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[主观题]

the family you came from isn"t as important as the family your are going to have

the family you came from isn"t as important as the family your are going to have.

答案

你将拥有的家庭比你出身的那个家庭重要。

更多“the family you came from isn"t as important as the family your are going to have”相关的问题

第1题

听力原文:M: Morning. Happy to meet you here. How are you and how is your whole family?W: G

听力原文:M: Morning. Happy to meet you here. How are you and how is your whole family?

W: Good morning, sir. Fine, thank you for your care.

M: Er, did you put that advertisement in yesterday, and did you see it?

W: Yes. I have seen it and also have a try.

M: (22)The junior sales manager. They want someone that could help them to manage the company.

W: Yes, it went into the Standard and the Evening News. That sounds good.

M: Jolly good. And congratulations to you!

W: Erm, what sort of a young man had you got in mind?

M: Oh, you know, a good education, er, (23)what I don't want is one of these young cocks, you know who just walk out of university with, exaggerated ideas of his own importance.

W: And how much he's going to earn, frankly. And only according to your conditions and your wants, we could find and look for more proper people, you know, so many people came here, and I don't want to waste their time. And what we want is just the right one.

M: I mean, (24)I'm not prepared to give him a very big salary to start with. I mean the increases he gets in his salary are going to be dependent on how effective he is. That's hard to say and hard to make so concrete criterion. Nowadays, you know, it's very difficult to find such a good person that can be suited this job. (24)And most of the time, they ask so many salary and, the most important one is that, they really have no ability to do it.

(23)

A.Junior Sales Manager Wanted.

B.Personnel Manager Wanted.

C.Secretary Wanted.

D.Managing Director Wanted.

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第2题

听力原文:M: How is your life away from your family?W: I live on my own here in an apartmen

听力原文:M: How is your life away from your family?

W: I live on my own here in an apartment. It's tough, but I'm doing it.

M: Do you have friends here?

W: Yes. I made most of my friends from my dance school.

M: Have your relatives seen you perform?

W: My parents came to New York all the way from Iowa. They will come again this week. I'll be dancing at All School Nights, and everybody will perform.

M: Tell me about your performance.

W: I work with Alan Barnes, who designs dances for the Frankfurt Ballet. Last summer I auditioned for Alan Barnes' Workshop and he chose me.

M: As a senior at the school, what are your courses?

W: I take English, Fine Arts and Current Politics. My teacher of Current Politics is Mr. Savage.

M: And French?

W: No. I took Spanish for three years. There are a lot of Spanish-speaking people here. And, I took Health Care last semester.

M: What are your professional goals?

W: I'd like to dance in a professional dance troupe or on Broadway.

(23)

A.A dance designer for the Frankfurt Ballet.

B.A teacher at the dance school.

C.A student at the dance school.

D.A famous dancer in a dance troupe.

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第3题

Edward rose early on the New-year morning.He looked in every room and wished a Happy N
ew Year to his family.Then he ran into the street to repeat that to those he might meet.

When he came back, his father gave him two bright, new silver dollars .

His face lighted up as he took them.He had wished for a long time to buy some petty books that he had seen at the bookstore.

He left the house with a light heart, expecting to buy the books.As he ran down the street, he saw a poor family.

“I wish you a happy New Year.” said Edward, as he was happily passing on.The man shook his head.

“You are not from this country? ” said Edward.The man again shook his head, for he could not understand or speak his language.But he pointed to his mouth, and to the children shaking with cold, as if (好像)to say, “These little ones have had nothing to eat for a long time”

Edward quickly understood that these poor people were in trouble.He took out his dollars, and gave one to the man and the other to his wife.

They were excited and said something in their language, which doubtless meant, “We thank you so much that we will remember you all the time.”

When Edward came home, his father asked what books he had bought.He hung his head a moment, but quickly looked up.

“I have bought no books,” said he, “I gave my money to some poor people, who seemed to be very hungry then.” He went on, “I think I can wait for my books till next New Year.”

“My dear boy,” said his father, “Here are some books, more as a reward for your goodness of heart than as a New-Year gift”.

“I saw you give the money cheerfully to the poor German family.It was nice for a little boy to do so.Be always ready to help others and every year of your life will be to you a Happy New Year.”

1.Edward expected to ________ with the money he got from his father.

