People
People is America’s No.1 magazine about fascinating people. It’s a guide to who and what’s hot in the arts, science, business, politics, television, movies, books, music and sports. It is published weekly.
Publisher: The Time Inc. Magazine Company
Cover Price: $211.47
Our Price:$117.00
Issues(期数):53 issues/ 12 months
Lucky
Lucky is the shopping magazine with the best buys, and the fashion tips you’ll need before you hit the stores. What makes Lucky really different is that it gets you the information you need before anyone else has it.
Publisher: Conde Nast Publications Inc.
Cover Price: $35.40
Our Price:$15.00
Issues: 12 issues/ 12 months
Parents
The most trusted magazine for parents who want to raise smart, loving and self-confident children. Each issue has age-specific child-development guidance, advice on your child’s health and safety, and the best ways to encourage your child’s learning.
Publisher: Meredith Corporation
Cover Price: $42.00
Our Price:$9.97
Issues: 12 issues/ 12 months
Entertainment
This magazine covers movies, television, music, Broadway stage productions, books, and popular culture. Unlike celebrity-focused magazines like People, its main concentration is on entertainment media and reviews. It’s intended for a more general audience.
Publisher: The Time Inc. Magazine Company
Cover Price: $199.50
Our Price:$38.95
Issues: 62 issues/ 12 monthsWhich of the following comes out every week?
A.Lucky. | B.Parents |
C.Entertainment. | D.People. |
According to the passage, what makes Lucky so special?
A.It has lots of cartoons. |
B.It has pictures of stars. |
C.It tells you where to find bargains. |
D.It has information no one else has. |
The underlined phrase, “celebrity-focused magazines”, probably refers to magazines focusing on ______.
A.hot events and famous stars |
B.festivals and celebrations |
C.political events |
D.daily life |
You’re most likely to find the above information ______.
A.on a magazine club website |
B.in an educational magazine |
C.in a guide to magazines |
D.in a magazine sales report |
Buy ______, a reader can save most.
A.Lucky. | B.Parents |
C.Entertainment. | D.People. |
Once again, I was in a new school. So was a girl in my class named Lisa. That’s where the similarities ended.
I was tall and she was small. My thick black hair had been recently cut short into an untidy style. Her natural blonde hair flowed to her waist and looked great. I was 12 and one of the oldest in the class while she was 11 and the youngest. I was awkward and shy. She wasn’t. I couldn’t stand her, considering her my enemy. But she liked me and wanted to be friends.
One day, she invited me over and I said yes—I was too shocked to answer any other way. My family had moved six times in six years, and I had never managed to develop any friendships. But this girl who wore the latest fashions wanted me to go home with her after school.
She lived in a fun part of town that had two pizza places, an all-right bookstore, a movie theater and a park. As we walked from the school bus stop through her neighborhood, I tried to guess which house might be hers. Was it the white one with the perfect lawn or the three –story house with a front porch? I got very surprised when she led me into an old apartment building. She lived on the fourth floor in a two-room place with her mother, her stepfather, her two brothers and her sister.
When we got into the room she shared with her sister, she took out a big case of Barbies, which was my next surprise. I had never played with them. We sat on the floor, laughing as we made up crazy stories about the Barbies. We found out that we both wanted to be writers when we were older and both had wild imaginations. We had a great day that afternoon .
Lisa was loved by the whole neighborhood. The bookstore owners lent her fashion magazines; the movie theater gave her free tickets…. Soon I was included in her magic world. We slept over at each other’s houses and spent every free moment together.
Lisa, my first real friend since childhood, helped me get through the rough years of early adolescence and taught me an amazing and very surprising thing about making friends: your worst enemy can turn out to be your best friend.The writer and Lisa were similar in the way that.
A.they were both new students |
B.they had the same hair styles |
C.they were both tall |
D.they were of the same age |
One day Lisa invited the writer.
A.to go to the movie |
B.to go to walk in a park |
C.to go to her home |
D.to go to a pizza place |
In the passage the writer described Lisa as a girl who was.
A.friendly and lovely | B.rich and happy |
C.quiet and lonely | D.awkward and shy |
Which of the following did the writer learn from Lisa?
