Sophia's birthday party the English song Say You, Say Me. A. started B. began C. started with D. began by 查看更多

 

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Has Tiger Mom gone soft? One year after the release of her book, "Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother," Amy Chua is back in the spotlight, reflecting on how overnight infamy(恶名)affected her life, her family and her parenting.
"I've changed a lot," she told The Huffington Post. "In October, we had 30 kids at our house! We've hosted parties with lots of food and music."
Last January, the Wall Street Journal published an excerpt(节选)from Chua's book with the headline "Why Chinese Mothers Are Superior." In the excerpt, Chua described how her daughters were never allowed to have sleepovers(在外过夜的儿童聚会), appear in school plays, earn any grade lower than an A . Chua, an author and professor at Yale Law School, spent much of 2011 on the defensive. In fact, many of her interviews seemed to lend fuel to her critics' fire.
Now, with the book out in paperback(简装),she said, "I put passages in the book and used very harsh words that I regret. Everybody has those moments you wish you could take back." Many of the scenes she described in the book are a far cry from the child-raising methods she advocates.
For those who still read "Battle Hymn" as an advice guide, Chua argues that so-called tiger parenting should be employed mainly during a child's early years, ideally between the ages of 5 and 12. These "super-strict parenting methods" are not meant for all ages. Remaining strict after middle school makes you a helicopter parent, according to Chua. And she is quick to point out how different that is from being a tiger mom.
"By the time kids get to high school, helicopter parents are hiring all these tutors, carrying their kids' sports bags. I never checked older daughter Sophia's papers because I knew she knew how to sit down and focus," Chua said.
As for younger daughter Lulu, 15, the rebel for whom the book waswritten, Chua has really backed off. Instead of forcing Lulu to practice violin for hours a day -- the source of their biggest fights, Chua "let her give that up". "My compromise is that I'm going to still be as strict academically, but in exchange she has a lot of social freedom. Lulu has had four sleepovers in the last two months!" Chua said. "Chua predicts she'll only get more easygoing with age.
【小题1】From Paragraph 1 we can know that after the publication of the book_____.

A.Tiger Mom became stricter with her children
B.Tiger Mom was thought highly by the public
C.Tiger Mom’s life and family were influenced
D.Tiger Mom became wealthy and easygoing
【小题2】What does the passage mainly tell us?
A.Tiger Mom has changed and wants to be soft.
B.Tiger Mom persuaded readers to follow her example.
C.How Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother came out.
D.How Tiger Mom became the worldwide spotlight.
【小题3】What does the underlined phrase “a far cry from” in Paragraph 4 mean?
A.similar toB.just the same asC.very different fromD.a cry far from
【小题4】What is the writer’s attitude towards Tiger Mom?
A.supportiveB.opposedC.unconcernedD.objective

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 With parents who taught at school, Sophia received a fairly good education. She would have achieved   36    in a career, but she   37    to spend most of her marriage in the   38    role of wife and mother,   39    herself to her husband and her three children.

At the beginning of their family life, Sophia took on the   40   for running the house in order for her husband to   41    his personal interest: writing novels. However, things weren’t going as   42    as expected. Nate’s writing failed to     43   the whole housekeeping. He had to take a position in the government to    44    for his family. Sophia tried to persuade Nate to give up his    45    for full-time writing, but he didn’t listen to her. He took his job   46     because it promised the family would be prevented from being   47  . That accounted for the shocking   48   he suffered when he lost his job. That day, he said to Sophia in a    49   , “I got fired. I am a    50    failure.” “Now you can focus your mind   51  your writing.” she responded. To make Nate believe money was no longer the major   52   , Sophia took out a box that was full of   53   . She explained that she got the money for their hand-painted lampshades.

The unemployed husband did   54    a book that was a(n)   55   hit and is a long-lasting literary masterpiece. The story of Sophia’s turning her husband into a world famous writer has been widely talked about ever since then.

