更多"Dormitory Life
①Living in a do"的相关试题:
[单项选择]Dormitory Life
①Living in a dormitory at college can be a great experience. However, if you take no steps to make this experience positive, dormitory life can become a misery. When you choose to live in a college dormitory, you will have a better chance to live a colorful and meaningful life. Meanwhile, you will have to give up many things as well.
②When you live in a dormitory, you can meet many people with different interests. And you can enjoy the various services there. Both are very important to make you successful at college. But you may have to give up much of your personal space. You will share a room with someone else. This means you need to make peace with the things and people around you.
③You will have to learn some important life skills. For example, you will learn how to get along with people. You will also learn to ignore things that you can’t change. But in the future, you will find these skills very helpful when you are working in the real world.
[简答题]A: WHAT IS IMPORTANT WHEN LIVING A BETTER LIFE
·BE REALISTIC
·BE ROMANTIC
B: WHAT IS IMPORTANT WHEN ATTENDING A CONFERENCE
·TOPIC OF THE CONFERENCE
·PLACE WHERE THE CONFERENCE WILL BE HELD
C: WHAT IS IMPORTANT WHEN GIVING A REPORT
·RESEARCH WORK
·CHOOSE AN INTERESTING TOPIC
[多项选择]A: WHAT IS IMPORTANT WHEN LIVING A BETTER LIFE
BE REALISTIC
BE ROMANTIC
B: WHAT IS IMPORTANT WHEN ATTENDING A CONFERENCE
TOPIC OF THE CONFERENCE
PLACE WHERE THE CONFERENCE WILL BE HELD
C: WHAT IS IMPORTANT WHEN GIVING A REPORT
RESEARCH WORK
CHOOSE AN INTERESTING TOPIC
[填空题]To many Americans living a clean and suburban life, the jobs introduced in the show are ______.
[单项选择]______ in our village are living a happy life.
A. The old
B. Old
C. Older
[简答题]
Living a Colorful Life on Campus
(1)校园生活丰富多彩的必要性;
(2)使校园生活丰富多彩的途径;
(3)我打算怎么做
[单项选择]______ both in working life and everyday living to different sets of values, and expectations places a severe strain on the individual.
A. Recreation
B. Transaction
C. Disclosure
D. Exposure
[单项选择]At the age of 16, Lee Hyuk Joon’s life is a living hell. The South Korean 10th grader gets up at 6 in the morning to go to school, and studies most of the day until returning home at 6 p. m. After dinner, it’s time to hit the books again—at one of Seoul’s many so-called cram schools. Lee gets back home at 1 in the morning, sleeps less than five hours, then repeats the routine—five days a week. It’s a grueling schedule, but Lee worries that it may not be good enough to get him into a top university. Some of his classmates study even harder.
South Korea’s education system has long been highly competitive. But for Lee and the other 700,000 high-school sophomores in the country, high-school studies have gotten even more intense. That’s because South Korea has conceived a new college-entrance system, which will be implemented in 2008. This year’s 10th graders will be the first group evaluated by the new admissions standard, which places more emphasis on grades in the three years of hig