网址:http://m.1010jiajiao.com/timu_id_4436491[举报]
Markita Andrews became a great salesgirl when she discovered, at age 13, the secret of selling.
It 36 with desire. For Markita and her mother, who worked 37 a waitress in New York after her husband left them when Markita was eight, their 38 was to travel the globe. "I'll work hard to make enough money to send you to 39 ," her mother said one day. "You'll go to college and when you 40 , you'll make enough money to take you and me around the world. Okay?"
So at age 13 when Markita 41 in her Girl Scout(女童子军)magazine that the scout who sold the most cookies would 42 an all-expenses-paid trip for two around the world, she 43 to sell all the Girl Scout cookies she could --- more Girl Scout cookies than anyone in the world, ever.
But desire alone is not 44 . To make her dream come true, Markita knew she needed a plan.
Her aunt 45 . "When you are doing business, dress like you are doing business. 46 your Girl Scout uniform. Always smile, whether they buy or not, always be 47 . And don't ask them to buy your cookies; ask them to 48 ."
Lots of other Scouts may have 49 that trip around the world. But only Markita went off in her uniform each day after 50 . "Hi, I have a dream. I'm earning a trip around the world for me and my mom by selling Girl Scout cookies," she'd say 51 the door. "Would you like to invest in one dozen or two dozen boxes of cookies?"
Markita 52 3,526 boxes of Girl Scout cookies that year and won her trip around the world.
Markita is not 53 than thousands of other people. The 54 is that Markita had discovered the secret of selling: Ask, Ask, Ask! Many people fail before they 55 begin because they fail to ask for what they want. The fear of rejection leads many of us to reject ourselves and our dreams
36. A. goes B. starts C. stays D. ends
37. A. as B. for C. like D. in
38. A. decision B. dream C. task D. interest
39. A. work B. hospital C. home D. college
40. A. marry B. grow C. graduate D. succeed
41. A. wrote B. heard C. found D. read
42. A. win B. go C. take D. give
43. A. needed B. asked C. decided D. hesitated
44. A. attractive B. enough C. perfect D. difficult
45. A. complained B. advised C. declared D. ordered
46. A. Put B. Wash C. Prepare D. Wear
47. A. patient B. fair C. nice D. honest
48. A. invest B. choose C. attend D. taste
49. A. wanted B. experienced C. planned D. arranged
50. A. supper B. school C. evening D. education
51. A. behind B. beside C. at D. on
52. A. sold B. produced C. advertised D. bought
53. A. prettier B. happier C. luckier D. smarter
54. A. answer B. fact C. difference D. conclusion
55. A. immediately B. even C. slowly D. still
查看习题详情和答案>>
It’s a question anyone might ask in the future: Should your household robot be cool? Or practical?
For Sony Corporation, robots ought to be entertaining. The company’s 51 robot, SDR—4X, can sing and dance. But for automaker Honda Motor Co. Ltd, such 52 should perform useful tasks for their 53 masters.
“It is in the end a machine, a 54 ” said Masato Hirose, Honda’s chief engineer. Sony’s chief researcher Toshi Doi said robots performing such tasks as 55 for ill or disabled people would not necessarily need a human 56 . “The attractiveness of the SDR—4X is its 57 ”, he said. “It has feelings. It has instincts (直觉).”
Drawing from its 58 of 60,000 words, an SDX—4X robot 59 last week that it can ask a 60 in a high voice: “please 61 still for a minute while I memorize your face.” It also 62 off its ability to walk on uneven (高低不平的) floors, and come to its owner when it’s 63 .
While Honda’s robot is 64 used mainly for entertainment, it is 65 that one day it will be a useful companion. So its robots have been 66 to be 120cm tall—more than twice the height of the SDR—4X. Hirose said 120cm is the 67 a robot that moves around a home should be.
“If you are going to have something that can move with 68 in a human surroundings, then it is better to 69 the robot like a human,” he said.
Hirose said that he hopes the robot will be 70 enough so that he can buy one for himself and let it get him a beer.
16. A. earliest B. latest C. coolest D. largest
17. A. matters B. people C. machines D. inventions
18. A. human B. own C. creative D. modern
19. A. tool B. robot C. toy D. slave
20. A. looking B. working C. leaving D. caring
21. A. appearance B. character C. job D. ability
22. A. purpose B. appearance C. personality D. material
23. A. storage B. use C. project D. creation
24. A. said B. announced C. showed D. imagined
25. A. friend B. partner C. servant D. guest
26. A. hold B. lie C. take D. make
27. A. left B. showed C. put D. dropped
28. A. tired B. called C. controlled D. made
29. A. also B. still C. again D. even
30. A. planned B. hoped C. reported D. described
31. A. expected B. raised C. proved D. designed
32. A. cheapest B. dearest C. smallest D. biggest
33. A. ease B. care C. difficulty D. foot
34. A. buy B. use C. invest D. design
35. A. useful B. smart C. cheap D. low
查看习题详情和答案>>
语法填空 (共10小题;每小题1.5分,满分15分)
阅读下面短文,按照句子结构的语法性和上下文连贯的要求,在空格处填入一个适当的词或使用括号中词语的正确形式填空,并将答案填写在答题卡括号为16—25的相应位置上。
BEIJING---World-renowned Oxford and Cambridge have come to China 16 (attract) top-rank postgraduate students in cooperation with the China Scholarship Council.
