He can' t () his mind whether to go or to stay.
A.make out
B.make into
C.make up
D.make for
A.make out
B.make into
C.make up
D.make for
A.adopt
B.accept
C.acquire
D.adapt
–Where is John? I couldn't find him. ()
A.He is very busy working on his project.
B.I am sorry but I 'm afraid I can 't agree with you.
C.I suppose he could have gone to the meeting room.
A、Michael is a person full of imagination and he can make his dreams come true
B、Michael is not a real person but probably the lifestyle. does exist
C、Michael has ambitions but he can’t make his dreams come true
D、Michael is a person full of imagination and his lifestyle. is common nowadays
A: Hey, Lily, what are you doing? L: ___________ for someone. A: You mean the boy you met on WeChat? L: You’re right. He is so ___________ and I think I fall in love with him. A: You must be joking. You can’t fall in love with someone you’ve never met! L: I know, but I keep thinking of him every day. And I get really depressed (沮丧的) when he’s not online. A: I think you just have a crush on him. You can’t be serious. L: Well, this might be silly. But I just can’t get him off my ___________. And I can’t help missing him. A: Did you tell him? L: Yes. He said I’m his dream girl. A: You shouldn’t take it too seriously. It might be a _______. L: I know. I can’t tell whether he’s serious or not so I need your ___________. A: I think you should enlarge your circle of real-life friends, and then the right person will come along.
阅读理解:判断题
A passenger told an air hostess that he needed a cup of water to take his medicine when the plane just took off. She told him that she would bring him the water in ten minutes.
The air hostess was kept so busy that she forgot to give him the water. As a result, the passenger was held up to take his medicine. Thirty minutes later, when the passenger's ring for service sounded, she hurried over to him with a cup of water, but he refused.
In the following hours on the plane, each time the air hostess passed by the passenger, she would ask him with a smile whether he needed help or not. But the passenger never answered a word.
When he was going to get off the plane, the passenger asked the air hostess to hand him the passengers' booklet. She was very sad. She knew that he would write down sharp words, but with a smile she handed it to him.
Off the plane, she opened the booklet, and smiled, for the passenger put it. “On the flight, you asked me whether I needed help or not for twelve times in all. How can I refuse your twelve sincere smiles?”
That's right! Who can refuse twelve sincere smiles from a person?
操作提示:句子正确选择下拉选项框为“T”;句子错误选择下拉选项框为“F”。
* A passenger wants a cup of water because he is thirsty. {T、F}
* The air hostess forgot to give him the water on purpose. {T、F}
* The passenger refused the cup of water. {T、F}
* The passenger didn't write down any sharp words. {T、F}
* This passage tells us that a sincere smile is of no use. {T、F}
As he got out of his car he found a young girl sitting on the road crying. He asked her what was wrong and she answered “I want to buy a red rose for my mother but I only have seventy-five cents. A rose costs two dollars.”
The man smiled and said “Come into the shop with me and I’ll buy you a rose.”
He bought the little girl her rose and ordered his own mother’s flowers. As they were leaving he wanted to drive the girl home. The girl said “Yes please! You can take me to my mother ” She brought him to a cemetery(墓地)and she placed the rose on the grave.
The man was moved. He returned to the flower shop picked up the flowers he ordered and drove two hundred miles to his mother’s house. If today is the day for your mother. Send a flower to your kind and beautiful mother.
(1)The man went to the shop to ().
A.help the girl
B.order some flowers
C.buy some food
D. buy a rose
(2)The man’s mother lived () away from him.
A.2 kilometres
B.200 kilometres
C.200 miles
D.not far
(3)The girl was crying on the road because ().
A.she was hungry
B.she couldn’t afford a rose
C.she couldn’t find her way home
D. she missed her mother
(4)After the man bought the girl a rose they went to () together.
A.the cemetery
B.the girl’s home.
C.his moth er’s house
D. his own home
(5)From the passage we can infer(推断) that ().
A.the girl loved flowers very much
B.The girl loved her mother very much
C.The shopkeeper sent the flowers to the man’s mother
D.The man didn’t love his mother
1.According to this passage,intelligence is the ability to ().
A、work by oneself do well in any
B、situation
C、know what is right and wrong
D、adapt oneself to a new situation
2.Why does an unintelligent child seem to have a wall between him and life in general?()
A、Because he can hardly see the outside world.
B、Because life is far away from him.
C、Because he knows nothing about life in general.
D、Because he has little interest in things around himself.
3.In a new situation,an intelligent person ().
A、knows more about what might happen to him
B、is well-prepared for his action
C、pays greater attention to the situation
D、completely ignores himself
4.If an intelligent person failed,he would ().
A、feel ashamed about the failure
B、learn from his experiences
C、find out what he can’t do
D、make sure what’s wrong with his outlook in life
5.An intelligent child ().
A、learns more about himself
B、shows interest in things around him
C、studies everything that may be interesting
D、looks down upon unintelligent children
A 20-year bull market has convinced us all the CEOs are geniuses, so watch with Astonishment the troubles of Donald Rumsfeld and Paul O'Neill. Here are two highly regarded businessmen, obviously intelligent and well-informed, foundering in their jobs.
