题目内容

任务型阅读。请认真阅读下列短文,并根据所读内容在文章后表格中的空格里填入一个最恰当的单词。
注意:每个空格只填一个单词。
     When Should a Leader Apologize and When Not?
     Why Difficult?
     When we wrong someone we know, even not intentionally, we are generally expected to apologize so as
to improve the situation. But when we're acting as leaders, the circumstances are different. The act of apology
is carried out not merely at the level of the individual but also at the level of the institution. It is a performance
in which every expression matters and every word becomes part of the public record. Refusing to apologize
can be smart, or it can be stupid. So, readiness to apologize can be seen as a sign of strong character or as a
sign of weakness. A successful apology can turn hate into personal and organizational harmony-while an
apology that is too little, too late, or too obviously strategic can bring on individual and institutional ruin. What,
then, is to be done? How can leaders decide if and when to apologize publicly?
     Why Now?
     The question of whether leaders should apologize publicly has never been more urgent. During the last
decade or so, the United States in particular has developed an apology culture-apologies of all kinds and for all
sorts of wrongdoings are made far more frequently than before. More newspaper writers have written about
the growing importance of public apologies. More articles, cartoons, advice columns, and radio and television
programs have similarly dealt with the subject of private apologies.
     Why Bother?
     Why do we apologize? Why do we ever put ourselves in situations likely to be difficult, embarrassing, and
even risky? Leaders who apologize publicly could be an easy target. They are expected to appear strong and
capable. And whenever they make public statements of any kind, their individual and institutional reputations
are in danger. Clearly, then, leaders should not apologize often or lightly. For a leader to express apology, there
needs to be a good, strong reason. Leaders will publicly apologize if and when they think the costs of doing so
are lower than the costs of not doing so.
     Why Refuse?
     Why is it that leaders so often refuse to apologize, even when a public apology seems to be in order? Their
reasons can be individual or institutional. Because leaders are public figures, their apologies are likely to be
personally uncomfortable and even professionally risky. Leaders may also be afraid that admission of a mistake
will damage or destroy the organization for which they are responsible. There can be good reasons for hanging
tough in tough situations, as we shall see, but it is a high-risk strategy.
1. Performance/ act/ activity  2. Easy  3. Properly/ appropriately/ successfully/ rightly  4. Urgent  5. Culture
6. Growing/ increasing/ rising  7. Expected/ supposed/ required  8. Public  9. Likely  10. Harm/ damage
练习册系列答案
相关题目
阅读表达。
     There's nothing wrong with tuming your hobby into a business. We're supposed to enjoy our work, right?
Just turn something we already enjoy into our career. Whether you're into painting or building furniture, you
know you feel proud of the result of your efforts.
     However, you should first explore the concept and do your market research and other planning. Don't
forget to consider what your day-to-day work life would look like.
     There is one very positive aspect of doing a business plan _____. You may be highly motivated to do some
planning and research, since this relates to an activity you know well and enjoy, and you therefore may be more
likely to do the necessary planning. This is a big plus! And once you see how to do this research, you may be
more likely to do it for other ideas you will come up with.
     Something I've learned over the years is that creating a business out of the first few ideas you come up with
isn't a good goal. If you are brainstorming ideas for your new career path, I suggest you list lots of ideas and
choose one or two that have the most potential to explore, as well as those that really draw you in.
     The evolution of your ideas is the best reason to explore those first ideas. The best careers come from
exploring the first ideas and finding out what will, and what won't, work for you. Make sure the business plan
you are creating based on your hobby should be one that you will enjoy and that will add to your quality of life.

Then start with your hobby, and enjoy the adventure of finding out where you will end up!
1. What's the writer's purpose of writing this passage? (Please answer within 10 words.)
     _______________________________________________________________________________________
2. Which sentence in the passage is closest in meaning to the following one? Make sure you have taken the
    future of your daily work life into consideration.
     _______________________________________________________________________________________
3. Fill in the blank in the third paragraph with proper words or phrases to complete the sentence. (Please answer
    within 10 words.)
    _______________________________________________________________________________________
4. What kind of business do you intend to start in the future? Why? (Please answer within 40 words.)
    _______________________________________________________________________________________
5. Translate the underlined sentence in the lasl paragraph into Chinese.
    _______________________________________________________________________________________
Directions: Read the passage carefully. Then answer the questions or complete the statements in the fewest
possible words.
