题目列表(包括答案和解析)
There are many people who could be Olympic Champions, all Americans who have never tried. I’d estimate (估计) five million people could have beaten me in the pole-vault(撑杆跳高) on the years I won it, at least five million. Men who were stronger, bigger, and faster than I could have done it, but they never picked up a pole, never made the efforts to vault their legs off the ground to try to get over the bar.
Greatness is all around us. It’s easy to be great because great people will help you. What fantastic about all the conventions(大会) I went to was that the greatest in the business would come and share their ideas, their methods and their techniques with everyone else. I have seen the greatest salesmen opening up and showing young salesmen exactly how they did it. They didn’t hold back. I have also found it true in the world of sports.
I’ll never forget the time I was trying to break Dutch Warmer Dam’s record. I was about a foot below his record, so I called him on the phone. I said, “Dutch, can you help me? I seem to have leveled off. I can’t get any higher.”
He said, “Sure, Bob, come on up to visit me and I’ll give you all I got.” I spent three days with the master, the greatest pole-vaulter in the world. For three days, Dutch gave me everything that he’d seen. There were things that I was doing wrong and he corrected them. To make a long story short, I went up eight inches. That great guy gave me the best that he had.
Great people will share. Great people will tell you their secrets. Look for them, call them on the phone or buy their books. Go where they are, get around them and talk to them. It is easy to be great when you get around great people.
60. What would be the best title for the passage?
A. Benefit from the Greatness around Us
B. Many Men Are Better than Me
C. Share Your Greatness with People around You
D. My Hearty Thanks to Warmer Dam
61. The author of this passage must be __________________.
A. a world record holder in pole vault B. a Dutch pole-vaulter
C. an Olympic Champion D. a student of Warmer Dam’s
62. The underlined phrase “leveled off” in Paragraph 3 probably means ______________.
A. go down in level B. stayed in a certain level
C. gone up in level D. progressed on
63. Why does the author think well of the conventions he attended?
A. Because many great people also attended them.
B. Because they were supported by many great businessmen.
C. Because he learned to share his greatness with others.
D. Because great athletes were willing to share.
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I woke up one morning last week to read a story about an athlete who had seemed to have everything.
US track star Marion Jones owned a trophy case filled with medals. She had worldwide fame. She held the high honor of being the first female track and field athlete to win five medals at an Olympics-the 2000 Sydney Games.
But last Friday, the 31-year-old track star tearfully confessed that she had lied to fans, sports official and US federal agents about taking steroids.
The five Olympic medals in her trophy case? Gone. Meaningless. The worldwide fame? Exchanged for infamy. The honor of being the first female track and field athlete to win five medals at an Olympics? Forgotten, wiped off the record books.
“It is with a great amount of shame that I stand before you and tell you that I have betrayed your trust,” Jones confessed.
She’d posed for pictures with fans. She’d attended parties and talked about her accomplishments. But for years she’d slept-or tried to sleep-knowing that much of what she had done was built on a lie.
Now, finally, she’d decided to tell the truth.
“If she had trusted her own natural gifts and allied them to self-sacrifice and hard work, I sincerely believe that she could have been an honest champion at the Sydney Games,” IAAF President Lamine Diack said over the weekend. “Instead, Mario Jones will be remembered as one of the biggest frauds in sporting history.”
Sadly, she won’t be the last. There are still other lurking behind their trophies. They too appear to have everything. They’re superstars, the envy of every young person who has played a sport. But for how long? And at what cost? Every time they look at their trophies and medals they remember that the awards really belong to someone else.
1.The main character in this passage is__________.
A.the writer himself B.Marion Jones
C.IAAF president D.US federal agents
2.The word “steroid” probably means _____________.
A.a type of drug B.a piece of equipment
C.a kind of food D.a bottle of drink
3.It is still a worry that _____________.
A.Marion Jones has cheated the public so long
B.Marion Jones may be remembered as a fraud in sporting history
C.IAAF president will not forgive Marion Jones
D.cheating is still widely existing in sports competition
4.The writer values ___________ most in this passage.
A.Marion Jones’ deciding to tell the truth
B.the honesty and hard work in sports competition
C.trophies, medals and champions
D.the spirit of Olympic Games
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