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When I was in fourth grade, I worked part-time as a paperboy. Mrs. Stanley was one of my customers. She’d watch me coming down her street, and by the time I’d biked up to her doorstep, there’d be a cold drink waiting. I’d sit and drink while she talked.
Mrs. Stanley talked mostly about her dead husband, “Mr. Stanley and I went shopping this morning.” she’d say. The first time she said that, soda(汽水) went up my nose.
I told my father how Mrs. Stanley talked as if Mr. Stanley were still alive. Dad said she was probably lonely, and that I ought to sit and listen and nod my head and smile, and maybe she’d work it out of her system. So that’s what I did, and it turned out Dad was right. After a while she seemed content to leave her husband over at the cemetery(墓地).
I finally quit delivering newspapers and didn’t see Mrs. Stanley for several years. Then we crossed paths at a church fund-raiser(募捐活动). She was spooning mashed potatoes and looking happy. Four years before, she’d had to offer her paperboy a drink to have someone to talk with. Now she had friends. Her husband was gone, but life went on.
I live in the city now, and my paperboy is a lady named Edna with three kids. She asks me how I’m doing. When I don’t say “fine”, she sticks around to hear my problems. She’s lived in the city most of her life, but she knows about community. Community isn’t so much a place as it is a state of mind. You find it whenever people ask how you’re doing because they care, and not because they’re getting paid to do so. Sometimes it’s good to just smile, nod your head and listen.
1.Why did soda go up the author’s nose one time?
A.He was talking fast. | B.He was shocked. |
C.He was in a hurry. | D.He was absent-minded. |
2.Why did the author sit and listen to Mrs. Stanley according to Paragraph 3?
A.He enjoyed the drink. | B.He wanted to be helpful. |
C.He took the chance to rest. | D.He tried to please his dad. |
3.Which of the following can replace the underlined phrase “work it out of her system”?
A.recover from her sadness | B.move out of the neighborhood |
C.turn to her old friends | D.speak out about her past |
4.What does the author think people in a community should do?
A.Open up to others. | B.Depend on each other. |
C.Pay for other’s help | D.Care about one another. |
So if moving the body can have these effects, what about the clothes we wear? We're all well aware of how dressing up in different ways can make us feel more attractive, sporty or professional, depending on the clothes we wear, but can the clothes actually change cognitive(认知) performance or is it just a feeling?
Adam and Galinsky tested the effect of simply wearing a white lab coat on people's powers of attention. The idea is that white coats are associated with scientists, who are in turn thought to have close attention to detail.
What they found was that people wearing white coats performed better than those who weren't. Indeed, they made only half as many errors as those wearing their own clothes on the Stroop Test(one way of measuing attention). The reserchrs call the effect "enclothed cognition," suggesting that all manner of different clothes probably affect our cognition in many differnt ways.
This opens the way for all sorts of clothes-based experiments. Is the writer who wears a fedora more creative? Is the psychologist wearing little round glasses and smoking a cigar more insightful? Does a chef's hat make the restaurant food taste better?From now on I will only be editing artcles for PsyBlog while wearing a white coat to help keep the typing error count low. Hopefully you will be doing your part by reading PsyBlog in a cap and gown(学位服).
5.What is the main idea of the text?
A.Body movements change the way people think. |
B.How people dress has an influencee on their feelings. |
C.What people wear can affect their cognitive performance. |
D.People doing different jobs should wear different clothes. |
6.Adam and Galinsky's experiment tested the effect of clothes on their wearers'______.
A.insights | B.movements |
C.attention | D.appearance |
7.How does the author sound in the last paragraph?
A.Academic. | B.Humorous. |
C.Formal. | D.Hopeful. |
Long before most of us even noticed what we now call "the environment," Buckminster Fuller said, "Pollution is nothing but the resources(资源)we are not harvesting. We allow them to be left around because we've been ignorant of their value." To take one example, let's compare the throwaway economy(经济)with a recycling economy as we feed a cat for life.
Say your cat weigh 5kg and eats one can of food each day. Each empty can of its food weights 40g. In a throwaway economy, you would throw away 5,475 cans over the cat's 15-year lifetime. That's 219kg of steel-more than a fifth of a ton and more than 40 times the cat's weight.
In a recycling economy, we would make one set of 100 cans to start with, then replace them over and over again with recycled cans. Since almost 3% of the metal is lost during reprocessing, we'd have to make an extra 10 cans each year. But in all, only 150 cans will be used up over the cat's lifetime-and we'll still have 100 left over for the next cat.
Instead of using up 219kg of steel, we've used only 6kg. And because the process of recycling steel is less polluting than making new steel, we've also achieved the following significant savings: in energy use-47% to 74%; in air pollution-85%; in water pollution-35%; in water use-40%.
8.What does Buckminster Fuller say about pollution?
A.It is becoming more serious. |
B.It destroys the environment. |
C.It benefits the economy. |
D.It is the resources yet to be used. |
9.How many cans will be used up in a cat's 15-year lifetime in a recycling economy?
