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单选题
Joan is () sister.
A

Mary and Jack

B

Mary’s and Jack’s

C

Mary’s and Jack

D

Mary and Jack’s


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更多 “单选题Joan is () sister.A Mary and JackB Mary’s and Jack’sC Mary’s and JackD Mary and Jack’s” 相关考题
考题 Most people-or at least more Western Europeans-did not accept daydreaming as part of their lives. In fact, until recently, daydreaming was viewed as a waste of time. Or it was considered an unhealthy escape from real life and its duties. But now some people are taking a fresh look at daydreaming. And it may be that more people are suffering from a lack of daydreaming than are suffering from too much of it.It now appears that a person's self-control and self-direction may suffer if he or she does no daydreaming at all. Such a person may become poorly equipped to deal with the pressures of daily life.Dr. Joan T. Freyberg has concluded that daydreaming contributes to intellectual growth. It also improves concentration and the ability to get long with others, she says. Another researcher reported that daydreaming seemed to produce improved self-control and creative ability.But that's only part of the story. The most remarkable thing about daydreaming may be its usefulness in shaping our future lives, as we want them to be.Industrialist Henry J. Kaiser believed that much of his success was due to the positive use of daydreaming. He maintained that you can imagine your future. Florence Nightingale dreamed of becoming a nurse. The young Thomas Edison pictured himself as an inventor. For these notable achievers, it appears that their daydreams came true.Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick believed that the way we pictured ourselves is often the way we turn out. He offered this advice: Hold a picture of yourself in your mind’s eye, and you will be drawn towards it. Picture yourself as defeated, and that alone will make victory impossible. Picture yourself vividly as winning, and that will contribute immeasurably to success. Do not picture yourself as anything, and you will drift(1)According to the passage, people who do not daydream will __________.A、suffer from a lack of daydreamingB、not waste timeC、improve concentrationD、escape from the real life(2)What does the first sentence in the fourth paragraph mean?A、But that's only part of the research.B、But there are still some other stories.C、But the story does not finish yet.D、But there are still some other positive uses of daydreaming.(3)The example of Thomas Edison is used to show __________.A、he is a successful dreamerB、he is a successful inventorC、daydreaming can shape our futureD、daydreaming can improve creative ability(4)According to Harry Emerson, if we do not imagine at all, we may __________.A、be defeatedB、wander and be aimlessC、achieve successD、overcome most of the problems(5)Which of the following can best serve as the title of the passage?A、Daydreaming, too much or too little?B、Come on, Imaging Your Future!C、New Discoveries on Daydreaming.D、Citizens Embracing Daydreaming

考题 Joan is working at the emergency room of the hospital (attached in) the Beijing Medical School.() 此题为判断题(对,错)。

考题 She () to be a friend of my sister.她原来是我姐姐的朋友。 A、turned outB、wasC、destinedD、planned

考题 李四正要创建自己的项目团队,考虑项目工作所需要的资源。选择适当的人是必不可少的。然而,适当的人不是随时都可找到。为了确保能适当地建立项目组织,Joan将需要寻找所有下列事项,除了:() A当需要适当的人时,最想要的人是否可用B过去是否有人完成过这类项目工作C候选人是否与业主有组织关联D他们能否作为团队一起工作得很好

考题 Hello, everyone. I'd like to talk about myself. My name is Lily. I am an IT worker. I work at the ABC company in Shanghai. Now I am working as a trainee (实习) Information Technology Manager. I am in charge of about 45 people. I am here on my own. My family is in Hong Kong. I don't have any brothers, but I have a sister. She works on newspaper advertisements. She is now sitting in front of the TV set and watching me on TV in our house in Hong Kong. I believe, my mother and father are together with her too. I would like to say hello to my family. Hi, Mum and Dad! Hello, Rose! Can you see me and hear me clearly? I am now in the TV studio (演播室) of Shanghai TV Station. We are making a program about our company. These people around me are my colleagues. That one over there is our boss.(1). Lily works in IT.A、 Right.B、Wrong.C、Doesn't say.(2). Lily has got a big family in Hong Kong.A、 Right.B、Wrong.C、Doesn't say.(3). Lily is working on a training program in the TV studio of Shanghai TV Station.A、 Right.B、Wrong.C、Doesn't say.(4). Lily is going to be the IT Manager.A、 Right.B、Wrong.C、Doesn't say.(5). Lily's boss and her colleagues are in Shanghai now.A、 Right.B、Wrong.C、Doesn't say.

