更多"The war was the most peaceful perio"的相关试题:
[单项选择]The war was the most peaceful period of my life. The window of my bedroom faced southeast. My mother had curtained it, but that had small effect. I always woke up with the first light and, with all the responsibilities of the previous day melted, felt myself rather like the sun, ready to shine and feel joy. Life never seemed so simple and dear and full of possibilities as then. I stuck my feet out under the sheets—I called them Mrs. Left and Mrs. Right—and invented dramatic situations for them in which they discussed the problems of the day. At least Mrs. Right did; she easily showed her feelings, but I didn’t have the same control of Mrs. Left, so she mostly contented herself with nodding agreement.
They discussed what Mother and I should do during the day, what Santa Claus should give a fellow for Christmas, and what steps should be taken to brighten the home. There was that little matter of the baby, for instance. Mother and I could never agree about that. Ours was the only hou
A. He felt frightened by the war.
B. He felt cheerful.
C. He felt puzzled by the dramatic situations around him.
D. He felt burdened with responsibilities.
[单项选择]My parents didn’t feel secure because the Cold War was beginning with the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe.
A. True
B. False
[填空题]Most of my classmates would like that job, therefore,______(要得到那份工作,竞争会很激烈).
[填空题]America reaped great gains from Iraq war despite the much pain from both sides.
[填空题]
The world has spent on preparations for war more than $112 billion a year, roughly $ 450 per head for every man, woman, and child in the world. Let us consider for a moment what could be done with this sum of money if it were spent on peace and not on war. 41) _____ ________________________________________.The rest should be spent in ways that will, at the same time, be of benefit to mankind and a solution to the economic problem of conversion from war industry to the expansion of peace industries. As to this expansion, let us begin with the most elementary of all needs, namely, food. 42) _____________________________________________.A very small part of what is now Being spent upon armaments would rectify our predicament(处境). Not only could the American surplus Of grain, which was for many years uselessly destroyed, be spent in relief of famine, but, by irrigation, large regions, now desert, could be made fertile, and, by improvement in transport, distribution from regions of ex