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Every weekend from September through January, football seems to be the most important even

t in the lives of millions of Americans. Thousands of people【C1】______to stadiums all over the country to【C2】______football games; even【C3】______fans watch the games on the television or listen to broadcasts on the radio. American football is different from the game that is【C4】______as football in most of the rest of the world. International football is called soccer in the United States,【C5】______it is a comparatively new game. It is beginning to become popular,【C6】______it doesnt attract crowds nearly as big as【C7】______that attend games of American football. Soccer games are shown on Television only【C8】______in a while, usually【C9】______a famous player in taking part. American football games are played by both amateurs, who dont get paid, and by【C10】______, who do. Almost【C11】______high school and university in the country has an amateur football team. In addition, there are professional teams in most of the larger cities. Besides football, the most【C12】______games in the United States are baseball and basketball. All of these【C13】______are spectator sports that is only a few people actually take part in them【C14】______many more(into the millions, in fact)only watch【C15】______. Participant sports are not usually as organized as spectator sports ; they include【C16】______activities【C17】______swimming, tennis and golf. Spectator sports give average people the【C18】______to identify with athletes who seem a little larger than life. Football players in the United States and soccer players in other【C19】______have become popular heroes. Football also gives people the opportunity to become a【C20】______of a community to cheer for New York over Chicago, or for San Paulo over Rio de Janeiro.

【C1】

A.travel

B.visit

C.go

D.walk

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更多“Every weekend from September t…”相关的问题
第1题
My father’s government job demanded that he go overseas every few years, so I was use
d to _ myself away from friends

A、interact

B、wrench

C、beckon

D、lunatic

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第2题
Every so often ,she spends a weekend in London.()
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第3题
The Hawaiian Islands are one of the most beautiful places on earth.The weather is friendly.The tempe
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第4题
From the passage, we can learn that, in protecting one's personal information, it is advisable _
_____.

A.to install antivirus programs on every node in the network

B.to turn to Internet security companies for help

C.to hide his IP address by using some sort of software

D.to come offline from time to time

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第5题
What can we infer from this passage?A.A dog may find its owner's disease even before docto

What can we infer from this passage?

A.A dog may find its owner's disease even before doctors.

B.Walking a dog every day will make it more sensitive.

C.Humans may turn to a dog for a discovery about the earth.

D.Humans should find more of a dog before it is too late.

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第6题
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All of the following are true EXCEPT ______.

A.the atmosphere is important to none.

B.a great deal of damage from the sun's deadly rays would be done to us, if there were no at mosphere.

C.the atmosphere, as the author described, is the roof under which man can live safely on Earth.

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第7题
"How was your weekend?" This question comes up at workplaces all over the United States ev

"How was your weekend?"

This question comes up at workplaces all over the United States every Monday morning as people greet each other. It is another way of saying, "How did you spend your leisure time?"

In the Unites States the way people spend their leisure time is an important part of their identity. Perhaps everybody does nearly the same thing all day in the office or the factory, but leisure time is what makes people distinct and reveals who they are.

For many people, leisure time means going somewhere -- to a museum, a concert, a restaurant, or a baseball game. Or it means doing something such as playing volleyball, backpacking, swimming, singing in a chorus (合唱), or playing in a park with their children. For other people, free time means staying home with wonderful sources of entertainment, such as VCR, stereo or cable TV with dozens of channels. Others pursue creative activities such as cooking, gardening, and home improvement. The latest stay-at, home activity is "surfing (冲浪) the net" -- that is, looking for information and entertainment on the Internet.

In the United States, leisure time is big business. Enormous amounts of money are spent by competing enterprises that make and sell the goods and services that people use in their free time. In fact, shopping itself is an important leisure time activity. Spending a day at a giant mall has become, for some people, as interesting as spending the day at museum or amusement park.

People in the United States are ultimately not much different from others in what they do in their leisure time. The real difference may lie in the energy, time, money, and sheer enthusiasm that they devote to it.

Why do Americans often greet each other by asking "How did you spend your leisure time?"

A.Because they are interested in the different pastime activities.

B.Because leisure time is what makes people different from each other.

C.Because they are bored with the job they have done for the whole week.

D.Because everybody does the same thing all day long.

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第8题
—Were you busy last weekend? —Very. Rather than () time playing cards as usual, I devote every effort to () an advertisement.

A、wasting, making

B、waste, make

C、to waste, make

D、a waste of, making

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第9题
In 2000, with little but a bar and a church left to make it a destination,, tiny St. James
, Nebraska, was taken off state highway maps. Then the church closed, and the small farm village in the state's northeast comer looked set to just disappear. Thanks to five devoted women, it didn't.

In May 2001, after meeting with staff from the Center for Rural Affairs, the friends -- Louise Guy, Vicky Koch, Jeanette Pinkelan, Mary Rose Pinkelman and Violet Pinkelman -- opened a weekend market for vendors (小商贩) to sell handcrafts and local food.

"We felt like, what can we do to bring the community together?" says Mary Rose Pinkelman. "We decided to make a place to sell local goods." They set up shop in the church school, which, though closed for nearly 40 years, had been well maintained. The first weekend, 16 vendors took over an old classroom. The result was an instant hit. Today, the market draws up to 70 vendors -- who sell such items as homemade jellies, baked goods, hand-woven rugs, and farm-grown produce -- and what Pinkelman calls an unexpected number of visitors. In the process, the market has made St. James a destination again, putting it back on the state road map.

According to Paragraph 1, what fate was St. James, Nebraska suffering ?

A.The replacement of the church.

B.The disappearance from highway maps.

C.The closedown of the bar.

D.The set-up of a market.

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第10题
During McDonald's early years French fries were made from scratch every day. Russet Burban
k potatoes were【C1】______, cut into shoestrings, and fried in its kitchens.【C2】______the chain expanded nationwide, in the mid-1960s, it sought to【C3】______labour costs, reduce the number of suppliers, and【C4】______that its fries tasted the same at every restaurant. McDonald's began【C5】______to frozen French fries in 1966—and few customers noticed the difference.【C6】______, the change had a profound effect【C7】______the nation's agriculture and diet. A familiar food had been transformed into a highly processed industrial【C8】______McDonald's fries now come from huge manufacturing plants【C9】______can process two million pounds of potatoes a day. The expansion【C10】______McDonald's and the popularity of its low-cost, mass-produced fries changed the way Americans eat.

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【C1】

A.scaled

B.stripped

C.peeled

D.sliced

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第11题
The one thing all children have in common is their rights. Every child has the right to su
rvive and thrive, to be educated, to be free from violence and abuse, to participate and to be heard. These are innate human rights, as inalienable as those held by adults. But until 1989, these rights were not formally articulated in a legally binding instrument, nor were governments fully accountable to advance these rights for every child. This all changed 25 years ago, on Universal Children s Day, when the United Nations adopted the Convention on the Rights of the Child. It rapidly became the most widely ratified human rights treaty in history.

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