While Andrew was getting ready for work one Friday morning, he announced to his wife that he had finally decided to ask his boss for a salary raise. All day Andrew felt nervous and anxious as he thought about the upcoming showdown. What if Mr. Larchmont refused to grant his request? Andrew had worked so hard in the last 18 months and landed some great accounts for Braer and Hopkins Advertising Agency. Of course, he deserved a wage increase.
The thought of walking into Larchmont’s office left Andrew weak in the knees. Late in the afternoon he was finally courageous enough to approach his superior. To his delight and surprise, the ever-frugal(一向节俭的)Harvey Larchmont agreed to give Andrew a raise!
Andrew arrived home that evening—despite breaking all city and state speed limits—to a beautiful table set with their best china, and candles lit. His wife, Tina, had prepared a delicate meal including his favorite dishes. Immediately he figured someone from the office had tipped her off!
Next to his plate Andrew found a beautiful lettered note. It was from his wife. It read: “Congratulations, my love! I knew you’d get the raise! I prepared this dinner to show just how much I love you. I am so proud of your accomplishments!” He read it and stopped to reflect on how sensitive and caring Tina was.
After dinner, Andrew was on his way to the kitchen to get dessert when he observed that a second card had slipped out of Tina’s pocket onto the floor. He bent forward to pick it up. It read: “Don’t worry about not getting the raise! You do deserve one! You are a wonderful provider and I prepared this dinner to show you just how much I love you even though you did not get the increase.”
Suddenly tears swelled in Andrew’s eyes. Total acceptance! Tina’s support for him was not conditional upon his success at work.
The fear of rejection is often softened and we can undergo almost any setback or rejection when we know someone loves us regardless of our success or failure.What was Andrew’s plan that Friday?
A.To request a wage increase from his boss. |
B.To get a job with the Braer and Hopkins Advertising Agency. |
C.To celebrate his success with his wife at home. |
D.To ask his boss to come for dinner. |
On his way back home, Andrew _________.
A.felt weak in the knees | B.was punished by the traffic policeman |
C.was too eager to share the news | D.couldn’t wait to enjoy a meal |
Which of the following statements about the story is FALSE?
A.Andrew was afraid that his request would lead to disaster. |
B.Andrew had worked very hard and done his part for the company. |
C.Andrew’s boss agreed to his request. |
D.One of Andrew’s colleagues had told his wife the good news. |
Why did Tina prepare a grand dinner for Andrew that day?
A.She was confident of his getting a pay raise. |
B.She meant to show her support whatever the result would be. |
C.She believed that her husband was the best in his company. |
D.She wanted to express her gratitude for his devotion to the family. |
We can conclude from the text that ______.
A.we should never be afraid to ask for what is due to us |
B.work hard and you will be rewarded |
C.many fears turn out to be unfounded |
D.unconditional love brings courage and strength |
Throughout his early years, Obama was known at home and at school as “Barry”. Obama’s parents met while both were attending the University of Hawaii at Manoa, where his father was enrolled(登记入读) as a foreign student. They separated when he was two years old and later divorced(离婚). His father received Master’s degree in Economics from Harvard University, then returned to Kenya, where he became a finance minister before dying in an automobile accident in 1982. His mother married another foreign student, Lolo Soetoro, and the family moved to Soetoro’s home country of Indonesia in 1967. Obama attended local schools in Jakarta, from age 6 to 10, where classes were taught in the Indonesian language.
During his time in Indonesia, he first attended St. Francis Assist Catholic school for almost three years. When Obama was in third grade he wrote an essay saying that he wanted to be president. His teacher later said that his reason for becoming president was that he wanted to make everybody happy.
Obama returned to Honolulu to live with his materal(母亲一方的) grandparents while attending Punahou School, a private college elementary school, from the fifth grade until his graduation in 1979. Obama’s mother, Ann, died of cancer a few months after the publication of his 1995 memoir(传记), Dreams from My Father.
In the memoir, Obama describes his experiences growing up in his mother’s middle class family. Of his early childhood, Obama writes, “That my father looked nothing like the people around me---that he was black as pitch(沥青), my mother white as milk .”
Some of his fellow students at Punahou School later told the Honolulu Star—Bulletin that Obama was mature(成熟的) for his age as a high school student and that he sometimes attended parties and other events in order to connect with African American college students and military service people.When Obama was a child, _________.
A.people used to call him Berry |
B.his father died of serious illness |
C.his father became a finance minister of America |
D.his parents attended Harvard University |
Which of the following is TURE about Lolo Soetoro?
A.He got college education in Indonesia |
B.He is a person from Kenya in Africa |
C.He is Obama’s stepfather and is a black |
D.He is a foreign student in America |
Obama’s mother, Ann, died of cancer in about ________ while his father died in _________.
