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[单选题]

We jumped with joy when we ______ their success.

A.heard of

B.heard from

C.heard for

D.heard over

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更多“ We jumped with joy when we __…”相关的问题
第1题
七选五第28题你选择____()

A.I believe they will make our home even nicer for Janet, Michael, and their new friends

B.With your help, we'll buy new computers for our children in a day or two

C.gain, thank you for all you did for the children

D.There was a look of joy on their faces

E.One or two of the children might even show you what they can do with their new computers

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第2题
The person who can see a ship without some feeling of excitement must have very little ima
gination. Even the idea of leaving the solid land【56】most of us were born and brought【57】, and going out on to the ever-moving waters must arouse【58】some feelings of strangeness. We may remember stories of terrible storms, with waves【59】mountains, and of people from ships which have sunk【60】weeks in small boats hundreds of miles from land. But we have also【61】joy of traveling on calm seas under blue【62】, and of the【63】excitement of coming to a new beautiful land which we have seen only in pictures before.

【64】ships are not, of course, made chiefly for pleasure: their biggest use is in carrying goods from country to country.【65】, ships can carry more goods than【66】means of transport, and can【67】so more cheaply. If ships【68】, the British government would not be able to feed【69】people.

Ships also have made【70】to discover more and more distant parts of our world.【71】is known to all, Columbus used a ship to discover America about 500 years ago. And【72】, ships are used for exploring the Antarctic.【73】would, in fact, not be【74】to say that ships have for thousands of years【75】one of the most important parts in shaping society.

(56)

A.by which

B.from which

C.on which

D.for which

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第3题
Many things make people think artists are weird and the weirdest may be this: artists' onl
y job is to explore emotions, and yet they choose to focus on the ones that feel bad.

This wasn't always so. The earliest forms of art, like painting and music, are those best suited for expressing joy. But somewhere in the 19th century, more artists began seeing happiness as insipid, phony or, worst of all, boring as we went from Wordsworth's daffodils to Baudelaire's flowers of evil.

You could argue that art became more skeptical of happiness because modern times have seen such misery. But it's not as if earlier times didn't know perpetual war, disaster and the massacre of innocents. The reason, in fact, may be just the opposite: there is too much damn happiness in the world today.

After all, what is the one modern form. of expression almost completely dedicated to depicting happiness? Advertising. The rise of anti-happy art almost exactly tracks the emergence of mass media, and with it, a commercial culture in which happiness is not just an ideal but an ideology.

People in earlier eras were surrounded by reminders of misery. They worked until exhausted, lived with few protections and died young. In the West, before mass communication and literacy, the most powerful mass medium was the church, which reminded worshippers that their souls were in peril and that they would someday be meat for worms. Given all this, they did not exactly need their art to be a bummer too.

Today the messages your average Westerner is bombarded with are not religious but commercial, and forever happy. Fast-food eaters, news anchors, text messengers, all smiling, smiling. Our magazines feature beaming celebrities and happy families in perfect homes. And since these messages have an agenda—to lure us to open our wallets to make the very idea of happiness seem unreliable. "Celebrate"! commanded the ads for the arthritis drug, before we found out it could in crease the risk of heart attacks.

What we forget—what our economy depends on is forgetting—is that happiness is more than pleasure without pain. The things that bring the greatest joy carry the greatest potential for loss and disappointment. Today, surrounded by promises of easy happiness, we need someone to tell us as religion once did, memento mori: remember that you will die, that everything ends, and that happiness comes not in denying this but in living with it. It's a message even more bitter than a clove cigarette, yet, somehow, a breath of fresh air.

By citing the example of poets Wordsworth and Baudelaire, the author intends to show that ______.

