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文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。文章主要讨论了血汗工厂的定义,它在第三世界国家的普遍程度、存在的复杂原因,以及针对它的利弊的争论。

1 . The prevalence (普遍) of sweatshop (血汗工厂) labor depends largely on the definition being used. At its most _______ definition, the term refers to work in a confined space (small, surrounded by walls) that is extremely difficult or dangerous. Sweatshops are considered to be fairly common. If the definition being used is closely related to the commonly-held _________ of a factory with overworked, under-paid workers, sweatshop labor becomes less common than expected. _________, they are still prevalent in third-world countries. According to the United States Government Accountability Office, a sweatshop is any workplace that breaks one or more state and federal _________ laws. Experts believe that roughly 50 percent of manufacturers—_________ in the clothing industry — employ sweatshop labor.

It can be _________ to figure out the exact number of sweatshops in a particular area. These workplaces usually, if not always, violate labor laws. Violations can include workers being paid less than minimum wage, child labor, and the severe lack of safety regulations. _________, many of these locations tend to hide their identities as sweatshops through a number of different means. For example, they might bribe government officials.

Another factor that _________ the prevalence of sweatshop labor is the economic situation in the country or region. Many individuals choose to work in sweatshops simply because there are no better alternatives _________ livelihood (生计), even if the income they’re being given still cannot support their basic standards of living. This has led to a sharper increase in sweatshops in third-world economies. In these countries, there is a __________ advantage to working in a sweatshop rather than not working at all. __________, the large number of people willing to work under such conditions causes employers to run more sweatshops.

Certain economists argue against the popular opinion that sweatshop labor should be considered __________. Sweatshop supporters argue that the workplaces are a necessity for poor countries. Sweatshop workers actually earn more than average in those countries. Following this train of thought, sweatshops are looked upon as an economic stimulus (刺激物). Employers following this belief are __________ to increase the number of sweatshops in poorer countries.

However, other experts think that __________ labor standards in third-world countries creates a downward spiral (螺旋线). That is to say, people will be forced to accept working in increasingly worsening circumstances. The demand for work is significantly larger than the number of jobs that are available. It’s quite __________ for wages and employee rights to continue going downwards in response to such desperation. As a result of the economic circumstances in a given region, employers who follow this philosophy are quick to point out that their businesses do not fall under the definition of a sweatshop.

1.
A.accurateB.generalC.applicableD.specific
2.
A.opinionB.conditionC.imageD.representation
3.
A.HoweverB.MoreoverC.ThereforeD.Otherwise
4.
A.taxB.criminalC.civilD.labor
5.
A.exclusivelyB.particularlyC.broadlyD.initially
6.
A.meaninglessB.significantC.awkwardD.difficult
7.
A.After allB.As a resultC.Above allD.As usual
8.
A.adds toB.results fromC.puts offD.appeals to
9.
A.in spite ofB.in addition toC.in terms ofD.in return for
10.
A.comparativeB.competitiveC.complicatedD.potential
11.
A.By contrastB.In turnC.All in allD.Last but not least
12.
A.necessaryB.constructiveC.illegalD.inhuman
13.
A.encouragedB.forbiddenC.remindedD.obliged
14.
A.establishingB.enforcingC.maintainingD.dropping
15.
A.possibleB.incredibleC.avoidableD.necessary
语法填空-短文语填(约310词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章主要说明了母语不是英语的研究人员阅读一篇英语科学期刊文章的时间大约是母语人士的两倍。对于一名博士生来说,这可能意味着每年要多花19个工作日来阅读论文。
2 . Directions: After reading the passage below, fill in the blanks to make the passage coherent and grammatically correct. For the blanks with a given word, fill in each blank with the proper form of the given word; for the other blanks, use one word that best fits each blank.

What If You’re Not Good at English?

Researchers whose first language is not English can spend around twice as long reading an English scientific journal article as native speakers. For a PhD student, that can mean     1     (spend) up to 19 additional working days per year just reading papers.

These statistics,     2     (publish) today in PLOS Biology, might not be shocking, researchers say, but it’s important to measure the effects of language barriers on the careers of academics       3     are not fluent in English. “It is the first step for the scientific community       4     (make) more efforts to solve this problem”, says Tatsuya Amano, a biodiversity researcher at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia, and a co-author of the study.

