The author's cousin Harry quite clearly had a rather weird sense of humour.
A: fanciful
B: eerie
C: strange
D: outlandish
A: fanciful
B: eerie
C: strange
D: outlandish
C
举一反三
- Which of the following statements is NOT true about humour? A: English people don’t take pride in their sense of humour. B: In English conversation, there is always an undercurrent of humour. C: Most English conversations will involve at least some degree of banter, teasing, understatement or self-deprecation. D: Humour is their “default mode”.
- Which of the following statements is NOT true about humour? A: English people don’t take pride in their sense of humour. B: In English conversation, there is always an undercurrent of humour. C: Most English conversations will involve at least some degree of banter, teasing, understatement or self-deprecation. D: Humour is their “default mode”.
- What does the author imply about Leeds City Council's decision? A: It is simply absurd. B: It is well-informed. C: It is rather unexpected. D: It is quite sensible.
- The teacher’s sense of humour ______ all her<br/>students and they really liked her.
- I’d rather marry a man who had a(n) of humour than one who was stunningly ( 非常地 ) attractive.
内容
- 0
The British ____ very proud of their sense of humour.(is, are)
- 1
In the author's opinion, fresher's week is ________. A: strange B: good C: funny D: boring
- 2
The author had a problem, which became clearly obvious just as he was to deliver the lecture.
- 3
The word ‘weird’ is similar in meaning to ( ). A: wonderful B: strange C: interesting D: surprised
- 4
That shy gift is quite (sense) ______ to other people’s words.