With the world economy growing weaker, for many young people, the dream of landing a good job is becoming harder and harder ________.
A. realized B.realizing C.to realize D.to be realized
When I was younger, I’d often go for ________ drive with some friends, purely for ________ enjoyment of it.
A.a; an B./; the C.the; / D.a; the
假设你叫李华,你将作为高三毕业生代表,根据以下要点在毕业晚会上用英文作一简短的告别演讲:
1、对三年高中生活的怀念; 2、对老师的感谢; 3、对母校的祝福
注意:1. 短文必须包括以上要点,可以适当发挥; 2. 词数:100左右
阅读下面的短文,根据短文后的要求答题(请注意问题后的字数要求)。
[1]Do you like chocolate? Most people do.Some like it in bars.Others just like big squares of it.
[2]Say you just got a box of chocolate.Which piece do you pick first? A study carried out by a professor in the University of Virginia showed that people's choices of chocolates show their personality.If you choose a round piece, you are a person who likes to party.If you select an oval shape, you are a person who strives.You like to make things and push yourself to be successful.Picking a square shape shows that this is an honest and truthful person you can depend on.
[3]What kind of chocolate do you pick? Maybe you like milk chocolate.This shows you have warm feelings about the past, while dark chocolate means something else—the person who chooses it looks forward to the future.What about white chocolate? Would you like to choose it? , you may find it hard to make up your mind.Those who like chocolate with nuts are people who like to help others.
[4]Do you believe these ideas? Can chocolate tell all these things? It doesn't matter.There is one sure thing about eaters of chocolates - they eat it because they like it.
1.What is the main idea of the text? (no more than 6 words.)
2.Fill in the blank (Paragraph 3 Line 3) to complete the sentence(no more than 5 words)
3.What does the underlined word “this”(Paragraph 2 Line 4) refer to? (no more than 8 words)
4.What’s the writer’s attitude towards the information about chocolate in the text?(no more than 15 words)
5.According to the passage, what of chocolate can show your characteristics and qualities?(no more than 2 words)
Making an advertisement for television often costs more than a movie. For example, a two – hour movie costs $6 million to make. A TV commercial can cost more than $6 000 a second. And that does not include cost of paying for air time. Which is more valuable, the program or the ad? In terms of money – and making money is what television is all about – the commercial is by far the more important.
Research, market testing, talent, time and money —— all come together to make us want to buy a product.
No matter how bad we think a commercial is, it works. The sales of Charm went up once the ads began. TV commercials actually buy their way into our head. We, in turn, buy the product.
And the ads work because so much time and attention are given to them. Here are some rules of commercial ad making. If you want to get the low middle – class buyer, make sure the announcer has a though, manly voice. Put some people in the ad who work with their hands. If you want to sell to upper – class audience, make sure that the house, the furniture, and the hair style are the types that the group identifies with. If you want the buyer feel superior to the character selling the product, then make that person so stupid or silly that everyone will feel great about himself or herself.
We laugh at commercials. We don’t think we pay that much attention to them. But evidence shows we are kidding ourselves. The making of a commercial that costs so much money is not kid stuff. It’s big, big business. And it’s telling us what to think , what we need, and what to buy. To put simply, the TV commercial is a form of brainwashing.
1.TV commercials are more important than other programs to television because .
A.they bring in great profits B.they require a lot of money to make
C.they are not difficult to produce D.they attract more viewers than other programs
2.The purpose of all the efforts made in turning out TV commercials is .`
A.to persuade people to buy the product
B.to show how valuable the product is
C.to test the market value of the product
D.to make them as interesting as TV movies
3.From the rules set for making commercial ads, we can see that .
A.the lower – middle – class buyer likes to work with his hand
B.the more stupid the characters, the more buyers of the product
C.ad designers attract different people with different skills
D.an upper – class buyer is only interested in houses and furniture
4.It is believed by the writer that .
A.few people like to watch TV commercials
B.TV commercials are a good guide to buyers
C.TV commercials often make people laugh
D.people do not think highly of TV commercials
5.What does the author actually mean in the last paragraph?
A.He asks TV viewers never to laugh at the TV commercial ads.
B.Commercials are used to show the true value of a product to be sold.
C.TV commercials cost much and they do influence us in one way or another.
D.Brainwashing must be introduced to sell something on TV.
Harvard University named historian Drew Gilpin Faust as its first female president on Sunday, ending a lengthy and secretive search to find a successor(接任者)to Lawrence Summers .
The seven-member Harvard Corporation elected Faust, a noted scholar on History of the American South and dean of Harvard’s Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, as the university’s 28th president.
“This is a great day, and a historic day for Harvard,” James R. Houghton, chairman of the presidential search committee, said in a statement. “Drew Faust is an inspiring and accomplished leader, a superb scholar, a dedicated teacher, and a wonderful human being.”
Her selection is noteworthy given the heated debates over Summers’ comments that genetic differences between the sexes might help explain the lack of women in top science jobs.
Faust has been dean of Radcliffe since 2001, two years after the former women’s college was combined into the university as a research center with a mission to study gender issues.
Some professors have quietly groused that the 371-year-old university is appointing a fifth president who is not a scientist. No scientist has had the top job since James Bryant Conant retired in 1953; its last four have come from the fields of classics, law, literature and economics.
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Faust is the first Harvard president who did not receive a degree from the university since Charles Chauncy, a graduate of Cambridge University, who died in office in 1762. She attended the University of Pennsylvania.
“Teaching staff turned to her constantly,” said Sheldon Hackney, a former president of the University of Pennsylvania and historian who worked closely with Faust. “She’s very clear. She has a sense of humor, but she’s very strong-minded. You come to trust in her because she’s so solid.”
1.Which might be the best title for the passage?
A.Harvard named its 1st female president.
B.History of Harvard University changed.
C.Debates on female equality ended
D.Drew Gilpin Faust, a famous woman historian.
2.Which is NOT true about Drew Gilpin Faust?
A.She is the 28th president of Harvard University.
B.She is a famous scholar from the American South.
C.She isn’t a graduate from Harvard University
D.She was head of Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study.
3.Lawrence Summers held the view that .
A.women cannot achieve as much as men in management
B.women cannot hold important positions in society
C.women can match men in science jobs
D.few women make top scientists owing to genes
4.The underlined word “groused” in the 6th paragraph means .
A.approved B.commented C.complained D.indicated
5.This passage probably appears in a .
A.biography B.personal letter C.research paper D.newspaper report