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单选题On the way home my wife saw a bookshelf outside a shop. " (41) it," she said. "We'll (42) it home on the roof-rack. I've always wanted one like that." Ten minutes (43) we were back with the bookshelf. I drove slowly. Other (44) seemed more polite than usual. The driver even stopped traffic to let us through. After a while my wife said, "There's a long line of cars (45) . Why don't they overtake (超车)?" Just at that time a police car did overtake, and two officers inside asked us to (46) their car through the busy traffic. The police car stopped at the church. One of the officers came to me and said, "Do you need any more (47) now?" I said, "You've been very (48) . We live just down the road." He'was looking at the bookshelf. "Oh," he said and (49) , "we thought it was something else." Suddenly I understood (50) the police drove here.
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单选题How many of the employees in this organization are men?
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单选题Fourteen-year-old Richie Hawley had spent five years studying violin at the Community School of Performing Arts in Los Angeles when he took part in a violin contest. Ninety-two young people were invited to the contest and Hawley cane out first. The contest could have been the perfect setup for fear, worrying about mistakes l and trying to impress the judges. But Hawley says he" did pretty well at staying calm. I couldn' t be thinking about how many mistakes I'd make--it would distract me from playing," he says. "I don' t even remember trying to impress people while I played. It' s almost as if they weren' t there. I just wanted to make music." Hawley is a winner. But he didn' t become a winner by concentrating on winning. He did it by concentrating on playing well. "The important thing in the Olympic Games is not to win but to take part," said the founder of the modem Olympics, Pierre de Coubertin. "The important thing in life is not the triumph but the straggle. The essential thing is not to have conquered but to have fought well." New research shows that Coubertin' s philosophy is exactly the path achievers take to win at life' s challenging games. A characteristic of high performers is their intense, pleasurable concentration on work, rather than on their competitors or future glory or money, says Dr. Charles Garfield, who has studied 1,500 achievers in business, science, sports, the arts, and professions. "They are interested in winning, but they're most interested in self-development, testing their limits." One of the most surprising things about top performers is how many losses they' ve had--and how much they' ve learned from each. "Not one of the 1,500 I studied defined losing as failing," Garfield says. "They kept calling their losses ' setbacks. '" A healthy attitude toward setbacks is essential to winning, experts agree. "The worst thing you can do if you' ve had a setback is to let yourself get stuck in a prolonged depression. You should analyze carefully what went wrong, identify specific things you did right and give yourself credit for them." Garfield believes that most people don' t give themselves enough praise. He even suggests keeping a diary of all the positive things you've done on the way to a goal.
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单选题Usually a law will be considered made with the approval of________.
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单选题Whatdoesthemansayabouttheseminar?A.Itwillendat3:30.B.Itwillendbefore3:30.C.Itwilllastlongerthanscheduled.D.Itwilllastthreehours.
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单选题What'stheprobablerelationshipbetweenthetwospeakers?A.Receptionistandcustomer.B.Waitressandcustomer.C.Salespersonandcustomer.D.Nurseandpatient.
单选题______ Greens are on visit to a beautiful city in China, A. /; a B. A; the C. The; a
单选题Whycouldn'tthemanopenthedoor?
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{{I}}You will hear 10 short dialogues. For each dialogue, there is one question and four possible answers. Choose the correct answer — A, B, C or D, and mark it in your test booklet. You will have 15 seconds to answer the question and you will hear each dialogue ONLY ONCE.
Now look at Question 1.{{/I}}
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