更多"'I’ve been shot in the leg. I’ve be"的相关试题:
[填空题]"I’ve been shot in the leg. I’ve been beat up. But that’s pretty minor," says a 41, year-old American security contractor who spent four years in Iraq. "But when you get a vehicle blown out from under you, it does tend to affect one a little bit."
With a broken back, two broken feet and neurological(神经的) damage, the man, who asked that his name not be used, spent the next three months in hospitals in Iraq,, Germany and America. But though he was physically on the mend by the start of this year, he found himself incapable. "I was having nightmares," he recalls. "I couldn’t do anything. Mostly, I’d just stay in a room and not leave."
Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (外伤后压性疾病), or PTSD, is the lasting of declining psychological symptoms. It can include flashbacks and nightmares, increased arousal in the form of insomnia(失眠), anger and an inability to concentrate, and impaired personal relationships. Although lasting psychological damage from horrific experiences has been recog
[单项选择]Man: That’s the most boring seminar I’ve been to in a long time.
Woman: Well, it wasn’t the regular speaker. She got sick at the last minute.
Man: I’m surprised they didn’t have a better substitute.
Question: What does the man mean
A. They should replace the regular speaker.
B. He hasn’t been to a seminar for a long time.
C. He didn’t expect the substitute was so poor.
D. The substitute was not as good as the regular speaker.
[单项选择]I’ve been going home for lunch ever since I started school. I never liked eating in the cafeteria(自助食堂) although in tile seventh grade, because all the other boys were doing it and thought it was cool. I washed dishes in the junior high school lunchroom once in a while in exchange for a free lunch. But I like going back to my own house at once.
Mom is always there; she had soup ready in the breakfast room by the time that Ann and Jim and I get home. Ann and Jim have never gone in for the cafeteria, either. Our house in only about a ten-minute walk from the school building, so we can make it back in plenty of time.
There’s something about eating in the cafeteria--and not leaving the high school from morning until afternoon -- that feels a little like being in prison. By the end of the morning, I’ve got to get out of the building. And Mom never seems to mind fixing lunch for us; she never suggests that we eat in the cafeteria.
It’s really the only time we have to be alone
A. takes a short cut to school
B. helps his mother wash dishes
C. has to hurry back to school
D. doesn’t have to hurry back school