The day was Thankful Thursday. It"s a weekly 1 that my two little girls and I began years ago. Thursday has become our day to go out and make a positive 2 . My girls shouted "McDonald"s, McDonald"s" as we 3 along a busy Houston road. Suddenly I 4 that almost every crossing I passed through was 5 by a panhandler (乞丐). And then it hit me! All these panhandlers must be hungry, too. Perfect! After we ate, I ordered a(n) 6 15 lunches and we set out to deliver them. We would pull 7 a panhandler, make a contribution, and tell him or her that we hoped things got better. Then we"d say, "Oh, 8 , here"s lunch." We handed our final contribution to a small woman and then immediately 9 back in the opposite direction for home. 10 , the light caught us again and we were stopped at the same crossing where this small woman stood. I was 11 and didn"t know quite how to behave. She made her way to our car, "No one has ever done 12 like this for me before," she said with 13 . Feeling uneasy, and wanting to move the conversation along, I asked, "So, 14 do you think you"ll eat your lunch?" She just looked at me with her huge, tired brown eyes and said, "Oh honey, I"m not going to eat this lunch." I was 15 , but before I could say anything, she continued, "You see, I have a little girl and she just loves McDonald"s, but I don"t have the money. But you know 16 tonight if she is going to have McDonald"s!" I don"t know if the kids 17 the tears in my eyes. So many times I had questioned whether our acts of kindness were too 18 or insignificant to really affect change. 19 in that moment, I recognized the 20 of Mother Teresa"s words:"We cannot do great things-only small things with great love." |
( )1. A. tradition ( )2. A. decision ( )3. A. walked ( )4. A. reminded ( )5. A. crowded ( )6. A. additional ( )7. A. close ( )8. A. in fact ( )9. A. faced ( )10. A. Unfortunately ( )11. A. excited ( )12. A. something ( )13. A. amazement ( )14. A. what ( )15. A. shocked ( )16. A. whether ( )17. A. realized ( )18. A. many ( )19. A. Therefore ( )20. A. promise | B. ceremony B. choice B. ran B. realized B. occupied B. expensive B. across B. to tell the truth B. headed B. Luckily B. embarrassed B. everything B. fear B. how B. confused B. if B. felt B. small B. Although B. oath | C. custom C. contribution C. wandered C. understood C. discovered C. cheap C. alongside C. generally speaking C. turned C. Unexpectedly C. frightened C. anything C. sorrow C. where C. pleased C. what C. noticed C. big C. Meanwhile C. truth | D. habit D. plan D. drove D. thought D. laid D. special D. throughout D. by the way D. looked D. Hopefully D. annoyed D. nothing D. amusement D. when D. worried D. that D. recognized D. simple D. Yet D. spirit | 阅读理解。 | The most frightening words in the English language are, "Our computer is down." You hear it more and more when you are on business. The other day I was at the airport waiting for a ticket to Washington and the girl in the ticket office said, "I"m sorry, I can"t sell you a ticket.Our computer is down." "If your computer is down, just write me out a ticket." "I can"t write you out a ticket. The computer is the only one allowed to do so." I looked down on the computer and every passenger was just standing there drinking coffee and staring at the black screen. Then I asked her, "What do all you people do?" "We give the computer the information about your trip, and then it tells us whether you can fly with us or not." "So when it goes down, you go down with it." "That"s good, sir." "How long will the computer be down?" I wanted to know. "I have no idea. Sometimes it"s down for 10 minutes, sometimes for two hours. There"s no way we can find out without asking the computer, and since it"s down it won"t answer us." After the girl told me they had no backup (备用) computer, I said. "Let"s forget the computer. What about your planes? They"re still flying, aren"t they?" "I couldn"t tell without asking the computer." "Maybe I could just go to the gate and ask the pilot if he"s flying to Washington," I suggested. "I wouldn"t know what gate to send you to.Even if the pilot was going to Washington, he couldn"t take you if you didn"t have a ticket." "Is there any other airline flying to Washington within the next few hours?" "I wouldn"t know," she said, pointing at the dark screen. "Only it knows. It can"t tell me." By this time there were quite a few people standing in lines. The word soon spread to other travelers that the computer was