In the eighteenth century one of the first modern economists, Adam Smith, thought that “ the whole annual produce of the land and labour of every country” provided revenue to “three different orders of people: those who live by rent, those who live by wages, and those who live by profit”. Each successive stage of the industrial revolution, however, made the social structure more complicated.
Many intermediate groups grew up during the nineteenth century between the upper middle class and the working class. There were small-scale industrialists as well as large ones, small shopkeepers and tradesmen, officials and salaried employees, skilled and unskilled workers, and professional men such as doctors and teachers. Farmers and peasants continued in all countries as independent groups.
During the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries the possession of wealth inevitably affected a person’s social position. Intelligent industrialists with initiative made fortunes by their wits which lifted them into an economic group far higher than that of their working-class parents. But they lacked social training of the upper class, who despised them as the “new rich.”
They often sent their sons and daughters to special schools to acquire social training. Here their children, mixed with the children of the upper classes, were accepted by them, and very often found marriage partners from among them. In the same way, a thrifty, hardworking labourer, though not clever himself, might save for his son enough to pay for an extended secondary school education in the hope that he would move in a “white-collar” occupation, carrying with it a higher salary and a move up in the social scale.
In the twentieth century the increased taxation of higher incomes, the growth of the social services, and the wider development of educational opportunity have considerably altered the social outlook. The upper classes no longer are the sole, or even the main possessors of wealth, power and education, though inherited social position still carries considerable prestige.What criterion did Adam Smith seem to go by in his classification of social groups?
A.The amount of wealth | B.The amount of money |
C.The social status | D.The way of getting money |
If you compare the first and second paragraph, what groups of people did Adam Smith leave out in his classification?
A.Officials and employees. | B.Peasants and farmers. |
C.Doctors and teachers. | D.Tradesmen and landlords. |
Who were the ‘new rich’ during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries?
A.They were still the upper class people. |
B.They were owners of large factories. |
C.They were intelligent industrialists. |
D.They were skilled workers who made their fortune. |
According to the passage, what did those people do who intended to make their children move up in the social ladder?
A.They saved a lot of money for their children to receive higher education. |
B.They tried to find marriage partners from the children of the upper class. |
C.They made greater fortunes by their wits. |
D.They worked even harder to acquire social training. |
In the twentieth century class differences have been partly smoothed out by ____.
A.increased income and decreased taxation |
B.taxation, social services and educational opportunities |
C.education, the increase of income and industrial development |
D.the decrease of the upper class population |
I am an e-mail user.When I first started to use the e-mail system. I used to read all my e-mail.I didn’t have much mail.1 was very excited about receiving any e-mail.I gave my friends my e-mail address.Soon I had more mail than 1 wanted.Some of the mail was junk mail.1 was worried.I didn't want my mail to control me.
I've tried some methods to help me get control of my mail.First,I check my mail at the same time every day.Also I try to allow myself only 15-20 minutes every day to process my e-mail.This doesn't always work,but I try.Sometimes I save the messages.Sometimes I just read them,maybe answer a few,and then delete them.Sometimes I'm not at all interested in a message,so I don't even open it.I delete it right away.This is very much the way I go through the mail that the postal service delivers to my home.
These methods are very simple.I have some friends who are very clever with computers.From time to time,they teach me new tricks for managing my e-mail.I've also learned to transfer(转存)some messages to a disk so they don't fill up my mail files(文件夹).Then I can read them later and maybe use them in my work.I'm still amazed at what e-mail can do for me! I'm still worried,however,about having too much to read. The writer used to read all his e-mail because __________.
A.he didn’t have much mail | B.he had nothing else to do |
C.he didn’t know how to read mail | D.he was forced to do that |
Which of the following does NOT belong to the ways of the writer’s dealing with his mail?
A.Saving the message | B.Just reading more |
C.Deleting some | D.Passing some into friends |
What does the underlined word “they” in the last paragraph refer to?
A.messages | B.friends | C.computers | D.methods |
What’s the purpose of the writer to write this passage?
A.To share happiness in using mail with us |
B.To share some worries in using mail with us |
C.To share some methods of using computer with us |
D.To persuade us out of using mail |
Air travel is such an everyday experience these days that we are not surprised when we read about a politician having talks with the Japanese Prime Minister one day, attending a meeting in Australia the following morning and having to be off at midday to sign a trade agreement in Hong Kong. But frequent long-distance flying can be so tiring that the traveler begins to feel his brain is in one country, his digestion in another and his powers of concentration nowhere---in short, he hardly knows where he is.
Air travel is so quick nowadays that we can leave London after breakfast and be in New York in eight hours, yet what really disturbs us most is that when we arrive it is lunch time while we have already had lunch on the plane and are expecting dinner.
Doctors say that air travelers are in no condition to work after crossing a number of time zones. Airline pilots, however, often live by their own watches.After a long air travel, a traveler _______.
A.finds himself in a different world |
B.finds his brain apart from his body |
C.finds himself in Hong Kong the following morning |
D.has little sense about where he is |
After a traveler arrives in New York from London, he______.
A.feels tired and needs a good rest |
B.feels hungry and needs another lunch |
C.doesn’t want to have supper |
D.has not had lunch yet |
Which statement is right? _______.
A.A traveler from London to New York needs lunch during his travel |
B.A traveler from London to New York doesn’t need any lunch on the plane |
C.The lunch hour in New York is eight hours later than that in London |
D.In fact, the distance from London to New York is only four hours’ trip by air |
The sentence “Airline pilots often live by their own watches.” means______.
A.they don’t trust others’ watches |
B.they don’t change their watches |
C.they make a living by their own watches |
D.they do as they used to do |
Doctors suggest the travelers_______?
