How did Lincoln die()。
A.He fell off the White House porch.
B.he fell down from the back of a horse.
C.He was shot.
D.He got the flu.
A.He fell off the White House porch.
B.he fell down from the back of a horse.
C.He was shot.
D.He got the flu.
A.Oh,I,m sorry to hear that
B.Really?Congratulationb
C.How did he die
D.I don"t believe it
How does Gunter Grass revive the memory of the Wilhelm Gustloff tragedy?
A.By presenting the horrible scene of the torpedo attack.
B.By describing the ship's sinking in great detail.
C.By giving an interview to the weekly Die Woche.
D.By depicting the survival of a young pregnant woman.
Born in rude and abject poverty, he never had any education, except what he gave himself, till he was approaching manhood. Not even books wherewith to inform. and train his mind were within his reach. No school, no university, no legal faculty had any part in training his powers. When he became a lawyer and a politician, the years most favourable to continuous study had already passed, and the opportunities he found for reading were very scanty. He knew but few authors in general literature, though he knew those few thoroughly. He taught himself a little mathematics, but he could read no language save his own, and can have had only the faintest acquaintance with European history or with any branch of philosophy.
The want of regular education was not made up for by the persons among whom his lot was cast. Till he was a grown man, he never moved in any society from which he could learn those things with which the mind of an orator to be stored. Even after he had gained some legal practice, there was for many years no one for him to mix with except the petty practitioners of a petty town, men nearly all of whom knew little more than he did himself.
Schools gave him nothing, and society gave him nothing. But he had a powerful intellect and a resolute will. Isolation fostered not only self-reliance but the habit of reflection, and indeed, of prolonged and intense reflection. He made all that he knew a part of himself. His convictions were his own—clear and coherent. He was not positive or opinionated and he did not deny that at certain moments he pondered and hesitated long before he decided on his course. But though he could keep a policy in suspense, waiting for events to guide him, he did not waver. He paused and reconsidered, but it was never his way to go back on a decision once more or to waste time in vain regrets that all he had expected had not been attained. He took advice readily and left many things to his ministers; but he did not lean on his advisers. Without vanity or ostentation, he was always independent, self-contained, prepared to take full responsibility for his acts.
It is said in the second paragraph that Abraham Lincoln ______.
A.was illiterate
B.was never educated
C.was educated very late
D.behaved rudely when he was young
How many times did the box hit the man?
A.Once
B.Three times
C.Twice
D.Four times
A.They did not realize how terrible the virus was until they were broken by it
B.They did not conscious of how terrible the virus was until they were broken by it
C.They were not conscious of how terrible the virus was until they were broken by it
D.They were not aware of how terrible the virus was until they were broken by it
—She gave two weeks.
A.What did she get
B.How much time did she give
C.What did she do
How long______?
A.you suppose did it last
B.do you suppose it lasted
C.did you suppose it last
D.you suppose it lasted