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The words on the cardboard “I’m blind, Please help” do not seem to draw much attention

because _____.

A.the words have a commanding air that annoys people

B.the demand for help is not direct and strong enough

C.people tend to ignore such familiar street side scenes

D.the language is too simple, and not eye-catching

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更多“The words on the cardboard “I’…”相关的问题
第1题
Part A Directions: On your way from Beijing to Paris, you lost you luggage car

Part A Directions:

On your way from Beijing to Paris, you lost you luggage carried by the airline. Write a complaint letter to the service center of the Airline. In your letter, you should tell them

1) what happened to your luggage,

2) what your luggage is like,

3) what compensation you expect.

You should write about 100 words neatly on ANSWER SHEET 2. Do not sign your own name. Use “Li Ming” instead. You do not need to write the address. (10 points)

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第2题
Television is the most effective brainwashing medium ever invented by man.Advertisers kn
ow this to be ().Children are affected by television in () we scarcely understand.

In the fall of 1971, I was () a story involving a young white woman living on the fringe (边缘) of Boston’s black ghetto.Her car had () out of gas.She had gone to a filling station () a can and was returning to her car when she was () in an alley by a gang of black youths.The gang () gasoline over her and set fire to her.She died () her burns.It was later established () some of the youths involved had, on the night before the killing, () on television a rerun of an old movie in which a drifter (流浪汉) is () on fire by an adolescent gang.There is some kind of strange reductive process (还原过程) at work here.To see something on television robs it () its reality, and then when the same thing is () out it is like the reenactment (重演) of something unreal.

() other words when the gang set fire to the girl, they were imitating () they had seen on a screen, as if they themselves were on a screen, and in a ().I don’t think we have () begun to realize how powerful a(n) () television is.It has already () very clear that the candidate with the most television () wins the election.

1.A.trueB.sincereC.dependantD.exact

2.A.methodsB.waysC.directionsD.respects

3.A.arrangedB.allottedC.appointedD.assigned

4.A.leftB.runC.stayedD.stopped

5.A.forB.byC.withD.in

6.A.tracedB.followedC.trappedD.hit

7.A.putB.pouredC.droppedD.sprayed

8.A.ofB.withC.inD.over

9.A.whenB.thatC.becauseD.as

10.A.lookedB.watchedC.experienceD.gone

11.A.setB.seenC.watchedD.burned

12.A.ofB.fromC.byD.for

13.A.actedB.playedC.putD.taken

14.A.OnB.InC.ByD.At

15.A.thatB.whichC.whatD.those

16.A.sceneB.fictionC.televisionD.story

17.A.evenB.alreadyC.muchD.little

18.A.equipmentB.applianceC.sourceD.medium

19.A.becomeB.turnedC.seemedD.looked

20.A.appearanceB.appealC.practiceD.experience

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第3题
One could well imagine a dictionary entry that rea...

One could well imagine a dictionary entry that reads."Honda,n. automobile.cf. Af fordable,reliable,friendly. "Or in the words of the prospective car buyers portrayed in its U.S. television eommercials. "l&39;II take it. "Buyers all over the world did. pushing sales of Honda cars and Honda motorcyeles into the millions. Behind those definitions,though,there was a flesh-and-blood Honda. self-made giant of Japanese industry who hated boardrooms and preferred getting grease on his hands as he tinkered alongside his engineers with the little ears that would zoom across the Pacific and conquer America. When Soichiro Honda,84,died last week of liver failure,the company he founded in 1948 was ranked fourth in Japan and poised to displace Chrysler as the third largest producer of passenger cars in the U.S. Honda was fated to build cars, The son of a village black-smith.he was no more than six when, breathless and memorized. be ran through the streets of his native town,near Hamamatsu,chasing a Ford Model T. By 18 he bad built his first auto,powered by a discarded American airplane engine. The after months of the war provided him with priceless opportunities,especially after U.S. occupation forces purged the upper echelons(梯队) of Japanese industry and government ,opening the doors for outsiders, Honda decided to manufacture affordable motorcyeles that would allow the Japanese to move cheaply farms to cities to buy ,sell or work. Honda refused to obey the Ministry of lnternational Trade and Industry when it ordered him to stick to motoreycies. Japan,it said,did not need more than a few car manufacturers. Honda ignored them. He also helped establish the company policy of setting up factories in the U. S. when Japanese competitors such as Toyota saw no wisdom inbuilding abroad.

According to the second paragraph which one of the folowing best describes Mr. Honda?

A.Mr. Honda was an imaginary hero in Japancse Mythology

B.Mr. Honda was a diligent person who always seated himself in his office reading a great number of reports

C.Mr. Honda was a severe person who always wear clean suit and white gloves

D.Mr. Honda loved to fiddle with the little cars in the workshop accompanied by engineers.