A.help the poor family

B.buy something to eat

C.buy some pretty books

2.Why did the poor man shake his head when Edward spoke to him?()

A.He couldn’t understand the boy

B.He wouldn’t accept the money

C.He didn’t like the boy’s language

3.How much did Edward give the poor family?()

A.One dolla

B.Two dollars

C.Three dollars

4.We know that Edward ________.

A.got a prize for his kind heart

B.got more money from his father

C.bought the books at the bookstore

25.What is the best title for the passage?()

A.New Year's Gift

B.Story of Buying Books

C.Father's Words

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第4题

A.They were the first people settling down in Canada.B.They came from the royal family

A.They were the first people settling down in Canada.

B.They came from the royal family of Britain.

C.They came from America but had a British dialect.

D.They were loyal to Great Britain and the Queen.

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第5题

听力原文:M: Why, Mary Smith. I haven't seen you for ages. How have you been?W: John, John

听力原文:M: Why, Mary Smith. I haven't seen you for ages. How have you been?

W: John, John Brown. It has been a long time, hasn't it? It must be at least a year.

M: No, we talked at the Johnson's Christmas party last December. Don't you remember?

W: That's right. Well, how are you? Still working for the Jones and French Company?

M: No, I changed jobs about 3 months ago. I'm with the National Bank now. How about you?

W: I'm still teaching at the university. But I switched from the German department to the Spanish department.

M: Don't tell me you speak Spanish, too.

W: Sure. I grew up in Spain, you know. German was what I studied in college, but my Spanish is much better.

M: All I've ever managed to learn is a little Italian. I can get a pizza in Rome, but not much more.

W: Well, how is your family? Are the children all in school now?

M: No, Billy is still at home. Tom is in the third grade and Jane's in the second. Billy could have gone to kindergarten, but we didn't want him to start school too early. So we're keeping him out until next year.

W: Our two children haven't started school yet either. But my daughter Sue will go in the fall, too. Oh, my bus band just came in. I want to go ask him something. I'll talk to you again later, John.

M: It was nice seeing you again, Mary.

(23)

A.The National Bank.

B.The Spanish department.

C.The Jones and French Company.

D.A company in Rome.

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第6题

听力原文:W: You don't look smart this morning. I can see you're not happy.M: I had never e

听力原文:W: You don't look smart this morning. I can see you're not happy.

M: I had never expected this would have happened to me. We had a power failure at home last night.

W: How come? Did anyone in the family, do anything wrong?

M: You've guessed it. It was all my father's fault.

W: What did he do?

M: I was just watching a wonderful football feature program on TV when the lights suddenly went out.

W: Why was that?

M: You see, we'd just had our dinner. My mother was washing my jeans in the washing machine. And the air-conditioners were on in both rooms. I was in my room watching TV.

W: What was your father doing then?

M: He wanted to warm his tea in the microwave oven. He plugged it in and the fuse broke. And everything stopped all of a sudden.

W: Your next-door neighbor is an electrician, isn't he?

M: Yes. Luckily, he happened to be at home. He came and fixed it up. But it was half an hour later. I had already missed a lot.

W: It was an annoying experience for a sports fan like you. But don't miss the basketball finals this evening. Make sure there is no power failure tonight.

Questions 23 to 25 are based on the conversation you have just heard.

23. Why does the man look depressed this morning?

24. What was the immediate cause of the power failure?

25. What will the man probably do tonight?

(20)

A.He failed in a power test yesterday.

B.He never expected himself to be happy.

C.It was because of his father's fault.

D.He missed about 30 minutes of a program.

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第7题

听力原文:W: So, what's your major?M: Well, (19) I've been thinking of going into business,

听力原文:W: So, what's your major?

M: Well, (19) I've been thinking of going into business, but I haven't decided yet. And my dad keeps telling me that computing is a good choice, but I'm undeclared at the moment.

W: Ah, that's what happened to me my freshman year. But I would suggest you stick to your dreams, because you will have fun in it, just like me. By the way, I major in architecture.

M: Oh, so what year are you in school?

W: I'm a senior, and I only have to take 10 more credits to graduate. Yeah!

M: Well. That must feel great to be almost finished with school.

W: You can say that again, but once I graduate, I have to start repaying a student loan, so I'm not looking forward to that.

M: But didn't your parents help you out with your college tuition?

W: No. My dad said he wasn't made of money, so he thought I should earn my own education.

