题目列表(包括答案和解析)
根据短文内容,从方框内选择合适的单词填空,使短文完整、连贯。
best, cause, either, everything, friendship, plenty, take, true, though, with
In today's world many people seem to be hungry for money. Money does have its good effect on the poor. But even if a person has already got (1.) of money, it doesn't mean he has got (2.)
If money were everything, all millionaires (百万富翁) would have real love, true 3., good health and a long life. However, this is not always 4..
No other three words are more pleasant (令人愉快的) than "I love you". But can love be bought? I'm afraid not. Love means to give, not to (5.. To each person, health and a long life are probably the 6.things. Well, can health and a long life be bought 7.money? Of course not. True friendship can't be bought, 8..
As we see around, if money is cared for too much, it can 9.brothers to quarrel, lovers to hate and marriage to end. Even 10.you have much money, it is still not enough to make you a happy person if you have no one to laugh with, no one to cry for.
Close contacts between Japan and the rest of the world were created in the twentieth century. In the last forty years, business contacts between Japan and the West have become very important. Many foreign companies now have offices in Japan and Japanese businessmen do business around the world. Differences between Japanese and Western ways of doing business, however, often bewilder foreign businessmen and make doing business in Japan difficult for foreigners.
The American businessman, for example, wants to start talking business immediately. He does not want to wait. The Japanese businessman, on the other hand, likes to arrive at decisions after giving them serious thought. Another thing foreign businessmen have difficulty in understanding is when a Japanese means “Yes” or “No”. This is because of cultural differences between Japanese and Western society(社会), Which make it difficult for a Japanese to say “No” directly.
In the USA, it is easy to say “No” to something one does not want to do. But in Japan, it is very difficult to say “No”. To refuse an invitation or a request(请求) with “No” is felt to be impolite. It is thought to be selfish and unfriendly. So instead of saying “No” directly, the Japanese have developed many ways to avoid(避免) saying “No”. These can help them avoid hurting other people’s feelings. However, this often makes their ways of doing business rather difficult for foreigners to understand and follow.
1.What often makes foreigners feel difficult to do business in Japan?
A. Their different ways of doing business.
B. Their different lifestyles.
C. The fact that the Japanese never say “No”.
D. The fact that the Japanese are slow to take action.
2. Which of the following is the closest in meaning to the underlined expression “bewilder foreign businessmen” in Paragraph One?
A. cause foreign businessmen to change their minds.
B. give a feeling of surprise to foreign businessmen.
C. attract foreign businessmen’s attention.
D. make foreign businessmen think wrongly.
3.What fact does the passage lead you to believe?
A. American businessmen do things more slowly than Japanese ones.
B. American businessmen like to say “Yes” and “No”.
C. Americans usually say what they are thinking.
D. Americans do not say what they think or feel clearly.
4.From the passage we can infer(推断) that __________.
A. Japanese businessmen are good at business
B. foreign businessmen should try to know Japanese ways of doing business
C. foreign businessmen must be more polite
D. you must learn from Japanese businessmen if you want to succeed
Bob was cutting a branch(树枝) off a tree in his garden. While he was sawing(锯), another man passed in the street. He stopped and said, “ Excuse me, but if you continue (继续)to saw(锯) that branch like that, you will fall down with it.” He said this because Bob was sitting on the branch and cutting it at a place between himself and the trunk(树干) of the tree.
Bob said nothing. He thought, “ This is some foolish(愚笨的) person who has no work to do and goes about telling other people what to do and what not to do.”
The man continued on his way. Of course, after a few minutes. The branch fell and Bob fell with it.
“My God!” he cried. “That man knows the future!” and he ran after him to ask how long he was going to live. But the man had gone.
1.One day Bob was cutting a branch_______a tree in his garden.
|
A.on |
B.in |
C.at |
D.off |
2.While Bob was sawing, another man_______.
|
A.told him to stop working |
B.told him he would fall down |
|
C.would borrow something from him |
D.would help him saw that branch |
3.After hearing the man’s words, Bob thought that________.
|
A.that was a foolish person. |
B.that was a wise person |
|
C.that was a proud person |
D.that fellow cheated him |
4.What happened to Bob after a few minutes?
