- 1
-
(66)
- 2
-
(67)
- 3
-
(65)
- 5
-
(64)
- 7
-
(60)
- 9
-
(58)
- 10
-
(59)
- 11
-
(57)
- 12
-
(56)
- 13
-
(54)
- 14
-
(55)
- 15
-
(52)
- 16
-
(53)
- 17
-
so ordinary common within make
honey who plead electricity article
machine thanks to contribute to
It is one of the paradoxes of civilization that the more opportunities are utilized, the more new ones are thereby created.New openings are as easy to find as ever to those (51) do their best, although it is not (52) easy as formerly to obtain great distinction in the old lines, because the standard has advanced so much, and competition has so greatly increased.The world is no longer clay," said Emerson, "but rather iron in the hands of its workers, and men have got to hammer out a place for themselves by steady and rugged blows."
Thousands of men have (53)__ fortunes out of trifles which others pass by. As the bee gets (54)__ from the same flower from which the spider gets poison, so some men will get a fortune out of the (55)__ and meanest things, as scraps of leather.cotton waste, slag, iron flings, from which others get only poverty and failure, There is scarcely a thing which (56)___ the welfare and comfort of humanity, scarcely an (57)__ of household furniture, a kitchen utensil, an article of clothing or of food, that is not capable of an important in which there may be a fortune.
Opportunities? They are all around us. Forces of nature (58) __ to be used in the service of man, as lightning for ages tried to attract his attention to the great force of (59) __ ,which would do his drudgery and leave him to develop the God-given powers (60) __ him. There is power lying latent everywhere waiting for the observant eye to discover it.
(from Opportunities Where You Are)
(51)
- 27
-
(40)
- 29
-
(39)
- 30
-
(38)
- 31
-
(37)
- 32
-
(34)
- 33
-
(35)
- 34
-
(36)
- 35
-
(32)
- 37
-
(33)
- A.Clifford Geertz
- B.A L Kroeber
- C.Edward Taylor
- D.Marvin Harris
- A.sexual discrimination
- B.Racial discrimination
- C.the definition of culture
- D.the definition of civilization
- A.prefer "Culture" to "Civilization"
- B.prefer "Civilization" to "culture"
- C.equate "culture" with "civilization
- D.use culture " and civilization" interchangeably
- A.Affected by the culture of the US.
- B.formerly colonized by Great Britain
- C.Geographically close to Great Britain
- D.technologically influenced by the U.S.
- A.is too specific
- B.is out-dated
- C.causes confusion
- D.can be inclusive
- A.Paragraph 1
- B.Paragraph 2
- C.Paragraph 3
- D.Paragraphs I and 2
- A.who speaks English
- B.why English is widespread
- C.When English became popular
- D.how people learn to speak English
- A.how spouses promote each other's health
- B.spouses probability of better future health
- C.the effect of psychological stress on health
- D.how spouses set up stress reducing mechanisms
- A.English is learned for different purposes
- B.English leaning takes place in various situationsC, Some 260 million people speak English as a native language.
- C.Some 260 million people speak English as a native language
- D.Some 260 million people use English as a working language
- A.personal income
- B.social networks
- C.psychological needs
- D.physical exercise
- A.2
- B.3.
- C.4.
- D.5
- A.they can manage money income jointly and effectively
- B.they can make themselves cheerful with money income
- C.money is used to purchase health-promoting goods and services
- D.money is one of the best and most direct health-promoting means
- A.the sexual difference
- B.the racial difference
- C.the historical difference
- D.the cultural difference
- A.biological factors
- B.social influences
- C.individual personality
- D.cultural environment
- A.fieldwork and theory
- B.fieldwork and data
- C.purpose and theory
- D.purpose and subjects
- A.Triggered
- B.proposed
- C.Promoted
- D.suppressed
- A.cultural and economic
- B.cultural and spiritual
- C.physical and psychological
- D.social and material
- A.heel-wearers are more attractive
- B.high heels make women feel safe
- C.men don't love women wearing heels
- D.men don't like dating women taller than them
- A.little shoes
- B.high heels
- C.toy shoes
- D.flat heels
- A.tools to push in nails
- B.devices to provide lawns with oxygen
- C.weapons to protect women against enemies
- D.accessories harmful to rather than good for women
- A.the old people
- B.the family
- C.the local economy
- D.the outside world
- A.objective
- B.positive
- C.negative
- D.Neutral
- A.wood and gasoline
- B.food and wood
- C.wedding gifts and food
- D.snowmobiles and gasoline
- A.became tamer
- B.grew wilder
- C.increased in number
- D.were harder to manage
- Another economic change involved the dependence on the outside through links to the cash economy. Cash was needed in order to purchase a snowmobile gasoline, and to pay for parts and repairs. This led to social inequality, which had not existed previously
- A.the social pattern of the Sami in Finland
- B.the influence of technology upon the Sami
- C.the problems of reindeer herding of the Sami
- D.the significance of reindeer in Sami culture.