题目内容

The measure of a man's character is what he would do if he knew he would never be found out.
——Thomas Macaulay
Some thirty years ago, I was studying in a public school in New York. One day, Mrs. Nanette O'Neil gave an arithmetic 【B1】 to our class. When the papers were 【B2】 she discovered that twelve boys had made the same mistakes throughout the test.
There is really nothing new about 【B3】 an exams. Perhaps that was why Mrs. O'Neill 【B4】 even say a word about it. She only asked the twelve boys to 【B5】 after class. I was one of the twelve. Mrs. O'Neill asked 【B6】 questions, and she didn't 【B7】 us either. She wrote on the blackboard the 【B8】 words by Thomas Macaulay. She then ordered us to 【B9】 these words into our exercise-books one hundred times.
I don't 【B10】 about the other eleven boys. Speaking for myself I can say: it was the most important single 【B11】 of my life. Thirty years after being introduced to Macaulay's words, they 【B12】 seem to me the best yard-stick(准绳), because they give us a 【B13】 to measure ourselves rather than others.
【B14】 of us are asked to make 【B15】 decisions about nations going to war or armies going to battle. But all of us are called 【B16】 daily to make a great many personal decisions. 【B17】 the Wallet, found in the street, be put into a pocket or turned over to a policeman? Should the 【B18】 change received at the store be forgotten or 【B19】 ? Nobody will know except 【B20】 But you have to live with yourself, and it is always better to live with someone you respect.
【B1】

A. test
B. problem
C. paper
D. lesson

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By contrast, baseball seems abstract, cool, silent, still.
On TV, baseball game is fractured into a dozen perspectives, replays, close ups. The geometry of the game, however, is essential to understanding it. You should contemplate the game from one point as a painter does his subject; you may, of course, project yourself into the game. It is in this projection that the game affords so much space and time for involvement. The TV won't do it for you.
Take, for example, the third baseman. You sit behind the third base dugout and you watch him watching home plate. His legs are apart, knees flexed. His arms hang loose. He does a lot of this. The skeptic still cannot think of any other sports so still, so passive. But watch what happens every time the pitcher throws: the third baseman goes up on his toes, flexes his arms or brings the glove to a point in front of him, takes a step fight or left, backward or forward, perhaps he glances across the field to check his first baseman's position. Suppose the pitch is a ball. "Nothing happened," you say. "I could have had my eyes closed."
The innocent must play the game. And this involvement in the stands is no more intellectual than listening to music is. Watch the third baseman. (79) Smooth the dirt in front of you with one foot; smooth the pocket in your glove; watch the eyes of the batter, the speed of the bat the sound of horsehide on wood. If football is a symphony of movement and theatre, baseball is chamber music, a spacious interlocking of notes, chores and responses.
The passage is mainly concerned with ______ .

A. the different tastes of people for sports
B. the different characteristics of sports
C. the attraction of football
D. the attraction of baseball

习惯性流产的主要病因是()E.

A.ordersB.directsC.insistsD.requires

A. orders
B. directs
C. insists
D. requires

— Read the article on the opposite page about networking.
— Choose the best word to fill each gap from A, B, C or D below.
— For each question 19 - 33, mark one letter (A, B, C or D) on your Answer Sheet.
— There is an example at the beginning (0).
NETWORK YOUR WAY TO SUCCESS
That (0)______ saying, 'It's not what you know, it's who you know' sums up what may well be the most important (19)______ of climbing the business ladder. Diligence, competence and experience are fine (20)______, but they are not enough.
While this is no great secret, the fact (21)______ that skilled workers are few and (22)______ between - get business success depends on informal networking and sociologists have (23)______ that the majority of top jobs in the US are obtained through it. A vast (24)______ of jobs are never advertised and of those that are, many have already been (25)______ to someone known to the company. These processes (26)______ not just to industry but to the government and public sector as well.
Potentially, colleagues, superiors, business friends, customers, suppliers can (27)______ a networker with information, addresses and open doors that. make the difference between stagnation and a rapid rise. Nonetheless, as a communications trainer in Germany put it: 'Many people just do not know how to (28)______ develop and foster promising relationships.' For some, networking (29)______ just too time-consuming or stressful. Such individuals shut themselves in their office and minimise (30)______ with the outside world. They may do a great job of work, but they are unlikely to make great career strides. Other would-be networkers (31)______ instant results, make a real nuisance of themselves, or network in too limited an environment. There are plenty of other classic errors, ranging from a failure to (32)______ favours, to the converse - networking with opportunists who themselves never deliver.
Effective networking does not just happen. It is a conscious process of developing links which (33)______ creativity, energy and commitment. Learning to do it will pay dividends.

A. measures
B. resources
C. means
D. actions

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