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[主观题]

After having lived for over twenty years in the same district, Albert Hall was forced

to move to a new neighborhood. He surprised his landlord by telling him that he was leaving because he could not afford to buy any more chocolate.

It all began a year ago when Albert Hall returned home one evening and found a large dog in front of his gate. He was very fond of animals and as he happened to have a small piece of chocolate in his pocket, he gave it to the dog. The next day, the dog was there again. It held up its paws (爪子) and received another piece of chocolate as a reward. Albert called his new friend “Bingo”. He never found out the dog's real name, nor who his owner was. However, Bingo appeared regularly every afternoon and it was quite clear that he liked chocolate more than bones. He soon grew dissatisfied with small pieces of chocolate and demanded a large bar a day. If at any time Albert couldn't give it, Bingo got very angry and refused to let him open the gate. Albert was now at Bingo's mercy and had to “buy him” to get into his own house! He spent such a large part of his week's wage to keep Bingo supplied with chocolate that in the end he had to move somewhere else.

1)、Albert had been living in the same district for all his life.

A.T

B.F

2)、Albert decided to move because he was afraid of animals, especially dogs.

A.T

B.F

3)、Bingo waited for Albert every afternoon at the gate because he liked Albert.

A.T

B.F

4)、We can tell from the story that Albert could afford to buy a large bar of chocolate for Bingo every day.

A.T

B.F

5)、Albert had to “buy him” means Albert had to give him chocolate.

A.T

B.F

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更多“After having lived for over twenty years in the same district, Albert Hall was forced”相关的问题

第1题

Though having lived abroad for years, many Chinese still ()the traditional customs.

A.perform

B.possess

C.observe

D.support

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第2题

The driver______. A. lived at the tavern B. was going home after leaving the

The driver______.

A. lived at the tavern

B. was going home after leaving the stranger at the tavern

C. was going away on the train

D. had to go back to the train station after leaving the stranger at the tavern.

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第3题

He shall consider it lucky to have _______ the accident.

A.endured

B.lived after

C.lasted

D.survived

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第4题

It is suggested in the passage that______.A.Burns had lived near the country before he wen

It is suggested in the passage that______.

A.Burns had lived near the country before he went to Edinburgh

B.Burns would give up writing poems forever because of the disappointing experiences in Edinburgh

C.Burns felt at great ease when he remained on the land than when he lived in the capital

D.Burns would surely change his life style. after his second trip to Edinburgh

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第5题

"To turn the tables" means ______.A.to move the tablesB.to carry the tables awayC.to gain

"To turn the tables" means ______.

A.to move the tables

B.to carry the tables away

C.to gain courage

D.to gain an advantage after having been at a disadvantage

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第6题

Which of the following is NOT true? ()A.Sequoyah developed a form. of writing with the he

Which of the following is NOT true? ()

A.Sequoyah developed a form. of writing with the help of the Cherokee tribe.

B.Sequoyah was a very observant young man.

C.Sequoyah spent, twelve years developing his alphabet.

D.Sequoyah was honored by having some trees named after him.

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第7题

A very strange old man used to live in our town. He didn't do anything as the rest of peop
le did. He lived alone and didn't talk to anybody. He liked to walk in the woods where there were no roads, following the narrow paths made by animals. People were afraid of him. They thought he was crazy and might do something terrible, like hurting one of the children.

One day a little boy disappeared. His parents looked for him for hours, and finally the whole town started a search of the woods. Some people thought the strange old man bad taken the child away.

Several hours later, the boy was found, very cold and hungry, and it was the old man, who knew the woods so well, who had found him. After that, he still lived alone and walked in the woods, but no one was afraid of him any more.

The old man was very strange because ______.

A.he liked to live alone

B.people didn't like him and were afraid of him

C.he liked to walk in the woods without roads

D.he didn't do anything as the others did

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第8题

Karen Maclnnes had spent nine months in the hospital. As she grew weaker, the 16-year-old
girl asked her parents,“Am I going to die?”

Her mother told Karen the truth. After learning the bad news,all Karen wanted was to go home.

Her parents decided to satisfy her wish-no matter that medical fund (基金),which had helped pay for Karen’s hospitalization, would not cover any of the full time medical care she would need at home. When she was carried through her front door,Karen smiled for the first time in months.

A friend of the Maclnnes family, Sheila Petersen, knew of this and offered to help. She volunteered (自愿)not only to find nurses,but also to raise money for Karen’s care. Money was received from so many people that Sheila created a fund,“Friends of Karen”.

After leaving the hospital, Karen lived for 11 months. And those months were happy ones for her,’’says her mother,“thanks to Sheila.”

Even after Karen died, people kept sending money. Sheila put it into the fund, tried to find someone else who needed help. By last month, Friends of Karen was helping 70 families.

“I still have a relationship with each family,”says Sheila. “We have four children who are near death now, and I want to be there for them. ’’Sheila admits(承认)the work is sometimes difficult,but says,“the smile on a child’s face makes it all worthwhile(值得的).” The mother told Karen that she____.

A.was going to die

B.was going home

C.was growing weak

D.was becoming better

Her parents agreed to take Karen home because____.A.thus they would save money

B.medical funds wouldn’t cover any of the full time medical care

C.they couldn, t pay for her hospitalization

D.they hoped to make her satisfied

Sheila helped Karen’s parents by____.A.giving them money

B.raising money from others

C.finding nurses for them

D.paying for Karen’s hospitalization

Karen lived for____since she had got out of the hospital.A.eleven months

B.nine months

C.twenty months

D.twelve months

请帮忙给出每个问题的正确答案和分析,谢谢!