1.A. only a little        B. quite a lot        C. quite a few        D. a great number

2.A. proved           B. required       C. selected       D. preferred

3.A. central          B. false          C. traditional    D. additional

4.A. devoting         B. supporting     C. deciding       D. forcing

5.A. responsibility   B. approach       C. amusement      D.occupation

6. A. observe         B. reduce         C. change         D. follow

7. A. generally       B. satisfactorily C. unfortunately  D. quickly

8. A. preserve        B. cover          C. include        D. overcome

9.A. support          B. search         C. provide        D. comfort

10. A. aid            B. interest       C. job            D. share

11. A. strictly       B. truly          C. carefully      D. seriously

12. A. well off       B. badly off      C. straight away  D. right now

13. A. cut            B. loss           C. disease        D. defeat

14.A. whisper         B. voice          C. sense          D. manner 

15.A. free            B. close          C. complete       D. necessary

16. A. on             B. for            C. in             D. to

17. A. connection     B. discovery      C. task           D.concern

18. A. gold           B. cash           C. jewelry        D. silver

19.A. pick out        B. react to       C. turn out       D. build up

20. A. ordinary       B. instant        C. short          D. humorous

 

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It was a simple letter asking for a place to study at Scotland’s oldest university which helped start a revolution in higher education. A 140-year-old letter written by a lady calling for her to be allowed to study medicine at St Andrews University has been discovered by researchers. Written by Sophia Jex-Blake in 1873, the seven-page document, which urged the university to allow women to study medicine at the institution, was released yesterday on International Women’s Day.

The document was discovered buried in the university archives (档案) by part-time history student Lis Smith, who is completing her PhD at St Andrews Institute of Scottish Historical Research. She said: “We knew that Sophia Jex-Blake and her supporters, in their effort to open up university medical education for women, had written to the Senatus Academicus (校评议委员会) at St Andrews in an attempt to gain permission to attend classes there, but we didn’t know documentary evidence existed. While searching the archives for information about the university’s higher certificate for women, I was astonished to come across what must be the very letter Jex-Blake wrote.”

In the letter, Sophia and her supporters offered to hire teachers or build suitable buildings for a medical school and to arrange for lectures to be delivered in the subjects not already covered at St Andrews. Although her letter was not successful, it eventually led to the establishment of the Ladies Literate in Arts at St Andrews, a distance-learning degree for women. The qualification, which ran from 1877 until the 1930s, gave women access to university education in the days before they were admitted as students. It was so popular that it survived long after women were admitted as full students to St Andrews in 1892.

Ms Jex-Blake went on to help establish the London School of Medicine for Women in 1874. She was accepted by the University of Berne, where she was awarded a medical degree in January 1877. Eventually, she moved back to Edinburgh and opened her own practice.

1.Sophia wrote a letter to St Andrews University because she wanted _______.

A.to carry out a research project there

B.to set up a medical institute there

C.to study medicine there

D.to deliver lectures there

2.Lis Smith found Sophia’s letter to St Andrews University _______.

A.by pure chance

B.in the school office

C.with her supporters’ help

D.while reading history books

3.Sophia’s letter resulted in the establishment of _______.

A.the London School of Medicine for Women

B.a degree programme for women

C.a system of medical education

D.the University of Berne

4.When did St Andrews University begin to take full-time women students?

A.In 1873.

B.In 1874.

C.In 1877.

D.In 1892.

 

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Has Tiger Mom gone soft? One year after the release of her book, Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother, Amy Chua is back in the spotlight, reflecting on how overnight infamy (恶名) affected her life, her family and her parenting.

“I have changed a lot,” she told the Huffington Post. “In October, we had 30 kids at our house! We have hosted parties with lots of food and music.”

Last January, the Wall Street Journal published an excerpt (节选) from Chua’s book with the headline “Why Chinese Mothers Are Superior”. In the excerpt, Chua described how her daughters were never allowed to have sleepovers (在外过夜的儿童聚会), appear in school plays, or earn any grade lower than an A. Chua, an author and professor at Yale Law School, spent much of 2011 on the defensive. In fact, many of her interviews seemed to lend fuel to her critics’ fire.

Now, with the book out in paperback, she said, “I put passages in the book and used very harsh words that I regret. Everybody has those moments you wish you could take back.”

For those who still read Battle Hymn as an advice guide, Chua argues that so-called tiger parenting should be employed mainly during a child’s early years, ideally between the ages of 5 and 12. These “super-strict parenting tactics” are not meant for all ages. Remaining strict after middle school makes you a helicopter parent, according to Chua. And she is quick to point out how different that is from being a tiger mom.