A.50 | B.100 |
C.150 | D.250 |
10.What is the author's purpose in writing the text?
A.To promote the idea of recycling. |
B.To introduce an environmentalist. |
C.To discuss the causes of pollution. |
D.To defend the throwaway economy. |
How to Remember What You Read
Reading is important. But the next step is making sure that you remember what you've read!
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If the plot, characters, or word usage is confusing for you, you likely won't be able to remember what you read. It's a bit like reading a foreign language. If you don't understand what you're reading, how would you remember it? But there are a few things you can do... Use a dictionary; look up the difficult words.
● Are you connected?
Does a character remind you of a friend? Does the setting make you want to visit the place? Does the book inspire you, and make you want to read more? With some books, you may feel a connection right away.
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● Read it; hear it; be it!
Read the lines. Then, speak them out loud. And, put some character into the words. When he was writing his novels, Charles Dickens would act out the parts of the characters. He'd make faces in the mirror, and change his voice for each character.
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● How often do you read?
If you read frequently, you'll likely have an easier time with remembering what you’re reading and what you've read.
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A.Are you confused? |
B.Practice makes perfect. |
C.What's your motivation? |
D.Memory is sometimes a tricky thing. |
E.Marking helps you remember what you read. |
F.But other books require a bit more work on your part. |
G.You can do the same thing when you are reading the text! |
A young English teacher saved the lives of 30 students when he took
Harvold, who has not
The bus driver never regained consciousness and died at Easy Surrey Hospital. He had worked regulary with the
The head of the language school told the local newspaper that the school is going to send Harvold on a weekend
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A.control | B.care | C.advantage | D.note |
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A.taken in | B.picked up | C.tracked down | D.helped out |
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A.greet | B.thank | C.invite | D.meet |
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A.present | B.introduce | C.take | D.organize |
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A.drive | B.doctor | C.librarian | D.teacher |
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A.given | B.marked | C.passed | D.conducted |
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A.speaking to | B.waiting for | C.returning to | D.looking for |
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A.learned | B.noticed | C.mentioned | D.doubted |
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A.sleep | B.cry | C.move | D.recover |
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A.ran over | B.went by | C.carried | D.hit |
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A.remembered | B.continued | C.prepared | D.managed |
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A.witnessed | B.recorded | C.praised | D.understood |
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A.appeared | B.reacted | C.escaped | D.interrupted |
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A.delay | B.accident | C.mistake | D.experience |
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A.airport | B.hospital | C.school | D.police |
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A.happy | B.fortunate | C.touched | D.sorry |
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A.survive | B.retire | C.relax | D.succeed |
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A.project | B.trip | C.dinner | D.duty |
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A.bravery | B.skill | C.quality | D.knowledge |
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A.necessary | B.easy | C.different | D.free |
Easy Ways to Build Vocabulary
It's not all that hard to build an advanced and large vocabulary. Like many things in life, it's
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One of the
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1.时间
2.一同过节的家人
3.活动
注意:1. 词数100左右;
2. 可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯。
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阅读下面短文,根据所给情节进行续写,使之构成一个完整的故事。
A Vacation with My Mother
I had an interesting childhood. It was filled with surprises and amusements, all because of my mother---loving, sweet, yet absent-minded and forgetful. One strange family trip we took when I was eleven tells a lot about her.
My two sets of grandparents lived in Colorado and North Dakota, and my parents decided to spend a few weeks driving to those states and seeing all the sights along the way. As the first day of our trip approached, David, my eight-year-old brother, and I unwillingly said good-bye to all of our friends. Who knew if we’d ever see them again? Finally, the moment of our departure arrived, and we loaded suitcases, books, games, camping equipment, and a tent into the car and bravely drove off. We bravely drove off again two hours later after we’d returned home to get the purse and traveler’s checks Mom had forgotten.
David and I were always a little nervous when using gas station bathrooms if Mom was driving while Dad slept: “You stand outside the door and play lookout(放哨) while I go, and I’ll stand outside the door and play lookout while you go.” I had terrible pictures in my mind: “Honey, where are the kids?” “What?! Oh, Gosh…I thought they were being awfully quiet.” We were never actually left behind in a strange city, but we weren’t about to take any chances.
On the fourth or fifth night, we had trouble finding a hotel with a vacancy. After driving in vain for some time, Mom suddenly got a great idea: Why didn’t we find a house with a likely-looking backyard and ask if we could set up tent there? David and I became nervous. To our great relief, Dad turned down the idea. Mom never could understand our objections(反对). If a strange family showed up on her front doorstep, Mom would have been delighted. She thinks everyone in the world is as nice as she is. We finally found a vacancy in the next town.
注意:
1. 所续写短文的词数应为150左右;
2. 至少使用5个短文中标有下划线的关键词语;
3. 续写部分分为两段,每段的开头已为你写好;
4. 续写完成后,请用下划线标出你所使用的关键词语。
Paragraph 1:
The next day we remembered the brand-new tent we had brought with us. ______________
Paragraph 2:
We drove through several states and saw lots of great sights along the way. ______________