完形填空     My first job was at a local diner, where I worked for seven years and l

完形填空     My first job was at a local diner, where I worked for seven years and l

题型:福建省期中题难度:来源:
完形填空     My first job was at a local diner, where I worked for seven years and learned so many lessons,
especially from a fellow waitress.
     Helen was in her 60s and had extraordinary self-respect, something I was really lacking. I      1     to
Helen because she was doing what she loved-      2      people--and nobody did it better.  She always
made everyone, customers and co-workers,       3     and feel good.
     Being a waitress changed my life. One of my      4      customers was Fred Hasbrook. He always ate
an omelet, and when I saw him coming, I tried to        5       it on his table as soon as he sat down.
     Thanks to the newfound confidence I      6      from Helen, I      7      having my own restaurant. But
when I called my parents to ask for a loan (贷款), they said, "We just don"t have the       8     ."
     The next day, Fred saw me and asked,  "What"s up? You"re not smiling today". I      9       my dream
with him and said, "Fred, I know I can do more       10      somebody would just have faith in me."
          11       he handed me checks totaling $ 50,000--along with a     12     that read, "The only
collateral(抵押) on this loan is my trust in your      13     as a person. Good people with a dream should
have the chance to realize that dream."
     I took the checks to Merrill Lynch, where the money was provided for me. I     14    working at the
diner, making     15     for the restaurant I would open during the break. My plans failed,      16     ,and I
lost the money.
Later I decided to apply for a job at Merrill Lynch.    17     I had no experience, I was     18     and
ended up becoming a pretty good agent.    19    I paid back Fred the $ 50,000, plus 14 percent annual
interest. Five years later, I was able to     20     my own firm.
答案
举一反三
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(     )1. A. looked on      
(     )2. A. helping        
(     )3. A. smile          
(     )4. A. regular        
(     )5. A. have          
(     )6. A. found out      
(     )7. A. set about      
(     )8. A. courage        
(     )9. A. shared        
(     )10. A. while        
(     )11. A. Long ago      
(     )12. A. letter        
(     )13. A. devotion      
(     )14. A. finished      
(     )15. A. wishes        
(     )16. A. instead      
(     )17. A. Even though  
(     )18. A. hired        
(     )19. A. Fortunately  
(     )20. A. design        
B. looked forward
B. respecting    
B. comfort        
B. average        
B. offer          
B. picked up      
B. dreamt of      
B. way            
B. told          
B. until          
B. Long before    
B. sign          
B. responsibility
B. practiced      
B. suggestions    
B. therefore      
B. As long as    
B. refused        
B. Eventually    
B. open          
C. looked up  
C. serving    
C. drink      
C. common      
C. leave      
C. got back    
C. tried on    
C. idea        
C. exchanged  
C. if          
C. Before long
C. word        
C. honesty    
C. continued  
C.  decisions  
C. though      
C. Because    
C. encouraged  
C. Personally  
C. set        
D. looked back    
D. praising      
D. sing          
D. fresh          
D. do            
D. took away      
D. went about    
D. money          
D. spared        
D. unless        
D. Long after    
D. note          
D. effort        
D. enjoyed        
D. plans          
D. meanwhile      
D. As            
D. discouraged    
D. Excitedly      
D. expand        
1-5:  DCABD     6-10: BAACD       11-15: BABDC    15-20:  BCACD
     Once again, I was in a new school. So was a girl in my class named Lisa. That"s where the similarities
ended.
     I was tall and she was small. My thick black hair had been recently cut short into an untidy style. Her
natural blonde hair flowed to her waist and looked great. I was 12 and one of the oldest in the class while
she was 11 and the youngest. I was awkward and shy. She wasn"t. I couldn"t stand her, considering her
my enemy. But she liked me and wanted to be friends.
     One day, she invited me over and I said yes-I was too shocked to answer any other way. My family
had moved six times in six years, and I had never managed to develop any friendships. But this girl who
wore the latest fashions wanted me to go home with her after school..
     She lived in a fun part of town that had two pizza places, an all-right bookstore, a movie theater and
a park. As we walked from the school bus stop through her neighborhood, I tried to guess which house
might be hers. Was it the white one with the perfect lawn or the three -story house with a front porch? I
got very surprised when she led me into an old apartment building. She lived on the fourth floor in a
two-room place with her mother, her stepfather, her two brothers and her sister.
     When we got into the room she shared with her sister, she took out a big case of Barbies, which was
my next surprise. I had never played with them. We sat on the floor, laughing as we made up crazy stories about the Barbies. We found out that we both wanted to be writers when we were older and both had
wild imaginations. We had a great day that afternoon.
     Lisa was loved by the whole neighborhood. The bookstore owners lent her fashion magazines; the
movie theater gave her free tickets…Soon I was included in her magic world. We slept over at each
other"s houses and spent every free moment together.
     Lisa, my first real friend since childhood, helped me get through the rough years of early adolescence
and taught me an amazing and very surprising thing about making friends: your worst enemy can turn out
to be your best friend.
1. The writer and Lisa were similar in the way that           .
A. they were both tall
B. they had the same hair styles
C. they were both new students
D. they were of the same age
2. One day Lisa invited the writer                   .        
A. to go to the movie
B. to go to walk in a park
C. to go to her home
D. to go to a pizza place
3. In the passage the writer described Lisa as a girl who was                  .        
A. friendly and lovely
B. rich and happy
C. quiet and lonely
D. awkward and shy
4. Which of the following did the writer learn from Lisa?
A. How to make up stories.
B. How to deal with enemies.
C. How to live a better life.
D. How to make friends.
     Growing up in Philadelphia, Lieberman started cooking with his stay-at-home dad when he was
seven. His food-loving family had two kitchens, and he quickly learned what was the best way to bake
his cakes. Lieberman improved his kitchen skills greatly during a year abroad before college, learning
from a cook in Italy and studying local specialties(地方特色菜)in Germany, Spain and France. At Yale,
he was known for throwing dinner parties, single-handedly frying and baking while mixing drinks for
dozens of friends. Just for fun, he and some friends decided to tape a show named Campus Cuisine
about his cooking. Lieberman was a real college student showing his classmates how to do things like