A.1982; 1967 | B.1967; 1982 | C.1979; 1967 | D.1995; 1982 |
Which of the following is NOT true?
A.Obama’s father was very black while his mother very white |
B.Obama’s materal grandparents lived in Honolulu of Indonesia |
C.Obama wanted to be president because he liked making people happy |
D.Obama’s classmates thought he was mature for his age as a high school student |
Sometimes there doesn’t seem to be enough rain. Other times there is too much. Maybe thereisn’t a lot we can do to control the rain, but there is a lot we can do to reduce problems caused bydifferent rainfall patterns.
A new development at the London Wetland Centre in Barnes solves the problems of managingwater with a “Rain Garden”. We are likely to be hearing about it a lot more often over the next fewyears. The idea is that the garden owner can store rainwater and use it in dry periods. They canreduce the problems caused by extra rain this way.
One of the key problems that the rain garden tries to deal with is the problem caused by toomuch water in the street. In a natural environment, a lot of rainwater is sent back into the air byplants. Much is also absorbed deep into the ground, and flows into streams and rivers. What happensin city environments can be completely different —— a large amount of rainwater flows straight offthe hard surfaces of roofs and roads. The harder the rain, the less likely it will be absorbed into theground —— floods are the result. Rainwater running off roads is often polluted.
The rain garden deals with living plants rather than hard surfaces. Plants are designed to holdwater and release it slowly, either into the ground, to be absorbed by plant roots (and so eventuallyback up into the atmosphere) or to go down into the water table. Not only does the rain gardenreduce the amount of water that flows onto the street, but it helps to clean it because plants are very goodat breaking down pollutants(污染物).What’s the main idea of the first paragraph?
A.Explaining why there is a lack of rain at times. |
B.Introducing several different patterns of rainfall. |
C.Telling us how to avoid problems caused by rain. |
D.Giving the idea that there are ways to manage rain water. |
According to the second paragraph, “Rain Gardens" are likely to _____.
A.harm the environment in the short run |
B.become popular over the next few years |
C.be turned down by most new developments |
D.be too expensive for common people to accept |
We can learn from the third paragraph that _____.
A.floods are often the results of small rains |
B.a heavy rain is less difficult for plants to absorb |
C.the rain garden helps send rainwater back into the air |
D.larger amounts of rainwater flow straight off in city environments |
According to the last paragraph, what does the rain garden help to clean?
A.The plants | B.The ground. | C.The water. | D.The street. |
D
At the railway stations all across Britain next week, groups of students will gather with their backpacks to wait for the trains that will carry them home for Christmas. This is a large movement of human beings as before, but with more contradictory traffic flows, so that trains filled with the young pass each other travelling in every direction.
At first, I went home every weekend with my washing, but then those visits became less regular. How did I let my parents know I was coming? They had no phone. Perhaps I wrote to them (“Expect me with dirty shirts this Friday afternoon”), but more likely I didn’t let them know, and just turned up or didn’t turn up, not understanding that my parents’ hopes of seeing me were a greater disappointment of my carelessness than a spoiled tea.
And in all this I suspect I was typical (有代表性的), at least of young men. As for our fathers and mothers, none of them talked of “empty-nest syndrome (综合症)”, even though its possible effect that the main human duty is to protect and feed the young would have suited their generation better than ours. Then, the feeling of loss went without a name. Today, it’s a condition with remedies, which will make parents feel more enjoyable in their life, The Mayo Clinic, for example, suggests you try to maintain regular contact with your children through “visits, phone calls, emails, texts or video chats”. If you feel unhappy, lean on (depend on … for support) loved ones or your mental health providers. Above all, stay positive: “Thinking about the extra time and energy that you might have to devote to your marriage or personal interests after your last child leaves home, it might help you adapt to this major life change.”
What can’t be denied, however, is that children often leave home. In modern societies, this is what they do. Christmas is the very time they can be depended on to return. For the non-religious, that may be this season’s true comfort and significance.The main reason for the busy traffic across Britain next week is that _______.
A.young students will travel home for Christmas. |
B.young people will travel in every direction. |
C.it is a large movement of human beings |
D.the traffic flows will be more contradictory |
From the second paragraph we can learn that the writer _______.
A.went home every week to wash dirty clothes |
B.understood his parents’ desire of seeing him |
C.didn’t understand his parents’ feelings |
D.went home to see his parents regularly |
The underlined word “remedies” in paragraph 3 is closest in meaning to _______.
A.reasons | B.excuses | C.habits | D.solutions |
From the last paragraph we know that _______.
