suddenly started to ring. Suddenly, a young guard ran toward me and ordered me to 2 him. I felt so
upset and 3 . He took me to a small room, but I was 4 frightened that I stopped at the door.
Finding me 5 to enter the room, he shouted that I had to go into the room.
He closed the door. I thought he was going to hurt me. Suddenly, a 6 voice said in my ear: "Take
out the things you"ve stolen!" "I stole nothing." I said. "Do as I tell you. If we find them, you"ll be in
trouble." "There is nothing." I answered. "I didn"t take anything." I said, taking everything out of my
pockets and bag.
7 this point, a guard came in and asked a salesgirl to 8 me. 9 , they found nothing.
But they didn"t believe that I hadn"t stolen anything. So the young guard ordered me to pass through the
door alarm again.
I was 10 when it rang again. I felt 11 and burst into tears. I didn"t know how to prove 12 I was
innocent(清白的).
They made me go into the small room again.
"Take out the stolen things quickly, 13 we will dial 110." They said.
"OK, call the police. I" m not afraid." I said 14 .
Suddenly, they 15 their tone. After a while, a salesgirl asked me to raise my feet. I did 16 she
had told me. There was a label (标签) on the bottom of my shoe. That was it! That was the 17 thing
that had brought me such great trouble. But it 18 my innocence.
After that, they 19 to me in the small room, But they should have apologized 20 , shouldn"t they?
A lot of people were there when I was taken away. What did they think of me?
( )1. Abuy ( )2. Aobey ( )3. Aangry ( )4. Avery ( )5. Adisagree ( )6. Ahigh ( )7. AOn ( )8. Alook at ( )9. ANeedless to say ( )10. Aafraid ( )11. Awronged ( )12. Awhat ( )13. Aand ( )14. Aunhappily ( )15. Achanged ( )16. Alike ( )17. Aonly ( )18. Atested ( )19. Asaid ( )20. Aloudly | B. paid B. beg B. excited B. much B. unwilling B. low B. In B. watch B. So far B. frightened B. upset B. whether B. but B. forcefully B. raised B. as B. last B. showed B. apologized B. together | C. passed C. follow C. happy C. such C. voluntarily C. sound C. At C. examine C. On one hand C. shocked C. scared C. that C. or C. terribly C. increased C. according to C. very C. proved C. agreed C. politely | D. paid for D. listen to D. puzzled D. so D. willingly D. sharp D. From D. keep D. As a result of D. sad D. unpleasant D. how D. so D. widely D. closed D. as if D. just D. gave D. promised D. in public |
1-5: BCDDB 6-10: BCCAC 11-15: ACCBA 16-20: BCCBD | |||
完形填空。 | |||
It was a cold winter afternoon. Robert stopped for a moment as he crossed the bridge and looked down at the river below. There were hardly any __1__on the river. Near the bridge, however, almost direct below, __2__was a small canoe (独木舟), with a boy in it. The boy was wearing __3__and shivering (颤抖) with cold, Robert noticed. Just then he heard a cry, "Help! Help!" The cry __4__from the river. Robert looked down. The boy was __5__the water and his canoe was floating away. "Help! Help!" he called again. Robert was a good __6__. Taking off his clothes, he __7__into the river. The __8__ water made him tremble(颤抖) all over, __9_in a few seconds he reached the boy. "Don"t be afraid," he said and started to swim towards the river bank,__10__the boy with him. But at that __11_he noticed a large motor boat under the bridge. There were several people on the boat, all __12__in his direction. Robert __13_to swim towards the boat. "Give me a hand," he shouted __14__he got near the boat. He __15__up into a row of faces. "It"s funny," he thought. "They look so __16__." Silently they helped the boy into the boat and __17__him in a blanket (毯子). But they did not move to __18__Robert. "Aren"t you going to pull me ___19_, too?" "You!" said one of the men. Robert noticed that he was standing next to a large __20__. "You! Why, we were making a film and you spoiled (破坏) a whole afternoon"s work! You can stay in the water!" | |||
( )1.A. fish ( )2.A. there ( )3.A. more ( )4.A. happened ( )5.A. on ( )6.A. swimmer ( )7.A. threw ( )8.A. deep ( )9.A. but ( )10.A. pushing ( )11.A. place ( )12.A. seeing ( )13.A. decided ( )14.A. while ( )15.A. turned ( )16.A. nervous ( )17.A. wrapped ( )18.A. save ( )19.A. on ( )20.A. boat | B. boats B. it B. many B. went B. within B. guard B. looked B. cool B. so B. dragging B. period B. smiling B. went B. till B. looked B. afraid B. left B. thank B. out B. blanket | C. waves C. where C. much C. arrived C. in C. soldier C. jumped C. dirty C. and C. holding C. second C. looking C. agreed C. for C. hurried C. excited C. placed C. wrap C. away C. camera | D. birds D. that D. little D. came D. under D. player D. turned D. cold D. or D. catching D. moment D. shouting D. promised D. as D. stood D. angry D. threw D. help D. off D. screen |
阅读理解。 | |||
I really love my job because I enjoy working with small children and like the challenges and | |||
1. When staying with the two girls" family,the author ________. | |||
A. was paid for extra work B. often worked long hours C. got much help from her boss D. took a day off every other week | |||
2. Why did the author leave her first job? | |||
A. She found a full-time job. B. She was fed up with children. C. She decided to attend a part-time course. D. She needed a rest after working extra hours. | |||
3. What has the author learned from her own experiences? | |||
A. Less successful students can still have a career. | |||
阅读理解。 | |||