A.How to make up stories. | B.How to deal with enemies. |
C.How to live a better life. | D.How to make friends. |
A young father was visiting an old neighbor. They were standing in the old man's garden,and talking about children. The young man said,“How strict should parents be with their children?”
The old man pointed to a string(绳子)between a big strong tree and a thin young one.“Please untie(解开)that string,” he said.The young man untied it,and the young tree bent(弯)over to one side. “Now tie it again,please,” said the old man,“but first pull the string tight so that the young tree is straight again.”
The young man did so.Then the old man said,“There,it is the same with children.You must be strict with them,but sometimes you must untie the string to know how they are getting on. If they are not yet able to stand alone,you must tie the string tight again.But when you find that they are ready to stand alone,you can take the string away.”The story is about ______.
A.how to take care of young trees |
B. how strict parents should be with their children |
C.how the young father should get on with his old neighbor |
D. how to tie and untie the string |
The young man untied the string ______.
A.in order to throw it away |
B. so that both of the trees would grow straight |
C.only to find that the thinner one bent over to one side |
D. in order to let the old man teach him |
When can the string be taken away?______.
A.When the old man has left |
B.After you have untied it |
C.When the young man has untied it next time |
D.When the young tree grows strong enough |
In the story the relation(关系)of the big strong tree to the thin one is like that of ______.
A.the young father to the old neighbor |
B.parents to their children |
C.the old neighbor to the children of the young father |
D.grown ups to their parents |
Last year, two days after Christmas, we kicked China out of the house. Not the country obviously, but bits of plastic, metal, and wood with the words “Made in China”. We kept what we already had, but stopped bringing any more in. because it had coated our lives with toys, and useless stuff. Sometimes I worried about jobs sent overseas, but price triumphed over virtue at our house. We couldn’t resist what China was selling.
But on that dark Monday last year, an unease feeling washed over me as I sat on the sofa. It wasn’t until then that I noticed a fact: China was taking over the place.
It stared back at me from the empty screen of the television. I spied it in the pile of tennis shoes by the door. It glowed in the lights on the Christmas tree and watched me in the eyes of a doll lying on the floor, I slipped off the couch and sorted gifts into two piles: China and non-China. The count came to China, 25, the world, 14. Christmas, I realized, had become a holiday made by the Chinese. Suddenly I wanted China out.
I persuaded my husband, and on Jan. 1 st, we started a-year-long household embargo on Chinese imports. The idea wasn’t to punish China. And we didn’t fool ourselves into thinking because we wanted to measure how far it had pushed in. We wanted to know what it would take in time, money, and worry to kick our China habit!
In the spring, our 4-year-old son started a campaign to support “China things”. “It’s too long without China,” he cried. He kept at me all day. I have discovered for myself that China doesn’t control every aspect of our daily lives, but if you take a close look at the underside of boxes in the toy department, I promise it will give you pause. “When we can buy China things again? Let’s never stop.” My son said.
After a year without China I can tell you this: You can still live without it, but it’s getting costlier by the day. And a decade from now I may not be brave enough to try it again. The best title for the text could be _______.
A.China Free Living: A Trouble One |
B.A Year without “Made in China” |
C.Why I Choose “Made in China” |
D.“Made in China”: Good or Bad |
According to the passage, why did the author stop bringing in things “Made in China”?
A.Because she wanted to bring back job opportunities for her natives. |
B.Because she has a strong sense of nationalism against “Made in China”. |
C.Because she wanted to learn what life would be like without “Made in China”. |
D.Because too much stuff made in China was take over her house. |
The Underlined word “embargo” in the forth paragraph means ________.
A.reaction | B.ban |
C.restriction | D.cancellation |
The writer’s purpose in writing this passage is ________.
A.to tell the readers an interesting experience |
B.to describe the trouble facing a housewife |
C.to explain the importance of Chinese goods |
D.to show the difficulty without Chinese goods |
Old age may not sound exciting. But recent findings offer good news for older people and for people worried about getting older.
Researchers found that people become happier and experience less worry after they reach the age of fifty. In fact, they say by the age of eighty-five, people are happier with their life than they were when they were eighteen years old.
The findings came from a survey of more than three hundred forty thousand adults in the United States. The Gallup Organization questioned them by telephone in two thousand eight. At that time, the people were between the ages of eighteen and eighty-five.
