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Even after he became famous, however, Andersen still felt like an outsider. His personal relationships caused him much pain英译中

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第1题

将下列英语句子翻译成汉语Even after he became famous, however, Andersen still felt like a

将下列英语句子翻译成汉语

Even after he became famous, however, Andersen still felt like an outsider. His personal relationships caused him much pain. Danish reviewers often criticized his stories and made fun of his appearance.

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第2题

Even after he became famous, however, Andersen still felt like an outsider. His person
al relationships caused him much pain.

A、即使是他成名之后,安徒生仍然觉得自己是个局外人。他的人际关系带给他许多痛苦。

B、在他成名之后,然而,安徒生仍觉得自己像个局外人。他的人际关系带给他许多痛苦。

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第3题

Boxing matches were very popular in England two hundred years ago. In those days
, boxers fought with bare fists for prize money. Because of this, they were known as "prize-fighters". However, boxing was very crude, for there were no rules and a prize-fighter could be seriously injured or even killed during a match.

One of the most colourful figures in boxing history was Daniel Mendoza, who was born in 1764. The use of gloves was not introduced until 1860 when the Marquis of Queensberry drew up the first set of rules. Though he was technically a prize-fighter, Mendoza did much to change crude prize-fighting into a sport, for he brought science to the game. In his day, Mendoza enjoyed tremendous popularity. He was adored by rich and poor alike.

Mendoza rose to fame swiftly after a boxing-match when he was only fourteen years old. This attracted the attention of Richard Humphries, who was then the most eminent boxer in England. He offered to train Mendoza and his young pupil was quick to learn. In fact, Mendoza soon became so successful that Humphries turned against him. The two men quarrelled bitterly and it was clear that the argument could only be settled by a fight. A match was held at Stilton where both men fought for an hour. The public bet a great deal of money on Mendoza, but he was defeated. Mendoza met Humphries in the ring on a later occasion and he lost for a second time. It was not until his third match in 1790 that he finally beat Humphries and became Champion of England. Meanwhile, he founded a highly successful Academy and even Lord Byron became one of his pupils. He earned enormous sums of money and was paid as much as £ 100 for a single appearance. Despite this, he was so extravagant that he was always in debt. After he was defeated by a boxer called Gentleman Jackson, he was quickly forgotten. He was sent to prison for failing to pay his debts and died in poverty in 1836.

1. Boxing in the 18th century was crude because _____.

A. boxers fought with bare fists

B. there were no regulations

C. boxers could be seriously injured or even killed during a match

D. All of the above

2. What do you think led to the change of crude prize-fighting into a sport? _____

A. Prize money.

B. The introduction of science to the game.

C. The use of gloves.

D. The first set of rules of boxing.

3. Why did Mendoza enjoy tremendous popularity in his day? _____

A. He had defeated his own coach.

B. He was the first to introduce the use of gloves.

C. He did much to change prize-fighting into a sport.

D. He had drawn up the first set of rules of boxing.

4. Mendoza _____ when he was only a teenager.

A. was seriously injured

B. enjoyed more popularity than Humphires

C. made a great deal of money

D. gained fame quickly

5. Humphries turned against Mendoza because _____.

A. Mendoza refused to be his pupil

B. he was jealous of Mendoza's success

C. Mendoza rose to fame swiftly

D. Mendoza was quick to learn

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第4题

About 150 years ago,a musician sat quietly at a concert in Vienna. He was playing his new
symphony. He couldn‘t (11) that the audience were clapping wildly. He was deaf. He was Beethoven,one of the greatest musicians who ever lived.

Beethoven wrote about 300 (12) of music. He wrote some of his most beautiful pieces after he became deaf. It is hard for anyone to be deaf. But it is even worse for a musician than for (13) else. Think of not being able to hear the music you have written!

As a child Beethoven did not have a happy life. His father drank (14) .When the boy was only four,his father decided to make a musician (15) him. Hour after hour he had to practice (16) the violin. He learned so fast that he was able to make a concert tour when he was eleven. When he was seventeen,the great Mozart praised him. After he studied with Haydn. Beethoven was writing a great deal of music (17) .

Beethoven had an ugly face and a bad temper. He was often invited (18) the homes of wealthy people. They forgave him when his temper flared up. Illness made him become deaf when he was (19) thirty-one.

Beethoven wrote long pieces and short ones,gentle ones and (20) ones.

A. hear

B. listen

C. listen to

D. hear of

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第5题

Sporting activities are essentially modified forms of hunting behaviour. Viewed biologically, the modern footballer is in reality a member of a hunting group. His killing weapon has turned into a harmless football and his prey (猎物) into a goal mouth. If his aim is accurate and he scores a goal, he enjoys the hunter’s triumph of killing his prey.

