( )1. A. give in ( )2. A. the other ( )3. A. kitchen ( )4. A. potatoes ( )5. A. with ( )6. A. confused ( )7. A. turned on ( )8. A. put ( )9. A. son ( )10. A. touch ( )11. A. strong ( )12. A. Now that ( )13. A. mean ( )14. A. questioned ( )15. A. water ( )16. A. similar ( )17. A. hard ( )18. A. What ( )19. A. looks ( )20. A. reaction | B. give up B. the rest B. storeroom B. carrots B. over B. excited B. turned down B. poured B. pot B. eat B. heavy B. Since then B. say B. explained B. pot B. same B. calm B. Whichever B. touches B. responsibility | C. go on C. another C. backyard C. tomatoes C. beyond C. surprised C. turned off C. flew C. kitchen C. smell C. light C. After that C. refer C. required C. stove C. different C. delicious C. Whose C. knocks C. answer | D. carry on D. the second D. bedroom D. apples D. without D. relaxed D. turned out D. picked D. daughter D. taste D. soft D. Once again D. think D. suggested D. fire D. wonderful D. broken D. Which D. waits D. impression |
阅读理解 | |||
The clock struck eleven at night. The whole house was quiet. Everyone was in bed except me. Under the strong light, I looked sadly before me at a huge pile of that troublesome stuff they call "books". I was going to have my examination the next day. "When can I go to bed?" I asked myself. I didn"t answer. In fact I dared not. The clock struck twelve. "Oh, dear!" I cried. "Ten more books to read before I can go to bed!" We pupils are the most wretched creatures in the world. Dad does not agree with me on this. He did not have to work so hard when he was a boy. The clock struck one. I was quite desperate now. I forgot all I had learned. I was too tired to go on. I did the only thing I could. I prayed, "Oh God, please help me pass the exam tomorrow. I do promise to work hard afterwards, Amen." My eyes were so heavy that I could hardly open them. A few minutes later, with my head on the desk, I fell asleep. | |||
1. The underlined word "wretched" in Paragraph 3 probably means ____________. | |||
A. happy B. disappointed C. unhappy D. hopeful | |||
2. Reviewing his lessons that night didn"t help him because ____________. | |||
A. it was too late at night B. he was very tired C. his eyelids were so heavy that he couldn"t keep them open D. he hadn"t studied hard before the examination | |||
3. What do you suppose probably happened to the author the next day? | |||
A. He went to a church to pray again. B. He passed the exam all by luck. C. He failed in the exam. D. He was punished by his teacher. | |||
4. The best title for the passage would be ____________. | |||
A. The Night Before the Examination B. Working Far into the Night C. A Slow Student D. Going Over My Lessons | |||
This is a true story from Guyana. One day, a boy took a piece of paper from a box. He made a paper ball and pushed it into his nose. He couldn"t get it out. He ran crying to his mother. His mother couldn"t get the paper out, either. A week later, the paper was still in the boy"s nose. His nose began to have a bad smell. So his mother took the boy to a hospital. The doctor looked up at the child"s nose, but she couldn"t get the paper out. She said she had to cut the boy"s nose to get the paper out. The boy"s mother came home looking sad. She didn"t want her child to have his nose cut. The next day she took the boy to her friend Sidney who lived in a house with an old lady called May. May wanted to see the child, so the child let her look up his nose. "Yes, I can see it," May said. "It will be out soon." As she spoke, she shook some black pepper on the child"s nose. The child gave a mighty sneeze and the paper flew out. His mother was surprised. May told his mother to take the boy to the seaside for a swim, for the salt water would go up his nose and stop the bad smell. So the lucky boy didn"t have to go to the hospital to have his nose cut. | |||
1. After the boy pushed a paper ball into his nose, ____. | |||
A. he took it out B. his mother took it out C. he did nothing but cry D. he tried to take it out but failed | |||
2. The paper ball stayed in the boy"s nose for ____. | |||
A. at most seven days B. less than seven days C. more than seven days D. exactly seven days | |||
3. Which of the following is TRUE? | |||
A. The doctor helped to take the paper ball out of the boy"s nose. B. May succeeded in taking the paper out. C. The boy"s mother found some black pepper to solve the problem. D. The boy had to have his nose cut at last. | |||
4. The boy should be taken to the seaside for a swim because ____. | |||
A. he needed to learn to swim B. the sea water would stop the bad smell of his nose. C. the sea water would wash out the paper ball. D. he needed a rest | |||
One night last February, a seventeen-year-old Duffy drove home along a winding road, he saw a strange light thrown against the tree. "I knew it wasn"t the moon", he said. "I drive this road all the time and I notice little things out of place." Duffy stopped his car and got out to examine. Below him far down in the deep valley lay a broken car with its headlights on. Thirty minutes earlier, a man had driven off the edge of the road, which has no guardrail. His car fell and rolled end over end, landing on its top more than two hundred feet below. Duffy rushed to call for help, then returned and got down to reach the injured driver. Snow covered the valley and the temperature was below freezing. After struggling back up the cliff, Duffy took off his jacket and shirt and wrapped the injured man in time, along with the blankets from his car. Life-saving deeds are starting to become usual action for Duffy, the oldest of seven children. When he was 12, he saved his ten-year-old brother from drowning. Two years ago, his three-year-old sister ate rat poison, and Duffy cleaned out her mouth, make her drink milk to protect her stomach and called doctors. "We have tried to teach the children good values, and it looks like we have got some reward for it." His father says. | |||
1. The strange light came from ________. | |||
A. The bright moon. B. Duffy"s car. C. The broken car in the valley D. an unknown place | |||
2. The phrase" landing on its top" means the car lay_________. | |||
A. on the top of the cliff B. with its wheels upward C. with its head upward D. on the road as usual | |||
3. From the above article, we can see Duffy has saved ________ at least. | |||
A. two B. three C. four D. five | |||
4. "We have tried to teach the children good values" may probably mean Duffy"s parents often tell their children_________. | |||
A. to help people in danger B. how to save people"s lives C. to remember the value of the car D. how to do business |