网址:http://m.1010jiajiao.com/timu3_id_2637163[举报]
从方框中选出相应的答语,每个答语限用一次
1.Who did the dishes?
2. What was it yesterday?
3. What did you have for breakfast this morning?
4. When did you have that meeting?
5. How does she go to school every morning?
6. How are you feeling today?
7.How long did they stay there?
8. How many friends do you have?
9. How often does she visit her grandmother?
10. How far is it from here to your school?
A. Not me. B. On foot. C. A twenty minutes’ walk D. Two E. January 5th,2004. F. A whole week. G. Not bad. H. Never. I. At 12 o’clock. J. Nothing. |
查看习题详情和答案>>
If you go to Finland, you’ll be surprised to find how “foolish” the Finnish people are.
Take the taxi drivers for example. Taxis in Finland are mostly high class Benz with a fare (票价) of two US dollars a kilometer. You can go anywhere in one, tell the driver to drop you at any place, say that you have some business to attend to, and then get off without paying your fare. And the driver would not show the least sign of worry.
The dining rooms in all big hotels not only serve their guests, but also outside diners. Hotel guests have their meals free, so their good faith is to wave their registration card to the waiter. With such a loose check, you can easily use any old registration card to take a couple of friends and dine free of charge.
With so many loopholes (漏洞) in everyday life, surely Finland must be a heaven to those who love to take “pretty advantages”. But the strange things is, all the taxi-passengers would always come back to pay their fare after they have attended to their business; not a single outsider has ever been found in the free hotel dining rooms. As the Finns always act on good faith and always show an attitude of “which is which” and “what is what” in everything they do, so to live in such a society has turned everyone into a real “gentleman”. In a society of such high moral practice, what need is there for people to take precautions (预防措施) against others?
【小题1】The word “foolish” probably means _____________.
A.friendly | B.careful | C.strange | D.funny |
A.he is sure that the passengers always act on good faith |
B.he is afraid to make the passengers angry and unhappy |
C.he thinks the passengers may be too poor to pay him |
D.he is sure that the passengers are really in trouble |
A.check the guests’ registration card carefully |
B.give people meals without paying |
C.serve their guests free of charge |
D.only serve their guests free breakfast |
A.No one takes advantages although there are many loopholes. |
B.All the taxi-passengers come back to pay their fare after they have attended to their business. |
C.Not a single outsider has ever been found in the free hotel dining rooms. |
D.Finland is heaven for immoral people because they can always take advantages freely. |
A.the Finns are foolish |
B.the Finns take things seriously |
C.the Finns are busy making money for the family |
D.the Finns never take precaution against others |
If you go to Finland, you’ll be surprised to find how “foolish” the Finnish people are.
Take the taxi drivers for example. Taxis in Finland are mostly high class Benz with a fare (票价) of two US dollars a kilometer. You can go anywhere in one, tell the driver to drop you at any place, say that you have some business to attend to, and then get off without paying your fare. And the driver would not show the least sign of worry.
The dining rooms in all big hotels not only serve their guests, but also outside diners. Hotel guests have their meals free, so their good faith is to wave their registration card to the waiter. With such a loose check, you can easily use any old registration card to take a couple of friends and dine free of charge.
With so many loopholes (漏洞) in everyday life, surely Finland must be a heaven to those who love to take “pretty advantages”. But the strange things is, all the taxi-passengers would always come back to pay their fare after they have attended to their business; not a single outsider has ever been found in the free hotel dining rooms. As the Finns always act on good faith and always show an attitude of “which is which” and “what is what” in everything they do, so to live in such a society has turned everyone into a real “gentleman”. In a society of such high moral practice, what need is there for people to take precautions (预防措施) against others?
【小题1】The word “foolish” probably means _____________.
A.friendly | B.careful | C.strange | D.funny |
A.he is sure that the passengers always act on good faith |
B.he is afraid to make the passengers angry and unhappy |
C.he thinks the passengers may be too poor to pay him |
D.he is sure that the passengers are really in trouble |
A.check the guests’ registration card carefully |
B.give people meals without paying |
C.serve their guests free of charge |
D.only serve their guests free breakfast |
A.No one takes advantages although there are many loopholes. |
B.All the taxi-passengers come back to pay their fare after they have attended to their business. |
C.Not a single outsider has ever been found in the free hotel dining rooms. |
D.Finland is heaven for immoral people because they can always take advantages freely. |
A.the Finns are foolish |
B.the Finns take things seriously |
C.the Finns are busy making money for the family |
D.the Finns never take precaution against others |
If you go to Finland, you’ll be surprised to find how “foolish” the Finnish people are.
