When I grow up, I want_____ a football player.


  1. A.
    be
  2. B.
    to be
  3. C.
    am
  4. D.
    are
B
want 后接動詞不定式,want to do sth ,而本題后的詞組為a football player,不能相當(dāng)于動詞,故加be動詞原形,故選B
練習(xí)冊系列答案
相關(guān)習(xí)題

科目:初中英語 來源: 題型:

動詞填空 括號內(nèi)所給動詞的適當(dāng)形式填空。(本大題共10分,每小題1分)
1.My father with his friends ________ (talk) about their work at this time yesterday.
2. Miss Green ___________(teach) English for nearly 5 years before she moved here.
3.Get it now before all the copies _________(sell ) out.
4. Bad weather _________(cause) natural disaters from time to time.
5. Tom said that he ____________(visit) the Palace Museum with his good friends the next day.
6.As a student, he is often told_____________(study) hard..
7. ---Tell me how long you __________(have) a cold. ------Ever since last night.
8. We can never follow the fashion because it _________(change) all the time.
9. When I grow up, I ___________(be) a doctor and help the patients.
10. The computer can work again!________it ________(repair)by you just now?

查看答案和解析>>

科目:初中英語 來源:2013屆江蘇泰興溪橋初級中學(xué)九年級下學(xué)期第一次月度英語試卷(帶解析) 題型:閱讀理解

When I was a child I never said, "When I grow up, I want to be a CEO," but here I am. When I look back on my career, I realize the road to becoming a CEO isn't a straight, clear path. In fact, no two paths are the same. But whether you want to be a boss one day or not, there's a lot to learn from how leaders rise to the top of successful companies.  
As this series of stories shows, the paths to becoming a CEO may be different, but the people in that position(位置) share the qualities of commitment(義務(wù)), work ethic(道德) and a strong desire for building something new. And every CEO take risks along the way—putting your life savings on the line to start a software company or leaving a big business to be one of the first employees at a startup.
I grew up in Minnesota, and learned how to be an entrepreneur(企業(yè)家)from my father, who has run a small business for almost 30 years. I went to Georgetown University and tried a lot of business activities in college with success. And I always had a dream job pattern(模式): to walk to work, work for myself and build something for consumers(顧客).  
I'm only 29, so it's been a quick ride to CEO. Out of college, I worked for AOL as a product manager, then moved to Revolution Health and ran the consumer product team. In mid-2007 I left Revolution Health and started LivingSocial with several other workmates, where I became a CEO.
Career advice: Don't figure out where you want to work, or even what industry you'd like to work at. Figure out what makes you do so. What gives you a really big rush? Answer why you like things, not what you like doing. . . and then apply it to your work life. Also, just because you're graduating, don't stop learning. Read more books than you did in college. If you do, and they're not, you're really well-positioned to succeed in whatever you do.
【小題1】What can we know from the first paragraph?

A.The writer hasn't achieved his childhood ambition.
B.The writer thinks there is some easy way to become a CEO.
C.The writer had an ambition of becoming a CEO in his childhood.
D.The writer believes success stories of CEOs can be beneficial(有益的) to everybody.
【小題2】According to the writer, successful CEOs should _____.
A.try not to take risksB.stay in the same business
C.have a strong sense of creativityD.save every possible penny
【小題3】What can we know about the writer from the passage?
A.He started LivingSocial when he was still a student of Georgetown University.
B.He used to run the consumer product team for AOL.
C.His business activities at college ended up in more failure than success.
D.His father had far-reaching influence on him.
【小題4】What does the underlined phrase “figure out” mean? ______.
A.?dāng)喽?/td>B.弄清C.理解D.領(lǐng)會
【小題5】Which of the following proverbs may the writer agree with according to the last paragraph?
A.Well begun is half done.
B.Everything comes to him who waits.
C.Time and tide wait for no man.
D.One is never too old to learn.

查看答案和解析>>

科目:初中英語 來源:2012-2013學(xué)年江蘇揚(yáng)州揚(yáng)中教育集團(tuán)樹人學(xué)校初三中考第三次模擬考試英語卷(解析版) 題型:其他題

根據(jù)短文內(nèi)容和首字母提示,在下文空格處填入適當(dāng)?shù)脑~使短文完整。在答題卡標(biāo)有題號的橫線上,寫出空缺處各單詞的正確形式。(每空一詞)

The pig that dares to dream

The best-loved pig in Hong Kong is called McDull. His mom makes a wish that he will look like Chow Yun-fat or Tony Leung, two movie heartthrobs, but he is distinguished (區(qū)分) only by a birthmark around his right eye.

