首页 > 外贸类考试> 单证员
题目内容 (请给出正确答案)
[单选题]

I always found myself a dread of west and a love of east in Eden.()

A.我总是在自己身上找到对伊甸之西的畏惧和对伊甸之东的喜爱。

B.我总是在我内心深处找到对伊甸之西的畏惧和对伊甸之东的喜爱。

C.我发现自己身上一直有对伊甸之西的畏惧,对伊甸之东的喜爱。

D.我发现自己一直对伊甸之西怀有畏惧,而对伊甸之东怀有喜爱。

查看答案
答案
收藏
如果结果不匹配,请 联系老师 获取答案
您可能会需要:
您的账号:,可能还需要:
您的账号:
发送账号密码至手机
发送
安装优题宝APP,拍照搜题省时又省心!
更多“I always found myself a dread …”相关的问题
第1题
DI found myself facing a dry-cleaning store which had once been one of the best restaurant

D

I found myself facing a dry-cleaning store which had once been one of the best restaurants in New York. On Sundays the old man would take my mother and me for dinner. There had been a balcony (走廊) where a baker (面包师) in a tall white hat baked fresh bread, and been whenever a customer entered, the baker would look down and put in a fresh batch (一炉). I could see the manager who always sat down with us while we ate. He had some disease, I suppose, because the right side of his face was swollen (肿的) out like a balloon, but he always wore a hard wing collar and a white tie, and never seemed sick. A Negro with a moustache was looking through the store window at me. For a moment I was anxious to go and tell him what l remembered. I did not go into the store, nor even toward our house, I went downtown instead and sat in my room, trying to read.

Why did the writer stop in front of the store?

A. He wanted to take some clothes to be cleaned.

B. He was thinking about his boyhood.

C. He was looking for a good place to eat.

D. He wanted to buy some fresh bread.

点击查看答案
第2题
听力原文:M: How about that grade I got on the final?W: I thought you would fail after you

听力原文:M: How about that grade I got on the final?

W: I thought you would fail after you had lost your notes.

Q: What does the woman mean?

(19)

A.He did better than expected.

B.He failed his test.

C.He always gets excellent grades.

D.He found his notes.

点击查看答案
第3题
听力原文:In Europe, one can go from one's home to an international conference with merely

听力原文: In Europe, one can go from one's home to an international conference with merely a long train ride in between. One scientist, after such a trip, came home looking ashen and distraught.

"What happened?" ask his wife.

"My dear," groaned the scientist, "I've been riding for hours in a backward-facing seat. You know how that always distresses my liver."

"But, darling," said Iris wife, "we have talked of this before, mid surely you told me that if you found yourself in such a spot, you would ask the person in the seat facing you to exchange places."

"Alas," said the scientist. "On this trip I could not ask. There was no one sitting there."

(33)

A.Description.

B.Argumentation.

C.Joke.

D.Exposition.

点击查看答案
第4题
It has always been a problem to decide whether "popular music" is music which represents t
he people or is simply music that the people like. The same problem of【C1】______exists with jazz. So many different【C2】______of music have been called jazz at one time or another that it is hard to say what【C3】______it is. Jazz has always been considered tobe black music【C4】______when I first【C5】______an interest in it twenty years ago, I used to hear white【C6】______ playing music that was like Louis Armstrong's in the 1920s. I found out afterwards that they learnt to do this by playing Armstrong's records over and over again until their style. was close enough to his【C7】______for them to imitate him.

Since then white singers like Bob Dylan have rediscovered【C8】______own folk tradition, instead of【C9】______from black roots. But the main【C10】______since 1960 have been social and technical. One is that young people have more【C11】______to spend on records at an earlier age than they used to, so Tin Pan Alley, the 'pop' music industry, aims at the teenage audience.【C12】______is that electronic equipment has developed to such an【C13】______that technicians are now capable of mixing sound to【C14】______recordings that are quite different from a live【C15】______.

But the real【C16】______with 'pop' musis is that Tin Pan Alley has always worked against its being a【C17】______music of the people. It takes everything original and natural out of it and【C18】______it with cheap commercial imitations.【C19】______the American folk singer, Woody Guthrie, said: "They've always【C20】______the second-rate songs. They've never wanted to play the good ones."

【C1】

A.definition

B.classification

C.imitation

D.discussion

点击查看答案
第5题
Text … Dad was【C1】______80. But he always laughed【C2】______my concerns. Now the cancer cam

Text

Dad was【C1】______80. But he always laughed【C2】______my concerns. Now the cancer came back. He had a month, two【C3】______, he said, and merely asked me to【C4】______my strength for the golf course.

