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if a person goes at a job with determination and purpose, he may 55 himself as well as others by his ability. 36. A. belief B. way C. fact D. condition 37. A. biggest B. most C. higher D. deepest 38. A. teaching B. learning C. accepting D. using 39. A. decision B. success C. effort D. trouble 40. A. would B. should C. must D. could 41. A. fet B. think C. guess D. understand 42. A. truly B. really C. however D. therefore 43. A. lead to B. strengthen C. increase D. add to 44. A. an experience B. an expert C. a thought D. a story 45. A. state B. mind C. start D. ending 46. A. classmates B. friends C. neighbours D. parents 47. A. blame B. expect C. get D. win 48. A. developed B. anized C. discovered D. found 49. A. a B. one C. its D. the 50. A. manage B. succeed C. try D. act 51. A. only B. almost C. just D. then 52. A. none B. all C. many D. most 53. A. lived B. worked C. played D. graduated 54. A. lesson B. medicine C. subjects D. maths 55. A. encourage B. love C. astonish D. disappoint 四、閱讀理解 (每小題 分, 滿分 30 分 ) 閱讀下列短文,從每題所給的四個(gè)選項(xiàng)( A、 B、 C 或 D)中,選出最佳選項(xiàng) A Albert Einstein was probably the most famous scientist of the twentieth century. He changed scientific thinking in the modern world. He is generally considered as the greatest physicist who ever lived. What’s more, he devoted a lot of his time and energy to working for human rights and progress. In 1933, while Einstein was visiting England and the United States, the Nazi government of Germany took all his things away, including his position and his citizenship. Einstein then settled down in the United States. In 1939, Einstein, who loved peace— afraid of a world in which only Hitler would had an atomic bomb(原子彈) — tried hard to persuade President Franklin D. Roosevelt in a famous letter to have the United States start uranium research. That Germany, after all, had no bomb, and that the first bomb would fall on Japan, could not have been expected. After the war, Einstein never stopped working for peace and reducing the number of soldiers in the world. Although he wasn’t connected with any accepted religion( 宗教 ) , Einstein felt that trust in a personal God was too special an idea to be suitable to the God at work in this universe, but he never believed that the universe was one of chance or disorder. The universe to him was one of pure law and order. He once said, “God may know everything, but he is not hateful.” 56. From the passage we know that . A. no scientist is as great as Albert Einstein during this century B. Albert Einstein was likely to be the greatest scientist of his time C. Albert Einstein made the first atomic bomb for the United States of America D. Albert Einstein gave up his German citizenship for political reasons 57. If Einstein had known that Hitler had no atomic bomb and that the first atomic bomb would fall on Japan, he would . A. have continued his scientific research B. have won another Nobel Prize for physics C. not have advised starting uranium research in the U. S. A. D. not have moved to the U. S. A. 58. Einstein in 1933. A. visited England and the U. S. A. B. lost everything C. became a man without a country D. both A and C 59. Einstein believed that everything in the universe . A. was kept in order by its own law B. had nothing to do with each other C. happened in an irregular way D. was made by the personal God B “ That’s funny! These fellows in the middle of the plate have died.” Dr Alexander Fleming was talking to another doctor in a laboratory in London. He had been studying some germs(細(xì)菌)that he was growing on a plate. They were very dangerous germs because they caused different kinds of illnesses that could kill people. Dr Fleming found that a mould( 霉菌 ) had floated in through the window landing on the plate. It had killed some of the germs it had touched. “This certainly looks promising.” Fleming said. “We must grow some of this mould to see if it will kill other germs.” He named the strange mould “penicillin”. It proved to be a killer of many germs. Fifty mice were given deadly germs and then half of them were injected( 注射 ) with penicillin. The twentyfive untreated mice died, but twentyfour of those lived that had been treated with penicillin. Dr Fleming wrote a report about what he had found out. Hardly anybody took any notice of it. In 1938 Dr Howard Florey, an Australian working in London, read Dr Fleming’s report and was very interested. He