- ________________- You too!A:Merry Christmas!B:What a beautiful day!C:Help yourself!D:I
- ________________- You too!
A:Merry Christmas!
B:What a beautiful day!
C:Help yourself!
D:It's very kind of you!
- ________________- You too!
A:Merry Christmas!
B:What a beautiful day!
C:Help yourself!
D:It's very kind of you!
第5题
Christmas music is loved by all who hear and sing it every year. Carols, bells, and merry music have been a part of Christmas for centuries. Every Christmas Eve the bells ring to call people to church services. The most famous sleigh bells in the world belong to Santa Claus.
Christmas is a family festival. In the United States, no distance seems too great if it enables one to join the family circle for the holiday. All schools close for two weeks, parents welcome home their children and grandchildren and often open their doors to friends and strangers.
The calendar began ______.
A.in the exact year of Christ' birth
B.on the exact date which divides time into B.C.and A.D.
C.on December 25th
D.on the chosen date
第6题
Everyone was home for the holiday. What could make for ______Christmas than that?
A. the merriest
B. a merrier
C. merry
D. the merry
第7题
James is reporting the car accident to the police on the spot.
POLICE: Can you tell me what___1__ here
JAMES: Yes. I had a bad traffic accident. Look, my car looks like a squashed Coke can.
POLICE: Did you see the car before it hit you
JAMES: No, I didn't. That car was too __2___.
POLICE: Which lane were you in
JAMES: I don't remember.
POLICE: How fast were you__3___ then
JAMES: Less than 30 miles per hour.
POLICE: Which direction were you__4___ from And which direction were you heading
JAMES: I was heading from east to west.
POLICE: OK, please move your car off to the side of the road. We will check on it. Do you feel like you need an ambulance, sir
JAMES: No, I didn't get __5___. Thanks for your concern.
POLICE: No problem, sir.
第8题
He dressed, and when he went downstairs from the top floor of the rooming house in which he lived, the only sounds he heard were the coarse sounds of sleep; the only lights burning were lights that had been forgotten. Charlie ate some breakfast in an all-night lunch wagon and took an elevated train uptown. From Third Avenue, he walked over to Sutton Place. The neighbourhood was dark. House after house put into the shine of the streetlights a wall of black windows. Millions and millions were sleeping, and this general loss of consciousness generated an impression of abandonment, as if this were the fall of the city, the end of time.
He opened the iron-and-glass doors of the apartment building where he had been working for six months as an elevator operator, and went through the elegant lobby to a locker room at the back. He put on a striped vest with brass buttons, a false ascot, a pair of pants with a light blue stripe on the seam, and a coat. The night elevator man was dozing on the little bench in the car. Charlie woke him. The night elevator man told him thickly that the day doorman had been taken sick and wouldn't be in that day. With the doorman sick, Charlie wouldn't have any relief for lunch, and a lot of people would expect him to whistle for cabs.
Charlie had been on duty a few minutes when 14 rang-Mrs. Hewing, who, he happened to know, was kind of immoral. Mrs, Hewing hadn't been to bed yet, and she got into the elevator wearing a long dress under her fur coat. She was followed by her two funny looking dogs. He took her down and watched her go out into the dark and take her dogs to the curb. She was outside for only a few minutes. Then she came in and he took her up to 14 again. When she got off the elevator, she said, "Merry Christmas, Charlie."
"Well, it isn't much a holiday for me, Mrs. Hewing," he said. "I think Christmas is a very sad season of the year. It isn't that people around here ain't generous--I mean I got plenty of tips--but, you see, I live alone in a furnished room and I don't have any family or anything, and Christmas isn't much of a holiday for me."
"I'm sorry, Charlie," Mrs. Hewing said. "I don't have any family myself, It is kind of sad when you're alone, isn't it?" she called her dogs and followed them into her apartment. He went down.
It was quiet then, and Charlie lit a cigarette. The heating plant in the basement encompassed the building at that hour in a regular and profound vibration, and the sullen noises of arriving steam heat began to resound, first in the lobby and then to reverberate up through all the sixteen stories, but this was a mechanical awakening, and it didn't lighten his loneliness or his petulance. The black air outside the glass doors had begun to turn blue, but the blue light seemed to have no source; it appeared in the middle of the air. It was a tearful light, and he wanted to cry. Then a cab drove up, and the Walsers got out, drunk and dressed in evening clothes, and he took them up to their penthouse. The Walsers got him to brood about the difference between his life in a furnished room and the lives of the people overhead. It was terrible.
All the following statements may account for the sadness felt by Charlie on Christmas EXCEPT______.
A.he had to get up early to work on Christmas morning
B.he felt lonely
C.he had a sense of inferiority
D.he was poor
第9题
Mrs. Smith didn't call the police because ______.
A.she was on the bus
B.she was not sure whether she had the ten pound notes with her
C.she was too angry to do so
D.she didn't like to make trouble for others
第10题
--Would you like another slice of Christmas cake?--________. I'm full.
A、Yes, please.
B、No more,thanks.
C、Why not?
D、Nothing more.