Dick lived in England. One day in January he said to his wife, "I"m going to fly to New York next week because I"ve got some work there." "Where are you going to stay there?" his wife asked. "I don"t know yet." Dick answered. "Please send me your address from there in a telegram (电报)," his wife said. "All right," Dick answered. He flew to New York on January 31st and found a nice hotel in the center of the city. He put his things in his room and then he sent his wife a telegram. He put the address of his hotel in it. In the evening he didn"t have any work, so he went to a cinema. He came out at nine o"clock and said,"Now I"m going back to my hotel and have a nice dinner." He found a taxi (出租车) and the driver said, "Where do you want to go?" But Dick didn"t remember the name and address of his hotel. "Which hotel are my things in?" he said, "And what am I going to do tonight?" But the driver of the taxi did not know. So Dick got out and went into a post office. There he sent his wife another telegram, and in it he wrote, "Please send me my address at this post office." Choose the right answer | |||
1. Dick flew to New York because ___. | |||
A. he went there for a holiday B. he had work there C. he went there for sightseeing (观光) D. his home was there | |||
2. Why did his wife want a telegram from him? | |||
A. Because she didn"t know his address yet B. Because she wanted to go to New York, too C. Because she might send him another telegram D. Because she couldn"t leave her husband by himself in New York | |||
3. Where did Dick stay in New York? | |||
A. In the center of the city. | |||
4. Who would send him the name and address of his hotel? | |||
A. The manager of his hotel. B. The police office. C. The taxi driver. D. His wife | |||
阅读理解 | |||
A baby camel asked his mother, "why do we have such large hoofs on our feet?" She turned to him and began her explanation. "The big hoofs are to keep us from sinking into the sand." "Oh!So why do we have long eyelashes?" "It"s to protect our eyes from the sand." "Why the big humps?" "That is to store fat and have enough energy to go long distances in the hot desert!" "I see!"the baby camel stretched his neck and looked up at his mother."Then what are we doing in this cage in the middle of a zoo?" Like the baby camel, I had asked the same kind of questions. When my blindness set in, I first locked myself in a cage of self-pity and bitterness. I was tired of walking out of that dark cage. Heavens! What was I thinking? Those bars were self-imposed (自我强加的). Finally, eagerness to leave it inspired me to open my ears to hear a reassuring whisper--I was created for much more. I broke down those bars and stepped out into the desert of life. I walked difficultly through the heat with determination. And the hooves of confidence kept me from sinking into the sand of danger. Each time I reached another point on my journey, my eyes saw a whole new world with opportunities to make a difference. Best of all, I was pleased that I was indeed created for much more! Bars come in all sizes and shapes. But none can hold up the force of determination that breaks them down. Step back and peek at what bars limit you. Take a deep breath, break them down, and come out into the freshness of a new life! 1. The dialogue between the baby camel and his mother is quoted to _____. A. show the hard life of camels B. encourage readers to ask questions C. introduce the topic of the passage D. make the passage interesting 2. In the passage, the underlined word "bars" refers to ______. A. the cage for the author to stay in B. the cage for the camels to stay in C. the bad self-imposed situation around the author D. something lying here and there in the desert 3. According to the passage, we know that the author _______. A. feels sad about the baby camel B. seems to like the mother camel"s situation C. still can"t recover form the bitterness D. once felt hopeless in his life | |||
阅读理解 | |||
Barbara and Barry Zucker--- Pinchoff, both doctors from New York City, took their three daughters on a walking safari(旅行)last year in Tanzania. Barbara told about their experience in Kinbero, "It is the most remote(遥远的)place we have ever been to," camping with a few other Americans, two Tanzanian guides, and several Hadza(哈扎人)who had time to sit and chat because they had just killed a giraffe. About 400 members of the Eastern Hadza tribe(部落)live in Tanzania today, the only hunter-gatherers who remain in Africa. The Hadza hunt game, gather edible plants and honey, and move from place to place whenever the weather changes. Every two weeks or so, they move to a new campsite. At the Pinchoffs" campsite, three Hadza men stopped by to visit and ended up staying three days. One of the guides gave the men a cigarette. They took out the tobacco, put it in a pipe, and lit the pipe with fire they started. It takes less than two hours for Hadza women to build a new camp. They make huts(茅屋)by bending branches into round structures about six feet high, and then covering them with long, golden grass. If the weather is very wet, the women may choose a dry cave to set up a camp. Some rock caves have been used over thousands of years and are decorated(装饰)with ancient rock paintings. Whether they sleep in huts, caves or in the open, the Hadza cover themselves only with thin cloths and depend on fire to keep them warm. The Hadza refuse to be "settled" into villages or to have the life of farmers. By 1979, almost all of them had returned to their old ways. They Hadza may be the only tribe in Africa that has never paid taxes. 1. The passage mainly tells us . A. one of the author"s travel experiences B. the life of the Hadza tribe in Tanzania C. Barbara"s walking safari in Tanzania D. the efforts of the Hadza to keep their old ways 2. What do we know about the life of the Hadza? A. They change their campsites regularly. B. They live mainly on farming. C. They keep warm using leaves at night. D. It takes them a long time to set up a camp. 3. Where do the Hadza live in wet weather? A. On the farm. B. In huts. C. In caves. D. In the open. |