Many new workers _______ and in six month they will be sent to build a new railway.
A.are being trained B.are training C.will train D.will be trained
高三英语单项填空简单题
Many new workers _______ and in six month they will be sent to build a new railway.
A.are being trained B.are training C.will train D.will be trained
高三英语单项填空简单题查看答案及解析
Many new workers _____ trained and in two months they will _____ to build a new railway.
A.are; be sending | B.are being; be sent |
C.are; send | D.will be; be to send |
高三英语单项填空简单题查看答案及解析
Suppose you are working as a manager in a famous company in China, and you will be sent to New York for a further study soon, but you don't think your English is good enough. So you are looking for a place where you can improve your English, especially your spoken English.
Here are some advertisements about English language training from newspapers. You may find the information you need.
1.. What is special about the 2lst Century English Training Centre?
A. Its teaching quality is better.
B. It is the nearest to the city center.
C. Its courses are more advanced.
D. It requires an entrance examination.
2.. Which school will you choose if you are busy in the daytime?
A. Global English Center and Modern Language School.
B. Global English Center and the International House of English.
C. Modern Language School and the 2lst Century English Training Centre.
D. The 2lst Century English Training Centre and the International House of English.
3.. If you prefer to have English course on weekends, which telephone number will you call?
A. 67353019. B. 67705272.
C. 67801642. D. 67432308.
高三英语阅读理解中等难度题查看答案及解析
“I sat-in at a restaurant for six months, and when they finally agreed to serve me, they didn’t have what I wanted”---so went a famous line. In reality, the sit-in movement was not a joke. It began in Greensboro, North Carolina, at 4:30 P. M. , on the afternoon of February 1, 1960. On that day, Ezell Blair Jr. , Joseph McNeil, David Richmond, and Franklin McClain entered an F. W. Woolworth store. They sat down at a segregated(隔离的)lunch counter, ordered coffee, and then refused to leave when told, ‘We don’t serve Negroes. ”
The four young men had expected not to be served. What no one had expected, however, was that they would sit there and politely, but firmly, refuse to leave. This was 1960, and throughout the South black people were not allowed to sit at the same lunch counters with whites, swim at the same beaches, use the same water fountains, or worship at the same churches. Segregation was the law, and it meant separation of the races in every way.
The next day, the four returned to Woolworth’s---this time accompanied by sixteen other students. Again they sat at the lunch counter and requested service. Again they were refused. And again, they declined to leave. On Wednesday, February 3, seventy students filled the Woolworth’s store. This time, the group included white students as well as black. Many brought school books and studied while they waited. By this time, their protest had become known nationwide as a “sit-in”.
On Thursday, there was trouble. An angry group of white teenagers began shoving(推搡) and cursing them but were quickly removed by the police. By February 10, the sit-in movement had spread to five other states.
By September 1961, more than 70,000 people, both black and white, had participated in sit-ins at segregated restaurants and lunch counters, kneel-ins at segregated churches, read-ins at segregated libraries, and swim-ins at segregated pools and beaches. Over 3,600 people had been arrested, and more than 100 students had been driven away. But they were getting results. On June 10, 1964, the U. S Senate passed a major civil rights bill outlawing(宣布为非法)racial discrimination in all public places. President Lyndon Johnson signed it on July 2, and it became law. But the highest credit still goes to the four brave students from North Carolina who first sat-in and waited it out.
1. In this passage, “sit-in” refers to _________.
A. an activity where people sit together and drink coffee freely
B. a bill which outlaws racial discrimination in all public places
C. a form in which people peacefully sit and decline to leave
D. a polite behavior that everyone enjoys
2. Which statement can be concluded from the fifth paragraph in the passage?
A. The sit-in movement was not successful.
B. The sit-in movement had a positive result.
C. Only black people participated in sit-ins.
D. A lot of protesters were arrested, with some students driven away from school
3. What was the purpose of the civil rights bill passed in 1964?
A. The highest credit went to the four brave students.
B. It declared that segregation was a law.
C. The students were allowed to participate in sit-ins.
D. It made racial segregation against the law in all public places.
4. What is the passage mainly about?
A. Segregation was the law in the South.
B. The first sit-in was in 1960.
C. The sit-ins helped to end segregation.
D. The civil rights bill was passed in 1964 by the U. S. Senate.
高三英语阅读理解简单题查看答案及解析
听下面一段较长对话,回答以下小题。
1.What will the woman's salary be in six months?
