重要提示:请勿将账号共享给其他人使用,违者账号将被封禁!
查看《购买须知》>>>
首页 > 大学本科
网友您好,请在下方输入框内输入要搜索的题目:
搜题
拍照、语音搜题,请扫码下载APP
扫一扫 下载APP
题目内容 (请给出正确答案)
[主观题]

-I'm really fed up with Larry! - ________

A I'm sorry to hear that. ;

B Really ;

C Hey, what's up

答案
查看答案
更多“-I'm really fed up with Larry! - ________”相关的问题

第1题

听力原文:M: Fancy seeing you here. I didn't know you rode the subway. W: I'm fed up with d

听力原文:M: Fancy seeing you here. I didn't know you rode the subway.

W: I'm fed up with driving and paying so much for gas, and the buses are crowded and unreliable.

M: Yeah, I really appreciate taking the subway! From the Scott Street station, it's only half a block to our office. And going home, the 52nd Street stop is only two blocks from my apartment.

W: Plus, the trains leave every 5 minutes, so if I miss one, I don't have to wait long for another.

What are the speakers mainly discussing?

A.The merits of the subway

B.The high cost of gasoline

C.Which station to get off at

D.The crowded and unreliable buses

点击查看答案

第2题

-I'm relly fed up with Larry-().
-I'm relly fed up with Larry-().

A、I'm sorry to hear that

B、Really?

C、Hey, what's up?

点击查看答案

第3题

听力原文:W: Oh, I'm fed up with my job!M: Hey, there is a perfect job for you in the paper

听力原文:W: Oh, I'm fed up with my job!

M: Hey, there is a perfect job for you in the paper today. You might be interested.

W: Oh, what is it? What do they want?

M: Wait a minute. Eh, here it is. The European Space Agency. It is recruiting translators.

W: The European Space Agency?

M: Well, that's what it says. They need an English translator to work from French or German.

W: So they need a degree in French or German, I suppose. Well, I've got that. What's more, I have plenty of experience. What else are they asking for?

M: Just that. A university degree and three or four years of experience as a translator in a professional environment. They also say the person should have a lively and inquiring mind, effective communication skills and the ability to work individually or as a part of the team.

W: Well, if I stay at my present job much longer, I won't have any mind or skills left. By the way, what about salary? I just hope it isn't lower than what I get now.

M: It's said to be negotiable. It depends on the applicant's education and experience. In addition to basic salary, there is a list of extra benefits. Have a look yourself.

W: Hm... travel and social security plus relocation expenses are paid. Hey, this isn't bad. I really want the job.

(20)

A.She is thirsty for promotion.

B.She wants a much higher salary.

C.She is tired of her present work.

D.She wants to save travel expenses.

点击查看答案

第4题

听力原文:M: Excuse me, are you waiting for buying the concert ticket?W: Yes, I am. So are

听力原文:M: Excuse me, are you waiting for buying the concert ticket?

W: Yes, I am. So are all these people in front of me.

M: How long have you been here?

W: About 50 minutes. I've hardly moved forward in that time.

M: Are you kidding?

W: Not at all. There was a couple up ahead of me who got so fed up that they finally gave up and left. They said they'd been here for more than an hour.

M: My God. Does anyone know what's causing the delay?

W: It could be that there aren't enough people selling tickets this afternoon. Or maybe their computer breaks down.

M: I just hope they don't nm out of tickets when I get up there.

W: That really would be annoying, wouldn't it?

M: I guess I should have come before lunch. Or has it been like this all day?

W: Obviously it has. In fact, before I came, I tried calling to order my tickets over the phone, just to avoid this long wait, but they don't take phone orders, or cheeks, or credit cards. It's cash or nothing. And you have to come in person.

M: Well, there are two more hours before the ticket office closes. Tickets to a good concert are worth waiting for. So I think I'll just make myself comfortable.

(20)

A.Mid-afternoon.

B.Before breakfast.

C.Late evening.

D.Late morning.

点击查看答案

第5题

听力原文:W: Did you have a good time today?M: Oh, no, Alexandra, my job is really starting

听力原文:W: Did you have a good time today?

M: Oh, no, Alexandra, my job is really starting to get me down. I just don't feel inspired about it any more, I'm tired out after the long hours of work all day.

W: I thought you liked working in that computer center.

M: I did. I thought it was a decent job as a technician. But now with the long hours of typing work, it's starting to get boring to me. Our vice manager is so demanding. Almost every day he asks me to type the reports. I suddenly realized that I'm working as a typist.

W: You told me you would talk to him over lunch today.

M: No way. He talked so much and I had no chance to talk.

W: Then you should try to talk to your manager.

