完形填空。     When I was in junior high, the eighth-grade bully (欺凌弱小者) struck me in

完形填空。     When I was in junior high, the eighth-grade bully (欺凌弱小者) struck me in

题型:浙江省模拟题难度:来源:
完形填空。     When I was in junior high, the eighth-grade bully (欺凌弱小者) struck me in the stomach. Not only
did it   1  , but the shame and embarrassment were almost impossible to bear. I wanted   2   to even the
score (摆平)! I   3  to meet him by the bike racks the next day and let him have it.
For some reason, I told my plan to Nana, my grandmother-big   4  . She gave me one of her hour-long   5 . It was a total    6  , but among other things, I vaguely    7   her telling me that I didn"t need to worry about him. She said, "Good deeds beget (产生) good results,   8   evil deeds beget bad results." I told her,
in a nice way, that I thought she was right. I told her that I did good things all the time, and all I got  9 
was a strike in the stomach. She stuck to her opinions,  10  .
It   11   me 30 years to understand the   12   of her words. Nana was living in a board-and-care home in
Laguna Hills, California. Each Tuesday, I   13   and took her out to dinner. We drove to a nearby simple
little restaurant. I   14   pot roast for Nana and a hamburger for myself. The food arrived and as I dug in,
I noticed that Nana wasn"t eating. She was just staring at the food on her plate. 15   my plate aside, I took Nana"s and cut her meat into small pieces. I then placed the plate back. 16  she very weakly, and with
great difficulty, forked the meat into her mouth, I was struck with a(n)   17   that brought instant tears to
my eyes. Forty years  18  , as a little boy sitting at the table, Nana had always done the same to me.
     It had taken 40 years, but the good deed had been   19  . Nana was right. We harvest exactly  20 
we sow. "Every good deed you do will someday come back to you."What about the eighth-grade bully?
He ran into the ninth-grade bully.(     )1. A. harm          
(     )2. A. eventually    
(     )3. A. organized    
(     )4. A. trouble    
(     )5. A. lectures      
(     )6. A push            
(     )7. A. remind      
(     )8. A. as          
(     )19. A. in time  
(     )10. A. therefore    
(     )11. A. needed    
(     )12. A. wisdom    
(     )13. A. came off    
(     )14. A prepared      
(     )15. A. Taking    
(     )16. A If            
(     )17. A. mind       
(     )18. A once          
(     )19. A returned      
(     )20. A. which     B. injure    
B. immediately
B. planned    
B. prize      
B. stories    
B encouragement
B. remember    
B. but      
B. in turn    
B. however    
B. spent    
B. intelligence
B. came back  
B booked      
B. Removing    
B As          
B. idea    
B ever        
B reacted      
B. what     C. hurt     
C. directly    
C. designed    
C. time        
C. instructions
C success      
C. recognize    
C. so      
C. in order    
C. though  
C. cost    
C. knowledge    
C. came by    
C purchased    
C. Moving    
C Since        
C. thinking    
C since        
C regained      
C. when       D. wound        
D. desperately
D. wished        
D. mistake      
D. scolding    
D. drag          
D. recall        
D. and          
D. in return  
D. nevertheless  
D. took          
D. belief        
D. came across  
D. ordered      
D. Making        
D. After        
D. memory        
D. previously    
D. replaced      
D. how          
答案
1-5: CDBDA     6-10:  DBBDC    11-15:  DACDC        16-20:  BDDCB
举一反三
阅读理解。     Parents divorced, little Buddy was in the care of his mother"s large Alabama family. Over the
years, Buddy seldom saw either of his parents. But he was happy where he was and he had many
kindly relatives, among whom Miss Sook was by far his best friend. Before Christmas, Buddy"s
father had managed to get legal custody(法定监护) of him for this Christmas. So, he had a new
suit, with a card pinned with his name and address and made the trip alone, by bus, to New
Orleans.
     Several things occurred that kept me awake the whole night. First, the footfalls, the noise of my father
running up and down the stairs, breathing heavily, I had to see what he was up to. So I hid and watched.