down. Some people went white, some people started to cry and still others kicked their luggage. | 1. The best title for the article is _____. | [ ] | A. When the Computer Is Down B. The Most Frightening Words C. The Computer of the Airport D. Asking the Computer | 2. What could the girl in the ticket office do for the passengers without asking the computer? | [ ] | A. She could sell a ticket. B. She could write out a ticket. C. She could answer the passengers" questions. D. She could do nothing. | 3. Why do you think they had not a backup computer? | [ ] | A. Because it was easy down B. Because it was very expensive. C. Because it was not advanced enough. D. Because it was not as big as the main computer. | 4. The last paragraph suggests that _____. | [ ] | A. a modern computer won"t be down. B. computers can take the place of humans C. sometimes a computer may bring suffering to people D. there will be great changes in computers | 完形填空。 | Two men on a touring holiday were injured by an explosion in their motor van (车) yesterday. Shoppers, traders and businessmen in Red Lion Street were 1 by a loud bang, and seconds later the two men jumped over from the van, which had stopped outside Barclays Bank. Several people rushed to give 2 and helped to put out the fire 3 the van. A light American truck changed the 4 to provide living accommodation room (躺的地方), 5 firemen arrived. The men, Mr. Cary House, who was driving, and his 6 Mr. Charlie Lynn were taken to hospital with slight 7 . They were allowed to leave after 8 . "I heard this explosion. It was 9 loud. I thought it could have been a(n) 10 ." said Mr. Leslie Webster, manager of the market, who was working in his office in Red Lion Street. "I looked out of the window and saw this lad jump from the van and 11 on the ground. Then another lad came out of the van. He seemed to be in a 12 state-parts of his trousers were hanging below his knees." "I came downstairs to get a fire extinguisher (灭火器), but 13 the time I got outside someone from the bank was in the 14 with an extinguisher." Mr. Webster said both men were shocked. One was taken into the market"s office to wait for a(n) 15 . "The second man 16 going back into the van to see if everything was 17 , and five minutes later he came out with a drawer that was blazing (burning)." he added. 18 inside the van was mainly superficial (表面的), 19 a plastic window was blown out. The two men have spent the last six months 20 . At the time of the incident their wives were shopping in the city. | ( )1. A. disappointed ( )2. A. call ( )3. A. inside ( )4. A. plan ( )5. A. after ( )6. A. wife ( )7. A. wounds ( )8. A. operation ( )9. A. much ( )10. A. bomb ( )11. A. lie ( )12. A. good ( )13. A. at ( )14. A. van ( )15. A. rescue ( )16. A. kept on ( )17. A. in order ( )18. A. Equipment ( )19. A. although ( )20. A. touring | B. excited B. warning B. outside B. mind B. before B. passenger B. sickness B. treatment B. pretty B. fire B. die B. poor B. for B. office B. doctor B. insisted on B. in all B. Suffering B. since B. repairing | C. frightened C. report C. around C. direction C. when C. visitor C. burns C. recovery (复原) C. usually C. truck C. roll C. easier C. after C. market C. firefighter C. cared for C. all right C. Damage C. because C. moving | D. shocked D. assistance D. towards D. nature D. until D. guest D. hurts D. examination D. actually D. accident D. fall D. worse D. by D. room D. ambulance (救护车) D. gave up D. all over D. Condition D. so that D. cleaning | 完形填空。 | Last week I was invited to a doctor"s meeting at the Ruth hospital for incurables. In one of the wards a patient, an old man, got up shakily from his bed and moved towards me. I could see that he hadn"t long to 1 , but he came up to me and placed his right foot close mine on the floor. "Frank!" I cried in astonishment. He couldn"t 2 , as I knew, but all the time 3 his foot against mine. My 4 raced back more than thirty years to the 5 days of 1941, when I was a student in London. The 6 was an air-raid shelter, in which I and about hundred other people slept every night. Two of the regulars were Mrs. West and her son Frank. 