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(\€dlKSOProductBuildVer2052-11.1.0.9740&0TableData ?WpsCustomData 欹増 P啍KSKS.!F!s84r" $ hG @` _l蟼w闚乢-Nf[2020J\貧 N駛韹P桍e脋10 N0USy 愰b1.Nobody believe his reason for being absent from the class ________ he had to meet his uncle at the airport. A. why B. that C. where D. because2. Time can never ________from us Chinese the sadness and heartache caused by World War II. A. wipe away B. give away C. turn away D. put away3. -------Is Tom still performing? ------- I am afraid not. He is said _________ the stage as he has become a teacher in a remote village.A. to have left B. to leave C. being left D. leave4.In Beijing opera, white facial painting suggests _______ and ________.A. dishonest; betray B. dishonesty; betray C. dishonesty; betrayal D. honesty; betrayal5. Statistics shows that men have ___________ as women do whatever vehicles they drive.A. twice serious accidents as many B. serious accidents as many twiceC. serious accidents as twice many D. twice as many serious accidents6. In the English language, sentence stress is like word stress and is ________ gives English its rhythm. A. when B. what C. that D. why7.The coach explained the regulations__________ to make sure that none of his players would become violators.A. at last B. at length C. in general D. in short8. In a ________ society, everyone have a strong sense of ________.A. just; just B. justice; justice C. just; justice D. justice; just9. Five hundred troops were sent in, more as a ______ gesture than as a real threat.A. real B. ideal C. facial D. symbolic10.------ Oh, dear! I failed in the driving test. -------- _________. You still have chances.A. Oh, that s too bad B. No pains, no gains C. It couldn t be better D. Pull yourself together孨0孾媁kXzzResearch confirms that performing acts of kindness and sharing thankful thoughts have many positive effects on mood and health. They are among the top five predictors of happiness.When you feel thankful for something, that s gratitude. You never get it out of 11 ; you are clear who or what is responsible, whether that s a loved one, a stranger, or a higher power. Gratitude is how you 12 to others when you see yourself in connection with things larger than yourself. 13 , this understanding of our reliance on others is becoming more 14 today. With commercial and social media, everything makes the younger generation feel that they are the 15 of the universe. If it s all about them, why thank others?If true, there would be a disturbing 16 trend. Canadian researchers found that people who wrote thank-you letters or performed good deeds for a six-week period decreased their pain, upped their energy, and improved their mental health. And you can 17 these benefits at any age. Old people who choose to be thankful are less likely to worry about their 18 health. Gratitude tends to be easily spread, as well. Those who are helped are more likely to pay kindness 19 . One study found that when someone is thanked, it more than doubles his or her chances of being 20 again, likely because he or she enjoys feeling socially 21 .If you aren t particularly grateful now, you can learn to be. People who keep a journal of three positive things that happen to them each day 22 health-inducing thankfulness. At first, it may be difficult to 23 the good things that occur. But 24 , your brain gets trained into a more appreciative mode. And in the end, the journal becomes a book of joyful 25 . Gratitude training certainly comes to your aid during the 26 times because a greater appreciation for life is the 27 you focus on. 28 your gratefulness directly with the person you feel grateful to, the benefits of happiness 29 . You don t need a scientific study to know that showing and accepting gratitude can ensure you an 30 life, a much better life than you thought.11. A. something B. anything C. nothing D. everything12. A. refer B. submit C. subscribe D. relate13. A. Therefore B. Meanwhile C. Besides D. However 14. A. strange B. difficult C. stubborn D. ridiculous15. A. master B. center C. survivor D. creator16. A. health B. mental C. cultural D. industrial17. A. continue B. approach C. sustain D. reap18. A. original B. improving C. failing D. falling19. A. upward B. downward C. backward D. forward20. A. thankful B. respectful C. helpful D. careful21. A. valued B. influenced C. attracted D. noticed22. A. cultivate B. emphasize C. benefit D. transmit23. A. analyze B. recognize C. summarize D. organize24. A. roughly B. decidedly C. gradually D. accidentally25. A. essays B. thoughts C. files D. memories26. A. dark B. golden C. special D. urgent27. A. scene B. part C. plan D. session28. A. Supplying B. Experiencing C. Sharing D. Recalling29. A. disappear B. accumulate C. emerge D. weaken30. A. enriched B. engaged C. enlarged D. enabled N0桘t銐AIn a historic moment on June 26, the US Supreme Court ruled that same-sex marriage is a legal right across all 50 states. The Supreme Court justices ruled states cannot deny gay men and women the same marriage rights. The decision means the 13 states with bans on same-sex marriage are no longer able to enforce them. Same-sex couples  ask for equal dignity in the eyes of the law . Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote in the majority opinion:  The Constitution grants them that right. The decision came after decades of litigation (蓩紜) and activism. It set off celebrations across the US. In affected states including Georgia, Michigan, Ohio and Texas, same-sex couples rushed to wed, while officials in Mississippi and Louisiana said marriages had to wait until procedural issues were addressed, reported the BBC.According to  The New York Times , the ruling came against the backdrop of fast-moving changes in public opinion in the US, with polls indicating that most Americans now approve of same-sex marriage.US President Barack Obama welcomed the ruling, saying it  affirms what millions of Americans already believe in their hearts.  