The team found that among scientists who had published only one paper in English, scientists from countries       5     English is generally poor spent 29.8 percent more time writing papers than native English speakers;     6     from countries with moderate English proficiency (能力) spent 50.6% more time. Similarly, the researchers found that people from countries with low English proficiency spent an average of 90.8 percent more time reading scientific articles       7     native English speakers.

At conferences, even those who overcome obstacles face difficulties in presenting their work in English. Germana Barata, a researcher who     8     (specialize) in science communication at the State University of Campinas in Brazil, says that despite being fluent in English, she still feels uncomfortable at times. “We       9     (give) the same amount of time to present, but all that we can say in 10 minutes is different from       10     a native speaker can say,” she points out.

2024-05-02更新 | 71次组卷 | 1卷引用:2024届上海市普陀区高三下学期二模英语试题
听力选择题-短文 | 适中(0.65) |
3 . 听下面一段独白,回答以下小题。
1. What were the college students in both groups required to do in the study?
A.To install some audio equipment in a lab.B.To test their eyesight using a phone app.
C.To send smartphone messages.D.To solve word search puzzles.
2. What do we learn about many of the students in the second test group after the phone rang?
A.They no longer concentrated on their task.B.They didn’t go on until the ringing stopped.
C.They called back right away.D.They wanted to answer the phone.
3. According to the passage, what is the most dramatic impact of using smartphones?
A.A decline in sports activities.B.A rise in emotional problems.
C.A decline in academic performance.D.A reduction in the amount of sleep.
2024-02-28更新 | 47次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市普陀区2024届高三一模英语试题(含听力)
阅读理解-阅读单选(约350词) | 适中(0.65) |
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文。通过Alex Johnson邀请老师和同学来体验坐轮椅的一天以及挑战立法者在轮椅上度过一天的事例,让人们真正的了解行动不便的人的生活,与大家一起改变世界。

4 . A Day in My Wheel Chair

Alex Johnson was born with a rare disorder and got his first wheelchair when he was 7 years old. When he was 11, he arranged to get a bunch of borrowed wheelchairs and then invited his teachers and fellow students to spend a day in them.

Dozens of volunteers quickly learned how complicated it was for Alex to get around the school. Balancing a lunch tray while also rolling down the cafeteria line? Super tricky. Those who participated also learned about the aches and pains Alex struggles with daily. There’s also the arduous, if not impossible, task of rolling a manual wheelchair up and down slopes.

Doors are the worst, they said, because they’re heavy and difficult to pull open from a rolling chair. And although the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) specifies that doorways need to be wide enough to allow a wheelchair and the person’s hands to pass through safely, but many doors in older buildings are just too narrow.

But making the world more accessible for wheelchair users is a public policy issue controlled by government officials, so Alex recently challenged the Tennessee House of Representatives to spend a day in wheelchairs. And 10 men and women took him up on it! For a full day, they worked at their desks and attended all their regular meetings in wheelchairs. The lawmakers had the same eye-opening experiences that Alex’s school pals had.

State Representative Clark Boyd said, “I expected it to be difficult, but I had no idea how frustrating it could be to just simply get around.”

Thanks to comparable wheelchair challenges around the world, more lawmakers are getting the opportunity to learn more about what it’s like for the millions of people living with a mobility disability. “My hope is that through my challenge we can make the world more accessible,” Alex said. “Together, we can change the world, one challenge at a time.”

1. In what way were the students’ experiences of spending a day in wheelchairs and the lawmakers’ experiences similar?
A.Gaining a better understanding of what life is like for disabled people.
B.Learning that making the world more accessible is government officials’ work.
C.Learning how tiring it is to roll a wheelchair to move around the school building.
D.Understanding what it’s like for Alex to balance a lunch tray while in a wheelchair.
2. In paragraph 3, the word “arduous” is closest in the meaning to “_________”.
A.compulsoryB.fruitlessC.ridiculousD.challenging
3. Why did the writer quote Clark Boyd’s remark?
A.To criticize the ADA for the narrow doors in buildings.
B.To show that Clark felt sympathy for wheelchair users.
C.To demonstrate that he had decided to change the public policy issues.
D.To convince the reader that lawmakers can make the world more accessible.
2023-02-28更新 | 87次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市普陀2022年6月高三英语二模英语试题(含听力)
智能选题,一键自动生成优质试卷~
阅读理解-六选四(约310词) | 较难(0.4) |
文章大意:这是一篇说明文。文章介绍了参与家庭聚餐可能会改善家庭沟通和支持的方式。

