Take his advice __________you will fail.A.norB.orC.forD.so
Take his advice __________you will fail.
A.nor
B.or
C.for
D.so
Take his advice __________you will fail.
A.nor
B.or
C.for
D.so
第1题
A.If he took
B.If he should take
C.Were he to take
D.Had he taken
第2题
All the universities are private institutions. Each has its【65】governing councils,【66】some local businessmen and local politicians as【67】as a few academics(大学教师).The state began to give grants to them fifty years【68】, and by 1970 each university derived nearly all its【69】from state grants. Students have to【70】fees and living costs, but every student may receive from the local authority of the place【71】he lives a personal grant which is enough to pay his full costs, including lodging and【72】unless his parents are【73】. Most【74】take jobs in the summer【75】about six weeks, but they do not normally do outside【76】during the academic years. The Department of Education takes【77】for the payments which cover the whole expenditure of the【78】, but it does not exercise direct control. It can have an important influence【79】new developments through its power to distribute funds, but it takes the advice of the University Grants Committee, a body which mainly【80】of academics.
(61)
A.with
B.by
C.at
D.into
第3题
Since you won't take advice, there is no ______ in asking for it.
A.place
B.point
C.reason
D.way
第4题
They decide to take advice on() (法定的) steps to get the money back.
A、criminal
B、just
C、equal
D、legal
第5题
A.If I didn' t take
B.Had I not taken
C.If I haven' t taken
D.Provided I didn' t take
第6题
【C1】
A.hurt
B.pain
C.harm
D.work
第7题
A.Have
B.Get
C.Carry
D.Take
第8题
_____ to all advice he gave up his job.
A.Essential
B.Discontented
C.Discouraged
D.Contrary
第9题
______your advice yesterday, I would have missed the train.
A.Had I not taken
B.If I didn't take
C.If I haven't taken
D.Provided I didn't take
第10题
The agent was going to ______.
A.give Lane some important papers
B.tell him some pieces of advice
C.tell him some important news
D.tell him his suffering
第11题
Born in rude and abject poverty, he never had any education, except what he gave himself, till he was approaching manhood. Not even books wherewith to inform. and train his mind were within his reach. No school, no university, no legal faculty had any part in training his powers. When he became a lawyer and a politician, the years most favorable to continuous study had already passed, and the opportunities he found for reading were very scanty. He knew but few authors in general literature, though he knew those few thoroughly. He taught himself a little mathematics, but he could read no language save his own, and had only the faintest acquaintance with European history or with any branch of philosophy.
The want of regular education was not made up for by the persons among whom his lot was cast. Until he was a grown man, he never moved in any society from which he could learn those things with which the mind of an orator was to be stored. Even after he had gained some legal practice, there was for many years no one for him to mix with except the petty practitioners of a petty town, men nearly all of whom knew little more than he did himself.
Schools gave him nothing, and society gave him nothing. But he had a powerful intellect and a resolute will. Isolation fostered not only self-reliance but the habit of reflection, and, indeed, of prolonged and intense, reflection. He made all that he knew a part of himself. His convictions were his own—clear and coherent. He was not positive or opinionated and he did not deny that at certain moments he pondered and hesitated long before he decided' on his course. But though he could keep a policy in suspense, waiting for events to guide him, he did not waver. He paused and reconsidered, but it was never his way to go back on a decision once more or to waste time in vain regrets so that all he had expected had not been attained. He took advice readily and left many things to his ministers; but he did not lean on his advisers. Without vanity or ostentation, he was always independent, self-contained, prepared to take full responsibility for his acts.
The implication of the second paragraph is that Abraham Lincoln______
A.was illiterate
B.was never educated
C.was never provided with any regular education
D.behaved rudely when he was young