M: Really? But isn't that so cruel? I didn't mean to offend you; I mean, it must be so hard.

W: Well, actually, I was so angry with him at first that I avoided talking to him. And after a few months, I came to understand him. (21) You know, he is the only man that has a job in our family, and a teacher's salary is just not enough.

M: Then how did you manage it?

W: (20)I did several part-time jobs and worked like crazy during holidays to cover most of my costs. And, I received some financial aid and a scholarship one, ear, which really saved me.

M: Well, have you lined up a job yet?

W: Not yet, but I'm trying to line up a few interviews at the job fair next month.

M: That's cool. Good luck!

(20)

A.Business.

B.Computing.

C.Architecture.

D.He hasn't decided yet.

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第8题

听力原文: The Chinese people, I found out, hold onto many traditions that are both interes
ting and puzzling. For instance, women customarily walk behind their husbands, and often three or four generations live together in the same house. None of these customs troubled me, however, until the day I found out that my wedding dress was to be red.

This is America, I thought, not China, and I am not going to make myself look silly by wearing that dress. What would my friends and family think?

My future mother-in-law soon caught wind of my reluctance to wear the dress and came to visit me.

"I know it is difficult for you to accept wearing a red wedding dress," she said. "I would like to help you understand our marriage customs. All Chinese women marry in a red dress because this color symbolizes great happiness, good luck, and a bright future. To marry in a white dress would bring very bad luck, for white represents mourning and deep sorrow."

Hearing this, I felt there was no way that I could refuse to wear that dress on my wedding day. Then she smiled and said, "You must promise to pass on this particular tradition to your own daughter one day. Old ways should never be forgotten."

Now so many years have passed since that day, but some things never change. And one of them is the attitude of people growing up in a new generation. When I told my daughter the history of the red dress, she replied, "I'm not wearing that dress!"

(30)

A.Women should walk behind their husbands.

B.Three or four generations live together in the same house.

C.Old people are held in great respect.

D.Women marry in a red dress.

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第9题

听力原文:W: Though many people want to have a happy family and marriage, the result is far
from satisfactory. As an expert on marriage, how do you see it?

M: An author once said "People get so caught up in careers, raising kids and satisfying their own souls, that they forget that their marriage needs to be fed too."

W: Could you give us some advice on how to improve our marital relationship?

M: The first piece of advice from me is to be your spouse's biggest fan.

W: What do you 'mean by that?

M: Let me give you an example. At a dinner party, a man said, "My wife has a great eye for color. She's so artistic." The women at the table glanced enviously at his wife, who was beaming at the unexpected praise. Words of praise are so important. Unfortunately, most of us are more likely to criticize our spouse in public.

W: What is the second piece of advice?

M: Spend some time apart.

W: You mean that time apart can actually bring you closer together?

M: Yes. When a hairdresser expressed an interest in cycling, his wife didn't complain. Instead, she agreed to mind the children for three hours every other Saturday morning so he could join a local bike club. Within a few months the hairdresser was fitter, happier and a lot more pleasant to be around. "I may not be out there riding with him," his wife says, "but I'm definitely reaping the benefits."

W: What is your third piece of advice?

M: You should try to address the needs of your spouse.

W: In marriage there should be pleasing of each other.

M: Sure. 1 have come across a couple. They told me this. Having heard her husband complain about all the toys spreading across their home, the wife bought some shelves and did some sorting and organizing. When the husband came home, he was very happy.

W: Thank you for your advice.

M: My pleasure.

(27)

A.Be your spouse's biggest fan.

B.Ways to a better marriage,

C.Spend quality time apart.

D.Ways to prevent divorce.

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第10题

The Importance of Just Being There"What's the most important thing you've done in your lif

The Importance of Just Being There

"What's the most important thing you've done in your life.'?" The question was put to me during a presentation I gave to a group of lawyers.

The answer came to me in an instant. It's not the one I gave, because the setting wasn't right. As a lawyer in the entertainment industry, I knew the audience wanted to hear some amusing stories about my work with well known persons. But here's the true answer, the one that leapt from the recesses of memory.

The most important thing I've ever done occurred on October 8, 1990. It was my mother's 65th birthday, and I was back home for a family celebration. I began the day playing tennis with a secondary -school friend I hadn't seen for a while. Between points we talked about what had been happening in each other's lives. He and his wife had just had a baby boy, who was keeping them up at night.

