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The dog frightened the little girl ______ crying.A.intoB.toC.withD.for

The dog frightened the little girl ______ crying.

A.into

B.to

C.with

D.for

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更多“The dog frightened the little …”相关的问题
第1题
The writer thinks that teenagers are frightened when they are in charge of themselves beca
use______.

A.they don't know how to stop a car without brakes

B.there is no one to ask for help when in trouble

C.there is no one to guide and discipline them

D.they are afraid of being left alone

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第2题
元组变量t=(“cat”,“dog”,“tiger”,“human”),t[::-1]的结果是()。

A.{‘human’,‘tiger’,‘dog’,‘cat’}

B.[‘human’,‘tiger’,‘dog’,‘cat’]

C.运行出错

D.(‘human’,‘tiger’,‘dog’,‘cat’)

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第3题
Why______did you take the dog into the churchyard?A.on earthB.on the earthC.in earthD.in t

Why______did you take the dog into the churchyard?

A.on earth

B.on the earth

C.in earth

D.in the earth

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第4题
In the sentence" Maybe he doesn' t see it himself" in paragraph 2, the pronoun "it" refers
to ______.

A.being friendly

B.a bit of envy

C.lucky dog

D.your luck.

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第5题
Why does the writer say a dog is a more demanding pet than a cat?A.It must be trained so t

Why does the writer say a dog is a more demanding pet than a cat?

A.It must be trained so that it won't bite.

B.It demands more food and space.

C.It needs more love and care.

D.It must be looked after carefully.

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第6题
按要求翻译下列句子(短语)。You can’t expect ivory from a dog’s mouth. (用汉语俗语翻译)
按要求翻译下列句子(短语)。You can’t expect ivory from a dog’s mouth. (用汉语俗语翻译)

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第7题
I (21) by Mr. J. Gerald Cowcamper's house one day and was greeted by a rather old looking

I (21) by Mr. J. Gerald Cowcamper's house one day and was greeted by a rather old looking dog. She was a gentle beast who (22) her tail as she pushed her nose against my hand.

"What's her (23) ?" I asked.

"I call her 'Dog Face'," replied the old (24) .

" (25) do you call her that?" I inquired.

"Isn't it obvious?" asked Mr. Cowcamper.

"Not really."

Mr. Cowcamper cradled the old animal's head in his hands. "If you (26) at just the right angle, you can see that she seems to have a dog's face," he (27) .

"But she is a (28) !" I said.

"Shhhh!" Mr. Cowcamper responded with the loudest whisper I have ever (29) . "Don't let her hear you say that!

I said (30) , because I didn't know what to say.

21 . A. stopped

B. ran

C. went

D. carried

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第8题
We can make mistakes at any age. Some mistakes we make are about money. But most mistakes
are about people. "Did Jerry really care when I broke up with Helen? .... When I got that great job, did Jim really feel good about it, as a friend? Or did he envy my luck?" When we look back, doubts like these can make us feel bad. But when we look back, it' s too late.

Why do we go wrong about our friends or our enemies? Sometimes what people say hides their real meaning. And if we don' t really listen closely we miss the feeling behind the words. Suppose someone tells you, "You' re a lucky dog." That' s being friendly. But "lucky dog?" There' s a bit of envy in those words. Maybe he doesn' t see it himself. But bringing in the "dog" puts you down a little. What he may be saying is that he doesn' t think you deserve your luck.

"Just think of all the things you have to be thankful for is another noise that says one thing and means another. It could mean that the speaker is trying to get you to see your problem as part of your life as a whole. But is he? Wrapped up in this phrase is the thought that your problem isn' t important. It' s telling you to think of all the starving people in the world when you haven't got a date for Saturday night.

How can you tell the real meaning behind someone' s words? One way is to take a good look at the person talking. Do his words fit the way he looks? Does what he says agree with the tone of voice? His posture? The look in his eyes? Stop and think. The minute you spend thinking about the real meaning of what people say to you may save another mistake.

