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[主观题]

Sarah said Abe loved her truly because ______.A.Abe saw her in the crowd though she tried

Sarah said Abe loved her truly because ______.

A.Abe saw her in the crowd though she tried to made herself small

B.Abe didn't forget her 20 years later

C.Abe kissed her in front of everybody

D.both A, B and C

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更多“Sarah said Abe loved her truly because ______.A.Abe saw her in the crowd though she tried”相关的问题

第1题

A young woman rode with her new husband in a wagon(四轮马车).They came to a log cabin (小

A young woman rode with her new husband in a wagon(四轮马车).They came to a log cabin (小木屋). The man shouted and a little boy came running out of the cabin. Sarah,the young woman,got down from the wagon,opened wide her arms and held the boy close.

“Hello,Abe Lincoln,” she said. “I think we’ 11 be good friends. ”

The new mother with the smiling face went to work at once. She washed Abe and his sister and tidied (弄整齐)their hair. And that night she threw away the boy’ s mattress (床塾)of leaves and gave him a soft mattress and enough blankets to keep him \^arm at night.

Sarah wove cloth and made new shirts for Abe. She made him new deerskin trousers and even deerskin shoes.

Maybe,if she hadn ’ t come to the cabin,he wouldn’ t have lived to be a man. When Abe’ s father told him not to go to school any more and help on thejfarm,Sarah took Abe’ s part against his father. Abe would rather read than eat,and when his father t6ld him to stop,Sarah said,“ Let the boy read.

In 1830 the day came when Abe would leave home to Work in New Salem. For the last time she had taken Abe’ s part against his father. For the last time sHe had kept the cabin quiet so that Abe could read.

More than twenty years later, when Abe, who had then become famous, was going to make a speech in a nearby town, Sarah went there just to watch him. In the crowd she tried to make herself small, but he saw her, and in front of everybody, got out of his carriage and went over and put his arms around her and kissed her. Yes,that was her Abe.

‘‘ He loved me truly,’’ she said later. Which of the following is not true?

A.The young woman in the wagon was Abe’ s new mother.

B.The man in the wagon was Abe’ s new father.

C.The little boy was the young woman’ s new son.

D.The little boy running out of the cabin was Ab

If Sarah hadn’ t come to the cabin,_____ .A.Abe’ s father wouldn’ t have told him not to go to school

B.Abe wouldn’ t have helped his father on the farm

C.Abe wouldn’ t have had so much time to read

D.Abe’s father wouldn’t have told him to stop reading

Sarah always took Abe’ s part against his father because she_____.A.wanted to please Abe

B.wished to be good friends with Abe

C.knew Abe didn’ t love reading very much

D.loved Aide truly

Sarah said Abe loved her truly because_____.A.Abe saw her in the crowd though she tried to make herself small

B.Abe didn’ t forget about his mother 20 years later

C.Abe kissed her in front of everybody

D.Abe said this to her himself

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第2题

A young woman rode with her new husband in a wagon(四轮马车). They came to a log cabin(小

A young woman rode with her new husband in a wagon(四轮马车). They came to a log cabin(小棚屋). The mall shouted and a little boy came running out of the cabin. Sarah, the young woman, got down from the wagon, opened wide her arms and held the boy close.

"Hello, Abe Lincoln," she said. "I think we'll be good friends."

The new mother with the smiling face went to' work at once. She washed Abe and his sister and tidied(整理) their hair. And that night she threw away the boy's mattress(床垫) of leaves and gave him a soft mattress and enough blankets to keep him warm at night.

Sarah wove cloth and made new shirts for Abe. She made him new deerskin trousers and even deerskin shoes.

Maybe, if she hadn't come to the cabin, he wouldn't have lived to be a man. When Abe's father told him not to go to school any more and help on the farm, Sarah took Abe's part against his father. Abe would rather read than eat, and when his father told him to stop, Sarah said, "Let the boy read."

In 1830 the day came when Abe would leave home to work in New Salem. For the last time she had taken Abe's part against his father. For the last time she had kept the cabin quiet so that Abe could read.

More than twenty years later, when Abe, who had then become famous, was going to make a speech in a nearby town, Sarah went there just to watch him. In the crowd she tried to make herself small, but he saw her and, in front of everybody, got out of his carriage and went over and put his arms around her and kissed her. Yes, that was her Abe.