     Sociologists have long recognized that organization of less than 200 individuals can operate through the
free flow of information among the members. Once their size goes beyond this figure, the organizations are
getting less flexible. So it seems necessary to prevent total disorder resulting from failures of communication.
     One solution to this problem would, of course, be to structure large organizations into smaller units of a
size that can act as a group. By allowing these groups to build reliance on each other, larger organizations
can be built up. However, merely having groups of, say, 150 will never of itself be a complete solution to the
problems of the organization. Something else is needed: the people involved must be able to build direct personal
relationships. To allow free flow of information, they have to be able to communicate with each other in a
casual way. Maintaining too formal a structure of relationships inevitably prevents the way a system works.
     The importance of this was drawn to my attention two years ago by the case of a TV station. Whether by
chance or by design, it so happened that there were almost exactly 150 people in the station. The whole
process worked very smoothly as an organization for many years until they were moved into purpose-built
accommodation. Then, for no apparent reason, the work seemed to be more difficult to do, not to say less
satisfying.
     It was some time before they work out what the problem was. It turn out that, when the architects were
designing the new building, they decided that the coffee room where everyone ate their sandwiches at lunch
times was an unnecessary luxury and so did away with it. And with that, they accidentally destroyed the close
social networks that strengthened the whole organization. What had apparently been happening was that, as
people gathered informally over their sandwiches in the coffee room, useful information was casually being
exchanged.
(Note: Answer the questions or complete the statements in NO MORE THAN EIGHT WORDS.)
1. What size of an organization may lead to communication failures?
    _________________________________________________________________________________
2. What are the two solutions to the communication problem within a large organization? 
    _________________________________________________________________________________
3. After the TV station moved into new accommodation, its operation ___________________________.
4. From the case of the TV station, we can conclude it is _________________________ that make(s) an 
    organization more successful.
语法填空。
     阅读下面短文,按照句子结构的语法性和上下文连贯的要求,在空格处填入一个适当的词或使用
括号中词语的正确形式填空,并将答案填写在标号为1-10的相应位置上。
Dear Annie,
     I am not opposed to drinking, but it sometimes makes Christmas parties out of control. Every year, the
company my wife works for 1______ (host) a Christmas dinner party at a local restaurant. What used to be
an enjoyable meal with some employees has become a large, drunken event 2______ (last) late into the night.
One year, two employees 3______ (expect) had a fight outside the entrance. Last year, it was even more
embarrassing that the scene 4______ some drunken employees set fire to one of the tables was viewed by
other customers in the restaurant. Every year, my wife talks about not going, 5______ always does and insists
we stay till the end of the party. This year, we thanked the hosts, left the restaurant and had cocktails and
dinner at home. I think we would be setting a good example and other employees would follow. What do you
think?
Dear West.
     We're with you, as you never know 6______ the party will have in store for you. 7______ you don't make
your farewells in an unhurried manner and don't give the impression that you are 8______ a rush, it will not
be rude to do so. The employees who get drunk may not even notice you're gone. More importantly, other
employees may find courage in 9______ to do the same, and perhaps if enough of them walk out, the boss
will find 10______ way to celebrate the holiday.
阅读理解。
     America hopes to start building a base that can continue to exist all the time on the moon within 20 years.
By the mid-2020s, astronauts will be staying there for six months a time. So what do scientists think food
and water will be like for those first moon residents?
     In the short term, food would have to be brought from Earth. The dream, however, is to grow things in
greenhouses on the moon. "You'd grow things in the liquid-there's no reason why that wouldn't work," says
Pillinger, a professor. This would mean floating plants in a nutrient-rich solution of water. "Soil is not a
necessary thing for plants; it's only to keep them standing upright," Pillinger adds.
     It would take at least a decade of experiments after the base was built before such a plan would work,
however. The main problem is working out how to get nutrients from the lunar soil. "Getting all that to work
requires a minimum level of infrastructure (基础设施) present before you can start experimenting with
greenhouses," says Pillinger.
     Finding strong plants to grow in space will also be hard, though scientists are already working on it:
scientist Amy Grunden of North Carolina State University has been working on genetically engineering food
crops that can be grown in harsh, off-planet environments.
     Water is a somewhat easier prospect (前景). One of the reasons that America wants to put its base at
the moon's south pole is that it thinks that, in the permanently shaded craters, there are large pools of frozen
water. If that's true, it could easily be mined and used to drink and to create oxygen for the habitants.
