阅读理解。 Until I was twelve years old, I thought everyone in the world knew abo
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阅读理解。 |
Until I was twelve years old, I thought everyone in the world knew about the grinnies, if I thought about the term at all - which is unlikely. After all, everyone in my family used the word quite naturally, and we understood each other. So far as I knew, it was a word like any other word - like bath, or chocolate, or homework. But it was my homework which led to my discovery that grinnies was a word not known outside my family. My last report card had said that I was a "C" student in English, and my parents, both teachers, decided that no child of theirs would be just an average student of anything. So nightly I spelled words aloud and answered questions about the fine points of grammar. I wrote and rewrote and rewrote every composition until I convinced my mother that I could make no more improvements. And the hard work paid off. One day the teacher returned compositions, and there it was - a big fat, bright red "A" on the top of my paper. Naturally, I was delighted, but I didn"t know I was attracting attention until the teacher spoke sharply, "Helen, what are you doing?" Called suddenly out of my happy thoughts, I said "Oh, I"ve got the grinnies!" The teacher and my classmates burst into laughter, and then I understood that grinnies were used inside my family. Other people were not so lucky. And it is really lucky to have the grinnies, an uncontrollable, natural state of great pleasure. Grinnies are shown on the outside by sparkling eyes and a wide, wide smile - not just any smile, but one that shows the teeth and stretches the mouth to its limits. A person experiencing the grinnies appears to be all mouth. On the inside grinnies are characterized by a feeling of joyful anxiety. Grinnies usually last just a few seconds, but they can come and go. Sometimes, when life seems just perfect, I have occasional attacks of the grinnies for a whole day. The term originated in my mother"s family. Her younger sister, Rose, who had deep dimples (酒窝), often expressed her pleasure with such a grin that the dimples appeared to become permanent. When Rose was about four, she started explaining her funny look by saying, "I have the grinnies". The term caught on, and it has been an important word in our family now for two generations. The occasion doesn"t matter. Anything can bring on the grinnies - just so long as one feels great delight. When my brother finally rode his bicycle - without training wheels - from our house to the corner and back, he came home with the grinnies. When I was little, my mother"s announcement that we would have homemade ice cream for dessert always gave me the grinnies. My father had the grinnies when I was chosen to make a speech at the end-of-school-year ceremony. Grinnies can be brought on by a good meal, a sense of pride, a new friend, a telephone call from someone special, an achievement. Or sometimes one gets the grinnies for no reason at all: just a sudden sense of happiness can bring on a case. Whatever brings them on, an attack of the grinnies is among life"s greatest pleasures. In fact, now that I look back on the experience, I feel sorry for my seventh-grade teacher. I think it"s a pity that she didn"t know the word grinnies. It"s such a useful term for saying, "I"m really, really pleased!" |
1. After the writer was twelve years old, she ______. |
A. thought everyone knew the meaning of "grinnies" B. equaled "grinnies" to bath or chocolate in meaning C. got to know "grinnies" was used only inside her family D. discovered the word "grinnies" through her mother |
2. When her English teacher called her name, the writer was ______. |
A. looking at the big "A" on the top of her paper B. listening to her English teacher attentively C. too happy to notice what"s happening around her D. busy rewriting and improving her compositions |
3. According to the writer, the word "grinnies" originates from______. |
A. her mother B. her aunt C. her brother D. her father |
4. The writer feels sorry for her seventh-grade teacher because the teacher______. |
A. has no pity on her students B. should not have laughed at her C. doesn"t have any luck to meet her parent D. has no idea of what "grinnies" is |
5. What method does the writer use to explain "grinnies"? |
A. Cause and effect. B. Examples. C. Comparison and contrast. D. Process. |
答案
1-5: CCBDB |
举一反三
完形填空。 |