The cartoon piglet is not smart, either. Everything he tries, he f___1.____. He wants to be an Olympic champion of qiangbaoshan, but the sport doesn’t really exist, of course. He d_____2.____ of going to the Maldives (馬爾代夫), but ends up on a one-day tour of a Hong Kong landmark i____3.______.

However, the slow, dumb(木訥) pig has won over Hong Kong people, often stereotyped(塑造) as eager to quick success. So far, there are five McDull movies s ___4.____ in both the mainland and Hong Kong.

The popularity of McDull sometimes makes his creator Alice Mak confused. “Maybe people see themselves and their friends in McDull," she says. Like McDull, Mak moves and speaks slowly. She describes herself a___5.___ a simple person, who does not try to draw too much meaning from the McDull stories. As a Christian, she has some simple beliefs, such as God creates h____6._____ because he loves them and wants them to be happy.

"McDull reminds people they u____7.___ to be as simple and happy as him," Mak says. "If there is a theme in all the McDull movies, it is about how a simple person keeps his or her simplicity in a complicated(復(fù)雜) world."

In one of the McDull movies, he talks to the audience: "I suddenly realize that there is s___8.___ you just cannot have. No noodles, no Maldives, no golden medal, no treasure ... it turns out that being stupid is not funny, it could mean failure. Disappointment is not funny, fat is not funny, fat does not even mean you have more strength. When I grow up, when I face the tough world that is not f____9.___, what should I do?"

"W____10.____ he has been doing in the movies is to find new dreams. Most of them keep failing him, but he always starts again with a new one," Mak says. "Maybe that`s why both children and adults find him adorable (可愛的)."

 

查看答案和解析>>

科目:初中英語 來源:2015屆湖北省宜昌市七年級下學(xué)期期中考試英語試卷(解析版) 題型:單項(xiàng)填空

When I grow up, I want________ a football player.

A.be               B.to be             C.a(chǎn)m               D.a(chǎn)re

 

查看答案和解析>>

科目:初中英語 來源:2012-2013學(xué)年江蘇泰興溪橋初級中學(xué)九年級下學(xué)期第一次月度英語試卷(解析版) 題型:閱讀理解

When I was a child I never said, "When I grow up, I want to be a CEO," but here I am. When I look back on my career, I realize the road to becoming a CEO isn't a straight, clear path. In fact, no two paths are the same. But whether you want to be a boss one day or not, there's a lot to learn from how leaders rise to the top of successful companies.  

As this series of stories shows, the paths to becoming a CEO may be different, but the people in that position(位置) share the qualities of commitment(義務(wù)), work ethic(道德) and a strong desire for building something new. And every CEO take risks along the way—putting your life savings on the line to start a software company or leaving a big business to be one of the first employees at a startup.

I grew up in Minnesota, and learned how to be an entrepreneur(企業(yè)家)from my father, who has run a small business for almost 30 years. I went to Georgetown University and tried a lot of business activities in college with success. And I always had a dream job pattern(模式): to walk to work, work for myself and build something for consumers(顧客).  

I'm only 29, so it's been a quick ride to CEO. Out of college, I worked for AOL as a product manager, then moved to Revolution Health and ran the consumer product team. In mid-2007 I left Revolution Health and started LivingSocial with several other workmates, where I became a CEO.

Career advice: Don't figure out where you want to work, or even what industry you'd like to work at. Figure out what makes you do so. What gives you a really big rush? Answer why you like things, not what you like doing. . . and then apply it to your work life. Also, just because you're graduating, don't stop learning. Read more books than you did in college. If you do, and they're not, you're really well-positioned to succeed in whatever you do.

1.What can we know from the first paragraph?

A.The writer hasn't achieved his childhood ambition.

B.The writer thinks there is some easy way to become a CEO.

C.The writer had an ambition of becoming a CEO in his childhood.

D.The writer believes success stories of CEOs can be beneficial(有益的) to everybody.

2.According to the writer, successful CEOs should _____.

A.try not to take risks                      B.stay in the same business

C.have a strong sense of creativity            D.save every possible penny

3.What can we know about the writer from the passage?

A.He started LivingSocial when he was still a student of Georgetown University.

B.He used to run the consumer product team for AOL.

C.His business activities at college ended up in more failure than success.

D.His father had far-reaching influence on him.

4.What does the underlined phrase “figure out” mean? ______.

A.?dāng)喽?nbsp;            B.弄清             C.理解             D.領(lǐng)會

5.Which of the following proverbs may the writer agree with according to the last paragraph?

A.Well begun is half done.

B.Everything comes to him who waits.

C.Time and tide wait for no man.

D.One is never too old to learn.

 

查看答案和解析>>

同步練習(xí)冊答案