Today, he said in a press release,  we can say, in no uncertain terms, that we have made our union a little more perfect. Another win.This was the second time the Supreme Court took lip same-sex marriage, according to an article in  Business Insider . The first time, in June 2013, the court made a decision that allowed the US federal government to recognize same-sex marriages in states where they were already legal.But at that time, the Supreme Court declined to rule on the broader question about gay marriage: Is there a constitutional (猍誰剉) right to same-sex marriage? The June 26 ruling gave a positive answer to that question.Justice Kennedy wrote in the majority opinion that the Constitution should evolve with societal changes. The nature of injustice is that we may not always see it in our own times, he wrote.  The generations that wrote and ratified the  Bill of Rights and the  Fourteenth Amendment (頞ckHh) did not exactly know the extent of freedom in all of its dimensions, and so they hoped the future generations can protect the right of all persons to enjoy liberty as we learn its meaning. The Fourteenth Amendment addresses citizenship rights and equal protection of the law. In the June 26 ruling, the Supreme Court declared that the equal protection clause of the amendment requires marriage rights be extended to same-sex couples, too.31. According to the passage, which of the following is true?A. The majority of Americans now object to same-sex marriage.B. Gay men and women did not care about the ruling.C. All the US states did not ban same-sex marriage before the ruling.D. The US president believes the country will be less perfect after the ruling.32. It can be inferred that .A. before June 26, most Americans have doubt about same-sex marriage.B. this is the first time the Americans have got the same-sex marriage right.C. thanks to the amendment, all the Same-sex couples can get married immediately.D. Americans struggled for decades to win the same-sex right.33. Why does the author refer to Justice Kennedy s  the nature of injustice is that we may not always see it in our own times ?A. The author thinks that it is unfair for same-sex marriage not to have the marriage right.B. The author wants to show that it is difficult for same-sex marriage couple to get the right.C. The author thinks that in our own times we can not see the justice.D. The author shows his dissatisfaction with the delayed approval of the legal same-sex marriage.BAt the beginning of the World Series of 1947,I experienced a completely new emotion, when the National Anthem was played. This time, I thought, it is being played for me, as much as for anyone else. This is organized major League Baseball, and I am standing here with all the others; and everything that takes place includes me.About a year later, I went to Atlanta, Georgia, to play in an exhibition game. On the field, for the first time in Atlanta, there were Negroes and whites. Other Negroes, besides me. And I thought: What I have always believed has come to be.And what is it that I have always believed? First, those imperfections are human. But that wherever human beings were given room to breathe and time to think, those imperfections would disappear, no matter how slowly. I do not believe that we have found or even approached perfection. That is not necessarily in the scheme of human events. Handicaps, stumbling blocks, prejudices all of those are imperfect. Yet, they have to be dealt with because they are in the scheme of human events.Whatever obstacles I found made me fight all the harder. But it would have been impossible for me to fight at all, except that I was sustained by the personal and deep-rooted belief that my fight had a chance. It had a chance because it took place in a free society. Not once was I forced to face and fight an immovable object. Not once was the situation so cast-iron rigid that I had no chance at all. Free minds and human hearts were at work all around me; and so there was the probability of improvement. I look at my children now, and know that I must still prepare them to meet obstacles and prejudices.But I can tell them, too, that they will never face some of these prejudices because other people have gone before them. And to myself I can say that, because progress is unalterable, many of today's dogmasYeag will have vanished by the time they grow into adults. I can say to my children: There is a chance for you. No guarantee, but a chance. And this chance has come to be, because there is nothing static with free people. There is no Middle Ages logic so strong that it can stop the human tide from flowing forward. I do not believe that every person, in every walk of life, can succeed in spite of any handicap. That would be perfection. But I do believe and with every fiber in me that what I was able to attain came to be because we put behind us (no matter how slowly) the dogmas of the past: to discover the truth of today; and perhaps find the greatness of tomorrow.I believe in the human race. I believe in the warm heart. I believe in man's honesty. I believe in the goodness of a free society. And I believe that the society can remain good only as long as we are willing to fight for it and to fight against whatever imperfections may exist. My fight was against the barriers that kept Negroes out of baseball. This was the area where I found imperfection, and where I was best able to fight. And I fought because I knew it was not doomed to be a losing fight. It couldn't be a losing fight-not when it took place in a free society. And in the largest sense, I believe that what I did was done for me that it was my faith in God that sustained me in my fight. And that what was done for me must and will be done for others.34.Why did the author say he had experienced a completely new emotion? A. Because the National Game was played for him. B. Because he could compete in the game and won the game. C. Because he was an American. D. Because he won game.35.The