"He loved me truly," she said later.

Which of the following is not true?

A.The young woman in the wagon was Abe's new mother.

B.The man in the wagon was Abe's new father.

C.The little boy was the young woman's new son.

D.The little boy running out of the cabin was Abe.

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第3题

完成下列各选项阅读下面的短文,然后根据短文的内容从每小题的四个选项中选出最佳的一项,并把它前
面的大写字母填在横线上。 A I grew up knowing I was different,and I hated it.When I started school my classmates made it clear to me how I must look to others:a little girl with an ugly lip.And l was deaf in one ear.I was sure that no one outside my family could love me.Then I entered Mrs.Leonard’s second—grade class. Mrs.Leonard was round and pretty,with shining brown hair and dark smiling eyes.Everyone loved her.But no one came to love her more than I did.And for a special reason. The time came for the annual(每年的)heating test given at our sch001.The“whisper test”required each child to go to the classroom door,turn sideways,close one ear with a finger,while the teacher whispered something from the desk,which the child repeated.Then the same for the other ear. The teacher usually whispered things like“ The sky is blue.” or “ Do you have new shoes?” Mv time came I turned my bad ear toward her,blocking the other just enough to be able to hear.1 waited.and then came the words that God had surely put into her mouth,seven words that changed my life forever. Mrs.Leonard,the teacher I loved,said softly,“I wish you were my little girl.” Mrs.Leonard,the teacher,________.

A.loved the little girl more than anybody else

B.loved the little girl while her parents didn’t

C.was loved by the little girl only

D.was loved by all the children in her class

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第4题

I was a freshman in college when I met the Whites. They were completely different from my
own family. Jane White and I became friends at school, and her family welcomed me like along-lost cousin.

In my family it was always important to place blame when anything bad happened. But the Whites didn't worry about who had done what. Mr. and Mrs. White had six children: three sons and three daughters.

In July, the White sisters and I decided to take a car trip to New York. The two oldest, Sarah and Jane, were college students, and the youngest, Amy had recently got a driver' s license, and was excited about practicing her driving on the trip.

The big sisters let Amy take over. She came to an intersection with a stop sign, but Amy continued without stopping. The driver of a large truck, crashed into our car.

Jane was killed instantly.

When Mr. and Mrs. White arrived at the hospital, they hugged us all.

To both of their daughters, and especially to Amy, over and over they simply said, "We' re so glad that you're alive."

I was astonished. No blame.

Later, I asked the Whites why they never talked about the fact that Amy was driving and had run a stop sign.

Mrs. White said, "Jane's gone, and nothing we say or do will bring her back. But Amy has her whole life ahead of her. How can she lead a full and happy life if she feels we blame her for her sister' s death?"

They were right. Amy graduated from college and got married several years ago, She works as a teacher of learning-disabled students. She' s also a mother of two little girls of her own, the oldest named Jane.

The writer of the article is ______ .

A.Mrs. White's niece

B.the Whites' cousin

C.Sarah' s friend at college

D.Jane' s friend at school

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第5题

It was a very happy family. The life was fairly well-off. Father, Leopold, was a music mas
ter in Austria. Mother was warm-hearted. There were two children, Marianne, a schoolgirl, and little Wolfgang, a child not quite four years old. Marianne was learning to play the piano, and day after day Leopold stood behind her as she practised. How patient her father was, and how cleverly he showed Maricanne how to play some particularly difficult pieces! She was making progress, very good progress, and that was excellent. And there, almost lost in the big chair, sat Wolfgang, who never had to be told to keep quiet when Marianne's shoulder, saying she had done well. At that moment Wolfgang climbed on his father's knee and begged to be allowed to play the pretty piece Marianne had now mastered. What a joke that was! Picking up his baby son, Leopold laughed and said," Look at your hands. You must wait, little man !"

There was no end of fun during tea, and Marianne had to tell her mother about Wolfgang wanting to play a difficult piece. When the meal was finished, Marianne helped to clear away the dishes. Suddenly Leopold got up. "Listen!" said he in a surprised voice. "Listen!" "Marianne is playing the piece better than ever!"

But Marianne was washing dishes in the kitchen.

