Soon it would be the holidays, but before that, there were final 1 . All the kids had been working hard for some time, reviewing their 2 . If they didn"t pass the exams, they would have to 3 them in September. There were usually a few who 4 , but Jane didn"t want to be one of them. She had worked hard all year, but she was working so hard that her mother 5 her. She went to bed too late. The night before the big day, her mother 6 that she should have an early night and take a sleeping pill. She promised to 7 her up in the morning. Jane was too 8 to fall asleep. Her mind kept jumping from subject to subject. At last, the 9 did work. In no time at all, she was sitting in the examination hall, looking at the paper, but she couldn"t answer 10 of the questions. Everyone 11 her was writing pages and pages. 12 , she couldn"t find anything to write about. From time to time she looked at her 13 . Time was running 14 . There was only an hour to 15 . She started one question, wrote two sentences, 16 and tried another. With only half an hour left she wrote 17 two sentences. By this time she was so worried that she started 18 . Her whole body shook. It shook so much that she woke up. She was still in bed and it had all been a terrible 19 . A minute later, 20 called her name. |
( )1. A. harvests ( )2. A. exercises ( )3. A. take ( )4. A. cheated ( )5. A. cared for ( )6. A. insisted ( )7. A. ring ( )8. A. sad ( )9. A. dream ( )10. A. all ( )11. A. ahead of ( )12. A. Unless ( )13. A. watch ( )14. A. up ( )15. A. run ( )16. A. gave out ( )17. A. another ( )18. A. thinking ( )19. A. exam ( )20. A. her mother | B. exams B. jobs B. write B. succeeded B. felt proud of B. agreed B. wake B. tired B. pill B. none B. behind B. However B. paper B. down B. leave B. gave up B. more B. dreaming B. dream B. her teacher | C. reports C. books C. attend C. passed C. worried about C. promised C. bring C. happy C. suggestion C. any C. in front of C. Though C. teacher C. out C. remain C. put off C. other C. crying C. story C. a classmate | D. papers D. lessons D. do D. failed D. thought highly of D. allowed D. pick D. nervous D. music D. some D. around D. As D. book D. over D. go D. put out D. some D. writing D. night D. a friend |
答案
1-5 BDADC 6-10 ABDBC 11-15 DBACD 16-20 BACBA |
举一反三
完形填空。 | After their business trip, John and Mary returned, eager to see their lovely children. As they drove into their home town feeling glad to be back, they noticed 1 , and they went off their usual route to see what it was. They found a 2 in flames. Mary said, "Oh, well, it isn"t our fire, let"s go home." But John 3 closer and screamed, "That home belongs to Fred Jones who works at the plant. He wouldn"t be 4 work yet, maybe there is something we could do." "It has nothing to do with us," Mary 5 . But John drove up and stopped and they were both horror-stricken to see the whole house in 6 . A woman on the lawn was screaming, "The children! Get the children!" John 7 her by the shoulder saying, "Get a hold of yourself and tell us where the children are!" "In the 8 ," cried the woman, "down the hall and to the left." In spite of Mary"s disagreement John 9 for the basement which was full of smoke and 10 hot. He found the door and two children. 11 he left he could hear some more sobbing. He 12 the two badly frightened children into 13 arms and started back asking how many more children were down there. They told him 14 more and Mary grasped his arm and screamed, "John! Don"t go back! It"s 15 ! That house will fall down any second." 16 he ran into the smoke-filled hallway and at last he found both children. As he climbed up the 17 stairs, the thought went through his mind that there was something strangely 18 about the little bodies next to him, and at last when they came out into the 19 and fresh air, he found that he had just 20 his own children. The baby-sitter had left them at this home while she did some shopping. | ( )1. A. direction ( )2. A. home ( )3. A. ran ( )4. A. at ( )5. A. whispered ( )6. A. ruins ( )7. A. pushed ( )8. A. basement ( )9. A. went ( )10. A. heavily ( )11. A. If ( )12. A. comforted ( )13. A. cheering ( )14. A. many ( )15. A. dangerous ( )16. A. Therefore ( )17. A. wide ( )18. A. particular ( )19. A. car ( )20. A. rescued | B. mistake B. plant B. walked B. off B. nodded B. pieces B. seized B. department B. reached B. slightly B. As B. delivered B. freezing B. several B. foolish B. So B. endless B. interesting B. sunlight B. found | C. danger C. store C. drove C. to C. disagreed C. flames C. greeted C. house C. asked C. partly C. Since C. recognized C. waiting C. three C. practical C. Instead C. final C. familiar C. crowd C. lost | D. smoke D. kitchen D. rode D. on D. required D. silence D. stopped D. hall D. rushed D. terribly D. Unless D. protected D. suffering D. two D. painful D. But D. dirty D. fortunate D. arms D. missed | 阅读理解。 | A thief who dropped a winning lottery ticket (彩票) at the scene of his crime has been given a lesson in honesty. His victim (受害者), who picked up the £25,000 prize, managed to trace him, and handed over the cash. The robbery happened when maths professor Vinicio Sabbatucci, 58, was changing a tyre on an Italian motorway. Another motorist, who stopped "to help", stole a suitcase from his car and drove off. The professor found the dropped ticket and put it in his pocket before driving home to Ascoli in eastern Italy. Next day, he saw the lottery results on TV and, taking out the ticket, realized it was a winner. He claimed the 60 million lire (里拉) prize. Then he began a battle with his conscience. Finally, he decided he could not keep the money despite having been robbed. He advertised in newspapers and on radio, saying:"I"m trying to find the man who robbed me. I have 60 million lire for him―a lottery win. Please meet me. Anonymity (匿名) guaranteed." (保证) Professor Sabbatucci received hundreds of calls from people hoping to trick him into handing them the cash. But there was one voice he recognized―and he arranged to meet the man in a park. The robber, a 35-year-old unemployed father of two children, gave back the suitcase and burst into tears. He could not believe what was happening. "Why didn"t you keep the money?" he asked. The professor replied:"I couldn"t, because it"s not mine." Then he walked off, spurning the thief"s offer of a reward. | 1. The sentence "Then he began a battle with his conscience." in Paragraph 2 implies (暗示, 暗指) all the following EXCEPT that _____. | [ ] | A. he knew what to do as soon as he saw the lottery results B. he hesitated (犹豫) about keeping the money for some time C. he thought for a moment of avenging (报仇) himself on the robber D. he came to realize that honesty is more important than money | 2. The word "spurning" in the last sentence can be replaced by _____. | [ ] | A. accepting B. claiming (认领) C. rejecting (拒绝) D. canceling (删除) | 3. If the story appears in a newspaper, the best title might be _____. | [ ] | A. A Thief"s Lucky Day B. A popular Maths Professor C. A Magic Lottery D. A Reward of Honesty | 阅读理解。 | "It"s over! Thank goodness!" School was over and I was tired. I sat at the front of the school bus. Janie, the driver, always tries to break the uncomfortable atmosphere (气氛) by talking. I try to listen politely, but usually I"m too busy thinking about my day. On this day, however, her talk was worth listening to. "My father"s ill," she said to no one in particular (特别地). I could see worry in her eyes. I had never seen her like this before. She always meets students with a smile. With a sudden chance of interest, I asked, "What"s wrong with him?" With her eyes wet and her voice unusual, she answered, "Heart trouble." Her eyes lowered as she continued, "I"ve already lost my mum, so I don"t think I can stand losing him." I couldn"t answer. My heart ached for her. I sat on the seat thinking of the great pain my own mother was thrown into when her father died. I saw how hard it was, and still is, for her. I wouldn"t want anyone to go through that. Suddenly I realized Janie wasn"t only a bus driver, which was just her job. She had a whole world of family and cares too. I shouldn"t have been so selfish. I paid no attention to Janie because she was a bus driver. I had judged her by her job and brushed her off as unimportant. I shouldn"t have been so selfish and self-centered. Understanding people is an art. | 1. When the students get on the school bus, Janie usually _____. | [ ] | A. listens to music B. talks about her own worry C. sits on her seat without words D. meets them with a smile | 2. After she learned Janie"s story, the writer thought of _____. | [ ] | A. her father"s death B. her mother"s pain C. the ache of her own heart D. the pain of Janie"s parents | 3. The writer felt herself selfish because she had _____. | [ ] | A. thought of Janie as nothing but a driver B. made only a few friends in the school C. hardly thought of herself D. never listened to others | 4. In this passage the writer tries to tell us that _____. | [ ] | A. losing parents makes people sad and helpless B. understanding the people around us takes time C. we should learn to understand the people around us D. it"s not right to judge the people around us by their clothes | 完形填空。 | I was driving around downtown (市中心) one afternoon in the winter. I 1 a red light and stopped. As I was 2 , I saw a young guy standing on my left. He was 3 in the face and holding a cardboard sign with some 4 on it. When you"re in the heart of downtown, it"s pretty 5 to see homeless people asking for 6 . Generally, I would pass them, but this time when I glanced over the sign, I 7 . I can"t remember what the sign said exactly, but it was something like:" 8 money / food, have stomach cancer, homeless, anything helps." I didn"t know why, but for some 9 this particular sign struck me. The 10 had just turned green, and there was a line of lunch rush hour traffic behind me. I went back and forth in my 11 a hundred times in that next 12 about whether I should do something. "Should I help? 13 on? Should I do something?" I didn"t. I did nothing. The traffic moved 14 , and I went with it. About a block or two away, my heart had sunk simply for this guy. I felt so 15 for him. So, I decided to go back and ask him 16 I could buy him lunch and hear his story. It took me about five minutes to 17 and back on to the same street where I had seen him. It was just five minutes-but he was 18 . "Where did he go so fast?" I wondered. So, there was 19 left to do except drive on. If you get a special nudge (想做的事) from inside you, 20 consider acting on it. Don"t miss out-for yourself and for that other person. | ( )1. A. came across ( )2. A. resting ( )3. A. dirty ( )4. A. writing ( )5. A. unfortunate ( )6. A. equipment ( )7. A. laughed ( )8. A. Spare ( )9. A. reason ( )10. A. face ( )11. A. body ( )12. A. hour ( )13. A. Drive ( )14. A. outside ( )15. A. wonderful ( )16. A. when ( )17. A. turn up ( )18. A. gone ( )19. A. anything ( )20. A. seriously | B. came from B. walking B. pale B. saying B. rude B. advice B. returned B. Need B. purpose B. sign B. pocket B. second B. Work B. upward B. bad B. where B. turn around B. caught B. something B. finally | C. came up with C. waiting C. happy C. feeling C. special C. money C. continued C. Keep C. goal C. light C. stomach C. day C. Come C. forward C. easy C. how C. go away C. dead C. nothing C. usually | D. came up to D. talking D. proud D. painting D. common D. power D. stopped D. Collect D. condition D. car D. head D. week D. Hold D. backward D. important D. if D. go around D. blind D. everything D. jokingly | 阅读理解。 | "Son!" Tim"s father shouted, "Is it possible for you to turn that noise down!?" "Sorry dad, but I love to play it loud because it makes me happy!" Tim replied while driving. He had bought the car a week before he got his driver"s license. The old car was all he could afford with the money he"d earned since he was 14 mowing lawns (修草坪) in his neighborhood. "Tim", his father asked again with that same worried look Tim was used to seeing, "What makes you happy by listening to that screaming (尖声的) guitar and what"s the name of that trash?" "The song is called "Happy"." "All I hear is that noisy guitar." "You never listen long enough to hear the words!" They continued arguing. As Tim neared the bend in the narrow road leading to their home, a new red sports car was out of control. Tim madly tried to turn to the right but the red car hit the driver"s side of Tim"s car very quickly. Tim"s father saw Tim"s face was covered in blood. The driver of the red sports car ran near. "Sir, I"m sorry! Here"s my phone!" the young man shouted with a strong smell of beer on his breath. Tim was taken to the hospital. As Tim"s mother arrived, she and her husband cried with fear uncontrollably. Then the doctor asked them to come to a private room. "Your son asked that if he died, I"d promise to tell his dad something. Sir, he asked me to tell you to please listen long enough to hear the words." Two weeks after Tim"s burial (葬礼), his father opened the door of the car that he simply could not bear to sell. He turned Tim"s favorite song up loudly and listened until he heard the words."I"m so happy; I"m so grateful." He knew what Tim had been trying to tell him for so many years. Tearfully he read the words:"A happy heart makes the face cheerful, but sadness destroys the spirit." | 1. How did Tim"s father think of Tim"s favorite music before the accident? | [ ] | A. It was exciting. B. It was just like rubbish. C. It was a kind of soft music. D. It was popular with the young. | 2. What might be the cause of the accident? | [ ] | A. Tim"s father didn"t pay attention while listening to music. B. Tim had just learned driving one week before. C. The road was too narrow for the two cars. D. The driver of the red sports car drank too much beer. | 3. What did Tim expect his father to do before he died? | [ ] | A. To listen to the words of that song. B. To bury him with his favorite CD. C. To learn to sing his favorite song. D. To sell his old car later. | 4. What would be the best title for the passage? | [ ] | A. Be happy B. Tell my dad to hear the words C. "Happy": Tim"s favorite song D. Father and son |
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