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TEXT D It is interesting to reflect for a moment upon the differences in the areas of moral feeling and standards in the peoples of Japan and the United States. Americans divide these areas somewhat rigidly into spirit and flesh, the two beings in opposition in the life of a human being. Ideally spirit should prevail but all too often it is the flesh that does prevail. The Japanese make no such division, at least between one as good and the other as evil. They believe that a person has two souls, each necessary. One is the "gentle" soul; the other is the "rough" soul. Sometimes the person uses his gentle soul; sometimes he must use his rough soul. He does not favor his gentle soul; neither does he fight his rough soul. Human nature in itself is good, Japanese philosophers insist, and a human being does not need to fight any part of himself. He has only to learn how to use each soul properly at appropriate times. Virtue for the Japanese consists in fulfilling one’s obligations to others. Happy endings, either in life or in fiction, are neither necessary nor expected, since the fulfillment of duty provides the satisfying end, whatever the tragedy it inflicts. And duty includes a person’s obligations to those who have conferred benefits upon him and to himself as an individual of honor. He develops through this double sense of duty a self-discipline, which is at once permissive and rigid, depending upon the area in which it is functioning. The process of acquiring this self-discipline begins in childhood. Indeed, one may say it begins at birth—how early is the Japanese child given his own identity! If I were to define in a word the attitude of the Japanese toward their children I would put it in one succinct word "respect." Love Yes, abundance of love, warmly expressed from the moment he is put to his mother’s breast. For mother and child this nursing of her child is important psychologically. Rewards are frequent, a bit of candy bestowed at the right moment or an inexpensive toy. As the time comes to enter school, however, discipline becomes firmer. To bring shame to the family is the greatest shame for the child. What is the secret of the Japanese teaching of self-discipline It lies, I think, in the fact that the aim of all teaching is the establishment of habit. Rules are repeated over and over, and continually practiced until obedience becomes instinctive. This repetition is enhanced by the expectation of the elders. They expect a child to obey and to learn through obedience. The demand is gentle at first and tempered to the child’s tender age. It is no less gentle as time goes on, but certainly it is increasingly inexorable. Now, far away from that warm Japanese home, I reflect upon what I learned there. What, I wonder, will take the place of the web of love and discipline which for so many centuries has surrounded the life and thinking of the people of Japan (511 words) The Japanese idea of virtue is ______.

A. sublimiting the "rough" soul to permit ascendancy of the "gentle" soul
B. fulfilling one’s obligation to others
C. doing good and avoiding evil
D. being friendly and courteous to all people

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B 根据下面短文回答下列问题。 Miss Jane teaches English in school. Her students are very smart and polite. One day she was having an English class. She asked her students to read after her, and walked slowly, listening to each of the students. Suddenly she saw her own shoes were different. They were not a pair (一双). She quickly went to stand behind the big table and taught her class from there. When class was over, she went out of the classroom quickly. The next day she came to her class. Everybody was reading English. She was very happy. She went to check every student. To her surprise (令她惊讶的是), everyone was wearing a pair of mismatched (搭配错的) shoes. Miss Jane went to stand behind the big table when she saw her own shoes, because ______.

A. [A] standing there she can teach well
B. she usually stands there when the students read after her
C. her shoes were not a pair

From his talk with Professor Plant, we know that Michael ______.

A. is a freshman
B. is a bad student
C. is declining in his course study
D. has spent most of his time on course work

F: Hello! Welcome to Ranch Steak House.M: We’d like a table of two, please.F: All right. Would you prefer smoking or non-smokingM: Nonsmoking, please. And we’d like a table by the window if possible.F: OK, let me see ... Yes, we do have a table available right now. Follow me, please. Where does this conversation most probably take place().

A. In a school.
B. In a restaurant.
C. In a coffee house.

What do we know about Susan

A. She speaks English and Chinese.
B. She only speaks Chinese.
C. She only speaks English.

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