During my many contacts with people in China, I have been asked by two different
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During my many contacts with people in China, I have been asked by two different people what I would recommend to them so that they could be happy. One of these people was my student and friend who began her question by saying I always appeared happy to her. She then asked how I could be this way and if I could teach her how to be happy all the time. The other inquiry was basically the same and came from the secretary of a company for which I was doing some work. The first one to ask was my student and in thinking about an answer I even explored in class the idea of optimism and pessimism, of people who feel the glass is always half full and those who think it is half empty. It was easy to show that different people react differently to the same situations and conditions but that didn’t bring me much closer to understanding why. About two months later I was riding to the airport in a taxi with the company secretary who asked me the same question and it made me think. Why did both these ladies feel they needed help to become happy? Indeed, why did either of them think they were not happy? Why did they choose to ask this question of me? Why are some people generally happy while others are not? Certainly if someone is healthy, it might be expected that they are happy, and this is probably true. However, some people have money and health but have a miserable disposition that makes it difficult for them to have friends and meaningful relationships. Similarly, one would expect those who have little to complain about their fate and many do, but others are able to enjoy what they have and enjoy life. It seems the difference must lie within the people. What we may be looking at is acceptance of a personal set of circumstances and the contentment which flows from that. It should not mean, however, that those people cannot wish for something better. If the difference between people who are happy and those who are not lies within the people themselves, can happiness be learned? I think there are things we can do, such as dreaming of the future, which can give us the sort of positive outlook which will generally make us happy people. 小题1: According to the passage, which of the following is true?A.The author was once asked how to be healthy and wealthy by two people. | B.The author came to realize why people responded differently to happiness. | C.Those who think the glass is always half empty are optimistic. | D.Those who feel the glass is always half full are pessimistic. | 小题2:. The underlined word “disposition” in the fourth paragraph means .A.character | B.habit | C.reputation | D.fate | 小题3: The underlined word “it” in the fourth paragraph refers to .A.the idea of pessimism | B.the attitude towards happiness | C.the satisfaction within | D.the appearance of happiness | 小题4:. What will the author most probably talk about after the last paragraph? A.Learning how to be happy. | B.Accepting the present situation. | C.Developing meaningful relationships. | D.Going after the dream. |
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答案
小题1:. C 小题1:.A 小题1:.B 小题1:.D |
解析
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举一反三
My husband is an engineer. Since we met, he has always been the rock in my life. I knew he had his feet 36 planted on the ground ,and it seemed that no matter what else went 37 , he would be the constant one. Three years of romance and two years of marriage later, I began to feel 38 of him because he never brought me flowers , he never 39 me, and nothing had changed in our marriage. After 40 , I finally told him I wanted to be 41 . He just sat there , speechless and didn’t even know __42__to say to make me stay . Finally , he spoke ,“What can I do to change your 43 ?” “I’ll stay if you have a good answer 44 this question,” I replied coldly。“If I asked for a 45 growing on a cliff, and getting it for me 46 certain death, would you still do so ?” His face grew troubled.“Can I give you the answer tomorrow morning ?” With that , my heart 47 . He couldn’t even give me an answer 48 away. The next morning , I found he was 49 .However, I found a note under a warm glass of milk . My eyes 50 misty as I was reading it “Dear, I’ll give you my 51 . After you do typing for a long time , I need my 52 to do it for you. Every time you leave the house , you forget your keys . I need my legs to run 53 and open the door for you… that’s why I cannot pick the flower for you….” With tears 54from my eyes , I opened the door. And there he was , with an extremely worried look on his face, waving the packet he had in his hand in front of me. Just because someone doesn’t love you 55 you want him to, it doesn’t meant that he doesn’t love you heart and soul. 小题1:A deeply B firmly C slightly D totally 小题2:A different B crazy C exciting D excited 小题3:A liked B tried C fond D tired 小题4:Afrightened B loved C surprised D lost 小题5:Asome time B sometime C sometimes D some times 小题6:A in B up C down D out 小题7:A what B which C how D when 小题8:A saying B comment C opinion D mind 小题9:A to B of C for D about 小题10:Atree B moon C flower D butterfly 小题11:Ameant B resulted C caused D led 小题12:Asank B settled C rose D worried 小题13:A soon B straight C straightly D quickly 小题14:Amissed B missing C losing D lost 小题15:Afell B changed C grew D got 小题16:Adscriptions B causes C lists D reasons 小题17:Aheart B fingers C mind D arms 小题18:A home B at home C out D in 小题19:Asteaming B sretching C streaming D spreading 小题20:Alike it B way C how D the way |
