题目内容 (请给出正确答案)
[主观题]

“It’s driving me crazy! Everything I did seems to go wrong!" “I know just_____ !”

A.how you do

B.how you feel

C.how did it do

D.how did it feel

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更多““It’s driving me crazy! Everyt…”相关的问题

第1题

The constant noise aroud here () me crazy!

A.drove

B.would drive

C.is driving

D.had driven

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第2题

Which sentence is different from other sentences()

A.The printer is driving me crazy

B.The printer is making me mad

C.I can’t believe the printer runs so fast

D.I can’t take it anymore

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第3题

—My cell phone is driving me crazy! It keeps turning off and on.—______. Maybe you should have it checked, or just return it()

A.I’m sorry to hear that

B.That’s all right

C.It depends

D.No big deal

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第4题

听力原文:P Well, were going to be talking about a special property of light. Actually, its
a small part of Einsteins special theory of relativity. Now, dont worry. Ill explain things really, really slowly, and use plenty of examples. OK, first, you have to understand the idea that there are things called frames of reference. Imagine that you are on an elevator. In that box, thats one frame. of reference. And as you go from the first floor to the third, you pass by some guy standing on the second floor. That second floor, thats another frame. of reference. Frame. of reference just means, then, the place where a person is standing. S1 Is there one perfect frame. of reference? P Good question. Nope. There are no stable frames. All of them move in some way. Now listen to this. Imagine that youre in your living room and you have a block of wood. If you measure the wood sitting on your couch, or if you measure it while riding on a bus, the block of wood will have the same measurements. Let me add here that we have to assume that the bus is going down a nice straight, smooth road and at a constant speed. OK, heres the first part of what Einstein was talking about. The laws of physics are true in all frames of reference. S1 So, that block of wood is going to be the same size in your living room or on the bus? P Right. Now youll really have to pay attention. Imagine that youre driving in a car and the car is going 50 mph. You throw a rock out the front at 20 mph. In your frame. of reference, the rock is going 20 mph. What about some guy standing by the side of the road? Remember that hes in a different frame. of reference. Right? Well, the speed of the car and the speed of the rock together equal 70 mph, and thats the speed hell see the rock moving. S2 What happens if youre in that same car, still going along at 50 mph, and you turn on the headlights? Doesnt light always have the same speed? But, wouldnt it be like the rock, the speed of light plus the speed of the car? P Well, think about speed. Speed is distance divided by time. OK. Heres another crazy part. Distance and time change when things start getting close to the speed of light. How about distance? Well the faster an object moves, the shorter it gets. Say you buy a really nice limousine, and you want to drive it around and show it off. Well, drive it slowly, because the faster you drive, the shorter the car will appear to the people on the street. You see the car, in your frame. of reference, as staying the same length as when you bought it. The people on the street, standing there in a different frame. of reference, see it as shorter than you do. S2 What about time? P Lets say you have two frames of reference. One is a guy standing on the ground and the other is a guy flying in a super fast airplane. The guy on the ground sees the guy in the super fast plane as moving slower in time. Thats crazy, right? Listen one more time. From the point of reference of the guy on the ground, the guy in the plane goes through time slower. So, how does light maintain the same speed no matter what the frame. of reference? Why is the light from the headlights not moving at the speed of light plus the 50 mph from the car? Well, its because distance and time, the things we use to measure speed, begin to change once we start to move really, really quickly. Its totally crazy, right? OK. Any questions? P Why is the light from the headlights not moving at the speed of light plus the 50 mph from the car? Well, its because distance and time, the things we use to measure speed, begin to change once we start to move really, really quickly. Its totally crazy, right? Why does the professor say this: P Its totally crazy, right?

What is the lecture mainly about?

A.Special theory of relativity

B.A property of light

C.Definitions of speed

D.Frames of reference

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第5题

听力原文:P Well, were going to be talking about a special property of light. Actually, its
a small part of Einsteins special theory of relativity. Now, dont worry. Ill explain things really, really slowly, and use plenty of examples. OK, first, you have to understand the idea that there are things called frames of reference. Imagine that you are on an elevator. In that box, thats one frame. of reference. And as you go from the first floor to the third, you pass by some guy standing on the second floor. That second floor, thats another frame. of reference. Frame. of reference just means, then, the place where a person is standing. S1 Is there one perfect frame. of reference? P Good question. Nope. There are no stable frames. All of them move in some way. Now listen to this. Imagine that youre in your living room and you have a block of wood. If you measure the wood sitting on your couch, or if you measure it while riding on a bus, the block of wood will have the same measurements. Let me add here that we have to assume that the bus is going down a nice straight, smooth road and at a constant speed. OK, heres the first part of what Einstein was talking about. The laws of physics are true in all frames of reference. S1 So, that block of wood is going to be the same size in your living room or on the bus? P Right. Now youll really have to pay attention. Imagine that youre driving in a car and the car is going 50 mph. You throw a rock out the front at 20 mph. In your frame. of reference, the rock is going 20 mph. What about some guy standing by the side of the road? Remember that hes in a different frame. of reference. Right? Well, the speed of the car and the speed of the rock together equal 70 mph, and thats the speed hell see the rock moving. S2 What happens if youre in that same car, still going along at 50 mph, and you turn on the headlights? Doesnt light always have the same speed? But, wouldnt it be like the rock, the speed of light plus the speed of the car? P Well, think about speed. Speed is distance divided by time. OK. Heres another crazy part. Distance and time change when things start getting close to the speed of light. How about distance? Well the faster an object moves, the shorter it gets. Say you buy a really nice limousine, and you want to drive it around and show it off. Well, drive it slowly, because the faster you drive, the shorter the car will appear to the people on the street. You see the car, in your frame. of reference, as staying the same length as when you bought it. The people on the street, standing there in a different frame. of reference, see it as shorter than you do. S2 What about time? P Lets say you have two frames of reference. One is a guy standing on the ground and the other is a guy flying in a super fast airplane. The guy on the ground sees the guy in the super fast plane as moving slower in time. Thats crazy, right? Listen one more time. From the point of reference of the guy on the ground, the guy in the plane goes through time slower. So, how does light maintain the same speed no matter what the frame. of reference? Why is the light from the headlights not moving at the speed of light plus the 50 mph from the car? Well, its because distance and time, the things we use to measure speed, begin to change once we start to move really, really quickly. Its totally crazy, right? OK. Any questions? P Why is the light from the headlights not moving at the speed of light plus the 50 mph from the car? Well, its because distance and time, the things we use to measure speed, begin to change once we start to move really, really quickly. Its totally crazy, right? Why does the professor say this: P Its totally crazy, right?

