Today the car is the most popular【C1】______of transportation in all of the United States. It has completely【C2】______the horse a means of everyday transportation. Americans use their car for【C3】______80 per cent of any【C4】______Most Americans are able to【C5】______cars. The average price of a【C6】______made car was $ 2, 050 in 1950; $ 2, 740 in 1960 and up to $ 4, 750【C7】______1975. During this period American car manufactures set about【C8】______the products and work efficiency.
As a result, the yearly income of the【C9】______family increased from 1950 to 1975【C10】______than the price of cars. For this reason【C11】______a new car takes a smaller【C12】______of family's total earnings today.
In 1951【C13】______it took 8. 1 months of an average family's【C14】______to pay a new car. In 1962 a new car【C15】______8. 3 of a family's annual earnings. By 1975 it only took 4. 75【C16】______income. In addition, the 1975 cars were technically【C17】______to models from previous years.
The【C18】______of the automobile extends throughout the economy【C19】______the car is so important to Americans. Americans spend more money to【C20】______their cars running than on any other item.
【C1】
A. kinds
B. sort
C. means
D. types
Part A
Directions: Read the following three texts. Answer the questions on each text by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.
The cohesiveness(内聚力)of a family seems to rely on members sharing certain routine practices and events. For a growing share of the American labor force, however, working shifts beyond the normal daylight hours—what we here call "shiftwork" — makes the lives of families difficult.
Existing research shows that both male and female shiftworkers express high levels of stress and a sense of conflict between the demands of work and family life. But shifiwork couples still maintain a traditional attitude about the meaning of marriage and the individual roles of husband and wife. They expressed a willingness to do" whatever it takes" to approximate their view of a proper marriage, including sacrificing sleep and doing conventional things at unconventional hours. For the ma- jority of couples interviewed — even when wives worked outside their homes a proper marriage is characterized by a very clear division of roles: husbands are "providers" whose major responsibility is to support the family; wives are "homemakers" who clean, cook, and care for husbands and children.
As couples encountered shifiwork schedules, however, initial expectations about what it would take to create a marriage and family were put to test. One woman expressed her dreams about what marriage was supposed to be:
"It would make me feel like I had more of a home atmosphere, you know. That' s the way I always expected being married having the husband go off, come in the evenings and spend the rest as the evenings together, you know that's the way we thought it would be. It doesn't work out that way.
The women' s definitions of a "good husband" are typified by the following wife' s response:
I him to be a good provider, and be there when I need him, loyal about the same things as he would expect out of me, expect that I expect him to dominate over me. But in a manner of speaking when it' s time to be a man I expect him to stand up instead of sitting back expecting me to do everything.
To husbands, a good wife was someone who was.
Understanding of what I feel go through at work. I need that respect at work, I hope I get it at work. I want my wife to realize what I expect at work. I don' t want her to give me a lot of shit when I come home from work because — I don' t know if this makes much sense.
These views seemed critical to maintain the families of the shiftworkers.
Despite ______, shiftwork couples still hoped to maintain a stable life.
A. traditional beliefs about marriage
B. lack of control over time
C. a very clear division of roles
D. the demands of work