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American football has a reputation for being a brutal and dangerous game. This reputation is not really (51)__. The players hurl themselves at each other fiercely, but today their (52) and helmets (fitted with visors to protect their faces) are so skillful padded that there are few serious (53)__. By comparison, the rugby player is almost naked, (54)_. only a thin jersey and a pair of shorts to protect him (55)__ his opponents" boots and tackling.park injury from harmful uniform have
give up be deserve well more where know
The football coach is a very important member of the college staff (56)_ important than the professors, some say! The coach picks promising football players from the high schools, and recommends that they (57)__given scholarships. This is the only way some boys from poor families with no intellectual background can get to college. Quite a few of these students go on to become processional football players. The names of processional football clubs are
as well (S8)___ to Americans as professional soccer clubs are to Europeans and South Americans.
Soccer games can now draw crowds of over 70 thousand in cities (59)_baseball attracts a mere 20 thousand spectators. The soccer stadiums are much
more luxurious than the vast majority of European and South American League grounds. There is a seat for everyone and a (60)_lot for 25 thousand cars. Soccer is being brilliantly promoted, like any other promising American product.
(From Two Kinds of Football)
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- A.Vaud.
- B.Geneva.
- C.Lucerne.
- D.Zurich.
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- A.varied sceneries
- B.an efficient tourist authority
- C.multi-lingual service
- D.a convenient transportation system
- A.A French-speaking city.
- B.A pastoral city.
- C.A German-speaking city.
- D.An industrial city.
- A.Traveling always takes time.
- B.The country is too vast to see in a day.
- C.Every village and town has a lot to offer.
- D.Big cities are crowded with heavy traffic.
- A.the founding of the Latin grammar school in Boston
- B.the furnishing of a wider curriculum in Massachusetts
- C.the establishment of the English Classical School in Boston
- D.the enactment of the first state-wide public high-school law
- A.The public high school.
- B.Benjamin Franklin's school.
- C.The English Classical School.
- D.The Boston Free Latin School.
- 45
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In the southern states, the principal means of secondary education even after 1900 continued to be .
- A.the Latin school
- B.the academy
- C.the classical language school
- D.the public high school
- 46
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According to the author, Franklin's school, as distinguished from the Latin grammar school, was__.
- A.inferior in quality
- B.coeducational
- C.more academic in nature
- D.more specialized
- A.Dismissal.
- B.Confusion.
- C.Stability.
- D.Independence.
- A.A lot of paper money was issued.
- B.American money replaced trade in foreign coins.
- C.Individual states were not allowed to issue money.
- D.The Continental Congress issued gold and silver coins.
- A.for a short time during one year
- B.throughout the seventeenth century
- C.continuously from the start of the colony
- D.from 1652 until after the Revolutionary War
- A.Wampum.
- B.Cotton.
- C.Tobacco leaves.
- D.Beaver furs.
- A.The shortage of money in colonial American.
- B.The effect of the Revolutionary War on American money.
- C.The American monetary system of the 17th and 18th centuries.
- D.The English monetary policies in the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
- A.the frontier life
- B.virtues of the pioneers
- C.the love for city life
- D.scenes of the Great Plains
- A.In Webster County.
- B.In a small town.
- C.Near Winchester.
- D.On a big farm.
- A.She was good at organizing children.
- B.She enjoyed travels to other countries.
- C.She was used to the extreme weathers.
- D.She played with children from immigrant families.
- A.signal an example
- B.introduce an event
- C.establish a transition
- D.draw a conclusion
- 57
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What does the sentence:The end is nothing; the road is all. in the 1st paragraph most probably mean?
- A.Writing is a hard road to take.
- B.Writers have many chores to do.
- C.Cather experienced many failures.
- D.Cather enjoyed the process of writing.
- At that time, Nebraska was still a frontier state, having joined the Union only a few years before in 1876. It was a land of bitter winters, burning summers, endless prairies, and far-flung (分布广的) sod houses -houses made of blocks of dirt because there we
- A.Life in the American West.
- B.Gather's Virginian ancestors.
- C.European immigrants in Nebraska.
- D.The influence of Nebraska on Gather's writing.
- A.English
- B.Portuguese
- C.Swedish
- D.An African dialect
- A.Process
- B.comparison
- C.space .
- D.time
- A.Slave owners did not understand pidgin languages.
- B.Slaves had to speak with each other in different languages.
- C.Slaves refused to learn English, the language of their oppressors
- D.Slave-owners forced their slaves to abandon their native languages.
- A.profit-making
- B.totally rejected
- C.well received
- D.prize-winning
- A.To trace the history of the word "creole”.
- B.To account for the variety in slave languages.
- C.To list all kinds of pidgin languages in the world.
- D.To describe how the slaves were treated in the New World.
- A.Soldiers
- B.urban life
- C.moral values
- D.newspapers
- A.a romantic writer
- B.a great novelist
- C.a newspaper reporter
- D.a short story writer
- A.Naturalistic
- B.romantic
- C.Sentimental
- D.modernistic
- All his writings cannot, of course, be considered equally good. But Crane's vivid impressions of life, his keen insight, and his fine distinctive style, colorful and forceful, provided a pattern for later writers. He gave the naturalist
- A.Stephen Crane's life and works.
- B.The portrayal of reality in novels.
- C.American writers of the early 19th century.
- D.The influence of religion on Stephen Crane.