Careful¡ªthere¡¯s a nail sticking out of that board. СÐÄ£¬ÄÇ¿é°åÉÏÓпŶ¤×ÓÍ»³öÀ´ÁË¡£
They will stick to the tough terms set out in UN Security Council resolution 1441. ËûÃǽ«°´ÕÕÁªºÏ¹ú°²Àí»á1441ºÅ¾öÒéÖеÄÑÏÀ÷Ìõ¿îÖ´ÐÐÈÎÎñ¡£ º»Êµ»ù´¡ Óï·¨Ìî¿Õ
(1)He stuck a stamp on the envelope.
(2)The nurse stuck the needle into my arm.
(3)The wheels of our car were stuck in the mud. (4)Reporters should stick to reporting the facts. 2in no timeÁ¢¼´£¬ÂíÉÏ
at no time¾ö²» on time׼ʱ£»°´Ê±
in time¼°Ê±£»ÖÕÓÚ£»³ÙÔç at a timeÒ»´Î
at one timeÔø¾£»Ò»¶È keep time×ßµÃ×¼£»ºÏÅÄ kill timeÏûĥʱ¼ä
for the time beingÔÝʱ ahead of timeÌáǰ
take one¡¯s time±ð׿±
Tom got the car fixed in no time. ÌÀÄ·ÂíÉϰÑÄÇÁ¾³µÐÞÀíºÃÁË¡£
Even if one makes a mistake£¬correcting mistakes in time is a good thing. ¼´Ê¹·¸ÁË´í£¬¼°Ê±¸ÄÕýÒ²ÊÇÒ»¼þºÃÊ¡£ º»Êµ»ù´¡
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(1)At no time did I feel they were being unreasonable. (2)I want to be home in time for tea.
(3)You¡¯d better do one thing at a time£¬so that you can concentrate on it. (4)At one time£¬that kind of thing would have made me really angry. 3get around´«²¥£»Á÷´«£»ËÄ´¦×ß¶¯
get along withºÍ¡¡Ïà´¦£»½øÕ¹ get across½²Çå³þ£»±»Áì»á get down to¿ªÊ¼ÈÏÕæ×ö
get over¿Ë·þ£»¿ØÖÆ£»»Ö¸´¹ýÀ´
Besides£¬I¡¯m easy to get along with and I like to make friends. ¶øÇÒ£¬ÎÒÈÝÒ×Ïà´¦£¬Ò²Ï²»¶½»ÅóÓÑ¡£(2011¡¤ÁÉÄþ¡¤ÊéÃæ±í´ï) They couldn¡¯t get around me because of the stream of passing traffic. ÒòΪÕýÔÚͨ¹ýµÄ³µÁ÷£¬ËûÃDz»Äܵ½ÎÒÕâ¶ù¡£ º»Êµ»ù´¡
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(1)News soon got around that he had resigned.
(2)No matter how I explain£¬I just can¡¯t get it across to her. (3)They got over many difficulties in their English study. (4)How are you getting along with your new roommates£¿
1£®They walked off£¬leaving me sitting there all by myself.ËûÃÇ×ßÁË£¬ÈÃÎÒÒ»¸öÈ˹ÂÁãÁãµØ×øÔÚÄǶù¡£
2£®Not only does he teach at school£¬but he writes songs. Ëû²»½öÔÚѧУ½ÌÊ飬¶øÇÒ»¹Ð´¸èÇú¡£
3£®My neighbour had both his legs broken in the traffic accident. ÎÒµÄÁÚ¾ÓÔÚ³µ»öÖÐˤ¶ÏÁËÁ½ÌõÍÈ¡£
4£®The engineers are so busy that they have zero time for outdoor sports activities£¬even though they have the interest(¾¡¹ÜËûÃÇÓÐÐËȤ)£®
5£®Stay with happy people and you will be happy every day.ºÍ¿ìÀÖµÄÈËÔÚÒ»Æð£¬Äã¾Í»áÿÌì¶¼¿ìÀÖ¡£
You should not only listen to the teacher¡¯s and your classmates¡¯pronunciation£¬but also to tapes and broadcasting.Äã²»½öÒªÌýÀÏʦºÍͬѧÃǵķ¢Òô£¬¶øÇÒ»¹ÒªÌý´Å´øÂ¼ÒôºÍ¹ã²¥¡£
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not only...but also...±íʾ¡°²»µ«¡¡¶øÇÒ¡¡¡±£¬Í¨³£¿ÉÒÔÁ¬½ÓÁ½¸ö²¢ÁеÄνÓï¡¢±öÓï¡¢±íÓï¡¢×´ÓïµÈ£¬»¹¿ÉÒÔÁ¬½ÓÁ½¸ö²¢Áеľä×Ó¡£ 1not only A but also B£½B as well as A
2not only...but also...Á¬½ÓÁ½¸ö·Ö¾äʱ£¬Èônot onlyλÓÚ¾äÊ×£¬not onlyËùÔڵķ־äÒª²¿·Öµ¹×°£¬but alsoºóÃæµÄ·Ö¾ä²»µ¹×°¡£
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4not onlyÖ»ÄÜÁ¬Ó㬶øbut also¼È¿ÉÁ¬Óã¬Ò²¿É·Ö¿ªÓã¬alsoÒ²¿ÉÊ¡ÂÔ¡£
Yet through his painstaking efforts£¬he changed not only his own fate but also the history of America. È»¶øÍ¨¹ýÕâЩ¼è¿àµÄŬÁ¦£¬Ëû²»µ«¸Ä±äÁË×Ô¼ºµÄÃüÔËÒ²¸Ä±äÁËÃÀ¹úµÄÀúÊ·¡£ (2012¡¤Õ㽡¤ÊéÃæ±í´ï)
By the activities in our English club£¬we not only practise but also learn more English.
