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Like a]l little children, my seven-year-old daughter gets scared sometimes when she is trying to go to sleep.If the wind is howling, her 36 can begin working overtime and she may see a (n) 37 in the shadows laughing in the wind.
This past Monday was one such night. 38 after I put her to bed, she came into my room crying that she was scared. She said she 39 the sound of a bad guy laughing and she was extremely afraid that 40 was going to get all of us. Her tears 41 my heart, and I held my daughter in my arms and assured her that nothing would happen to her. I walked her back into her room and 42 down beside her to continue to assure her that I would keep her safe.
“Yes, I know you will always 43 me, Daddy, but what about when you go to sleep?” she asked.
“Sweetheart,” I comforted her, “there are great angels all around this house, and they 44 sleep. They are here just to safeguard us. They can 45 any bad guy from getting in here.”
“ 46 , Daddy, what about when the angels miss? I mean like when kids are kidnapped (绑架)or robbers 47 people’s houses – what about those 48 ?”
Her question struck m e – when did I start 49 questions like this? When did I begin not to consider the most obvious problems of our 50 ? I mean, I 51 problems every day but I am still very surprised by this 52 question.
I considered her question and realized there is no perfect 53 . And I drew my 54 and simply sated, “I don’t know, sweetheart.” I held her a little 55 , and I went back to my original answer, “I am with you.”
36.A.thought B.imagination C.idea D.creation
37.A.picture B.animal C.tree D.figure
38.A.Shortly B.Long C.Hardly D.Quietly
39.A.ignored B.made C.heard D.invited
40.A.anyone B.nobody C.someone D.anybody
41.A.felt B.cut C.comforted D.got
42.A.lay B.laid C.lied D.slept
43.A.hold B.watch C.keep D.protect
44.A.sometimes B.never C.often D.always
45.A.catch B.see C.stop D.observe
46.A.Thus B.Then C.So D.But
47.A.break into B.run into C.come into D.turn into
48.A.years B.months C.days D.times
49.A.judging B.asking C.avoiding D.causing
50.A.existence B.workshop C.memory D.nature
51.A.point to B.deal with C.play with D.stick to
52.A.hard B.simple C.stupid D.clever
53.A.result B.word C.answer D.exercise
54.A.breath B.conclusion C.attention D.money
55.A.closer B.further C.higher D.tighter
查看习题详情和答案>>My husband and son took a New York-to-Milwaukee flight that was supposed to leave Friday at 11:29 am. The flight boarded after 4 pm and didn’t leave the gate until 4:40, and half an hour later the pilot announced it would be another hour until takeoff. At that point a Jewish family, worried about violating the Sabbath (安息日), asked to get off. Going back to the gate cost the plane its place in line for takeoff, and the flight was eventually cancelled. Was the airline right to grant that request?
M. W, Norwalk, CONN.
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Situations like that can bring out the worst in people. But despite the increasing resentment(怨恨) of a plane full of people, the pilot tried to do the right thing. He went out of his way to satisfy one family’s urgent need. He should not have done so.
Passengers bought tickets in the belief that the airline’s primary goal was to get them to their destination as close to the schedule as possible. Once they got on the plane and the doors are locked, it’s not correct to announce that the rules have changed and that a personal (as opposed to medical) emergency —no matter how urgent — might take precedence(优先).
That would be just as true if turning back to the gate had merely cost a few minutes rather than doomed the flight entirely, since on a plane, even a slight delay can spread outward, from the people in the cabin to those meeting them to the passengers waiting to board the plane for the next leg of its journey and so on. It would also be true if the personal emergency were not religious — if someone suddenly realized she’d made a professional mistake that might cost her millions, and she had to race back to the office to fix it.
If a religious practice does nothing to harm others, then airlines should make a reasonable effort to accommodate it. Though that family has every right to observe the Sabbath, it has no right to enlist an airplane full of captive bystanders to help them do so. By boarding a flight on a Friday afternoon, the family knowingly risked running into trouble. The risk was theirs alone to bear.