We always celebrated Dad"s November birthday on Thanksgiving Day, even after he entered a nursing home. As years 1 , these events took on a 2 meaning for me-a traditional birthday party for Dad, and a 3 thanking for all he had been to me in my life. When we knew that it might be his last birthday, the 4 family decided to prepare for a huge Grandpa Simon birthday celebration at the nursing home. It was a crowded party with lots of noise and food. During a quiet moment ,I announced that it was now Dad"s 5 to listen to some stories for a 6 change.I wanted everyone to tell Grandpa Simon 7 we loved about him .The room because 8 , abd even Dad was quiet as his family crowded around him. One after 9 another ,people told stories from their hearts ,while Dad listened with 10 . people 11 recalled all kinds of lost memories-stories about 12 when they were little, stories about when Dad was young ,stories that are shared family treasures . The stories 13 . Each one seemed to trigger the memory of two more. 14 the littlest grandchildren couldn"t wait to tell Dad why they loved him. For a man who had been kind to so many hundreds of people in his life, here was our 15 to celebrate him. A few months later, at Dad"s memorial 16 , we more fully realized what we had given Dad that night. Those were the stories people 17 tell at a burial service, after a loved one is no longer around to hear the words. They are told, then, full of tears, with the 18 that the person who passed away will somehow hear the outpouring of love. But we had given those loving memories to Dad in life, told 19 laughter, with hugs and joy. He had 20 to hold and roll over in his mind during his last months and days. |
( )1. A. past ( )2. A. several ( )3. A. personal ( )4. A. all ( )5. A. turn ( )6. A. chance ( )7. A. why ( )8. A. still ( )9. A. others ( )10. A. wet ( )11. A. realized ( )12. A. which ( )13. A. escaped ( )14. A. especially ( )15. A. course ( )16. A. service ( )17. A. eventually ( )18. A. hope ( )19. A. in ( )20. A. it | B. went in B. double B. personnel B. both B. way B. change B. when B. noisy B. the other B. dry B. recognized B. what B. flowed B. specially B. courage B. section B. normally B. anger B. into B. them | C. went on C. any C. person C. whole C. saying C. charge C. what C. empty C. another C. clean C. rewrote C. when C. memorized C. even C. custom C. servant C. importantly C. kindness C. through C. us | D. past on D. single D. personality D. entirely D. right D. choice D. that D. crowded D. other D. amazing D. recalled D. why D. told D. ever D. chance D. settlement D. occasionally D. opening D. by D. me |
阅读理解。 |
"Everything happens for the best," my mother said whenever I faced disappointment. "If you carry on, one day something good will happen. And you"ll realize that it wouldn"t have happened if not for that previous disappointment." Mother was right, as I discovered after graduating from college in 1932, I had decided to try for a job in radio, then work my way up to a sports announcer. I hitchhiked to Chicago and knocked on the door of every station-and got turned down every time. In one studio, a kind lady told me that big stations couldn"t risk hiring an inexperienced person. "Go out in the sticks and find a small station that"ll give you a chance," she said. I thumbed home to Dixon, Illinois. While there were no radio-announcing jobs in Dixon, my father said Montgomery Ward had opened a store and wanted a local athlete to manage its sports department. Since Dixon was where I had played high school football, I applied. The job sounded just right for me. But I wasn"t hired. My disappointment must have shown. "Everything happens for the best." Mom reminded me. Dad offered me the car to hunt a job. I tried WOC Radio in Davenport, Iowa. The program director, a wonderful Scotsman named Peter MacArthur told me they had already hired an announcer. As I left his office, my frustration (挫折) boiled over. I asked aloud, "How can a fellow get to be a sports announcer if he can"t get a job in a radio station?" I was waiting for the elevator when I heard MacArthur calling, "What was you said about sports? Do you know anything about football?" Then he stood me before a microphone and asked me to broadcast an imaginary game. The preceding (在前的) autumn, my team had won a game in the last 20 seconds with a 65-yard run. I did a 15-minute build-up to that play, and Peter told me I would be broadcasting Saturday"s game! On my way home, as I have many times since, I thought of my mother"s words: "If you carry on, one day something good will happen. Something wouldn"t have happened if not for that previous disappointment." I often wonder what direction my life might have taken if I"d gotten the job at Montgomery Ward. |
1. The writer shows his _____ by saying ""… if I"d not gotten the job at Montgomery Ward". |
A. regret B. happiness C. gratefulness D. disappointment |
2. The underlined phrase "out in the sticks" probably means _____? |
A. in radio stations B. in the country C. in big cities D. in Dixon, Illinois |
3. Why did the writer mention his mother"s words over and again? Because _____. |
A. it was his mother"s words that encouraged him B. his mother was a person who talked a lot C. nothing good has happened to him up to now D. he got turned down every time he tried |
