( )1. A. received ( )2. A. serious ( )3. A. fear ( )4. A. Fortunately ( )5. A. though ( )6. A. invite ( )7. A. refused ( )8. A. hot ( )9. A. properly ( )10. A. sick ( )11. A. argued ( )12. A. speakers ( )13. A. commanded ( )14. A. story ( )15. A. kind ( )16. A. message ( )17. A. scolded ( )18. A. faith ( )19. A. popular ( )20. A. aims | B. made B. negative B. excitement B. Finally B. until B. take B. offered B. dry B. carefully B. afraid B. proved B. teachers B. suggested B. mistake B. honest B. suggestion B. appreciated B. choice B. special B. luck | C. accepted C. deep C. regret C. Actually C. because C. bring C. decided C. open C. cheerfully C. fond C. explained C. parents C. requested C. trouble C. stubborn C. presentation C. instructed C. results C. confident C. chances | D. gave D. sudden D. delight D. Obviously D. if D. send D. pretended D. full D. actively D. aware D. concluded D. students D. demanded D. progress D. eager D. comment D. corrected D. efforts D. famous D. courage |
答案
1-5: ABCBD 6-10: ACBAD 11-15: CABDA 16-20: CBDCD |
举一反三
阅读理解。 | Almost 20 years ago, a few days before Christmas, Roni Austin"s 6-year-old daughter, Lauren, went to a Jack in the Box in Carlsbad and ate a hamburger. She got sick, was rushed to a hospital and never came home. Lauren was the first to die in a multi-state E. coli outbreak that killed three other children and sickened 700 people. Like many people, Austin had never heard of E. coli before. At first bewildered, and then angry, Austin soon became the face of food-safety reform in California and beyond. She co-founded a nonprofit group, Safe Tables Our Priority (STOP), and pushed successfully for legislation (立法) requiring E. coli to be a reportable illness, so outbreaks could be followed and stopped sooner. Nervous initially to be in the spotlight, she learned not to fear politicians for the beef and fast-food industries. She was in the Oval Office when President Clinton signed the most sweeping changes to federal food-inspection law in the 1990s. She was in Sacramento when a state measure named after her daughter passed, indicating minimum cooking temperatures in restaurants. Austin, 64, is not sure she has much choice. Every time she thinks she"s handed off the baton (指挥棒) to others, though, something brings her back. A phone call from a parent who has lost a child to a food-borne illness. A news story about another outbreak. An event at La Costa Heights Elementary School, where redheaded Lauren was in first grade and where a memorial garden was planted in her honor. Fixing food safety meant putting her career as a fashion designer on hold and flying 10 times to Washington DC to testify. It meant going to Sacramento to speak a half-dozen times. She"s not fond of the legislative process. Asked what she"s proudest of in making her way through all that, she said,"That I didn"t give up." | 1. What does the underlined word "E. coli" in Paragraph 1 refer to? | A. A fast-food restaurant. B. A special person. C. A reportable illness. D. A state of America. | 2. The third paragraph is mainly about ______. | A. the great changes in food inspection B. Austin"s efforts to achieve food safety C. the standards and practices of safe food D. the federal plan to monitor food production | 3. It can be inferred from Paragraph 4 that _______. | A. food safety problems are very serious B. Roni Austin was forced to do the job C. more people are concerned about food safety D. Roni Austin donated to a memorial garden | 4. Which of the following is true of Roni Austin? | A. She regretted for what she had done. B. She used to be a fashion teacher. C. She founded the organization STOP on her own. D. She is the representative of food-safety reform. | 5. What can be the best title for the text? | A. Mother"s Way of Making Food Safe. B. Painful Reminders, Constant Efforts. C. Mother"s Pride in Public Services. D. Handling Sorry, Celebrating Life. | 完形填空。 | My father woke me up early one summer morning announcing, "Get up. You"re going with me to cut grass." The idea 1 my father actually thought I was big enough to help him in his 2 made me feel proud and 3 . From sunup to sundown my father, my younger brother and I 4 in the large yards in a rich part of Atlanta, Georgia. By the end of the day I was tired out, but felt good. I had 5 a hard day"s labour and had earned $6. One day my father found some leaves I"d 6 and pulled me aside. "Clear away these leaves," he said 7 ,"and don"t make me have to tell you to do it again." The 8 was clear. Today I value the importance of doing a job 9 the first time. It will never 10 to impress the person you are working for. After two years my father told me and my brother that he felt we were 11 enough to do lawns (草 坪) on our own. Every Saturday, we 12 out early in the morning with the same desire and drive we had gained while working 13 our father. Taking care of lawns was not exciting 14 high-paying, but that didn"t matter. It taught me that any job is a good job and that 15 I was paid was more than I had before. A newspaper reporter once asked me how someone 16 possible live on a forty-hour- a -week minimum (最低的) pay."My father never worked just forty hours a 17 , and neither have I." I replied. "If you"re only working forty hours, you probably don"t want to do 18 better than you"re doing." In every job I"ve 19 -from doing lawns to washing dishes-I have learned something that helped me in my next job. If you 20 hard enough, you can learn from any job you do. | ( )1. A. what ( )2. A. farm ( )3. A. excited ( )4. A. played ( )5.A. put out ( )6. A. collected ( )7. A. finally ( )8. A. news ( )9. A. right ( )10. A. happen ( )11. A. strong ( )12. A. worked ( )13. A. beyond ( )14. A. and ( )15. A. no matter how ( )16. A. must ( )17. A. day ( )18. A. some ( )19. A. found ( )20. A. see | B. that B. family B. tired B. excised B. put down B. cleaned B. usually B. message B. quickly B. seem B. old B. set B. without B. and yet B. whatever B. should B. year B. any B. lost B. work | C. which C. business C. troubled C. worked C. put away C. missed C. unexpectedly C. information C. fast C. fail C. clever C. turned C. under C. but C. no matter what C. may C. week C. little C. held C. try | D. why D. company D. unpleasant D. struggled D. put in D. noticed D. firmly D. word D. wrong D. begin D. skilled D. figured D. like D. or D. however D. could D. month D. very D. helped D. enjoy | 完形填空。 | Life happens whether we are ready for it or not, and in May 2005, my mom passed away after an extended illness. I"m not sure we are ever really 1 to lose a parent, especially Mom. I had more things I needed to 2 with her about, and I know I wasn"t ready to let her 3 . Less than one month later, my 4 fell from a ladder, suffered a head injury, and died a week later. My husband was not only my life partner but my business 5 , and there I was left to 6 our business and my life alone. After 7 the initial shock of losing the two people who had the greatest 8 on my life, I started to pick up the pieces with the 9 and strength provided by family, friends, and business associates. I quickly 10 that asking for help was the only way I would 11 the sadness and keep my business and my home intact (完好无损的). I"d often 12 myself looking around in a daze, feeling overwhelmed (难以抵 抗的) because my challenges seemed so 13 . Learning to 14 for the help I needed was a huge accomplishment. I discovered that people 15 wanted to help, but they didn"t know how. My 16 opened the door for them to give the support they wanted to share. Three years have passed since that time. I sold my 17 and my house and chose to relocate back to the state of my birth, where my family lived. I 18 to ask for help from my 19 of family, friends, and colleagues because I am driven to a life of simplicity and joy, and I know I won"t get there alone. And that"s just 20 . | ( )1. A. afraid ( )2. A. talk ( )3. A. cry ( )4. A. child ( )5. A. partner ( )6. A. start ( )7. A. passing by ( )8. A. effort ( )9. A. care ( )10. A. learned ( )11. A. forget ( )12. A. control ( )13. A. easy ( )14. A. hope ( )15. A. really ( )16. A. order ( )17. A. garden ( )18. A. pretend ( )19. A. circle ( )20. A. fine | B. willing B. quarrel B. go B. father B. colleague B. run B. coming across B. effect B. energy B. remembered B. accept B. find B. small B. answer B. hardly B. excuse B. business B. stop B. record B. possible | C. prepared C. joke C. pass C. sister C. assistant C. sell C. getting through C. pressure C. help C. admitted C. suffer C. think C. great C. pay C. secretly C. request C. belongings C. continue C. choice C. necessary | D. thought D. do D. leave D. husband D. friend D. make D. running over D. impression D. advice D. expected D. survive D. forgive D. exciting D. ask D. proudly D. attempt D. wealth D. decide D. sense D. important | 完形填空。 | In the dining room of my grandfather"s house stood a massive grandfather"s clock. Meals in that dining room were a 1 for four generations to become one. The table was always 2 with food from wonderful family recipes(食谱) all containing 3 as the main ingredient (成分)And always that grandfather clock stood like a trusted old family 4 , sharing our happiness As I was a child, the old clock 5 me. I watched and listened to it during meals. 