题目内容
He grew up among knights (国际象棋中的马), kings and queens. At 16, Norway’s chess genius Magnus Carlsen is pushing to become the world’s youngest world title contender (竞争者).
Carlsen, who was introduced to the game by his father Henrik when he was a little boy, became the world’s youngest international grandmaster (大师) at 13.Now he is 17th in the World Chess Federation’s ranking of top players –a position much desired for a player his age.
“I’m going for the world championship,” says Magnus, the third youngest grandmaster in world history. But former champion Gary Kasparov and India’s Viswanathan Anand, the World Chess Federation’s current number one, already see him as a possible person who will take their position after they have left.
From a young age, Carlsen showed signs of extraordinary intelligence. “At the age of two, he already knew all the car brand names. At five, whatever he built with his toys was very unique and outstanding,” his father says.
It is also reported that he learnt the names of every country of the world, with their flag, capital and size by heart. But his first attempts at the game were embarrassing and he was far from the “Mozart of Chess”.
“I almost gave up,” his father remembers. But as Magnus watched his father and older sister play, he began to like the challenge.
After playing his first tournament(决赛) at eight, his baby face became a common feature in chess circles.
When asked what he does when not playing chess, Magnus’ answers to an interviewer’s questions come easily.
Girls? “I haven’t done much in that field.”
Money? “Has never been a problem.”
Hobbies? “I love to play football, spend time with my friends and be in front of my computer as people my age do. And listen to music.”
But then, strangely enough, math is not his thing. “I was definitely the best in my class when I was little but now I hate it,” he says.
So what’s the secret behind his success so far?
“Before a match I will sleep a lot,” he says. “There are very often bad dreams; like that the person I am playing with cheats.”
1.Magnus began to show his talent in chess at the age of ______.
A.13 B.16 C.8 D.5
2.Why is Magnus good at chess ?
A.Because he played his tournament at a very young age.
B.Because he is better at math than others.
C.Because he had a good rest by sleeping a lot before each match.
D.Because he was born with a special ability to create and learn new things.
3.As a famous chess player, Magnus likes to do the following things except ______.
A.getting together with kids of his age B.playing football
C.playing his computer D.dating girls
4.Magnus is considered to be “Mozart of Chess” because ______.
A.Magnus’ hobby of listening to music plays a part in his success
B.Magnus has the same gift for chess as Mozart has for music
C.Magnus was not quick at learning chess in the beginning
D.Magnus decided to become “Mozart” while still young
C D D B
Ron Meyer is the president and COO(首席运营官) of Universal Studios.As one of the most successful business leaders in Hollywood, he heads up Universal Pictures and Universal Parks & Resorts.He's the guy who oversees the production of Multimillion-dollar extravaganzas(作品) like King Kong and Cinderella Man.
Meyer’s story sounds like the plot of one of his motion pictures.He grew up in a modest home where there was little income.It was a big deal to go to a restaurant.At 15, he quit high school and spent his time hanging out with the neighborhood toughs(流氓).He was then a kid quick with his fists who seemed to get into fights somewhat regularly.At one point, he was separated from others with an infectious disease, having no TV and nothing to do.His mother sent him two books.One was The Amboy Dukes, a novel about kids in street gangs.The other was The Flesh Peddlers, about a guy in the talent agency(星探公司)who lived a successful life.“I realized,” he says, “that I was no longer that silly kid I had been, and I wanted to change my life.”
Meyer took any job he could get.He worked as a busboy and short-order cook.He cleaned offices and sold shoes.That attitude made an impression on people.One day he received a call from Paul Kohner, a successful agent who represented stars like John Huston, Charles Bronson and Lana Turner.Their messenger and driver had quit, and they knew Ron was willing to take whatever job they offered. He started the job the next day.
Meyer was lucky to work with a good boss―and he had the brains to make the most of that experience.In nearly six years of driving for Kohner, Meyer became his right-hand man and learned a lot.By the 1970s, Meyer had built many relationships in the business.In 1975, the fate presented an opportunity and he started his own operation Creative Artists Agency, which became a huge success, representing Hollywood legends like Barbra Streisand, Tom Hanks and Tom Cruise.
Twenty years later, Meyer was appointed to run Universal Studios, a position far beyond his youthful dream.But once he saw success was possible, he was driven to achieve it.Today, colleagues regularly owe his success―and theirs―to his humility and perseverance.It’s a level of success that takes determination, personality and intelligence, whether it comes from a college education or from the street.
【小题1】What is the main idea of the passage?
A.How a bitter childhood contributes to one’s success. |
B.It’s important to choose a right career to achieve one’s life goal. |
C.A talent agency helps a person to become famous. |
D.It’s people’s determination, intelligence and personality that decide their success. |
A.He benefited a good deal from the experience. |
B.He smartly took the opportunity to learn from the experience. |
C.That experience made him ever smarter than ever before. |
D.He used his brains to impress his boss. |
A.A talent agency is to oversee the production of movies. |
B.Ron Meyer did far more successfully than Raul Kohner. |
C.Relationship is the most important thing in the film industry. |
D.Meyer had never thought of being as successful as today. |
Driving to a friend’s house on a recent evening, I was attracted by the sight of the full moon rising just above my friend’s rooftop. I stopped to watch it for a few moments, thinking about what a pity it is that most city people --- myself included --- usually miss sights like this because we spend most of our lives indoors.
