ɽ¶«Ê¡ÁÙÒÊÊÐ2019½ì¸ßÈýÉÏѧÆÚ11ÔÂ·ÝÆÚÖп¼ÊÔ¼ì²âÓ¢Óï Word°æº¬´ð°¸

C£®You must bring a piece of official photo ID£® D£®You can not register if you don¡¯t have a passport£® 23£®What can we learn from the passage?

A£®You can only have food with meat in Konnopke¡¯s£®

B£®You can have a full sightseeing in Berlin within two hours£® C£®You can only choose walking tours to visit Berlin£®

D£®You can enjoy the food and the atmosphere in the Adana Grillhaus£®

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Ma did well in math and science classes in high schoo1£®And he ended up choosing to study electrical engineering in college£®Several engineering jobs later£¬though£¬Ma had a change of heart£®He wanted to enter the restaurant business£®It was in his blood£®After a11£¬his parents had owned a Chinese restaurant in Arkansas£®His uncle also owned one in New York£®

Ma has a clear memory of when he decided to open his own restaurant£®His parents could not understand why he would leave such a good job to open a restaurant£®But Ma remained certain£®He was going to do things different from his parents£®He was able to learn from their one major mistake as restaurant owners¡ªthey knew very little about the art of cooking£®

¡°My parents knew nothing about cooking or owning a restaurant£¬so they could only let their excellent chef start to go across the street and open a Chinese restaurant and it really put my parents in a bad situation£®¡±

So£¬at age 30£¬Ma decided to return to a cooking school named International Culinary Center£®Then he received training in French cooking£®He wanted to study the fundamentals of cooking so that he could work as a chef in his own restaurant£®

He originally didn¡¯t know anything about cooking£®Never cooked through his entire life up until this point£®Ma soon learned that he enjoyed cooking£®He discovered it was similar to engineering£®¡°Professional cooking is consistency£¬efficiency£¬cleanliness and it¡¯s all about the process of things which you know my background in engineering was£¬¡±said Ma£®

In 2009£¬Ma opened his first restaurant in Virginia£®It is called Maple Avenue£¬

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which serves American cuisine£®At Maple Avenue£¬Ma did everything£¬and he worked long hours£¬seven days a week£®His long hours paid off£®Ma opened his fourth restaurant last year£¬Kyirisan in Washington£¬D£®C£®He mixes his training in French cooking with his Chinese heritage to create new dishes£®

Kyirisan¡¯s success is due to the creative menu and food£¬Ma says£®

¡°I think you can create your own success£¬just by working hard£®Not because you¡¯re smarter than anybody£¬not because you¡¯re more creative than anybody£¬just by working hard£®¡±

24£®Why did Ma want to open his own restaurant? A£®He felt it difficult to be an engineer£® B£®He had to help his parents support his family£® C£®He was greatly influenced by his family£®

D£®His parents and his uncle all owned restaurants in New York£® 25£®What made his parents¡¯business poor? A£®They lacked the professional management£® B£®They were cheated by their chef£®

C£®They were not creative enough in making menus£® D£®Their dishes were not tasty enough£®

26£®What does the underlined word¡°fundamentals¡±in paragraph 4 refer to? A£®Different menus£® C£®Necessary skills£®

B£®Useful cookers£® D£®General steps£®

27£®What is the key factor for Ma¡¯s final success? A£®His being smarter than anybody else£® B£®His hard work and great effort£®

C£®The places he chose for his restaurants£® D£®The help from his parents and his wife£®

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Every year between May and September£¬all 54 employees of Basecamp£¬a Chicago¡ªbased web applications company£¬work a short week£ºjust four days¡ªa total of 32 hours£®They work a conventional five-day week the rest of the year£®

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¡°That¡¯s plenty of time to get great work done£®This is all we expect and all we want from people£¬¡±says Jason Fried£¬co-founder£®¡°Working 60 or 70 hours is unnecessary£®In fact£¬if you have to work 60 or 70 hours a week£¬there¡¯s a management problem£®¡±

The company¡¯s summer workload must fit reduced hours£¬Mr£®Fried insists£¬otherwise the benefits of a shorter week¡ª¡ªto recover from work£¬enjoy time with family and pursue outside interests¡ªwould be undone£®

His thought chimes with new research that finds it is not just long hours that are harmful to employees¡¯physical and mental health£®It is also the intensity of work¡ªtight deadlines and an unrelated pace£®Moreover£¬it suggests that intense work harms career prospects£®That is because long hours and intensity reduce the quality of the work£®

The study£¬to be published in the Industrial and Labor Relations Review£¬concludes that the level of intensity we apply to the work we do is generally¡°a stronger predictor of unfavourable outcomes than overtime work¡±£®

The researchers£¬Argyro Avgoustaki£¬assistant professor of management at ESCP Europe and Hans Frankort£¬senior lecturer in strategy at Cass Business School£¬compared people in similar jobs and education levels£¬and found they were more likely to suffer poorer well¡ªbeing and low career prospects£¬including satisfaction£¬security and promotion£¬when they worked at an intense level for long periods£® 28£®What can we learn about the company? A£®Working 32 hours is unnecessary£® B£®There is a management problem£®

C£®Its summer workload is suitable for its shorter hours£® D£®Its employees work a four¡ªday week conventionally£®

29£®What does the underlined phrase¡°chime with¡±in paragraph 4 mean? A£®Contribute to£® B£®Consist with£® C£®Deal with£®

D£®Go against£®

30£®What are harmful to employees¡¯health according to Mr£®Fried? A£®Career prospects and intensity£® B£®Tight deadlines and reduced hours£®

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C£®Long hours and intensity£®

D£®Career prospects and poorer well-being£® 31£®From which is the text probably taken? A£®A health magazine£® C£®A culture report£®

B£®A biology textbook£®

D£®A travel brochure£®

D

It is perhaps unsurprising that a study started and funded by the wool industry would conclude that wool is the best material to sleep in£®The study£¬by the University of Sydney£¬has found that wearing wool pyjamas(˯ÒÂ)over cotton can result in up to 15 minutes extra sleep£®Wool£¬apparently£¬regulates body temperature better and keeps our bodies in the¡°warm comfort zone¡±for better¡ªquality sleep£®

Wool has also been called a¡°super¡ªfibre¡±thanks to its drying functions(especially useful for those who suffer night sweats)£¬which is the selling point£®The National Sleep Foundation£¬a US nonprofit£¬lists wool among its recommended materials to sleep in£®It also promotes silk£¬which it calls a¡°thermoregulator¡±,but warns it might be¡°slippery¡±as well as expensive£®

According to a survey last autumn£¬40£¥of adults in the UK wear pyjamas in bed£¬20£¥wear underwear and a third wear nothing£®But guess what? That survey was also conducted by the wool industry to push its products£®So£¬basically£¬the wool industry wants us to just follow everything they say£¬like sheep£®

It is well known that worrying has a negative impact on our ability to sleep£¬so perhaps not stressing too much about pyjama material is the best advice£®Then again£¬perhaps there is something else to worry about¡ªskincare experts are trying to persuade us that cotton pillowcases cause wrinkles because of friction£®The National Health Service doesn¡¯t seem to care about pyjama material£¬however£®Its sleep health guidance includes a room temperature of between 18¡æand 24¡æ£¬thick curtains to increase darkness and keeping tech in other parts of the house£®So wear what you want¡ª¡ªthe advice that also applies when you¡¯re awake£® 32£®What is mainly talked about in the first two paragraphs? A£®The introduction of the wool industry£®

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