1. The passage is mainly about _____.
A. life on the moon by 2020
B. America's first moon base that exists forever
C. food and water on the future moon base
D. housing for settlers on the future moon base
2. How do people plant on the moon in the future?
A. By burying plants in the lunar soil.
B. By growing plants in water.
C. By keeping plants standing straight.
D. By making use of the moonlight.
3. What difficulty will scientists meet in solving the food problem?
A. How to find water to irrigate plants.
B. Where to experiment with plants.
C. How to grow plants in the moon soil.
D. What plants are suitable to grow on the moon.
4. Scientists want to build the base on the moon's south pole because _____.
A. there is oxygen for people to breathe
B. people have found the frozen water that can be drunk there
C. it is a place where water will possibly be found and supplied
D. there are large pools that can let people have a swim
阅读理解。
     The past ages of man have all been carefully labeled by anthropologists (人类学家). Descriptions like
"Palaeolithic (旧石器时代的) Man", "Neolithic" (新石器时代的) Man", etc. neatly sun up whole periods.
When the time comes for anthropologists to turn their attention to the twentieth century, they will surely
choose the label "Legless Man". Histories of the time will go something like this:"From the twentieth century,
people forgot how to use their legs. Men and women moved about in cars, buses and trains from a very
early age. There were lifts in all large buildings to prevent people from walking. And the surprising thing is
that they didn't use their legs even when they went on holiday."
     The future history books might also record that we were deprived (剥夺) of the use of our eyes. In our
hurry to get from one place to another, we failed to see anything on the way. Air travel gives you a bird's-eye
view of the world. When you travel by car or train, an unclear picture of the countryside constantly smears
the windows. Car drivers, especially, are mixed with the urge to go on and on: they never want to stop. The
typical twentieth-century traveler is the man who always says "I've been there." You mention the remotest,
and someone is bound to say "I've been there"-meaning, "I drove through it at 100 miles an hour on the way
to somewhere else."
     When you travel at high speeds, the present means nothing: you live mainly in the future because you spend
most of your time looking forward to arriving at some other place. But actual arrival, when it is achieved, is
meaningless. You want to move on again. By traveling like this, you suspend all experience. The traveler on
foot, on the other hand, lives constantly in the present.
     For him traveling and arriving are one and the same thing: he arrives somewhere with every step he makes.
He experiences the present moment with his eyes, his ears and the whole of his body. At the end of his journey
he feels a delicious physical tiredness. He knows that sound, satisfying sleep will be his: the just reward of all
true travelers.
1. What's the best title of the passage?
A. The advantages of travel
B. The best way to travel
C. The reward of true travel
D. Possible ways to travel
2. Anthropologists label man nowadays "Legless" because _____.
A. people forget how to use their legs
B. lifts prevent people from walking
C. modern vehicles have replaced walking
D. people prefer cars, buses and trains
3. While traveling at high speeds, _____.
A. people can get more pleasure from it
B. people always focus on next destination
C. people can enjoy the view of the destination
D. people care much about the arrangement of the journey
4. The author says "we are deprived of the use of our eyes" because _____.
A. people can't get a clear picture of the view along
B. eyes become useless in traveling at high speed
C. people want to sleep during traveling
D. people won't use their eyes
5. What does the author intend to tell us?
A. Legs become weaker.
B. There is no need to use legs or eyes.
C. Modern means of transportation make the world a small place.
D. We should experience the present heart and soul while traveling.
阅读理解。
     If you want to teach your children how to say sorry, you must be good at saying it yourself, especially to
your own children. But how you say it can be quite tricky.
     If you say to your children "I am sorry I got angry with you, but .."what follows that's but" can make the
apology ineffective. "I had a bad day" or "your noise was giving me a headache" leaves the person who has
been injured feeling that he should be apologizing for his bad behavior in expecting an apology.
     Another method by which people appear to apologize without actually doing so is to say "I'm sorry you're
upset"; this suggests that you are somehow at fault for allowing yourself to get upset by what the other person
has done.
     Then there is the general, all-covering apology, which avoids the necessity of identifying a specific act that
was particularly hurtful or insulting, and which the person who is apologizing should promise never to do again.
Saying "I'm useless as a parent" does not commit a person to any specific improvement.
     These pseudo-apologies are used by people who believe saying sorry shows weakness. Parents who wish
to teach their children to apologize should see it as a sign of strength, and therefore not resort to these pseudo-
apologies.
