Mary and Tom have returned but ()students in the class haven't come back yet.
A.other
B.the other
C.others
D.the others
A.other
B.the other
C.others
D.the others
A.Never I
B.Not me
C.No me
D.None me
Dear Mrs. Miller,
I was awfully sorry to learn that Tom kicked his ball through your window this morning.
He has been warned time and time again not to play football beside your house. Unfortunately, he disobeyed me, and I can only offer my sincere apologies. When you have the window repaired, please send the bill to me.
Apologize once again.
Yours sincerely,
Mary Washington
Polly: Franco, who do you take after in your family?
Franco: Definite1y my mother.We’re both quite moody and impatient.We used to argue a lot when I was growing up, because she’s quick-tempered.Also, we’re both tall and thin.
Polly: Do you 1ook like her as well?
Franco: No, I 1ook like my dad, but he's very ca1m.I am more romantic.What about you?
Polly: People say I 1ook 1ike my mum.We've got the same nose, unfortunately.But I' m not 1ike
her in other ways.She's shy whereas I'm much more sociab1e.I 1ove being with my
friends and meeting new peop1e, but she hates it.I' m more 1ike my dad, I think.What
about you, Mary?
Mary: I' m a natural optimist, just like my dad.He is never pessimistic.I always think that everything wi1l work out well in the end and so does he.I’ve got the same sense of humour as my mum.We both laugh at stupid things.I suppose I look a bit like my grandmother.We've got the same smile, and we both have very dark hair.
1、Franco’s () is tall and thin.
A.mum
B.dad
C.daughter
2、Franco’s dad is().
A.quick-tempered
B.romantic
C.calm
3、Polly’s mum is() and() meeting new people.
A.sociable; loves
B.shy; hates
C.shy; loves
4、Mary is a (n) (), just like her dad.
A.optimist
B.pessimist
C.artist
5、Mary has the same() like her grandmother.
A.eyes
B.nose
C.smile
A.Sounds good
B.Looks nice
C.Seems all right
D.Feels excellent
Their experiment______, Tom and Mary set out to write the report on the results.
A.done
B.to be done
C.being done
D.will be done
Mary: Tom, would you like to go to a party this Saturday? Tom:(). What kind of party? Mary: It's a birthday party.
A.Sounds good
B.Looks nice
C.Seems all right
D.Feels excellent
"It's like you start out the semester with plenty of money and then $20 for dinner out here and $100 at the department store there, it's gone," said Tom, a Northeastern University third-year student. "And there are so .many things you need like toothpaste or laundry detergent (洗涤剂) that you don't think about until you get here and need it."
From the books lining their shelves to the fashionable clothes filling their closets, college students say the expenses of a college education go well beyond tuition and a dining hall meal plan. Many say they arrive on campus only to be overwhelmed by unexpected costs from sports fees to the actual price of a slice of pizza.
Balancing a job with schoolwork, especially at colleges known for their heavy workloads like Harvard and MIT, can be tough. So can the pressure students often feel to financially keep pace with their friends.
"When you get dragged along shopping, you're going to spend money; if you get dragged to a party and everyone wants to take a cab but you're cheap and want to take a bus. Chances are you'll end up sharing the fee for the cab," said Tom. "I guess you could say no, but no one wants to be the only one eating in the snack bar while your friends are our to dinner."
Max Cohen, a biology major at MIT, said he is accustomed to watching fellow students spend $40 a night to have dinner delivered or $50 during a night out at a bar. During the school's recent spring break, friends on trips for the week posted away messages that read like a world map—Paris, Rome, Tokyo. "Meanwhile I stay home and work," said Cohen. "I didn't realize when I came here how much money I would spend or how hard I would have to work to get by."
It is a lesson some younger students learn quickly. Others, surrounded by credit card offers, go into debt, or worse, are forced to leave school.
"A lot of people don't think twice about how much they spend," said a first-year student at MIT, "and you feel the pressure sometimes to go along with them."
The sentence "If only the rest of his expenses were as easy to quantify." (Lines 2-3, Paragraph 1) implies that ______.
A.there are many other unexpected expenses
B.it is easy to calculate how much more to spend
C.the tuition is too high to be calculated
D.he has to pay only a few other expenses
A.the other
B.others
C.other
D.the others
A.are
B.were
C.have
D.was