考题 Joan正要创建自己的项目团队,考虑项目工作所需要的资源。选择适当的人是必不可少的。然而,适当的人不是随时都可找到。为了确保能适当地建立项目组织,Joan将需要寻找所有下列事项,除了:a. 当需要适当的人时,最想要的人是否可用?b. 过去是否有人完成过这类项目工作?c. 候选人是否与业主有组织关联?d. 他们能否作为团队一起工作得很好?

考题 I (11) (12) English girl. (13) name is Joan. I'm 12. I have a Chinese (14) . (15) name is Sun Hui. We're in the same(相同的)class. All her family (16) in China now. Her father is a teacher in our school. (17) teaches English.(18) mother is a nurse(护士) in a hospital(医院).(19) bas a brother.(20) is only 4.( )11.A.isB.amC.areD.be

考题 阅读理解Betty and Harold have been married for years.But one thing still puzzles old Harold.How is it that he can leave Betty and her friend Joan sitting on the sofa, talking, go out to a ballgame, come back three and a half hours later, and they’re still sitting on the sofa, talking?What in the world, Harold wonders, do they have to talk about?Betty shrugs.Talk? We’re friends.Researching this matter called friendship, psychologist Lillian Rubin spent two years interviewing more than two hundred women and men.No matter what their age, their job, their sex, the results were completely clear.Women have more friendships than men, and the difference in the content and the quality of those friendships is “marked and unmistakable”.More than two-thirds of the single men Rubin interviewed could not name a best friend.Those who could were likely to name a woman.Yet three-quarters of the single women had no problem naming a best friend, and almost always it was a woman.More married men than women named their wife/husband as a best friend, most trusted person, or the one they would turn to in time of emotional distress(情感危机).“Most women,” says Rubin, “identified at least one, usually more, trusted friends to whom they could turn in a troubled moment, and they spoke openly about the importance of these relationships in their lives”.“In general,” writes Rubin in her new book, “women’s friendships with each other rest on shared emotions and support, but men’s relationships are marked by shared activities.” For the most part, Rubin says , interactions (交往) between men are emotionally controlled—a good fit with the social requirements of “manly behavior”.“Even when a man is said to be a best friend,” Rubin writes, “the two share little about their innermost feelings.Whereas a woman’s closest female friend might be the first to tell her to leave a failing marriage, it wasn’t unusual to hear a man say he didn’t know his friend’s marriage was in serious trouble until he appeared one night asking if he could sleep on the sofa.”6.What old Harold cannot understand or explain is the fact that() .A.he is treated as an outsider rather than a husbandB.women have so much to shareC.women show little interest in ballgamesD.his wife is difficult to talk to7.Rubin’s study shows that for emotional support a married woman is more likely to turn to ().A.a male friendB.a female friendC.her parentsD.her husband8.According to the text, which type of behavior. is NOT expected of a man by society?()A.Ending his marriage without good reason.B.Spending too much time with his friends.C.Complaining about his marriage trouble.D.Going out to ballgames too often.9.Which of the following statements is best supported by the last paragraph?()A.Men keep their innermost feeling to themselves.B.Women are more serious than men about marriage.C.Men often take sudden action to end their marriage.D.Women depend on others in making decisions.10.The research done by psychologist Rubin centers on() .A.happy and successful marriageB.friendships of men and womenC.emotional problems in marriageD.interactions between men and women

考题 Joan has been charged ____________ a misdemeanor by asking her 13-year-old son to drive, putting her child in a dangerous situation. A. ofB. withC. for

考题 It’s difficult to ___ her from her sister. A.spoke toB.said toC.distinguishD.differ

考题 A CAR STOPPED JUST IN THE MIDDLE OF THE STREET Joan has been charged with a misdemeanor by asking her 13-year-old son to drive, putting her child in a dangerous situation. It was Joan's 32ndbirthday, so she decided to go out for dinner with her 35-year-old boyfriend, Donald, as well as her 13-year-old son, Mike. Joan was so happy that she drank two bottles of wine with her boyfriend.When it was time to go home, both Joan and Donald were too drunk to drive.They knew it clearly that both of them couldn't drive home safely after that much wine, so they sat in the back seat and asked Mike, Joan's 13-year-old son, to drive the 2008 Land Rover. Being a driver for the first time in his life, Mike could receive no help from his mom or Donald.They were too drunk to tell him clearly what to do. He started the car nervously, but when he realized he couldn't control the car at all, he was scared and depressed. He decided to stop the car and refuse to drive any further. He called the police for help. When the police arrived, they found the car was stopped right in the middle of the street.1. Joan has been charged with driving after drinking.()2. Mike was 35 years old.()3. Joan and Donald were both too drunk to drive.()4. It was the first time for Mike to drive.()5. The police stopped Mike in the middle of the street.()

