A rude kid and his mates were visiting a theme park. They arrived very and everything was empty and clean. A park cleaner came , singing and dancing as he swept. As everything was already so clean, the group of friends found it to see the cleaner working so carefully, and so early in the morning. They had a great time making of him. But the cleaner didn’t , and just kept sweeping the area.
So the gang (一伙人) started bags and bits of paper on the ground, ‘to give him something to do’. When more visitors started , and saw the kids throwing trash about, they thought it was one of the park’s fun activities, so they in. And as more people arrived, the park became covered in . The park cleaner couldn’t .
As time went , the park attractions were emptying, and more people were looking down at the rubbish on the ground. , no one was on any of the park rides (游乐设施). They were all about, looking at the ground. “Well,” said the park authorities, “What is going on here?” Well... Everyone was looking for something!
It out that some time during that day, everyone had dropped something on the ground, but now that it was with trash. Whenever anyone dropped anything, it was almost to find it!
There was no other than to have everyone help to clean the park, so they could find their things. by the park cleaner, the visitors swept the ground singing and dancing all the while. It became so much fun that from that day they a new activity in the park, in which everyone, with brushes and bags, spends a while cleaning, laughing and dancing.
A.late B.early C.tidy D.strange
A.by B.in C.across D.out
A.attractive B.difficult C.amusing D.scaring
A.games B.fun C.face D.sense
A.sing B.dance C.mind D.hear
A.picking B.making C.collecting D.throwing
A.arriving B.leaving C.working D.searching
A.interested B.took C.joined D.came
A.rubbish B.visitors C.cleaners D.addition
A.find B.help C.stop D.cope
A.away B.up C.down D.on
A.Since then B.At last C.Not yet D.Even though
A.standing B.sitting C.playing D.laughing
A.found B.turned C.became D.started
A.blended B.missed C.covered D.changed
A.unreal B.probable C.important D.impossible
A.solution B.cleaner C.service D.activity
A.Attracted B.Encouraged C.Improved D.Served
A.created B.discovered C.celebrated D.hosted
A.prepared B.faced C.armed D.left
My life as a tax-paying employed person began in middle school, when, for three whole days, I worked in a baking factory.
My best friend Betsy's father was a manager at Hough Bakeries, which, at Easter time, ____41____little bunny ( 兔子 ) cakes for all its ____42____throughout Cleveland. It happened that the plant downtown needed eight kids for ____43____help during our spring break, for which I had no ____44____beyond listening to my favorite records. I'd ____45____minimum wage. I'd see how a factory ____46____. My parents thought all of this was a grand idea and called Betsy's dad with their ____47____.
Our ____48____in the factory were simple: Place cakes on a moving belt. Attach icing (糖霜) ears. Apply icing eyes and nose. ____49____bunny from the belt. This was _____50_____than it sounds. _____51_____a bit and the cakes pile up. As I told my parents at dinner that first night, it was all a little more high-pressure than I'd _____52_____.
Dad ____53____. The son of a grocer, he'd spent the summers of his childhood _____54_____food in Benardsville, New Jersey. This was the sort of work that made you _____55_____the dollars you earned and respect those who did the work, he told me.
41.
A. |
sold |
B. |
ordered |
C. |
made |
D. |
reserved |
42.
A. |
stores |
B. |
families |
C. |
schools |
D. |
citizens |
43.
A. |
generous |
B. |
financial |
C. |
technical |
D. |
temporary |
44.
A. |
plans |
B. |
problems |
C. |
excuses |
D. |
hobbies |
45.
A. |
offer |
B. |
earn |
C. |
set |
D. |
suggest |
46.
A. |
worked |
B. |
closed |
C. |
developed |
D. |
survived |
47.
A. |
ambition |
B. |
permission |
C. |
experience |
D. |
invitation |
48.
A. |
joys |
B. |
ideas |
C. |
roles |
D. |
choices |
49.
A. |
Save |
B. |
Keep |
C. |
Stop |
D. |
Remove |
50.
A. |
harder |
B. |
better |
C. |
longer |
D. |
cheaper |
51.
A. |
Calm down |
B. |
Slow down |
C. |
Stay on |
D. |
Move on |
52.
A. |
indicated |
B. |
witnessed |
C. |
expected |
D. |
remembered |
53.
A. |
cried |
B. |
smiled |
C. |
hesitated |
D. |
refused |
54.
A. |
tasting |
B. |
finding |
C. |
sharing |
D. |
delivering |
55.
A. |
withdraw |
B. |
donate |
C. |
receive |
D. |
appreciate |
My husband and I just spent a week in Paris. ____36____So the first thing we did was rent a fantastically expensive sixth-floor apartment the size of a cupboard. It was so tiny that we had to leave our suitcases in the hallway.
The place wasn't entirely authentic,though. Unlike a normal Parisian apartment, the plumbing (水管) worked. ____37____Our building even had a tiny lift with a female voice that said, "Ouverture des portes," in perfect French. That is the only French phrase I mastered, and it's a shame I don't have much use for it.
Parisians are different from you and me. They never look lazy or untidy. As someone noted in this paper a couple of weeks ago, they eat great food and never gain weight. ____38____French strawberries do not taste like cardboard. Instead, they explode in your mouth like little flavor bombs.
____39____On our first morning in Paris, I went around the corner to the food market to pick up some groceries. I bought a handful of perfectly ripe small strawberries and a little sweet melon. My husband and I agreed they were the best fruit we had ever eaten. But they cost $18!
In France, quality of life is much more important than efficiency.
You can tell this by cafés life. French cafés are always crowded. ____40____When do these people work? The French take their 35-hour workweek seriously - so seriously that some labor unions recently struck a deal with a group of companies limiting the number of hours that independent contractors can be on call.