A.poetry is not as expressive of joy as painting or music

B.art grow out of both positive and negative feeling

C.poets today are less skeptical of happiness

D.artist have changed their focus of interest

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第4题
We all associate colors with feeling and attitudes. In politics dark blue often means "tra
dition", and red means "social change". But blue can also mean sadness (I'm feeling blue), white is often for purity, although in China white is worn at weddings and black for funerals. Advertisers are aware of the importance of selecting colors according to the way people react to them. Soap powders come in white and light blue packets (clean and cold, like ice); cereals often come in brown packets (like wheat fields), but cosmetics never come in brown jars (dirty?).

Where do these ideas come from? Max Luscher from the University of Geneva believes that in the beginning life was dictated by two factors beyond our control: night and day. Night brought passivity, and a general slowing down of metabolism; day brought with it the possibility of action, and increase in the metabolic rate, thus providing us with energy and initiative. Dark blue, therefore, is the color of quiet and passivity, bright yellow, the color of hope and activity.

In prehistoric times, activity as a rule took one of two forms: either we were hunting and attacking, or we were being hunted and defending ourselves against attack. Attack is universally represented by the color red; self-preservation by its complement green.

In Luscher's view, the association of colors with feeling and attitudes can be traced back to ______.

A.the association of day and night with passivity and action in ancient time

B.the association of black with funerals in western Europe

C.the association of white with purity in some countries

D.the association of red with joy in China

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第5题
We feel confident that you will agree that the quality of material ______ and the high standard of w

A.A.use, selectable

B.B.used, selectable

C.C.use, selective

D.D.used, selective

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第6题
When I was a little girl, my brothers and I collected stamps for many years. My mother
didn't use to work during the week, but she worked in the post office near our house on Saturdays, and she used to bring home all the new stamps as soon as they were issued (发行).

On the day of the World Cup football final in London in 1966, we were very excited because England were playing West Germany in the final. When we were having lunch, my mother told us to go to the post office straightaway after the match if England won, but she didn't tell us why. At 2 o'clock my mother went back to work as usual, while the rest of the family were watching the football on TV at home. Although she wasn't watching the match, she was listening to it on the radio.

England won 4:2 and so my brothers and I ran to the post office. As we burst in, my mother was standing behind the counter. She was waiting to sell us a very special limited edition with ENGLAND WINNERS on each stamp. We were over the moon.

We still have it today,and perhaps it is worth a lot of money.

1.This passage mainly tells us ______.

A、the author and her brother used to like stamps very much

B、the author had a very kind mother

C、the author and her brothers had an unforgettable experience in collecting stamps

D、their mother used to support them by working in the post office

2.According to the passage, her mother worked in the post office ______.

A、during the week

B、on Saturdays

C、on Sundays

D、for six days

3.heir mother told them to go to the post office straightaway after the match if England won, but she didn't tell them why. Why do you think she did that________

A、She wanted to give them a surprise.

B、She doubted if she would get the stamps.

C、She forgot to do that.

D、She thought it unnecessary to tell them the reason.

4.What does the sentence "We were over the moon." mean________

A、We jumped high.

B、We were extremely happy about it.

C、We watched the moon for a long time.

D、We couldn't sleep the whole night.

5.What is the best title for this passage_________

A、My Childhood

B、My Mother

C、A Precious Stamp

D、A Memorable Experience in Collecting Stamps

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第7题
Messrs. Smith & Co. have given us your name as a (4) . We should be (5) if you would advise us w

Messrs. Smith & Co. have given us your name as a(4). We should be(5)if you would advise us whether they are of good repute.

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第8题
When I was a little girl, my brothers and I collected stamps for many years. My mother didn't use to work during the week, but she worked in the post office near our house on Saturdays, and she used t

When I was a little girl, my brothers and I collected stamps for many years. My mother didn't use to work during the week, but she worked in the post office near our house on Saturdays, and she used to bring home all the new stamps as soon as they were issued (发行).

On the day of the World Cup football final in London in 1966, we were very excited because England were playing West Germany in the final.When we were having lunch, my mother told us to go to the post office straightaway after the match if England won, but she didn't tell us why. At2 o'clock my mother went back to work as usual, while the rest of the family were watching the football on TV at home. Although she wasn't watching the match, she was listening to it on the radio.

