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() about it now?Every time a customer has complained we've followed our store policy and offered them an exchange or a full refund.

A.What's the plan

B.What's be doing

C.What's being done

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更多“() about it now?Every time a c…”相关的问题
第1题
—________________ about it now?—Every time a customer has complained we've followed

—________________ about it now?

—Every time a customer has complained we've followed our store policy and offered them an exchange or a full refund.

A、What's the plan

B、 What's be doing

C、What's being done

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第2题
So at about eleven every night when he sat down for his (1) , I would come out of the
So at about eleven every night when he sat down for his (1) , I would come out of the

kitchen and sit down (2) to him and read articles from the front page of the (3) . When I ran into a word I didn’t know (and I didn’t know half of the article, because any word (4) than a couple of syllables gave me trouble) he explained the (5) of the word and gave me the (6) .Then he’d send me (7) to the sentences so I could understand the word in (8) . Then I would take the paper away with me, armed now with the meaning of those words, and reread and reread the article (9) that the meaning of those words would get(10) into my memory. Every evening we did that.

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第3题
Americans smoke six thousand million cigarettes every year, that is, every person smokes a
bout 4,195 cigarettes a year in the country of 18 years of age or more. It has been calculated that 51% of American men smoke while 34% of American women do so.

Since 1939, scientific studies have shown that smoking does great harm to one's health and it will shorten one's life.

Cigarette smoking is believed, by most research workers in the field, a very important cause in the development of the cancer of the lungs and the cancer of the throat and is believed to have much to do with some other kinds of cancers. Cigarette smokers suffer from the illness of the heart more often than those who don't smoke. But strange, yet true, women are thought to be less affected, because when women smoke, they usually don't breathe in the smoke so deeply. Most of doctors and researchers say, "Give up smoking. If you don't smoke--don't start!"

Filters (过滤嘴) are required now to make smoking a bit safer, but they can only reduce, not get rid of, its poison.

But there are still a number of doctors and research workers who are less sure of the effect of cigarette smoking on health. They believe that the cancers of the lungs, the throat and so on may also be caused by air pollution, or chemical poison that is now being used by farmers in large quantities to destroy plant pests and small animals.

______each smoke about 4,195 cigarettes a year.

A.Americans

B.American men

C.American women

D.American aged 18 or more

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第4题
We may be very pleased with the rapid progress we have made in every field of study. But t
he way to test a student's knowledge and ability still remains as poor as it was. We have almost done nothing to improve our examination system.

It is well known that the examination system we are now using may be a good way of testing a student's memory, but it can tell you nothing about a student's ability. It does no good to students and teachers.

As soon as a child begins school, he enters a world of examination that will decide his future job.

In fact a good examination system should train a student to think for himself. But it now does nothing about that. Students are encouraged to remember what is taught. It does not enable them to gain more new knowledge. The students who come out first in the examination often may not be the best in their studies.

Besides, the examinations often force teachers to train students what to do with the coming examination from time to time. There must be some simpler and better way to test a student's ability besides knowledge. And that is what we should do at once.

The most suitable title of this passage is______.

A.Progress in the Field of Study

B.Teachers' Role in Study

C.How to Improve Students' Ability

D.Bad Points of the Examination System

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第5题
Ten years later I find it every now and then, but I'm still searching. In 2003, I
raised over $1,400 for the fight __1__cancer. That was a success! I was doing something for someone, __2__ looking for a "payback." As far as writing a book, that too can be measured __3__ a success. ___4__ because I wrote it and got it published, but because some of the proceeds will go to help others. 10% will go to the University of Nebrask-Omaha Lied Transplant Center, and hopefully I'll sell enough books to change some poems about cancer into music and create a CD, with proceeds__5__to the American Cancer Society.