A. |
Not all the customers are tourists. |
B. |
The quality of life in France is equally excellent. |
C. |
There was a nice kitchen and a comfortable bed. |
D. |
The amazing food is mainly consumed by local farmers. |
E. |
That's not the only reason the French eat less than we do. |
F. |
Our aim was to see if we could live, in some way, like real Parisians. |
G. |
The food is so delicious that you don't need much of it to make you happy. |
My life as a tax-paying employed person began in middle school, when, for three whole days, I worked in a baking factory.
My best friend Betsy's father was a manager at Hough Bakeries, which, at Easter time, ____41____little bunny ( 兔子 ) cakes for all its ____42____throughout Cleveland. It happened that the plant downtown needed eight kids for ____43____help during our spring break, for which I had no ____44____beyond listening to my favorite records. I'd ____45____minimum wage. I'd see how a factory ____46____. My parents thought all of this was a grand idea and called Betsy's dad with their ____47____.
Our ____48____in the factory were simple: Place cakes on a moving belt. Attach icing (糖霜) ears. Apply icing eyes and nose. ____49____bunny from the belt. This was _____50_____than it sounds. _____51_____a bit and the cakes pile up. As I told my parents at dinner that first night, it was all a little more high-pressure than I'd _____52_____.
Dad ____53____. The son of a grocer, he'd spent the summers of his childhood _____54_____food in Benardsville, New Jersey. This was the sort of work that made you _____55_____the dollars you earned and respect those who did the work, he told me.
41.
A. |
sold |
B. |
ordered |
C. |
made |
D. |
reserved |
42.
A. |
stores |
B. |
families |
C. |
schools |
D. |
citizens |
43.
A. |
generous |
B. |
financial |
C. |
technical |
D. |
temporary |
44.
A. |
plans |
B. |
problems |
C. |
excuses |
D. |
hobbies |
45.
A. |
offer |
B. |
earn |
C. |
set |
D. |
suggest |
46.
A. |
worked |
B. |
closed |
C. |
developed |
D. |
survived |
47.
A. |
ambition |
B. |
permission |
C. |
experience |
D. |
invitation |
48.
A. |
joys |
B. |
ideas |
C. |
roles |
D. |
choices |
49.
A. |
Save |
B. |
Keep |
C. |
Stop |
D. |
Remove |
50.
A. |
harder |
B. |
better |
C. |
longer |
D. |
cheaper |
51.
A. |
Calm down |
B. |
Slow down |
C. |
Stay on |
D. |
Move on |
52.
A. |
indicated |
B. |
witnessed |
C. |
expected |
D. |
remembered |
53.
A. |
cried |
B. |
smiled |
C. |
hesitated |
D. |
refused |
54.
A. |
tasting |
B. |
finding |
C. |
sharing |
D. |
delivering |
55.
A. |
withdraw |
B. |
donate |
C. |
receive |
D. |
appreciate |
My husband and I just spent a week in Paris. ____36____So the first thing we did was rent a fantastically expensive sixth-floor apartment the size of a cupboard. It was so tiny that we had to leave our suitcases in the hallway.
The place wasn't entirely authentic,though. Unlike a normal Parisian apartment, the plumbing (水管) worked. ____37____Our building even had a tiny lift with a female voice that said, "Ouverture des portes," in perfect French. That is the only French phrase I mastered, and it's a shame I don't have much use for it.
Parisians are different from you and me. They never look lazy or untidy. As someone noted in this paper a couple of weeks ago, they eat great food and never gain weight. ____38____French strawberries do not taste like cardboard. Instead, they explode in your mouth like little flavor bombs.
____39____On our first morning in Paris, I went around the corner to the food market to pick up some groceries. I bought a handful of perfectly ripe small strawberries and a little sweet melon. My husband and I agreed they were the best fruit we had ever eaten. But they cost $18!
In France, quality of life is much more important than efficiency.
You can tell this by cafés life. French cafés are always crowded. ____40____When do these people work? The French take their 35-hour workweek seriously - so seriously that some labor unions recently struck a deal with a group of companies limiting the number of hours that independent contractors can be on call.
A. |
Not all the customers are tourists. |
B. |
The quality of life in France is equally excellent. |
C. |
There was a nice kitchen and a comfortable bed. |
D. |
The amazing food is mainly consumed by local farmers. |
E. |
That's not the only reason the French eat less than we do. |
F. |
Our aim was to see if we could live, in some way, like real Parisians. |
G. |
The food is so delicious that you don't need much of it to make you happy. |
It doesn't impress like George Washington's plantation on the Potomac, but Lincoln's home in downtown Springfield,Illinois, 36 (prove)irresistible to visitors since it opened tothepublic.Beautifullyrestored(修复)to its 1860 appearance,the house was Abraham and Mary Lincoln's home for 17years.In 1844 they bought it 37$1,200 and some land from Charles Dresser, who performed their 38 ( marry)ceremony in 1842.
When the house was built,it was much 39 (small)thanit is today.Mary's niece wrote,"The little home 40 (paint) white .It was sweetand fresh. Mary loved it. She was extremely pretty, andher house was a reflection of 41 (she),everything in good taste and inperfect order.
Although Mary loved flowers, 42 shenor her husband was known as a gardener.Along-time neighbor said they never planted trees and only kept a garden for one year. Mary's sister,Frances Todd Wallace,often came over 43 (plant)flowers in the front yard.
44 Lincolns enlarged the house to a full two stories in 1856 to meet the needs of their growing family. Three ofthe four Lincoln sons were born here. After Lincoln was elected President of the US in 1861, they rented the house and 45 (sell)most of their furniture.