What is the lecture mainly about?

A.Special theory of relativity

B.A property of light

C.Definitions of speed

D.Frames of reference

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第6题

He ignored his parents' warnings of crazy driving and now he had to ______ the consequence
s of collision.

A.catch on

B.answer for

C.take on

D.settle down

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第7题

听力原文:M: My computer is so slow that I can't work on this report. It' s driving me craz
y. I think it' s time to buy a new one.

W: You should try to go to Cherry' s electronics. That' s where I got mine last year. They're very helpful, and they have the best technicians in town.

M: That' s good information. I always have some problems with computers.

W: Oh, and when you go, don't forget to take your computer with you. They' ll copy its contents onto your new one.

What is the man' s problem?

A.His computer' s programs needs to be updated.

B.His computer is too slow.

C.His computer is too small.

D.His computer is broken.

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第8题

听力:What does the speaker say about herself?

I have learned many languages, but I have not mastered them the way a professional interpreter or translator has. Still, they have opened doors for me. They have allowed me the opportunity to seek jobs in international contexts and help me get those jobs. Like many people who have lived overseas for a while, I simply got crazy about it. I can’t imagine living my professional or social life without international interactions. Since 1977, I have spent much more time abroad than in the United States. I like going to new places, eating new foods and experiencing new cultures. If you can speak the language, it’s easier to get to know the country and its people. If I had the time and money, I would live for a year in as many countries as possible.

Beyond my career, my facility with languages has given me a few rare opportunities. Once just after I returned from my year in Vienna, I was asked to translate for a German judge at an Olympic level horse event. I learned a lot about the sport. In Japan, once when I was in the studio audience of a TV cooking show, I was asked to go up on the stage and taste the beef dish that was being prepared and tell what I thought. They asked, “Was it as good as American beef?” It was very exciting for me to be on Japanese TV speaking in Japanese about how delicious the beef was.

A.She enjoys teaching languages.

B.She can speak several languages.

C.She was trained to be an interpreter.

D.She was born with a talent for languages.

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第9题

听力原文: If you must know, we writers are not crazy about the evident power of pictures;
at least, not professionally. I don't know how many times rye looked at Hank Walker's famous shot of the Kennedy brothers. I am moved every time, but I always see the same thing. The attraction, I think, has to do with stillness itself. On display as well are actors, mobsters, kids, kings, animals, bombs, eyes, legs, soldiers, winners, losers, us. These are moving pictures that do not move. That in itself may account for one's fascination with them. We live in a world where everything moves: Families and institutions, no less than trains and boats and planes. The very novelty of the still is like a stage whisper. One pays attention because it is as quiet and noticeable as a mouse. A still picture stands still. Movies say," kook at me, watch this." A still says, "Take it or leave it." The picture, like a selfish lover, stands and waits for others to come to it, secure in the appraisal of its own value. It is not as if the subject is stopped in mid-action; rather, it seems that the still is the action.

What was Hank Walker's profession?

A.A writer.

B.A painter.

C.A photographer.

D.A movie director.

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第10题

听力原文:M:How are your new neighbors, Nancy?W:They seem nice enough, but they have a son

听力原文:M:How are your new neighbors, Nancy?

W:They seem nice enough, but they have a son who's driving me crazy

M: What do you mean?

W: He comes home every night around 10 with his car windows rolled down and his radio blaring. It stops as soon as he turns the car off. But by then Brian and Lisa are wide awake.

M: Oh, no.

W: Oh, yes. Sometimes it takes us till midnight just to get them to settle down again.

M: Have you tried talking to them?

W: We haven't even really met them yet except to say a quick hallo. I hate to get off on the wrong foot.

M: You are not going to like them when you do meet them if you keep on simmering.

W: I know, but I feel stupid complaining. It's not as though he's blasting his stereo all night.

M: You said yourself it is driving you crazy.

W: Well, You know how early I have to get up to be here at the office, I'm just not getting enough sleep and neither are the kids. They're so irritable when I get home in the afternoon.

M: Maybe you could go over there sometime with a little gift: a plant for the yard or something. Then you could ask their son whether they have any other children and they'll be sure to ask about yours.

W: Yeah, and then what?

M: Then you could mention that the hardest thing at this stage is getting your kids to go to sleep at night.

W: And keeping them in the asleep.

M: That's the idea. And you should do it soon. The longer you wait, the harder it will be to do politely.

(20)

A.He drives too fast.

B.He plays his guitar too loudly.

C.His radio wakes her children up.

D.His friends are too noisy.

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