考题 He got an well with his sister. 翻译

考题 —Hello, Joan. —( ) Kate. Glad to see you.A. HiB. HelloC. Good morningD. How do you do

考题 吴渥德(Joan Woodward)曾归纳出技术与组织结构之间的关系,有______、______和______三种情形。

考题 Joan had ________________ for 75 hours before she got her licence. A、flyB、flownC、to flyD、flying

考题 The girl is not so ______ as his sister. A、worryingB、worriedC、worryD、worries

考题 CHow Room Designs Affect Our Work and FeelingsArchitects have long had the feeling that the places we live in can affect our thoughts, feelings and behaviors. But now scientists are giving this feeling an empirical(经验的,实证的) basis. They are discovering how to design spaces that promote creativity, keep people focused and lead to relaxation.Researches show that aspects of the physical environment can influence creativity. In 2007, Joan Meyers-Levy at the University of Minnesota, reported that the height of a room's ceiling affects how people think. Her research indicates that higher ceilings encourage people to think more freely, which may lead them to make more abstract connections. Low ceilings, on the other hand, may inspire a more detailed outlook.In additions to ceiling height, the view afforded by a building may influence an occupant's ability to concentrate. Nancy Wells and her colleagues at Cornell University found in their study that kids who experienced the greatest increase in greenness as a result of a family move made the most gains on a standard test of attention.Using nature to improve focus of attention ought to pay off academically, and it seems to, according to a study led by C. Kenneth Tanner, head of the School Design Planning Laboratory at the University of Georgia. Tanner and his team found that students in classrooms with unblocked views of at least 50 feet outside the window had higher scores on tests of vocabulary, language arts and maths than did students whose classrooms primarily overlooked roads and parking lots.Recent study on room lighting design suggests than dim(暗淡的) light helps people to loosen up. If that is true generally, keeping the light low during dinner or at parties could increase relaxation. Researchers of Harvard Medical School also discovered that furniture with rounded edges could help visitors relax.So far scientists have focused mainly on public buildings. "We have a very limited number of studies, so we're almost looking at the problem through a straw(吸管)," architect David Allison says. "How do you take answers to very specific questions and make broad, generalized use of them? That's what we're all struggling with."64. What does Joan Meyers-Levy focus on in her research?A.Light.B.Ceilings.C.Windows.D.Furniture.

考题 CJoan is an American girl.(21)family is in New York.(22) is thirteen.She (23) salad a lot.Now Joan is (24) China. She likes Chinese food,too. (25) lunch she likes eating chicken. She reads Chinese every morning. She likes(26) Chinese (27)class. She usually (28) Chinese after class, too.She (29) TV on Sunday evening. It’s relaxing at home. She likes(30) tennis,too.( )21.A. HerB. HersC.SheD. He

考题 The girl with a flower in her hand is my sister.(改为含有定语从句的复合句)The girl_________ _________ a flower in her hand is my sister.

考题 Emerging in the late Sixties and reaching a peak in the Seventies,Land Art was one of a range of new forms,including Body Art,Performance Art,Action Art and Installation Art,which pushed art beyond the traditional confines of the studio and gallery.Rather than portraying landscape,land artists used the physical substance of the land itself as their medium.The British Land Art,typified by Long's piece,was not only more domestically scaled,but a lot quirkier than its American counterpart.Indeed,while you might assume that an exhibition of Land Art would consist only of records of works rather than the works themselves,Long's photograph of his work is the work.Since his“action”is in the past,the photograph is its sole embodiment.That might seem rather an obscure point,but it sets the tone for an exhibition that contains a lot of blackandwhite photographs and relatively few natural objects.Long is Britain's bestknown Land Artist and his Stone Circle,a perfect ring of purplish rocks from Portishead beach laid out on the gallery floor,represents the elegant,rarefied side of the form.The Boyle Family,on the other hand,stands for its dirty,urban aspect.Comprising artists Mark Boyle and Joan Hills and their children,they recreated random sections of the British landscape on gallery walls.Their Olaf Street Study,a square of brickstrewn waste ground,is one of the few works here to embrace the commonplaceness that characterises most of our experience of the landscape most of the time.Parks feature,particularly in the earlier works,such as John Hilliard's very funny Across the Park,in which a longhaired stroller is variously smiled at by a pretty girl and unwittingly assaulted in a sequence of images that turn out to be different parts of the same photograph.Generally however British land artists preferred to get away from towns,gravitating towards landscapes that are traditionally considered beautiful such as the Lake District or the Wiltshire Downs.While it probably wasn't apparent at the time,much of this work is permeated by a spirit of romantic escapism that the likes of Wordsworth would have readily understood.Derek Jarman's yellowtinted film Towards Avebury,a collection of long,mostly still shots of the Wiltshire landscape,evokes a tradition of English landscape painting stretching from Samuel Palmer to Paul Nash.In the case of Hamish Fulton,you can't help feeling that the Scottish artist has simply founda way of making his love of walking pay.A typical work,such as Seven Days,consists of a single beautiful blackandwhite photograph taken on an epic walk,with the mileage and number of days taken listed beneath.British Land Art as shown in this well selected,but relatively modestly scaled exhibition wasn't about imposing on the landscape,more a kind of landscapeorientated light conceptual art created passing through.It had its origins in the great outdoors,but the results were as gallerybound as the paintings of Turner and Constable.Towards Avebury_____A.originates from a long walk that the artist took B.illustrates a kind of landscape-orientated light conceptual art C.reminds people of the English landscape painting tradition. D.represents the elegance of the British land art E.depicts the ordinary si