A.in modern society, children should leave home |
B.Christmas is likely a time for family reunion |
C.the significance of Christmas is celebration |
D.Christmas is not a comfort for the non-religious |
From the passage we can infer that by writing the article the writer is to _______.
A.persuade the young to show concern for their parents |
B.ask the young to go home regularly |
C.make the young understand their parents’ interest |
D.enable the young to be more independent |
C
All parents know that one of their most important tasks is to prepare their children for an independent life, but any parent can tell you that it’s hard to let go of your children. That balance between keeping your children safe and allowing them to learn from their own mistakes can be heartbreaking. Years of experience means that parents often do know best, but on the other hand the young, being less bound by tradition, are often more creative, more able to find new solutions to old problems. Revolutions are led by the young.
Good teachers make the growth of critical thinking (批判性思维) easier in their students, only to find that this lead to a questioning of the teachers’ basic beliefs. Schools encourage parents to become involved, but are often embarrassed when parents have doubts about some of the educational methods being used. Governments encourage unimportant groups to empower themselves in order to participate fully in the development process. And they are often surprised when the new leaders of these groups turn around and attack the policies or decisions of that same government. However, the rebellious (叛逆的) young and the newly unimportant groups are important in social development. They are not necessarily representatives of those they want to represent in their demands, but their voices must be heard.
Good parents know that just forbidding (禁止) particular behaviors does not prevent their children from finding ways to engage in these forbidden activities. Indeed, sometimes the forbidden fruit is more inviting, just because it is not accepted by authority. Parents must work with their children to educate them on the facts, know as much as possible about the lives of their children, provide a good example, encourage more wholesome activities but also support their children when they don’t follow what is expected of them. But the most important point is that they also need to learn how to let go.By saying “Revolutions are led by the young.”, the author indicates that young people are more _______.
A.conventional | B.realistic | C.creative | D.heartbreaking |
From the second Paragraph we know ________.
A.teachers’ basic beliefs should be questioned by students |
B.schools encourage parents to question their education methods |
C.government is satisfied with the new leaders’ attack on the policies |
D.the voice of the rebellious young should be heard by the government |
In order to educate children well, parents should _______.
A.forbid particular behaviors in their daily life |
B.know them well and set a good example to them |
C.educate them with facts and expect much of them |
D.know as much as possible about their children |
From the passage we can learn that the author prefers _______.
A.free parenting | B.traditional parenting |
C.critical parenting | D.smart parenting |
What is the best title of the passage?
A.Letting Go – for Children’s Independent Life |
B.Parents’ Task – in Children’s Development |
C.Way of Growth – for the Young Groups |
D.Teaching Methods – for Teachers and Schools |
B
What happens inside the skull of a soccer player when repeatedly heads a soccer ball? That question motivated a challenging new study of the brains of experienced players that has caused discussion and debate among soccer players, and some anxiety among those of us with soccer-playing children.
For the study, researchers at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York selected 34 adults, men and women. All of the volunteers had played soccer since childhood and now competed year-round in adult soccer leagues. Each filled out a detailed questionnaire developed especially for this study to determine how many times they had headed a soccer ball in the previous year, as well as whether they had experienced any known concussions (脑震荡) in the past.
Then the players completed computerized tests of their memory and other learning skills and had their brains scanned, using a complicated new M.R.I. technique which can find structural changes in the brain that can’t be seen during most scans.
According to the data they presented at Radiological Society of North America meeting last month, the researchers found that the players who had headed the ball more than about 1,100 times in the previous 12 months showed significant loss of white matter in parts of their brains involved with memory, attention and the processing of visual information, compared with players who had headed the ball fewer times.
This pattern of white matter loss is “similar to those seen in traumatic (外伤的) brain injury”, like that after a serious concussion, the researchers reported, even though only one of these players was reported to have ever experienced a concussion.
The players who had headed the ball about 1,100 times or more in the past year were also generally worse at recalling lists of words read to them, forgetting or fumbling the words far more often than players who had headed the ball less. The passage is most probably a ________.
A.news report | B.research report |
C.story for soccer players | D.text for doctors |
In which way can researchers find the structural changes in the brain?
A.Computerized test | B.Questionnaire |
C.Scanning | D.M.R.I. technique |
From the passage we can conclude that frequent heading may have ________.
A.significant effect on brain | B.little effect on one’s brain |
C.nothing to do with the brain injury | D.one’s memory improved |
What is likely to be the cause of memory loss?
A.Playing soccer frequently | B.Tests of their memory |
C.White matter loss | D.Information processing |
The underlined word “fumbling” is closest in meaning to ________?
A.remembering | B.misunderstanding | C.recalling | D.missing |