There was a Christmas tree and the fireplace downstairs. Moreover, I could see my father. He was
crawling around under the tree arranging a pyramid of packages. I felt dizzy, for what I saw forced me to
reconsider everything. If these were presents intended for me, then obviously they had not been ordered
by the Lord and delivered by Santa Claus; no, they were gifts bought and wrapped by my father. Which
meant that my rotten little cousin Billy Bob and other rotten kids like him weren"t lying when they laughed
at me and told me there was no Santa Claus. The worst thought was: Had Sook known the truth, and lied
to me? No, Sook would never lie to me. She believed. It was just that-well, though she was
sixty-something, in some ways she was at least as much of a child as I was.
     I waited until I was sure he was in bed and sound asleep. Then I crept downstairs and examined the
tags attached to each of the packages. They all said: "For Buddy." I decided to open the packages: It
was Christmas morning. I was awake, so why not? I won"t bother to describe what was inside them: just
shirts and sweaters and dull stuff like that. The only thing I appreciated was a toy gun. Somehow I got the
idea it would be fun to waken my father by firing it. So I did. Bang. Bang. Bang. He raced out of his room, wild-eyed, Bang. Bang. Bang. "Buddy-what the hell do you think you"re doing? Bang. Bang. Bang. "Stop
that!" I laughed. " Look, Daddy. Look at all wonderful things Santa Claus brought me."
     Calm now, he walked into the room and hugged me. "You like what Santa Claus brought you?"
     I smiled at him. He smiled at me. There was a tender lingering (逗留不去的) moment, damaged
when I said: "Yes. But what are you going to give me, Daddy?" His smile evaporated. His eyes narrowed
suspiciously-you could see that he thought I was pulling some kind of trick. But then he blushed, as
though he was ashamed to be thinking what he was thinking. He patted my head, and coughed and said: "Well, I thought I"d wait and let you pick out something you wanted. Is there anything particular you
want?"
     I reminded him of the airplane we had seen in the toy store on Canal Street. His face sagged. Oh,
yes, he remembered the airplane and how expensive it was. Nevertheless, the next day I was sitting in
that airplane dreaming I was zooming toward heaven while my father wrote out a check for a happy
salesman, who promised to help ship the plane on the bus. 
     But I wasn"t free of New Orleans yet. The problem was a large bottle of wine; maybe it was because
of my departure, but anyway my father had been drinking it all day, and on the way to the bus station, he
scared me by grabbing my wrist and harshly whispering: "I"m not going to let you go. I can"t let you go
back to that crazy family in that crazy old house. Just look at what they"ve done to you. A boy six, almost
seven, talking about Santa Claus! It"s all their fault, all those sour old spinsters with their Bibles and their
knitting needles, those drunken uncles. Listen to me, Buddy. There is no God! There is no Santa Claus."
He was squeezing my wrist so hard that it ached. "Kiss me. Please. Please. Kiss me. Tell your daddy
that you love him." But I couldn"t speak. I was terrified I was going to miss my bus. And I was worried
about my plane, which was strapped to the top of the taxi. "Say it: "I love you." Say it. Please. Buddy. Say
it."
     It was lucky for me that our taxi-driver was a good-hearted man. Because if it hadn"t been for his help, and the help of some efficient porters and a friendly policeman, I don"t know what would have happened
when we reached the station. My father was so drunk he could hardly walk, but the policeman talked to
him, quieted him down, helped him to stand straight, and the taxi-man promised to take him safely home.
But my father would not leave until he had seen the porters put me on the bus.
     Once I was on the bus, I crouched in a seat and shut my eyes. I felt the strangest pain. A crushing pain
that hurt everywhere. I thought if I took off my heavy city shoes, those crucifying monsters, the agony
would ease. I took them off, but the mysterious pain did not leave me. In a way it never has; never will.