We played at course near the English village of Freckleton. During World War Ⅱ my father had【C5】______in an army【C6】______the outskirts of the village.

A local told us," There was【C7】______memorial service because of the bomber. "

I【C8】______at Dad. "Do you know the bomber?"

His【C9】______had turned pale. "Yes. Come with me. "

I followed him to a【C10】______ground at the rear of a church.

"How did these folks die?" I asked.

"They weren' t folks. They were【C11】______. Four and five-year-olds. Thirty-eight in all. One of our bombers【C12】______into the school. "He shut his eyes. "God, What a【C13】______! I remember pulling away【C14】______of the plane, bricks and all these precious kids inside... "

I saw tears【C15】______in my father' s eyes," There was one gift who was always laughing. I【C16】______her Lady Sunshine. A week after the crash, I found a note on the base of【C17】______board from her parents. They wondered【C18】______anybody had【C19】______a photograph of her. I took them all the photos I had. We sat in their front parlor and cried. I' ve never experienced【C20】______quite so sad. "

【C1】

A.pulling

B.pushing

C.taking

D.making

点击查看答案
第6题
Many a young persons tells me he wants to be a writer. 【M1】______I always encourage such p

Many a young persons tells me he wants to be a writer. 【M1】______

I always encourage such people, but I also explain that

there's a big differences between "being a writer" and writing. 【M2】______

In cases these individuals are dreaming of wealth and 【M3】______

fame, not the long hours alone on a typewriter. 【M4】______

Reality is that writing is a lonely, private and poor-paying 【M5】______

affair. For every writer kissed by fortune there are thousands

more whose longing is never awarded. When I left a 20 - year career 【M6】______

in the U. S. Coast Guard to become a freelance writer(自由撰稿人) ,

I had no prospects at all. What I did have was a friend who found

me my room in a New York apartment building. It wasn't even 【M7】______

matter that it was cold and had no bathroom. I immediately bought

a used mannual typewriter and felt like a genuine writer. 【M8】______

After a year or so, however, I still hadn't gotten a break and

began to doubt myself. It was so hard to sell a story that barely

made enough to eat. But I knew I wanted to write. 1 had dreamed

about it for years. I wasn't going to be one of those people who

die wondered, What if? I would keep putting my dream to the test— 【M9】______

even enough it meant living with uncertainty and fear of failure. 【M10】______

This is the Shadow land of hope, and anyone with a dream must

learn to live there.

【M1】

点击查看答案
第7题
根据下面资料,回答题 Personal Assistant of the Year O Anne-Marie Garrard was shocked when

根据下面资料,回答题

Personal Assistant of the Year

O Anne-Marie Garrard was shocked when it was announced that she had won the

00 Personal Assistant of the Year award. "The other candidates seemed me

34 to be very strong, and I have to say I found that the selection procedure really

35 hard," she says. "1 didn"t think I had any chance of winning. When I heard my

36 name, my legs were so weak I could only hardly stand up," she laughs. So

37 how is "the best" personal assistant chosen from a group of so extremely good

38 and very different individuals? The final decision was reached after a

39 day-long session of the tests, interviews and exercises. Garrard believes

40 the skills she uses in her job helped her how to perform. well. For instance, although

41 most of her work is for her company"s Managing Director, she works for six bosses

42 in all, so she always tries out to be prepared for anything that might happen.

43 As for the future, her firm has closed for its summer break now; as soon as

44 they will open again, there is a pay rise waiting for her. But Garrard is not

45 going to be relax. She says, "There"s always room for personal development. You must keep trying to improve."

34__________

查看材料

点击查看答案
第8题
根据以下资料,回答下列各题: Directions: There are 20 blanks in the following passage. For e
ach blank there are four choices marked A.B.C.and D.on the right side of the paper. You should choose the ONE that best fits into the passage. Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre. It has always been difficult for me to decide whether "popular music" means music written for the people or is simply music that the people like. The same problem of definition 67 with jazz. So many different 68 of "music have been called jazz at one time or another that it is 69 to say what it really is. Jazz has always been 70 to be black music but when I first 71 an interest in it, I used to hear white bands playing music that was like Louis Armstrongs in the 1920s. I found out 72 that they learnt to do this by playing his records 73 until their style. was close enough to his for them to 74 him. Since then white singers 75 Bob Dylan have rediscovered their own folk 76 , instead of borrowing from black roots. But the main changes 77 1960 have been social and technical. One is that young people have more money to spend on 78 at an earlier age than they 79 , so Tin Pan Alley, the "pop" music industry, 80 at teenage audience. 81 is that electronic equipment has developed to such an 82 that technicians are now capable of mixing sound to produce recordings that are quite different from a 83 performance. But the real problem with "pop" music is that Tin Pan Alley has always worked against its being a 84 music of the people. It 85 everything original and natural out of it and 86 it with cheap commercial imitations. As the American folk singer, Woody Guthrie, said: "Theyve always preferred the second rate songs. Theyve never wanted to play the good ones. " A.takes

