would have died like this, so why should I interfere? All over the bush things like this happen; they happen all the time; this is how life goes on, by living things dying painfully. I cannot stop it. He was glad that the deer was unconscious and had gone past suffering so that he did not have to make a decision to kill it. At his feet, now, were ants tricking back with pink fragments in their mouths and there was a fresh acid smell in his nose. He sternly controlled the uselessly convulsing(痉挛的) muscles of his empty stomach, and reminded himself: the ants must eat too.

The shape had grown small. Now it looked like nothing to be recognized. He saw the blackness thin, and bits of white showed through, shining in the sun—yes, there was the sun just up. Then the boy looked at those insects. A few were standing and gazing up at him with small glittering eyes. "Go away!" he said to the ants coldly. "I am not for you—not just yet, at any rate."

He bent over the bones and touched the sockets(孔) in the skull: that was where the eyes were, he thought suspiciously, remembering the liquid eyes of a deer.

That morning, perhaps an hour ago, this small creature had been stepping proud and free through the bush even as he himself had done. Proudly stepping the earth, it had smelt the cold morning air. Walking like kings, it had moved freely through this bush, where each blade of grass grew for it alone, and where the river ran pure sparkling water for it to drink.

And then—what had happened? Such a sure swift footed thing could surely not be trapped by a swarm of ants?

How was the deer when the boy first saw it?

A.It was already dead in the bush.

B.It was still on its feet.

C.It was lying on the ground dying.

D.It was fighting the ants to a finish.

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