     Twelve hours later I was home in bed. The room was dark. Sook was sitting beside me, rocking in a
rocking chair, a sound as soothing (令人舒畅的) as ocean waves. I had tried to tell her everything that
had happened, and only stopped when I was hoarse (嘶哑的) as a howling dog. She stroked her fingers
through my hair, and said: "Of course there is a Santa Clause. It"s just that no single somebody could do
all he has to do. So the Lord has spread the task among us all. That"s why everybody is Santa Claus. I
am. You are. Even you cousin Billy Bob. Now go to sleep. Count stars. Think of the quietest thing. Like
snow. I"m sorry you didn"t get to see any. But now snow is falling through the stars-" Stars sparkled,
snow whirled inside my head; the last thing I remembered was the peaceful voice of the Lord telling me
something I must do. And the next day I did it. I went with Sook to the post office and bought a penny
postcard. That same postcard exists today. It was found in my father"s safety deposit box when he died
last year. Here is what I had written him: Hello pop hope you are well I am and I am turning to
pedal my plane so fast I will soon be in the sky so keep your eyes open and yes I love you Buddy.
1.When Buddy asked his Daddy for Christmas presents, his father"s reaction suggested that  _______.A. He felt sorry he forgot to prepare presents for his son.
B. He thought his son should have known all the presents were sent by him, not Santa Claus.
C. It was difficult for him to accept that his son is so greedy.
D. He was ashamed of not knowing what his son liked.2. Once Buddy was on the bus, he felt the strangest pain . The reason probably is _____________.A. His father squeezed him so hard that it ached.
B. His father was very drunk and had difficulty returning home.
C. He didn"t say "I love you" to his father.
D. He had an argument with his father at home.3. Which of the following statements is NOT true?A. Buddy didn"t tell his Daddy "I love you" until his death.
B. Buddy"s father and Miss Sook were people of different personalities.
C. Buddy still held the belief that there was Santa Claus.
D. Buddy finally mailed a postcard to his father.4. What can be inferred from the first paragraph?A. Cousin Billy Bob had a good relationship with Buddy.
B. Miss had no idea of Santa Clause, and lied to Buddy.
C. Father loved Buddy very much and prepared a lot of gifts for him.
D. Buddy was afraid of his father for they had been separated long time.5. The following words can describe Miss Sook except _______.A. old            
B. clever          
C. naughty          
D. trusted6. Which of the following can be the best title of passage?A. Is There a Santa Clause in the World?
B. A Christmas Memory
C. How to Celebrate Christmas in a Meaningful Way?
D. A Christmas of a Divorced Family
题型:浙江省模拟题难度:| 查看答案
完形填空。     In my dual (双重的) profession   1    an educator and health care provider, I have worked with many
children infected with HIV. They have taught me so many things, but I have especially learned that
great   2     can be found in the smallest individuals. Let me tell you about Tyler.
     Tyler was   3   infected with HIV; his mother was also infected. From the very beginning of his life,
he was dependent on medications to   4    him to survive. When he was five, he had a tube inserted in a
vein (静脉) in his chest. At times, he also needed extra oxygen to support his   5  .
     Tyler wasn"t    6    to give up one single moment of his childhood to this deadly disease. It was not
   7   to find him playing and racing around his backyard, wearing his medicineloaded backpack and  
  8    his tank of oxygen behind him in his little wagon (小手推车). All of us who knew Tyler were
impressed by his pure   9    in being alive and the energy it gave him. Tyler"s mom often    10    him by
telling him that he moved so    11   she needed to dress him in red. That way,when she peered through
the window to check on him playing in the yard, she could quickly   12   him.
     This deadly disease eventually    13   down Tyler. He grew quite ill and, unfortunately,    14   did his
HIVinfected mother. When it became    15   that he wasn"t going to survive, Tyler"s mom talked to him
about   16  . She comforted him by telling Tyler that she was dying too, and that she would be with him
soon in heaven.