To understand how this transformation has taken place we must briefly look back at our forefathers. They spent over a million years evolving (进化) as cooperative hunters. Their very survival depended on success in the hunting-field. Under this pressure their whole way of life, even their bodies, became greatly changed. They became chasers, runners, jumpers, aimers, throwers and prey-killers. They cooperated as skillful male-group attackers.

Then about ten thousand years ago, after this immensely long period of hunting their food, they became farmers. Their improved intelligence, so vital to their old hunting life, was put to a new use--that of controlling and domesticating their prey. The hunt became suddenly out of date. The food was there on the farms, awaiting their needs. The risks and uncertainties of the hunt were no longer essential for survival.

The skills and thirst for hunting remained, however, and demanded new outlets. Hunting for sport replaced hunting for necessity. This new activity involved all the original hunting sequences but the aim of the operation was no longer to avoid starvation. Instead the sportsmen set off to test their skill against prey that were no longer essential to their survival. To be sure, the kill may have been eaten but there were other much simpler ways of obtaining a meaty meal.

The author believes that sporting activities ().

A.are forms of biological development

B.have actually developed from hunting

C.are essentially forms of taming the prey .

D.have changed the ways of hunting

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第6题

In 1896, Einstein went to Zurich(苏黎世)to study physics. There he met a girl from Hu

In 1896, Einstein went to Zurich(苏黎世)to study physics. There he met a girl from Hungary. They studied in the same class and the same interest in physics brought them together and they became good friends. Before long they fell in love. In 1903 when Einstein was 24, he married Marits, who was 4 years older than he.

After their marriage, Einstein devoted himself to the research of the great theory. To give her husband more help, Marits gave up her own work, and became a good wife and assistant. She tried her best to encourage him whenever possible. She was sure that her husband would succeed. They often discussed the theory while walking outside or sitting together in the room. They even did that in their letters when one of them was away from their home.

In 1914, Einstein moved to Berlin and settled down there. At that time his theory proved to be correct and he had become famous all over the world. But it was not long before the First World War broke out. Marits as well as her two sons, who was on holiday in Switzerland couldn't come back to Berlin any more. The war not only stopped Einstein's work but also broke up the warm happy family. In 1919 Einstein and Marits had to get divorced (离婚).

1)、From this passage we can see that Marits was 27 when married.

A.T

B.F

2)、We can learn from the passage that Marits was also a great scientist.

A.T

B.F

3)、The last paragraph mainly tells us why Einstein and Marits got divorced.

A.T

B.F

4)、Einstein and Marits got divorced because Marits didn't love Einstein after the war broke out.

A.T

B.F

5)、The writer wanted to tell us that we should remember Marits when talking about Einstein's theory.

A.T

B.F

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第7题

七选五:[A]The first published sketch, "A Dinner at Poplar Walk" brought tears to Dickens's eyes

七选五:[A]The first published sketch, "A Dinner at Poplar Walk" brought tears to Dickens's eyes when he discovered it in the pages of The Monthly Magazine. From then on his sketches ,which appeared under the pen name "Boz" in The Evening Chronicle, earned him a modest reputation.

[B]The runaway success of The Pickwick Papers, as it is generally known today, secured Dickens's fame. There were Pickwick coats and Pickwick cigars, and the plump, spectacled hero, Samuel Pickwick, became a national figure.

[C]Soon after Sketches by Boz appeared, a publishing firm approached Dickens to write a story in monthly installments, as a backdrop for a series of woodcuts by the ten-famous artist Robert Seymour, who had originated the idea for the story. With characteristic confidence, Dickens successfully insisted that Seymour's pictures illustrate his own story instead. After the first installment, Dickens wrote to the artist and asked him to correct a drawing Dickens felt was not faithful enough to his prose. Seymour made the change, went into his backyard, and expressed his displeasure by committing suicide. Dickens and his publishers simply pressed on with a new artist. The comic novel, The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club, appeared serially in 1836 and 1837, and was first published in book form. in 1837.

[D]Charles Dickens is probably the best-known and, to many people, the greatest English novelist of the 19th century. A moralist, satirist, and social reformer. Dickens crafted complex plots and striking characters that capture the panorama of English society.

[E]Soon after his father's release from prison, Dickens got a better job as errand boy in law offices. He taught himself shorthand to get an even better job later as a court stenographer and as a reporter in Parliament. At the same time, Dickens, who had a reporter's eye for transcribing the life around him especially anything comic or odd, submitted short sketches to obscure magazines.