England won 4:2 and so my brothers and I ran to the post office. As we burst in, my mother was standing behind the counter. She was waiting to sell us a very special limited edition with ENGLAND WINNERS on each stamp. We were over the moon.We still have it today, and perhaps it is worth a lot of money.

1. This passage mainly tells us __________.

A、the author and her brother used to like stamps very much

B、the author had a very kind mother

C、the author and her brother had an unforgettable experience in collecting stamps

D、their mother used to support them by working in the post office

2. According to the passage, her mother worked in the post office ________.

A、during the week

B、on Saturdays

C、on Sundays

D、for six days

3. According to the passage, her mother worked in the post office ________.

A、during the week

B、on Saturdays

C、on Sundays

D、for six days

4. What does the sentence "We were over the moon." mean?

A、We jumped high.

B、We were extremely happy about it.

C、We watched the moon for a long time.

D、We couldn't sleep the whole night.

5. What is the best title for this passage?

A、My Childhood

B、My Mother

C、A Precious Stamp

D、A Memorable Experience in Collecting Stamps

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第9题
A couple from Miami, Bill and Simone Butler, spent sixty-six days in a life-raft(救生
A couple from Miami, Bill and Simone Butler, spent sixty-six days in a life-raft(救生

艇) in the seas of Central America after their boat sank.Twenty-one days after they left Panama in their boat, Simony, they met some whales(鲸鱼). “They started to hit the side of the boat,” said Bill, “and then suddenly we heard water.” Two minutes later, the boat was sinking. They jumped into the life-raft and watched the boat go under the water. For twenty days they had tins of food, biscuits, and bottles of water. They also had a fishing-line and a machine to make salt water into drinking water — two things which saved their lives. They caught eight to ten fish a day and ate them raw(生的). Then the line broke. “So we had no more fish until something very strange happened. Some sharks(鲨鱼) came to feed, and the fish under the raft were afraid and came to the surface. I caught them with my hands.”About twenty ships passed them, but no one saw them. About twenty ships passed them, but no one saw them. After fifty days at sea their life-raft was beginning to break up. Then suddenly it was all over. A fishing boat saw them and picked them up. They couldn’t stand up. So the captain carried them onto his boat and took them to Costa Rica. Their two months at sea was over. During their days at sea, _______ saved their lives

A、tins of food and bottles of water

B、a fishing-line and a machine

C、whales and sharks

D、Twenty passing ships

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第10题
在参议员罗伯特·肯尼迪1968年竞选总统时的一篇演讲中。他对GDP讲了以下一段话: (GDP)并没有考虑到我们孩子

在参议员罗伯特·肯尼迪1968年竞选总统时的一篇演讲中。他对GDP讲了以下一段话:

(GDP)并没有考虑到我们孩子的健康、他们的教育质量或者他们游戏的快乐。它没有包括我们的诗歌之美或者婚姻的稳定,没有包括我们关于公共问题争论的智慧或者我们公务员的廉洁。它既没有衡量出我们的勇气,我们的智慧,也没有衡量出我们对祖国的热爱。简言之,它衡量一切,但并不包括使我们的生活有意义的东西,它可以告诉我们有关美国人的一切,但没有告诉我们,为什么我们以作为美国人而骄傲。

罗伯特·肯尼迪的话对吗?如果对的话,我们为什么要关注GDP?

In a speech that Senator Robert Kennedy gave when he was running for president in 1968, he said the following about GDP:

It does not allow for the health of our children, the quality of their education, or the joy of their play. It does not include the beauty of our poetry or the strength of our marriages, the intelligence of our public debate or the integrity of our public officials. It measures neither our courage, nor our wisdom, nor our devotion to our country. It measures everything, in short, except that which makes life worthwhile, and it can tell us everything about America except why we are proud that we are Americans.

Was Robert Kennedy right? If so, why do we care about GDP?

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