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124. they always kept on good _____ with their next-door neighbors for the children's sake.

a. friendship b. relations c. intentions d. terms

[´ð°¸]d. terms.

[×¢ÊÍ]keep (be) on good terms withÓë......ºÍÄÀÏà´¦¡£

125. do you think a wife should _____ her habits and tastes to those of her husband?

a. comply b. confirm c. consent d. conform

[´ð°¸]d. conform.

[×¢ÊÍ]conform vi×ñÊØ£¬·ûºÅ£ºall the students must conform to the rules.(È«ÌåѧÉú±ØÐë×ñÊØ¹æÕ¡£)conform sth. to sth. else(vt)ʹ·ûºÏ£ºhe conformed the plans to the new specifications.(ËûʹÕâЩ¼¯ºÏ·ûºÏй淶¡£) comply with×ñÊØ£»confirmʹ¼á¶¨£¬È·ÈÏ£¬Ö¤Êµ£»consent (to)ͬÒ⣬ÔÞͬ¡£

126. he was afraid that the branch might bend over and break, and he would be sent _____ to the ground.

a. crashing b. throwing c. rushing d. dropping

[´ð°¸]a. crashing.

[×¢ÊÍ]crash(to the ground)Ã͵ø£¨µ½µØÉÏ£©¡£crash n.

³£Ö¸·É»úµÈµÄ¡°Ê§Ê¡±£¬È磺he was killed in an aircraft crash.(ËûÔÚ·É»úʧÊÂÖÐÉ¥Éú¡£)±¾¾äÖÐÓÃfalling²»Í×£¬fallÖ¸¡°ÂäÏ£¬µôÏ¡±£¬±¾Éí²¢²»Ç¿µ÷ÂäϵÄËÙ¶È£¬¶øcrashʹ¡°Ã͵ø¡±£¬¹Ê±¾ÌâÓÃcrashing×î¼Ñ¡£

127. high interest rates _____ people from borrowing money.

a. discourage b. decrease c. disturb d. disgust

[´ð°¸]a. discourage

[×¢ÊÍ]discourage sb. from doing sth.ʹÈÏΪijʲ»ÖµµÃ×ö£ºtht wet weather discouraged people from going to the sports meeting.(ÏÂÓêÌìʹÈ˾õµÃ²»ÖµµÃÈ¥¿´Ô˶¯»á¡£)

128. despite their good service, most inns are less costly than hotels of _____ standards.

a. equivalent b. uniform c. alike d. likely

[´ð°¸]a. equivalent.

[×¢ÊÍ]equivalentÏàµÈµÄ£¬Ï൱µÄ£ºhe exchanged his pounds for the equivalent amount of dollars. uniform ÏàͬµÄ,Ò»ÑùµÄ¡£likely adj.ºÜ¿ÉÄܵģ¬ÓÐÏ£ÍûµÄ¡£alike(±íÓïÐÎÈÝ´Ê)ÏàͬµÄ£¬ÏàÏóµÄ¡£

129. the two things are the same in outward form but different _____.

a. in addition b. in brief c. in common d. in essence

[´ð°¸]d. in essence.

[×¢ÊÍ]in essence±¾ÖÊÉÏ£»in addition´ËÍ⣻in brief¼ò¶ÌµØ£¬¼òÑÔÖ®£»in common¹²Í¬¡£

130. _____ it is a good thing i did not get the post i had applied for, though i must admit that i was disappointed at the time.

a. by the way b. in a way c. in the way d. in no way

[´ð°¸]b. in a way.

[×¢ÊÍ]in a way(-to some extent)ÔÚijÖ̶ֳÈÉÏ£»in no way¾ö²»£»by the way ˳±ãÌáһϣ»in the way °­Ê¡£´ËÌâ²»ÄÜÑ¡by the way£¬ÒòΪby the way ×ö²åÈëÓïÆäºóÓ¦¼Ó¶ººÅ¡£

±¾ÌâÒëÎÄ£ºÎÒûÓеõ½ÎÒÉêÇëµÃ¹¤×÷ÔÚijÖ̶ֳÈÉÏ˵ÊǼþºÃÊ£¬¾¡¹ÜÎÒ³ÐÈϵ±Ê±ÎÒºÜʧÍû¡£

131. _____ inviting guests and not treating them properly!

a. strangely b. fantastically

c. surprisingly d. fancy

[´ð°¸]d. fancy.