5 . Engaging in Family Meals

Engaging in family meals may be a matter of improving communication and support at home. A new study in the Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior, published by Elsevier, connects less family discouragement and better family communication with a higher likelihood to eat evening family meals and family breakfasts together, and not in front of a television. The researchers surveyed 259 patients who participated in weight management and weight loss programs at the Ohio State University or Wake Forest University.     1    

“It’s important to note all family members in the home have influence,” lead study author Keeley J. Pratt, PhD, the Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA, said of the findings that any family member can influence the adoption and maintenance of healthy patterns and behaviors in the home.     2     The study also found parents who perceived their child to be overweight were more than four times as likely to talk to them about the kid’s weight, also called “weight talk.”

“While open communication with children about health is beneficial, it’s important to ensure communication directly about children’s weight is not harmful in their development of a healthy body image and behaviors. That includes older children and adolescents who are at greater risk of developing eating disorders and disordered eating behaviors,” Professor Pratt said.     3     Families with younger children, regardless of gender, were more likely to eat family dinners and breakfasts together, and parents of older children were more likely to talk about their own weight with the child. As kids grow up, the relationship between kids and their parents becomes better.

    4     “Understanding these associations will provide essential evidence needed to design future family-based interventions for these patients to help in their behavior change and weight loss, prevent the beginning of obesity in children, and enhance positive family meal practices and healthy communication about weight,” Professor Pratt said.

A.The study shows parents of older children were more likely to talk about their own weight with the child.
B.They found parents with better family communication were more likely to participate in family meals.
C.There was no significant difference between male and female children in this study.
D.This was the first study specifically to examine the home eating habits of adult patients.
E.Previous study has shown parental obesity (肥胖) is the strongest risk for children’s obesity.
F.Someone has no power to influence the family, but they are influencing each other.
2022-12-14更新 | 145次组卷 | 2卷引用:2023届上海市普陀区高三上学期一模英语试卷
文章大意:本文是一篇说明文,介绍了时尚行业已经成为地球上最具有破坏性的行业之一,是仅次于石油行业的最不环保的行业,现在正面临惩罚。

6 . What do you know about fashion? The fashion industry, which has become one of the most _________ to the planet, is having a moment of punishment. But which changes make a difference, and which ones just _________ in the wash? In fact, the fashion industry is second only to the oil industry, the most environmentally unfriendly industry.

A friend of mine _________ an antique clothes store in the north of London. Business has been good for many years, which makes her acquire a large fortune. Every few weeks, she visits a vast storehouse on the edge of the city to go through piles of clothing. Most of it is _________, but if you know what you are looking for, there are raw diamonds. The storehouse has a long history. It was once a clearing house for the low-quality wool scraps(碎料) that were used to make cheap clothing for the _________ in Victorian Britain. A century on, _________ has changed. Nowadays, it is full of modern-day inferior products, all _________ cheap clothing made for the masses around the world. Except that this stuff is going to be burned or buried, not being reused.

The items are the products of an industry that, in the past 30 years, has become one of the most successful and also most _________ on the planet. Known as fast fashion, it has filled our wardrobes(衣柜) with cheap and cheerful clothes. But after three decades of continuous growth, the model is in _________ with fundamental environmental limits and there is widespread agreement – even from within the industry – that it is time to ____________. Otherwise, “Fast fashion” creates a mountain of unsellable, cheap clothing that ends up in a terrible place.

“The fashion industry represents a key environmental ____________,” says Kirsi Niinimäki at Aalto University in Espoo, Finland. “Eventually, the long-term stability of the fashion industry ____________ the total abandonment of the fast-fashion model.” Like fast food, fast fashion is all about instant ____________ on the cheap.

