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  The decision to sell his Volkswagon (汽车牌子) was tough for Howard. He didn't know much about engines , 1 . The knocking sound in the engine 2 him. The mechanic (技工) at his service station said it 3 bad. In fact, he told Howard to 4 the engine. Howard learned this would cost several hundred dollars. 5 the VW was eight years old, Howard decided to sell the car 6 fix it. The mechanic offered a very 7 price for the car. Howard wouldn't 8 it. 9 , he found a buyer who would pay 10 . Howard explained the 11 to the buyer, so that the woman would know she was not 12 in the deal.

  A few weeks later, Howard asked 13 about the VW engine problem. “Oh that!” said the woman. “I got it 14 for $50. The car is running 15 now. That mechanic who told 16 to get a new engine didn't check the problem 17 .”

  Imagine Howard's 18 and anger! He immediately wrote to the 19 , saying that he would tell everyone he 20 his bad deal. He sent a copy of his letter to the Better Business Bureau (局).

1.

[  ]

A.in spite of
B.besides
C.though
D.thus

2.

[  ]

A.worried
B.interested
C.filled
D.excited

3.

[  ]

A.sounded
B.looked
C.felt
D.fixed

4.

[  ]

A.buy
B.sell
C.repair
D.replace

5.

[  ]

A.Since
B.Because
C.Even though
D.Before long

6.

[  ]

A.as well as
B.but for
C.instead of
D.rather than

7.

[  ]

A.little
B.much
C.high
D.low

8.

[  ]

A.receive
B.allow
C.take
D.agree

9.

[  ]

A.Anyway
B.Instead
C.Therefore
D.Again

10.

[  ]

A.a lot
B.more
C.at once
D.off

11.

[  ]

A.car type
B.price
C.engine trouble
D.mechanic's offer

12.

[  ]

A.won
B.cheated
C.troubled
D.punished

13.

[  ]

A.the new owner
B.the mechanic
C.the boss
D.a buyer

14.

[  ]

A.fixed
B.sold
C.replaced
D.paid

15.

[  ]

A.slowly
B.beautifully
C.directly
D.truly

16.

[  ]

A.me
B.you
C.us
D.him

17.

[  ]

A.carelessly
B.carefully
C.at all
D.yet

18.

[  ]

A.surprise
B.fun
C.disappointment
D.courage

19.

[  ]

A.mechanic
B.mechanic's boss
C.woman
D.woman's boss

20.

[  ]

A.heard from
B.got along with
C.had for
D.knew of
答案:C;A;A;D;A;D;D;C;B;B;C;B;A;A;B;B;B;A;B;B
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  Bonus(奖金)culture has become the subject of many studies nowadays.Many people have been angered by the way some bankers and high officials seem to have been rewarded for failure.Others find the idea of offering many-million-dollar bonuses morally disgusting.

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(1)

The effect of performance-related bonuses has not been well studied because people _________.

[  ]

A.

take the function of bonuses for granted

B.

see that bonus offering is done everywhere

C.

think financial encouragement is disgusting

D.

are shocked by the practice of rewarding for failures

(2)

According to Malcolm Higgs, designs that _________ are the good ones.

[  ]

A.

drive people to finish short-term tasks

B.

help to attract and keep good employees

C.

link financial rewards with the quality of the outcomes

D.

connect individual interests with long-term business goals

(3)

If a person plays safe to get a bonus, he is probably being _________.

[  ]

A.

more enthusiastic

B.

more risk-taking

C.

less daring

D.

less responsible

(4)

Which of the following do you think the author would most probably agree with?

[  ]

A.

Companies should make their bonus projects simple.

B.

The benefit of bonus helps to get the best out of people.

C.

The biggest problem with bonus is it creates cheating.

D.

Bonus offering can stop people doing things for pure joy.

(5)

Which do you think is the best title of the passage?

[  ]

A.

What Is Bonus?

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Does Bonus Work?

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科目:高中英语 来源:浙江省2012届高三调研考试英语试题 题型:050

阅读理解

  Bonus(奖金)culture has become the subject of many studies nowadays.Many people have been angered by the way some bankers and high officials seem to have been rewarded for failure.Others find the idea of offering many-million-dollar bonuses morally disgusting.

  But few have asked whether performance-related bonuses really do improve performance.The answer seems so obvious that even to ask the question can appear ridiculous.Indeed, in spite of all the complaints about them, financial encouragements continue to be introduced in more and more areas, from healthcare and public services to teaching and universities.

  So it may come as a shock to many to learn that paying for results can actually make people perform badly in many circumstances, and that the more you pay, the worse they perform.

  No one is arguing that bonuses can help companies and institutions attract and keep the best staff.Nor does anyone argue against the idea that you can encourage people to do specific tasks by linking payments to those tasks.Rather, the point is about how to get the best out of people.Do employees really perform better if you promise to pay them more for getting results?

  There are some obvious reasons why such payments can fail.It has been argued, for instance, that cash bonuses contributed to the financial crash, because traders had little enthusiasm to make sure that their companies enjoyed long-term survival.

  Most bonus projects are poorly designed, says Professor Malcolm Higgs.He thinks the reason is that organisations try to keep bonus arrangements simple.Nevertheless, he thinks bonus projects can work as long as they link the interests of individual employees with the long-term goals of a business.

  Bonuses can also encourage cheating.“Once you start making people's rewards dependent on outcomes rather than behaviours, the evidence is people will do whatever they can to get those outcomes,” says Professor Edward Deci.“In many cases the high officials simply lied and cheated to make the stock(股票)price go up so they got huge bonuses.”

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  A “do this and get that” approach might improve performance in the short term, but over longer periods it will always fail, Kohn says.People who receive bonus will naturally play safe, become less creative, cooperate less and feel less valued, he adds.What's more, the studies also suggest that offering rewards can also stop people taking responsibility.

(1)

The effect of performance-related bonuses has not been well studied because people ________.

[  ]

A.

take the function of bonuses for granted

B.

see that bonus offering is done everywhere

C.

think financial encouragement is disgusting

D.

are shocked by the practice of rewarding for failures

(2)

According to Malcolm Higgs, designs that ________ are the good ones.

[  ]

A.

drive people to finish short-term tasks

B.

help to attract and keep good employees

C.

link financial rewards with the quality of the outcomes

D.

connect individual interests with long-term business goals

(3)

If a person plays safe to get a bonus, he is probably being ________.

[  ]

A.

more enthusiastic

B.

more risk-taking

C.

less daring

D.

less responsible

(4)

Which of the following do you think the author would most probably agree with?

[  ]

A.

Companies should make their bonus projects simple.

B.

The benefit of bonus helps to get the best out of people.

C.

The biggest problem with bonus is it creates cheating.

D.

Bonus offering can stop people doing things for pure joy.

(5)

Which do you think is the best title of the passage?

[  ]

A.

What Is Bonus?

B.

Does Bonus Work?

C.

Why Bonus Offered?

D.

How Bonus Works?

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