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Nobody enjoys having a tooth______.A.drill and fillB.drilling and fillingC.to drill and fi

Nobody enjoys having a tooth______.

A.drill and fill

B.drilling and filling

C.to drill and fill

D.drilled and filled

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更多“Nobody enjoys having a tooth__…”相关的问题
第1题
How often one hears children wishing they were grown up, and old people wishing they were
young again. Each age has its pleasures and its pains, and the happiest person is the one who enjoys what each age gives him without wasting his time in useless regrets.

Childhood is a time when there are few responsibilities to make life difficult. If a child has good parents, he is fed, looked after and loved, whatever he may do. It is impossible that he will ever again in his life be given so much without having to do anything in return. In addition, life is always presenting new things to the child—things that have lost their interest for older people because they are too well-known. But a child has his pains: he is not so free to do what he wishes to do; he is continually being told not to do things, or being punished for what he has done wrong.

When the young man starts to earn his own living, he can no longer expect others to pay for his food, his clothes, and his room, but has to work if he wants to live comfortably. If he spends most of his time playing about in the way that he used to as a child, he will go hungry. And if he breaks the laws of society as he used to break the laws of his parents, he may go to prison. If however, he works hard, keeps out of trouble and has good health, he can have the great happiness of building up for himself his own position in society.

According to Paragraph 2, the writer thinks that______.

A.life for a child is comparatively easy

B.a child is always loved whatever he does

C.if much is given to a child, he must do something in return

D.only children are interested in life

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第2题
After the Trojan War had ended, not a11 of the Greeks got to enjoy ap1 easant homecoming j ourney.0dy sseus'return was fu11 of difficulties. It took him tenyears to get back to his home.Odysseus had many obstac1es put in his way by the sea godPoseidon after having hurt the god' s feelings. He was then trapped by Ca1ypso on herisland. The goddess made him her 1over. For seven years, she refused to 1et him 1eave.Finally, Zeus - the king of a11 gods - stopped Calypso. 0dysseus sailed away on a sma11 boat.However, the boat was destroyed by a storm. Lucki1y, he was able to make it home safe1y at1ast. After having arrived home, 0dysseus found that many men were chasing after his wifeP enelope. Together with his son Te1 emachus, Odysseus fought to get rid of these men. Afterthis was done, Odysseus real ized that Penelope had been faithful to him. However,when shesaw him for the first time after sO many years, she could not be sure that he was real1yher husband.“Dear Queen, how can you be sO hard-hearted when you see that your husbandhas returned after such a 1ong time? ”begged 0dysseus. But sti11, Penelope was not surewhether she could trust him. She decided to test the man standing in front of her. Sheasked a servant to move the bed out of the bedroom.How can that be done?asked0dysseus.“If it is my bed, then nobody could move it except me. I made it myself.One ofits pillars (床腿)is the olive tree that grew on the spot where I built the bedroom.”Andnow Penelope knew that the man was truly her husband. She had waited for him for so manyyears!She threw her arms around him and cried for joy.

(1) In a11, Odysseus’homecoming journey took him seven years.

A、T

B、F

(2) The under1ined wordobstaclesin Paragraph 1 could mean suggestions.

A、T

B、F

(3) Telemachus helped Odysseus to get rid of the men who were chasing after his wife.

A、T

B、F

(4) Penelope fe1t excited when she saw her husband for the first time after he had returnedhome.

A、T

B、F

(5) Odysseus proved to Penelope that he was truly her husband by menti oning some secretsabout their bed.

A、T

B、F

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第3题
How often does one hear children wishing they were grown up, and old people wishing they w
ere young again? Each age has its pleasures and its pains, and the happiest person is the one who enjoys what each age gives him without wasting his time in useless regrets.

Childhood is a time when there are few responsibilities to make life difficult. If a child has good parents, he is fed, looked after and loved, whatever he may do. It is impossible that he will ever again in his life be given so much without having to do anything in return. In addition, life is always presenting new things to the child—things that have lost their interest for older people because they are too well-known. But a child has his pains; he is not so free to do what he wishes to do; he is continually being told not to do things, or being punished for what he has done wrong.

When the young man starts to earn his own living, he can no longer expect others to pay for his food, his clothes, and his room, but has to work if he wants to live comfortably. If he spends most of his time playing about in the way that he used to as a child, he will go hungry. And if he breaks the laws of society as he used to break the laws of his parents, he may go to prison. If however, he works hard, keeps out of trouble and has good health, he can have the great happiness of building up for himself his own position in society.

According to Paragraph 2, the writer thinks that

A.life for a child is comparatively easy

B.a child is always loved whatever he does

C.if much is given to a child, he must do something in return

D.only children are interested in life

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第4题
A hundred years ago it was assumed and scientifically "proved" by economists that the laws
of society make it necessary to have a vast army of poor and jobless people in order to keep the economy going. Today, hardly anybody would dare to voice the principle. It is generally accepted that nobody should be excluded from the wealth of the nation, either by the law of nature or by those of society. The opinions are outdated, which were current a hundred years ago, that the poor owed their conditions to their ignorance, lack of responsibility. In all western industrialized countries, a system of insurance has been introduced which guarantees everyone a minimum of subsistence in case of unemployment, sickness and old age. I would go one step further and argue that, even if these conditions are not present, in other words, one can claim this substance minimum without having to have any "reason". I would suggest, however, that it should be limited to a definite period of time, let's say two years, so as to avoid the encouragement of an abnormal attitude which refuses any kind of social obligation.