1 6 how at different times of the day, that clock would strike with a wonderful 7 .Year after year, the clock struck a part of my 8 , a part of my heart. Even more wonderful to me was what my grandfather did each day. He 9 wound that clock with a special and magic key, which 10 the clock ticking and striking. He never let that clock wind down and 11 . When we grandkids got. a little older, he showed us how to 12 the clock . Several days after my grandfather died. I entered the dining room, with tears flowing 13 .The clock stood desertedly 14 , seeming smaller and not as magnificent as before. I couldn"t 15 to look at it. Years later, my grandmother gave me the clock and the key. The old house was quiet. I opened the clock door with my shaking hand. Then 16 , reverently(虔诚地) , I entered the key and wound the clock. It sprang to 17 . Tick - tock: tick - tock, life and chimes were 18 into the dining room, into house and into my 19 . In the movement of the hands of the clock, my grandfather 20 again. | ( )1. A. party ( )2. A. filled ( )3. A. wine ( )4. A, friend ( )5. A. disappointed ( )6. A. questioned ( )7. A. sound ( )8. A. studies ( )19. A. strangely ( )10. A. got ( )11. A. break ( )12. A. wind ( )13. A. unexpected ly ( )14. A. ticking ( )15. A. help ( )16. A. slowly ( )17. A. feet ( )18. A. breathed ( )19. A. study ( )20. A. died | B. time B. cleared B. surprise B. guard B. encouraged B. remembered B. hammer B. opinions B. carefully B. kept B. fall B. repair B. gently B. moving B. bear B. quickly B. hands B. blown B. bedroom B. lived | C. place C. spread C. fish C. doctor C. interested C. doubted C. voice C. memories C. eagerly C. prevented C. stop C. read C. difficultly C. noisy C. hope C. unwillingly C. sense C. taken C. heart C. smiled | D. situation D. left: D. love D. lawyer D. comforted D. wondered D. ring D. brains D. usually D. found D. move D. clean D. freely D. quiet D. insist D. naturally D. life D. sent D. mind D. sang | 完形填空。 | My father was raised in a fatherless home at a time when the family of five struggled to survive, which caused my father to be extremely tightfisted (吝啬) with money. When we children became 1 that other children got pocket money from their parents, we made a(n) 2 to ask our father for some. Immediately his face turned stone-cold, and he said, "If you"re old enough to ask, you"re old enough to 3 ." And we had to seek odd jobs about the neighborhood. He didn"t 4 his attitude as we grew into adulthood. There was a time when 5 of us had a car, so we had to ride a 6 whenever we came home. Though the bus stopped about two miles from home. Dad never met us, 7 in bad weather. If someone 8 (and my brothers did a lot), he"d say in his 9 father-voice, "That"s what your legs are 10 !" One spring evening I was on the bus home from 11 . Tests and long hours in labs had 12 me exhausted. As other students were 13 at their stops, I looked silently out of the window. Finally, the bus came to a 14 at my destination, and I 15 , carrying my suitcase to begin the long journey home. The row of privet hedge (树篱) came into 16 , which lined the driveway that climbed the hill to our house. I stopped to put a book in the suitcase. When I stood up, I saw something gray 17 along the top of the hedge toward the house. It was the top of my father"s head, I 18 . Then, each time I came home, be would stand behind the hedge, watching, 19 he knew I had arrived safely. I held back my tears. He did care, 20 . Upon reaching home, I found my father sitting innocently in his chair. "So! It"s you!" he said, his face lengthening into surprise. | ( )1. A. excited ( )2. A. suggestion ( )3. A. spend ( )4. A. change ( )5. A. neither ( )6. A. bicycle ( )7. A. especially ( )8. A. complained ( )9. A. strangest ( )10. A. for ( )11. A. work ( )12. A. made ( )13. A. treated ( )14. A. corner ( )15. A. jumped on ( )16. A. mind ( )17. A. moving ( )18. A. understood ( )19. A. until ( )20. A. in advance | B. certain B. attempt B. survive B. strengthen B. each B. bus B. even B. refused B. scariest B. in B. home B. led B. met B. house B. went off B. leaf B. flying B. realized B. after B. above all | C. surprised C. trouble C. earn C. take C. none C. train C. only C. cried C. softest C. by C. college C. found C. received C. street C. got off C. flower C. falling C. imagined C. since C. after all | D. aware D. plan D. raise D. show D. all D. car D. once D. intended D. lowest D. on D. town D. proved D. greeted D. stop D. climbed on D. view D. shining D. thought D. though D. in total |
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