考题 共用题干 第三篇Shouldn't We Know Who Invented the Windshield WiperWe know the famous ones一the Thomas Edison and the Alexander Graham Bells一but what about the less famous inventors?What about the people who invented the traffic light and the windshield wiper(雨刷器)?Shouldn' t we know who they are?Joan Mclean thinks so.In fact,Mclean,a professor of physics at Mountain University in Range,feels so strongly about this matter that she's developed a course on the topic.In addition to learning" who"invented"what",however,Mclean also likes her students to learn the answers to the"why"and"how" questions.According to Mclean,"when students learn the answers to these questions,they are better prepared to recognize opportunities for inventing and more motivated to give inventing a try".Her students agree.One young man with a patent for an unbreakable umbrella is walking proof of McLean's statement."If I had not heard of the story of the windshield wiper's invention,"said Tommy Lee,a senior physics major,"I never would have dreamed of turning my bad experience during a rainstorm into something so constructive."Lee is currently negotiating to sell his patent to an umbrella producer.So,just what is the story behind the windshield wiper? Well,Mary Anderson came up with the idea in 1902 after a visit to New York City. The day was cold and stormy,but Anderson still wanted to see the sights,so she jumped aboard a streetcar. Noticing that the driver was struggling to see through the snow covering the windshield,she found herself wondering why there couldn't be a built-in device for cleaning the window. Still wondering about this when she returned home to Birmingham,Alabama,Anderson started drafting out solutions. One of her ideas,a lever(操作杆)on the inside of a vehicle that would control an arm on the outside,became the first windshield wiper.Today we benefit from countless inventions and innovations,It's hard to imagine driving without Garrett A.Morgan's traffic light. It'5equally impossible to picture a world without Katherine J. Blodgett's innovation that makes glass invisible.Can you picture life without clear windows and eyeglasses?What can we learn from this article?A:Teachers should help students to sell their inventions to producers.B:How to design a built-in device for cleaning the window.C:We should know less famous inventors.D:We should develop invention courses in universities.

考题 共用题干 第三篇Shouldn't We Know Who Invented the Windshield WiperWe know the famous ones一the Thomas Edison and the Alexander Graham Bells一but what about the less famous inventors?What about the people who invented the traffic light and the windshield wiper(雨刷器)?Shouldn' t we know who they are?Joan Mclean thinks so.In fact,Mclean,a professor of physics at Mountain University in Range,feels so strongly about this matter that she's developed a course on the topic.In addition to learning" who"invented"what",however,Mclean also likes her students to learn the answers to the"why"and"how" questions.According to Mclean,"when students learn the answers to these questions,they are better prepared to recognize opportunities for inventing and more motivated to give inventing a try".Her students agree.One young man with a patent for an unbreakable umbrella is walking proof of McLean's statement."If I had not heard of the story of the windshield wiper's invention,"said Tommy Lee,a senior physics major,"I never would have dreamed of turning my bad experience during a rainstorm into something so constructive."Lee is currently negotiating to sell his patent to an umbrella producer.So,just what is the story behind the windshield wiper? Well,Mary Anderson came up with the idea in 1902 after a visit to New York City. The day was cold and stormy,but Anderson still wanted to see the sights,so she jumped aboard a streetcar. Noticing that the driver was struggling to see through the snow covering the windshield,she found herself wondering why there couldn't be a built-in device for cleaning the window. Still wondering about this when she returned home to Birmingham,Alabama,Anderson started drafting out solutions. One of her ideas,a lever(操作杆)on the inside of a vehicle that would control an arm on the outside,became the first windshield wiper.Today we benefit from countless inventions and innovations,It's hard to imagine driving without Garrett A.Morgan's traffic light. It'5equally impossible to picture a world without Katherine J. Blodgett's innovation that makes glass invisible.Can you picture life without clear windows and eyeglasses?Professor Joan McLean's course aims to______.A:add color and variety to students' campus lifeB:inform students of the windshield wiper inventionC:carry out the requirements by Mountain UniversityD:prepare students to try their own invention

