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[单选题]

We students often help and learn from ()other.

A.all

B.each

C.every

D.one

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更多“We students often help and learn from ( )other.”相关的问题

第1题

John is a famous writer now. But he said he was not a good student when he was young.
He was often late for ___1___ and didn't like doing his homework. Sometimes, he slept in class while the teacher was teaching. He didn't understand much, but he always thought he understood everything. One day the teacher ___2___ the students a question, “When Jack was ten years old, ___3___ brother Bob was twenty, Jack is fifteen now and how old is his brother Bob?” John said, “That's easy. Bob is twice as old as Jack, so he is now thirty.”

Another time, the ___4___ in a science class asked, “When it thunders (打雷), why do we always see the light before we ___5___ the sound?”

“But, Miss,”said John quickly,“don't you know our eyes are in front of our ears?”

1)、A.teacher

B.his

C.asked

D.class

E.hear

2)、A.teacher

B.his

C.asked

D.class

E.hear

3)、A.teacher

B.his

C.asked

D.class

E.hear

4)、A.teacher

B.his

C.asked

D.class

E.hear

5)、A.teacher

B.his

C.asked

D.class

E.hear

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第2题

When we were students, we () often stay up all night.
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第3题

When we were students we () often stay up all night.

A.will

B.would

C.should

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第4题

When I was studying English at a training center in Washington D.C. in 2008, I shared

When I was studying English at a training center in Washington D.C. in 2008, I shared a house with two young Americans, Jim and Steve. Jim was studying French and Steve Chinese, both at the Foreign Service Institute. We shared many things in common, but we also thought and acted quite differently. Steve was interested in speaking Chinese. He always tried every opportunity to talk with me with his very English-like pronunciation. I was often touched with his diligence. However, I wanted to practice English with him, too. So we often spoke at the same time in the other’s mother tongue. Jim was fresh from college and the youngest of the three. He was going out all the time. The only time we met was at breakfast. There was a small round table in our kitchen, where we saw around to enjoy our food. Steve had Chinese fast food such as dumplings or noodles, and I ate bread and boiled eggs. But Jim often just drank a cup of tea because he had nothing in his fridge. He was too busy dating pretty French girls to do any shopping. I often offered him some of my food. But Steve told me in his poor Chinese that I didn’t need to do that. He said that it was Jim’s own fault and that it served him right. Although he was learning Chinese, he still had his American sense of values.

Two years later, I returned to China. The three of us still keep in touch. Jim now works in a travel agency in Paris. He got married to one of the pretty girls. He wrote to tell us that he can now enjoy a delicious breakfast with his beautiful wife every morning in their comfortable living room. Steve wants to work in China. And I’m helping him with this. I have introduced him to the dean of the Overseas Section of our university. He is very interested in Steve. He wants to know if Steve can work here teaching the overseas students Chinese. I have sent the message to Steve. I’m sure he’d be very happy to accept the job. However, I hope he could try harder to improve himself. Otherwise, all the overseas students would speak with his terrible pronunciation!

(1) Which of the following statements is TRUE according to the passage?()

A、Steve and Jim were more alike in character.

B、The author didn’t enjoy talking with Steve.

C、The three of them were all language majors.

D、Their living condition was rather poor.

(2) Which of the following is TRUE about Jim?()

A、He has a French way of making friends.

B、Going out with girls cost him a lot of time.

C、He learned French in order to date Paris girls.

D、He liked doing housework.

(3) What is the author’s opinion of Steve?()

A、Steve was a very hardworking fellow.

B、Steve enjoyed cooking Chinese food.

C、Steve enjoyed shopping more than Jim.

D、Steve’s Chinese accent was quite pure.

(4) What does the last sentence of the first paragraph imply?()

A、Steve didn’t like offering help to others.

B、American people only eat their own food.

C、Steve wanted Jim to do his own shopping.

D、Americans and Chinese differ in their sense of values.

(5) What can be learned from the last paragraph?()

A、Jim is a very good husband.

B、Steve enjoys teaching Chinese.

C、The author works for overseas students.

D、The three friends still keep in touch.

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第5题

When we were students we often stay up all night.A、willB、wouldC、should

When we were students we often stay up all night.

