问题 单项选择题

下岗工人将获得7万美元的补偿,这相当于普通蓝领工人两年的税后年薪。仅靠这笔钱,在美元疲软、物价上涨的时代并不能( ),不过尚能维持一个家庭几年的正常生活。

A.高枕无忧

B.一劳永逸

C.丰衣足食

D.为所欲为

答案

参考答案:C

解析:选项A“高枕无忧”比喻思想麻痹,丧失警惕。选项B“一劳永逸”是指辛苦一次把事情办好,以后就可以不再费力了。选项C“丰衣足食”是指穿的吃的都很丰富充足,形容生活富裕。选项D“为所欲为”侧重于想干什么就干什么。从以上几个成语的含义可以看出,A、B、D均不符合题意,C项可以用来形容家庭生活水平,并且比“尚能维持一个家庭几年的正常生活”程度要深,符合题意。

单项选择题
单项选择题

Questions 61-64 are based on the following passage.
"It’s like being bitten to death by ducks." That’s how one mother described her constant squabbles with her eleven-year-old daughter. And she’s hardly alone in the experience. The arguments almost always involve mundane matters—taking out the garbage, coming home on time, cleaning up the bedroom. But despite its banality, this relentless bickering takes its adolescents—particularly mothers—report lower levels of life satisfaction, less marital happiness, and more general distress than parents of younger children. Is this continual arguing necessary
For the past two years, my students and I have been examining the day-to-day relation-ships of parents and young teenagers to learn how and why family ties change during the transition from childhood into adolescence. Repeatedly, I am struck by the fact that, despite considerable love between most teens and their parents, they can’t help sparring. Even in the closest of families, parents and teenagers squabble and bicker surprisingly often—so often, in fact, that we hear impassioned recountings of these arguments in virtually every discussion we have with parents or teenagers. One of the most frequently heard phrases on our interview tapes is, "We usually get along but..."
As psychologist Anne Petersen notes, the subject of parent-adolescent conflict has generated considerable controversy among researchers and clinicians. Until about twenty years ago, our views of such conflict were shaped by psychoanalytic clinicians and theorists, who argued that spite and revenge, passive aggressiveness and rebelliousness toward parents are all normal, even healthy, aspects of adolescence. But studies conducted during the 1970s on samples of average teenagers and their parents (rather than those who spent Wednesday afternoons on analysts’ couches) challenged the view that family storm and stress was inevitable or pervasive. These surveys consistently showed that three-fourths of all teenagers and parents, here and abroad, feel quite close to each other and report getting along very well. Family relations appeared far more pacific than professionals and the public had believed.

The parents-children relationship changes from the relative positive to the relative negative when ______.

A.the children reach 7 or 8 years of age

B.the children reach 13 or 14 years of age

C.the parents begin to have too many household responsibilities

D.the parents begin to feel there is too much burden in the house