After two months, he had()news of what she was doing in Tokyo.
He felt()of what he had done in school.
11. A. He got a new job. B. He was on holiday. C. He had a car accident. D. He was ill.
Simba did not tell Rafiki who he was because he had lost his memory of the past.
He was very strong. Indeed, peoplesaid he had ______ of three men.
Pliny refused to go together with his uncle because he was afraid of the volcano.
Not until he had fulfilled his mission did he realize that he was seriously ill.
He was very easy to get ______ with. And although he was poor, he managed to get _____ because he was single and had very simple needs.
He was a man of _____, but unfortunately he had a bad reputation which I believe was not deserved.
This boy was _______ for what he had done in the class.
He felt________of what he had done in school.
When he was questioned about the missing ring, he firmly______ that he had ever seen it.
He was too______to admit that he had been wrong.
It was he in______we had the greatest faith.
My mind wasn't on what he was saying so I'm afraid I ______ half of it.
Not only ______ the book, but he remembered what he had rea
A young man who lived in London was in love with a beautiful girl. Soon she became his fiancée (未婚妻). The man was very poor while the girl was rich. The young man wanted to make her a present on her birthday. He wanted to buy something beautiful for her, but he had no idea how to do it, as he had very little money. The next morning he went to a shop. There were many fine things there: gold watches, diamond… but all these things were too expensive. There was one thing he could not take his eyes off. It was a beautiful vase. That was a suitable present for his fiancée. He had been looking at the vase for half an hour when the manager of the shop noticed him. The young man looked so pale, sad and unhappy that the manager asked what had happened to him.
He was afraid that the others might think he was showing______or being superior.
His health had deteriorated(B级)while he was in prison.
"A writer's job is to tell the truth," said Hemingway in 1942. No other writer of our time had so fiercely asserted, so pugnaciously defended or so consistently exemplified the writer's obligation to speak truly His standard of truth-telling remained, moreover, so high and so rigorous that he was ordinarily unwilling to admit secondary evidence, whether literary evidence or evidence picked up from other sources than his own experience. "I only know what I have seen," was a statement which came often to his lips and pen. What he had personally done, or what he knew unforgettably by having gone through one version of it, was what he was interested in telling about. This is not to say that he refused to invent freely. But he always made it a sacrosanct point to invent in terms of what he actually knew from having been there.
他感到本应属于自己的快乐被剥夺了。He felt that he had been of the pleasure that was his due.
Who had not walked since he/she was born?
He stepped in very quietly. He was afraid ______ his wife and children.
M: You’re very sad today. W: Yeah. It’s Carl. He was very angry with me yesterday and I was very angry with him, and so we had a row and now we’re not talking to each other. What does the underl