A、will

B、would

C、should

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第6题

When I was studying English at a training center in Washington D.C. in 1998, , I shareda
house with two young Americans, Jim, and Steve. Jim was studying French and Steve Chinese, both at the Foreign Service Institute. We shared many things in common, but we also thought and acted quite differently. Steve was interested in speaking Chinese. He always tried every opportunity to talk with me with his very English-like pronunciation. I was often touched with his diligence. However, I wanted to practice English with him, too. So we often speak at the same time in the other &39;s mother tongue. Jim was fresh from college and the youngest of the three. He was going out all the time. The only time we met was at breakfast. There was a small round table in our kitchen, where we sat around to enjoy our food. Steve had Chinese fast food such as dumplings or noodles, and I ate bread and boiled eggs. But Jim often just drank a cup of tea because he had nothing in his bridge. He was too busy dating pretty French girls to do any shopping. I often offered him some of my food. But Steve told me in his poor Chinese that I didn&39; t need to do that. He said that it was Jim&39; s own fault and that it served him right. Although he was learning Chinese, hestill held his American senseof value.

Two years later, I returned to china. The three of us still keep in touch. Jim now works in a travel agency in Paris. He got married to one of the pretty girls. He wrote to tell us that now he can enjoy a delicious breakfast with his beautiful wife every morning in their comfortable living room. Steve wants to work in china. And V m helping him with this. I have introduced him to the dean of the OverseasSection of our university. He is very interested in Steve. He wants to know if Steve can work here teaching the overseas students Chinese. I have sent the messageto Steve. I&39; m sure he’ d be very happy to accept the job. However, I hope he could try harder to improve himself. Othervise, all the overseas studentswould speakwith his terrible pronunciation!

Which of the following statementsis true according to the passage?

A.The three of them were all language majors.

B.Steve and Jim were more alike in character.

C.The author didn’ t enjoy talking with Steve.

D.Their living condition was rather poor.

What is the author,s opinion of Steve?A.Steve was a very hardworking fellow.

B.Steve enjoyed cooking Chinese food.

C.Steve enjoyed shopping more than Jim.

D.Steve' s Chinese accentwas quite pure.

Which of the following is true about Jim?A.Going out with girls cost him a lot of time.

B.He had a French way of making friends.

C.He learnedFrench in order to dateParis girls.

D.He liked doing housework.

What does the last sentenceof the first paragraphimplies that___?A.Stevedidn't like offering help to others.

B.American people only eat their own food.

C.Americans and Chinesediffer in their senseof value.

D.Stevewanted Jim to do his own shopping.

From the last paragraph, we can learn that_____ .A.Jim is avery good husband.

B.Steveenjoys teaching Chinese.

C.The author works for overseasstudents.

D.The three friends still keep in touch.

请帮忙给出每个问题的正确答案和分析,谢谢!

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第7题

We might marvel at the progress made in every field of study, but the methods of testing a
person's knowledge and ability remain as primitive as ever they were. It really is extraordinary that after all these years, educationists have still failed to device anything more efficient and reliable than examinations. For all the pious claim that examinations text what you know, it is common knowledge that they more often do the exact opposite. They may be a good means of testing memory, or the knack of working rapidly under extreme pressure, but they can tell you nothing about a person's true ability and aptitude.

As anxiety-makers, examinations are second to none. That is because so much depends oil them. They are the mark of success of failure in our society. Your whole future may be decided in one fateful day. It doesn't matter that you weren't feeling very well, or that your mother died. Little things like that don't count: the exam goes on. No one can give of his best when he is in mortal terror, or after a sleepless night, yet this is precisely what the examination system expects him to do. The moment a child begins school, he enters a world of vicious competition where success and failure are clearly defined and measured. Can we wonder at the increasing number of "drop outs": young people who are written off as utter failures before they have even embarked on a career? Can we be surprised at the suicide rate among students?

A good education should, among other things, train you to think for yourself. The examination system does anything but that. What has to be learnt is rigidly laid down by a syllabus, so the student is encouraged to memorize. Examinations do not motivate a student to read widely, but to restrict his reading; they do not enable him to seek more and more knowledge, but induce cramming. They lower the standards of teaching, for they deprive the teacher of all freedoms. Teachers themselves arc often judged by examination results and instead of teaching their subjects, they are reduced to training their students in exam techniques which they despise. The most successful candidates are not always the best educated; they are the best trained in the technique of working under duress.

The results on which so much depends are often nothing more than a subjective assessment by some anonymous examiner. Examiners are only human. They get tired and hungry; they make mistakes. Yet they have to mark stacks of hastily scrawled scripts in a limited amount of time. They work under the same sort of pressure as the candidates. And their word carries weight. After a judge's decision you have the right Of appeal, but not after an examiner's. There must surely be many simpler and more effective ways of assessing a person's true abilities. Is it cynical to suggest that examinations are merely a profitable business for the institutions that run them? This is what it boils down to in the last analysis. The best comment on the system is this illiterate message recently scrawled on a wall: I were a teenage drop-out and now I are a teenage millionaire.

