23. Neither my father nor I ___ going to the park.
A.is
B.am
C.are
D.will
- · 有3位网友选择 D,占比37.5%
- · 有2位网友选择 B,占比25%
- · 有2位网友选择 A,占比25%
- · 有1位网友选择 C,占比12.5%
A.is
B.am
C.are
D.will
A.either
B.none
C.both
D.neither
听力原文:M: What a relationship Steven and his father have!
W: Don't they? I only hope my daughter and I can get along like that when she's Steven's age.
Q: What does the woman mean?
(18)
A.She strongly disagrees with the man. .
B.She knows neither Steven nor his father at all.
C.She also admires Steven's relationship with his father.
D.She also has a close relationship with her daughter now.
完型填空There is an old saying that husbands and wives start to look and behave like each other after a time. I don't know if this was true of my mother and father.Both of my parents had brown hair and brown eyes and low voices. My father, __1__, was eight years older than my mother andtaller and thinner. He was built as straight as an arrow. My mother was shorter and had a rounder and fuller face and she looked as soft as a pillow. My mother was quieter and talked less than my father did. She was also a much more patient person than my father. My father was more experienced in life. He was __2__ to doing everything quickly. My mother, on the other hand, worked and spoke more slowly. They were fond of nature and sports, such as walking, gardening and swimming.
They were both __3__ in reading and music, but my father preferred history books, while my mother liked to read romantic novels. In music, their types were similar, and they were never proud of listening to it.
Most of the time they were in agreement on bringing __4__ their children.They both believed in giving them love and neither one believed in punishing them physically. At times, their personalities were very much alike, but at other times, they seemed very __5__. Perhaps that is why none of their children knows which parent he looks or behaves like.
1.A:however B:interested C:up D:used E:different
2.A:however B:interested C:up D:used E:different
3.A:however B:interested C:up D:used E:different
4.A:however B:interested C:up D:used E:different
5.A:however B:interested C:up D:used E:different
146.A.what should study B.what he studied C.what to study D.what studied
147.A.For the future B.In the future C.For future D.In future
148.A.close B.last C.end D.final
149.A.before B.as C.when D.while
150.A.told B.asked C.talked D.said
听力原文:M: Are you close to your parents?
W: Yeah, we're close. My father and I have always been close. Sometimes my mom and I don't really see eye to eye. What about you?
M: Well, I think my parents definitely don't understand me. My mother always says I'm perfect while my father often criticizes me for doing things wrong.
W: That's interesting. Do you think that's just a generational thing?
M: Well, I don't know. My parents grew up in the 60's. But they didn't seem to know much about their times.
W: So they were kept away from all the big social activities?
M: Yeah. They grew up in a small town and neither of them knew anything about politics, even though my father's father was a local judge and lawyer.
W: My parents grew up in the 60's too, but my dad taught physics at the university and my mom ran a small bookstore in town. I guess they were the kind of people who were open to current events.
M: I'm jealous. Sometimes I feel a lot more educated than my parents, which is fine, but also uncomfortable at times.
W: I can imagine.
M: They just don't understand some things. They haven't experienced life in the same way I have.
W: You mean the traveling you've done?
M: Yeah. My dad thinks I ran away from home because I hated him or something ridiculous like that. I just wanted to see the world.
W: I told my dad once that I'd find a way to study in America and then live there forever.
M: My dad always tells me that I'd be really homesick if I studied at a European university.
W: And then you have to remind him that Europe is only 10 hours away by plane.
(20)
A.Different family backgrounds.
B.The generation gap.
C.Traveling and studying overseas.
D.Different interests and hobbies.
Both of my parents had brown hair and brown eyes and low voices. My father, __1__, was eight years older than my mother and taller and thinner. He was built as straight as an arrow. My mother was shorter and had a rounder and fuller face and she looked as soft as a pillow.
My mother was quieter and talked less than my father did. She was also a much more patient person than my father. My father was more experienced in life. He was __2__ to doing everything quickly. My mother, on the other hand, worked and spoke more slowly.
They were fond of nature and sports, such as walking, gardening and swimming. They were both __3__ in reading and music, but my father preferred history books, while my mother liked to read romantic novels. In music, their types were similar, and they were never proud of listening to it. Most of the time they were in agreement on bringing __4__ their children. They both believed in giving them love and neither one believed in punishing them physically. At times, their personalities were very much alike, but at other times, they seemed very __5__. Perhaps that is why none of their children knows which parent he looks or behaves like.