This passage is mainly about ______.

A.how to interpret what people say

B.what to do when. you listen to others talking

C.how to avoid mistakes when you communicate with people

D.why we go wrong with people sometimes

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第9题
Anyone who trains animals recognizes that human and animal perceptual capacities are diffe
rent. For most humans, seeing is believing, although we do occasionally brood about whether we can believe our eyes. The other senses are largely ancillary; most of us do not know how we might go about either doubting or believing our noses. But for dogs, scenting is believing. A dog's nose is to ours as the wrinkled surface of our complex brain is to the surface of an egg. A dog who did comparative psychology might easily worry about our consciousness or lack thereof, just as we worry about the consciousness of a squid.

We who take sight for granted can draw pictures of scent, but we have no language for doing it the other way about, no way to represent something visually familiar by means of actual scent. Most humans cannot know, with their limited noses, what they can imagine about being deaf, blind, mute, or paralyzed. The sighted can, for example, speak if a blind person a "in the darkness," but there is no corollary expression for what it is that we are in relationship to scent. If we tried to coin words, we might come up with something like "scent-blind." But what would it mean? It couldn't have the sort of meaning that "color-blind" and "tone-deaf' do, because most of us have experienced what "tone" and "color" mean in those expressions "scent-blind." Scent for many of us can be only a theoretical, technical expression that we use because our grammar requires that we have a noun to go in the sentences we are prompted to utter about animals' tracking. We don't have a sense of scent. What we do have is a sense of smell-for Thanksgiving dinner and skunks and a number of things we call chemicals.

So if Fido and sitting on the terrace, admiring the view, we inhabit worlds with radically different principles of phenomenology. Say that the wind is to our backs. Our world lies all before us, within a 180 degree angle. The dog's-well, we don't know, do we?

He sees roughly the same things that I see but he believes the scents of the garden behind us. He marks the path of the black-and-white cat as she moves among the roses in search of the bits of chicken sandwich I let fall as I walked from the house to our picnic spot. T can show that Fido is alert to the kitty, but not how, for my picture-making modes of thought too easily supply falsifyingly literal representations of the cat and the garden and their modes of being hidden from or revealed to me.

The phrase "other senses are largely ancillary" (paragraph 1) is used by the author to suggest that______.

A.only those events experienced directly can be appreciated by the senses

B.for many human beings the senses of sights is the primary means of knowing about the world

C.smell is in many respects a more powerful sense than sight

D.people rely on at least one of their other senses in order to confirm what they see

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第10题
After having lived for over twenty years in the same district, Albert Hall was forced
to move to a new neighborhood. He surprised his landlord by telling him that he was leaving because he could not afford to buy any more chocolate.

It all began a year ago when Albert Hall returned home one evening and found a large dog in front of his gate. He was very fond of animals and as he happened to have a small piece of chocolate in his pocket, he gave it to the dog. The next day, the dog was there again. It held up its paws (爪子) and received another piece of chocolate as a reward. Albert called his new friend “Bingo”. He never found out the dog's real name, nor who his owner was. However, Bingo appeared regularly every afternoon and it was quite clear that he liked chocolate more than bones. He soon grew dissatisfied with small pieces of chocolate and demanded a large bar a day. If at any time Albert couldn't give it, Bingo got very angry and refused to let him open the gate. Albert was now at Bingo's mercy and had to “buy him” to get into his own house! He spent such a large part of his week's wage to keep Bingo supplied with chocolate that in the end he had to move somewhere else.

1)、Albert had been living in the same district for all his life.

A.T

B.F

2)、Albert decided to move because he was afraid of animals, especially dogs.

A.T

B.F

3)、Bingo waited for Albert every afternoon at the gate because he liked Albert.

A.T

B.F

4)、We can tell from the story that Albert could afford to buy a large bar of chocolate for Bingo every day.

A.T

B.F

5)、Albert had to “buy him” means Albert had to give him chocolate.

A.T

B.F

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