The company Honda founded was all set to____A.become the third largest car prodocer in the U. S

B.remove Chrysler from its present position

C.put Chrysler out of business

D.push sales in the United States

Honda was fated to build cars , because____A.he was the son of a village black-smith

B.Honda decided to manufacture affordable motorcycles that would allow the Japanese to move cheaply from farms to cities to buy,sell or work

C.Ministry of International Trade and Industry of Japan said that Japan did not need more than a few car manufacturers

D.he ran chasinga Ford Model T when he was 6,and by 18 he had built his first auto. By grasping opportunities he began to manufacture motorcycles

Which of the following factors contributes to making Honda a giant automaker? A Education. aoble origin and inheritage

A.Education. aoble origin and inheritage

B.Tenacity determination and timing

C.Luck.cunnings and eruelty

D.Poverty ,inferiority and pitiablity

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第4题
As far back as he could remember, Larry had longed to go to Hollywood and become a film st
ar. The young man's hopes for success were broken again and again, however. Hollywood just did not seem interested. When he first came to California Larry had decided never to give up and return home without success. Therefore, he kept on trying. Someday, he told himself, his big opportunity would come.

Larry found a job parking cars for one of Hollywood's big restaurants. His pay was basic, but since the guests were kind enough to give him more money, he managed to make a living.

One day he recognized an important film director driving into the parking lot and getting out of his car. Larry had recently heard that the man was ready to make a new picture.

Larry got into the car and prepared to drive it on into the lot and park it. Then he stopped, jumped out, and ran over to the director. "Excuse me, sir, but I think it's only fair to tell you that it's now or never if you want me in your next picture. A lot of big companies are after me."

Instead of pushing away the boy, the director got interested in Larry's words and stopped. "Yes? Which companies?" he asked.

"Well," replied the boy, "there's the telephone company, the gas company, and the electric company, to tell you only a few."

The director laughed, then wrote something on a card and handed it to the young man. "Come and see me tomorrow."

Larry got a small part in the director's next film. He was on his way!

Which of the following was Larry interested in?

A.Working as a waiter.

B.Becoming a film star.

C.Parking cars for film stars.

D.Never going home.

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第5题
Text 3I am not one who golfs. The only time I tried it I was confident that a dozen balls
would be an adequate supply. This is the sport of retired people: how hard could it be? The confidence was misplaced, also, one by one, the balls, and I had to quit somewhere around the seventh hole. On the sixth, actually, I hit a car—there was absolutely no reason for a highway to be that close to a golf course—but that’s another story. The point is that the game did not yield up its mystery to me; I remain, in the golfing universe, a child of darkness. I do find that I am able to watch golf on television, however, where it is possible to experience a calmness that the game itself sadly lacks. Spread out on a couch and indifferent to the outcome (very important), you watch tiny white balls sail improbable distances over the biggest lawns in the world, interrupted occasionally by advertisements for expensive cars. One of the players is named Tiger. Another is named Love. If you have access to a bottle of Martinis (optional), the joy potential can be quite huge.

There is usually a price for pleasure so mindless. In the case of TV golf, it is listening to the commentators analyze the players’ swings. What looks to you like a single, continuous, and not difficult act is revealed, via slow motion and a sort of virtual-chalkboard graphics, to be a sequence of intricately measured adjustments of shoulder to hip, head to arm, elbow to wrist, and so on. Where you see fluidity, the experts see geometry; what to you is nature is machinery to them—parallel lines, extended planes, points of impact. They murder to examine. Yet, apparently, these minutes and individualized measurements make all the difference between being able reliably to land a golf ball in an area, three hundred yards away, the size of a bathmat and, say, randomly hitting a car, which, let’s face it, only a fool would drive right next to a golf course. There is a major disproportion, in other words, between the straightforwardness of the game and the fantastic precision required to play it, a disproportion mastered by a difficult but, to the ordinary observer, almost invisible technique.

Short stories are the same. A short story is not as restrictive as a sonnet, but, of all the literary forms, it is possibly the most single-minded. Its aim, as it was identified by the modern genre’s first theorist, Edgar Allan Poe, is to create “an effect”—by which Poe meant something almost physical, like a sensation or an extreme excitement.

第31题:The author quotes his own experience with golf to show that _____.

[A] things are often not so simple and easy as they seem

[B] his experience with golf has been a frustrating failure

[C] that experience of his offered much for his later life

[D] apparent truths are more often than not unreliable

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第6题
It is ______ he is determined.A.buying a new car thatB.to buy a new car thatC.to buy a new
car whatD.buying a new car which

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第7题
The accident was caused by ______. A. the driver of the first car B. the dri

The accident was caused by ______.

A. the driver of the first car

B. the driver of the second car

C. the driver of the third car

D. both B and C

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第8题
I bought a new car last month, but()my old car yet.A. did not sellB. have not soldC. h

I bought a new car last month, but()my old car yet.

A. did not sell

B. have not sold

C. had not sold

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第9题
I caught a ______ of the car before it disappeared very rapidly.A.sightB.glareC.glimpseD.g

I caught a ______ of the car before it disappeared very rapidly.

A.sight

B.glare

C.glimpse

D.glance

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第10题
My car is broken, so it is completely ______.A.usedB.usefulC.uselessD.using

My car is broken, so it is completely ______.

A.used

B.useful

C.useless

D.using

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第11题
选出不同的一项()

A.jeep

B.car

C.skirt

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