One wonders: What can we do about it? Don’t you have any clothes on? It’s not that ____________. More importantly, don’t waste, learn to control your desires and ____________ falling into this “Fast fashion” lifestyle. As the guardian columnist Lucy Seagal once said, the “Fast fashion” industry is profit-driven, but consumers who have experienced “over-consumption” will naturally grow tired of it, and the market will have its choice.

1.
A.convincingB.interestingC.confusingD.damaging
2.
A.carry outB.come outC.set outD.break out
3.
A.buildsB.runsC.supportsD.controls
4.
A.expensiveB.uselessC.worthlessD.attractive
5.
A.businessmenB.childrenC.localsD.masses
6.
A.littleB.fewC.muchD.many
7.
A.on behalf ofB.in the form ofC.for the sake ofD.in terms of
8.
A.effectiveB.destructiveC.preventiveD.alternative
9.
A.quarrelB.argumentC.fightD.conflict
10.
A.tell the truthB.hit the brakesC.pave the wayD.break the ice
11.
A.threatB.effectC.problemD.protection
12.
A.results fromB.consists ofC.brings aboutD.relies on
13.
A.ambitionB.actionC.satisfactionD.attraction
14.
A.farB.extremeC.badD.complex
15.
A.enjoyB.imagineC.missD.avoid
2022-12-14更新 | 1156次组卷 | 2卷引用:2023届上海市普陀区高三上学期一模英语试卷
阅读理解-六选四(约230词) | 适中(0.65) |
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7 . Like many schools worldwide, the pandemic forced Safe Passage to address an issue it’s been debating for years: how to best integrate (使……完整,使……整体) online or remote learning into its education plans.     1     But the area’s lack of internet access, as well as security concerns like theft, make distributing technology for students to learn at home a daunting (令人怯步的) task.

Holland says students will be at a disadvantage in today’s workplace if they don’t have access to digital tools.     2    

“Blended learning is a combination between technology and face-to-face classroom learning,” says Holland. “It’s not a bolt-on solution. If you see technology as this cool thing you just bolt on to an existing curriculum, you are in big trouble.”

Jean-Francois agrees.

“A lot of grants will include purchasing laptops or tablets. But education is a lot more complex,” she says. “    3     We can’t just assume that if we give them a tablet and instructions, they are going to know how to use it, and we shouldn’t expect they are going to know how to effectively teach children with it.”

    4     But Johnson, the Rotarian who helps clubs design education grants, cautions against moving too quickly to “reinvent education.”

“We need to figure it out, but figure it out one step at a time,” says Johnson. “You have to know what people are able to accept and use — cognitively, socially, and emotionally. Determine that, then move forward.”

A.Most remote learning involves technology like tablets.
B.The Rotary clubs raise money to buy tablets and pack the items for delivery.
C.With the unpredictability of the pandemic, many schools will be making the same kind of decisions in the coming year.
D.At the same time, students benefit most when technology is integrated into the entire curriculum, not just provided through a mass distribution of laptops.
E.We need to use this time and lean into developing teachers in new ways we haven’t thought of before.
F.Students have formed small groups to share smartphones with others who don’t have one.
2022-01-04更新 | 49次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市曹杨第二中学2020-2021学年高二上学期期末考试英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约470词) | 较难(0.4) |
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8 . “Is data the new oil?” asked advocates of big data back in 2012 in Forbes magazine. By 2016, with the rise of big data’s fast-growing cousin deep learning, we had become more certain: “Data is the new oil,” stated Fortune magazine.

Amazon’s Neil Lawrence has a slightly different comparison: Data is coal. Not coal today, though, but coal in the early days of the 18th century, when Thomas Newcomen invented the steam engine. Newcomen built his device to pump water out of the southwest’s rich tin (锡) mines.

The problem, as Lawrence said, was that the pump was rather more useful to those who had a lot of coal than those who didn’t: it was good, but not good enough to be able to buy enough coal in to run it. That was so true that the first of Newcomen’s steam engines wasn’t built in a tin mine, but in coal works near Dudley.

So why is data coal? The problem is similar: there are a lot of Newcomen in the world of deep learning. New companies are coming up with revolutionary new ways to train machines to do impressive tasks, from reconstructing facial data from images to learning the writing style of an individual user to better predict which word they are going to type in a sentence. And yet, like Newcomen, their innovations are so much more useful to the people who actually have large amounts of raw material to work from.