making drinks out of dining-hall fruit. That helped the show become very popular among the students.
They would stop Lieberman after classes to ask for his advice on cooking. Tapes of the show were
passed around, with which his name went beyond the school and finally to the Food Network.
     Food Network producer Flay hopes the young cook will find a place on the network television. He
says Lieberman"s charisma is key. "Food TV isn"t about food anymore," says Flay. "It"s about your
personality and finding a way to keep people"s eyeballs on your show."
     But Lieberman isn"t putting all his eggs in one basket. After taping the first season of the new show,
Lieberman was back in his own small kitchen preparing sandwiches. An airline company was looking
for some one to come up with a tasteful, inexpensive and easy-to-make menu to serve on its flights,
Lieberman got the job.
1. We can learn from the text that Lieberman"s family ____.
A. have relatives in Europe  
B own a restaurant.
C. love cooking at home    
D. often hold parties
2. The Food Network got to know Lieberman ____.
A. through his taped show
B. from his teachers
C. at one of his parties
D. on a television program
3. What does the word "charisma" underlined in the text refer to?
A. Lieberman"s fine cooking skill.
B. A way to show one"s achievement.
C. Lieberman"s after-class interest.
D. A natural ability to attract others.
4. Why did the airline company give Lieberman the job?
A. He could prepare meals in a small kitchen.
B. He could cook cheap, delicious and simple meals.
C. He was good at using eggs to make sandwiches.
D. He was famous for his shows on Food TV.
5. What can we learn about Lieberman from the text?
A. he is friendly and active.      
B. He is clever but lonely.
C. He enjoys traveling around.
D. He often changes his menus.
完形填空
     We may look at the world around us, but somehow we manage not to see it until whatever we"ve
become used to suddenly disappears. __1 _, for example, the neatly-dressed woman I __2 _ to see -- or
look at -- on my way to work each morning.
     For three years, no matter __3 _ the weather was like, she was always waiting at the bus stop around 8:00 a.m. On __4 _ days, she wore heavy clothes and a pair of woolen gloves. Summertime __5 _ out
neat, belted cotton dresses and a hat pulled low over her sunglasses. __6 _, she was an ordinary working
woman. Of course, I __7__ all this only after she was seen no more. It was then that I realized how 
__8__ I expected to see her each morning. You might say I __9__ her.
     "Did she have an accident? Something __10 ?" I thought to myself about her _11 _.  Now that she was
gone, I felt I had __12   her. I began to realize that part of our _13 _ life probably includes such chance
meetings with familiar _14 _: the milkman you see at dawn, the woman who _15 _ walks her dog along the
street every morning, the twin brothers you see at the library. Such people are _16 _ markers in our lives.
They add weight to our _17   of place and belonging.
     Think about it. _18 _ while walking to work, we mark where we are by _19__ a certain building, why
should we not mark where we are when we pass a familiar, though _20 _ person?
(     )  1. A. Make        
(     )  2. A. happened    
(     )  3. A. what        
(     )  4. A. sunny        
(     )  5. A. took        
(     )  6. A. Clearly      
(     )  7. A. believed    
(     )  8. A. long        
(     )  9. A. respected    
(     )10. A. better      
(     )11. A. disappearance
(     )12. A. forgotten    
(     )13. A. happy        
(     )14. A. friends      
(     )15. A. regularly    
(     )16. A. common      
(     )17. A. choice      
(     )18. A. Because      
(     )19. A. keeping      
(     )20. A. unnamed      
B. Take          
B. wanted        
B. how          
B. rainy          
B. brought        
B. Particularly  
B. expressed      
B. often          
B. missed        
B. worse        
B. appearance    
B. lost          
B. enjoyable      
B. strangers      
B. actually      
B. pleasant      
B. knowledge    
B. If            
B. changing      
B. unforgettable  
C. Give        
C. used        
C. which        
C. cloudy      
C. carried      
C. Luckily      
C. remembered  
C. soon        
C. praised      
C. more        
C. misfortune  
C. known        
C. usual        
C. tourists    
C. hardly      
C. important    
C. decision    
C. Although    
C. passing      
C. unbelievable
D. Have        
D. tried      
D. when        
D. snowy      
D. turned      
D. Especially  
D. wondered    
D. much        
D. admired    
D. less        
D. fortune    
D. hurt        
D. daily      
D. guests      
D. probably    
D. faithful    
D. sense      
D. However    
D. mentioning  
D. unreal      
阅读理解。
        Margaret, married with two small children, has been working for the last seven years as a night
cleaner, cleaning offices in a big building.
        She trained as a nurse, but had to give it up when her elder child became seriously ill.“I would have
liked to go back to it, but the shifts(工作班次) are all wrong for me, as I have to be home to get the
children up and off to school.”
        So she works as a cleaner instead, from 9 p.m.till 6 a.m.five nights a week for just £90, before tax
and insurance.“It’s better than it was last year, but I still think that people who work ‘unsocial hours’
should get a bit extra.”
        The hours she’ s chosen to work mean that she sees plenty of the children, but very little of her
husband.However, she doesn’t think that puts any pressure on their relationship.
        Her work isn’t physically very hard, but it’s not exactly pleasant, either.“I do get angry with people
who leave their offices like a place for raising pigs.If they realized people like me have to do it, perhaps
they’d be a bit more careful.”
        The fact that she’s working all night doesn’t worry Margaret at all.Unlike some dark buildings at
night, the building where she works is fully lit, and the women work in groups of three.“Since I’ve got to
be here, I try to enjoy myself-and I usually do, because of the other girls.We all have a good laugh, so the
time never drags.”
        Another challenge Margaret has to face is the reaction of other people when she tells them what she
does for a living.“They think you’re a cleaner because you don’t know how to read and write,” said
Margaret.“I used to think what my parents would say if they knew what I’d been doing, but I don’t think
that way any more.I don’t dislike the work though I can’t say I’m mad about it.”
1.Margaret quit her job as a nurse because _______.  
A.she wanted to earn more money to support her family
B.she had suffered a lot of mental pressure
C.she needed the right time to look after her children
D.she felt tired of taking care of patients
2.Margaret gets angry with people who work in the office because _______.
A.they never clean their offices    
B.they look down upon cleaners
C.they never do their work carefully    
D.they always make a mess in their offices
3.When at work, Margaret feels _______.

