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[主观题]

Now many young kids regard tailoring a good career becauseA.it can make a lot of money.B.i

Now many young kids regard tailoring a good career because

A.it can make a lot of money.

B.it's expensive to go to university.

C.it's fashionable to be a tailor.

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更多“Now many young kids regard tailoring a good career becauseA.it can make a lot of money.B.i”相关的问题

第1题

听力原文:Now, it's 10 o'clock and time for a summary of the news.Schools where children ar

听力原文: Now, it's 10 o'clock and time for a summary of the news.

Schools where children are failing in reading and writing tests will be publicly identified under new government plans. The government also plans to introduce six new tests including mathematics and science for all school children. Education Minister David Kemp said no school should be afraid of being exposed, The main purpose is to inform. parents and schools. They'll have exact information and students' problems will be known.

A psychologist has found 1/10 of students fear injections, blood and injury-- some so much that they run away. from doctors. These young patients may miss out on treatment. They were more likely to have fainted when faced with injections, blood and injury. The fear could disturb appropriate medical care.

Research has been done on kids who were making trouble all the time at school. They made the teachers' lives very difficult, Researchers found that many of those troublemakers were from divorced families. What they really want is the attention from parents and teachers. Once they could get attention from parents and teachers, the kids could be very appealing.

What is the main purpose of introducing the new tests?

A.To inform. parents and schools.

B.To pick out good students.

C.To expose poor schools.

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第2题

These days lots of young Japanese do omiai, literally, "meet and look. " Many of them do s
o willingly. In today's prosperous and increasingly conservative Japan, the traditional omiai kekkon , or arranged marriage, is thriving.

But there is a difference. In the original omiai, the young Japanese couldn't reject the partner chosen by his parents and their middlernan. After World War II, many Japanese abandoned the arranged marriage as part of their rush to adopt the more democratic ways of their American conquerors. The Western ren'ai kekkon , or love marriage, became popular; Japanese began picking their own mates by dating and falling in love.

But the Western way was often found wanting in an important respect: it didn't necessarily produce a partner of the right economic, social, and educational qualifications. "Today's young people are quite calculating," says Chieko Akiyama, a social commentator.

What seems to be happening now is a repetition of a familiar process in the country's history, the "Japanization" of an adopted foreign practice. The Western ideal of marrying for love is accommodated in a new orniai in which both parties are free to reject the match. "Omiai is evolving into a sort of stylized introduction," Mrs. Akiyama says.

Many young Japanese now date in their early twenties, but with no thought of marriage. When they reach the age—in the middle twenties for women, the late twenties for men—they increasingly turn to omiai. Some studies suggest that as many as 40% of marriages each year are omiai kekkon. It's hard to be sure, say those who study the matter, because many Japanese couples, when polled, describe their marriage as a love match even if it was arranged.

These days, doing omiai often means going to a computer matching service rather than to a nakodo. The nakodo of tradition was an old woman who knew all the kids in the neighborhood and went around trying to pair them off by speaking to their parents; a successful match would bring her a wedding invitation and a gift of money. But Japanese today find it's less awkward to reject a proposed partner if the nakodo is a computer.

Japan has about five hundred computer matching services. Some big companies, including Mitsubishi, run one for their employees. At a typical commercial service, an applicant pays $80 to $ 125 to have his or her personal data stored in the computer for two years and $ 200 or so more if a marriage results. The stored information includes some obvious items, like education and hobbies, and some not-so-obvious ones, like whether a person is the oldest child. (First sons, and to some extent first daughthers, face an obligation of caring for elderly parents. )

According to the passage, today's young Japanese prefer______.

A.a traditional arranged marriage

B.a new type of arranged marriage

C.a Western love marriage

D.a more Westernized love marriage

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第3题

听力原文:Megan Della Selva, a sophomore at George Washington University, has already trade

听力原文: Megan Della Selva, a sophomore at George Washington University, has already traded e-mail messages with her mom, just to say hi, Maria Minkarah, the friend she is having lunch with, has just talked to her dad, to report on a doctor's visit and her latest thoughts about studying abroad. The young women keep in close touch with their families, discussing matters big and small, academic and

personal. Interviews with students on a variety of campuses suggest that many turn to their parents for help with everything from roommate troubles to how to improve the paper they e-mailed home. Perhaps the most striking thing was the tone students had when talking about their parents. , fond, warm and admiring. The sense of parents as people to be admired was widespread.

Not all college students are this closely connected with their parents. But university officials, students and their families say that the generation gap is nothing like what it used to be, now that baby boomers, once so alienated from their parents, have become parents themselves. "This generation of parents is more involved," said Jennifer Bell, coordinator of the parents office at North Carolina State University. "Thirty years ago, parents were content to drive their kids to college, drop them off, and pick them up at graduation. Now there are different expectations, because they've been involved in their kids' lives all through school."

