单选题
According to the research,how may children be affected by their parents’lies?
A.They may fall behind in school.
B.They may lie to their parents too.
C.They may get confused about the society.
D.They may feel they are being overprotected.
推理题。题干意为“根据研究调查,父母的谎言会对孩子造成什么样的影响?”。文章第三段“…give children mixed messa.ges at a time when they are trying to figure out how to deal with the social world.”,由此可推理出,父母的谎言会影响孩子们对于社会的理解,故C为正确答案。
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1
What’d Heyman’d suggestion for parents?
A.Teach their children about rules.
B.Guide their children on sound beliefs.
C.Influence their children in various ways.
D.Figure out children’d problems in advance.
2
根据下面资料,回答题。
When Tom Szaky sees a juice container thrown away,he doesn’t see rubbish;he sees a pen-cil case.Sweet wrappers(包装纸)?A beautiful kite.But these are not the imaginings of a dream-er.For the 28-year-old CEO of Trenton,New Jersey-based TerraCycle,they’re a business model.
The fast-talking Szaky is leading the new industry of upcyclin9.Instead of recycling(shred-ding or breaking down materials and enabling them to be reproduced as other products),TerraCycle takes packaging headed for landfills(垃圾填埋)and reuses it-more or less whole.TerraCycle’s 85 employees make nearly 200 products,sold at shops such as Petco,Kmart,Whole Foods Mar-ket, and Target.
Szaky´s $ 7.4 million company, now also moving ahead in Mexico, Canada. the United
Kingdom and Brazil is a far cry from the business he founded with classmate Jon Beyer in 2002 as a freshman at Princeton University. The two entered a business competition with a plan to sell an organic plant fertilizer(有机肥料) made from worm waste. They lost the competition but started the business anyway.
With their goal--to make products entirely out of rubbish--suddenly clear, Szaky knew the time was fight to drop out of Princeton.
TerraCycle´ s first product used dining-hall waste to feed the worms and thrown-away bottles to package the fertilizer. The result: a cheap, green breakthrough. Word spread, and in 2004, Home Depot began carrying the fertilizer in its Canadian stores.
To Szaky, waste does not exist in nature. TerraCycle is a "second chance" employer of, say,a piece of furniture, an ice-cream container. As Szaky points out: "The biggest problem with most green, fair-trade, and organic products is that they tend to cost more. At TerraCycle, everything is made from rubbish, and rubbish is free. People should be able to protect the planet without having to pay a cost for that fight. "
Who is Tom Szaky?
A.A student at Princeton University.
B.The manager of a food company.
C.An employee of Home Depot.
D.CEO of TerraCycle.