His wife following, Leopold walked quietly upstairs, the lamp in one hand, his music book in the other. He pushed open the door, and there was little Wolfgang playing in the darkness. "I love it." whispered the child.

It was the beginning of Mozart's life of music.

Wolfgang was quiet when his sister practised the piano because ______.

A.he loved music

B.he liked his sister

C.he didn't want to make a noise

D.he didn't feel well

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第6题

Alice Walker makes her living by writing, and her poems, short stories, and novels have wo
n many awards and fellowships for her. She was born in Eatonton, Georgia. She went to public school there, and then to Spelman College in Atlanta before coming to New York to attend Sarah Lawrence College, from which she graduated in 1966. For a time she lived in Jackson, Mississippi, with her lawyer husband and her small daughter. About Langston Hughes, American poet, in her first book for children, she says, "After my first meeting with Langston Hughes I promised I would write a book about him for children someday. Why? Because I, at 22, knew next to nothing of his work, and he didn't scold me; he just gave me a pile of his books. And he was kind to me; I will always be grateful that in his absolute warmth and generosity he fulfilled my deepest dream of what a poet should be. "

"To me he is not dead at all. Hardly a day goes by that I don't think of him or speak of him. Once, just before he died, when he was sick with the flu, I took him a sack full of oranges. The joy I felt in giving that simple gift is never decreased by time. He said he like oranges, too."

What is the main topic of the passage?

A.Alice Walker's reflections on Langston Hughes

B.The influence of Alice Walker on the writing of Langston Hughes

C.Langston Hughes book about Alice Walker

D.A comparison of the children of Alice Walker and that of Langston Hughes

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第7题

完成下列各题 Young Marconi had the teachers to give him lessons at home in Italy.He loved
books,especially 21 on science.He had curious mind and always wanted to prove for himself 22 he read. 23 day,when he was sitting by an open window,it seemed that a thousand 24 filled his ears.“Where are they all 25 ?”he asked himself.“And where will they go? What happens to all the words that people say?Do they 26 in the air around the earth, 27 waiting for someone to pick them up?” At once Marconi went to work.Sounds cal3 be made t0 28 ,he thought,if they are given a push by electricity.If I call push a piece of wood across the waves of water.I can also 29 sounds through the air waves by electrical power. A few weeks 30 he called his mother and father up to his workroom for a 31 .He touched a little machine,and two floors below there was the sound of a buzz(嗡嗡声).“How did you do it?”they asked.“Your machine is 32 far from the sound.” “That’s right,”he said happily.“I have just found a 33 to carry sound without wires.’’ Although Marconi’S father did not think the wireless sound would 34 be important,he gave his son some money to 35 his work.“Father,with this money I am going to send messages round the world one day.’’

A.that

B.those

C.ones

D.one

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第8题

In 1933 an unknown American called Clarence Nash went to see the filmmaker Walt Disney
. He had an unusual voice and he wanted to work in Disney's cartoon(动画片) film for children. When Walt Disney heard Nash's voice, he said,"Stop! That's our duck!"

The duck was the now-famous Donald Duck, who first appeared in 1934 in the film The Wise Little Hen. Donald lived in an old houseboat and wore his sailor jacket and hat. Later that year he became a star after an eight-minute Mickey Mouse film. The cinema audience liked him because he was lazy and greedy, and because he lost his temper very quickly. And they loved his voice when he became angry with Mickey's eight nephews. Soon Donald was more popular than Mickey Mouse himself, probably because he wasn't a goody-goody like Mickey.

In the 1930s, 40s and 50s Donald and his friends Mickey, Goofy and Pluto made hundreds of Disney cartoons. He also made educational films about the place of the USA in the world and safety in the home. Then in 1966 Donald Duck and his voice disappeared---there were no more new cartoons.

Clarence Nash died in February, 1985. But today's children can still see the old cartoons on television and hear that famous voice.

(1)Walt Disney made Donald Duck film.()

(2)The first Donald Duck film was made in 1934.()

(3)Clarence Nash was a film-maker.()

(4)The underlined word "audience" in the second paragraph means readers.()

(5)The underlined word "goody-goody" in the second paragraph means a person who likes to appear to be faultless in behavior.()

此题为判断题(对,错)。

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第9题

When MRA was shortlisted for a valuable contract for the development of a coastal defence
system for another country, it was contingent on the payment of a facilitation fee to an official in the defence ministry. Clearly this was an unusual request but it was also made very clear that MRA would not be awarded the contract, worth $2 billion over 10 years, unless the relatively modest sum of $1 million was paid immediately.

