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I have no dream____ to have a happy life.
A.other than B.rather than C.more than D.less than
查看习题详情和答案>>I have no dream _______ to have a happy life.
A.other than B.rather than C.more than D.less than
查看习题详情和答案>>My love affair with the sea began when I was no more than six years old, walking along the sandy beaches. I always wanted to make the first set of footprints in the wet sand.
Unlike many surfers who sought the perfect wave, my interests always lay beneath the sea’s surface in a world I could only imagine and dream of. Soon, wearing a snorkel and a mask, I made my first solo adventures in the deep.
Perhaps the greatest turning point in my life came when I was in high school and I wrote a letter to the famous Scripps Oceanographic Institution, in San Diego, asking how I might learn more about the sea.
A kind scientist answered my letter and told me how to apply to Scripps for a summer scholarship, which I received. During one of their cruises that summer, I met Dr. Robert Norris, a marine geologist. He loved the sea almost as much as I did. Soon he was asking me what my plans were and where I expected to attend college. I told him I didn’t know, so he suggested I consider his school, the University of California in Santa Barbara.
Now my love affair with the sea became a serious endeavor. If I wanted to be an undersea explorer, I needed to learn as much as I could about the laws of the physical world that controlled the environment I wanted to enter. The undersea world is not our natural world. It is unforgiving to those who make mistakes. At its greatest depths the water temperature is near freezing, the pressure is eight tons per square inch, and it is totally dark. It is easy to get lost in such a world. I needed to learn a lot about geography, navigation, meteorology, geology, biology, and many other things. While I was in school, I took a little of everything.
I decided another important thing for me to do was to join the U.S. Navy. If I was going to be an undersea explorer, I would have to lead men and women on dangerous adventures where they might get hurt, and I didn’t want that to happen. In the Navy I learned discipline, organization, and how to motivate and lead people on expeditions so that we could explore the wonders of the deep.
Finally, the time came to put all that I had learned to use, to go forth with a team of men and women and explore an adventure I am still on and hope to be on for many years to come.
【小题1】In Paragraph 5, the writer discusses “the laws of the physical world.”Which of the following is an example of one of the laws?
| A.Water pressure. |
| B.Various ocean animal life. |
| C.The appearance of the water. |
| D.The different colors of the ocean. |
| A.was not sure what he wanted to study |
| B.was advised to take them by Dr. Robert Norris |
| C.believed it would help him succeed in the Navy |
| D.thought they were needed to fully understand the ocean |
| A.develop his leadership skills |
| B.get along with people under stress |
| C.learn about the dangers of the ocean |
| D.gather specific information about ocean life |
| A.Spend time examining your talents. |
| B.Join groups to learn to get along on a team. |
| C.Interview explorers to see if they are happy. |
| D.Study as many ocean-related topics as you can. |
Mary Jean Price Walls graduated second in her class in 1950.She had high hopes when she applied to a local college,Southwest Missouri State College.But after sending off her application,she spent months waiting for a reply.It never came.
Worse than simply being denied admission(拒绝接收),the school didn’t reply to her at all.It wasn’t a matter of her school records,but of her skin color:Wallsis African American,and in those days,that fact alone closed a lot of doors. “I was sad and I was hurt,”Walls told ABC News.“I did not expect the skin color would affect my application.I thought I could go to university like other students.”
Four years later,the government declared that all schools should not discriminate against(歧视)African Americans— but it was too late for Walls.She’d moved on with her life, becoming a wife and a mother,and working as an elevator operator.She retired last year,at the age of 77.
She stayed quiet about the unfairness she’d faced in Missouri State.Her son,Terry,went through school records and found that she’d been the first black student to ever apply to the college.Today,four percent of the Southwest Missouri State College body is African American—including Terry.
Although it’s too late for Missouri State to change the past,the school is awarding Walls with an honorary degree(荣誉学位)from the school.While she knows it’s too late for herto change the course of her own life with the degree,it’s a chance for her to show her family that Missouri State has changed in the last 60 years,and there’s not a single door closed to them anymore.
1.Walls couldn’t enter the local college because________.
A.her examination performance is too bad
B.girls were not allowed to go to college
C.she was an African?American student
D.her parents had no enough money to support her
2.Before she was denied Walls thought that________.
A.her application would be accepted as others’
B.it was hard to become a college student
C.it was impossible for her to be admitted
D.she could be the best student in her college
3.What can we know about Walls’s son?
A.He helped his mother get the honorary degree.
B.He is a good student who teachers like best.
C.He was admitted by the college once his mother applied to.
D.He wants to be a government official who can help his mother.
4.What can we infer from the passage?
A.Walls did not fight for her right to education.
B.The college did not receive Walls’s application.
C.Walls got a good job after she received the degree.
D.The government gave Walls some money for the wrongs.
5.Walls’s honorary degree suggests that________.
A.she could change her life with the degree
B.her dream of going to college has come true
C.she has been leading a happy life with her family
D.great changes have taken place in Missouri State
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In some cities, workaholism(废寝忘食) is so common that people don't consider it unusual. They accept the lifestyle as 1 . Government workers in Washington D. C., 2 , frequently work sixty to seventy hours a week. They don't do this because they have to; they do it because they 3 to. Workaholism can be a 4 problem. Because true workaholics would rather work than do anything else, they 5 have no idea of how to relax; that is, they might not 6 movies, sports, or other types of entertainment. Most of all, they 7 to sit and do nothing. The lives of workaholics are usually stressful, and this tension(紧张) and worry can cause 8 problems such as heart attacks and stomach diseases. 9 , typical workaholics don't pay much attention to their families. Their marriages may end in 10 as they spend little time with their families.
Is workaholism 11 dangerous? Perhaps not. There are, certainly, people who work 12 under stress. Some studies show that many workaholics have great energy and interest in work. They feel 13 is so pleasurable that they are actually very happy. For most workaholics, work and entertainment are the same thing. Their jobs 14 them with a challenge; this keeps them busy and creative.
15 do workaholics enjoy their jobs so much? There are several 16 to work. Of course, it provides people with paychecks, and this is important. But it offers 17 financial security(安全感/保障). It provides people with self-confidence(自信心); they have a feeling of satisfaction 18 they have produced a challenging piece of work and are able to say “I 19 it”. Psycholigists(心理学家) claim(声称) that their work gives people an identity. After they take part in work, they 20 a sense of self and individualism.
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