But there is an ending to the story: 69 years later, James Watt made a nice change to the Newcomen steam engine, adding a condenser (冷凝器) to the design. That change, Lawrence said, “made the steam engine much more efficient, and that’s what triggered the industrial revolution.”

Whether data is oil or coal, then, there’s another way the comparison holds up: a lot of work is going into trying to make sure we can do more, with less.

“If you look at all the areas where deep learning is successful, they’re all areas where there’s lots of data,” points out Lawrence. That’s great if you want to classify images of cats, but less helpful if you want to use deep learning to diagnose rare illnesses. “It’s generally considered unacceptable to force people to become sick in order to acquire data.”

It’s not as impressive as teaching a computer to play a game better than any human alive, but “data efficiency” is a vital step if deep learning is to move away from simply taking in large amounts of data and giving out the best correlations (关联) possible.

1. The first of Newcomen’s steam engines wasn’t built in a tin mine because________.
A.its operation required a lot of coalB.it would lose its function in a tin mine
C.it was in greater demand in coal worksD.the rich mines required more advanced aids
2. According to the passage, in which situation is deep learning the least successful?
A.Reconstructing facial data.B.Predicting a word in a sentence.
C.Classifying images of cats.D.Diagnosing rare diseases.
3. What can be inferred from the passage?
A.Watt’s condenser helped the steam engine consume less coal.
B.Data involving patients is often collected through immoral ways.
C.Teaching machines to learn is a vital step towards data efficiency.
D.Thomas Newcomen’s steam engine had revolutionary applications.
4. Neil Lawrence compared data to coal to indicate that________.
A.acquiring data is as complex as mining for coal
B.a change is required to make more out of less data
C.data is the new fuel to start an information revolution
D.a larger amount of data is needed to accomplish something
2022-01-04更新 | 145次组卷 | 3卷引用:上海市曹杨第二中学2020-2021学年高二上学期期末考试英语试题
阅读理解-阅读单选(约500词) | 较难(0.4) |
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9 . By now you've probably heard about the "you're not special"speech,when English teacher David McCullough told graduating seniors at Wellesley High School:" Do not get the idea that you're anything special, because you're not." Mothers and fathers present at the ceremony took issue with these words. But lost in the uproar was something we really should be taking to heart: our young people actually have no idea whether they're particularly talented or accomplished or not. In our eagerness to lift their confidence,we forgot to teach them how to realistically assess their own abilities, a crucial requirement for getting better at anything from math to music to sports. In fact, it's not just privileged high-school students: we all tend to view ourselves as above average.

Such inflated self-judgments have been found in study after study, and it's often exactly when we're least competent at a given task that we rate our performance most generously. In a 2006 study published in the journal Medical Education, for example, medical students who scored the lowest on an essay test were the most charitable in their self-evaluations, while high-scoring students judged themselves much more severely.

Poor students, the authors note,"lack insight" into their own inadequacy.Why should this be?Another study, led by Comell University psychologist David Dunning, offers an enlightening explanation. People who are less capable, he writes with co-author Justin Kruger, suffer from a"double burden": they're not good at what they do, and their very ineptness prevents them from recognizing how bad they are.There's a conflict here, the authors note:"The skills that help to develop competence in a particular field are often the very same skills necessary to evaluate competence in that field." In other words, to get better at judging how well we're doing at an activity,we have to get better at the activity itself.

There are a couple of ways out of this double bind. First,we can learn to make honest comparisons with others. Train yourself to recognize excellence, even when you yourself don't possess it, and compare what you can do against what truly excellent individuals are able to accomplish. Second, seek out feedback that is frequent, accurate and specific. Find a critic who will tell you not only how poorly you're doing.but just what it is that you're doing wrong. As Dunning and Kruger note, success indicates to us that everything went right, but failure is more ambiguous: any number of things could have gone wrong. Use this external feedback to figure out exactly where and when you screwed up.

If we adopt these strategies---and most importantly, teach them to our children---they won't need parents,or a commencement(毕业典礼)speaker, to tell them that they're special. They'll already know that they are,or have a plan to get that way.

