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She has always()to her father, although he did not graduate from a famous university.
A . appreciated
B . admired
C . respected
D . looked u
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mary would like to display a collapsed section on her video catalog form, she has created a section buy when she display the form in the client the section always opens expanded. which one of the following should mary do to collapse the section?()
A . nothing. Sections always open expanded
B . modify the section default properties to collapsed
C . modify the form propenties to display all sections collapsed
D . modify the section opened for reading property to auto-collapse&e
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She's unlucky, and she's always suffering() luck one after another
A . a sick
B . an ill
C . sick
D . ill
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We forgave her anger because we knew that her father's illness had put her under great ()
A . shelter
B . crisis
C . stress
D . nervousne
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Maria was a sister in Salzburg convent, but she always got into trouble because of her lively and active character.
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She is a very ____ person. She always keeps her attention fixed on what she wants to achieve.
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She always takes_______ of the mistakes made by her rivals.
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She always ( ) her mother on Sundays.
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They don’t like her because she always of things.
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She ’ s always been kind to me — I can ’ t just turn _____ on her now that she needs my help.
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Maybe 10 years old Elizabeth put it best when she said to her father," But Dad, you can't be healthy if you're dead."
Dad, in a hurry to get home before dark so he could go for a run, had forgotten to wear his safety belt—a mistake 75% of the US population make every day. The big question is why.
There have been many myths about safety belts since their first appearance in cars some forty years ago. The following are three of the most common.
Myth Number One: It's best to be "thrown clear "of a serious accident.
Truth: Sorry, but any accident serious enough to" throw you clear" is also going to be serious enough to give you a very bad landing, and chances are you'll have travelled through a windshield or door to do it. Studies show that chances of dying after a car accident are twenty-five times greater in cases where people are" thrown clear".
Myth Number Two: Safety belts" trap" people in cars that are burning or sinking in water.
Truth: Sorry again, but studies show that people knocked unconscious for not wearing safety belts have a greater chance of dying in these accidents. People wearing safety belts are usually protected to the point of having a clear head to free themselves from such dangerous situations, not to be trapped in them.
Myth Number Three: Safety belts aren't needed at a speed of less than 30 miles per hour (mph).
Truth: When two cars travelling at 30 mph hit each other, an unbelted driver would meet the windshield with a force headfirst into the ground from a height of 10 meters.
Why did Elizabeth say to her father, "But, Dad, you can't be healthy if you are dead"?
A.He was driving at great speed.
B.He was running across the street.
C.He didn't have his safety belt on.
D.He didn't take his medicine on time.
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She's always been kind to me — I can't just turn ______ on her now that she needs my help.
A.my back
B.my head
C.my eye
D.my shoulder
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A 67-year-old woman has noticed blurry vision and weakness over the past 4 months.Her symptoms are always worse toward the end of the day.She undergoes a neuromuscular evaluation including electromyog
问题1:The most obvious site of disease in myasthenia gravis is the()
A.Anterior horn cell
B.Neuromuscular junction
C.Sensory ganglion
D.Parasympathetic ganglia
E.Sympathetic chain
问题2:The most common manifestation of muscle weakness with myasthenia gravis is()
A.Diaphragmatic weakness
B.Wristdrop
C.Footdrop
D.Ocular muscle weakness
E.Dysphagia
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—So how is your new roommate?—She really (). She’s always making loud noises at midnight and when I remind her, she always makes rude remarks.
A、turns me over
B、turns me down
C、turns me off
D、turns me out
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She has got a few thousand pounds ___________ for her retirement. [ ] A. put on
B. put down
C. put away
D. put together
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Golda's father always supported her even against her mother's wishes.
A.Y
B.N
C.NG
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A __ person always puts his own interest first.
A.selfish
B.voluntary
C.thrifty
D.initial
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Her sister always spends so much _____ her clothes that she can’t manage to live with her salary()
A.for
B.in
C.at
D.on
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In those days she was always lost in thought.so that she had to be called three or four times___she came to her dinner.
<img src='https://img2.soutiyun.com/ask/uploadfile/2817001-2820000/ed65b04c8270a800ea4de6d26d7c4d80.gif' />
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Ann is an English girl. She is fourteen. She is a middle school student. Her teacher is Miss White. Ann helps her to put her books and ruler on the desk.
They have a new classroom. You can see many desks and chairs in it. There is a blackboard, a clock and a map on the wall.
There are some pens on the desk. The red one is Ann's. The others are Kate's. Kate is Ann's good friend. She isn't here today. She is ill.
Ann is an English girl and four years old.
A.True
B.False
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In the days before Diana became accustomed to daily hairdressers, high fashion and expertly applied makeup, she looked her best when she was wearing her least. No frilly blouses concealed her elegant neck, carefully cut skirts her long legs, or bulky sweaters her well-rounded figure. She was young and not fully aware of just how attractive she could be. But if she wanted to impress a young man, any young man, she always made it a point to go swimming or sailing or, at the very least, play a game of tennis.
When Prince Charles saw her aboard Britannia at Cowes in the late summer of 1980, he wasn't however particularly interested. She belonged to his younger brother Andrew's set, and had come aboard, not at Chariest s invitation, but with Lady Sarah Armstrong Jones, his cousin and sixteen years his junior.
