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---How did the plan strike you?
---Great, indeed!_______. I can not speak too highly of it
- A.In fact
- B.Be sure
- C.After all
- D.As a result
"How did the plan strike you?"
"It ____ , so we can't think too highly of it.
A. all depends B. makes no sense C. is so practical D. is just so so
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---How did the plan strike you?
---It ___, so we can’t think too highly of it.
A. all depends B. makes no sense C. is so practical D. is just so so
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A man accused of failing to return more than 700 children’s books to five different libraries in the county was released from prison after a book publisher agreed to post his bond (保释金) of $1,000. The publisher said, “There’s a story here. This is a man who loves books. He just can’t let go of them. He hasn’t stolen a single book. So what’s the crime? We think that Mr Barush has a story to tell. We plan to publish his story.”
When asked why he didn’t return the books, Mr Barush said, “Well, how could I? They became family to me. I was afraid to return them, because I knew that kids or dogs would get hold of these books and chew them up, throw them around, tear the pages, spill soda on them, get jam and jelly on them, and drown them in the toilet.”
He continued, “Books are people, too! They talk to you, they take care of you, and they enrich you with wisdom, humor and love. A book is a guest in my home. How could I kick it out? I repaired torn pages. I dusted them with a soft clean cloth. I turned their pages so they could breathe and get some fresh air.”
“Every week I reorganized them on their shelves so they could meet new friends. My books were HAPPY books. You could tell just by looking at them. Now they’re all back in the library, on the lower shelves, on the floors, at the mercy of all those runny-nosed kids. I can hear them calling me! I need to rescue them. Excuse me. I have to go now.”
【小题1】Why was the man put into prison?
| A.Because the book publisher persuaded the police to do so. |
| B.Because he stole 700 children’s books from the five different libraries. |
| C.Because he refused to return the books that he had borrowed. |
| D.Because he wanted to publish his story. |
| A.He treated them as real people. |
| B.He treated them as his own children. |
| C.He treated them as his furniture. |
| D.He treated them as his job. |
| A.a thief | B.a writer | C.crazy about books | D.unfortunate |
| A.A funny thief who loves stealing books. |
| B.A person who refuses to return borrowed books and wants to look after them. |
| C.A person who is crazy about books so he keeps stealing them from the library. |
| D.A person who may have some mental problems. |
Napoleon Bonaparte died on May 5, 1821, on the island of St. Helena off the coast of Africa. He was 51 years old at the time. When doctors examined Napoleon’s body, they said that the former emperor of France had died from cancer of the stomach. That was the cause of death recorded in the official report. However, other doctors disagreed. One doctor who was present during the examination of the body said that Napoleon died of hepatitis. Other historians and medical experts have suggested that Napoleon died of syphilis, tuberculosis, or perhaps malaria. Now, after careful research, a British chemist thinks that Napoleon might have been poisoned -- not by a person, but by his wallpaper.
Napoleon was sent to the island of St. Helena in 1815 after he lost the battle of Waterloo. He was a prisoner on the island. Although he had servants to attend to him, he had to live in one small building. St. Helena is a very wet island, so the walls of the building were always covered with mold. Napoleon became ill from spending too much time inside his house. Almost constantly he had a fever, chills, and felt sick to his stomach. He often felt pain in his shoulders and in his side. His skin turned yellow. He got frequent headaches, and he would become dizzy and vomit(吐). None of the medicine that the doctors gave Napoleon seemed to help. They were not sure what was the matter. Finally, Napoleon was too weak to leave the house. One night, while he was sleeping, he went into a coma and died.
Many doctors who later reviewed the reports of Napoleon’s illness found that the symptoms(症状) did not show a man who suffered from stomach cancer. It seemed obvious that Napoleon had died from some other cause. In 1961, a Swedish doctor examined some of Napoleon’s hair and found a high level of arsenic, a chemical poison. Was Napoleon murdered? It is doubtful. Arsenic was used in many types of medicine during Napoleon’s time, so he might have taken the arsenic as a cure for his illness. Then, in 1982, Dr. David Jones from England began to look into the mystery and suggested that Napoleon might have breathed in arsenic which was in the air of his house. In the 1700s and 1800s, arsenic was used to make a kind of green paint used on cloth and wallpaper. If the paint was used on a wet wall, the arsenic would go into the air. A person in the room might breathe that air. After studying the wallpaper in the room where Napoleon died, Dr. Jones found high levels of arsenic in the green paint on the walls.
1.Why did Napoleon live on St. Helena?
|
A.He owned the island. |
B.He was a prisoner there. |
|
C.His family lived there. |
D.He liked the island. |
2.The official report said that Napoleon died of____________.
|
A.cancer |
B.a coma |
C. mold |
D.poison |
3.Napoleon suffered from the following symptoms except __________.
A. chills B. fever C dizziness D. bleeding
4.According to Dr. Jones, how did the arsenic probably get into Napoleon’s body?
|
A.He drank it.. |
B.He touched it. |
C.He breathed it in. |
D.He ate it |
5.The passage says that .
|
A.a British doctor thinks he has found the cause of Napoleon’s death |
|
B.many doctors have tried to guess the cause of Napoleon's death |
|
C.Napoleon could have died from poison |
|
D.all of the above |
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