题目列表(包括答案和解析)
A sixth of undergraduates in Beijing this year have registered at driving school. The students, mostly from majors such as business management or international trade, will finish their driving courses within 20 days or so.
Training costs have dropped to 2, 600 yuan for students, according to the Haidian Driving School in Beijing. The price is not really low, but students will accept it, seeing it as an investment (投资)in their future. Familiarity with the operation of computers and fluent English are the basic skills graduating students need to find a job. But a driver’s permit has become another factor (因素).
“In the job market, owning a driver’s permit sometimes strengthens a graduating student’s competitiveness for a good position, ”says Zhou Yang, an undergraduate at the China University of Political Science and Law.
Cars will become a necessary part of many people’s lives in the coming years, and it is difficult to get a permit of campus because of the pressures on working people’s time. “Having a fulltime job after graduation offers limited time to learn to drive. We senior students have plenty of spare time, plenty of opportunity to learn. ”Zhou says.
Xu Jian, an official at the driving school, said undergraduates were very able and serious, and could grasp in an hour what ordinary people took four hours to learn. In this driving school, middle -aged people, young women and college students are the main customers.
To get a driver’s permit, a beginner is now required to have at least 86 hours’practice before the final road test.
________ in Beijing want to learn to drive.
A. Most of the undergraduates
B. Many undergraduates
C. Many students in the driving school
D. Most of the students who learn business or international trade
The undergraduates are learning to drive because ________.
A. they need this skill to find a good job
B. they like to drive cars
C. they will not have any time to learn to drive after they have
found a full - time job
D. most of them will be able to buy cars in the future
Which of the following is likely to be Xu Jian’s opinion of students learning to drive?
A. He thought it was better to learn it at college than at work.
B. He decided it was a waste of money and time to learn to drive.
C. He agreed that they could learn to drive.
D. He thought they would spend three times more time to learn to drive than usual.
Which of the following can be the best headline for the passage?
A. Students Pay Less to Learn to Drive Now.
B. Students Learn to Drive.
C. It is Better to Learn to Drive at Colleges.
D. Welcome to the Driving School.
Fred Michel is one of 7.2 million Americans who moonlight, or hold more than one job.
Once a week, after his day job as medical director of a mental health center, the 40-year-old psychiatrist (精神病大夫) heads to a part-time job at a treatment center for young people. Twice a month, he travels three hours to another teenage treatment center.
Last year, 5.4 percent of the American workforce held second jobs, according to the US Labor Department, and that looks set to increase this year.
Many workers like the safety that moonlighting provides, says Carl Hausamn, the writer of "Moonlighting: 148 Great Ways to Make Money to the Side."
The information from the US Labor Department shows that 40 percent of US moonlighters in 1997 took a second job to meet household expenses or pay off debts. Others save money or buy some special things.
People also take second jobs with an eye to the future - wanting to try out a new field or gain experience.
Michel started moonlighting when medical systems were unstable (不稳定的). He wanted to make sure he wasn't tied to one system that ended up failing.
Just as the purposes for moonlighting vary, the moonlighters cross all age and racial groups. And they work in a variety of industries - no longer just service, office and sale jobs.
“Technology just affects your ability to make money,” Hausman says. "That makes a frequent change in moonlighting."
As its name means, moonlighting still occurs mostly at night. And that results in some pressures. Chief among them is time.
Full-time employers could misunderstand, too. Some companies do not allow after-hour work because they fear it will affect their employees' 9-to-5 performance.
"The primary employer is saying, ‘Wait, I'm paying you for the sharp, fresh, energetic you,’” says Tom Gimbel, president and founder of LaSalle Staffing in Chicago. "If you' re burning yourself at both ends, it's going to show."
Still, the good done to the moonlighters can be great. Besides extra income, moonlighters enjoy variety, freedom and chance to do something new. They also may find their part-time jobs strengthen what they do full time.
Besides, "it's fun," Michel says. Not only do his part-time jobs offer a chance to network, stretch his professional skills and make more money, but they also give him the variety he wouldn't find just in a full-time job.
"It' s a way of pulling from the spice cabinet" he says, "and offering a little variety throughout the day."
60. What is the article mainly about?
A. The ways of moonlighting.
B. The reasons for moonlighting.
C. The problems with moonlighting.
D. The kinds of people who moonlight.
61. The reason why Fred Michel began to moonlight is that ________.
A. he found it exciting to do a part-time job
B. he needed to make ends meet with more money
C. he feared he would lose his present job one day
D. he felt more and more pressure from his employer
62. Some companies don't allow their workers to moonlight because they are afraid ________.
A. their workers can not do extra-hour work for them
B. their workers will be too tired to try their best at work
C. their workers will one day turn to some other different jobs
D. their workers will not get to work and be off work on time
63. The underlined sentence "It's a way of pulling from the spice cabinet." in the last paragraph means _________.
A. moonlighting gets you away from the job you don' t enjoy
B. moonlighting offers you freedom to make extra money
C. moonlighting strengthens your professional skills
D. moonlighting brings you chances to do something different
A sixth of undergraduates in
Training costs have dropped to 2, 600 yuan for students, according to the Haidian Driving School in
“In the job market, owning a driver’s permit sometimes strengthens a graduating student’s competitiveness for a good position, ”says Zhou Yang, an undergraduate at the China University of Political Science and Law.
Cars will become a necessary part of many people’s lives in the coming years, and it is difficult to get a permit of campus because of the pressures on working people’s time. “Having a fulltime job after graduation offers limited time to learn to drive. We senior students have plenty of spare time, plenty of opportunity to learn. ”Zhou says.