(1)、
A:however
B:interested
C:up
D:used
E:different
(2)、
A:however
B:interested
C:up
D:used
E:different
(3)、
A:however
B:interested
C:up
D:used
E:different
(4)、
A:however
B:interested
C:up
D:used
E:different
(5)、
A:however
B:interested
C:up
D:used
E:different
听力原文: My father was 44 and knew he wasn't going to make it to 45. He wrote me a letter and hoped that something in it would help me for the rest of my life.
Since the day I was 12 and first read his letter, some of his words have lived in my heart. One part always stands out. "Right now, you are pretending to be a time-killer. But I know that one day, you will do something great." Knowing that my dad believed in me gave me permission to believe in myself: "You will do something great." He didn't know what that would be, and neither did I, but at times in my life when I've felt proud of myself, I remember his words and wish he were here so I could ask, "Is this what you were talking about, Dad? Should I keep going?"
A long way from 12 now, I realize my father would have been proud when I made any progress. Lately, though, I've come to believe he'd want me to move on to what comes next: to be proud of, and believe in, someone else. It's time to start writing my own letters to my children. Our children look to us with the same unanswered question we had. Our kids don't hold back because they're afraid to fail — they're only afraid of failing us. They do not worry about being disappointed. Their fear — as mine was until my father's letter — is of being a disappointment.
Give your child permission to succeed. If you don't have children, then write a letter to someone who looks up to you. You know who they are. They're writing for you to believe in them. I always knew my parents loved me. But trust me: That belief will be more complete, that love will be more real, and their belief in themselves will be greater if you write the words on their hearts: "Don't worry; you'll do something great." Not having that blessing from their parents may be the only thing holding them back.
Questions 26 to 29 are based on the passage you have just heard.
26. What happened to the speaker as mentioned in the passage?
27. According to the speaker, what are children afraid of?
28. What do we know about the speaker from the passage?
29. What is the main purpose of the passage?
(33)
A.He lost his father when he was young.
B.He worked hard before he read his father's letter.
C.He asked his father's permission to believe in himself.
D.He knew what his father wanted to do from the very beginning.
听力原文:M: I'd like to know more information about your background.
W: I studied at the university in Barcelona and after graduating I worked for my father's advertising agency for three years. In 1976, I decided to quit the job and devote myself to Photography.
M: You learned Photography on your own. Why didn't you go to a school of Photography instead of studying Communication Sciences?
W: At that time there was no school of Photography in Spain. While I worked at my father's agency, during vacations I would study how the agency's professional photographers were taking photos.
M: Photographers seem to take pictures of things that exist around us, but your works are different in this way. Your works are neither documentary nor landscape photos, so you capture a completely different subject. What made you start photographing the kind of subjects that don't exist?
W: I was thrilled at the fact that people tend to confuse the photograph with the reality, as if a photograph functions as a mirror of reality. For me it was clear that a photograph is just a constructed image, an image that is not natural nor spontaneous but made intellectually and technologically.
M: It means that a photograph doesn't exist by itself, it contains an exterior factor, so the photograph is a mixture of arguments.
W: Yes, for me any photograph is an invention.
When did the woman decide to learn Photography?
A.When she was studying in the university.
B.When she was working for her father.
C.In 1976.
D.Three years ago.
听力原文:M: It sounds like a challenging position.
W: Yes, it is. How do you feel about a position with a lot of amine travel involved?
M: I'd like nothing better.
W: What experience do you have with computers?
M: My father is in file advertising business, so I practically grew up with a computer around me.
W: That's great, because you can't make a good sales representative without knowing the "ins and outs" of computers. What about your sales experience?
M: I'm a bit more than 22 years old. I graduated from college six months ago.
W: I see. What have you been doing in the past six months?
M: I've been selling automobiles for Mason Imports.
W: Really?. What did you study in college?
M: I majored in marketing and minored in sociology.
W: Marketing. That's what we need. So what got you into car sales?
M: My father recommended it. He said the experience of making many sales presentations daily, plus the experience of closing deals would be invaluable for my career.
W: Your father sounds like a very intelligent man.
M: Thanks.
W: So how are the sales going?
M: My boss, Mr. Peters, rays I have a natural talent for sales. I'm doing Very well there.
(23)
A.Colleagues.
B.Mother and son.
C.A teacher and a student.
D.A prospective employer and an employee.
A.nor
B.or
C.but
D.and
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