A: What’s the time, please? B: Sorry, . A. let me see B. I don’t know C. excuse me D. it’s seven thirty 查看更多

 

题目列表(包括答案和解析)

— What's the time, please?

— Sorry.                 

A.Let me see           B.I don't know           C.Excuse me         D.It's seven thirty

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阅读理解。
Jack: Excuse me, Han Mei. What's the time, please?
Han Mei: Let me see. Oh, it's five o'clock. It'stime to go home.
Jack: But I must go and see Kate. Look at this.
It's a nice new pen. It's Kate's. I find it
under the teacher's desk. I must give it to
her. Where's Kate? Do you know?
Han Mei: Sorry, I don't know. But I think she's in Miss Gao's room.
Jack: Let's go and see her.
Han Mei: OK.
(In Miss Gao's room)
Jack: Hi, Kate. Is this pen yours?
Kate: Let me see. Oh, yes. It's mine.
Jack: Here you are.
Kate: Thank you very much.
Jack: That's all right. You must look after your things.
根据对话内容,选择正确答案。
1. The pen is _____.
A. Jim's
B. Han Mei's
C. Kate's
D. Miss Gao's
2. The pen is _____.

A. new but old
B. new and nice
C. good and nice
D. old but nice

3. Who finds the pen? _____.

A. Jack
B. Han Mei
C. Kate
D. Miss Gao

4. Where does Jack find the pen? _____.
A. In the classroom
B. Under Kate's desk
C. In Miss Gao's room
D. On the teacher's desk
5. —Where's Kate?—She's _____.

A. in the classroom
B. in Miss Gao's room
C. at home
D. at Mrs Gao's room

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  -Excuse me, what's the time, please?

  -________.

  -Thank you all the same.

[  ]

A.Sorry, I don't know. My watch is at home.

B.Oh, I can't see it. My watch is in my bag. I must go.

C.It's time for class

D.I don't have a watch. Let's guess

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选择下列每组句子的对话顺序。
1. (1). Hi, Kate. Next Sunday is my birthday. Can you come to my birthday party?
    (2). OK. I'm sure he would love to come.
    (3). Hi, Ann!
    (4). Five. Don't forget to tell Jim. I hope he can come, too.
    (5). Oh, thanks very much. I'd love to. What time is it going to start?
A. (1)-(5)-(4)-(3)-(2)
B. (3)-(2)-(5)-(4)-(1)
C. (1)-(3)-(5)-(4)-(2)
D. (3)-(1)-(5)-(4)-(2)
2. (1). May I speak to Rose?
    (2). Certainly.
    (3). Will you take a message?
    (4). Sorry, she is not in at the moment.
    (5). Please tell her to return me the dictionary tomorrow.
A. (1)-(4)-(3)-(2)-(5)
B. (1)-(2)-(3)-(4)-(5)
C. (1)-(2)-(3)-(5)-(4)
D. (1)-(4)-(2)-(5)-(3)
3. (1). Yes, it's very nice. What's the time?
    (2). It's four o'clock.
    (3). I have a new watch. Do you like it?
    (4). Let's go!
    (5). Oh, it's time to play games!
(A). 3-1-2-5-4
(B). 1-3-5-4-2
(C). 5-2-4-3-1
(D). 2-3-1-5-4
4. (1). Are you sure?
   (2). Can you mend it?
   (3). If he can't, nobody can.
   (4). Something is wrong with my TV set.
   (5). Sorry. But Uncle Wang can.
   (6). Let me see. Oh, it's broken.
A. (6)-(4)-(1)-(2)-(5)-(3)
B. (2)-(4)-(1)-(6)-(3)-(5)
C. (4)-(6)-(2)-(5)-(1)-(3)
D. (4)-(2)-(1)-(3)-(6)-(5)
5. (1). Black and white.
    (2). Will you show me a jacket?
    (3). OK. I will take one.
    (4). I think you look nice in yellow, and it is popular.
    (5). Certainly. What colour would you like?
A. (5)-(1)-(4)-(3)-(2)
B. (2)-(5)-(1)-(4)-(3) 
C. (3)-(5)-(4)-(2)-(1)
D. (5)-(4)-(1)-(2)-(3)

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In Canada and the United States, people enjoy entertaining at home. They often invite friends over for a meal, a party, or just for coffee and conversation.

    Here are the kinds of things people say when they invite someone to their home:

    "Would you like to come over for dinner Saturday night?"

    "Hey, we're having a party on Friday. Can you come?"

    To reply to an invitation, either say thank you and accept, or say you're sorry and give an excuse:

"Thanks. I′d love to. What time would you like me to come?" or "Oh sorry,

I′ve tickets for a movie."

    Sometimes, however, people use expressions that sound like invitations but which are not real invitations. For example:

    "Please come over for a drink sometime."

    "Why not get together for a party sometime?"

    "Why don't you come over and see us sometime soon?"

    They are really just polite ways of ending a conversation. They are not real invitations because they don't mention a specific time or date. They just show that the person is trying to be friendly. To reply to expressions like these, people just say "Sure, that would be great!" or "OK. Yes, thanks."

     So next time when you hear what sounds like an invitation, listen carefully. Is it a real invitation or is the person just being friendly?

1. Why do Canadians and Americans often invite friends for meals at home?

    A. Because they can save time.    B. Because they can spend less money.

    C. Because they enjoy entertaining at home.

    D. Because they have modern and beautiful houses.

2. Which of the following is a real invitation?

    A. "lf you′re free, let′s go for a drink sometime."

    B. "Please go to the cinema with me someday."

    C. "Would you like to have a cup of tea with us sometime?"

    D. "I′ve two tickets here. Can you go to the concert with me?"

3. If people say "Let's get together for lunch some day." You just say, "    

    A. That would be nice.               B. How about this weekend?

    C. Oh, sorry. I′m very busy.          D. That′s great. I′ll be there on time.

4. People use "an unreal invitation" in order to show that                 .

    A. they′re trying to be friendly          B. they′re trying to be helpful

C. they′re trying to make friends with others 

D. they haven′t got ready for a party yet

5. The passage is mainly about                     .

    A. entertainment at home                  B. real invitations or not

    C. expressions of starting a conversation D. ways of ending a conversation

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