—Where did you get this dragon kite?—I made it by _ on the Dragon Head Raising Day.A. mineB. myC. myselfD. me 相关知识点: 试题来源: 解析 选项A:“mine” 是名词性物主代词,相当于 “my + 名词”,例如 “this book is mine”(这本书是我的),在这里不符合句子结构。选项B:“my” ...
Where did the Elder Scrolls come from?- they are created by the Aedra. The Elder Scrolls are both parts of Nirn and are Nirn itself. Hmm, I guess a smart Daedra Lord willing to destroy Nirn should have tried to seek out an option to rewrite, change or destroy exactly the Elder Scro...
76. When did you go/visit there? 的 理解和上下文的联系.根据下一句:5月28 日,可知此处应该是:你什么时候去的?故填 When did you go/visit there? 77. Who did you go with?查文章的 解和 上下文的联系.根据下一句:我和父母一起去 的,可知此处应该是:你和谁一起去的?故填 Who did you go with...
Did you know? Dexterouscomes from the Latin word dexter, meaning "on the right side." Since most people are right-handed, and therefore do things more easily with their right hand, dexter developed the sense of skillful. Where is the word dexterity from? 1520s, "manual skill, skill in u...
“When I was born?” the dragon asked, thinking hard. “Yes,” Minli said, again thinking that this dragon was very different from any dragon she had ever heard about. “What did they call you when you were born?”...
相关知识点: 试题来源: 解析 A 【原文】 M: Where did you go for your Dragon Boat Festival holiday? W: I planned to go to the Great Wall. But finally I decided on Poyang Lake. M: That must be more fun to see the boat racing!反馈 收藏 ...
Sure, it was a sea slug that washed ashore Australia's Gold Coastlast week, and dragons are...Warner, Kelsey
Where'sTim from? A. England. B. Australia. C. Canada.( A) 2. When did Tim come to China? A. Three years ago. B. Two years ago. C. Five years ago.(B) 3. What does Tim's mother do? A. Doctor. B. Nurse. C. Taxi driver.( C) 4 What's Tim's favourite Chinese festival...
“Well,” the dragon looked down at the fish with a wry smile, “either one of us would be a very strange relative to you, Fish. Why did you think I was your aunt?” “Because Aunt Jin always said she would ...
Where did the word really originate? really (adv.) The general sense is fromearly 15c. Purely emphatic use dates from c. 1600, "indeed," sometimes as a corroboration, sometimes as an expression of surprise or a term of protest; interrogative use (as in oh, really?) is recorded from 181...