Oxford made its first 17 (appear) at the China Scholarship Council's annual International Graduate Scholarship Fair, 18 opened on Saturday in Beijing. The school wants to encourage excellent Chinese students to consider 19 Oxford can offer for 20 academic and professional careers.
"The students came well-prepared with specific questions and were serious about the chance," said Sherwood, director of graduate admissions and funding at Oxford, who will make 21 two stops for the fair in Wuhan and Shanghai.
The University of Cambridge 22 (attend) the fair since its first session in 2009, and stresses that it would continue to invest to train students to be problem-solvers.
23 Cambridge and Oxford present at the fair in competition for 24 best and brightest, Osterfield and Sherwood agree that the two universities usually have more interest in cooperation 25 competition, except in their traditional annual boat race.
查看习题详情和答案>>
EAT YOUR VEGETABLES.Wash your hands. Always say “please” and “thank you”. We are full of advice for our children, but when it comes to money, we often have little to say. As a result, our children may grow up with clean hands and good manners, but without any idea how tomanage their money.
Here are some basics that will help guide them their entire lives:
Show them the future. If your 13-year-old girl were to save $1.000,invest(投资)it at 8% and add $100 every month, by the time she’s 65,she would have $980,983!
Be careful of credit(信用).Credit cards can help you buy necessary things and build a credit history, but they must be used responsibly, which means paying off your debt in time. Explain to your children that when you buy something using a credit card, you can easily end up paying two or three times what you would have paid if you used cash.
Teach patience. Suppose your child wants a new bicycle that costs $150.Rather than paying the cash, give him some regular pocket money and explain that by putting aside,say,$15 each week, he will be able to buy it for himself in only ten weeks.
Provide incentive. Tell your children the importance of saving. “For every dollar he or she agrees to save and invest rather than spend, you agree to add another dollar to the pot,” says Cathy Pareto, expert in money planning.
Explain your values. Values and money are deeply intertwined, says Eilleen Gallo,co-author of The Financially Intelligent Parent. When your child demands that you buy something, explain why you really don’t want to buy it.“You might say, ‘I’d rather save that money for your education,’” advises Gallo. Every time you spend or don’t spend money, you have a chance to share your values.
【小题1】The writer gives some basics to help________ in a proper way.
A.parents teach their children how to deal with money |
B.children follow their parents’ instructions |
C.children manage their money |
D.parents save their money |
A.give him some regular pocket money |
B.encourage him to put money away for it |
C.explain to him the importance of investment |
D.tell him to save some money by using a credit card |
A.honor | B.praise | C.excitement | D.encouragement |
A.Parents want to know how to educate their children. |
B.He wants to share his good ideas about money matters. |
C.He thinks money management the most important for children. |
D.Parents care Little about their children’s management of money. |
The Internet will open up new vistas (前景), create the global village——you can make new friends all around the world. That, at least, is what it promised us. The difficulty is that it did not take the human mind into account. The reality is that we cannot keep relationships with more than a limited number of people. No matter how hard the Internet tries to put you in communication, its best efforts will be defeated by your mind.
The problem is twofold(双重的). First, there is a limit on the number of people we can hold in mind and have a meaningful relationship with. That number is about 150 and is set by the size of our brain. Second, the quality of your relationships depends on the amount of time you invest in then. We invest a lot in a small number of people and then distribute what’s left among as many others as we can. The problem is that if we invest little time in a person, our engagement with that person will decline until eventually it dies into “someone I once knew”.
This is not, of course, to say that the Internet doesn’t serve a socially valuable function. Of course it does. But the question is not that it allows you to increase the size of your social circle to include the rest of the world, but that you can keep your relationships with your existing friends going even though you have to move to the other side of the world.
In one sense, that’s a good thing. But it also has a disadvantage. If you continue to invest in your old friends even though you can no longer see them, then certainly you aren’t using your time to make new friends where you now live. And I suspect that probably isn’t the best use of your time. Meaningful relationships are about being able to communicate with each other, face to face. The Internet will slow down the rate with which relationships end, but it won’t stop that happening eventually.
1.The number of friends we can keep relationships with is decided by______.
A. the Internet B. the time we have C. the place we live D. the mind
2.The underlined word “engagement” in the second paragraph probably means “_____”.
A. appointment B. connection C. interview D. agreement
3.The author holds the view that___________.
A. the Internet helps to keep in touch with friends far away
B. the Internet determines the quality of social relationships
C. the Internet greatly increases the size of social circles
D. the Internet is of no value in social communication
4.What will the author encourage us to do?
A. To keep in touch with old friends when we have moved away.
B. To chat with friends often on the Internet.
C. To make more new friends face to face.
D. To stop using the Internet to make new friends.
5.What is the author’s attitude towards the use of the Internet to strengthen relationships?
A. He thinks it useless B. He is hopeful of it.
C. He approves of it. D. He doubts it.
查看习题详情和答案>>