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第9题

The decline in American manufacturing is a common refrain, particularly from Donald Trump.
"Wedon&39;t make anything anymore," he told Fox News, while defending his own made-in-Mexicoclothing line.

Without question, manufacturing has taken a significant hit during recent decades, and further tradedeals raise questions about whether new shocks could hit manufacturing.

But there is also a different way to look at the data.

Across the country, factory owners are now grappling with a new challenge: instead of having toomany workers, they may end up with too few. Despite trade competition and outsourcing, Americanmanufacturing still needs to replace tens of thousands of retiring boomers every years. Millennialsmay not be that interested in taking their place, other industries are recruiting them with similar orbetter pay.

For factory owners, it all adds up to stiff competition for workers-and upward pressure on wages. "They&39;re harder to find and they have job offers," says Jay Dunwell, president of Wolverine CoilSpring, a family-owned firm, "They may be coming [into the workforce], but they&39;ve been pluckedby other industries that are also doing an well as manufacturing," Mr. Dunwell has begun bringinghigh school juniors to the factory so they can get exposed to its culture.

At RoMan Manufacturing, a maker of electrical transformers and welding equipment that his fathercofounded in 1980, Robert Roth keep a close eye on the age of his nearly 200 workers, five areretiring this year. Mr. Roth has three community-college students enrolled in a work-placementprogram, with a starting wage of $13 an hour that rises to $17 after two years.

At a worktable inside the transformer plant, young Jason Stenquist looks flustered by the coppercoils he&39;s trying to assemble and the arrival of two visitors. It&39;s his first week on the job. Askedabout his choice of career, he says at high school he considered medical school before switching toelectrical engineering. "I love working with tools. I love creating." he says.

But to win over these young workers, manufacturers have to clear another major hurdle: parents,who lived through the worst US economic downturn since the Great Depression, telling them toavoid the factory. Millennials "remember their father and mother both were laid off. They blame iton the manufacturing recession," says Birgit Klohs, chief executive of The Right Place, a businessdevelopment agency for western Michigan.

These concerns aren&39;t misplaced: Employment in manufacturing has fallen from 17 million in 1970to 12 million in 2013. When the recovery began, worker shortages first appeared in the high-skilledtrades. Now shortages are appearing at the mid-skill levels. "

The gap is between the jobs that take to skills and those that require a lot of skill," says Rob Spohr,a business professor at Montcalm Community College. "There&39;re enough people to fill the jobs atMcDonalds and other places where you don&39;t need to have much skill. It&39;s that gap in between, andthat&39;s where the problem is."

Julie Parks of Grand Rapids Community points to another key to luring Millennials intomanufacturing: a work/life balance. While their parents were content to work long hours, youngpeople value flexibility. "Overtime is not attractive to this generation. They really want to live theirlives," she says.

A、says that he switched to electrical engineering because he loves working with tools。

B、 points out that there are enough people to fill thejobs that don ’t need much skill 。

C、points out that the US doesn’t manu facture anything anymore。

D、believes that it is important to keep a close eye on the age of his workers。

[E] says that for factory owners,workers are harder to find because of stiff competition。

[F] points out that a work/life balance can attract young people into manufacturing。

[G] says that the manufacturing recession is to15 blame for the lay-off the young people’s parents 。

41.Jay Deuwell______________

42.Jason Stenquist______________

43.Birgit Klohs______________

44.Rob Spohr______________

45.Julie Parks______________

41__________

42

43

44

45

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第10题

In the 1900's, American townspeople usually washed and brushed their teeth and combed thei
r hair in the kitchen. Or they kept a water pitcher (大水罐) and a wash basin in their rooms and took care of these things there.

The bathtub was a wash tub (澡盆) filled with water from the stove. If you were small enough you could sit down by drawing your knees to your chest, Otherwise, you washed yourself standing up. Often all the women and girls in the family bathed together. Then the men and boys did. In most families this was Saturday-night because Sundays they went to church.

A small number of families did have running water. But that depended on Whether there was a water system where they lived and on whether they could afford the plumbing (水管实施 ). Some people had bathtubs in their homes as early as 1895. But many others did not have their first bath in a bathtub until 1910 or later when they were fifteen or sixteen years old.

In the first paragraph, "took care of" means ______.

A.kept

B.looked after

C.used

D.kept and used

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第11题

A young pair of pandas is expected to settle in their new home in the Atlanta's Zoo to- mo
rrow, tile Beijing Youth Daily reported yesterday.

Born in the Chengdu Panda Breeding Base, the two, named Jiu Jiu and Hua Hua, will .spend the next 10 years in the United States. At a cost of $ 4 million, their new home is an exact copy of the natural environment where they lived in Chengdu, Sichuan Province in Southwest China. The panda house is also equipped with advanced facilities to study pandas in an all-around way, said the report. Visitors can view pandas in a separate room inside the

panda house, which is open to public every day.

As part of an international co operative plan to protect and study panda, the co-operation between Chengdu and Atlanta has finally come to an agreement after three years of discussion. And the research fund of $ 5 million raised by Atlanta's zoo has also contributed to the co-operation.

After a flight in a huge and comfortable case, Jiu Jiu and Hua Hua will be put under quarantine(隔离) for two weeks upon their arrival. And a welcome ceremony will be held for them in Atlanta on November 20, with ambassador(大使) Li, former U. S. President Carter and his wife, the Georgia governor and mayor of Atlanta.

Where is the two panda's original home?

A.Some mountains in Siehuan Province.

B.A certain base in the city of Chengdu.

C.The Atlantic Zoo in the United States.

D.A separate room inside the panda house.

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