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84. They’d like to see her daughter ____________, get married and have kids.

A.settle on B.settle up C.settle for D.settle down
科目 英语   题型 未知题型   难度 容易
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A newly-wedded couple on a four-month honeymoon were hit by six natural disasters, including the Australian floods, Christchurch earthquake and Japanese tsunami (海啸).
Stefan and Erika Svanstrom left Stockholm, Sweden, on December 6 and were immediately stuck in Munich, Germany, due to one of Europe's worst snowstorms.
Travelling with their baby daughter, they flew on to Cairns in Australia which was then struck by one of the most violent cyclones in the nation's history.
From there, the couple, in their 20s, were forced to shelter for 24 hours on the cement (水泥) floor of a shopping centre with 2,500 others.
“Trees were being knocked over and big branches were put down across the streets, ” Mr. Svanstrom told Sweden's Expressen newspaper. “We escaped by the skin of our teeth.”
Mr. Svanstrom said they then headed south to Brisbane but the city was experiencing massive flooding, so they crossed the country to Perth where they narrowly escaped burning bush fires.
The couple then flew to Christchurch, New Zealand, arriving just after a massive magnitude (震级) 6.3 earthquake attacked the city on February 22.
Mrs. Svanstrom said, “When we got there the whole town was like a war zone. We could not visit the city since it was completely blocked off, so instead we travelled around before going to Japan.”
But days after the Svanstroms arrived, Tokyo was rocked by Japan's largest earthquake since records began.
“The trembling was horrible and we saw roof tiles fly off the buildings,” Mr. Svanstrom said. “It was like the buildings were swaying back and forth.”
The family returned to Stockholm on March 29 after a much calmer visit to their last destination China.
But Mr. Svanstrom --- who also survived the destructive Boxing Day tsunami that hit southeast Asia in 2004 --- said the marriage was still going strong.
He added, “I know marriages have to experience some difficulties, but I think we have been through most of them. We've certainly experienced more than our fair share of disasters, but the most important thing is that we're together and happy.”
In Svanstrom's opinion, a marriage.

A.has to go peacefully and happily for all time
B.has to experience many disasters at the beginning
C.must always allow the couple be together and happy
D.should experience difficulties to make it steady

Why were Stefan and Erika Svanstrom stopped in Munich?

A.Christchurch earthquake stopped them.
B.Because of Europe's worst snowstorm.
C.The plane was damaged.
D.The trains broke down.

Which of the following statements is NOT true?

A.The family were stuck in a mall of Australia for twenty-four hours.
B.The family didn't experience any disaster in China.
C.During their stay in New Zealand, they also visited a war zone in the town.
D.The earthquake the family experienced in Tokyo was the largest one recorded in Japan.

The Svanstroms thought that Christchurch of New Zealand was.

A.disordered B.interesting
C.beautiful D.shaking

The best title for this passage is.

A.Meeting Disasters During Honeymoon
B.Six Natural Disasters
C.Newly-wed Couple Met Australian Floods
D.Japanese Tsunami

My older brother and I are busy (arrange) a trip to Africa. We will leave London on 15 July, and we’ll be flying to Morocco. We are going to travel on camels the Sahara Desert. After the trip by camel, we’re going to travel down the River Nile. We’ll start at Lake Victoria. A little way down the river from Lake Victoria, the water (actual) gets quite rough. So, we’ll go white-water rafting, is quite dangerous, but very exciting! After white-water rafting, we’re going on a trip to see wild animals in Kenya.
we’ll be walking for almost two weeks, I’ll need to buy a large, strong, light backpack advance to carry my (supply) of food and water. It is so dangerous that our guides will have guns (scare) the animals away if they come too near. I really want to see elephant close up. After that, we’ll be moving on to Tanzania, we’re going to climb Mount Kilimanjaro. The African part of our trip will take about four weeks and we will surely have a happy time.