1. The author thinks the real problem is that ________.
A.young people are expected to lift their confidence
B.young people don't know how to evaluate their performance correctly
C.young people can't make outstanding academic achievements
D.we always tend to consider ourselves to be privileged
2. Why can't those low-achieving students see their weakness?
A.Because the burdens they carry prevent their development.
B.Because what they do requires mope skills than they possess.
C.Because they lack the critical ability to judge their performance.
D.Because they have always been told by others that they are special.
3. What can we infer from the suggestions given by the writer?
A.We need to acknowledge our excellence so that we can do better.
B.The best way to get better is to carefully study past failures on our own.
C.We should make comparisons with others so that we can know where and when we failed.
D.It is essential that we know where our limitations are and seek honest comments from others.
4. Which of the following can be the best title for this passage?
A.Special or Not? Teach Kids to Figure It Out
B.Let's Admit That We Are Not That Special
C.Tips on Making Ourselves More Special
D.Tell the Truth:Kids Overestimate Their Talents
2021-12-23更新 | 182次组卷 | 1卷引用:上海市晋元高级中学2021-2022学年高三上学期12月月考英语试卷
阅读理解-阅读单选(约530词) | 适中(0.65) |
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10 . A few years ago, Charles Barkley got into a lot of trouble for making the observation that sports figures didn't need to be role models. Thousands of fans and professional journalists were cross at this attack on the fundamental principle that the person who jumps highest must aim highest and the person who handles the running back must also be able to deal with life's problems with grace as well.

The problem is not that we look to these people for perfection when they take off their uniforms. It's that we expect anyone to be our representatives for perfection. That's stupid and it makes the rest of us down here lazy.

I get the importance of having heroes, the people who inspire us to cultivate the best potential within us and nurture our better angels. I personally have many heroes, from my mother, Lucy, to my favorite law professor, Howard. But these are personal contacts, people who have-actually touched my hand and my heart, and who occupy a pedestal(基座)built of my own experiences and aspirations. To look at an athlete or an actress with high salary and demand that he or she match our dreams is not only a waste of time, but it's dangerous. The danger comes in how this type of hero worship dehumanizes both the object of affection and the person who blindly adores. That was Barkley's point, not that we should give public figures a pass for being faulty but that we shouldn't abandon our own moral compasses and look to them for true north.

Recently on a television program I participated in, the discussion turned to Kathleen Kane. Someone suggested that the fact that the first female attorney general(首席检察官)in Pennsylvania was really messing things up could have unfortunate consequences for women seeking elected office. I offered the opinion that Kane was unquestionably criticized and that it was not hatred towards woman but incompetence at the root of the attacks. After the show aired, I had people emailing to tell me that I was either a traitor(叛徒)for publicly attacking a fellow female when we need to stand together behind this "role model", or a fool for not going a step further to say that this incompetent lawyer had made it harder for all women to move to the next level.

How depressing! Why should the inferior performance of one woman lead to such diverse but passionate views in people? The answer is obvious: Kane has stopped being an attorney general but has instead become The First Female Attorney General. She can't just make a mistake and pay the normal consequences.

If we stopped trying to live our lives through the accomplishments of public figures, many of whom look and sound like us, we'd learn how to recognize the heroic character of those we might actually know, and the heroic potential within ourselves. Or, perhaps, the honesty to accept our ordinary humanity.

1. Many people were angry with Charles Barkley mainly because________.
A.he broke fundamental principles in lifeB.he was not good enough to be a role model
C.he doubted the perfection of some sports figuresD.he thought sports figures could have weaknesses
2. According to Barkley, why is it dangerous to take public figures as heroes?
A.Because we may let go of our own moral standards.
B.Because an athlete or actress cannot match our dreams.
C.Because we blindly admire public figures for their faults.
D.Because we shouldn't waste time imitating public figures.
3. From the passage we can infer that Kathleen Kane was________.
A.unfairly criticized due to being femaleB.the first female attorney general in the US
C.less qualified than the public had expectedD.a role model for women seeking elected office
4. Which of the following might be the best title of the passage?
A.Be Our Representatives for PerfectionB.Exploration of Our Own Heroic Potential
C.Our Unrealistic Expectation of Public FiguresD.Our Conventional Views of Female Politician
共计 平均难度:一般