     A few days before his death, Tyler   17   to me to come to his hospital bed and    18  ,"I might die
soon. I"m not    19   . When I die, please dress me in   20  . Mom promised she"s coming to heaven,
too. I"ll be playing when she gets there, and I want to make sure she can find me."(     )1. A. in        
(     )2. A. pleasure  
(     )3. A. seriously  
(     )4. A. cause    
(     )5. A. breathing  
(     )6. A. happy    
(     )7. A. common    
(     )8. A. dragging  
(     )9. A. character  
(     )10. A. comforted
(     )11. A. slowly  
(     )12. A. know    
(     )13. A. tore    
(     )14. A. neither  
(     )15. A. apparent  
(     )16. A. life     
(     )17. A. waved    
(     )18. A. whispered
(     )19. A. excited  
(     )20. A. red      B. for        
B. pain      
B. born      
B. enable    
B. living    
B. willing    
B. unusual    
B. carrying  
B. joy        
B. scolded    
B. happily    
B. spot      
B. broke      
B. so        
B. hopeless  
B. dream      
B. said      
B. shouted    
B. surprised  
B. white      C. as       
C. sorrow  
C. unlucky  
C. make    
C. running  
C. daring  
C. surprised
C. pushing  
C. moment  
C. teased  
C. quickly  
C. stop    
C. wore     
C. such     
C. sure    
C. future  
C. signed   
C. cried    
C. scared  
C. bright   D. on              
D. courage        
D. disappointingly
D. lead            
D. walking        
D. discouraged    
D. ordinary        
D. taking          
D. excitement      
D. praised        
D. fast            
D. observe        
D. kicked          
D. nor            
D. terrible        
D. death          
D. explained      
D. spoke          
D. happy          
D. beauty          
题型:模拟题难度:| 查看答案
阅读理解。     A 69yearold grandmother with  no teeth of her own has eventually won a long legal  battle to stop a
Scottish regional council (政务委员会) adding fluoride (氟化物) chemical to the public water  supply.
     In a case which has already cost the taxpayer £1,000,000,the judge ruled that it was beyond the
powers of the local authority to add the chemical to the water in order to reduce tooth decay.
     At her home last night Mrs Catherine McColl said, "I did what I thought was right and I would do it
again, too." She claimed that adding fluoride to public drinking water made it into some kind of dirty
soup ."Where would it stop?"she asked. "They might come up with the idea of putting drugs into the
water to keep the unemployed quiet."It was a horrible poison, she said, that could have caused all kinds
of diseases, including cancer.
     The judge, however, concluded that there was no evidence  to suggest that the inclusion of fluoride in
the water supply would have had a negative effect on public health. Although the chemical might serve as
an efficient and convenient means of achieving a beneficial effect on  the dental health of consumers
generally, he said, and its  use was greatly favoured by the dental profession, he  could also understand
why some members of the public, Mrs McColl in particular, might be passionately opposed  to the
action of the Water Authority in assuming the  right to improve public wellbeing without consulting the
public in the first case. The Authority"s legal duty to provide "wholesome" water for public consumption
which was both safe and pleasant to drink ,did not,he said, extend to their right to safeguard public health
by chemical means.1. Mrs McColl felt so strongly about the fluoride issue that she eventually ________.A. took the local council to court
B. had a physical fight with the judge
C. urged the authority to apologize
D. spent much money removing the chemical2. According to what the judge said in the passage, adding fluoride to the water________.A. was not proved to be harmful
B. was the duty of the local authority
C. was strongly opposed by dentists
D. was surely beneficial to the public3.The word "wholesome"in the last paragraph can be best replaced by the word"________".A. clear    
B. poisonless
C. healthy   
D. recycled4. From the passage we learn that people like Mrs McColl are more concerned about________.A. the improvement of their personal health
B. the problem of unemployment in their community
C. the chemicals to be used for the improvement of water quality
D. their right to be informed of the authorities" decisions
题型:模拟题难度:| 查看答案
完形填空。     I can still remember when I met my best friend. She had just moved into the neighborhood and her
grandmother brought her down to    1   me. I hid behind my mother and she hid behind her
grandmother,   2    to look at each other. Soon we lost the   3   and started playing with each other.
In the 7th grade, I first lost touch with her. She was    4   family problems and I deserted her to be with
the   5   people. None of my new friends liked her as much as I did because they knew she had   6  .