Many years ago my dad was diagnosed (诊断) with a terminal illness . He was unable to work at 36 job . He would be fine for quite a while , but would then fall suddenly 37 and have to be admitted to the hospital . He wanted to do something to keep himself 38 , so he decided to volunteer at the local children 39 . My dad loved kids . He would talk to them and play with them .Sometimes , he would 40 one of his kids . In certain instances , he would give 41 to the sad parents of these children . One of his kids was a girl who had been admitted with a 42 disease that paralyzed (使…瘫痪) her from the neck down . I don’t know the 43 of the disease , but I do know that it was very sad for a little girl . My dad decided to try to help her . He started 44 her in her room , bringing paints , brushes and paper . He stood the paper up 45 a backing , put the paintbrush in his mouth and began to paint . He didn’t use his hands at all . Only his 46 would move . He would visit her 47 he could and paint for her . All the while he would tell her , “see , you can do 48 you set your mind to .” 49 , she began to paint using her mouth , and she and my dad became friends . Soon after , the little girl was discharged (允许出院). My dad also 50 the children hospital for a little while because he became ill. Sometime later after my dad had recovered and 51 to work , he was at the volunteer counter one day and 52 the front door open . In came the little girl who had been paralyzed , but this time she was 53 . She ran straight to my dad and hugged him really tight . She gave my dad a picture she had done using her 54 . At the bottom it read, “thank you for helping me walk .” Sometimes love is more 55 than doctors , and my dad-who died just a few months after the little girl gave him the picture-loved every single child in that hospital . 小题1:.A.an important | B.a steady | C.an easy | D.a good | 小题2:..A.ill | B.behind | C.asleep | D.down | 小题3:..A.well | B.wealthy | C.busy | D.healthy | 小题4:.A.palace | B.hospital | C.center | D.park | 小题5:..A.teach | B.miss | C.lose | D.treat | 小题6:..A.speech | B.comfort | C.praise | D.help | 小题7:..A.special | B.curious | C.strange | D.rare | 小题8:.A.result | B.reason | C.name | D.course | 小题9:..A.observing | B.drawing | C.painting | D.visiting | 小题10:..A.with | B.across | C.against | D.over | 小题11:..A.head | B.neck | C.fingers | D.eyes | 小题12:..A.with whoever | B.whenever | C.as if | D.as soon as | 小题13:.A.everything | B.something | C.anything | D.nothing | 小题14:.A.Basically | B.Naturally | C.Eventually | D.Suddenly | 小题15:.A.left | B.entered | C.rushed to | D.stayed at | 小题16:..A.stopped | B.returned | C.hesitated | D.refused | 小题17:..A.pushed | B.noticed | C.observed | D.kicked | 小题18:..A.shouting | B.lying | C.walking | D.jumping | 小题19:..A.hands | B.pens | C.paper | D.mind | 小题20:..A.thankful | B.useful | C.thoughtful | D.powerful |
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Of all the areas of learning the most important is the development of attitudes. Emotional reactions as well as logical thought processes affect the behavior of most people. “The burnt child fears the fire” is one example. Another is the rise of despots(独裁者) like Hitler. Both these examples also point out the fact that attitudes come from experiences. In the one case the experience was direct and impressive; in the other it was indirect and cumulative(累积的). The Nazis got certain ideas largely by the speeches they heard and the books they read. The classroom teacher in the elementary school is in a key position to influence(影响) attitudes. This is true partly because children obtain attitudes from those adults who they respect. Another reason is that pupils are often curious about a subject in school that has only been touched upon at home or has possibly never occurred to them before. To a child who has previously got little knowledge of Mexico, his teacher’s method of dealing with such a unit will greatly affect his attitude toward Mexicans. However, when children go to school with undesirable attitudes, it is unwise for the teacher to change their feelings by praising or scolding them. She can achieve the proper effect by helping them obtain good experiences. For example, first-grade pupils afraid of policemen will probably change their attitudes after a classroom chat with the neighborhood officer in which he explains how he protects them. In the same way a class of older children can develop attitudes through discussion, research outside reading and all-day trips. Finally a teacher must not constantly show her own attitudes because her influence can be no good if she has personal prejudices(偏见). This is especially true in respect to controversial(引起争议的) questions on which children should be encouraged to reach their own decision as a result of objective analysis(分析) of all the facts. 小题1:. The passage mainly tells us _____.A.attitudes affect our actions | B.teachers play an important role in developing children’s attitudes | C.attitudes can be changed by some classroom experiences | D.teachers gradually affect pupils’ attitudes by their attitudes | 小题2:. In the first paragraph the writer gives us two examples to _____.A.show that attitudes come from experiences | B.compare with each other | C.show all experiences are direct and impressive | D.tell experiences from attitudes | 小题3:.When children in school have unpleasant attitudes, teachers should _____.A.change their feelings by scolding them | B.think highly of their good attitudes | C.help them by giving them good experiences | D.take no notice of their feelings | 小题4:.The passage specially states in the last paragraph that _____.A.direct experiences are more valuable than indirect ones | B.what a child learns in school has already been introduced at home | C.teachers can sometimes have a bad influence on children | D.teachers should always cover up their own attitudes |
