We all know that some things are obviously right. For example, it is right to be 1 to other people. It is also right to look after the environment. Some things are 2 wrong, too. For instance, we should not hurt or bully(欺负) others, nor should we litter. Rules often tell us what is right or wrong.
Rules can help the public make the right 3 ,and remain safe. Car drivers have to obey traffic regulations that tell them the right things to do on the road to avoid crashes. Cyclists who give signals before turning or stopping help prevent 4 .
If people follow rules without taking other matters into consideration, it will be 5 for them to form what is sometimes called a “black and white” view. For example, they may believe that people should always tell the truth, and that lying is 6 acceptable. Such people always stick to their views, even if it means that they may get into 7 .
Sometimes it may not be so easy to know 8 what is right or wrong. Some people choose not to eat meat because they believe that it is 9 to eat animals, but others argue that they can eat meat and 10 be kind to animals; some insist that stealing is always wrong, but others think that one does not need to feel to 11 when stealing some food to eat, if lives in a really poor area and he is 12 . Rules help us live together in harmony, because they show us the right way to 13 other. However, some people argue that rules may be 14 , having observed that rules change all the time , and that some schools have some regulations and other have different ones ----so who is to 15 what is right ?
A.kind B.sensitive C.fair D.generous
A.equally B.slightly C.clearly D.increasingly
A.suggestion B.conclusions C.turns D.choices
A.accidents B.mistakes C.falls D.deaths
A.interesting B.vital C.easy D.valuable
A.seldom B.rarely C.merely D.never
A.trouble B.power C.prison D.control
A.roughly B.eventually C.deliberately D.exactly
A.awful B.cruel C.unhealthy D.unnecessary
A.still B.even C.later D.somehow
A.nervous B.anxious C.afraid D.guilty
A.begging B.staving C.growing D.wandering
A.follow B.instruct C.treat D.protect
A.disgusting B.confusing C.unsafe D.unimportant
A.predict B.explain C.decide D.consider
One family, which had emigrated from Japan and settled at the turn of the century near San Francisco, had established a business in which they grew roses and trucked them into San Francisco three mornings a week.
The other family was a naturalized(加入国籍的)family from Switzerland who also marketed roses, and 21 families became modestly successful, 22 their roses were known in the markets of San Francisco for their 23 vase-life.
For four decades the two families were neighbors, and the sons 24 the farms, but then on December 7, 1941, Japan 25 Pearl Harbor. Although the rest of the family members were American, the 26 of the Japanese family had never been naturalized. In the turmoil(动乱) and the questions about internment camps(拘留营), his neighbor made it clear that, if 27 , he would look after his friend’s nursery(花圃). It was 28 each family had learned in church—Love the neighbor as thyself. “You would do 29 for us, ” he told his Japanese friend.
It was not long before the Japanese 30 was transported to a poor landscape in Granada, Colorado. The relocation center consisted of tar-paper-roofed barracks (兵营) 31 by barbed wire and armed guards.
A full year went by. Then two. Then three. While the 32 neighbors were in internment, their friends worked in the greenhouses, the 33 before school and on Saturdays, and the father's work often stretched to 16 and 17 hours. And then 34 , when the war in Europe had
35 , the Japanese family packed up and 36 a train. They were going home.
What would they find? The family was 37 at the train station by their neighbors, and when they got to their home, the whole Japanese family stared.. There was the nursery, complete, clean and shining in the sunlight, neat, prosperous and healthy.
So was the balance of the bank passbook 38 to the Japanese father. And the house was 39 as clean and welcoming as the nursery.
And there on the dining room 40 was one perfect red rosebud, just waiting to unfold- the gift of one neighbor to another.
A.each B.both C.all D.two
A.as B.if C.unless D.though
A.short B.perfect C.long D.important
A.took over B.dealt with C.watched out D.handed over
A.achieved B.battled C.controlled D.attacked
A.children B.members C.father D.girls
A.possibility B.necessary C.likely D.possible
A.everything B.anything C.nothing D.something
A.the same B.similarly C.familiar D.the similar
A.father B.family C.neighbors D.mother
A.surrounded B.covered C.watched D.guarded
A.Swiss B.Swede C.naturalized D.Japanese
A.members B.girls C.children D.boys
A.sometime B.some day C.one time D.one day
A.completed B.ended C.started D.died
A.entered B.got C.boarded D.reached
A.met B.seen C.received D.accepted
A.referred B.devoted C.prepared D.handed
A.right B.quite C.just D.rather
A.chair B.table C.floor D.ground
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