“Now,” Mrs. Virginia DeView said, smiling, “we are going to discover our professions.” The class seemed to be greatly surprised. Our professions? We were only 13 and 14 years old! The teacher must be . “Yes, you will all be searching for your future . Each of you will have to someone in your field, plus give an oral report.”
Each day in her class, Virginia DeView reminded us about this. Finally, I picked print journalism. This I had to go to interview a true-blue newspaper reporter. I was extremely nervous. I sat down in front of him able to speak. He looked at me and said, “Did you bring a pencil or pen?”
I shook my head.
“How about some ?”
I shook my head again.
Finally, I thought he realized I was , and I got my first big tip as a . “Never, never go anywhere without a pen and paper. You never know what you’ll run into.” After a few days, I gave my oral report totally from memory in class. I got an A on the entire project.
Years later, I was in college looking around for a new career, but with no success. Then I Virginia DeView and my desire at 13 to be a journalist. And I called my parents. They didn’t me. They just reminded me how competitive the field was and all my life I had run away from competition. This was true. But journalism did something to me: it was in my blood. It gave me the freedom to go up to total strangers and ask what was .
For the past 12 years, I’ve had the most satisfying reporting career, stories from murders to airplane crashes and choosing my strongest area. When I went to pick up my phone one day, an incredible wave of memories hit me and I realized that had it not been for Virginia DeView, I would not be sitting at that desk.
I was all the time: “How did you pick journalism?”
“Well, you see, there was this teacher …” I always start out. I just wish I could thank her.

A.good B.mad C.careless D.curious

A.universities B.families C.professions D.lives

A.interview B.please C.admire D.respect

A.expressed B.ordered C.expected D.meant

A.hardly B.nearly C.naturally D.eagerly

A.drink B.newspapers C.preparations D.paper

A.satisfied B.comfortable C.terrified D.sorry

A.student B.journalist C.teacher D.writer

A.called B.recognized C.remembered D.visited

A.answer B.promise C.stop D.persuade

A.how B.whether C.why D.when

A.breaking in B.getting down C.falling off D.going on

A.making B.retelling C.covering D.writing

A.certainly B.finally C.doubtfully D.completely

A.hurt B.excited C.disappointed D.asked

在英语课堂上,你的周围有一些学习效率高的同学,他们表现突出,这与他们良好的习惯是分不开的。请就此话题用英语写一篇120词左右的短文,举一两个例子说明他们的良好习惯,并谈谈你的看法。

[1] Boys whose fathers work very long hours are more likely to be aggressive, according to a new research. A study of more than 1,400 children found those boys, whose fathers worked more than 55 hours a week, were more aggressive than their peers, yet the same thing didn’t happen to daughters. What’s more, mothers’ working hours did not seem to affect it.
[2] Now, further research needs to be carried out to find out why this happens in males, and to look for ways to tackle it. In Germany, 15 percent of fathers of children, aged three and four, worked 55 or more hours a week. Dr. Jianghong Li said, “It is possible when fathers work very long hours, children are less well monitored after school, especially if mothers also work full time hours. There is some evidence young boys are less well monitored than girls, when fathers have high work related demands. As a result, it will cause more problems.
[3] The average amount of time parents spend with their children has increased in recent years, but the quantity and quality of parent-child time is still raised as a concern. Studies in the US and Australia point to a desire among parents to work fewer hours and spend more time with their children. A wish among children is that parents would come home from work less tired and stressed.
[4] The finding provides evidence to support equal opportunities for mothers and fathers to share parenting and work responsibilities. Instead of focusing on negative effects of mothers’ working hours, policy makers should pay attention to negative results of fathers’ long working hours for children’s emotional well being. Fathers should be urged not to work long hours, but to have a greater share of parenting responsibilities.
What’s the main idea of the passage? (no more than 11 words)

How much time should fathers work a week at most according to the passage? (no more than 5 words)

What would happen if fathers work too long hours? (no more than 10 words)

What’s the desire among children according to the passage? (no more than 10 words)

What does the text suggest to us? (no more than 10 words)

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