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(1)Only when he apologizes for his rudeness will I speak to him again(ÎҲŻáÔÙºÍ
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He speaks not only English and French but also Spanish.(¸ÄΪnot onlyλÓÚ¾äÊ׵ĵ¹×°¾ä)
Not only does he speak English and French but also Spanish.
(1)Ask any Chinese (ÎÊÈκÎÒ»¸öÖйúÈË)which city is famous for ice and snow£¬and the answer is sure to be Harbin. (2)¡ªCan you help me?
¡ªYes.Follow your teacher¡¯s advice (Ìý´ÓÄãÀÏʦµÄ½¨Òé)£¬in my opinion£¬and everything will be OK.
(3)Take it away£¬can¡¯t you (²»ÐÐÂð)?
(4)¡ªMr.Gordon asked me to remind you of the meeting this afternoon.Don¡¯t forget it.
¡ªOK.I won¡¯t (²»»áÍü)£®
(5)Protect our earth (±£»¤ÎÒÃǵĵØÇò)£¬or else it will be no longer fit for us to live on.
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If you want to get around in Beijing£¬here is the transport you can choose.
Taxis are on the streets 24 hours 1.a day.The price 2.is displayed (display) on the window.You should ask 3.for a receipt. Public transport may be the cheapest means of transport,4.starting (start) at 1 yuan£¬but buses and trolleybuses are very crowded during the rush hour (6¡Ã30 am¡ª8¡Ã00 am and 5¡Ã00 pm¡ª6¡Ã30 pm)£®Buses with different number sections travel to different places or serve 5.at different times.
Minibuses are less expensive than taxis and less crowded than public transport.6.If you want to get a seat in rush hours£¬a minibus is a 7.better (good) choice. The underground is fast and 8.convenient (convenience)£®It opens from 5¡Ã00 am to 11¡Ã00 pm.A one-way trip costs 3 yuan.
If you want to explore the narrow alleys£¬you¡¯d 9.better choose pedicabs,10.but remember to make sure of the price before your journey.
¢ò.¿ÎÍâÍØÕ¹¡ª¡ªÔĶÁÏÂÃæ²ÄÁÏ£¬ÔÚ¿Õ°×´¦ÌîÈëÊʵ±µÄÄÚÈÝ(²»¶àÓÚ3¸öµ¥´Ê)»òÀ¨ºÅÄÚµ¥´ÊµÄÕýÈ·ÐÎʽ
How can we know that the birds we see in the South in winter are the same ones that come north in spring? Once John J£®Audubon£¬a bird 1.lover (love)£¬wondered about this.Every year he 2.watched (watch) a pair of little phoebes nesting in the same place.He decided to put tiny silver bands (¹¿) on 3.their legs.The next spring£¬the birds 4.with the bands came back in the very same place.The phoebe£¬as was learned£¬spent winter 5.where/wherever it was warm enough to find food.Today there are
hundreds of birdbanders all over America.
The government of the U£®S.has a special birdbanding department 6.which/that makes all the birdbands.The bands do not hurt the birds£¬as they are made 7.of aluminium and are very light.Each band has 8.a special number.On each band are these words£¬¡°Inform Fish and Wildlife Service£¬Washington£¬D.C.¡±
Anyone who finds a dead bird with a band on its legs 9.is asked(ask) to send the band to Washington with a note 10.telling (tell) where the bird was found.In this way naturalists add to their knowledge of the habits and needs of birds.
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Chocolate soap is supposed to be good for the skin.But it¡¯s not so good for the tongue.Unfortunately for the US soldiers of World War ¢ò£¬the chocolate bars the army gave them tasted like they were intended for use in the bath.
In the army¡¯s defense£¬it wasn¡¯t trying to win any cooking awards.In fact£¬it specifically ordered that its chocolate bars not be too delicious£¬so soldiers wouldn¡¯t eat them too quickly.These bars were created for survival£¬not taste.¡°They were awful£¬¡± John Otto£¬a former army captain in World War ¢ò said.¡°They were big£¬thick things£¬and they weren¡¯t any good.I tried them£¬but I had to be awfully hungry after I tried them once.¡±
As unappealing as the chocolate bars were to some£¬others like them.Samuel Hinkle£¬the chemist who created the chocolate bars£¬pointed out that the number of bars made were far greater than the army needed.¡°It soon became obvious that the generous American soldiers were sharing their valued possessions with their foreign friends£¬whether soldiers of other countries or local citizens.¡±
The bars turned many hungry Europeans into friends of the United States.¡°People wanted them£¬¡± said Otto.¡°You¡¯d give them to kids.In some places they were very hungry.And they surely helped relax people about American soldiers.¡±
Otto said he never saw a European turn his or her nose up at the chocolate.¡°It was food£¬¡± he said.¡°At that time£¬everyone was very hungry.I saw German kids standing outside the US army kitchen.They weren¡¯t begging£¬just standing there very politely.When we were done£¬the kids would eat the food out of the garbage.They were that hungry.¡±
Other Europeans did not see chocolate until well after the war ended.¡°We didn¡¯t see any Americans where I was£¬¡± said Elizabeth Radsma£¬who was 25 years old when the Germans occupied her country£¬the Netherlands.¡°Even after the war£¬we saw only English.Maybe the Americans gave out some chocolates in the big cities£¬but we were only in a small town.Before the British£¬we saw only German soldiers.But chocolate£¿Don¡¯t make me laugh£¡Maybe in my dreams£¡¡±