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There¡¯s a man in the habit of hitting me on the head with an umbrella£®At first I couldn¡¯t stand it£»now I'm used to it£®
I don¡¯t know his name£®I know he¡¯s average in appearance£¬wears a gray suit£®and has a common face one hot morning£¬when 1 was sitting off a tree-shaded bench in Palermo Park£¬reading the paper£¬suddenly I felt something touch my head£®It was the very same man who now£¬as I'm writing£®keeps striking me with an umbrella£®
On that occasion I turned around filled with anger£®He just kept on hitting me£®I asked him if he was crazy£®He didn¡¯t even seem to hear me£®Thell I threatened to call a policeman£®Calmly£®cool as a cucumber£¬he stuck with his task£®After a few moments of hesitation£¬and seeing that he was not about to change his attitude£¬I stood up and hit him on the nose£®The man fell down£®But he immediately got back on his feet£¬obviously with great effort£¬and without a word again began hitting me on the head with the umbrella£®His nose was bleeding and£¬at that moment£®Ifelt sorry for him I felt regret for having hit him so hard£®After all£¬the man wash¡¯t exactly hitting me£»he was merely tapping me lightly with his umbrella£¬not causing any pain at all£®Of course£®those taps were extremely bothersome£®As we all know£¬when a fly lands on your forehead£¬you don¡¯t feel any pain£»what you feel is annoyance well then£¬that umbrella was one huge fly that kept landing on my head time after time£®
Convinced that I was dewing with a madman£®I tried to escape£®But the man followed me£¬wordlessly continuing to hit me£®So I began to run(I should point out that not many people run as fast asI do)£®He took off after me£®trying to land a blow£®The man was out of breath so that I thought£¬if I continued to force him to run at that speed£¬he would drop dead fight then and there?
56£®When the man began to strike the author with an umbrella£¬the author
A£®became angry B£®called the police
C£®turned around and escaped D£®turned around and fought back
57£®The author would most probably agree that he man was £®
A£®deaf B£®blind C£®dead D£®mad
58£®The author felt sorry for the man because £®
A£®the man formed a bad habit of beating others
B£®he hit I the marl so hard that his nose bled
C£®the man couldn¡¯t catch up with him
D£®there was a fly on the man¡¯s head
59£®It can be learned from the passage that the man £®
A£®shouted loudly while hitting the author
B£®wanted to tell the author something
C£®rail after the author breathlessly
D£®acted as if he were a fly
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Work is a part of living ¡ªmy grandparents understood that. They lived and worked on a farm that has been in my family for 150 years. They raised chickens for eggs , pigs and cattle for meat . Cows were kept for milk and the cream, from which Grandma made butter and cheese. What little yard they had became a garden.
The Depression, therefore, didn¡¯t make much change in their lives. But it did bring an unending flow of men out of work, drifting from job to job, to the farm. The first to show up at the door of the kitchen was a man in rags. He took off his hat and quietly explained that he hadn¡¯t eaten for a while. Grandpa stood watching him a bit , then said , ¡°There¡¯s a stack of firewood against the fence behind the barn (¹È²Ö). I¡¯ve been needing to get it moved to the other side of the fence . You have just about enough time to finish the job before lunch .¡±
Grandma said a surprising thing happened. The man got a shine in his eyes and he hurried to the barn at once. She set another place at the table and made an apple pie. During lunch, the stranger didn¡¯t say much, but when he left, his shoulders had straightened. ¡°Nothing ruins a man like losing his self-respect,¡± Grandpa later told me.
Soon after, another man showed up asking for a meal. This one was dressed in a suit and carried a small old suitcase. Grandpa came out when he heard voices. He looked at the man and then offered a handshake.¡± There is a stack of firewood along the fence down behind the barn I¡¯ve been meaning to get it moved. It¡¯d sure be a help to me . And we¡¯d be pleased to have you stay for lunch.¡± The fellow set his suitcase aside and neatly laid his coat on top. Then he set off to work.
Grandma says she doesn¡¯t remember how many strangers they shared a meal with during those Depression days-or how many times that stack of wood got moved.
1.When he was asked to move a stack of firewood, the first man who asked for a meal got a shine in his eyes for he was glad that .
A£®he had found a good job |
B£®he would have something to eat |
C£®he would no longer suffer from the Depression |
D£®he would get what he wanted without losing his self-respect |
2.The writer¡¯s grandfather asked those jobless men to move the stack of firewood because .
A£®he didn¡¯t want them to have a meal free of charge |
B£®he had been needing to get it moved |
C£®he wanted to help them in his own way |
D£®he wanted to show them his kindness and respect |
3.The writer¡¯s grandfather was all of the following but .
A£®kind |
B£®thoughtful |
C£®wealthy |
D£®sympathetic |
4.The best title for the story would be .
A£®The Depression |
B£®The Pleasure of Helping Others |
C£®No Pains, No Gains |
D£®Work-A Part of Living |
At five he was collecting old newspapers to make money. And when he was 15 he signed his schoolmates up to start a baby-sitting circle.
Now 20, third-year Cambridge University student, Peter Blackburn is managing director of a company with a £ 30,000 plan. And he thinks it will make more than $15,000 by next summer. He set up Peter Blackburn Ltd last year to bring out a new, color term-planner that now students all over the UK are using.
"I felt that most of the planners going around were pretty unimaginative," he says, "I believed that I could do a better job and decided to have a go".
Blackburn admits that he is putting far more effort into business than his computer studies course at university. While fellow students are out with their friends, he keeps in touch with his business office in Lancashire by movable phone. Before he set up the company he spent one holiday preparing a plan that would persuade his bank to lend him money.
"Most students work hard for a good degree because they believe that will help them get a job to support themselves," he says "I work hard at my company, because that is what will support me next year, after I leave college."
Friends believe that Blackburn will make £ 1 million within 5 years. He is not quite so sure, however. "There's a lot to be done yet," he says.
1.Choose the right order of the facts given in the passage.
a. He spent his holiday preparing a plan. b. He collected newspapers.
c. He set up his own company. d. He asked the bank for money.
e. He set up a babysitting circle.
A£®e, b, c, a, d |
B£®b, e, a, d, c |
C£®b, e, d, a, c |
D£®b, e, c, a, d |
2.When he was quite young, Blackburn _______ .
A£®already made a lot of money |
B£®already had a business brain |
C£®was already managing director of a company |
D£®already set up his own business |
3.The underlined expression in the fourth paragraph "have a go," here means _______ .
A£®give up this job and have a new one |
B£®leave the company |
C£®have a try |
D£®develop my business quickly |
4.In spite of£¨¾¡¹Ü£© a college student, Blackburn _______ .
A£®spends more time on his business than on his studies course |
B£®keeps in touch with his business office by movable phone |
C£®seldom goes out with his friends |
D£®often spends whole holiday preparing business plan |
5.Which of the following best explain why Blackburn works hard at his company?
A£®He wants to do more business practice before he leaves college. |
B£®He wants to make more money before he leaves college. |
C£®He wants to get a good job like most students after he leaves the college. |
D£®he depends on the company for his living in the future. |