更多"These girls didn’t like to visit Ch"的相关试题:
[单项选择]These girls didn’t like to visit Chicago, and they had to go.
A. to
B. visit
C. and
D. had
[填空题]He didn’t like this book, his sister didn’t like it, either.
______ he ______ his sister liked this book.
[填空题]Things that the traveller didn’t like in New York were the ______.
[单项选择]A. She didn’t like the books the man bought.
B. There wasn’t a large selection at the bookstore.
C. The man bought a lot of books.
D. She wanted to see what the man bought.
[填空题]She didn’t like herself(praise) ______ like that.
[单项选择]A. It was lost. B. Mary didn’t like it.
C. It was expensive. D. Henry did not buy it.
[填空题]She didn’t like herself(praise) _________ like that.
[单项选择]A. Because Maria didn’t like the game. B. Because Maria fell ill.
C. Because he didn’t have the time. D. Because he couldn’t stand football.
[单项选择]St. Paul didn’t like it. Moses warned his people against it. Hesiod declared it "mischievious” and "hard to get rid of it", but Oscar Wilder said, "Gossip is charming."
"History is merely gossip," he wrote in one of his famous plays. "But scandal is gossip made tedious by morality. ’
In times past, under Jewish law, gossipmongers might be fined or flogged. The Puritans put them in stocks or ducking stools, but no punishment seemed to have the desired effect of preventing gossip, which has continued uninterrupted across the back fences of the centuries.
Today, however, the much-maligned human foible is being looked at in a different light. Psychologists, sociologists, philosophers, even evolutionary biologists are concluding that gossip may not be so bad after all.
Gossip is "an intrinsically valuable activity", philosophy professor Aaron Ben-Ze’ev states in a book he has edited, entitled Good Gossip. For one thing, gossip helps us acquire information that we need to
A. show the general disapproval of gossip
B. introduce the topic of gossip
C. examine gossip from a historical perspective
D. prove the real value of gossip
[单项选择]St.Paul didn’t like it. Moses warned his people against it. Hesiod declared it "mischievous" and "hard to get rid of it", but Oscar Wilder said, "Gossip is charming."
"History is merely gossip," he wrote in one of his famous plays. "But scandal is gossip made tedious by morality."
In times past, under Jewish law, gossipmongers might be fined or flogged(鞭笞). The Puritans put them in stocks or ducking stools, but no punishment seemed to have the desired effect of preventing gossip, which has continued uninterrupted across the back fences of the centuries.
Today, however, the much maligned human foible(弱点) is being looked at in a different light. Psychologists, sociologists, philosophers, even evolutionary biologists are concluding that gossip may not be so bad after all.
"Gossip is a valuable activity," philosophy professor Aaron Ben-Ze’ev states in a book he has edited, entitled Good Gossip. For one thing, gossip helps us acquire information that we need to k
A. neutral
B. positive
C. negative
D. indifferent