Recently, business activity in the defence sector had been very slow, and MRA was about to announce around 500 staff redundancies. Therefore news that this contract was about to be awarded came as a great relief to the board of MRA, as the jobs would now be secured. However, only the chief executive officer (CEO) and operations director knew about the facilitation fee, so an emergency meeting of the board was convened with only one item on the agenda.

Due to the very sensitive nature of the matter at hand, it was decided not to make a formal record of the discussions at the board meeting. This was more likely to result in a frank exchange of views and encourage all directors to express their opinions openly.

The CEO, Charlie Desborough, explained the dilemma to the board, making it very clear that without this contract there would be no way to protect jobs. The finance director, Jake Neilson, said that he was personally very uncomfortable with the idea of paying a facilitation fee, which was in effect a ‘bribe’. As a professional accountant he was bound by a code of ethics which strictly prohibited making such payments, therefore he could not sanction the payment under any circumstances.

The HR director, Sarah Shue, took a far more pragmatic stance. She acknowledged that any form. of corruption was utterly deplorable; however, it was a fact of life in many countries. She asserted that if the board of MRA decided not to make the payment and forego the contract, then it could be assured that a competitor would not adopt such a high-minded position. The net effect was that by avoiding a relatively small payment, the firm would be doing a disservice to both its employees and its shareholders, who would undoubtedly suffer a reduction in their shareholder value. She maintained that sometimes it is necessary to take difficult decisions in business that are for the greater good, and so suggested that the payment to the official should be made.

Required:

(a) (i) Compare relativism and absolutism and explain the significance of individual or personal differences in guiding ethical behaviour under each approach in a given scenario such as the situation at MRA. (5 marks)

(ii) Explain the ethical theories of deontology and teleology or consequentialism, and analyse which of the approaches have been adopted by Sarah Shue and Jake Neilson. (6 marks)

The involvement of directors in bribery and corruption can seriously undermine the relationships of trust upon which corporate governance is based.

Required:

(b) (i) Assess how bribery and corruption could undermine confidence and trust in MRA, with reference to the principles of corporate governance. (8 marks)

(ii) Describe best practice measures which could be employed by MRA to combat bribery and corruption. (6 marks)

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第10题

A“Troublemaker”was what was given to my friend Peter by his teachers.They also said that h
e had no future andno hope! But now I suggest that anyone who said that should say“sorry”to him.Peter finished Grade Nine,and then he went to study at a technical college.He became a leader of a group ofbad boys.After graduation he had nothing to d0,SO he just hung around by the market with his friends.

It looked like nothing could change his life.It was not until the day that his father died.He left the boys andwent to help his mother who sold food by the roadside.

He really pitied his mum and wanted to do something to support her.He loved reading cartoon(漫画)books andhad been collecting them for years,SO he decided that he should sell them.Soon he realized that his books were verypopular.So he made up his mind to set up his own business.He went around buying cartoon books from otherpeople.He bought them for 25%and then sold them for half price.

These days,he doesn’t have to go around looking for cartoon books because there are always people coming tohis shop to sell their old ones.He now has a monthly income of about 55,000 baht(泰铢).

He was a“troublemaker”to his teachers but he is a hero to me.If you are judged by your teachers as a“badstudent”.I suggest you ignore what they say.Just do your best in everything.Don’t give up so eas-ily,Believe me ,one day you could be successful,too.

Why does the author think some people should say“sorry”to Peter?

A.They refused to help him.

B.They considered him hopeless.

C.They looked down on his parents.

D.They made him give up his friends.

What did Peter do after his father died?A.He worked at a market.

B.He learnt to draw pictures.

C.He started his own business.

D.He continued his c011ege studies.

How does Peter get second.hand cartoon books now?A.He buys them from bookstores.

B.He goes around collecting them.

C.He borrows them from his friends.

D.He waits for people to sell them to him.

The word ignore in paragraph 6 is closest in meaning to_________.A.take no interest in

B.pay no attention to

C.believe in

D.stick to

请帮忙给出每个问题的正确答案和分析,谢谢!

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