A.which happened
B.that had happened
C.which had happene
D.that had been happened
第1题
A.which happened
B.that had happened
C.which had happened
D.what had happened
第2题
The Marriage of Young People
Young people are often pressured to marry by their families and friends. Rose and Bill talk about the frustrations and disagreements Rose has had with her family. She has told Bill about how her family continually asks her why she isn't marrieD.Her family has been putting pressure on Rose to find a husband, and this makes Rose angry.
Bill understands how Rose feels. He has also been upset about how his friends react to his single life. His women friends usually find him date, even if he doesn't want them. They introduce him to new people as the eligible (合适的) bachelor.
Sometimes Rose and Bill feel they might be better off financially if they each found a marriage partner.. They know that two people living together and earning two salaries can afford more than a single person can. They also know about the income tax advantages married couples enjoy. However, for the moment, each of them is committed to remaining single.
Young people feel many pressures not to get marrieD.Rose has a very good job at the bank. There is a possibility of a promotion in the near future. A promotion means a higher salary and more responsibility. She questions whether she can combine success in business with marriage. Both demand a great amount of time and work. Bill too, is hesitant about getting married because of his active social life. He has many friends and is out with one of them almost every night. How can he ever settle down and stay home with one person? Will he miss friends?
At this point Rose and Bill are each trying to settle the question of whether to get married, Both Rose and Bill know they will reach a decision without being pressured.
第 31 题 Rose is frustrated by her family's_________
A.constant pressure about marriage
B.unwillingness to accept Bill into the family
C.ignorance of her career potential
D.all of the above
第3题
W: That's correct. Thank you for calling. And I am very happy to be here to attend this meeting.
M: Thanks for taking the time. I understand you'll be coming to Washington tomorrow and will join us in the White House. So the time is very urgent.
W: That's my intention, sir.
M: We've been told it's going to be 1:30 in the afternoon in the Rose Garden. Is that what the White House told you? Or how did you get the time?
W: That's the same timetable I was given. To me it was assigned very well.
M: Oh, very good. Mrs. Koop, tell us what you will understand the President will do tomorrow? And what this means practically to the American problem?
W: Well, it's been a few years since he first announced that this was his intention and during that time the FDA had gone through its usual protocol. And they have published the proposed regulations at the Federal Register and there have been comments from the people and that is all over now. And what the President will be presenting to the public tomorrow are the revised regulations: Now I have not seen them, but it's my impressions from what I've heard that they're pretty much the same as the things as he talked about the last year. And President Clinton seldom repeatedly suggested an end to using trade marks of cigarette on baseball caps.
A.A surgeon general who will be present in a rose garden
B.A woman who used to be one of Reagan's Surgeon General.
C.A spokesman for President Clinton on drug regulations.
D.Ronauld Reagan.
第4题
At the beginning, Rose realized the only thing that could stop her was fear of ,failure. "I couldhear my friends and family saying, 'Why did you leave a good job?' If I failed, would I be okay facing them? And: t thought, 'So what? I can go back for further study in medicine.' I started to accept that it would be okay to say, 'I failed, but I tried.' Once I was comfortable with that th6fight, the fear came to an end. I realized I feared regret more than failure. And after you turn to the path you choose, there is nothing acceptable but Success"
Now, Rose has no regrets about leaving medicine. "What I'm doing is not all that different from: what I Was doing as a doctor. The goal is the same: to relieve (减轻) pain. A former professor told me: 'You're helping hundreds of thousands of women with your shoes. As a doctor, you would have helped only the few who went to your office. You're having a much greater effect.'
Looking back, Rose admits she caught a couple of lucky breaks. "To me, luck is about being prepared for those opportunities (机会) that come knocking. You have to have an open mind, the right skilis and all your senses working 'to see what opportunities present themselves. Luck can open the door, but you still have to walk through it."
36. Before starting:her shoe business, Taryn Rose was a _
A. nurse B. worker C. doctor D. boss
第5题
W: That's correct. Thank you for calling. And I am very happy to be here to attend this meeting.