M: I don't see the manager very often. He is always on the road.

W: Well, there is no sense in just staying here. You should try to find another job. l'm sure there are tots of jobs you'd be good at.

M: Thanks, Alexandra. I'll see if I can find out about other jobs. I've always enjoyed working with people and I have a good head for mathematics and statistics.

W: Then why don't you apply for a job as a clerk in a bank?

M: You're probably right. I'll go there tomorrow.

What is the man's feeling about his present job?

A.He is interested in it.

B.He is fed up with it.

C.He feels inspired about it.

D.He likes it. more than before.

点击查看答案

第6题

听力原文:M: How are your new neighbors, Nancy?W: They seem nice enough, but they have a so

听力原文:M: How are your new neighbors, Nancy?

W: They seem nice enough, but they have a son who's driving me crazy.

M: What do you mean?

W: He comes home every night around 10 with his car windows rolled down and radio blaring. It stops as soon as he turns the car off. But by then Brian and Lisa axe wide awake.

M: Oh, no.

W: Oh, yes. Sometimes it takes us till mid-night just to get them settled down again.

M: Have you tried talking to them?

W: We haven't even really met them yet except to say a quick hello. I hate to get off ou the wrong foot.

M: You are not going to like them when you do meet them if you keep on complaining.

W: I know, but I fed stupid complaining. It's not as though he is blasting his stereo all night.

M: You said yourself it is driving you crazy.

W: Well, you know how early I have to get up to be here at the office. I'm just not getting enough sleep and neither are the kids. They're so irritable when I get home in the afternoon.

M: Maybe you could go over sometime with a little gift: a plant for the yard or something. Then you could ask about their son whether they have any other children and they'll be sure to ask about yours.

W: Yeah, and then what?

M: Than you could mention that the hardest thing at this stage is getting your kids to get sleep at night?

W: And keeping them asleep.

M: That's the idea. And you should do it soon. The longer you wait, the harder it'll be to do politely.

(20)

A.He drives too fast.

B.His radio wakes her children up.

C.He plays his guitar too loudly.

D.His friends are too noisy.

点击查看答案

第7题

听力原文:M: I'm fed up with the noisy environment here. I suppose we should rent a house w
ith better environment, but I don't see how we can afford it right now.

W: If only we hadn't bought the second-hand car!

Q: What does the woman mean?

(17)

A.She regretted having bought the second-hand car.

B.It is unnecessary to rent another house.

C.They should sell their second-hand car and buy a new one.

D.They can afford a second-hand car.

点击查看答案

第8题

I am really fed up with Larry!_____________

A.How is she

B.Are you OK?

C.Why do you say that

点击查看答案

第9题

听力原文:W: Hi, Jim!M: Hi, Mary! Where is Hill?W: Oh, he's probably at home.M: Why?W: He d

听力原文:W: Hi, Jim!

M: Hi, Mary! Where is Hill?

W: Oh, he's probably at home.

M: Why?

W: He drank too much last night.

M: Now we have to do this work without him.

W: Even when he comes, he's too lazy to do very much.

M: Right. I'm fed up with him.

Where is Hill now?

A.He is at home.

B.He is in the office.

C.He is on the way home.

点击查看答案

第10题

听力原文:M: Jane, have you got time this evening?W: Not really, I'm afraid. But I'll be fr

听力原文:M: Jane, have you got time this evening?

W: Not really, I'm afraid. But I'll be free tomorrow.

M: Well, I'll be busy then. Maybe another time, I'll ring up to see if you are not engaged in anything later.

W: Sure. See you.

What will they do tomorrow?

A.They will meet later.

B.They will not be able to see each other.

C.The woman has got something to do.

点击查看答案

第11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.

点击查看答案
下载APP
关注公众号
TOP
重置密码
账号:
旧密码:
新密码:
确认密码:
确认修改
购买搜题卡查看答案 购买前请仔细阅读《购买须知》
请选择支付方式
  • 微信支付
  • 支付宝支付
点击支付即表示同意并接受了《服务协议》《购买须知》
立即支付 系统将自动为您注册账号
已付款,但不能查看答案,请点这里登录即可>>>
请使用微信扫码支付(元)

订单号:

遇到问题请联系在线客服

请不要关闭本页面,支付完成后请点击【支付完成】按钮
遇到问题请联系在线客服
恭喜您,购买搜题卡成功 系统为您生成的账号密码如下:
重要提示:请勿将账号共享给其他人使用,违者账号将被封禁。
发送账号到微信 保存账号查看答案
怕账号密码记不住?建议关注微信公众号绑定微信,开通微信扫码登录功能
请用微信扫码测试
优题宝