Who could () in the Olympics?
A.contest
B. competition
C. match
D. compete
A.contest
B. competition
C. match
D. compete
The door was ______ and I could not see who she was talking to.
A.shut
B.shutted
C.shutting
D.being shut
I'll get it for you ______ I could remember who last borrowed it.
A.on condition
B.as far as
C.if only
D.lest
A.offer
B.supply
C.accept
D.afford
A、Who are you going to phone?
B、I don't know.
C、Yes, of course.
D、No, here it is.
How could a manager deal with conflict?
A.If his superior is involved, he should be the third party of it.
B.He should punish the person who is responsible for the conflict.
C.He might consider whether to interfere with the matter or not.
D.He would not consider his relationship with the two adversaries.
The two-way radio is very important to people who live on these great Australian farms. It works much like a telephone. A person can listen to someone else talk and then gives an answer. For example, people on the large farms could talk to a doctor far away. They could tell the doctor about someone who was ill, and the doctor could let them know how to look after the sick person.
As the large farms were so far from towns, the children could not go to school. Radio schools were started for them in some places. At a certain time each day, boys and girls turn on their radios and listen to teachers in cities far away.
Families on the large farms wanted to give news to their neighbours. The programme Round Robin Talks by radio was started to keep families in touch with each other. They could talk about who was going away and who was iii. The men could talk about their sheep and cows and how much money the markets would pay for them. In many ways the radio became a newspaper for the farm people of Australia.
In the passage "the two-way radio" is______.
A.important to Americans
B.useful for children only
C.used as a telephone
D.only used by doctors
The two-way radio is very important to people who live on these great Australian farms. It works much like a telephone. A person can listen to someone else talk and then give an answer. For example, people on the large farms could talk to a doctor far away. They could tell the doctor about someone who was ill, and the doctor could let them know how to look after the sick person.
As the large farms were so far from towns, the children could not go to school. Radio schools were started for them in some places. At a certain time each day, boys and girls turn on their radios and listen to teachers in cities far away.
Families on the large farms wanted to give news to their neighbours. The programme "Round Robin Talks" by radio was started to keep families in touch with each other. They could talk about who was going away and who was ill. The men could talk about their sheep and cows and how much money the markets would pay for them. In many ways the radio became a newspaper for the farm people of Australia.
In the passage "the two-way radio" is ______.
A.important to Americans
B.useful for children only
C.used as a telephone
D.only used by doctors
A:East Bouren 54655.
B:Hello. Terresa here. Can I speak to Jack, please?
A:________
B:OK.
A、Who's that speaking?
B、Could you take a message?
C、I think she's gone shopping.
D、Hold the line, please.
Why does a man in the west who asks for a job say something like "Yes, I can certainly do it"?
A. Because to get the job he should give an impression that he's just fit for the job.
B. Because he is not modest.
C. Because he could do nothing but speak that way.
D. Because he was eager to get the job.
Literary persons, even the greatest, are seldom spectacular.Those who lead lives of heroic action have neither the time nor usually the desire, even if they have the ability, to express themselves in writing.Those who gallop down valleys of death do not sing about that experience; they leave it to gentle poets living comfortably in country retreats.Moreover, to be a great writer one must spend more of one's time at a table in the laborious and wholly prosaic act of writing.Few writers attract a Boswell, and unless the details of their lives, their sayings, and their oddities happen to be preserved in writing, they soon become little more than a name.Even with all the elaborate apparatus of modern publicity, few readers could without notice write more of the biography of any living writer than could be contained on a postcard.The word is always so much greater than the man.()
A.Most literary men would prefer to lead lives of action
B.What writers write is more significant than what they do
C.The man of action is often a poor writer
D.Most readers are uniformed about the lives of writers