【小题1】M. W. wrote the letter to ask whether ______.
A.Any religious passenger has the right to ask the pilot to take off |
B.The airline has the right to cancel the flight without any reason |
C.A flight should meet any passenger’s need despite others’ benefit |
D.A plane which has left the gate should give up taking off |
A.The pilot did the right thing in spite of the fierce resentment. |
B.The plane should turn back if anyone aboard is seriously ill. |
C.Anybody who has boarded has no chance to get off the plane. |
D.Any flight shouldn’t change its schedule no matter what has happened. |
A.Turning back to the gate usually takes a plane quite a long time. |
B.Nobody should take precedence to require the plane to turn back to the gate. |
C.Even if it had taken a few minutes it was not right to turn back to the gate. |
D.It was OK if turning back to the gate hadn’t caused the flight to be cancelled. |
A.It’s right for the plane to turn back to the gate to save a passenger’s treasure |
B.The Jewish family should give up observing the Sabbath after boarding |
C.The biggest problem of turning back is to bring trouble to the pilot |
D.The Jewish family had better avoid boarding on Friday afternoon |
My husband and son took a New York-to-Milwaukee flight that was supposed to leave Friday at 11:29 am. The flight boarded after 4 pm and didn’t leave the gate until 4:40, and half an hour later the pilot announced it would be another hour until takeoff. At that point a Jewish family, worried about violating the Sabbath (安息日), asked to get off. Going back to the gate cost the plane its place in line for takeoff, and the flight was eventually cancelled. Was the airline right to grant that request?
M. W, Norwalk, CONN.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Situations like that can bring out the worst in people. But despite the increasing resentment(怨恨) of a plane full of people, the pilot tried to do the right thing. He went out of his way to satisfy one family’s urgent need. He should not have done so.
Passengers bought tickets in the belief that the airline’s primary goal was to get them to their destination as close to the schedule as possible. Once they got on the plane and the doors are locked, it’s not correct to announce that the rules have changed and that a personal (as opposed to medical) emergency —no matter how urgent — might take precedence(优先).
That would be just as true if turning back to the gate had merely cost a few minutes rather than doomed the flight entirely, since on a plane, even a slight delay can spread outward, from the people in the cabin to those meeting them to the passengers waiting to board the plane for the next leg of its journey and so on. It would also be true if the personal emergency were not religious — if someone suddenly realized she’d made a professional mistake that might cost her millions, and she had to race back to the office to fix it.
If a religious practice does nothing to harm others, then airlines should make a reasonable effort to accommodate it. Though that family has every right to observe the Sabbath, it has no right to enlist an airplane full of captive bystanders to help them do so. By boarding a flight on a Friday afternoon, the family knowingly risked running into trouble. The risk was theirs alone to bear.
1.M. W. wrote the letter to ask whether ______.
A.Any religious passenger has the right to ask the pilot to take off
B.The airline has the right to cancel the flight without any reason
C.A flight should meet any passenger’s need despite others’ benefit
D.A plane which has left the gate should give up taking off
2.What do we know from the reply letter?
A.The pilot did the right thing in spite of the fierce resentment.
B.The plane should turn back if anyone aboard is seriously ill.
C.Anybody who has boarded has no chance to get off the plane.
D.Any flight shouldn’t change its schedule no matter what has happened.
3.What does the underlined part in Paragraph 4 mean?
A.Turning back to the gate usually takes a plane quite a long time.
B.Nobody should take precedence to require the plane to turn back to the gate.
C.Even if it had taken a few minutes it was not right to turn back to the gate.
D.It was OK if turning back to the gate hadn’t caused the flight to be cancelled.
4.The author of the reply letter thinks that _________.
A.It’s right for the plane to turn back to the gate to save a passenger’s treasure
B.The Jewish family should give up observing the Sabbath after boarding
C.The biggest problem of turning back is to bring trouble to the pilot
D.The Jewish family had better avoid boarding on Friday afternoon
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