My friend had also seen it. He grew up living in a forest in Europe, and the moon meant a lot to him then. It had touched much of his life.
I know the feeling. Last December I took my seven-year-old daughter to the mountainous jungle of northern India with some friends. We stayed in a forest rest house with no electricity or running hot water. Our group had campfires outside every night, and indoors when it was too cold outside. The moon grew to its fullest during our trip. Between me and the high mountains lay three or four valleys. Not a light shone in them and not a sound could be heard. It was one of the quietest places I have ever known, a bottomless well of silence. And above me was the full moon, which struck me deeply.
Today our lives are filled with glass, metal, plastic and fiber-glass. We have television,
cell phones, pagers, electricity, heaters and ovens and air-conditioners, cars, computers.
Struggling through traffic that evening at the end of a tiring day, most of it spent indoors, I thought, “Before long, I would like to live in a small cottage. There I will grow vegetables and read books and walk in the mountains. And perhaps write, but not in anger. I may become an old man there, and wear the bottoms of my trousers rolled and measure out my life in coffee spoons. But I will be able to walk outside on a cold silent night and touched the moon.”
【小题1】The best title for the passage would be _________.
A.Touched by the Moon | B.The Pleasures of Modern Life |
C.A Bottomless well of Silence | D.Break away from Modern life |
A.there was too much pollution. |
B.he failed to see the fullest moon. |
C.he didn’t adapt to modern inventions |
D.there were too many accidents on the road. |
A.No modern equipment. | B.Complete silence. |
C.The nice moon. | D.The high mountain. |
A.show that the writer likes city life very much. |
B.tell us that people greatly benefit from modern life. |
C.explain that people have less chances to enjoy nature. |
D.show that we can also enjoy nature at home through them. |
A.express the feeling of returning to nature. |
B.show the love for the moonlight. |
C.advise modern people to learn to live. |
D.want to communicate longing for modern life. |
Daniel Boone was born in the United States in 1734. He didn't go to school and couldn't read, although he learned all about the forests, streams and hunting. He could move silently like an Indian leaving no marks. He loved to live alone in the woods where nothing frightened him.
When he grew up, he married and tried to settle down on a farm. A year later, however, he wasn't satisfied and decided to go into the unknown western lands, crossing the Appalachian Mountains. When he returned after two years, he became famous for his long journey. He brought valuable animal skins and told stories about the Indians.
After this, he chose to keep travelling to unknown places. Once he lost to the Indians in battle and was taken away. The Indians liked him and became his friends.
Daniel Boone died at the age of 86. He is remembered as an explorer(探险者)and a pioneer who lived an exciting life in the early years of American nation.
【小题1】Daniel Boone's early life was mainly spent in ______ .
A.learning about nature |
B.hunting with his friends |
C.learning useful skills from the Indians |
D.studying at home because he couldn't go to school |
A.set up a large farm |
B.go on a journey with his wife |
C.find food, new land for his farm |
D.live a peaceful life with his family |
A.he travelled a lot in the western lands |
B.he was very good at telling stories |
C.he found better animal skins than others |
D.he was the first to climb the Appalachian Mountains |
A.Because they wanted to learn from him. |
B.Because he wanted to make peace with them. |
C.Because they wanted to make friends with white people. |
D.No reason is told in this article. |
A.warm-hearted | B.strong |
C.careful | D.brave |
Robert Burns, the son of a hard-working and intelligent farmer, was the oldest of seven children. Although always hard pressed financially, their father encouraged his sons with their education. As a result, Burns not only read the Scottish poetry of Ramsay and the collections by Hailes and Herd, but also the works of Pope, Locke, and Shakespeare.
By 1781, Burns had tried his hand at several agricultural jobs without success. Although he had begun writing, and his poems were spread widely in manuscript (手稿), none were published until 1786, when Burns published Chiefly in the Scottish Dialect (1786), which was an immediate success. Later Burns brought out a second edition of his poems at Edinburgh in 1787, and for two winters he was socially active in the Scottish city. In 1788 he retired to a farm at Ellis land. By 1791 Burns had failed as a farmer, and he moved to Dumfries, where he held a position as a tax collector. He died of illness at 37.
Burns’s art is at its best in songs such as My Heart’s in the Highlands. Some of his songs, such as Auld Lang Syne and Comin’ thro’ the Rye, are among the most familiar and best-loved songs in the English language. But his talent was not limited to songs; two descriptive pieces, Tam o’ Shanter and The Jolly Beggars, are among his masterpieces.
Burns had a fine sense of humor, which was reflected in his satirical (讽刺的), descriptive, and playful poems. His great popularity with the Scots lay in his ability to describe the life of his fellow rural Scots. His use of dialect brought an energetic, much-needed freshness into English poetry.
【小题1】 What can we learn from the first paragraph?
A.Burn had a wealthy childhood. |
B.Burns was best loved by his parents. |
C.Burns’s father cared more about his kids’ education. |
D.Burns wanted to be a poet when he grew up. |
A.1781 | B.1786 | C.1787 | D.1791 |
A.songs | B.poems | C.stories | D.humors |
A.His satirical style. | B.His descriptiveness. |
C.His fine sense of humor. | D.His use of Scottish dialect. |
A.majored in agriculture when he was a student |
B.earned a lot of money by publishing his poems |
C.was a failure in managing farms but a success in art |
D.showed much interest in collecting tax before he died |