M: Thanks for taking the time. I understand you'll be coming to Washington tomorrow and will join us in the White House. So the time is very urgent.
W: That's my intention, sir.
M: We've been told it's going to be 1:30 in the afternoon in the Rose Garden. Is that what the White House told you? Or how did you get the time?
W: That's the same timetable I was given. To me it was assigned very well.
M: Oh, very good. Mrs. Koop, tell us what you will understand the President will do tomorrow? And what this means practically to the American problem?
W: Well, it's been a few years since he first announced that this was his intention and during that time the FDA had gone through its usual protocol. And they have published the proposed regulations at the Federal Register and there have been comments from the people and that is all over now. (20)And what the President will be presenting to the public tomorrow are the revised regulations: Now I have not seen them, but it's my impressions from what I've heard that they're pretty much the same as the things as he talked about the last year. And (21)President Clinton seldom repeatedly suggested an end to using trade marks of cigarette on baseball caps.
A.A surgeon general who will be present in a rose garden
B.A woman who used to be one of Reagan's Surgeon General.
C.A spokesman for President Clinton on drug regulations.
D.Ronauld Reagan.
第6题
听力原文:M: Now, first of all, let's introduce Mrs. Koop. (19) She is one of Reagan's Surgeon General. Thank you very much for joining us ,joining us from Hanover, New Hampshire, correct?
W: That's correct. Thank you for calling. And I am very happy to be here to attend this meeting.
M: Thanks for taking the time. I understand you'll be coming to Washington tomorrow and will join us in the White House. So the time is very urgent.
W: That's my intention, sir.
M: We've been told it's going to be 1:30 in the afternoon in the Rose Garden. Is that what the White House told you? Or how did you get the time?
W: That's the same timetable I was given. To me it was assigned very well.
M: Oh, very good. Mrs. Koop, tell us what you will understand the President will do tomorrow? And what this means practically to the American problem?
W: Well, it's been a few years since he first announced that this was his intention and during that time the FDA had gone through its usual protocol. And they have published the proposed regulations at the Federal Register and there have been comments from the people and that is all over now. (20)And what the President will be presenting to the public tomorrow are the revised regulations: Now I have not seen them, but it's my impressions from what I've heard that they're pretty much the same as the things as he talked about the last year. And (21)President Clinton seldom repeatedly suggested an end to using trade marks of cigarette on baseball caps.
(20)
A.A surgeon general who will be present in a rose garden
B.A woman who used to be one of Reagan's Surgeon General.
C.A spokesman for President Clinton on drug regulations.
D.Ronauld Reagan.
第7题
听力原文:M: Now, first of all, let's introduce Mrs. Koop. She is one of Reagan's Surgeon General. Thank you very much for joining us ,joining us from Hanover, New Hampshire, correct?
W: That's correct. Thank you for calling. And I am very happy to be here to attend this meeting.
M: Thanks for taking the time. I understand you'll be coming to Washington tomorrow and will join us in the White House. So the time is very urgent.
W: That's my intention, sir.
M: We've been told it's going to be 1:30 in the afternoon in the Rose Garden. Is that what the White House told you? Or how did you get the time?
W: That's the same timetable I was given. To me it was assigned very well.
M: Oh, very good. Mrs. Koop, tell us what you will understand the President will do tomorrow? And what this means practically to the American problem?
W: Well, it's been a few years since he first announced that this was his intention and during that time the FDA had gone through its usual protocol. And they have published the proposed regulations at the Federal Register and there have been comments from the people and that is all over now. And what the President will be presenting to the public tomorrow are the revised regulations: Now I have not seen them, but it's my impressions from what I've heard that they're pretty much the same as the things as he talked about the last year. And President Clinton seldom repeatedly suggested an end to using trade marks of cigarette on baseball caps.
(20)
A.A surgeon general who will be present in a rose garden
B.A woman who used to be one of Reagan's Surgeon General.
C.A spokesman for President Clinton on drug regulations.
D.Ronauld Reagan.
