Recently, I stopped by a convenience store to get a newspaper and a bottle of drink. The young woman at the check-out 1 said. "That"ll be five dollars in all please." She then 2 down at the paper I was buying and said, "I"m 3 all these negative (消极的) words on the front pages. I want to read some 4 news for a change." She then said, " 5 , I think someone should just 6 a good news newspaper-a paper with wonderful, inspirational 7 about people overcoming difficulty and doing good things for others." She 8 me for coming in and said, "Maybe we"ll get some good news," and she 9 . She made my day. The following day after my business appointments, I 10 the same store again to pick up bottled water and a piece of newspaper, but a 11 young lady was behind the counter. As I checked out I said, "Good afternoon" and 12 her my money. She said nothing-not a word, not a smile or not a 13 . She just gave me my change and 14 a negative tone ordered "Next!" It 15 me right between the eyes: Two people, the same age; one made me feel 16 , but the other, well, made me feel that I had inconvenienced her by 17 . Every morning, you should ask 18 this important question: "Who do I want to be today? "The Grouch (不 高兴的人) "or" The Good News Girl""? Your answer will go a long way toward 19 the joy and happiness that you will experience in your 20 . |
( )1. A. bed ( )2. A. put ( )3. A. tired of ( )4. A. latest ( )5. A. In fact ( )6. A. collect ( )7. A. stories ( )8. A. told ( )9. A. did ( )10. A. dropped by ( )11. A. beautiful ( )12. A. carried ( )13. A. gesture ( )14. A. for ( )15. A. caught ( )16. A. great ( )17. A. moving on ( )18. A. her ( )19. A. creating ( )20. A. home | B. counter B. got B. interested in B. good B. As usual B. print B. ideas B. thanked B. agreed B. stood by B. different B. passed B. movement B. at B. hit B. sad B. going away B. them B. determining B. office | C. table C. glanced C. careful about C. interesting C. However C. sell C. pictures C. praised C. laughed C. brought in C. clever C. handed C. shake C. through C. pushed C. excited C. showing up C. yourself C. sharing C. study | D. shop D. turned D. fond of D. real D. By the way D. publish D. habits D. congratulated D. pointed D. took in D. stupid D. showed D. problem D. in D. saw D. disappointed D. showing off D. themselves D. forming D. life |
答案
1-5: B C A B A 6-10: D A B C A 11-15: B C A D B 16-20: A C C B D |
举一反三
阅读理解。 | It was getting dark and snow was coming down. Joe was driving home. He"d been unemployed since the factory closed. Most of his friends had left, but he stayed on. After all, he was born here. Suddenly he saw a lady standing on the side of the road and pulled up. She was worried. No one had stopped to help her. Was he going to hurt her? He looked poor and hungry. Joe knew how she felt and said, "My name is Joe and I"m here to help you." All she had was a flat tire, but for an old lady, that was bad enough. Joe changed the tire, but he got dirty and his hands were hurt. She wanted to pay Joe and said any amount would have been all right. Joe never thought twice about the money and there were plenty who had given him a hand in the past. He had lived his whole life that way. He told her that if she really wanted to pay him back, the next time she saw someone who needed help, she could give that person the assistance that they needed. Later the lady went into a small restaurant to grab a bite to eat. The cash register was like the telephone of an out-of-work actor-it didn"t ring much. The waitress, who was nearly eight months pregnant (***), brought a clean towel to her with a sweet smile. The old lady remembered Joe. After the waitress brought the change from a 100-dollar bill, she found the lady gone and something written on a piece of paper, "Someone once helped me out-the way I"m helping you. If you really want to pay me back, don"t let the chain of love end up with you." That night the waitress gave her sleeping husband a soft kiss and whispered, "Everything"s going to be all right. I love you, Joe." | 1. What did Joe do that dark snowy evening? | A. He drove to work. B. He helped an old lady with a flat tire. C. He gave an old lady a lift. D. He helped an old lady push her car. | 2. The underlined sentence "She wanted to pay Joe and …" suggests that ____. | A. the old lady was very grateful to Joe"s timely aid B. the old lady cared little about money C. the old lady didn"t have money on hand to pay Joe D. the old lady wanted to pay Joe less | 3. We can learn from this passage that ____. | A. the old lady knew the waitress was Joe"s wife B. the old lady had a big meal in the small restaurant C. Joe would have a baby soon D. Joe helped a lot of people in the past | 4. Which of the following would be the best title for the passage? | A. Acts of luck B. A warm-hearted man C. A well-off lady D. The chain of love | 完形填空。 | I can still remember it like it was yesterday. I was a college freshman and had 1 up most of the night before laughing and talking with friends. Now just before my first 2 of the day my eyelids were feeling heavier and heavier and my he ad was drifting down to my desk to make my textbook a 3 . A few minutes nap (瞌睡) time before class couldn"t 4 , I thought. BOOM! I lifted my head suddenly and my eyes opened wider than saucers. I looked around with my 5 beating wildly trying to find the cause of the 6 . My young professor was looking back at me with a boyish smile on his face. He had 7 dropped the textbooks he was carrying onto his desk. "Good morning!", he said still 8 . "I am glad to see everyone is 9 . Now let"s get started." For the next hour I wasn"t sleepy at all. It wasn"t from the 10 of my professor"s textbook alarm clock either. It was instead from the 11 discussion he led. With knowledge and good 12 he made the material come 13 . His insights were full of both wisdom and loving-kindness. And the enthusiasm and joy that he 14 with were contagious (富有感染力的). I 15 the classroom not only wide awake, but a little 16 and a little better as well. I learned something far more important than not 17 in class that day too. I learned that if you are going to do something in this life, do it well, do it with 18 . What a wonderful place this would be if all of us did our work joyously and well. Don"t sleepwalk your way through 19 then. Wake up! Let your love fill your work. Life is too 20 not to live it well. | ( )1. A. took ( )2. A. class ( )3. A. platform ( )4. A. lose ( )5. A. heart ( )6. A. trouble ( )7. A. angrily ( )8. A. smiling ( )9. A. active ( )10. A. sound ( )11. A. fascinating ( )12. A. gesture ( )13. A. strange ( )14. A. taught ( )15. A. decorated ( )16. A. clearer ( )17. A. discussing ( )18. A. joy ( )19. A. work ( )20. A. hard | B. divided B. test B. pillow B. help B. mind B. noise B. carelessly B. talking B. curious B. shock B. convincing B. sense B. natural B. spread B. filled B. smarter B. speaking B. speed B. life B. complex | C. stayed C. task C. carpet C. last C. thought C. failure C. intentionally C. complaining C. present C. interruption C. puzzling C. humor C. handy C. combined C. left C. quieter C. cheating C. aim C. joumey C. short | D. put D. lecture D. wall D. hurt D. head D. incident D. accidentally D. shouting D. awake D. blow D. encouraging D. design D. alive D. started D. entered D. stronger D. sleeping D. determination D. college D. simple | 阅读理解。 | That summer an army of crickets (蟋蟀) started a war with my father. Dad didn"t care for insects much more than Mamma, but he could tolerate a few living in the basement. Mamma was a city girl and she said a cricket was just too noisy. Then to prove her point she wouldn"t go to bed. She drank coffee and smoked my father"s cigarettes and paced between the sofa and the TV. Next morning she threatened to pack up and leave, so Dad drove to the store and hurried back. He sprayed poison from a jug. When he was finished he told us that was the end of it. For a couple of weeks we went back to find dead crickets in the laundry. He suggested that we"d all be better off to hide as many as we could from Mamma. I fed a few dozen to the cat who I didn"t like because he scratched for no reason. However, soon live crickets started showing up in the kitchen and bathroom. Mamma was upset because she thought they were the dead crickets come back, but Dad said these were certainly new ones. He fetched his jug of poison and sprayed all over until the whole house smelled of poison, and then he sprayed the basement again. A couple of weeks later, when both live and dead crickets kept turning up, Dad emptied the basement of junk. Then he burned a lot of old newspapers and magazines which he said the crickets had turned into nests. While we ate supper that evening, the wind lifted some flames onto the wood pile. The only gasoline was in the lawn mower"s (割草机) fuel tank but that was enough to create an explosion big enough to reach the house. Once the roof caught, there wasn"t much anyone could do. After the fire trucks left, Mamma took the others to Aunt Gail"s. I helped Dad and Uncle Burt carry things out of the house and pile them by the road. We worked into the night and we didn"t talk much, while all around the noise of crickets broke our silence. | 1. What do we know about the author"s mother? | A. She didn"t like insects at all. B. She liked insects more than his father. C. She cared for insects very much. D. She could only tolerate a few insects. | 2. The author"s father drove to the store to buy ____. | A. cigarettes for himself B. more coffee for his wife C. some poison D. some gasoline | 3. The author fed a few dozen crickets to the cat probably to ____. | A. make his mother happy B. help clear away the crickets C. play with the cat D. harm the cat | 4. The author"s father burned the old newspapers and magazines because he thought ____. | A. they were no longer useful B. the crickets were afraid of fires C. they became the home of crickets D. the dead crickets came back to life | 5. We learn from the last paragraph that ____. | A. the author"s family lost their battle against the crickets B. the author"s parents learned to put up with insects C. the author"s family didn"t suffer much in the fire D. the author"s parents got divorced | 完形填空。 | "Everything happens for the best," my mother said whenever I 1 disappointment. "If you can carry on, one day something 2 will happen. And you"ll realize that it wouldn"t have happened if not for that 3 disappointment." Mother was right, 4 I discovered after graduating from college in 1932. I had decided to 5 a job in radio, then work my way up to sports 6 . I hitchhiked to Chicago and 7 on the door of every station-and got turned 8 every time. In one studio, a kind lady told me that big stations couldn"t risk hiring an 9 person-"Go out in the sticks and find a small station that will give you a 10 ," she said. I thumbed home to Dixon, Illinois. 11 there was no radio-announcing job in Dixon, my father said Montgomery Ward had opened a store and wanted a local athlete to 12 its sports department. Since Dixon was where I had played high school football, I 13 . The job 14 just right for me. But I wasn"t hired. My disappointment must have 15 , "Everything happens for the best," Mom 16 me. Dad offered me the car to job hunt. I tried WOC Radio in Davenport, lowa. The program director, a wonderful Scotsman named Peter MacAethur, told me they had already hired an announcer. As I left his office, my frustration 17 . 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 18 I heard MacAethur calling, "What was that you said about sports? Do you know anything about football?" Then he asked me to stand before a microphone and to broadcast a(an) 19 game. On my way home, once again I thought of my mother"s words. I often wonder what 20 my life might have taken if I"d gotten the job at Montgomery Ward. | ( )1.A. faced ( )2.A. useful ( )3.A. old ( )4.A. when ( )5.A. try out ( )6.A. player ( )7.A. knocked ( )8.A. out ( )9.A. unpracticed ( )10.A. job ( )11.A. While ( )12.A. work ( )13.A. accepted ( )14.A. sounded ( )15.A. come ( )16.A. recovered ( )17.A. boiled over ( )18.A. after ( )19.A. forceful ( )20.A. side | B. received B. helpful B. previous B. as B. try on B. announcer B. arrived B. off B. inpracticed B. suggestion B. When B. receive B. agreed B. became B. shown B. encouraged B. turned over B. as B. close B. action | C. considered C. wonderful C. original C. which C. try for C. manager C. approached C. on C. inexperienced C. chance C. Which C. arrange C. applied C. got C. disappeared C hugged C. hit over C. when C. imaginary C. approach | D. met D. good D. early D. while D. try over D. fan D. hunted D. down D. unexperienced D. advantage D. So D. design D. promised D. grew D. brightened D. reminded D. took over D. before D. ordinary D. direction | 完形填空。 | I grew up poor-living in the housing projects (住房) with six brothers, three sisters, a varying assortment (各式各样东西的混合) of foster kids (养子), my father, and a wonderful mother, Scarlette Hunley. We had little money and few worldly goods, but plenty of love and attention. I was 1 and energetic. I understood that no matter how poor a person was, he could still 2 a dream. My dream was 3 . By the time I was sixteen, I could crush a baseball, and hit anything that moved on the baseball field. I was also 4 : My high school Coach Jarvis, who not only believed in me, but taught me how to believe in myself. He 5 me the difference between having a dream and showing conviction (信念). One particular incident with Coach Jarvis changed my life forever. It was the summer between my junior and senior years, and a friend 6 me for a summer job. This meant a chance for money in my pocket-cash for dates with girls, certainly, money for a new bike and new clothes, and the 7 of savings for a house for my mother. The prospect of a summer job was attractive and interesting, and l wanted to jump at the opportunity. Then I realized I would have to 8 summer baseball to handle the work schedule, and that meant I would have to tell Coach Jarvis I wouldn"t be playing. When I told Coach Jarvis, he was 9 as I expected him to be. "You have your whole life to work," he said. "Your 10 days are limited. You can"t afford to waste them." I stood before him with my head hanging, trying to think of the words that would explain to him why my dream of buying my mom a house and having money in my pocket was worth facing his 11 to me. "How much are you going to make at this job, son?" He demanded. "3.5 dollars an hour." I replied. "Well," he asked, "Is $3.5 an hour the price of a dream?" That question, the plainness of it, laid here for me the difference between wanting something right now and having a goal. I delicated myself to sports that summer and with the year I was hired by the Pittsburgh Pirates to play baseball, and was 12 a $20,000 contract. I signed with the Denver Broncos in 1998 for $1.7 million, and bought my mother the house of my dreams. | ( )1.A. happy ( )2.A. live ( )3.A. athletics ( )4.A. right ( )5.A. persuaded ( )6.A. sent ( )7.A. aim ( )8.A. give in ( )9.A. disappointed ( )10.A. living ( )11.A. sadness ( )12.A. paid | B. polite B. afford B. music B. popular B. taught B. advised B. idea B. give up B. mad B. playing B. regret B. got | C. shy C. make C. business C. lucky C. brought C. gave C. start C. give away C. frightened C. working C. hopelessness C. offered | D. honest D. need D. money D. confident D. asked D. recommended D. purpose D. give off D. shameful D. learning D. disappointment D. presented |
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