author firmly believed that________. A. humans are imperfect if they all unite together to overcome the difficulties B. humans needn t approach perfect even if they can C. humans should face the obstacles and fight for it bravely D. humans are becoming kind and honest if they have freedom36.We can infer from the passage that______. A. in the past Negroes were kept out of baseballB. the civil war broke out because the Negroes fought for their freedom C. the fight between Negroes and Whites never ends D. the fight ended up with a game37.The underlined word  vanished most probably means______. A. disappeared B. increased C. appeared D. happened38.The best title of this passage may be______. A. Nothing Matters Except Fighting B. Success Lies in Hard Work C. Freedom is Everything D. Free Minds and Hearts Make a Difference踁0鸑媁桘Social SignatureSo what did the detailed data that we collected reveal? This question is best answered in terms of a characteristic that we decided to call the  social signature of an individual, and in particular by looking at how this  social signature changed over time. Imagine one of our participants during the first six-month observation window call some people very frequently, and others only occasionally, where the people called are likely to include relatives, close friends, and more distant acquaintances. If we now put the people called by our participant, with the person most frequently called in first position, the second-most frequently called person in second position, and so on, then we can build a profile of how the participant allocated calls between all of their different social relationships. This profile is in fact what we call the  social signature, and it reflects what fraction of calls a given participant placed to the person they call second-most, right down to the least frequently called person. So what was the  social signature able to tell us?First, let me introduce a general property that applied to the  social signatures of all participants. The number of people that participants called frequently, with whom they had a strong relationship, was comparatively small. We may have five close friends and 20 acquaintances, but we are very unlikely to have 20 close friends and five acquaintances. If we look at the  social signature in greater detail, we find that there were differences between different participants, so that one individual may have had three close friends and another seven. That is in fact why we chose the term  signature .Perhaps most interestingly, if we looked at the  social signature of a given participant over the three consecutive six-month observation windows, we found that it remained quite stable. It is worth taking a moment to reflect why this should be surprising. The social world of our participants was undergoing a significant transition, with changes in both close and less close friendships. By the end of our study, the identity of some of the close friends of the participants had changed, and so these relationships were now with entirely different individuals, but the fraction of the calls participants placed to a counterpart almost didn t change.How can we understand the persistence of an individual s  social signature ? The key is that the pattern of our social relationships is shaped by a number of critical constraints.Time: The first very general and quite inescapable constraint is that we only have a limited amount of time to maintain social relationships.Emotional Capital: The second constraint reflects the fact that a strong social relationship requires considerable emotional investment, and our stock of emotional capital is limited.Cognitive Limitations: The third constraint is biological in nature, and reflects the fact that they also limit the social relationships.Can the new social technologies that are accessible significantly change the three factors that we believe shape the patterns of our social interactions? Based on the behavior that we observed for our participants, at this point I would tend to answer no.Social signatureThe concept of the  social signature The  social signature is a profile which is built according to how 1.____________ participants call people with different social relationships and it reflects the fraction of calls a given participant places to the person they call.Features of the  social signature ?There are variations between different participants.*Participants call a comparatively 2.___________number of people with whom they have a strong relationship.*A large number of people are called less frequently, where the relationship is weak.*We are likely to have more 3.____________than close friends.?It remains quite stable.*It is 4.___________to spend time reflecting why this should be surprising.* 5._____________the fact that the relationships change, the fraction of the calls participants place to a counterpart remains largely 6.______________.The persistence of an individual s  social signature ?The key to 7.______________the persistence of an individual s  social signature is that the pattern of our social relationships is shaped by some critical constraints.*Time: We only have a limited amount of time to maintain social relationships.*Emotional Capital: Considerable investment is 8._____________required,and our stock is limited.*Cognitive 9.______________: They also limit the social relationships.ConclusionThe new social technologies that we have 10._____________to are unlikely to change the three factors that may shape the patterns of our social interactions.PAGE PAGE 1 (,.02>@  , . 0 2 4 6 D 镗峡珱巻~ung`YRKD=6 OJQJ^J OJQJ^J OJQJ^J OJQJ^J OJQJ^J OJQJ^J OJQJ^J OJQJ^J OJQJ^JOJPJQJ^JOJPJo(^JOJPJo(^JCJ OJPJQJ^JaJ CJ OJPJo(^JaJ nHtH'CJ OJPJo(^JaJ mH sH nHtHCJ OJPJo(^JaJ nHtHCJ OJPJo(^JaJ 'CJ OJPJo(^JaJ mH sH nHtHCJ OJPJo(^JaJ nHtHD F H J L \ ^ ` b d x z 2 4 R T V v x z 赉苷吻拦搏枏垇zsle^WPI OJQJ^J OJQJ^J OJQJ^J OJQJ^J OJQJ^J OJQJ^J OJQJ^J OJQJ^J OJQJ^J 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