While we were playing, a car came screaming up the road toward the courts. It was my friend's father, who shouted to my buddy that his baby had stopped breathing and was being rushed to the hospital. In a flash my friend was in the car and gone, disappearing in a cloud of dust.

For a moment I just stood there, paralyzed. Then I tried to figure out what I should do. Follow my friend to the hospital? There was nothing I could accomplish there, I convinced myself. My friend's son was in the care of doctors and nurses, and nothing I could do or say would affect tile outcome. Be there for moral support? Well, maybe. But my friend and his wife both }tad large families, and I knew they'd be surrounded by relatives who would provide more than enough comfort and support, whatever happened. All I could do at the hospital, I decided, was get in the way. Also, I had planned a full day with my family, who were waiting for me to get home. So I decided to head back to my folks' house and check in with my friend later.

As I started my rental car, I realized that my friend had left his truck and keys at the courts. I now faced another problem. I couldn't leave the keys in the truck. But if I locked the truck and took the keys, what would I do with them? I could leave them at his house, but with no paper on me to leave a note, how would he know I bad done that? Reluctantly I decided to swing by the hospital and give him the keys.

When I arrived, I was directed to a room where my friend and his wife were waiting. As I had thought, the room was filled with family members silently watching my friend comfort his wife. I slipped in and stood by the door, trying to decide what to do next. Soon a doctor appeared. He approached my friend and his wife, and in a quiet voice told them that their son had died, the victim of sudden infant death syndrome.

For what seemed an eternity the two held each other and cried, unaware of the rest of us standing around in pained, stunned silence. After they had calmed themselves, the doctor suggested they might want to spend a few moments with their son.

My friend and his wife stood up and walked numbly past their family. When they reached the door, my friend's wife saw my standing in the corner. She came over and hugged me and started to cry. My friend hugged me, too, and said, "Thanks for being here. '

For the rest of that morning, I sat in the emergency room of that hospital and watched my friend and his wife hold the body of their infant son, and say good - bye.

It's the most important thing I have ever done.

The experience taught me three lessons.

First: The most important thing I've ever done happened when I was completely helpless. None of the things I had learned in university, in three years of law school or in six years of legal practice were of any use in that situation. Something terrible was happening to people I cared about, and I was powerless to chang

A.Y

B.N

C.NG

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第11题

It being not only possible but even easy to predict which ten-year-old boys are at greates
t risk of growing up to be persistent offenders, what are we doing with the information? Just about the last thing that we should do is to wait until their troubles have escalated in adolescence and then attack them with the provisions of the new Criminal Justice Bill. If this bill becomes law, magistrates will have the power to impose residential care orders. More young people will be drawn into institutional life when all the evidence shows that this worsens rather than improves their prospects. The introduction of short sharp shocks in detention centers will simply give more young people a taste of something else they don’t need; the whole regime of detention centers is one of toughening delinquents, and if you want to train someone to be anti-establishment, “I can’t think of a better way to do it,” says the writer of this report. The Cambridge Institute of Criminology comes up with five key factors that are likely to make for delinquency: a low income family a large family, parents deemed by social workers to be bad at raising children, parents who themselves have a criminal record, and low intelligence in the child. Not surprisingly, the factors tend to overlap. Of the 63 boys in the sample who had at least three of them when they were ten, half became juvenile delinquents—compared with only a fifth of the sample as a whole. Three more factors make the prediction more accurate: being judged troublesome by teachers at the age of ten, having a father with at least two criminal convictions and having another member of the family with a criminal record. Of the 35 men who had at least two of these factors in their background 18 became persistent delinquents and 8 more were in trouble with the law. Among those key factors, far and away the most important was having a parent with a criminal record, even if that had been acquired in the distant past, even though very few parents did other than condemn delinquent behavior in their children. The role of the schools emerges as extremely important. The most reliable prediction of all on the futures of boys came from teachers’ ratings of how troublesome they were at the age of ten. If the information is there in the classroom there must be a response that brings more attention to those troublesome children: a search for things to give them credit for other than academic achievement, a refusal to allow them to go on playing truant, and a fostering of ambition and opportunity which should start early in their school careers. According to the author, delinquency should be tackled ___.

A.before adolescence

B.during institutional treatment

C.during adolescence

D.when the problem becomes acute

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