A.4,000 yuan. B.5,000 yuan. C.6,000 yuan.
2.How does the woman feel about the salary the company offers her?
A.Satisfied. B.Confused. C.Disappointed.
高三英语长对话中等难度题查看答案及解析
They had a dozen children, six boys and six girls, in seventeen years. One reason Dad had so many children was that he was confident anything he and Mother teamed upon was sure to be a success.
Our house at Montclair, New Jersey, was a sort of school for scientific management and the removal of wasted motions — or “motion study,” as Dad and Mother named it.
Dad took moving pictures of us children washing dishes, so that he could determine how we could reduce our motions and thus hurry through the task. Each child who wanted extra pocket money put forward an offer saying what he would do the job for. The lowest bidder got the contract(合约).
Dad put process and work charts in the bathrooms. Every child old enough to write — and Dad expected his children to start writing at a young age — was required to sign their names on the charts in the morning after he had brushed his teeth, taken a bath, combed his hair, and made his bed. At night, each child had to weigh himself, mark the figure on a graph, and sign the process charts again after he had done his homework, washed his hands and face, and brushed his teeth. Mother wanted to have a place on the charts for saying prayers, but Dad said as far as he was concerned prayers were voluntary.
It was strict management, all right. Yes, at home or on the job, Dad was always the efficiency expert. He buttoned his vest from the bottom up, instead of from the top down, because the bottom-to-top process took him only three seconds, while the top-to-bottom took seven. He even used two shaving brushes to make his face smooth enough, because he found that by so doing he could cut seventeen seconds off his shaving time. For a while he tried shaving with two razors, but he finally gave that up.
“I can save forty-four seconds,” he complained, “but I wasted two minutes this morning putting this bandage on my throat.” It wasn’t the injured throat that really bothered him. It was the two minutes.
1.Why was the author’s house considered a sort of school?
A. It had a team of twelve children there.
B. The children were taught how to work well in it.
C. The parents could teach their children better at home.
D. The parents could have the children’s daily activities recorded.
2.What is the purpose of signing the charts?
A. To help to do things efficiently. B. To manage the big family effectively.
C. To look after the children better. D. To remind the children to obey the rules.
3.What did the father complain about one morning?
A. He should have given up shaving. B. His bleeding throat bothered him.
C. He couldn’t shave with two razors. D. He failed to cut short his shaving time.
4.We can we infer from the text?
A. The kids had to bid for everything they wanted.
B. The author took pride in his father’s management.
C. The couple were always troubled by their children.
D. The father’s work was to teach the children at home.
高三英语长对话或独白中等难度题查看答案及解析
Since the mid-1980's, growing numbers of Asians ___ in New Zealand, and they ___about six percent of the total population.
A.had settled; make of B.have settled; make up
C.settled; make up of D.are settling; make up for
高三英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析
. --- If you accept this job, you will earn $10,000 a month and be provided with a house and a new car.
--- Your ________ is inviting, but I’m not interested in the job.
A.help | B.offer | C.explanation | D.excuse |
高三英语单项填空简单题查看答案及解析
Since the mid-1980's, growing numbers of Asians ___________ in New Zealand, and they ___about six percent of the total population.
A.had settled; make of B.have settled; make up
C.settled; make up of D.are settling; make up for
高三英语单项填空简单题查看答案及解析
Hundreds of Swedish workers are trialing a six—hour working day in the hopes that it will_____ sick leave and save the country money.
A. cut down B. turn down C. pull down D. cast down
高三英语单项填空中等难度题查看答案及解析