Take the taxi drivers for example. Taxis in Finland are mostly high class Benz with a fare (票价) of two US dollars a kilometer. You can go anywhere in one, tell the driver to drop you at any place, say that you have some business to attend to, and then get off without paying your fare. And the driver would not show the least sign of worry.
The dining rooms in all big hotels not only serve their guests, but also outside diners. Hotel guests have their meals free, so their good faith is to wave their registration card to the waiter. With such a loose check, you can easily use any old registration card to take a couple of friends and dine free of charge.
With so many loopholes (漏洞) in everyday life, surely Finland must be a heaven to those who love to take “pretty advantages”. But the strange things is, all the taxi-passengers would always come back to pay their fare after they have attended to their business; not a single outsider has ever been found in the free hotel dining rooms. As the Finns always act on good faith and always show an attitude of “which is which” and “what is what” in everything they do, so to live in such a society has turned everyone into a real “gentleman”. In a society of such high moral practice, what need is there for people to take precautions (预防措施) against others?
1.The word “foolish” probably means _____________.
A.friendly |
B.careful |
C.strange |
D.funny |
2.Why wouldn’t the driver show the least sign of worry? Because _________.
A.he is sure that the passengers always act on good faith |
B.he is afraid to make the passengers angry and unhappy |
C.he thinks the passengers may be too poor to pay him |
D.he is sure that the passengers are really in trouble |
3.The dining rooms in all big hotels ___________.
A.check the guests’ registration card carefully |
B.give people meals without paying |
C.serve their guests free of charge |
D.only serve their guests free breakfast |
4.What’s FALSE according to the passage?
A.No one takes advantages although there are many loopholes. |
B.All the taxi-passengers come back to pay their fare after they have attended to their business. |
C.Not a single outsider has ever been found in the free hotel dining rooms. |
D.Finland is heaven for immoral people because they can always take advantages freely. |
5.The sentences “which is which” and “what is what” show that __________.
A.the Finns are foolish |
B.the Finns take things seriously |
C.the Finns are busy making money for the family |
D.the Finns never take precaution against others |
查看习题详情和答案>>
If you go to Finland, you’ll be surprised to find how “foolish” the Finnish people are.
Take the taxi drivers for example. Taxis in Finland are mostly high class Benz with a fare (票价) of two US dollars a kilometer. You can go anywhere in one, tell the driver to drop you at any place, say that you have some business to attend to, and then get off without paying your fare. And the driver would not show the least sign of worry.
The dining rooms in all big hotels not only serve their guests, but also outside diners. Hotel guests have their meals free, so their good faith is to wave their registration card to the waiter. With such a loose check, you can easily use any old registration card to take a couple of friends and dine free of charge.
With so many loopholes (漏洞) in everyday life, surely Finland must be a heaven to those who love to take “pretty advantages”. But the strange things is, all the taxi-passengers would always come back to pay their fare after they have attended to their business; not a single outsider has ever been found in the free hotel dining rooms. As the Finns always act on good faith and always show an attitude of “which is which” and “what is what” in everything they do, so to live in such a society has turned everyone into a real “gentleman”. In a society of such high moral practice, what need is there for people to take precautions (预防措施) against others?
小题1:The word “foolish” probably means _____________.
A.friendly | B.careful | C.strange | D.funny |
A.he is sure that the passengers always act on good faith |
B.he is afraid to make the passengers angry and unhappy |
C.he thinks the passengers may be too poor to pay him |
D.he is sure that the passengers are really in trouble |
A.check the guests’ registration card carefully |
B.give people meals without paying |
C.serve their guests free of charge |
D.only serve their guests free breakfast |
A.No one takes advantages although there are many loopholes. |
B.All the taxi-passengers come back to pay their fare after they have attended to their business. |
C.Not a single outsider has ever been found in the free hotel dining rooms. |
D.Finland is heaven for immoral people because they can always take advantages freely. |
A.the Finns are foolish |
B.the Finns take things seriously |
C.the Finns are busy making money for the family |
D.the Finns never take precaution against others |