This may sound like a fantastic proposal, but so, I think, our insurance system would have sounded to people a hundred years ago. The main objection to such a scheme would be that if each person were entitled to receive minimum support, people would not work. This assumption rests on the fallacy of the inherent laziness. In human nature, actually, aside from abnormally lazy people, there would be very few who would not want to earn more than the minimum, and who would prefer to do nothing rather than work.

However, the suspicions against a system of guaranteed subsistence minimum are not groundless from the standpoint of those who want to use ownership capital for the purpose of forcing others to accept the work conditions they offer. If nobody were forced to accept work in order not to starve, work would be sufficiently interesting and attractive in order to induce one to accept it. Freedom of contract is possible only if both parties are free to accept and reject if; in the present capitalist system this is not the case.

But such a system would not only be the beginning of real freedom of contract between employers and employees, its principal advantage would be the improvement of freedom in interpersonal relationships in every sphere of daily life.

People used to think that poverty and unemployment were due to ______.

A.the slow development of the economy

B.the poor and jobless people's own faults

C.the lack of responsibility on the part of the society

D.the large number Of people who were not well-educated

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第5题
How often one hears children wishing they were grown up, and old people wishing they were
young again. Each age has its pleasures and its pains, and the happiest is the one who enjoys what each age gives him without wasting his time in useless regrets.

Childhood is a time when there are few responsibilities to make life difficult. If a child had good parents, he is fed, looked after and loved, whatever he may do. In addition, life is always presenting new things to the child things that have lost their interest for older people because they are too well known. A child finds pleasure in playing in the rain, or in the snow. His first visit to the seaside is a marvelous(非凡的) adventure. But a child has his pains., he is not so free to do as he wishes as he thinks older people are; he is continually being told not to do things, or being punished for what he has done wrong. His life is therefore not perfectly happy.

When the young man starts to earn his own loving, he becomes free from the discipline (纪律) of school and parents; but at the same time he forced to accept responsibilities (责任). He can no longer expect others to pay for his food, his cloths, and his room, but has to work if he wants to live comfortably. If he spends most of his time playing ahout in the way that he used to as a child, he will go hungry. And if he breaks the laws of society as he used to break the laws of his parents, he may go to prison. If, however, he works hard, keeps out of trouble and has good health, he can have the real happiness of seeing himself make steady(稳定的) progress in his job and of building up for himself his own position in society.

Old age has always been thought of as the worst age to be; but it is not necessary for the old to be unhappy. With old age should come wisdom and the ability to help others with ad vice wisely given. The old can have the joy of seeing their children making progress in life; they can watch their grandchildren growing up around them; and, perhaps best of all, they can, if their life has been a useful one, feeling the happiness of having come through the bat tie of life safely and of having reached. a time when they can lie back and rest, leaving others to continue the fight.

The title of the passage is______.

A.Each Age

B.Growing Pains and Happiness

C.The Best Age to Be

D.The Happiest People to Be

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第6题

Britain enjoys a () climate.

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第7题
Passage Four:Questions 36 to 40 are based on the following passage.For any given task in B
ritain there are more men than are needed. Strong unions keep them there in Fleet Street, home of some London’s biggest dailies, it is understood that when two unions quarrel over three jobs, the argument is settled by giving each union two. That means 33 per cent overmanning, 33 per cent less productivity than could be obtained.

A reporter who has visited plants throughout Europe has an impression that the pace of work is much slower here. Nobody tries too hard. Tea breaks do matter and are frequent. It is hard to measure intensity of work, but Britons give a distinct impression of going at their tasks in a more leisurely way.

But is all this so terrible? It certainly does not improve the gross national product or output per worker. Those observant visitors, however, have noticed something else about Britain. It is a pleasant place.

Street crowds in Stockholm. Paris and New York move quickly and silently heads down, all in a hurry. London crowds tend to walk at an easy pace (except in the profitable, efficient City, the financial district).

Every stranger is struck by the patient and orderly way in which Britons queue for a bus: if the saleswoman is slow and out of stock she will likely say, ‘oh dear, what a pity’; the rubbish collectors stop to chat (聊天) and call the housewives “Luv.” Crime rises here as in every city but there still remains a gentle tone and temper that is unmatched in Berlin, Milan or Detroit.

In short, what is wrong with Britain may also be what is right. Having reached a tolerable standard, Britons appear to be choosing leisure over goods.

第36题:What happens when disputes over job opportunities arise among British unions?

A) Thirty three per cent of the workers will be out of work.

B) More people will be employed than necessary.

C) More jobs will be created by the government.

D) The unions will try to increase productivity.

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第8题

Britain enjoys a cold continental climate.()

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第9题
选出下列句子中语法错误的选项:She enjoys sports, music and eat.()
选出下列句子中语法错误的选项:She enjoys sports, music and eat.()

A、She

B、enjoys sports, music

C、and eat

D、没有错误

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第10题

Britain enjoys a warm continental climate.()

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