Cellphones and e-mail have a lot to do with what university administrators and parents alike say has been a big change over the last decade. Hundreds of colleges nationwide have recognized the new reality by giving parents a stronger presence on campus, through a host of offices created to deal with parents' queries and concerns.

(33)

A.freshman

B.sophomore

C.junior

D.senior

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第4题

Children are a relatively modem invention. Until a few hundred years ago they did not exis
t. In medieval and Renaissance painting you see pint-sized men and women, wearing grown-up clothes and grown-up expressions, performing grown-up tasks. Children did not exist because the family as we know it had not evolved.

Children today not only exist; they have taken more attention, in no place more than in America, and at no time more than now. It is always Kids' Country here. Our civilization is child-centered, child-obsessed. A kid's body is our physical ideal. In Kids' Country we do not permit middle age. Thirty is promoted over 50, but 30 knows that soon his time to be overtaken will come.

We are the first society in which parents expect to learn from their children. Such a topsy-turvy (颠倒)situation has come about at least in part because, unlike the rest of the world, ours is an immigrant society, and for immigrants the only hope is in the kids. In the Old Country, that is Europe, hope was in the father, and how much wealth he could accumulate and pass along to his children. In the growth pattern of America and its ever-expanding frontier, the young man was ever advised to go west; the father was ever inheriting from his son. Kids' Country may be the inevitable result.

Kids' Country is not all bad. America is the greatest country in the world to grow up in because it is Kids' Country. We not only wear kids' clothes and eat kids' food, we dream kids' dreams and make them come true. It was, after all, a boys' game to go to the moon.

If in the old days children did not exist, it seems equally true today that adults, as a class, have begun to disappear, condemning all of us to remain boys and girls forever, jogging and doing push-ups against eternity.

The author uses the example of the Renaissance painting to show that ______.

A.adults were smaller and smaller now because they had many things to do

B.adults expressed less concern for their children

C.children looked and acted like adults at that time

D.children were not allowed to appear in family paintings

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第5题

All the following medicines are available now EXCEPT______?A.medicine that stops mother-to

All the following medicines are available now EXCEPT______?

A.medicine that stops mother-to-child transmission

B.medicine that gives most young adults who take it a normal life span

C.medicine that gives all adults a chance to live normal lives

D.medicine that gives little kids that get the HIV positive a good chance to grow up and live normal lives

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第6题

听力原文: Megan Della Selva, a sophomore at George Washington University, has already trad
ed e-mail messages with her mom, just to say hi, Maria Minkarah, the friend she is having lunch with, has just talked to her dad, to report on a doctor's visit and her latest thoughts about studying abroad. The young women keep in close touch with their families, discussing matters big and small, academic and personal. Interviews with students on a variety of campuses suggest that many turn to their parents for help with everything from roommate troubles to how to improve the paper they e-mailed home. Perhaps the most striking thing was the tone students had when talking about their parents: fond, warm and admiring. The sense of parents as people to be admired was widespread.

Not all college students are this closely connected with their parents. But university officials, students and their families say that the generation gap is nothing like what it used to be, now that baby boomers, once so alienated from their parents, have become parents themselves. "This generation of parents is more involved," said Jennifer Bell, coordinator of the parents office at North Carolina State University. "Thirty years ago, parents were content to drive their kids to college, drop them off, and pick them up at graduation. Now there are different expectations, because they've been involved in their kids' lives all through school."

Cellphones and e-mail have a lot to do with what university administrators and parents alike say has been a big change over the last decade. Hundreds of colleges nationwide have recognized the new reality by giving parents a stronger presence on campus, through a host of offices created to deal with parents' queries and concerns.

Megan Della Selva, who has already traded e-mail messages with her mom, just to say hi, is a ______.

A.freshman

B.sophomore

C.junior

D.senior

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第7题

请在第_____处填上正确答案。A. Survey found that 79 percent of parents of young athletes wa

请在第_____处填上正确答案。

A. Survey found that 79 percent of parents of young athletes wanted their children to concentrate on one sports.

B. The young soccer organization has teams for children as young as five.

C. Many of them completely lose interest in sports.

D. Sports for children have two important purposes.

E. But what about the others,the average kids?

F. Very young kids don’t know why their parents are pushing them so hard?

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第8题

Forget Brother, Can You Spare a Dime? The theme song of this recession might well be "Moth
er, Can You Write a Check?" The distressing economy has resulted in increasing numbers of parents and grandparents helping out their strapped adult children and grandkids with home down payments, credit-card bailouts(紧急财政援助), and spare cash--often at the same time as parents are trying to confront new retirement budgets.

"We are seeing a ton of this," says Ross Levin, an Edina, Minn., financial adviser. "Sometimes it's a great idea and sometimes it is not. You have to make sure you put on your own oxygen mask first."

