摘要:D come from the direction-.
网址:http://m.1010jiajiao.com/timu3_id_2529748[举报]
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| "Everything happens for the best," my mother said whenever I 1 disappointment. "If you can carry on, one day something 2 will happen. And you'll realize that it wouldn't have happened if not for that 3 disappointment." Mother was right, 4 I discovered after graduating from college in 1932. I had decided to 5 a job in radio, then work my way up to sports 6 . I hitchhiked to Chicago and 7 on the door of every station-and got turned 8 every time. In one studio, a kind lady told me that big stations couldn't risk hiring an 9 person-"Go out in the sticks and find a small station that will give you a 10 ," she said. I thumbed home to Dixon, Illinois. 11 there was no radio-announcing job in Dixon, my father said Montgomery Ward had opened a store and wanted a local athlete to 12 its sports department. Since Dixon was where I had played high school football, I 13 . The job 14 just right for me. But I wasn't hired. My disappointment must have 15 , "Everything happens for the best," Mom 16 me. Dad offered me the car to job hunt. I tried WOC Radio in Davenport, lowa. The program director, a wonderful Scotsman named Peter MacAethur, told me they had already hired an announcer. As I left his office, my frustration 17 . I asked aloud, "How can a fellow get to be a sports announcer if he can't get a job in a radio station?" I was waiting for the elevator 18 I heard MacAethur calling, "What was that you said about sports? Do you know anything about football?" Then he asked me to stand before a microphone and to broadcast a(an) 19 game. On my way home, once again I thought of my mother's words. I often wonder what 20 my life might have taken if I'd gotten the job at Montgomery Ward. | ||||
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| Upon receiving the Nobel Peace Prize, Mother Teresa said, "What can you do to 1 world peace? Go home and love your 2 and love your friends. Love them without measure". A 3 story tells of a woman who finally decided to ask her boss for a raise in salary. All day she felt 4 . Late in the afternoon she gathered 5 to see her employer. To her 6 the boss agreed to a raise. The woman 7 her home that evening to a beautiful table set with their best dishes. Her husband had come home early and prepared a festive meal. She 8 if he somehow knew that she would not get 9 . She found him in the kitchen and 10 him the good news. They hugged and kissed, then sat down to the 11 meal. Next to her plate the woman found a beautifully lettered note. It read, " 12 , darling! I knew you'd get the raise! These things will tell you how much I 13 you." Following the supper, her husband went into the kitchen to 14 . She noticed that a second 15 had fallen from his pocket. Picking it off the floor, she read, "Don't worry about not getting the 16 ! You deserve (应得) it anyway! These things will tell you how much I love you." Someone has said that the measure of love is when you love without 17 . What this man feels for his wife is 18 acceptance and love, 19 she succeeds or fails. His love 20 her victories and soothes her wounds. He stands with her, no matter what life throws in their direction. | |||
| ( )1.A. urge ( )2.A. parents ( )3.A. sad ( )4.A. nervous ( )5.A. energy ( )6.A. worry ( )7.A. reached ( )8.A. considered ( )9.A. turned down ( )10.A. declared ( )11.A. optimistic ( )12.A. Good luck ( )13.A. respect ( )14.A. bring up ( )15.A. letter ( )16.A. award ( )17.A. measure ( )18.A. instant ( )19.A. either ( )20.A. celebrates |
B. promote B. children B. pleasant B. excited B. strength B. disappointment B. got B. argued B. turned off B. told B. wonderful B. Cheers B. admire B. clean up B. notice B. promotion B. intention B. appropriate B. whether B. admits |
C. construct C. wife C. frightening C. desperate C. power C. delight C. arrived C. wondered C. turned over C. informed C. successful C. Congratulations C. envy C. make up C. note C. raise C. discussion C. necessary C. when C. encourages |
D. approach D. family D. moving D. dangerous D. courage D. horror D. returned D. thought D. turned out D. proved D. convenient D. Help yourself D. love D. dress up D. poster D. reward D. doubt D. total D. no matter D. believes in |
