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Monday…oh, I don’t like Monday because I’ll have to go back to school again after the weekend. Tuesday is not so bad. I usually play tennis with my friends after school. On Wednesday evening I don’t go out. I stay at home and do my homework. I like Thursday because the next day is Friday. I always go out on Friday—maybe to the cinema. I love the weekend. On Saturdays I get up late, and I sometimes go to the shops in the afternoon. In the evening we go to a club. Then on Sundays I go to my friend’s house or she comes to mine. I usually visit my grandmother for an hour in the afternoon. Then the weekend is over and it’s Monday…and I feel bad again!
小题1:I don’t like Monday because .
A.Monday is the first day of a week | B.I just spend a happy weekend |
C.Monday is the first school day of a week | D.I will have many lessons on Monday |
A.I can play tennis with my friends | B.I have no homework to do |
C.I have a P.E. class | D.I’m free |
A.Monday | B.Tuesday | C.Wednesday | D.Friday |
A.I get up late on Monday. | B.I visit my grandmother on Saturday. |
C.I play tennis on Sunday. | D.I do some shopping at weekends. |
A.doesn’t like school | B.likes to stay at home |
C.only likes Friday | D.only likes Saturday |
The greatest saleswoman in the world today doesn’t mind if you call her a girl. That’s because Markita Andrews has got more than eight thousand dollars selling Girl Scout cookies since she was seven years old.
Going door-to-door after school, the terribly shy Markita changed herself into the cookie-selling dynamo(高手).
It starts with great wish.
For Markita and her mother, whose husband left them when Markita was eight years old, their dream was to travel the world. “I’ll work hard to make enough money to send you to college,” her mother said one day. “When you leave college, you’ll make enough money to take you and me around the world. Okay?”
So at the age of 13 when Markita read in her Girl Scout magazine that the Scout(童子军)who sold the most cookies would win a free trip for two around the world, she decided to sell all the Girl Scout cookies she could—more Girl Scout cookies than anyone in the world, ever.
Wish, however, alone is not enough. To make her dream come true, Markita knew she needed a plan.
“When you are doing business, wear your Girl Scout clothes when you go up to people in their building, ” her aunt told her. “Always smile, whether they buy something or not and always be nice.”
Lots of other Scouts may have wanted that trip around the world, but only Markita went off in her own uniform each day after school, ready to ask—and keep asking—people to help in her dream.
Markita sold 3,526 boxes of Girl Scout cookies that year and won her trip around the world. Since then, she has sold more than 42,000 boxes of Girl Scout cookies.
Markita is no cleverer than thousands of other people, with dreams of their own. The difference is that many people fail before they even begin. They fear(恐惧)that they will be refused. This fear leads many of us to refuse ourselves and prevents us from getting where we have set off for long before anyone else ever has the chance—no matter what we are selling.
“It takes courage(勇气)to ask for what you want,” she said. “Courage is not that you don’t have fear. It means doing what it takes although you have a fear of it”.
1.From the passage we learn that ________.
A.a good planning is the most important in the job of selling
B.Markita took the free trip around the world herself
C.Markita has a full-time selling job now
D.to do something successfully, we should do what is needed
2.Markita ________.
A.started to sell Girl Scout cookies when she was 13 years old
B.has only one parent
C.whose parents are rich, went to college
D.sold cookies in different shops
3.Which of the following is the best title for the passage?
A.The Greatest Saleswoman in the World.
B.A Successful Girl in Selling.
C.The Secret of Selling.
D.Girl Scout Cookies.
4.The main reason for Markita’s success is that ________.
A.she asks for what she wants before she is refused
B.she isn’t afraid to be refused
C.her aunt has told her how to sell things
D.she has a good wish
查看习题详情和答案>>
-You like listening to Sally's songs, don't you?
-_________.She has a sweet voice.
Yes.I do
Yes, she does
No, 1 don't
No, she doesn't
Foreign visitors are often puzzled in Japan because most streets there don’t have names. In Japan, people use landmarks instead of street names. For example, the Japanese will say to travelers, “Go straight down to the corner. Turn left at the big hotel and go past a fruit market. The post office is just across the bus stop.”
In the Midwest of America, usually there are not many landmarks. So people will tell you directions(方向) and distance. In Kansas(堪萨斯州), for example, people will say, “Go north two miles. Turn east, and then go another mile.”
People in Los Angeles, California, have no idea of distance on the map. They measure(测量) distance by telling time. “How far away is the post office?” you ask. “Oh,” they answer, “it’s about five minutes from here.” You say, “Yes, but how many miles away is it?” They don’t know.
People in Greece(希腊) sometimes do not even try to give directions because few visitors understand the Greek language. Instead of giving you the direction, a Greek will often say, “Follow me.” Then he’ll lead you through the streets of the city to the post office.
Sometimes a person doesn’t know the answer to your question. A New Yorker might say, “Sorry, I have no idea.” But in Yucatan, Mexico(墨西哥), no one answers “I don’t know.” People in Yucatan think “I don’t know” is not polite. They usually give an answer, often a wrong one. A visitor can get very, very lost in Yucatan!
One thing will help you everywhere. You might not understand a person’s words, but maybe you can understand his body language. He or she will usually turn and then point in the correct direction. Go on in that direction, and you may find the post office!
【小题1】What do you think of the word “landmarks” mean?
A.Names of streets or roads in a place. |
B.Hotels, markets and bus stops in a city. |
C.Buildings or places which are easily seen. |
D.Building or places with great importance. |
A.Four. | B.Five. |
C.Seven. | D.Eight. |
A.The Japanese often use landmarks when they give directions. |
B.People in Los Angeles, California, have no idea of distance. |
C.People in Yucatan think “I don’t know” is not polite. |
D.People in Greece often give wrong directions. |
A.There are not many landmarks in the Midwest of America. |
B.We needn’t carry a map when we travel around the world. |
C.People give directions in the same way in different parts of the world. |
D.There are different ways to give directions in different parts of the world. |