However, every summer we   7    always sit at each other"s house, watch soap operas, and talk about
all the boys we liked.
It was last year when I noticed the problem. I guess I was   8   devoted in high school to   9    she
needed someone there. Anyway, she made a new best friend and so did I. Then I didn"t know why,
   10   she started cutting herself!
     She then was diagnosed(诊断)with clinical depression. At first, I was very     11  , but we still stayed
in    12    I wanted to be there with her since her new best friend basically   13    her and people were
calling her    14  .
     Yesterday she came to me and said, "I never knew what a best friend was    15    you, the only person,
would stop me cutting. I   16     your help so much, and you didn"t even know you were    17    me."
We both cried. And I guess a kind of    18    from my life so far is never to give up on your friends. Even
if they aren"t as cool as others, or people think they are crazy, they need    19    there. If you desert them,
you will only be   20    yourself.(     )1. A. follow  
(     )2. A. scared    
(     )3. A. temper    
(     )4. A. taking up  
(     )5. A. happier  
(     )6. A. problems  
(     )7. A. should  
(     )8. A. much      
(     )9. A. admit    
(     )10. A. but     
(     )11. A. calm     
(     )12. A. place  
(     )13. A. confused  
(     )14. A. crazy  
(     )15. A. unless  
(     )16. A. expect  
(     )17. A. urging  
(     )18. A. honour  
(     )19. A. someone  
(     )20. A. innocent  B. meet        
B. annoyed        
B. interest      
B. getting through
B. cooler        
B. shortcomings  
B. could          
B. too            
B. accept        
B. for            
B. considerate    
B. touch          
B. bothered      
B. stubborn      
B. as            
B. influence      
B. blaming        
B. favour        
B. something      
B. successful     C. join       
C. worried      
C. confidence    
C. going through  
C. stronger      
C. partners      
C. would        
C. only          
C. consider      
C. or           
C. upset        
C. control      
C. reminded      
C. clumsy        
C. until        
C. appreciate    
C. helping      
C. pleasure      
C. anyone        
C. guilty        D. support        
D. delighted      
D. shyness        
D. making up    
D. cleverer      
D. disabilities  
D. might          
D. just          
D. realize        
D. so            
D. helpful        
D. mood          
D. deserted      
D. stupid        
D. that          
D. demand        
D. hurting        
D. lesson        
D. everything    
D. reliable      
题型:模拟题难度:| 查看答案
阅读理解。
     根据短文内容,从短文后的选项中选出能填入空白处的最佳选项。选项中有两项为
多余选项。     Richard"s father died when he was five. Later on he lost his mother. An old woman felt sorry for the
poor boy and often helped him. Of course he had no money to go to school. He had to work for a rich
farmer. The man paid him nothing except food and clothes.   1    He found  some old books near the
school and taught himself to read and write.
       2   It connected the village and the town. One morning people found there was a big stone on it. It
stopped them from going to town. They had to move it away, or they had to cross the mountain if they
had something to do in the town. But the stone weighed thirty tons  at  least  and  the  strongest  young  
men couldn"t do that.      3      
     Richard looked at it carefully for a while and said, "I have a way to move it away." But few men
believed him.    4    Night fell and people went home. Only the boy stayed there. To their surprise, the
villagers found  the stone was gone the next morning. They didn"t know which spirit had moved it
away.    5  
     "How could he?" the rich farmer called out, "He"s only fifteen! He couldn"t move it at all!"
     "He dug a big hole beside the stone," said the old woman, "And then he could easily push it into the
hole !"
     Looking at each other, the farmers couldn"t say a word.
题型:模拟题难度:| 查看答案
最新试题
热门考点

超级试练试题库

© 2017-2019 超级试练试题库,All Rights Reserved.

A. There seemed to be nothing strange in the village.
B. The old woman said Richard had done it all.
C. There was a narrow path between two mountains.
D. But the boy didn"t lose heart.
E. Some farmers even laughed at the boy.
F. The boy hoped he could do something for the    villagers some day.
G. They discussed for a long time, but nobody knew    what to do.