Have any questions?
[email protected]
English
Vietnamese
French
Spanish
Korean
Japanese
Thai
Chinese
Indonesian
Login
Signup
Contact
Login
Home
Her questions … really strange.
Question 1:
Her questions … really strange.
A.
were
B.
was
C.
look
These questions are from this test. Would you like to take a practice test?
Practice Quiz 11 | A1 – Beginner
30 minutes
30 questions
Do test
Some questions from the same exam
It … a really good idea.
They … with us at the pawn shop.
I hate to admit it but you … absolutely right.
Hearing that, he … really surprised.
Yesterday I … so happy.
I want to play it again! It … such a wonderful game.
Seeing the offer, we … interested in their products.
She … really distressed.
Unfortunately, they … late.
He … so disappointed.
To his surprise, the news … shocking.
The answer to that problem … very simple.
You know that his parents … poor.
That detail … fairly important.
After studying the lesson again, their results … much better.
Her result … excellent.
Our money … enough to buy it.
Everybody believed that the game … so exciting.
Her aunt … very rich.
Her questions … really strange.
Your brother … a bad worker.
You … really sure.
I … satisfied with their short answer.
We … ready for that flooding.
They … our best friends.
She … among the thieves.
It … her personal achievement.
He … my best friend.
I think it … the right choice.
It … a bad example.
Some other questions you may be interested in
A. I am much more intolerant of a human being’s shortcomings than I am of an animal’s, but in this respect I have been lucky, for most of the people I have come across have been charming.
B. Then you come across the unpleasant human animal—the District Officer who drawled, “We chaps are here to help you chaps,’ and then proceeded to be as obstructive as possible.
C. In these cases of course, the fact that you are an animal collector helps; people always seem delighted to meet someone with such an unusual occupation and go out of their way to assist you.
D. Fortunately, these types are rare, and the pleasant ones I have met more than compensated for them—but even so, I think I will stick to animals.
E. When you travel round the world collecting animals you also, of necessity, collect human beings.
A. Surrendered, or captured, combatants cannot be incarcerated in razor wire cages; this ‘war’ has a dubious legality.
B. How can then one characterize a conflict to be waged against a phenomenon as war?
C. The phrase ‘war against terror’, which has passed into the common lexicon, is a huge misnomer.
D. Besides, war has a juridical meaning in international law, which has codified the laws of war, imbuing them with a humanitarian content.
E. Terror is a phenomenon, not an entity—either State or non-State.
A. To avoid this, the QWERTY layout put the keys most likely to be hit in rapid succession on opposite sides. This made the keyboard slow, the story goes, but that was the idea.
B. A different layout, which had been patented by August Dvorak in 1936, was shown to be much faster.
C. The QWERTY design (patented by Christopher Sholes in 1868 and sold to Remington in 1873) aimed to solve a mechanical problem of early typewriters.
D. Yet the Dvorak layout has never been widely adopted, even though (with electric typewriters and then PCs) the anti-jamming rationale for QWERTY has been defunct for years.
E. When certain combinations of keys were struck quickly, the type bars often jammed.
A. Branded disposable diapers are available at many supermarkets and drug stores.
B. If one supermarket sets a higher price for a diaper; customers may buy that brand elsewhere.
C. By contrast, the demand for private-label products may be fewer prices sensitive since it is available only at a corresponding supermarket chain.
D. So, the demand for branded diapers at any particular store may be quite price sensitive.
E. For instance, only SavOn Drugs stores sell SavOn Drugs diapers.
F. Then, stores should set a higher incremental margin percentage for private-label diapers.
A.Having a strategy is a matter of discipline.
B.It involves the configuration of a tailored value chain that enables a company to offer unique value.
C.It requires a strong focus on profitability and a willingness to make tough trade-offs in choosing what not to do.
D.Strategy goes far beyond the pursuit of best practices.
E.A company must stay the course even during times of upheaval, while constantly improving and extending its distinctive positioning.
F.When a company’s activities fit together as a self-reinforcing system, any competitor wishing to imitate a strategy must replicate the whole system?
A.Humour gives you the opportunity to exaggerate a point which is presumably why it is best remembered.
B.Using humour can be not just the most arduous route but the joke may fail to cause a flutter.
C.But a warming here: humour has to be funny.
D.Everyone with a successful humour advertisement agress that they are very careful about the script.