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A Battery’s Worst Nightmare(噩梦) Portable electronics that can be carried about easily are only as good as their batteries and, let’s face it, batteries aren’t very good, especially when compared with, say, petrol, which packs 100 times a battery’s energy into an equal space. That’s why a large group of mechanical engineers (centered at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, but with partners at other universities and companies) are hard at work in an effort to replace batteries with a tiny engine that runs on fuel. Imagine a battery-free life!When the fuel runs out in your laptop or mobile phone, you just fill up and go. The engine, about the size of a ten-cent coin, starts with a combustion chamber (燃烧室) that burns hydrogen (氢). Its tiny parts are etched onto silicon wafers (硅片) in the same manner that computer parts are imprinted onto integrated circuits (集成电路). The first engine is made up of five wafers. And since these wafers could be produced in much the same way as computer chips, they could probably be produced quite cheaply. But the devil in all this nice detail is efficiency(效率). Tiny engine parts don’t always behave like their scaled-up parts of the first engine. Something between the parts can slow down the work, according to Columbia University professor Luc Frechette, one of the engine’s designers. Extreme heat from the combustion chamber is also a problem, often leaking to other parts of the engine. The scientists’ goal is to create an engine that will operate 10 times better than batteries do. Frechette says that a complete system, with all parts in place and working, will be set up in the next couple of years, but commercial models aren’t available until at least the end of the next ten years. 小题1:. . According to the passage, the title suggests that ________.A.batteries should be greatly improved | B.petrol will be used instead of batteries | C.the time of batteries will be gone forever | D.pollution caused by batteries must be prevented | 小题2:. What’s the meaning of the underlined word “devil” (In Paragraph 3)?A.Problem. | B.Advantage. | C.Invention. | D.Technique. | 小题3:. What can we infer from the passage?A.The new invention doesn’t need any fuel. | B.The new engine has been produced in quantity. | C.The new invention is much cheaper than the battery. | D.The new engine needs to be improved before it’s on sale. | 小题4:. . What is the main purpose of this passage?A.To introduce a new invention to readers. | B.To persuade readers not to use batteries. | C.To show us how the new invention works. | D.To declare when the engine will be on sale. |
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The disaster at the Chernobyl(former USSR前苏联) power station happened quickly and without warning. It was in the early hours of April 26, 1986 when the cooling system of the reactor(反应堆) failed. Minutes later, a violent (猛烈地) explosion blew the top off the reactor and blasted(爆炸生成) a huge cloud of radioactive gas high into atmosphere. Two people were killed immediately. Hundreds received powerful radiation overdose (过量). And more than 25,000 had to be taken away from their homes. Days later, the radioactive cloud had spread as far as Scotland. Its radiation was weak, but all over Europe radioactive rain was falling. In some areas people were advised not to eat fresh vegetables, or drink fresh milk, and the sale of meat was forbidden. The accident at Chernobyl was the world’s worst nuclear accident. In Britain, it convinced (使……相信) many people that all nuclear power stations should be shut down for good. But the Central Electricity Generating Board didn’t agree. They claimed that ·similar disasters could not happen in Britain because of safer designs, fewer deaths are caused using nuclear fuel (燃料) than by mining for coal or drilling for oil and gas. Nuclear accidents are unusually fewer compared with other types of accidents-such as air crashes, fires or dam break-down more nuclear power stations are necessary because the world’s supplies of oil, coal and natural gas are running out. In 1957 in Cumbria (Britain) a nuclear reactor overheated and caught fire. No one was killed but fourteen workers received radiation overdose. Small amounts of gas and dust were let out over the local countryside. An official report said the accident was nearly a full-scale disaster. The Nuclear Authority wanted the report published but the Prime Minister at the time refused. He thought that it would make people less confident in Britain’s nuclear industry. Thirty years later, the cabinet(内阁) records of 1957 were published. Only then did the public discover what had really happened in Cumbria. 小题1:. One result of the Chernobyl nuclear disaster was that ______.A.25,000 people were killed | B.fresh foods were polluted | C.people in Scotland were taken away from their homes | D.hundreds of houses in Chernobyl were destroyed | 小题2:.According to the passage, nuclear accidents______.A.are most unlikely to cause death | B.are always kept secret from the public | C.can only happen in underdeveloped countries | D.may happen in any country that has nuclear power station. | 小题3:. After the nuclear accident at Chernobyl many people in Britain _______.A.still believed it could not happen in their country. | B.were not convinced that nuclear power stations could be safe | C.accepted that there would be fewer deaths than in drilling for oil | D.supported nuclear power stations because world fuel supplies were low | 小题4:.. The British Government refused to publish the report on the Cumbria accident because _______.A.Britain’s supplies of oil, coal and gas were running out | B.it takes thirty years for the effects of radiation to appear | C.fewer people died in that accident than in other types of accidents | D.it was concerned that the British people would doubt their country’s nuclear expertise (核技术) |
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