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发布时间:2024-07-29 18:23:58

[单项选择]{{B}}Passage 2{{/B}}
Don Bruns of Lima, Ohio, and his 11- year-old son, Aaron, love baseball, and the Cincinnati Reds in particular. For, Aaron’s birthday last October, his dad decided to drive him to Cincinnati more than two hours away, for the first game of the World Series. They had no tickets but hoped to buy a pair from scalpers.
After arriving at Riverfront Stadium, the Brunses walked the streets for two hours. Aaron wearing a Reds cap, his father carrying a sign that said "We Need 2 Tickets."
"There were a lot of scalpers," the father said." But the cheapest ticket was $1075 a piece. I couldn’t afford that." And Aaron understood.
Then the boy and his father were approached by Michael Teicher, who worked for a company that produces baseball highlight show for TV. Teicher pulled out a pair of tickets and handed them to Bruns.<
A. A place
B. A baseball team
C. A stadiam
D. A street

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[单项选择]{{B}}Passage 2{{/B}}
Don Bruns of Lima, Ohio, and his 11- year-old son, Aaron, love baseball, and the Cincinnati Reds in particular. For, Aaron’s birthday last October, his dad decided to drive him to Cincinnati more than two hours away, for the first game of the World Series. They had no tickets but hoped to buy a pair from scalpers.
After arriving at Riverfront Stadium, the Brunses walked the streets for two hours. Aaron wearing a Reds cap, his father carrying a sign that said "We Need 2 Tickets."
"There were a lot of scalpers," the father said." But the cheapest ticket was $1075 a piece. I couldn’t afford that." And Aaron understood.
Then the boy and his father were approached by Michael Teicher, who worked for a company that produces baseball highlight show for TV. Teicher pulled out a pair of tickets and handed them to Bruns.<
A. baseball fans
B. baseball players
C. tickets sellers
D. gatekeepers
[单项选择]Don Bruns of Lima, Ohio, and his 11- year-old son, Aaron, love baseball, and the Cincinnati Reds in particular. For, Aaron’s birthday last October, his dad decided to drive him to Cincinnati more than two hours away, for the first game of the World Series. They had no tickets but hoped to buy a pair from scalpers.
After arriving at Riverfront Stadium, the Brunses walked the streets for two hours. Aaron wearing a Reds cap, his father carrying a sign that said "We Need 2 Tickets."
"There were a lot of scalpers," the father said." But the cheapest ticket was $1075 a piece. I couldn’t afford that." And Aaron understood.
Then the boy and his father were approached by Michael Teicher, who worked for a company that produces baseball highlight show for TV. Teicher pulled out a pair of tickets and handed them to Bruns.
"How much do you want " Bruns asked.
"No charge," said Teicher, "Enjoy the game."
When asked later, Teicher explained: "I was working fo
A. A place
B. A baseball team
C. A stadiam
D. A street
[单项选择]Passage One
Stories don’t just happen ; they are created. There are no stories in the everyday course of events; there are only the ingredients for stories. A dozen people may watch a man standing on the fifth-floor ledge or a small child crying. There is no story involved in either case unless one of the dozen chooses to make one up—to surround the isolated event with a beginning and an end, thereby giving what we call a meaning to human action. In other words, there has to be a story-maker--a story-teller--if there is to be a story.
You as the story-maker or writer are in complete control of all of the details of your story. You have control over who the characters are, what they do, and why they do it. You also have control over how the story is to be told and who is going to tell it. You can adopt one of a number of points of view, each of which will give a quite different total story.
Broadly speaking, there are two major approaches a writer can tak
A. creative features
B. unimportant details
C. misleading facts
D. raw materials
[单项选择]
Passage 3
I don’t believe that men have deliberately turned us into slaves, as one of your correspondents writes. (1) I do know that many women are exploited at work. There must be equal pay (2) equal work, and where this is not the case, the abuse must be resisted at all costs.
I don’t believe that men (3) us their mental inferiors. But I do know that there’s still a great (4) of prejudice against women. Certain jobs are still considered to be for men (5) , for example top jobs in industry, in the government and the law. This sort of (6) must be resisted at all costs.
We are born with brains just as good as men’s, and (7) we are not expected to use them. It all begins in the home and at school, (8) girls are expected to play a smaller (9) than boys,
A. complain
B. comply
C. conflict
D. condemn

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