A.should rest when they arrive in New York from London. |
B.should work in good condition since they just finish a long journey. |
C.rest in a place with good condition. |
D.give up long journey since it makes them tired. |
Our eating habits are very important for good health and a strong body. There are times when most of us would have sweets and ice-cream rather than eat meat and rice. Sweets and ice-cream are not bad for the stomach if we eat at the end of a meal. If we drink beer at meals, it may take away our appetite. It is important for us to eat our meal at the same time each day. When we feel hungry, it is a sign that our body needs food. When we feel angry or excited, we may not want to eat. A long time ago, in England, some judges used to decide whether a man was telling the truth by giving him some dry bread. If the man could not swallow the bread, it was a sign that he was not telling the truth. Although this seems very strange and rather foolish, it is indeed an excellent way of finding out the truth. A man who is worrying about something has difficulty in swallowing anything dry. Because he is worried, he loses his appetite and does not want to eat. Why do we have to form good eating habits?
A.Because we want to eat more. |
B.Because we enjoy our meal. |
C.Because we want to save time. |
D.Because we want to keep fit. |
When do you think it is good to eat sweets and ice-cream according to the passage?
A.When we are happy |
B.When we have a good appetite. |
C.After a meal. |
D.Before a meal |
The word“swallow” means______.
A.take into the stomach through the throat |
B.eat with difficulty |
C.break with the teeth before taking in |
D.drink like a fish |
When does the writer think it would be better to have our meal?.
A.When our work is over. |
B.At the fixed time every day. |
C.When we feel happy. |
D.When every family member is home. |
What could a man do if he told a lie according to some judges in old England?.
A.He could eat a lot of food. |
B.He could hardly need any food. |
C.He could swallow some dry bread easily. |
D.He could not swallow any dry bread. |
After a day of work and play, the body needs to rest. Sleep is necessary for good health. During this time, the body recovers from the activities of the previous day. The rest that you get while sleeping enables your body to prepare itself for the next day.
There are four levels of sleep, each being a little deeper than the one before. As you sleep, your muscles relax little by little. Your heart beats more slowly, and your brain slows down. After you reach the fourth level, your body shifts back and forth from one level of sleep to the other.
Although your mind slows down, from time to time you will dream. Scientists who study sleep state that when dreaming occurs your eyeballs begin to move quickly (although your eyelids are closed). This stage of sleep is called REM, which stands for rapid eye movement.
If you have trouble falling asleep, some people recommend breathing very slowly and very deeply. Other people believe that drinking warm milk will help make you drowsy. There is also an old suggestion that counting sheep will put you to sleep.A good title for this passage is _______.
A.Sleep. | B.Good Health | C.Dreams | D.Work and Rest |
The word “drowsy” in the last paragraph means_______.
A.sick | B.asleep | C.a little sleepy | D.noisy |
This passage suggests that not getting enough sleep might make you _______.
A.dream more | B.have poor health | C.nervous | D.breathe quickly |
During REM ________.
A.your eyes move quickly | B.you dream |
C.you are restless | D.both A and B |
The average number of hours of sleep that an adult needs is_________.
A.approximately(大约) six hours. | B.around ten hours. |
C.about eight hours | D.not stated here. |
Miss Popular
I was awkward in middle school: bony and athletic, with a high grade in science and a low one in self-esteem. Though I had a few friends, I wasn’t popular. I was picked last in football and I sometimes ate lunch by myself.
I remember the day Brittany came to our school. Her teeth were crooked(歪斜的), and she was a little overweight. Not that this mattered though, because she walked around like she was better than all of us. She was outspoken and incredibly frightening, making people lose confidence.
Around Brittany, I tried my best to go unnoticed. Standing out or stealing her spotlight could only result in one thing: conflict. Brittany was always the first girl picked for teams; I was lucky if I was picked at all. I was thrown the ball while she stood with the quarterback, chatting about the last party she’d gone to. I had never been to a party before or kissed a boy.
One day, a classmate asked me to the school dance. I was flattered. Then Brittany told me during science class that she had persuaded him to invite me. She asked in front of everyone, “Why would anyone even want you?” I went home and cried.
Although she was seemingly perfect in everyone’s eyes, I wanted to be everything that she wasn’t and yet a million times more perfect. Brittany was so frightening and violent, but I wanted to be calm and not at all aggressive.
I found Brittany’s online profile a few weeks ago. She still had the same chubby(圆胖脸) face and mocking(嘲笑的)simile, and had posted half-naked pictures of herself. But as I read on, I realized that Brittany had died in a drunken driving accident a year ago. She had been 16 and pregnant at the time. Suddenly my view of Brittany changed from a bad influence into a struggling little girl whose life was taken before she could understand right from wrong. My experience with Brittany taught me that though we are all innocent in our youth, the choices we make will have great effects on us forever. I will always remember Brittany as that loud, overconfident girl. As part of that shy insecure person I used to be will always keep me modest.Fromthefirst three passages wecanconcludethat .
A.the author was trying to avoid conflict with Brittany |
B.the author secretly envied Brittany for being popular |
C.Brittany’s appearance made her popular with boys |
D.Brittany was puzzled at how she could be popular |
Which of the following is TRUE about Brittany?
A.She didn’t mean to hurt the author. |
B.She took delight in hurting others. |
C.Her confidence came from her popularity. |
D.Her overweight made her more outspoken. |
According to the passage we can learn that the author.
A.was afraid of Brittany and followed her lead |
B.saw the influence that low self-esteem can have |
C.was determined to be better than Brittany |
D.knew she was quietly different from Brittany |
Thelast passage is meant to .
A.tell us the reason for Brittany’s death |
B.present the changed attitude to Brittany |
C.show the influences of the youth |
D.stress the importance of behaviors |