题目内容
Keep the picture carefully, it ___ a lot of money.
A is worth B. worthed C. is worthy of D. worths
A
There once was a very honest shopkeeper whose business was to provide goods to the local people. He would open his shop at 8:00 a.m. after having his breakfast and at 1:00 p.m. he would go for lunch. In the evening at 8:30 p.m. he closed his shop to complete his daily routine.
However, to get time for lunch was really difficult be-cause he didn’t have anybody to help him at that time. Therefore, it was his daily practice that whichever customer was shopping at 1:00 p.m. would be asked to oversee (看管) the shop until the shopkeeper returned from lunch.
One day, a group of four thieves planned to steal from his shop while he was gone for lunch. One of the thieves went at 1:00 p.m. to be the customer that would be asked to oversee the shop.
The thief, pretending to be a customer, went in at 1:00 p.m. and started buying several items. As planned, the shop-keeper asked the thief to sit on his chair for thirty minutes until he returned from lunch.
Then, the other three thieves quickly came and told the pretend customer to help, but something had changed within him and he knew deeply in his heart that if he was given responsibility for the shop, he should not perform any dishonest acts during that time. His friends did not agree. As the now honest man tried to stop them, they resisted (抵抗) and a fight started. And at the same time the shopkeeper returned and asked why there was a fighting. The now honest man explained the entire plan.
The shopkeeper had been searching for an honest man who could take ownership of the shop and run it. The shop-keeper felt that he had found the right man.
【小题1】What is the problem for the shopkeeper?
| A.Nobody could prepare lunch for him every day. |
| B.He had nobody to keep the shop when he went for lunch. |
| C.He was too busy to have lunch every day. |
| D.He couldn’t find a person to work at the shop. |
| A.Because he thought he would be asked to keep the shop. |
| B.Because the shopkeeper invited him to lunch then. |
| C.Because the shop was closed at that time. |
| D.Because he thought he could buy cheap things then. |
| A.everything in his shop was stolen |
| B.the thief became the new owner of the shop |
| C.there was a fighting in his shop |
| D.the thief helped his fellows steal things from his shop |
| A.once a thief, he will always be a thief |
| B.an honest man will be responsible for his action |
| C.you can’t believe in a dishonest man forever |
| D.trust can change a thief into an honest man |
Earlier this year, the Environmental Protection Agency proposed a stricter nationwide health standard for smog-causing pollutants that would bring substantial benefits to millions of Americans. With a final rule expected by the end of this month, some opponents, mainly from industrial and oil-producing states, are pushing back. They say investments required to produce cleaner air are too expensive and not scientifically justified.
Lisa Jackson, the E.P.A. administrator, needs to stick to her guns. This is only the first of several political tests to come this fall, as she also seeks to tighten rules governing individual pollutants like mercury and global warming gases like carbon dioxide.
The health standard she is proposing covers ground-level ozone, commonly known as smog, which is formed when sunlight mixes with pollutants from factories, refineries, power plants and automobiles. Ozone is a major health threat, contributing to heart disease and various respiratory (呼吸道的) problems.
Ms. Jackson’s proposal—to reduce the permitted level of smog in the air from the current 75 parts per billion to between 60 parts per billion and 70 parts per billion—is sensible, no matter what industry’s defenders may claim. It had been recommended by the agency’s independent scientific panel but rejected by the Bush administration, which proposed a weaker standard.
Industry will have to make investments in cleaner power plants, and new technologies may be required. As it is, about half the counties that monitor ozone levels are not yet in compliance with current standards, let alone the proposed standard.
Fears about burdening industry raised by critics like George Voinovich, a Republican of Ohio, and Mary Landrieu, a Democrat of Louisiana, cannot be dismissed out of hand, especially in the middle of a recession (萧条). But the health benefits, E.P.A. says, far outweigh the costs, and the time frame for compliance (服从) is generous.
【小题1】Why are some people strongly against a stricter limitation of smog-caused pollutants?
| A.Because they have to live a poorer life. |
| B.Because they think they have to spend more money. |
| C.Because they hold different political view. |
| D.Because they want to make more money. |
| A.To reduce the permitted smog level as much as possible. |
| B.To raise the permitted smog level as much as possible. |
| C.To keep the permitted smog level from 60 to 70 to 75 parts per billion. |
| D.To lower the permitted smog level from 75 to 60 to 70 parts per billion. |
| A.Objective. | B.Subjective. | C.Critical. | D.Unknown. |
| A.Cleaner power plant on the way. |
| B.Say no to smog pollutants. |
| C.Lower smog pollutant, better our life. |
| D.Debate on smog pollutants. |