The researchers asked questions about emotions like happiness, sadness and worry. They also asked about mental or emotional stress.
Arthur Stone in the Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Science at Stony Brook University in New York led the study. His team found that levels of stress were highest among adults between the ages of twenty-two and twenty-five.
The findings showed that stress levels dropped sharply after people reached their fifties.
Happiness was highest among the youngest adults and those in their early seventies. The people least likely to report feeling negative emotions were those in their seventies and eighties.
The study also showed that men and women have similar emotional patterns as they grow older. However, women at all ages reported more sadness, stress and worry than men.
The findings appeared in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Researchers say they do not know why happiness increases as people get older. One theory is that, as people grow older, they grow more thankful for what they have and have better control of their emotions. They also spend less time thinking about bad experiences.
Professor Stone says the emotional patterns could be linked to changes in how people see the world, or maybe even changes in brain chemistry.
The researchers also considered possible influences like having young children, being unemployed or being single. But they found that influences like these did not affect the levels of happiness and well-being related to age. What is the report about?
A.The relationship between happiness and age. |
B.The influence between happiness and unemployment. |
C.The tendency between family and health. |
D.The expectation between age and children. |
Suppose John is 90 years old and Mike is 24, which of the following is True about them according to the research?
A.John is happier and more energetic than Mike. |
B.Mike is happier but weaker than John. |
C.John is more sad and worried than Mike. |
D.Mike is more worried and depressed than John. |
One of the possible reasons why the older one gets, the happier one becomes is that _______.
A.they have had enough bad experiences |
B.they become more grateful about the things they own |
C.they have found it easy to forget their pains and pressures |
D.they have lost their ability to control themselves |
Which of the following is true according to the passage?
A.Having young children affects the levels of happiness of the old. |
B.Emotional patterns can change the physical structures of human’s brains. |
C.It’s reported that women at all ages are happier than men. |
D.Why happiness increases as people get older is still an unsolved mystery. |
“Soon, you’re going to have to move out!” cried my neighbor upon seeing the largest tomato plant known to mankind, or at least known in my neighborhood.
One tiny 9-inch plant, bought for $1.25 in the spring, has already taken over much of my rose bed, covering much of other plants, and is well on its way to the front door.
Roses require a good deal of care, and if it weren’t for the pleasure they give, it wouldn’t be worth the work. As it is, I have a garden full of sweet-smelling roses for most of the year. Bushes must be pruned(剪枝) in early spring, leaving ugly woody branches until the new growth appears a few weeks later. It was the space available in the garden that led me into planting just one little tomato plant. A big mistake.
Soil conditions made just perfect for roses turn out be even more perfect for tomatoes. The daily watering coupled with full sun and regular fertilizing have turned the little plant into a tall bush. The cage I placed around it as the plant grew has long since disappeared under the thick leaves.
Now the task I face in harvesting the fruit is twofold; First, I have to find the red ones among the leaves, which means I almost have to stand on my head, and once found I have to reach down and under, pick the tomatoes and withdraw(缩回) my full fist without dropping the prize so dearly won. I found two full-blown white roses completely hidden as I picked tomatoes in June. But they were weak and the leaves already yellow for lack of light.
Here I am faced with a painful small decision: To tear up a wonderful and productive tomato plant that offers up between ten and twenty ripe sweet tomatoes each day or say goodbye to several expensive and treasured roses. Like Scarlett in Gone With the Wind, I’ll think about that tomorrow. What ate the requirements for the healthy growth of rose?
A.A lot of care and the right soil. |
B.Frequent pruning and fertilizing. |
C.Tomato plants grown alongside. |
D.Cages placed around the roots. |
The writer planted the tomato because ________.
A.it cost only $1.25 |
B.the soil was just right for it |
C.there was room for it in the garden |
D.the roses’ branches needed to be covered |
This year the writer’s roses were _______.
A.removed from the rose bed |
B.picked along with the tomatoes |
C.mostly damaged by too much sunlight |
D.largely hidden under the tomato plant |
By saying “the prize so dearly won” in paragraph 5, the writer wants to _______.
A.show the difficulty in picking the tomatoes |
B.show the hardship of growing the roses |
C.express her liking for the roses |
D.express her care for the tomatoes |