[×¢ÊÍ]fancy doing ûÏëµ½.......¾¹È»£º1)fancy your him!(ûÏëµ½Ä㾹ȻÈÏʶËû£¡) 2)fancy spending the day in here!(ûÏëµ½¾¹ÔÚÕâÀï¹ýÁËÒ»Ì죡)

±¾ÌâÒëÎÄ£ºÃ»Ïëµ½ÑûÇëÁË¿ÍÈ˾¹Ã»ÓкúÃÕдý£¡

132. with sufficient scientific information a manned trip to mars should be _____.

a. obtainable b. potential c. considerable d. feasible

[´ð°¸]d. feasible.

[×¢ÊÍ]feasible(=that can be done)¿ÉÐеģ¬¿É×öµ½µÄ£º1)your plan sounds quite feasible.(ÄãµÄ¼Æ»®ÌýÆðÀ´ºÜ¿ÉÐС£) 2)it's not feasible to make the trip in one day.(Ò»ÌìÄÚÒª½øÐÐÕâ´ÎÂÃÐÐÊÇ×ö²»µ½µÄ¡£) "n,q ?vJ{)Y*m{d"U[ ±¾_×Ê_ÁÏ_À´_Ô´_ÓÚ_¹ó_ÖÝ_ѧ_ϰ_Íø ¿¼ÑÐÒ»·½½ÌÓý˶ʿ Http://wwW.gzU521.coM )"n,q ?vJ{)Y*m{d"U

obtainable¿ÉµÃµ½µÄ£»considerableÏ൱µÄ£¬¿É¹ÛµÄ£»potentialDZÔڵģ¬¿ÉÄܵġ£

133. the generation _____ makes it difficult for parents to understand their children's opinions.

a. division b. gap c. separation d. interval

[´ð°¸]b. gap.

[×¢ÊÍ]generation gap ´ú¹µ¡£

division·Ö£¬»®·Ö£»separation·Ö¿ª£»interval¼ä¸ô£¬¼ä϶£»£¨Ä»¼ä»ò¹¤¼ä£©ÐÝÏ¢¡£at intervals ²»Ê±£¬Ê±Ê±

134. if the boy had _____ the dog alone it wouldn't have bitten him.

a. set b. left c. had d. put

[´ð°¸]b. left.

[×¢ÊÍ]leave sb./sth. alone²»ÈÇ£¬²»¹Ü£¬²»Åö£ºleave the box alone.(±ðÅöÄǸöºÐ×Ó¡£)

135. they were so far away that i couldn't _____ their faces clearly.

a. see through b. make up c. see off d. make out

[´ð°¸]d. make out.

[×¢ÊÍ]make out(=identify and see with effort or difficulty)±æÈϳö¡£

see through²ÎÔÄ¢££¬151,×¢ÊÍ:´Ë´¦see through»¹¿É±íʾ¡°¿´´©......(=understand the real meaning of or reason for; realize the falseness of)¡±£º 1)the teacher saw through the boy's story of having to help at home. (=the teacher knew his story was not true; it was just an excuse.) 2) he can't fool her. she sees him through every time.

see offËÍÐУ»make up¹¹³É£¬×é³É£¬Æ´´Õ£»ÃÖ²¹£¬Åâ³¥£»»¯×°£¬±àÔ죺1)±àÔ죺john made up the joke about the talking dog. 2)ÃÖ²¹£ºbob must make up the work he missed. 3)´Õ×㣺 we need one more to make up the dozen. 4)»¯×°£º the actors were making up when we arrived. 5)¹¹³É£ºnine players make up a team.

136. achieving a high degree of proficiency in english as a foreign language is not a mysterious _____ without scientific basis.

a. process b. practice c. procedure d. program

[´ð°¸]a. process.