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| It was Tom's first visit to England, and he was looking forward to his first journey on London's Underground Railway. And against his friends' 1 , he was determined to travel 2 . He entered the station shortly after five o'clock in the afternoon. This is a 3 time to travel in London, 4 crowds of people go home from work at this hour. He 5 to join a long line of people waiting for tickets. When at last his 6 came, he had some difficulty in making himself understood by the ticket seller. 7 , he got the right ticket in the end and by asking people the 8 , he also found the right platform. It was 9 with people. He did not 10 to get on the first train, but he was able to move nearer to the platform so as to be in a better 11 to get on the next one. When this train came in, Tom was 12 forward onto the train by the 13 of people from behind. The doors closed and the train moved off. He was unable to see the 14 of the stations where the train 15 , but he knew that the station he wanted was the sixth 16 along the line. When the train reached the sixth station, Tom got off, feeling 17 that his journey had been so easy. But he suddenly realized that he had come to a station he had never 18 . He explained his 19 to a man who was standing on the platform. With a 20 on his face, he told Tom that he had caught a train going in the opposite direction. | ||||
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| Several pieces of advice I've gotten in my life have really made a difference. "Be 1 to people." This sounds quite common, but I'll never 2 my father telling me that. I was ten, and I had been rude to someone. He said, "There is no 3 in being rude to anyone at any time. You never know who you're going to meet later in life. 4 , you don't change anything by being rude. 5 you don't get anywhere." " 6 that you can do anything you want to do. Don't let anyone say, 'You're not 7 enough…it's too hard…it's a bad 8 …no one has done that before…girls don't do that. My mom gave me that advice in 1973. And it 9 me to never worry about what others were saying about my 10 direction. "Always do the 11 job you can do at whatever you're assigned, even if you think it's 12 ." Jerry Parkinson, an assistant advertising manager and my boss at P&G, told me this in 1979. Here I had just 13 from Harvard Business School(HBS), and I was assigned to determine 14 the hole in the Ivory shampoo bottle should be: 3/8 of an inch or 1/8 of an inch.I did research, focus groups …and I would come home at night 15 how I had gone from HBS to this. But later I realized that any job you're given is a(n) 16 to prove yourself. "Don't be a credit hog(吝惜赞扬的人). If you're 17 in the neighborhood of good things, good things will 18 to you." Tom Tierney, who was my boss at Bain in 1981 and is now on the eBay board, told me this. It's 19 ? You get ahead by crediting other people. Finally, in 1998, I was in New York 20 the big celebration as eBay went public(上市). My husband is a doctor. I called into his operating room and told him the great news. And he said, "That's nice." | ||||
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| Several pieces of advice I've gotten in my life have really made a difference. "Be 1 to people." This sounds quite common, but I'll never 2 my father telling me that. I was ten, and I had been rude to someone. He said, "There is no 3 in being rude to anyone at any time. You never know who you're going to meet later in life. 4 .you don't change anything by being rude. 5 you don't get anywhere." " 6 that you can do anything you want to do. Don't let anyone say, 'You're not 7 enough…it's too hard…it's a bad 8 …no one has done that before…girls don't do that. '"My mom gave me that advice in 1973. And it 9 me to never worry about what others were saying about my 10 direction. "Always do the 11 job you can do at whatever you're assigned, even if you think it's 12 ." Jerry Parkinson, an assistant advertising manager and my boss at P&G, told me this in 1979.Here I had just 13 from Harvard Business School(HBS), and I was assigned to determine 14 the hole in the Ivory shampoo bottle should be: 3/8 of an inch or 1/8 of an inch. I did research, focus groups...and I would come home at night 15 how I had gone from HBS to this. But later I realized that any job you're given is a(n) 16 to prove yourself. "Don't be a credit hog (吝惜赞扬的人). If you're 17 in the neighborhood of good things, good things will 18 to you." Tom Tierney, who was my boss at Bain in 1981 and is now on the eBay board, told me this. It's 19 ? you get ahead by crediting (赞扬) other people. Finally, in 1998, I was in New York 20 the big celebration as eBay went public (上市). My husband is a doctor. I called into his operating room and told him the great news. And he said, "That's nice." | |||||
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