[F] Dickens was born in Portsmouth, on England's southern coast. His father was a clerk in the British navy pay office -a respectable position, but wish little social status. His paternal grandparents, a steward and a housekeeper possessed even less status, having been servants, and Dickens later concealed their background. Dicken's mother supposedly came from a more respectable family. Yet two years before Dicken's birth, his mother's father was caught stealing and fled to Europe, never to return. The family's increasing poverty forced Dickens out of school at age 12 to work in Warren's Blacking Warehouse, a shoe-polish factory, where the other working boys mocked him as "the young gentleman." His father was then imprisoned for debt. The humiliations of his father's imprisonment and his labor in the blacking factory formed Dicken's greatest wound and became his deepest secret. He could not confide them even to his wife, although they provide the unacknowledged foundation of his fiction.

[G] After Pickwick, Dickens plunged into a bleaker world. In Oliver Twist, e traces an orphan's progress from the workhouse to the criminal slums of London. Nicholas Nickleby, his next novel, combines the darkness of Oliver Twist with the sunlight of Pickwick. The popularity of these novels consolidated Dichens' as a nationally and internationally celebrated man of letters.

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第8题

He was () his early forties when he became Prime Minister.

A、of

B、in

C、from

D、after

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第9题

After he ______ that unforgettable love, he became afraid of it.A.feelB.feltC.experi

A.feel

B.felt

C.experience

D.experienced

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第10题

Some African Americans have had a profound impact on American society, changing many people's views on race, history and politics. The following is a sampling of African Americans who have shaped society and the world with their spirit and their ideals.

 Muhammad All

 Cassius Marcellus Clay grew up a devout Baptist in Louisville, Kentucky, learning to fight at age 12 after a police officer suggested he learn to defend himself. Six years later, he was an Olympic boxing champion, going on to win three world heavyweight titles. He became known as much for his swagger (趾高气扬) outside the ring as his movement in it, converting to Islam in 1965, changing his name to Muhammad Ali and refusing to join the U. S. Army on religious grounds. Ali remained popular after his athletic career ended and he developed Parkinson's disease, even lighting the Olympic torch at the 1996 Atlanta Olympics and conveying the peaceful virtues of Islam following the September 11 terrorist attacks.

 W. E.B.Du Bois(William Edward Burghardt Du Bois)

 Born in 8, this Massachusetts native was one of the most prominent, prolific intellectuals of his time. An academic, activist and historian, Du Bois co-founded the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), edited “The Crisis” magazine and wrote 17 books, four journals and many other scholarly articles. In perhaps his most famous work, “The Souls of Black Folk”, published in 1903, he predicted “the problem of 20th century [would be] the problem of the colorline”.

 Martin Luther King Jr.

 The Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. is considered one of the most powerful and popular leaders of the American civil rights movement. He spearheaded (带头;作先锋)a massive, nonviolent initiative of marches, sit-ins, boycotts and demonstrations that profoundly affect-ed Americans' attitudes toward race relations. He was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964.

 Malcolm X

 Black leader Malcolm X spoke out about the concepts of race pride and black nationalism in the early 1960s. He denounced the exploitation of black people by whites and developed a large and dedicated following, which continued even after his death in 1965.Interest in the leader surged again after Spike Lee's 1992 movie “Malcolm X” was released.

 Jackie Robinson

 In 1947, Jackie Robinson broke the color barrier by joining the Brooklyn Dodgers, becoming the first black baseball player in the U. S. major leagues. After retirement from baseball in 1957, he remained active in civil rights and youth activities. In 1962, he became the first African-American to be inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame.

 31.Which of the following is NOT true about Muhammad Ali?

 A.He never served in the army.

 B.He learned to fight at an early age.

 C.His popularity decreased after his retirement from boxing.

 D.He loves peace.

 32.The italicized word “prolific” (line 2, Para. 3) is synonymous to______.

 A.smart     

 B.skilled   

 C.productive   

 D.pioneering

 33.According to the passage, which of the following statements is NOT true?

 A.W. E.B.Du Bois was engaged in the cause of promoting the status of colored people.

 B.Jackie Robinson was denied by U. S. major baseball leagues throughout his life.

 C.Martin Luther King Jr. was highly awarded for his contributions to the civil rights movements.

 D.Malcolm X directly or indirectly inspired interest in leadership even after his death.

 34.What is common among the celebrities mentioned in the passage?

 A.Each achieved enormous success in his/her field and was highly recognized.

 B.Each was devoted to his/her cause but didn't win recognition until death.

 C.All were active and famous in several fields in their lifetime.

 D.All loved peace and remained active in civil rights activities.

 35.Which of the following can be a title of the passage?

 A.Life of Famous African Americans

 B.Influence of Famous African Americans

 C.Political Pioneers: Icons and intellectuals

 D.Cultural Pioneers: Icons and intellectuals

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