They don't allow ____in the library, but they allow people____ in the restroom.
A、to smoke ... to smoke
B、to smoke...smoking
C、smoking ...smoking
D、smoking...to smoke
A、to smoke ... to smoke
B、to smoke...smoking
C、smoking ...smoking
D、smoking...to smoke
A.entered
B.enter
C.toenter
D.enters
SpeakerB :____________
A.You must be mistaken. I don’t know you at all.
B.Hello, Brown! I haven’t seen you for ages.
C.How do you do, Mr. Brown? Very happy to see you.
D.Hi, John! Welcome to China.
These days,however,many women work outside the home.They can't be at home with the children all day.They,too,come home tired in the evening.They don't have time to do the housework.
Today she can get help.Mothers can leave their children at the day-care centers during the day.The company a woman works for may allow her to work part-time.In that way,she can earn some money,but she can also be with her children part of every day.
Now many men share the housework with their wives.The husband may also spend more time at home with the children.
In the United States more and more men are becoming househusbands every year.These changes in the home mean changes in the family.Fathers can be closer to their children because they are at home more.Fathers and children can understand each other better.Husbands and wives may also find changes in their marriage.They,too,may have better understanding of each other.
1.In those days men ().
A.saw their children in the evenings and on weekends
B.spent a lot of time with their children
C.played with the children all day
D.never saw the children
2.Today there are ().
A.more housewives
B.more women working outside the home
C.not so many women working
D.no jobs for women
3.Day-care centers help ().
A.working mothers with their children
B.housewives
C.with cooking and cleaning
D.women with the housework
4.This passage is about ().
A.housewives
B.American men
C.how many American women are working
D.how family life in America is changing
Yet there's something of a【B6】here, for the very qualities a society【B7】to seek in its heroes-selflessness,【B8】consciousness, and the like—are precisely the【B9】of those which are needed to【B10】a talented but otherwise unremarkable neighborhood kid into a Michael Jordan. To become a star athlete, you have to have an extremely competitive【B11】and you have to be totally focused on the development of your own physical skills. These qualities【B12】well make a great athlete,【B13】they don't necessarily make a great person. On top of this, our society reinforces these【B14】by the system it has created to produce athletes—a system characterized by【B15】responsibility and enormous privilege.
The athletes themselves suffer the【B16】of this system. Trained to measure themselves perpetually【B17】the achievements of those a round them, many young athletes develop a sense of what sociologist Walter Schafer has【B18】"conditional self-worth". They learn very quickly that they will be accepted by the important figures in their lives—parents, coaches and peers as long as they are【B19】as "winner". Unfortunately they become【B20】and behave as if their athletic success will last forever.
【B1】
A.outside
B.inside
C.besides
D.with
My mother won’t allow me to travel ________.
A.alone
B.lonely
C.one man
D.along
Financial markets improve economic welfare because______.
A.they allow funds to move from those without productive investment opportunities to those who have such opportunities
B.they allow consumers to time their purchases better
C.they weed out inefficient firms
D.all of the above
E.both A and B
A.Parallel session is smaller-scale meetings which take place at the same time in different rooms
B.Young scholars usually present their papers at the parallel session
C.Parallel session may involve more detailed discussion between authors and participants
D.Parallel session doesn’t allow walk-ins and walk-outs