第8题
Last week a friend told me that she was reading a French novel in her university literature class. It was called Remembrance of Things Past and was written by Marcel Proust. She told me that in that book, a man bites into a little cookie called a Madeleine and that the taste of the cookie makes him think about the past. For me, it is the sense of smell rather than the sense of taste that brings back happy memories.
The aroma of pipe tobacco always makes me smile. I know most people feel very differently about the smell of tobacco, but I like it for a simple reason: My grandfather used to smoke a pipe, and I adored my grandfather. After an especially good dinner, he used to settle into his favorite chair and go through a long ritual of filling his pipe with something that looked like dead leaves and smelled of apples. Then he would light the pipe, lean back, and smile. The grandchildren gathered around him while he smoked and told us stories about when he was young and travelled the world on sailing ships. I felt safe and loved sitting near my grandfather while he smoked his pipe.
Another wonderful smell is the scent of sweet rolls just coming out of the oven. When I was a child, my mother used to bake sweet rolls every Saturday. The children helped mix the dough with sugar and cinnamon and shape it into little balls. Then we eagerly watched the timer as it counted down the minutes until the rolls were done. After my mother took out the hot rolls and placed them on the counter, the children mixed water and sugar into a paste. When the rolls were cool, we spread the paste over the rolls. What a wonderful aroma! My mother let us eat one right away. We were very happy and secure there in the family kitchen with the smell of sweet, hot rolls.
My favorite aunt always wore a perfume that smelled like roses. My aunt was a tall and large woman who had lots of blond hair and wore flowered dresses. Her perfume was just like her: soft, friendly, warm, and cheerful. She had a lovely singing voice, and when I spent the night at my cousins' house, she would sit in the bedroom as we fell asleep singing old lullabies in her rich, low voice. I fell asleep under the blankets to the smell of her rose perfume and her soft songs, feeling cared for and content.
These are just three examples of smells that I associate with happiness and safety. I don't know anyone who smokes a pipe these days, so I rarely smell pipe tobacco. However, I have my mother's recipe for sweet rolls, and I sometimes bake them for my friends. I like to wear more than one kind of perfume, but whenever I wear my rose perfume, I think of my aunt. Smells bring back wonderful memories.
第9题
The aroma of pipe tobacco always makes me smile. I know most people feel very differently about the smell of tobacco, but I like it for a simple reason: My grandfather used to smoke a pipe, and I adored my grandfather. After an especially good dinner, he used to settle into his favorite chair and go through a long ritual of filling his pipe with something that looked like dead leaves and smelled of apples. Then he would light the pipe, lean back, and smile. The grandchildren gathered around him while he smoked and told us stories about when he was young and travelled the world on sailing ships. I felt safe and loved sitting near my grandfather while he smoked his pipe.
Another wonderful smell is the scent of sweet rolls just coming out of the oven. When I was a child, my mother used to bake sweet rolls every Saturday. The children helped mix the dough with sugar and cinnamon and shape it into little balls. Then we eagerly watched the timer as it counted down the minutes until the rolls were done. After my mother took out the hot rolls and placed them on the counter, the children mixed water and sugar into a paste. When the rolls were cool, we spread the paste over the rolls. What a wonderful aroma! My mother let us eat one right away. We were very happy and secure there in the family kitchen with the smell of sweet, hot rolls.
My favorite aunt always wore a perfume that smelled like roses. My aunt was a tall and large woman who had lots of blond hair and wore flowered dresses. Her perfume was just like her: soft, friendly, warm, and cheerful. She had a lovely singing voice, and when I spent the night at my cousins' house, she would sit in the bedroom as we fell asleep singing old lullabies in her rich, low voice. I fell asleep under the blankets to the smell of her rose perfume and her soft songs, feeling cared for and content.
These are just three examples of smells that I associate with happiness and safety. I don't know anyone who smokes a pipe these days, so I rarely smell pipe tobacco. However, I have my mother's recipe for sweet rolls, and I sometimes bake them for my friends. I like to wear more than one kind of perfume, but whenever I wear my rose perfume, I think of my aunt. Smells bring back wonderful memories.
第10题
Mother told Rose to buy some sugar in the supermarket and_____.
A.she did so
B.so she did
C.so did she
D.she did such
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