Actually, we shouldn't be surprised. Rumsfeld and O'Neill are not doing badly despite having been successful CEOs but because of it. The record of senior businessmen in government is one of almost unrelieved disappointment. In fact, with the exception of Robert Rubin, it is difficult to think of a CEO who had a successful career in government.
Why is this? Well, first the CEO has to recognize that he is no longer the CEO. He is at best an adviser to the CEO, the president. But even the president is not really the CEO. No one is. Power in a corporation is concentrated and vertically structured. Power in Washington is diffuse and horizontally spread out. The secretary might think he's in charge of his agency. But the chairman of the congressional committee funding that agency feels the same. In his famous study "Presidential Power and the Modern Presidents," Richard Neustadt explains how little power the president actually has and concludes that the only lasting presidential power is "the power to persuade."
Take Rumsfeld's attempt to transform. the cold-war military into one geared for the future. It's innovative but deeply threatening to almost everyone in Washington. The Defense Secretary did not try to sell it to the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Congress, the budget office or the White House. As a result, the idea is collapsing.
Second, what power you have, you must use carefully. For example, O'Neill's position as Treasury Secretary is one with little formal authority. Unlike Finance Ministers around the world, Treasury does not control the budget. But it has symbolic power. The secretary is seen as the chief economic spokesman for the administration and, if he plays it right, the chief economic adviser for the president.
O'Neill has been publicly critical of the IMF’s bailout packages for developing countries while at the same time approving such packages for Turkey, Argentina and Brazil. As a result, he has gotten the worst of both worlds. The bailouts continue, but their effect in holstering investor confidence is limited because the markets are rattled by his skepticism.
Perhaps the government doesn't do bailouts well. But that leads to a third rule: you can't just quit. Jack Welch's famous law for re-engineering General Electric was to be first or second in any given product category, or else get out of that business. But if the government isn't doing a particular job at peak level, it doesn't always have the option of relieving itself of that function. The Pentagon probably wastes a lot of money. But it can't get out of the national-security business.
The key to former Treasury secretary Rubin's success may have been that he fully understood that business and government are, in his words, "necessarily and properly very different.' In a recent speech he explained, "Business functions around one predominate organizing principle, profitability…Government, on the other hand, deals with a vast number of equally legitimate and often potentially competing objectives---for example, energy production versus environmental protection, or safety regulations versus productivity.”
Rubin's example shows that talented people can do well in g
A.regard the president as the CEO
B.take absolute control of his department
C.exercise more power than the congressional committee
D.become acquainted with its power structure
The air hostess was kept so busy that she forgot to give him the water. As a result, the passenger was held up to take his medicine. Thirty minutes later, when the passenger's ring for service sounded, she hurried over to him with a cup of water, but he refused.
In the following hours on the plane, each time the air hostess passed by the passenger, she would ask him with a smile whether he needed help or not. But the passenger never answered a word.
When he was going to get off the plane, the passenger asked the air hostess to hand him the passengers' booklet. She was very sad. She knew that he would write down sharp words, but with a smile she handed it to him.
Off the plane, she opened the booklet, and smiled, for the passenger put it. “On the flight, you asked me whether I needed help or not for twelve times in all. How can I refuse your twelve sincere smiles?”
That's right! Who can refuse twelve sincere smiles from a person?
操作提示:句子正确选择下拉选项框为“T”;句子错误选择下拉选项框为“F”。
A passenger wants a cup of water because he is thirsty.
The air hostess forgot to give him the water on purpose.
The passenger refused the cup of water.
The passenger didn't write down any sharp words.
This passage tells us that a sincere smile is of no use.
During his freshman year summer vacation, his classmate got him a job working on a hay (干草) farm. He threw hay up into wagons as the tractor drove around fields, and then they stacked (剁起) it in the hot barn. It was a hot,lowpaying job.
He once worked a few nights a week at a grocery store. He put things on the shelf. It was a lot of lifting and carrying,and his arms were strong from this and the previous job. It was dull and didn’t pay much.
He took some time off when soccer got serious,but the following summer he tried working at a lumber yard. It was hot outside, but he got a lot of exercise lifting and carrying things like boards and drywall. He also learned a lot about building supplies. It still didn’t pay well.
From there, he spent a year doing some tutoring for a friend of the family, but that was piecemeal. His first real job came the last year at school, when he fixed registers and worked on computers at a big box store. It was his favorite job yet, but it still didn’t pay well.
What Peter realized with all of these jobs was that he needed a better paying job! The only way to get that was to get trained or educated. He could go to school and get a 2year degree in an office or technical position. His other choices were going to a 4year college or joining the army. He wasn’t sure what he was going to do yet, but he knew he had to do something. Jobs were a lot of work, money was hard to earn,but he liked staying busy and being able to buy things. Peter wanted the most out of life, and that meant education.
25.All the jobs Peter had taken had one thing in common:_____.
A、They didn’t pay well
B、They were dull and tiresome
C、They needed hard labor
D、They were done during his vacation
26._____was the most important for Peter if he wanted a good job.
A、Confidence
B、Education
C、Opportunity
D、Wisdom
27.We can learn from the text that_____.
A、Peter knew what to do with his future
B、Peter’s father didn’t care about him
C、It was very hard for Peter to make his choices
D、Peter was determined to do whatever he liked