A.exists

B.starts

C.correlates

点击查看答案
第9题
听力原文:M: Lucy, where are you from? W: I am from Indonesia. M: And how did you find Ca
mbridge when you first arrived? W: Well, I like it here. I think the city is very beautiful. M: What about your accommodation? Was that OK? W: Yes, OK. At first I stayed with a family for three months. They were very kind to me, but they had three young children and I found it difficult to study. M: Right, I see. W: So after three months I moved out and now I live with two other students in a student house. Its much cheaper and we like it there. M: Good, and what about your studies? What are you studying? W: Im doing a Bachelor of Computing. M: Computing, I see. Um, apart from the language difficulties, if you can separate them, how have you found the course? W: OK, but... M: Yes, go on. W: Well, the main difficulty for me is getting time on the computers in the computer room. Its always busy and this makes it very hard to do my practical work. M: Yes, Im sure it would. Can you reserve time in the computer room? W: No, I cant but it would certainly help if we could reserve computer time. M: Yes. Ill look into that and see if something can be done to improve things over there. Questions 13 to 15 are based on the conversation you have just heard. 13. Why did the woman move out and choose to live in a student house? 14. What is the womans major? 15. What did the woman think could help solve her problem?13.

A.Language.

B.Computing.

C.Bachelor.

D.Accommodation.

点击查看答案
第10题
听力原文:It arrived on a Friday afternoon. The idea probably originated somewhere over the
Atlantic, off the coast of Africa. It came across the world, until it finally found me, stuck in traffic, and flew through my ear into my head. And I knew exactly what I wanted to do with my life. History had always been my academic passion, I've read so many history textbooks. I've sat down and read countless encyclopedia articles, books and websites, and I've watched more hours of the History Channel than anyone I've ever met. I know that I want to have a hand in guiding the progress of my nation and world. My passion for history has only been matched by my love of mental competition. I live for arguments, debates and discussions. The points and counterpoints come out hard and fast. I make my statement and discredit that of my opponent, I respond, I parry, I dodge. I feel content, happy and fulfilled. These two ideas found their way to me on that Friday afternoon, a profession that would combine my two passions: Campaign Management. My love for mental combat would be used to its fullest in matching wits with the opposing campaign staff, and my passion for history would be more than sated by my involvement in what I consider to be its most interesting aspect: its creation. Through campaign management, I would be indirectly shaping history. Many of my friends don't know where they want to go to school. They don't talk about where they stand in the class, how good, or bad their scores are. People ask me the same questions, and I face them with confidence, because I know the answer to a larger question: I know where I Wahl lo be when I'm done with college.

(30)

A.History teacher.

B.College professor.

C.History writer.

D.Campaign manager.

点击查看答案
第11题
听力原文:Sharon Keating was worried about her kids when she got a divorce. Her daughter sa

听力原文: Sharon Keating was worried about her kids when she got a divorce. Her daughter says, "I was feeling ... like down and sad and even though I didn't really show it."

Judith Wallerstein says problems from divorce can last for many years. They can show up when the kids are adults. As adults, the kids have trouble.

Wallerstein studied 93 children over a generation. The results can only be found in her book.

She says children of divorce are more likely to have problems with drugs. They are far more likely to seek therapy. About 40-percent of them do not marry. Their marriages fail at nearly twice the usual rate. It is hard for them to trust. They are afraid of failing.

Critics say Wallerstein had too few children in her study. Other things may be the cause of the kid's problems. The study does not compare kids from divorced families with kids from "healthy" families.

Wallerstein's families divorced a generation ago. Times have changed. People feel different about divorce. Today programs like Kid's Turn try to lessen some of the effects of divorce with family counseling. Talking about their feelings helps the kids get through it.

Since they know more about the problems, maybe the kids will be able to handle it.

(33)

A.Children of divorce are always happy.

B.Children of divorce sometimes feel sad but don't really show it.

C.Children of divorce are no! affected.

D.Children of divorce are always very angry.

点击查看答案
退出 登录/注册
发送账号至手机
密码将被重置
获取验证码
发送
温馨提示
该问题答案仅针对搜题卡用户开放,请点击购买搜题卡。
马上购买搜题卡
我已购买搜题卡, 登录账号 继续查看答案
重置密码
确认修改