Diana was three years older than Sarah, but still almost a generation away. And besides, Charles had his mind on other things—most particularly the breakup of his romance with the beautiful but self-willed Anna Wallace. There was also the fact that if he noticed Diana in anything more than passing, he thought about her as the sister of one of his former girlfriends—Lady Sarah Spencer—who had recently married (he hadn't attended), and whatever others might have been plotting he most certainly was not thinking of renewing his romantic links with the Spencer girls.
But if Charles was not instantly enchanted by the fresh, gambolling nineteen-year-old who spent some days aboard the Royal Yacht, his staff were. "She was so unassuming and so natural,' one recalls. And in the manner of all servants, particularly ones who are in the employ of the bachelor Prince, they inevitably started speculating amongst themselves if she was the one for what they called "the job".
So, it seems, did Diana. At the age of sixteen she had jokingly told a friend that she was "out to get' Charles. But that may have been just romantic fantasizing on the part of a young girl whose main reading was the soapy romances penned by her step-grandmother, the redoubtable Barbara Cartland. The Prince's late valet, Stephen Barry; insisted however: "She went after the Prince with single-minded determination. She wanted him—and she got him!"
She had, of course, met him many times before in the years of her childhood spent as a near-neighbour of the Windsors at Sandringham when Charles used to pop his head round the nursery door where she was having tea with Andrew and Edward, or during a shooting party on Sandringham Estate where at the age of sixteen she was reintroduced to him by her sister Sarah. More recently she had encountered him at polo. But then he had always been busy or with a girlfriend in tow. This time he was alone.
She made sure Charles was watching when she bravely followed his example and went windsurfing in the ehoppy and not-too-warm waters of the Solent. Naturally flirtatious, she made sure he noticed her long slim legs and trim figure. And he could not fail but start to take an interest—if only a comparative one—in the beautiful younger sister of a former girlfriend.
Accounts of this first meeting vary. Some claim that it is where the famous romance began. Others insist that his interest was but a mild one; that with Anna still in mind, the timing was wrong and he simply regarded her as a new and pretty addition to his surprisingly limited circle of friends.
But she had certainly impressed him enough for him to invite her up to Balmoral shortly afterwards. Diana accepted with alacrity.
To impress a young man, Diana might choose to play a game of tennis, because ______.
A.she was a highly skilled tennis player
B.she looked attractive in her tennis outfit
C.she preferred tennis to swimming
D.her hair-style. was fashionably designed
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The poor are very wonderful people. One evening we went out and we picked up four people from the street. And one of them was in a most terrible condition - and I told the sisters: You take care of the other three. I take care of this one who looked worse. So I did for her all that my love can do. I put her in bed, and there was such a beautiful smile on her face. She took hold of my hand as she said just the words "Thank you" and she died.
I could not help but examine my conscience before her and I asked what I would say if I was in her place. And my answer was very simple. I would have tried to draw a little attention to myself. I would have said I am hungry, that I am dying, I am cold, I am in pain, or something, but she gave me much more - she gave me her grateful love. And she died with a smile on her face. So did that man whom we picked up from the drain, half eaten with worms, and we brought him to the home. "I have lived like an animal in the street, but I am going to die like an angel, loved and cared for", he said at the end . And it was so wonderful to see the greatness of that man who could speak like that, who could die like that without blaming anybody, without cursing anybody, without comparing anything. Like an angel - this is the greatness of our people. And that is why we believe what Jesus has said: I was hungry, I was naked, I was homeless, I was unwanted, unloved, uncared for, and you did it to me.
And with this prize that I received as a Prize of Peace, I am going to try to make the home for many people who have no home. Because I believe that love begins at home and if we can create a home for the poor I think that more and more love will spread. And we will be able through this understanding love to bring peace, be the good news to the poor, the poor in our own family first, in our country and in the world. When I pick up a person from the street, hungry, I give him a plate of rice, a piece of bread, I have satisfied. I have removed that hunger. But to a person who is shut out, who feels unwanted, unloved, terrified, the person who has been thrown out from society, that poverty is so full of hurt and so unbearable… And so let us always meet each other with a smile, for the smile is the beginning of love, and once we begin to love each other naturally we want to do something.
What can be learned from the second paragraph?
A.The woman should have paid more attention to herself.
B.The man couldn' t blame anyone.
C.The author is religious.
D.The man died in the street.
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Some people just can’t keep from giving. That was the way it was with my neighbor. Despite being crippled, she was very active. In fact, she __1__ to do more for the __2__ every day than I ever do in a year’s time. I was always __3__ at the pace she kept. And most importantly, she always had a positive __4__. I don’t remember once hearing her complain __5__ her trouble. The stresses of everyday life never seemed to bother her.
1). A. amazed
B. about
C. seemed
D. community
E. attitude
2). A. amazed
B. about
C. seemed
D. community
E. attitude
3). A. amazed
B. about
C. seemed
D. community
E. attitude
4). A. amazed
B. about
C. seemed
D. community
E. attitude
5). A. amazed
B. about
C. seemed
D. community
E. attitude
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The following paragraph of an event involves the description of: A girl on my daughter’s team jumped in the pool, grabbed the sock, and swam after Elizabeth. She grabbed Elizabeth’s foot. “You have to put the sock on,” the girl screamed. Elizabeth treaded water while her teammate put on the sock.
A、Scenes
B、Actions
C、Feelings and emotions
D、/