[×¢ÊÍ]process(=connected series of actions, or series of operations) ¹ý³Ì£ºby what process is cloth made form wool?(¾­¹ýʲô¹ý³ÌÑòë֯³ÉÄØÁÏ£¿)practice(=the doing of something of, performance or repeated exercise, etc.)ʵϰ£¬Á·Ï°£»¿ªÒµ: she is doing her practice at the piano.(ËýÔÚÁ·Ï°µ¯¸ÖÇÙ¡£)procedure(=the regular order of doing things)³ÌÐò£ºthe usual procedure at a meeting(¿ª»áµÄͨ³£³ÌÐò)¡£program(=plan of what is to be done or list of items or events)¿Î³Ì£¬¼Æ»®£¬´ó¸Ù£ºwhat is the program for tomorrow ?(Ã÷ÌìÉÏʲô¿Î?)

137. i must go now. _____, if you want that book i'll bring it next time.

a. incidentally b. accidentally

c. occasionally d. subsequently

[´ð°¸]a. incidentally.

[×¢ÊÍ]incidentally(=by the way)¸½´øµØ£¬Ë³±ã£ºfred said, incidentally, that he had no dinner.(˳±ãÌáһϣ¬¸£À´µÂÄÇʱ˵£¬Ëû»¹Ã»³ÔÍí·¹¡£)accidentally(=by chance)żȻµØ£ºi met with an old friend of mine accidentally last week.(ÉÏÐÇÆÚÎÒżȻÅöµ½Ò»Î»ÀÏÅóÓÑ¡£)occasionally (=from time to time, not regularly)²»Ê±µØ£¬Å¼¶û£ºwe get visitors here occasionally.(ÎÒÃÇż¶ûÔڴ˽ÓÓο͡£)subsequently(=afterwards, later) at first we thought we would go; but subsequently we learned we were needed at home.(Æð³õ,ÎÒÃÇÏëÀ뿪£»µ«ËæºóÎÒÃǵÃÖª¼ÒÀïÐèÒªÎÒÃÇ¡£)

138. a completely new situation is likely to _____ when the school leaving age is raised to 16.

a. arouse b. rise c. arise d. abide

[´ð°¸]c. arise.

[×¢ÊÍ]arise(=come into being, appear, happen)²úÉú£¬·¢Éú£ºdifficulties will arise as we do the work.(ÎÒÃÇ×öÕâÏ×÷ʱ½«»á·¢ÉúÀ§ÄÑ¡£)

arouse »½Æð£¬¼¤Æð£¬»½ÐÑ£»rise ÉÏÉý;abide (by)×ñÊØ¡£rav*mc9&Gf w€vv{[ת Ìù ÓÚ ÎÒ µÄ ѧ ϰ Íø ¿¼ÑÐÒ»·½½ÌÓý˶ʿ HTtp://wwW.gzU521.coM)rav*mc9&Gf w€vv{

±¾ÌâÒëÎÄ£ºµ±ÖÐѧ±ÏÒµÄêÁäÉÏÉýµ½16Ëêʱ£¬ºÜ¿ÉÄܲúÉúÍêȫеÄÇé¿ö¡£

139. the illness from which mary is suffering has now been _____ as hepatitis (¸ÎÑ×).

a. diagnosed b. determined c. deduced d. discovered

[´ð°¸]a. diagnosed.

[×¢ÊÍ]diagnose...as °Ñ......Õï¶ÏΪ......¡£

±¾ÌâÒëÎÄ£ºÂêÀöµÄ²¡ÏÖÒÑÕï¶ÏΪ¸ÎÑס£

140. these continual _____ in temperature make it impossible to decide what to wear.

a. alterations b. vibrations c. waves d. fluctuations

[´ð°¸]d. fluctuations. [×¢ÊÍ]fluctuations²¨¶¯£»waves²¨ÀË£»alterations(²¿·Ö)¸Ä±ä£¬±ä¸ü£»vibrations(ÎïÀíѧÉÏ)Õñ¶¯¡£

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