Xu Jian, an official at the driving school, said undergraduates were very able and serious, and could grasp in an hour what ordinary people took four hours to learn. In this driving school, middle -aged people, young women and college students are the main customers.
To get a driver’s permit, a beginner is now required to have at least 86 hours’ practice before the final road test.
72.________ in Beijing want to learn to drive.
A. Most of the undergraduates
B. Many undergraduates
C. Many students in the driving school
D. Most of the students who learn business or international trade
73.The undergraduates are learning to drive because ________.
A. they need this skill to find a good job
B. they like to drive cars
C. they will not have any time to learn to drive after they have
found a full - time job
D. most of them will be able to buy cars in the future
74.Which of the following is likely to be Xu Jian’s opinion of students learning to drive?
A. He thought it was better to learn it at college than at work.
B. He decided it was a waste of money and time to learn to drive.
C. He agreed that they could learn to drive.
D. He thought they would spend three times more time to learn to drive than usual.
75.Which of the following can be the best headline for the passage?
A. Students Pay Less to Learn to Drive Now.
B. Students Learn to Drive.
C. It is Better to Learn to Drive at Colleges.
D. Welcome to the Driving School.
A man liked to climb tall mountains. After years of 21 , he felt he could handle any mountain in the world.
During a climbing trip, with five other men, he 22 he would first make the final climb and claim the glory, while the others 23 . So he headed toward the top and he was 24 that there was a full moon.
25 it was foolish to climb at night alone, he did use a rope and put in good piton (岩钉) protection. With the 26 of the moon, he made rapid progress. But 27 , thick clouds were starting to build around the mountain. In just a few minutes visibility 28 to almost zero. It was now too late to 29 , so he continued to climb up the mountain.
While 30 in total darkness, he got into some rotten rock, and slid over the edge of a cliff (悬崖). The good news is that he was still 31 after the fall, although he found himself hanging from his rope. The bad news is, he had 32 his heavy coat during the fall and the night air was getting colder and colder.
Suddenly, from above he seemed to hear a strong deep voice, “ 33 the rope!” What? Once again, he heard a deep voice saying that. But 34 followed, as the climber continued to hang onto the rope, hoping to grab something that would enable him to climb to 35 . Unable to see his true 36 , the climber concluded that hanging onto the rope was his only 37 .
The following day, his teammates discovered him 38 to death, still on his rope --- only eight feet 39 a large rock. If the climber had cut the rope, he would have dropped down to a relatively safe area, where he could have built a 40 , and probably survived the night.
21. A. recovering B. experimenting C. observing D. training
22. A. wondered B. understood C. decided D. agreed
23. A. slept B. climbed C. walked D. prepared
24. A. sure B. glad C. upset D. calm
25. A. Since B. When C. Although D. If
26. A. benefit B. position C. protection D. track
27. A. naturally B. thankfully C. finally D. unfortunately
28. A. dropped B. changed C. rose D. settled
29. A. look around B. set out C. turn back D. set off
30. A. driving B. rushing C. jumping D. moving
31. A. awake B. cold C. alive D. active
32. A. buried B. picked C. worn D. lost
33. A. Wave B. Cut C. Drop D. pick
34. A. violence B. reply C. silence D. failure
35. A. safety B. origin C. top D. base
36. A. appearance B. situation C. movement D. direction
37. A. reward B. hope C. work D. result
38. A. burned B. bitten C. beaten D. frozen
39. A. in B. beside C. above D. below
40. A. path B. fire C. house D. cave
A man liked to climb tall mountains. After years of 21 , he felt he could handle any mountain in the world.
During a climbing trip, with five other men, he 22 he would first make the final climb and claim the glory, while the others 23 . So he headed toward the top and he was 24 that there was a full moon.
25 it was foolish to climb at night alone, he did use a rope and put in good piton (岩钉) protection. With the 26 of the moon, he made rapid progress. But 27 , thick clouds were starting to build around the mountain. In just a few minutes visibility 28 to almost zero. It was now too late to 29 , so he continued to climb up the mountain.
While 30 in total darkness, he got into some rotten rock, and slid over the edge of a cliff (悬崖). The good news is that he was still 31 after the fall, although he found himself hanging from his rope. The bad news is, he had 32 his heavy coat during the fall and the night air was getting colder and colder.
Suddenly, from above he seemed to hear a strong deep voice, “ 33 the rope!” What? Once again, he heard a deep voice saying that. But 34 followed, as the climber continued to hang onto the rope, hoping to grab something that would enable him to climb to 35 . Unable to see his true 36 , the climber concluded that hanging onto the rope was his only 37 .
The following day, his teammates discovered him 38 to death, still on his rope --- only eight feet 39 a large rock. If the climber had cut the rope, he would have dropped down to a relatively safe area, where he could have built a 40 , and probably survived the night.
21. A. recovering B. experimenting C. observing D. training
22. A. wondered B. understood C. decided D. agreed
23. A. slept B. climbed C. walked D. prepared
24. A. sure B. glad C. upset D. calm
25. A. Since B. When C. Although D. If
26. A. benefit B. position C. protection D. track
27. A. naturally B. thankfully C. finally D. unfortunately
28. A. dropped B. changed C. rose D. settled
29. A. look around B. set out C. turn back D. set off
30. A. driving B. rushing C. jumping D. moving
31. A. awake B. cold C. alive D. active
32. A. buried B. picked C. worn D. lost
33. A. Wave B. Cut C. Drop D. pick
34. A. violence B. reply C. silence D. failure
35. A. safety B. origin C. top D. base
36. A. appearance B. situation C. movement D. direction
37. A. reward B. hope C. work D. result
38. A. burned B. bitten C. beaten D. frozen
39. A. in B. beside C. above D. below
40. A. path B. fire C. house D. cave
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