题目内容
— Has the little girl passed ______ P.E. test?
— She has tried twice, and the teacher will allow her to have _____ third try.
A. the; 不填 B. a; the C. the; a D. the; the
C
■Ruffi Ruff! Where's Scruff?
Reading level: Baby—reschool
Hardcover: 16 pages
Language: English
Availability: In Stock.Sold by Amazon-com.Gift—wrap available.
Book Description: It's bath time for Scruff.But does anyone know where he's hiding? Have the cows seen him? Moo—no! How about the pigs? Oink—no! But not for toddlers.If they look carefully, they'll find Scruffhiding on every pop—up page!
■You and Me, Baby
Reading level: Baby—Grade 1
Hardcover: 40 pages
Language: English
Availability: In Stock.Ships from and sold byAmazon.com.Gift—wrap available.
Only 4 left in stock—rder soon.
■The Giving Tree
Reading level: Ages 4~8
Hardcover: 64 pages
Language: English
Availability: Sold all the year round and choose One—Day Shipping at checkout.
Book Description: Once there was a tree...and she loved a little boy.Every day the boy would come to the tree to eat her apples, swing from her branches, or slide down her trunk...and the tree was happy.
■Where the Wild Things Are
Reading level: Ages 6~10
Hardcover Comic: 62 pages
Language: English
Availability: In Stock.Ships from and Sold by Amazon-com.Gift—wrap available.Order it at once, and choose One—Day Shipping at checkout.
■Goodnight Moon(Board book)
Reading level: Baby—Preschool
Board book: 30 pages
Language: English
Availability: In Stock.Ships from and sold by Amazon-com.
Book description: Perhaps the perfect children's bedtime book.Goodnight Moon is a short poem of goodnight wishes from a young rabbit.He says goodnight to every object in sight and within earshot, including the "quiet old lady whispering hush."
【小题1】If you want a book for an eight-year-old, which one will you choose?
A.You and Me, Baby | B.Where the Wild Things Are |
C.Goodnight Moon | D.Ruffi Ruff! Where's Scruff? |
A.Where the Wild Things Are | B.Goodnight Moon |
C.Ruff! Ruff! Where's Scruff? | D.The Giving Tree |
A.Where the Wild Things Are | B.You and Me, Baby |
C.RuffS Ruff! Where's Scrufl? | D.Goodnight Moon |
A.The Giving Tree | B.You and Me, Baby |
C.Goodnight Moon | D.Where the Wild Things Are |
A.abundant | B.secure | C.available | D.valid |
As any homemaker who has tried to keep order at the dinner table knows, there is far more to a family meal than food. Sociologist Michael Lewis has been studying 50 families to find out just how much more.
Lewis and his co-workers carried out their study by videotaping the families while they ate ordinary meals in their own homes. They found that parents with small families talk actively with each other and their children. But as the number of children gets larger, conversation gives way to the parents’ efforts to control the loud noise they make. That can have an important effect on the children. “In general the more question-asking the parents do, the higher the children’s IQ scores,” Lewis says. “And the more children there are, the less question-asking there is.”
The study also provides an explanation for why middle children often seem to have a harder time in life than their siblings. Lewis found that in families with three or four children, dinner conversation is likely to center on the oldest child, who has the most talk about, and the youngest, who needs the most attention. “Middle children are invisible,” says Lewis. “When you see someone get up from the table and walk around during dinner, chances are it’s the middle child.” There is, however, one thing that stops all conversation and prevents anyone from having attention: “When the TV is on,” Lewis says, “dinner is a non-event.”
【小题1】The writer’s purpose in writing the text is to _________.
A.show the relationship between parents and children |
B.teach parents ways to keep order at the dinner table |
C.report on the findings of a study |
D.give information about family problems |
A.they are busy serving food to their children |
B.they are busy keeping order at the dinner table |
C.they have to pay more attention to younger children |
D.they are tired out having prepared food for the whole family |
A.have to help their parents to serve dinner |
B.get the least attention from the family |
C.are often kept away from the dinner table |
D.find it hard to keep up with other children |
A.why TV is important in family life |
B.why parents should keep good order |
C.why children in small families seem to be quieter |
D.why middle children seem to have more difficulties in life |
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:请将答案写在答题卡上相应题号的横线上。每个空格只填1个单词。
You probably know what fast food is. It is cooked food that is ready almost as soon as you enter a public eating place. It does not cost much.
Most fast food restaurants are chain (连锁) restaurants. That means each one is part of a huge company. Each restaurant in the chain has the same large, colorful sign that can be easy to recognize from far away. Each offers its own carefully limited choice of foods. Each kind of hamburger or piece of chicken tastes the same at every restaurant in the chain.
The fast food industry began with two brothers in the nineteen forties. Mac and Dick McDonald owned a small, but very successful restaurant. They sold only a few kinds of simple food, especially hamburgers. People stood outside the restaurant at a window. They told the workers inside what they wanted to eat. They received and paid for their food very quickly. The food came in containers that could be thrown away. The system was so successful that the McDonald brothers discovered they could sell a lot of food and lower their prices.
Ray Kroc sold restaurant supplies. He recognized the importance of the McDonald brothers' idea. Kroc paid the McDonald brothers for permission to open several restaurants similar to theirs. He opened the first McDonald's restaurant near Chicago in nineteen fifty-five. Soon, more McDonald's were opening all across the United States. Other people copied the idea and more fast food restaurants followed.
Fast food restaurants spread quickly in the United States because of franchising. Franchising means selling the legal right to operate a store in a company's chain to an independent business person. If the company approves, the business person may buy the store for a period of years. Each restaurant also gives the company about ten percent of the money it earns in sales. Today, over seventy percent of McDonald's restaurants worldwide are owned and operated by independent businessmen and women.
McDonald's and fast food industry | |
Explanation of fast food | It is cooked food which is more convenient and much (【小题1】) than other food. |
Characters of the chain restaurants | There are: ▲(【小题2】) recognized signs ▲carefully (【小题3】) choice of foods ▲the (【小题4】) tastes of food at every restaurant in the chain. |
(【小题5】) of McDonald's | It developed from Mac and Dick McDonald’s (【小题6】) but successful restaurant which (【小题7】) some kinds of simple food with different service from others’. |
Great changes brought by Kroc to McDonald's | ▲The McDonald brothers (【小题8】) Kroc to open several same restaurants with theirs. ▲Franchising made Fast food restaurants spread (79) in the United States. |
Current situation | At most (【小题9】) percent of McDonald's restaurants worldwide are not run by independent businessmen and women. |