This is a big reason why many successful people advise you to do something you love. If you don’t enjoy what you do, it is going to feel like unbearable pain and will likely make you quite well before you ever become good at it.
When you see people exhibiting some great skills or having achieved great success, you know that they have put in a huge part of their life to get there at a huge cost. It’s sometimes easy to think they were lucky or were born with some rare talent, but thinking that way does you no good, and there’s a huge chance that you’re wrong anyway.
Whatever you do, if you want to become great at it, you need to work day in and day out, almost to the point of addiction, and over a long period of time. If you’re not willing to put in the time and work, don’t expect to receive any rewards. Consistent, hard work won’t guarantee you the level of success you may want, but it will guarantee that you will become really good at whatever it is you put all that work into. 24. Paragraph 1 mainly talks about ________.
A. the reasons for success B. the meaning of success C. the standards of success D. the importance of success 25. Successful people suggest doing what one loves because ______.
A. work makes one feel pain B. one tends to enjoy his work C. one gives up his work easily D. it takes a lot of time to succeed 26. What can we infer from Paragraph 4?
A. It’s natural for successful people to show their skills. B. Success is from hard work not from luck or talent. C. People need to achieve success at the cost of life. D. It helps to think that luck or talent leads to success. 27. What is the main theme of the passage?
A. Having a goal is vital to success. B. Being good is different from being great.
C. One cannot succeed without time and practice. D. Luck, talent and family help to achieve success.
C
I decided a few months ago that I was going to treat myself to a 4-day getaway from Los Angeles and visit Chicago. I got a free airplane ticket, but had to pay the hotel in cash, which I really couldn’t afford. I found a travel website where a discounted 3-night stay was purchased from a recently opened hotel.
About three weeks before the trip, I had to regretfully cancel and only then realized the room, while transferable (可转手的) to another person, couldn't be changed to a later date and wasn't refundable. For the next two weeks I tried selling it on Craig's list with no success. Five days before the \some acquaintances who live in Chicago and offer someone a free stay. After trying a handful of people all of whom already had their own plans, I was determined to have the room not go to waste.
That's when it suddenly occurred to me that I was looking at the room in the wrong way. Instead of viewing it for vacation purposes, surely there must be a way to put it to good use, and that was the idea that some sort of shelter might be able to use it. I eventually found one whose focus is aiding victims of domestic violence. This particular one was willing to listen to my out-of-left-field story and made it easier to transfer the room. The shelter was working with a desperate woman and her daughter, who were fortunately able to make use of the room. I was later told by the shelter \ 28.We can learn from paragraph 1 that the author______.
A. had a tight budget B. bought his flight in cash C. was on business in Chicago D. preferred a hotel in good condition
29.Why did the writer decide to offer the room to someone?
A. Time for reservation was almost up. B. He had an extra room. C. It cost him nothing. D. His friend needed it.
30. The writer said he was looking at the room in the wrong way to mean that______. A. he may have lost his way
B. he had done something wrong C. he made a mistake about the room D. he should change the way of thinking 31. What did the author finally do with the room?
A. He gave it up. B. He sold it to a shelter.
C. He donated it to needy strangers. D. He put it off to a later use.
D
A global climate agreement has been finalized in Paris. The goal of preventing what scientists regard as dangerous levels of climate change—judged to be reached at around 2℃ of warming above pre-industrial times—is central to the agreement.
The world is already nearly halfway there and many countries argued for a tougher target of 1.5℃—including leaders of low-lying countries that face unsustainable sea levels rises in a warming world. The desire for a more ambitious goal has been kept in agreement—with the promise to “attempt to limit” global temperatures even more, to 1.5℃.
Dr Bill Hare, CEO of Climate Analytics, says the objective is “remarkable”. “It is a victory for the small islands, the least developed countries and all those with the most to lose”.
Meanwhile, for the first time, the agreement lays out a longer-term plan for reaching a peak in greenhouse emissions(排放) “as soon as possible” and achieving a balance between output of man-made greenhouse gases and absorption—by forests or the oceans—“by the
second half of this century”.
“If agreed and implemented(履行), this means bringing down greenhouse-gas emissions within a few decades. It is in line with the scientific evidence we presented,” says John Schellnhuber, Director of the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research.
“The Paris Agreement is only one step on a long road, and there are parts of it that frustrate and disappoint me, but it is progress,” says Greenpeace International executive director Kumi Naidoo. “This deal alone won’t dig us out the hole we’re in, but it makes the sides less steep.”
32. The global temperature has risen about ______.
A. 1℃. B. 1.5℃. C. 2℃. D. 2.5℃. 33. What is stressed in the Paris Agreement?
A. Check the rising global temperature.
B. Provide scientific evidence for global warming. C. Help developed countries deal with climate change. D. Balance the emission and absorption of greenhouse gas.
34. How did Kumi Naidoo feel when talking about the agreement in the last paragraph?
A. Satisfied. B. Optimistic. C. Upset. D. Anxious. 35. What is the passage mainly about?
A. A solution to the global warming. B. An argument about the seal level rises. C. An introduction to the Paris Agreement. D. A limitation on the greenhouse-gas emissions.
第二节 (共5小题;每小题2分,满分10分)
根据短文内容,从短文后的选项中选出能填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为多余选项。
Holidays can be a very lonely time, particularly for those who spend the holidays solo. 36
1. Plan your time in advance
You’ll have several days to fill up, so be proactive. Find books and movies you have always wanted to read and watch, and make a list of events that you’d like to attend. 37
2. Use your time wisely
38 See this time alone as a gift: a stretch of time where you have total control to do whatever you want. Use it wisely.
3. Don’t wallow (沉迷)
Holidays alone tend to be times when beating yourself up and getting depressed are more likely to happen. 39 Avoid solo holiday depression by re-arranging your time by yourself as an opportunity to grow. Be grateful—some people who are enduring family dinners wish they were in your place.
4. Volunteer
Food banks, shelters and crisis centers are short-staffed during holidays when the demand is the greatest. 40 And that will brighten other people’ s holidays in turn!
A. Do something fun, instead!
B. Meet for dinner, go for drinks, or throw a party. C. Helping out those in need will make you feel good. D. Regard it as an opportunity to refill your spiritual juice.
E. Here are tips to keep yourself balanced and productive over the holidays. F. Make a list of things you have always wanted to do but never had the time for. G. Without a plan you might find yourself being alone and bored, which will lower your spirits.
第三部分 语言知识运用(共两节,满分45分) 第一节 (共20 小题;每小题1.5分,满分30分)
阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和 D)中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。