Some 62 percent of visitors to Grandparents.com have helped their kids financially in the past year, with 70 percent of that group handing over cash to help their adult children and grandchildren with daily expenses, says the site's CEO, Jerry Shereshewsky. Another popular category is housing; in the last year many parents have coughed up down payments to help their kids get into homes while the 8,000 first-time home buyer's credit was in effect.

Then there's the debt-bailout situation. A survey recently conducted by Creditcards.com for Newsweek found that 42 percent of folks with adult children have helped them pay off car loans, credit cards, medical bills, and more.

None of this is surprising to Shereshewsky, who sees the trend as a natural result of changing families and the distribution of wealth. "This is where all the money is--and it's where the money is, despite the fact that we've had this meltdown." In general, the baby-boom generation is far wealthier than their children are, and has a lower unemployment rate than 20-somethings. He says that the vast majority of multi-generation households now involve adult children (and sometimes their children) moving in with aging parents. Baby-boom parents generally aspire to helping their kids and their grandchildren and don't want to wait until they are dead to do it.

"You should give while you're young enough to enjoy the fruits of what you're doing," says Shereshewsky, who is personally considering getting a reverse mortgage on his home when it comes time to help his 20-something kids with home purchases.

According the passage, people are regarded as "strapped" if they are ______.

A.jobless in the recession

B.in financial difficulties

C.dependent on their parents

D.troubled by credit card debt

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第9题

LONDON — Life for Cathy Hanger and her three children is set to permanent (永久的) fast-fo

LONDON — Life for Cathy Hanger and her three children is set to permanent (永久的) fast-forward.

Their full school day and her job as a lawyer's assistant are busy enough. But Hanger also has to take the two boys to soccer or hockey or basketball while dropping off her daughter at piano lessons or Girl Scout Club.

Often, the exhausted family doesn't get home until 7 p.m. There is just time for a quick supper before homework. In today's world, middle-class American and British parents treat their children as if they are competitors racing for some finishing line. Parents take their children from activity to activity in order to make their future bright. It seems that raising a genius has become a more important goal than raising a happy and well-balanced child.

"Doctors across the country are reporting a growing number of children suffering from stomachaches and headaches due to exhaustion and stress," says child expert William Doherty of the University of Minnesota.

Teachers are dealing with exhausted kids in the classroom. It's a very serious problem. Many children attend after-school clubs by necessity. But competitive pressures also create an explosion of activities. They include sports, language, music and math classes for children as young as four.

"There is a new parenting trend under way which says that you have to tap all your child's potential(潜能) at a young age; otherwise you will let him down," says Terry Apter, a Camb- ridge-based child and adolescent psychiatrist (青少年精神病专家).

"It isn't entirely new: there have always been pushy parents. But what was previously(以前) seen as strange behavior. is now well accepted."

From the second paragraph of this passage we can find that______.

A.Hanger busies herself by following a trend

B.Hanger is interested in sports and music

C.Hanger doesn't spend much time on her full-time job

D.Hanger wastes much time helping her children's lessons

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第10题

回答{TSE}题: Voice Your Opinion:Change is Neededin Youth Sports Everywhere you look,you se
e kids bouncing a basketball or waving atennis racquet(网球拍).And thesekids are getting younger and younger.In some countries,children can compete on basketball,baseball,and volleyball teams starting atage nine.__________ (46)And swimming and gymnastics classesbegin at age four,to prepare children for competition.It’s true that a few of these kids will develop into highly skilledathletes and may even become members of the national Olympic teams. __________ (47)This emphasis on competitionin sports is having serious negative effects. Children who get involved incompetitive sports at a young age often grow tired of their sport. Many parents pressure their kidsto choose one sport and devote all their time to it.__________ (48)But 66 percent of the youngathletes wanted to play more than one sport for fun.Anotherproblem is the pressure imposed by over—competitive parents and coaches.Children are not naturally competitive.In fact,a recent study by Paulo David found that most children don’t evenunderstand the idea of competition until they are seven years old.__________(49)The third,and biggest,problem for young athletes is the lack of time to do their homework,have fun,be with friends—in short,time to be kids.When they are forced tospend every afternoon at sports practice,they oftenstart to hate their chosen sport. A searchers found that 70 percentof kids who take part in competitive sports before the age of twelve quitbefore they turn eighteen.__________(50)Excessivecompetitiveness took away all the enjoyment. Need to remember the purpose of youth sports’-to give kids a chance to havedeveloping strong,healthy bodies. A.Survey found that 79 percent of parents of young athletes wanted theirchildren to concentrate on one sports. B.The young soccer organization has teams for children as young asfive. C.Many of them completely lose interest in sports. D.Sports for children have two important purposes. E.But what about the others,the average kids? F.Very young kids don’t know why their parents arepushing them so hard. {TS} __________ (46)

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