     But even when presented with examples of genuine contrition (悔悟), children still need help to become
aware of the complexities of saying sorry. A three-year-old might need help in understanding that other children
feel pain just as he does, and that hitting a playmate over the head with a heavy toy requires an apology. A six-
year-old might need reminding that spoiling other children's expectations can require an apology. A 12-year-old
might need to be shown that raiding the biscuit tin without asking permission is acceptable, but that borrowing
a parent's clothes without permission is not.
1. According to the author, "tricky" means ____.
A. simple
B. complicated
C. cautious
D. various
2. It is not advisable to use the general, all-covering apology because ____.
A. it is only an empty promise
B. it is not necessary
C. it is neither clear nor effective
D. it is hurtful and insulting
3. In teaching children to say sorry ____.
A. parents should set them a good example
B. parents should be patient and tolerant
C. the significance of it should be involved
D. their ages should be taken into account
4. According to the passage, apologizing properly is ____.
A. a social issue calling for immediate attention
B. a big problem faced by every family
C. a sign of social progress
D. not as simple as it seems
阅读理解。

     Many people write to newspaper and magazines express their opinions. Letters to the editor must carry
the writer's full name, address and telephone number, although the information is not necessary for publication.
This requirement to provide personal particulars is a clear indication that writers are held responsible for what
they say. When a writer wants his voice heard, he needs to claim ownership of his voice. Responsibility is the
name of the game.
     "People today prefer living together to putting their signatures on a marriage certificate because they refuse
to accept responsibility for the relationship," said social worker Ken Yip, "and this is what is causing a lot of
family problems." When we sign a paper, for example, a business contract or a bank document, the signature
is symbol of consent, an agreement to take the matter seriously. Most governments and many organizations
will not process writer's complaints if they do not bear the writer's signature. The absence of a signature, they
explain, tells us that the writer cannot be too serious and therefore does not deserve a reply.
     There are people who wish to remain anonymous (匿名的) for various reasons. Multi-billionaire Mr. King
donates generously to charity several times a year. He gives simply because he wants to help but not for the
publicity his donations may bring, and he does not want his good deeds to make news. In other cases, people
insist on anonymity because they are afraid of the consequences of revealing their identity. Crime witnesses
may be willing to assist the police, but most are unwilling to give their names when reporting a crime.
     Name or no name? The answer is very personal and lies in how much we want to get involved. We all have
a name, it is a matter if responsibility to it when we make a statement, a claim or an accusation. We all want
to honour our own name, and it is only by stamping our expression of an opinion with our own name that we
honour what we say.

阅读理解。
Dear Friend,
     The recent success of children's books has made the general public aware that there's a huge market
out there.
     And there's a growing need for new writers trained to create the $3 billion worth of children's books
bought each year……plus stories and articles needed by over 650 publishers of magazines for children
and teenagers.
     Who are these needed writers? They're ordinary folks like you and me.
     But am I good enough?
     I was once where you might be now. My thoughts of writing had been pushed down by self-doubt, and
I didn't know where to turn for help.
     Then, I accepted a free offer from the Institute to test my writing aptitude (潜能), and it turned out to
be the inspiration I needed.
     The promise that paid off
     The Institute made the same promise to me that they will make to you, if you show basic writing ability:
     You will complete at least one manuscript (手稿) suitable to hand in to a publisher by the time you finish
our course.
     I really didn't expect any publication before I finished the course, but that happened. I sold three stories.
And I soon discovered that was not unusual at the Institute.
     Since graduation, I have authored 34 nationally published children's books and over 300 stories and articles.
     Free test and brochure
     We offer a free aptitude test and will send you a copy of our brochure describing our recognized home-
study courses on the basis of one-on-one training.
     Realize your writing dream today. There's nothing sadder than a dream delayed until it fades forever.
     Sincerely
     Kristi Holl,
     Instructor Institute of Children's Literature
1. From the first three paragraphs, we learn that _____.
A. children's books are usually bestsellers
B. publishers are making $3 billion each year
C. magazines for teenagers have drawn public attention
D. there is a growing need for writers of children's books
2. When finishing the course, you are promised to _____.
A. be a successful publisher
B. become a confident editor
C. finish one work for publication
D. get one story or article published
3. Kristi Holl mentions her experience mainly to _____.
A. prove she is a good instructor
B. Promote the writing program
C. Give her advice on course preparation
D. Show she sold more stories than articles