1. My sister ____her teeth every day. A: will brush B: has brushed C: brushed D: brushes
1. My sister ____her teeth every day. A: will brush B: has brushed C: brushed D: brushes
Q21. On the stage, there's a woman....her hair. A: brushing B: brushed
Q21. On the stage, there's a woman....her hair. A: brushing B: brushed
He just brushed his house this morning and got many _____ on his jacket. A: bushes B: rashes C: blot D: stains
He just brushed his house this morning and got many _____ on his jacket. A: bushes B: rashes C: blot D: stains
When I took my shirt out of the suitcase, I found it badly____. A: crashed B: crushed C: pressed D: brushed
When I took my shirt out of the suitcase, I found it badly____. A: crashed B: crushed C: pressed D: brushed
The simple figures, words and Numbers written, embossed and brushed on the shipping package are called A: indicative mark B: transportation mark C: warning mark D: sales mark
The simple figures, words and Numbers written, embossed and brushed on the shipping package are called A: indicative mark B: transportation mark C: warning mark D: sales mark
How can you love this man? He watches TV all day long, and _____, he seems not to have brushed his teeth for months!( ) A: in a word B: by the way C: what’s more
How can you love this man? He watches TV all day long, and _____, he seems not to have brushed his teeth for months!( ) A: in a word B: by the way C: what’s more
Read the following paragraph The most depressing thing about an illness is the sense of being left out or brushed aside by it from the mainstream of living. When a person is ill, he cannot keep up with the world of healthy people. Life begins to occur without him. Even language seems to change. What is said to a sick person does not involve him, and therefore he begins to interpret it differently. He loses touch with the outer, healthy world. His sense of isolation is increased rather than lessened by the regular visits of the doctor. The doctor labels the sick person’s disease and confines him to his special place. With tact and skill, the doctor completes the patient’s helplessness and makes final his division from the world of strong arms, sound legs, clear skin, and lungs that breathe deeply. The sick person’s only hope is to return to life again, and he clings to the thought of getting well. (qtd. from Kathleen E. Sullivan, Paragraph Practice, p.125)
Read the following paragraph The most depressing thing about an illness is the sense of being left out or brushed aside by it from the mainstream of living. When a person is ill, he cannot keep up with the world of healthy people. Life begins to occur without him. Even language seems to change. What is said to a sick person does not involve him, and therefore he begins to interpret it differently. He loses touch with the outer, healthy world. His sense of isolation is increased rather than lessened by the regular visits of the doctor. The doctor labels the sick person’s disease and confines him to his special place. With tact and skill, the doctor completes the patient’s helplessness and makes final his division from the world of strong arms, sound legs, clear skin, and lungs that breathe deeply. The sick person’s only hope is to return to life again, and he clings to the thought of getting well. (qtd. from Kathleen E. Sullivan, Paragraph Practice, p.125)
Read the following paragraph The most depressing thing about an illness is the sense of being left out or brushed aside by it from the mainstream of living. When a person is ill, he cannot keep up with the world of healthy people. Life begins to occur without him. Even language seems to change. What is said to a sick person does not involve him, and therefore he begins to interpret it differently. He loses touch with the outer, healthy world. His sense of isolation is increased rather than lessened by the regular visits of the doctor. The doctor labels the sick person’s disease and confines him to his special place. With tact and skill, the doctor completes the patient’s helplessness and makes final his division from the world of strong arms, sound legs, clear skin, and lungs that breathe deeply. The sick person’s only hope is to return to life again, and he clings to the thought of getting well. (qtd. from Kathleen E. Sullivan, Paragraph Practice , p.125)
Read the following paragraph The most depressing thing about an illness is the sense of being left out or brushed aside by it from the mainstream of living. When a person is ill, he cannot keep up with the world of healthy people. Life begins to occur without him. Even language seems to change. What is said to a sick person does not involve him, and therefore he begins to interpret it differently. He loses touch with the outer, healthy world. His sense of isolation is increased rather than lessened by the regular visits of the doctor. The doctor labels the sick person’s disease and confines him to his special place. With tact and skill, the doctor completes the patient’s helplessness and makes final his division from the world of strong arms, sound legs, clear skin, and lungs that breathe deeply. The sick person’s only hope is to return to life again, and he clings to the thought of getting well. (qtd. from Kathleen E. Sullivan, Paragraph Practice , p.125)