A.light-hearted because of her fellow workers
B.happy because the building is fully lit
C.tired because of the heavy workload
D.bored because time passes slowly


4.The underlined part in the last paragraph implies that Margaret’s parents would _______.  
A.help care for her children   
B.regret what they had said
C.show sympathy for her    
D.feel disappointed in her
完形填空。

     Ben and his wife Susan were on their way to have dinner with their friends, Ian and Betty. It was a
dark,   1   night, and they did not know the road very well. They   2   through Cookstown, until they
found   3   they thought was the road to Dorling,   4   Ian and Betty lived.   5   it soon became clear that
they were not on the road to   6   at all. The road that they were on was getting   7  , and there were not
other   8   on it. The wind was blowing   9   with every minute that passed.    
     They came to a small   10  . They drove past a church, and then two houses without lights on. There
was   11   about to tell them where they   12  , or where the road went. Just then Ben saw a
telephone-box, fifty metres or so further on. While he walked   13   along the road to see if there was a
name outside the church, Susan   14   Ian and Betty to tell that they were still   15  .    
     Betty was just saying that the   16  as already rather dry, when Ben came back to the   17  , his head
down   18   the wind. He said that there was a tree   19   across the road, and that the telephone lines
were down, Susan heard   20   more from Betty about the dinner.


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(     )1. A. cloudy
(     )2. A. rode
(     )3. A. what 
(     )4. A. there     
(     )5. A. And    
(     )6. A. Coodstown 
(     )7. A. narrower 
(     )8. A. bikes 
(     )9. A. hard 
(     )10. A. house 
(     )11. A. somebody 
(     )12. A. were 
(     )13. A. forward 
(     )14. A. wrote 
(     )15. A. at home 
(     )16. A. dinner 
(     )17. A. telephone box 
(     )18. A. on 
(     )19. A. standing 
(     )20. A. something 

B. rainy      
B. ran      
B. that      
B. which       
B. But       
B. their own home
B. wider     
B. cars     
B. heavily     
B. village     
B. nobody     
B. went     
B. ahead     
B. explained  
B. on their way
B. weather     
B. church      
B. to       
B. lying     
B. a little     


C. windy     
C. walked      
C. which      
C. where      
C. So        
C. Dorling      
C. longer    
C. trains    
C. harder    
C. church       
C. anybody      
C. passed       
C. around      
C. visited      
C. in Cookstown   
C. coat       
C. houses      
C. against     
C. laying    
C. much         
D. snowy              
D. drove              
D. when                
D. that                
D. Or                  
D. a village          
D. farther            
D. carts              
D. more heavily        
D. telephone box      
D. everybody          
D. drove              
D. back                
D. telephoned          
D. in the church      
D. water              
D. village            
D. into                
D. growing            
D. nothing