考题 Hello Joan.(),Kate Glad to see you.A、How are you?B、HelloC、Good morningD、How do you do

考题 “那些能够使人群发病率升高的因素就可以认为是病因,其中某个或多个因素不存在时,人群的疾病频率就下降。”这一流行病学病因观最早是由下面哪个人提出的()。A、Joan SnowB、Johns HopkinsC、RothmanD、LilienfeldE、Mac Mahon

考题 问答题Most children at the tender age of six or so are full of the most impractical schemes for becoming policemen, firemen or train drivers when they grow up. When I was that age, however, I could not be bothered with such mundane ambitions, I knew exactly what I wanted to do.  I was going to have my own zoo. At the time, this did not seem to me, and still does not seem, a very unreasonable idea. My friends and relatives, who had long found me strange because I showed little interest in anything that did not have fur or feathers, accepted this as just another manifestation of my strangeness. They felt that, if they ignored my often-repeated remarks about owning my own zoo, I would eventually grow out of it.  As the years passed, however, to the bewilderment of my friends and relatives, my resolve to have my own zoo grew increasingly stronger, and eventually, after going on a number of expeditions to bring back animals for other zoos, I felt the time was ripe to acquire my own.  From my latest trip to West Africa, I had brought back a considerable collection of animals which were living, temporarily I assured her, in my sister’s suburban garden in Bournemouth. After a number of unsuccessful attempts to convince local councils in various areas to support my plans, I began to investigate the possibility of starting my zoo on the island of Jersey in the English Channel.  I was given an introduction to a man named Hugh Fraser who, I was told, was a broad-minded, kindly soul. He would show me around the island and point out suitable sites. So, I flew to Jersey and was met by Hugh Fraser who drove us to his family home, probably one of the most beautiful old houses on the island. There was a huge walled garden with lots of outbuildings all built in the beautiful local stone which was the colour of autumn leaves glowing in the sunshine. Turning to my wife, I said, “What a marvelous place for a zoo!”  If my host had promptly fainted on the spot, I could not have blamed him. The thought of creating the average person’s idea of a zoo, with all the grey cement and iron bars, in such a lovely spot was horrible. To my astonishment, however, Hugh Fraser did not faint, but merely cocked an enquiring eyebrow at me and asked whether I really meant what I said. Slightly embarrassed, I replied that I had meant it, but added hastily that I realized that it was impossible. Hugh said he did not think it was as impossible as all that.  He went on to explain that the house and grounds were too big for him to keep up as a private individual, and so he wanted to move to a smaller place in England. Would I care to consider renting the property for the purpose of establishing my zoo? I could not imagine more attractive surroundings for my purpose, and by the time lunch was over, the bargain had been sealed.  The alarm displayed by all who knew me when this was announced can only be imagined. The only exception to the general chorus of disapproval was my sister. Although she thought it a mad scheme, at least it would rid her back garden of the assorted jungle creatures who were beginning to put great strain on her relationship with her neighbours.  Answer the questions in maximum of fifteen words.  1.How did the writer’s friends and family react to his childhood ambition?  2.Why didn’t the writer start a zoo in England?  3.Why was the writer introduced to Hugh Fraser?  4.What was Hugh’s initial reaction to the writer’s comment about the walled garden?  5.How did the writer’s sister feel about the establishment of the zoo in Jersey?

考题 单选题What is she?()A She is a typistB She is talking to her friendC She is having a holiday.D She is my sister.

考题 单选题Muriel goes to a bead store to make a bracelet for her sister. She begins by putting on 3 yellow beads, 2 green beads, 1 black bead, and 3 orange beads in that order. She repeats this pattern until she completes the bracelet. If the final bead she puts on the bracelet is a black bead, which of the following could be the total number of beads on the bracelet?A 85B 87C 89D 91E 93