更多"Flying across the Atlantic for the "的相关试题:
[填空题]Flying across the Atlantic for the first time was a great (achieve)()
[填空题]After flying across the Atlantic, Charles Lindbergh became famous _____.
[单项选择]Flying across the country the other day, I sat next to a retired Air Force colonel, and we had a pleasant conversation about love of flying, travel and grandchildren--and for him, of retirement itself. "Yeah," he said, "there’s only one thing that would make me give this up."
"What’s that "
"If Hillary or Jane Fonda runs for president, I’m going to work full time to beat her."
I told him I knew Hillary. She doesn’t even need a last name now. And she’s no JaneFonda.
"Well," I concluded before we began talking about planes and kids again, "I think you are going to get your chance. I think she’s going to run."
I once wrote, with total sincerity, that I thought Hillary Rodham Clinton had the political instincts of a stone. I also wrote that I thought she had marginalized her husband’s chances of being an important president.
He blew that by naming his wife to head the task force to work out a national plan, and she decided to work in secret with ba
A. life after retirement.
B. love of flying and travel.
C. popularity of President Bush.
D. Hillary’s running for presidency.
[单项选择]The first time I tried shark-fin soup was at Time Warner’s annual dinner in Hong Kong. Shark-fin soup is a luxury item ($100 bowl in some restaurants)in Hong Kong and Mainland China, its biggest consumers; it’s a dish that embodies east Asia’s intertwined notions of hospitality and keeping (or losing) "face". "It’s like champagne", says Alvin Leung, owner of Bo Innovation, a Cantonese restaurant in Hong Kong. "You don’t open a bottle of Coke to celebrate. It’s a ritual. "
Unfortunately, this gesture of hospitality comes with a price tag much bigger than that $ 100 bowl. All told, up to 70 million sharks are killed annually for the trade, despite the fact that 30% of shark species are threatened with extinction. "Sharks have made it through multiple mass extinctions on our planet, " says Matt Rand, director of Pew’s Global Shark Conservation division. "Now many species are going to go the way of th
A. escape punishment by law
B. make more freezer spaces on boat
C. prevent massive overfishing
D. exploit bad execution of law