somebody
英 ['sʌmbədɪ]
美['sʌmbədi]
- n. 大人物;重要人物
- pron. 有人;某人
考试真题
- If we humans aren't quite sure about a decision, we go and ask somebody else.
出自-2016年6月阅读原文
- He stood out in three ways-as a technologist, as a corporate (公司的)leader and as somebody who was able to make people love what had previously been impersonal, functional gadgets.
出自-2012年12月阅读原文
- If you make clinical predictions based on somebody's race, you're going to be wrong a good chunk of the time, Yudell told Live Science.
出自-2016年12月阅读原文
- But of course there is also a kind of humorous satisfaction in seeing somebody self-important making a fool of themselves.
出自-2011年6月听力原文
- People often get into love affairs because they have unrealistic expectations about somebody.
2015年12月六级真题(第二套)听力 Section A
- If I have a "new idea", I now quickly look to see whether somebody else has already thought of it, or something similar—and I then compare what I think with what others have thought.
2016年高考英语江苏卷 阅读理解 任务型阅读 原文
- Such activities fill the spaces that used to be dead time such as waiting for somebody to arrive for a lunch meeting.
2016年高考英语江苏卷 阅读理解 阅读D 原文
- When the studio didn't want me for the film -- it wanted somebody as well known as paul -- he stood up for me.
2017年高考英语全国卷2 阅读理解 阅读B 原文
- Next time somebody pushes corporate quotas as a way to promote gender equity, remember that such policies are largely self-serving measures that make their sponsors feel good but do little to help average women.
2020年考研真题(英语一)阅读理解 Section Ⅱ
- One study found that people responded best to comments that shifted from negative to positive, possibly because it suggested they had won somebody over.
2020年考研真题(英语二)阅读理解 Section Ⅱ