The main idea of this passage is ______.

A.examinations exert a pernicious influence on education

B.examinations are ineffective

C.examinations are profitable for institutions

D.examinations are a burden on students

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第8题

It would be interesting to discover how many young people go to university without any cle
ar idea of what they are going to do afterwards. If one considers the enormous variety of courses【C1】______ , it is not hard to see how difficult it is for a student to select the course most suited to his【C2】______ and abilities. If a student goes to university to acquire a broader【C3】______ of life, to enlarge his ideas and to learn to think for himself, he will【C4】______ benefit. Schools often have too restricting an atmosphere, with its time tables and【C5】______ , to allow him much time for independent【C6】______ of the work he is asked to do. Most students would, I believe,【C7】 ______ by a year of such exploration of different academic studies, especially those "all rounders" with no【C8】______ interest. They should have longer time to decide in what subject they want to take their degrees, so【C9】______ in later life, they do not look 【C11】______ and say, "I should like to have been an archaeologist.【C10】______ I hadn't taken a degree in Modern Languages, I shouldn't have ended up as a(n)【C12】______ , but it's too late now. I couldn't go back and begin all over again."

There is, of course, another side to the question of how to make the best【C13】______ of one's time at university. This is the case of the student who excels in a particular branch of learning. He is immediately【C14】______ by the University of his choice, and spends his three or four years becoming a specialist, emerging with a first-class Honour Degree and very【C15】______ knowledge of what the rest of the world is all about. it【C16】______ becomes more and more important that. If students are not to waste their【C17】______ , there will have to be much more【C18】______ information about courses and more advice. Only in this way can we be sure that we are not to have, on the one hand. a hand of specialists【C19】______ of anything outside of their own subject, and on the other hand, an ever increasing number of graduates 【C20】______ in subjects for which there is little or no demand in the working world.

【C1】

A.overtook

B.occupied

C.offered

D.organized

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第9题

We uncovered numerous explanations for the undesirable effects of working on students’ engagement in school except____

A.they have less time to devote to school assignments

B.they get too tired from work to study

C.they view school more rewarding

D.they take drugs and use alcohol more often than non-working students

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第10题

Addison Heard uses an image of his wife and infant son for the background on his
laptop. An MBA student at the University of Virginia's Darden School of Business, Heard thinks about his family constantly. But because he's away at B-school, he has experienced much of his son's first year via phone calls and digital photos. Says Heard, "It has been particularly hard, not being there with them every day. "

This was his family's choice. It didn't make financial sense for his wife, Eden, a corporate lawyer in Washington, to quit her job, sell their condo(公寓), and move to Charlotterville with her husband. So he went alone. In his first Year each spouse made the 200-mile round-trip commute on alternate weekends. Since their son was born last May, Addison has been doing most of the driving.

As complicated as the Heard's situation seems, it isn't all that rare. In any year, hundreds of couples deal with how to handle the family logistics(后勤工作) of going to B-school. Some choose a long-distance relationship, commuting back and forth on weekends and breaks. Others see partners and children only on vacations and holidays. Still others pack up the family and bring them along.

Being apart hasn't been easy, but the Heards have made it work. On weekends when the couple is in Virginia, they attend social events, so she can feel a part of the community. Heard also avoids Friday classes to gain more family time. "We've gotten into a routine that works," he says, "but I'm looking forward to being home, so the three of us can be a family. "

Any long-distance commute puts pressure on a relationship, causing some couples to drift apart. Being thrown in a rigorous academic schedule for one spouse and a demanding career for the other, the stress intensifies, often distracting students from their studies.

Some schools offer students in these situations a good deal of support. For faraway spouses, there are on-campus social events when they visit, online communities, even involvement in alumni networks in their home cities. But mainly B-schools try to make it easier for students to take their partners along for the ride. They help families find housing, preschools, or local employment.

The decision to attend a distant B-school is fraught(伴随着的) with financial and logistical problems. Students also must decide if their families should stay or go. Either way, schools try to accommodate them. "We have more than ourselves to think about," an MBA student, Cory Hricik says. "It's a family-influenced choice. "

Heard will come into contact with his son in his first year via____________________.

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