4. Which of the following statements is true according to the passage? |
A. There was a small radio station in Dixon, Illinois. B. Peter MacArthur was a program director in Scotland. C. WOC Radio in Davenport broadcast imaginary games. D. Montgomery Ward had a store with a sports department. |
5. When did the writer decide to take a radio-announcing job? |
A. When he hitchhiked to Chicago. B. After he graduated from college. C. Before he graduated from college. D. As soon as he was turned down. |
完形填空。 |
A poor boy Howard Kelly was trying to make some money for school by selling goods. He found that he had only one coin left. He was so _1 that he decided to beg for a meal at the next house. However, he lost his courage(勇气) when a lovely young 2 __ opened the door. Instead of asking for a meal, he asked for a drink of ___3__ . She smiled understandingly and brought him a __4__glass of milk. He drank it slowly and then asked, “How much is it?” “You need pay nothing.” she replied. “Mother has __5__me never to accept pay for a __6__.” As Howard __7_ that house, he not only felt stronger __8__ , but it also made him believe in God and the human beings more. He was about to give up before this. __9_ later, the young woman became very ill. She was sent to the big city, Dr Howard Kelly, now famous, was called in for the treatment(治疗). __10__When he heard the name of the __11__she came from, a _12__light filled his eyes. Immediately, he rose and went down through the hospital hall into her room. He __13__her at once. From that day on, he gave __14_ attention to her case and __15__ to do his best to saveher life. After a long time, she recovered. The bill was sent to her room. She was ___16__to open it because she knew it would ___17__ the rest of her life to pay it off. Finally she looked at the bill and saw these words on ne side of it, “Paid in full with __18__ .” Dr Howard Kelly Tears of __19__ ran out of her eyes as she cried, “Thank you, _20___. Your love has got around through human hearts and hands.”
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( )1.A. worried ( )2.A. lady ( )3.A. water ( )4.A. hot ( )5.A. said to ( )6.A. happiness ( )7.A. went in ( )8.A. in body ( )9.A. Days ( )10.A. when ( )11.A. city ( )12A. quick ( )13. treated ( )14.A. special ( )15.A. wished ( )16.A. afraid ( )17.A. need ( )18.A. all her money ( )19.A. comfort ( )20.A. Doctor | B. milk B. gentleman B. milk B. cold B. ordered B. kindness B. stayed in B. in mind B. Weeks B. where B. room B. happy B. realized B. much B. decided B. excited B. spend B. my pay B. joy B . Mother | C. soup C. doctor C. soup C. large C. allowed C. food C. left C. in courage C. Months C . then C. town C. familiar C. recognized C. little C. hoped C. unable C. take C. love C. surprise C. Boy
| D. wine D. mother D. wine D. small D. taught D. milk D. ran from D. in health D. Years D. that D. house D. strange D. saved D. large D. ordered D. certain D. cost D. a glass of milk D. sadness D. God |
阅读理解。 |
Lovely animals are always kept as pets,especially those which look pretty and there’ s always a lot of fun keeping them. Here’s a story about it. The children begged for a hamster (仓鼠), and after a long time and promises that they alone would care for it, they got one. Of course, they loved this special friend. They named it Danny, made “a house” for it, and played happily with it. Two months later, when Mom found herself doing the cleaning and feeding the hamster, she decided to send it away and found a future new home for it. The children took the news of Danny’s immediate departure quite well, though one of them said, “He’s been around here a long time. We’ll miss him.” “Yes,” Mom replied. “But he’s too much work for one person, and since I’m that person, I say he goes.” Another child offered, “Well, maybe if he wouldn’t eat so much and wouldn’t make things in bad order, we would keep him.” But Mom didn’t change her mind. “It’s time to take Danny to his new home now,” she insisted. “Go and get his cage(笼子).” With one voice and in tearful anger the children shouted, “Danny? We thought you said Daddy!”
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1. Mom wanted to send Danny away because_______. |
A. she had to do too much more work B. the children didn’t help her C. she found a new home for Danny D. Danny didn’t want to stay here any more
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2. The underlined word “departure” probably means _______. |
A. staying B. leaving C. playing D. eating |
3. It can be inferred from the text that Daddy _______. |
A. often did housework B. often ate a lot and did much C. often kept everything clean and in good order D. often ate much and made everything in bad order |
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 |
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