1.();

A. against

B. for

C. and

D. to

2.();

A. for

B. or

C. but

D. and

3.();

A. for

B. or

C. at

D. as

4.();

A. And

B. Not

C. Nor

D. Yet

5.();

A. went

B. goes

C. go

D. going

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第6题
Muna Hamzeh is a writer who spent eleven years living in a Palestiniar r______ camp in Bethlehem. No
w she is back in the United States and finding it difficult to a______. She compares her life in the camp to what she enjoys now in Austin, Texas—the wide open spaces, c______ with nature and, most importantly, freedom of m______. During her last two months at the camp there was frequent fighting, memories of which make her n______ every time she hears or sees helicopters and ambulances. She is also angry at the fact that a lot of the Israeli m______ equipment is actually made in the United States and paid for by US citizens through their taxes but that North Americans don't seem to know about this, or to c______. She worries that this i______ may result in another Vietnamese war, with young people fighting a war and dying when they don't even understand why.
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第7题
听力原文:M: Every year, as the seasons change, many birds, fish, insects and land animals
start to move. Some travel thousands of kilometers. For many it is for the first time. All of them have one thing in common: they know where they are going and they make no mistakes.

This is migration. There are many things which help animals to migrate. Birds and other animals have a body clock which tells them about changes in temperature and periods of light. Birds and some insects use their eyes to measure and compare the position of the sun from different place.

Many people now believe magnetism is very important. The earth itself is a magnet and every kind of life is affected in some way by its magnetic, fields.

But there are still many questions without answers, for example, the migration of eels. European eels travel down their rivers and into the Atlantic Ocean. They then swim 5600 kilometers to the Sargasso Sea, where they lay their eggs. The eels then die. The baby eels are carried by the Gulf Stream to Europe, a journey which takes two and a half years. They swim back up the rivers. There they live for about ten years before the return journey to the Atlantic. How do they do this? We know what happens to the eels but not how or why.

"Migration" in this passage means

A.the seasonal moving of creatures.

B.settling down in a new place.

C.the activity controlled by magnetism.

D.knowing where one is going and making no mistakes.

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第8题
The Thinking Habit That Changed My Life I remember one evening three years ago, when my
life was verydifferent. 1 was overweight. I was deeply in debt. I was a smoker. I felthopeless and helpless.I couldn ’t change anything.

Then I looked up at the sky and thought what a miracle life is. And Iresolved to list the good things in my life. I had a wonderful wife. 1 hadfive amazing children. I could sec and appreciate the beauty of the worldaround me. The list went on, but you get the idea. Even when thingsseemed terrible for me, actually I was OK.

That night I resolved to be grateful for what I had, and for the peoplein my life. I started the habit of gratitude. Now many people consider itunimportant. I&39;m here to tell you that it&39;s very important. It changes lives. Now I appreciate my wife Eva more. I feel good about having her inmy life. And we have deepened our relationship. I also appreciate mykids more. Instead of criticizing them, I tend to notice their loveliness,curiosity and humor. to others around me, at work and everywhere else, because insteadof seeing the faults in everyone, I see the good, and am grateful for them. I need less,because instead of thinking about what I don&39;t have, I amgrateful for what I do have. Each and every moment becomes cause forgratitude, and life becomes easier.

Without the habit of gratitude, we tend to complain and see the badin people and things. We can&39;t change that at once, but you can dosomething. For example, you can start with a small action. Really feel thehappiness that something o someone is in your life, or take a moment tomake a list of the things in your life that you&39;re thankful for.

1.I was unhappy with my life three years ago.

A.True

B.False

C.Not Given

I drank every day and couldn't stop it.A.True

B.False

C.Not Given

I was unable to support my family.A.True

B.False

C.Not Given

I now try to see the good in others.A.True

B.False

C.Not Given

I am now more strict with my kids.A.True

B.False

C.Not Given

A small action doesn't work to change one ’s bad habit.A.True

B.False

C.Not Given

I like making friends with people around me

A.True

B.False

C.Not Given

One evening I came to a new understanding of my life

A.True

B.False

C.Not Given

Now I have a closer relationship with my wife

A.True

B.False

C.Not Given

Many people value the habit of gratitude nowadays.A.True

B.False

C.Not Given

请帮忙给出每个问题的正确答案和分析,谢谢!

