( )1. A. hate ( )2. A. realize ( )3. A. away ( )4. A. thought ( )5. A. must ( )6. A. for ( )7. A. test ( )8. A. talk to ( )9. A. same ( )10. A.allowed ( )11. A. how ( )12. A. would ( )13. A. explained ( )14. A. study ( )15. A. might ( )16. A. easy ( )17. A. turned ( )18. A. extra ( )19. A. either ( )20. A. all | B. love B. recognize B. for B. meaning B. should B. with B. know B. chat with B. different B. agreed B. whether B. will B. prepared B. work B. can B. difficult B. shouted B. ordinary B. too B. either | C. like C. know C. down C. news C. could C. around C. understand C. find out C. usual C. planned C. when C. could C. informed C. health C. should C. crazy C. went C. interesting C. also C. none | D. enjoy D. find D. on D. reason D. would D. about D. see D. do with D. unusual D. suggested D. what D. can D. developed D. body D. need D. silly D. came D. important D. again D. neither |
完形填空。 | |||
A serious car crash leads one woman to rediscover her faith in human kindness. long wait in the emergency ward and__6__me to deal with the visible distress of my hospital visitors. | |||
( )1. A.caught ( )2. A.imagined ( )3. A.push ( )4. A.into ( )5. A.survived ( )6. A.advised ( )7. A.assist ( )8. A.stay ( )9. A.patient ( )10.A.make ( )11.A.claim ( )12.A.presenting ( )13.A.accident ( )14.A.hoped ( )15.A.held ( )16.A.puzzled ( )17.A.knowledge ( )18.A.progress ( )19.A.unforeseen ( )20.A.sympathy | B.trapped B.found B.force B.onto B.met B.forced B.leave B.visit B.performance B.offer B.consult B.showing B.incident B.prepared B.lent B.doubted B.belief B.pride B.happier B.strength | C.lost C.devoted C.get C.off C.beat C.ordered C.participate C.operation C.presence C.drink C.conclude C.giving C.event C.waited C.moved C.stopped C.power C.surprise C.strange C.kindness | D.involved D.dreamed D.turn D.on D.feared D.helped D.come D.appointment D.physician D.take D.check D.telling D.occasion D.watched D.waved D.listened D.privilege D.comfort D.extreme D.donation |
阅读理解。 | |||
It was the summer of 1965. Deluca, then 17, visited Peter Buck, a family friend. Buck asked Deluca about his plan for the future. "I"m going to college, but I need a way to pay for it," Deluca recalls saying. "Buck said, "you should open a sandwich shop."" That afternoon, they agreed to be partners. And they set a goal: to open 32 stores in ten years. After doing some research, Buck wrote a check for $1,000. Deluca rented a storefront (店面) in Connecticut, and when they couldn"t cover their startup costs, Buck kicked in another $1,000. But business didn"t go smoothly as they expected. Deluca says, "After six months, we were doing poorly, but we didn"t know how badly, because we didn"t have any financial controls." All he and Buck knew was that their sales were lower than their costs. Deluca was managing the store and to the University of Bridgeport at the same time. Buck was working at his day job as a nuclear physicist in New York. They"d meet Monday evenings and brainstorm ideas for keeping the business running. "We convinced ourselves to open a second store. We figured we could tell the public, "We are so successful; we are opening a second store."" And they did-in the spring of 1966. Still, it was a lot of learning by trial and error. But the partners" learnasyougo approach turned out to be their greatest strength. Every Friday, Deluca would drive around and handdeliver the checks to pay their supplies. "It probably took me two and a half hours and it wasn"t necessary but as a result, the suppliers got to know me very well, and the personal relationships established really helped out," Deluca says. And having a goal was also important. "There are so many problems that can get you down. You just have to keep working toward your goal," Deluca adds. Deluca ended up founding Subways Sandwich, the multimilliondollar restaurant chain. | |||
1.Deluca opened the first sandwich shop in order to ________. | |||
A.support his family B.pay for his college education C.help his partner expand business D.do some research | |||
2.Which of the following is true of Buck? | |||
A.He put money into the sandwich business. B.He was a professor of business administration. C.He was studying at the University of Bridgeport. D.He rented a storefront for Deluca. | |||
3.What can we learn about their first shop? | |||
A.It stood at an unfavorable place. B.It lowered the prices to poor management. C.It made no profits due to poor management. D.It lacked control over the quality of sandwich. | |||
4.They decided to open a second store because they ________. | |||
A.had enough money to do it B.had succeeded in their business C.wished to meet the increasing demand of customers D.wanted to make believe(假装)that they were successful | |||
5.What contributes most to their success according to the author? | |||
A.Learning by trial and error. B.Making friends with supplies. C.Finding a good partner. D.Opening chain stores. | |||
完形填空。 | |||
It"s no secret that many children would be healthier and happier with adoptive parents than with the parents that nature dealt them. That"s especially__1__of children who remain in homes where they"re badly treated__2__the law blindly favors biological parents. It"s also true of children who__3__for years in foster (寄养) homes because of parents who can"t or won"t care for them but__4__to give up custody (监护) rights. Fourteenyearold Kimberly Mays__5__neither description, but her recent court victory could__6__ help children who do. Kimberly has been the__7__of an angry custody battle between the man who raised her and her biological parents, with whom she has never lived. A Florida judge__8__that the teenager can remain with the only father she"s ever known and that her biological parents have "no legal__9__"on her. Shortly after__10__in December 1978, Kimberly Mays and another baby were mistakenly switched and sent home with the__11__parents. Kimberly"s biological parents, Ernest and Regina Twigg, received a child who died of a heart disease in 1988. Medical tests__12__that the child wasn"t the Twiggs" own daughter, but Kimberly was, thus leading to a custody__13__with Robert Mays. In 1989, the two families__14__that Mr. Mays would maintain custody with the Twiggs getting__15__ rights. Those rights were ended when Mr. Mays decided that Kimberly was being__16__. The decision to__17__Kimberly with Mr. Mays caused heated discussion. But the judge made it clear that Kimberly did have the right to sue (起诉)__18__her own behalf. Thus he made it clear that she was__19__just a personal possession of her parents. Biological parentage does not mean an absolute ownership that cancels(取消) all the__20__of children. | |||
( )1.A.terrible ( )2.A.but ( )3.A.settle ( )4.A.have ( )5.A.likes ( )6.A.actually ( )7.A.victim ( )8.A.ruled ( )9.A.expectation ( )10.A.birth ( )11.A.biological ( )12.A.examined ( )13.A.battle ( )14.A.thought ( )15.A.equal ( )16.A.harmed ( )17.A.make ( )18.A.by ( )19.A.more than ( )20.A.freedom | B.sad B.if B.live B.refuse B.gives B.eventually B.object B.believed B.action B.judgment B.own B.explained B.right B.quarreled B.same B.forbidden B.leave B.through B.no more than B.happiness | C.true C.when C.suffer C.stick C.fits C.successfully C.sacrifice C.ordered C.effect C.operation C.kind C.decided C.agreement C.agreed C.visiting C.wounded C.give C.on C.not more than C.rights | D.natural D.because D.gather D.fail D.knows D.abruptly D.teenager D.indicated D.claim D.school D.wrong D.showed D.decision D.prepared D.speaking D.hidden D.keep D.in D.less than D.ideas |