“By the time kids get to high school, helicopter parents are hiring all these tutors, carrying their kids’ sports bags. I never checked older daughter Sophia’s papers because I knew she knew how to sit down and focus,” Chua said.

As for younger daughter Lulu, 15, the rebel for whom the book was written, Chua has really backed off. Instead of forcing Lulu to practise violin for hours a day—the source of their biggest fights, Chua “let her give that up”. “My compromise (妥协) is that I’m going to still be as strict academically, but in exchange she has a lot of social freedom. Lulu has had four sleepovers in the last two months!” Chua said. Chua predicts she’ll only get more easygoing with age.

1.What does the passage mainly tell us?

A.How Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother came out.

B.Tiger Mom persuaded readers to follow her example.

C.Tiger Mom has changed and wants to be soft.

D.How Tiger Mom became the worldwide spotlight.

2.From paragraph one we can know that after the publication of the book______________.

A.Tiger Mom became stricter with her children

B.Tiger Mom’s life and family were influenced

C.Tiger Mom was thought highly by the public

D.Tiger Mom became wealthy and easygoing

3.Lulu quarreled with her mother mainly over______________.

A.whether she could do well at school

B.when she could have sleepovers

C.what should be written in the book

D.how long she practiced the violin

 

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Too Much Happiness was written by Alice Munrowinner of the 2013 Nobel Prize in Literatureone of our greatest contemporary writers of fiction and the owner of the Man Booker Price for FictionHer stories have appeared in The New YorkerThe Atlantic Monthlyand other publicationsand her collections have been translated into thirteen languages

? The main character is Sophia Kovalevskya great Russian mathematicianwriter and advocator拥护者)of womens rights in the late nineteenth century. After visiting her lover Maxsim Kovalevsky in Rivierashe travels in Europeending up in Swedenwhere she teaches at the only university in Europe willing to employ a female mathematicianThe book writes about her journey from Riviera to Sweden

??? The story tells the typical struggle of an intellectual(知识分子)woman to achieve success and happinessHoweverwhen she is going to dieSophia saystoo much happiness”.I think its irony(讽*11的).As reading the storyshe has too many mental problems·Firstas a woman mathematicianshe was born in a wrong time She was married to Vladimir Kovalevsky without lovecalleda white marriage”.She explained thatno a young Russian woman who was unmarried could leave the country.”She satisfied her marriage to seek her career

??? Furthermorewhen she sees a man look like Maxsim in the stationshe says to herself,“of courseit would not be Maxsimwhat could he be doing in Paris?”She doesnt want to face the fact because she doesnt want to lose her hopeShe believes they will marry in springAnd in her letter to Julia she says:“it is to be happiness after allhappiness after allHappiness.”She is cheating herself. In factthe man does not want to marry herand the happiness she expected doesnt take place at all

??? Finally, I conclude that the end must be a tragedy(悲剧).From the very first pages the atmosphere is gloomy黯淡的)and threatening.One of us will die this year.”“Because we have gone walking in a graveyard(墓地)on the first day of the New Year.Some pages further,“a black cat across their pathall reflect it will be a bad endingNot because she had some problems with her lungbut because her life does not bring her happinessand because of these disharmony things that happen in her life

1.We can infer from the passage that__·

ASophia was born in a wrong time and was mentally ill

Bwomen were not fairly treated in Europe in Sophias time

CSophia loved travelling around Europe to meet `different people

Dunmarried women were forbidden to learn mathematics at that time

2.The underlined phrasethe factin Paragraph 4 most probably refers to the fact that

Aher husband refuses to divorce Bshe cant teach in university

Cshe falls in love with Maxsim DMaxsim doesnt want to marry her

3.Why does the author name this book Too Much Happiness

AIt is used to suggest that the story must be a comedy

BIts a phrase repeatedly used by Sophia herself to her friend

CIts used in an ironic way to show that Sophia isnt happy at all

DIts to show Sophia is very happy to achieve success in her career

4.What can we conclude from Sophias experience

AIts hard for an educated woman to achieve success in Europe at that time

BRussian women were not allowed to go abroad without a white marriage

CMarried women could travel freely across Europe in the late nineteenth century

DSeeing a black cat across the path would bring people to death in the end

5.In a newspaperthis passage is most probably in the section of____

A. Entertainment B. Travel CCareer D. Culture

 

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