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第9题
Passage Two Questions 57 to 61 are based on the following passage. Every other week it

Passage Two Questions 57 to 61 are based on the following passage.

Every other week it seems a new study comes out that adds to our already-formidable store of parental worries. But even by those upgraded standards, the report issued last week by the federal government’s National Center for Health Statistics contained a jaw-dropper: the parents of nearly one of every five boys in the United States were concerned enough about what they saw as their son’s emotional or behavioral problems that they consulted a doctor or a health-care professional. By comparison, about one out of 10 parents of girls reported these kinds of problems.

The report confirms what many of us have been observing for some time now that lots of school-age boys are struggling. And, parents are intensely worried about them.

What is bothering our sons? Some experts suggest we are witnessing an epidemic of ADHD and say boys need more treatment. Others say that environmental pollutants found in plastics, among other things, may be eroding their attention spans and their ability to regulate their emotions.

Those experts may be right but I have another suggestion. Let's examine the way our child rearing and our schools have evolved in the last10 years. Then ask ourselves this challenging question: could some of those changes we have embraced in our families, our communities and our schools be driving our sons crazy?

Instead of unstructured free play, parents now schedule their kids' time from dawn till dusk (and sometimes beyond). By age 4, an ever-increasing number of children are enrolled in preschool. There, Instead of learning to get along with other kids, hold crayon (蜡笔) and play Duck, Duck, Goose, children barely out of diapers are asked to fill out work sheets, learn calculation or study Mandarin. The drumbeat (鼓声) early academics gets even louder when they enter" real" school. Veteran teachers will tell you that first graders are now routinely expected to master a curriculum that, only 15 years ago, would have been considered appropriate for second, even third graders. The way we teach children has changed, too. In many communities, elementary schools have become test-prep factories---where standardized testing begins in kindergarten and" teaching to the test" is considered a virtue. At the same time, recess (休息时间) is being pushed aside in order to provide extra time for reading and math drills. So is history and opportunities for hands-on activities---like science labs and art. Active play is increasingly frowned on---some schools have even banned recess and tag. In the wake of school shootings like the tragedy at Virginia Tech, kids who stretch out a pointer finger, bend their thumb and shout" pow! "are regarded with suspicion and not a little fear.

第57题:What are many American parents concerned about according to the first paragraph?

A) Their children's health problems.

B) Their children's emotional and behavioral problems.

C) The report issued by National Center for Health Statistics.

D) The studies that come out every other week.

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第10题
About 50 years ago the idea of disabled people doing sports was never heard of. But when t
he annual games for the disabled were started at Stroke Mandeville, England in 1948 by Sir Ludwig Guttmann, the situation began to change. Sir Ludwig Guttmann, who had been driven to England in 1939 from Nazi Germany, had been asked by the British government to set up an injuries centre at Stroke Mandeville Hospital near London. His ideas about treating injuries included sports for the disabled.

In the first games just two teams of injured soldiers took part. The next year, 1949, five teams took part. From those beginnings things developed fast. Teams now come from abroad to Stroke Mandeville every year. In 1960 the first Olympics for the Disabled were held in Rome. Now, every four years the Olympic Games for the Disabled are held, if possible, in the same place as die normal Olympic Games, although they are organized separately. In other years Games for the Disabled are still held at Stroke Mandeville. In the 1984 wheelchair Olympic Games, 1, 604 wheelchair athletes from about 40 countries took part. Unfortunately, they were held at Stroke Mandeville and not in Los Angeles, along with the other Olympics.

The Games have been a great success in promoting international friendship and understanding, and in proving that being disabled does not mean you can't enjoy sports. One small source of disappointment for those who organize and take part in the games, however, has been the unwillingness of the International Olympic Committee to include the disabled events at the Olympic Games for the able bodies. Perhaps a few more years are still needed to convince those fortunate enough not to be disabled that their disabled fellow athletes should not be excluded.

The first games for the disabled were held________after Sir Ludwing Guttmann arrived in England.

A.50 years

B.21 years

C.9 years

D.4 years

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