A. The branch fell. B. Bob fell down to the ground.
C. Bob was hurt himself. D. Both A and B.
5.This story is about ________.
|
A.a foolish man |
B.a wise man |
C.cutting a tree |
D.that we need to take good advice |
Several years ago, a television reporter was interviewing three of the most important people from local businesses. One was a very rich banker, another owned one of the largest companies in the world, and the third owned many buildings in the center of New York.
The reporter was talking to them about being important.
“How do we know if someone is really important?” the reporter asked the banker.
The banker thought for a few moments and then said, “I think anybody who is invited to the White House to meet the President is really important.”
The reporter then turned to the owner of the very large company. “Do you agree with that?” she asked.
The man shook his head, “No. I think the President invites a lot of people to the White House. You’d only be important if while you were visiting the President, there was a telephone call from the president of another country, and the President said he was too busy to answer it.”
The reporter turned to the third man. “Do you think so?”
“No, I don’t.” he said. “I don’t think that makes the visitor important. That makes the President important.”
“Then what would make the visitor important?” the reporter and the other two men asked.
“Oh, I think if the visitor to the White House was talking to the President and the phone rang, and the President picked up the receiver, listened and then said, ‘it’s for you.’”
1.This story happened in ________.
A. U.N. B. U.S.A. C. U.K. D. P.R.C.
2.There are________in this passage.
A. three men B. three women and one man
C. four men D. three men and one woman
3.The banker and the owner of one of the largest
companies
in the world ________.
A. had similar opinions about the reporter’s question
B. disagreed with each other
C. had been invited to the White House many times
D. didn’t reply to the reporter
4.The owner of one of the largest companies thought ________.
A. he himself was really important because he owned one of the largest companies in the world
B. the President was really important because the president of another country called him
C. the visitor was really important if the President would rather treat him than answer an important phone call from another country
D. none of them was really important
5.The underlined word you in the last paragraph refers to (指的是) ________.
A. the television reporter B. the owner of many buildings
C. the President D. the visitor to the White House
Moreno, Stanley, and 23 other students from Westfield State College were on vacation in Acapulco, Mexico. This was the last night in the hotel. It was 4 am, Moreno and Stanley came back from a party.
Just as Stanley went to sleep, he heard loud noise outside. From the balcony (阳台) of their fourth-floor room, Moreno and Stanley saw black smoke out of one window and heard people shouting.
Moreno ran out into the corridor and began knocking on doors and shouting, "Fire!" After that, he went upstairs in a hurry to tell other people. At the same time, Stanley was downstairs helping people get through the smoke-filled room. There he joined forces with Nalewanski, a 21-year-old boy who had a room on the second floor.
"Let's go," Nalewanski said. He and Stanley wet their shirts in the bathroom and put them around their mouths and noses so they could breathe. Then they ran up the stairs. On the fourth floor they found Moreno feeling terrible (Moreno had made it up to the eighth floor before turning back). But after making sure he could get back down on his own, they continued upstairs, knocking on the doors on every floor.
In the end, no one was seriously hurt. Moreno said, "There were hundreds of people in the hotel. It was our duty to help them."
1. students from Westfield State College were on vacation in Acapulco, Mexico.
|
A.Twenty-three |
B.Twenty-four |
|
C.Twenty-five |
D.Twenty-six |
2. Which floor does Stanley live on?
|
A.The second floor. |
B.The fourth floor. |
|
C.The seventh floor. |
D.The eighth floor. |
3. Nalewanski and Stanley put their wet shirts around their mouths and noses in order to .
|
A.make them cool |
|
B.stop the smoke from going into lungs (肺) |
|
C.let people find them |
|
D.play a joke with other people |
4. What is the correct order?
a. Moreno told other people.
b. No one was seriously hurt.
c. Nalewanski joined them to save people.
d. Stanley and Moreno saw the smoke.
|
A.d-b-c- a |
B.d-a-c-b |
|
C.a-d-c-b |
D.c-d-b-a |
5. From the fourth paragraph, we can know
|
A.the three boys are brave |
|
B.Moreno died in the fire |
|
C.the reason of the fire |
|
D.Nalewanski called the police for help |
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