7 wartime problems, we shelter-dwellers got to 8 each other very well. Frank West 9 me because he wasn"t 10 , not even at birth. His mother told me he was 37 then, but he had 11 of a mind than a baby has. His " 12 " consisted of rough sounds-sounds of pleasure or anger and 13 more. Mrs. West, then about 75, was a strong, capable woman, as she had to be, of course, because Frank 14 on her entirely. He needed all the 15 of a baby. One night a policeman came and told Mrs. West that her house had been flattened by a 500-pounder. She 16 nearly everything she owned. When that sort of thing happened, the rest of us helped the 17 ones. So before we 18 that morning, I stood beside Frank and 19 my right foot against his. They were about the same size. That night, then, I took a pair of shoes to the shelter for Frank. But as soon as he saw me he came running and placed his right foot against mine. After that, his 20 to me was always the same. | ( )1.A. work ( )2.A. answer ( )3.A. covering ( )4.A. minds ( )5.A. better ( )6.A. cave ( )7.A. Discussing ( )8.A. learn from ( )9.A. needed ( )1O.A. normal ( )11.A. more ( )12.A. word ( )13.A. not ( )14.A. fed ( )15.A. attention ( )16.A. lost ( )17.A. troublesome ( )18.A. separated ( )19.A. pushed ( )20.A. nodding | B. stay B. speak B. moving B. memories B. dark B. place B. Solving B. talk to B. recognized B. common B. worse B. speech B. no B. kept B. control B. needed B. unlucky B. went B. tried B. greeting | C. live C. smile C. fighting C. thoughts C. younger C. sight C. Sharing C. help C. interested C. unusual C. fewer C. sentence C. something C. lived C. treatment C. destroyed C. angry C. reunited C. showed C. meeting | D. expect D. laugh D. pressing D. brains D. old D. scene D. Suffering D. know D. encouraged D. quick D. less D. language D. nothing D. depended D. management D. left D. unpopular D. returned D. measured D. acting | 完形填空。 | Recently, one of my best friends, whom I"ve shared just about everything with since the first day of kindergarten, spent the week- end with me. Since I moved to a new town several years ago, we"ve both always 1 the few times a year when we can see each other. Over the 2 , we spent hours and hours, staying up late into the night, talking about the people she was 3 around with. She started telling me stories about her new boyfriend, about how he experimented with 4 and was into other 5 behavior. I was blown away! She told me how she had been 6 to her parents about where she was going and even sneaking out to see this guy because they didn"t want her 7 him. No matter how hard I tried to tell her that she 8 better, she didn"t believe me. Her self-respect seemed to have disappeared. I tried to 9 her that she was ruining her future and heading for big trouble. I felt like I was getting 10 . I just couldn"t believe that she really thought it was 11 to hang with a bunch of losers, especially her boyfriend. By the time she left, I was really worried about her and 12 by the experience. It had been so frustrating, I had come 13 to telling her several times during the weekend that maybe we had just grown too far apart to 14 our friendship-but I didn"t. I put the power of 15 to the ultimate test. We"d been friends for far too long. The chance was that she 16 me enough to know that I was trying to save her from hurting herself. I wanted to believe that our friendship could 17 anything. A few days later, she called to say that she had thought long and hard about our 18 , and then she told me that she had 19 with her boyfriend. I just listened on the other end of the phone with tears of joy running down my face. It was one of the truly 20 moments in my life. Never had I been so proud of a friend. | ( )1.A. worried about ( )2.A. weekend ( )3.A. working ( )4.A. books ( )5.A. self-destructive ( )6.A. explaining ( )7.A. on ( )8.A. did ( )9.A. told ( )10.A. somewhere ( )11.A. acceptable ( )12.A. exhausted ( )13.A. almost ( )14.A. stop ( )15.A. love ( )16.A. thought ( )17.A. mean ( )18.A. friendship ( )19.A. broke away ( )20.A. demanding | B. looked forward to B. months B. falling in love B. girls B. self-respecting B. reasoning B. beside B. deserved B. convince B. everywhere B. believable B. surprised B. nearly B. continue B. friendship B. remembered B. conquer B. relationship B. broke down B. challenging | C. paid attention to C. years C. hanging C. friends C. self-confident C. declaring C. around C. had C. force C. nowhere C. reliable C. satisfied C. close C. start C. truth C. valued C. tell C. quarrel C. broke up C. frustrating | D. think of D. days D. keeping in touch D. drugs D. self-defensive D. lying D. to D. got D. warn D. anywhere D. admirable D. terrified D. over D. make D. justice D. hated D. prove D. conversation D. broke out D. rewarding |
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