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阅读理解。     One of my closest friends has a family tradition that I quite like, and I"ve been slowly trying to
implement(实施) in my own family. Basically, each year after Thanksgiving dinner, all of the people sit
around in the living room and each person takes a few minutes and talks about the thing they are most
thankful about over the last year. Everyone in the family takes the question seriously and answers it
honestly, giving thanks for what really matters and adds value to their life.    
     This is something I"ve actually thought about a lot in the last year, and I really came up with two things, one obvious and one not so much.    
     The first one, obviously, is the conception and birth and healthiness of my daughter. She"s a healthy,
happy twomonthold baby who smiles a lot and very much enjoys sitting on her dad"s lap. I am so thankful
for having this wonderful baby in my life, and thankful that she has the gift of good health.    
     The second one isn"t my financial turnaround (as some of you might have expected-that was what I
was most thankful for last year). Instead, I am thankful for the discovery of the value of writing in my life.
A year ago, The Simple Dollar was only a few weeks old and was far from popular yet-according to my
data, on Thanksgiving Day last year I had about 60 subscribers. The process of writing was bringing me
enjoyment. This past year showed me otherwise, and I am deeply thankful for it. After thinking about it
for a while, I began to realize that it is a very powerful and wonderfully positive exercise. You spend time
reflecting deeply on the positives in your life, and you often realize that even when things are bad, you do
have lots to be thankful for because there is a lot of good in your life, and it can shine a bright light even
in a dark spot in your life. I hope to repeat this each year on Thanksgiving, because it brought forth a
pretty strong joy in my life today.1. What does the family tradition mentioned in the first paragraph refer to?  A. Having Thanksgiving dinner together.  
B. Enjoying the warm family atmosphere together.  
C. Talking about the things they appreciate most.  
D. Talking about their attitude towards future life.2. The author is thankful for the fact that ________.   A. she has a happy and healthy baby  
B. her daughter likes playing with her dad  
C. her daughter makes her dull life full of fun  
D. her daughter is losing weight 3. It can be inferred from the passage that ________.   A. the author keeps doing exercise to strengthen her body  
B. the author once suffered financial difficulty  
C. the author will not go on writing until she discovers the value of writing  
D. writing has made the author known nationwide 4. According to the last paragraph, what does the author realize?   A. People should have low expectation.  
B. People should find a suitable career.  
C. People should reflect on their mistakes.  
D. People should hold a positive attitude.
答案
1-4: CABD
核心考点
试题【阅读理解。     One of my closest friends has a family tradition that I quite like, an】;主要考察你对题材分类等知识点的理解。[详细]
举一反三
完形填空。     Growing up, I remember my father as a silent, strict man-not the kind of person around whom
one could laugh. As a teenager knowing little about life, I wanted a father who could 1 the mysteries
of the human journey. In college, when friends called home for 2 , I would become   3  for what I
didn’t have.
     Then one night after my move back home, I overheard my father on the telephone. There was
some trouble. Later, he  4  the problem with me. Obviously my knowledge of law helped him a lot.
I talked through the problem with him, 5 the motives of the people involved and offering several
negotiation strategies.
     He  6  patiently before finally admitting, “I can’t think like that. I’m a 7 man.”
     My father is a 8 scientist who has a good knowledge of the building blocks of nature. 9 , human
nature is a mystery to him. That night I realized he was simply not skilled at 10 people. It’s not in his
 11 to understand human desires.
     It was no one’s 12 that my father showed no interest in human emotions while I placed great
importance on them. We are sometimes born more sensitive, and dreamy than our 13 and become
more curious, and idealistic than them. 14 I, who knew my father as an intelligent man, had never
understood his intelligence didn’t cover all of my 15 feelings.
     I believe that coming home has 16 me years of questions and confusion. I nowadays consider my
parents as people who have other relationships than just being my parents, relationships that 17 and
define them.
     Best of all, I nowadays regard my parents as 18 : people who ask me for advice; people who need
my 19 and understanding. And I’ve come to see my past in a 20 view. Knowing them makes me feel
safe in where I come from and where I’m going.
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 (     ) 1. A. think      
(     ) 2. A. money      
(     ) 3. A. unhappy    
(     ) 4. A. exchanged  
(     ) 5. A. proving    
(     ) 6. A. replied    
(     ) 7. A. simple    
(     ) 8. A. special    
(     ) 9. A. Therefore  
(     )10. A. meeting with
(     )11. A. nature    
(     )12. A. relief    
(     )13. A. relatives  
(     )14. A. Besides    
(     )15. A. strong    
(     )16. A. told      
(     )17. A. raise      
(     )18. A. friends    
(     )19. A. visit      
(     )20. A. richer    
B. produce    
B. advice      
B. unhelpful  
B. solved      
B. recording  
B. learned    
B. weak        
B. lively      
B. However    
B. dealing with
B. plan        
B. secret      
B. classmates  
B. And        
B. strange    
B. gave        
B. protect    
B. teachers    
B. support    
B. harder     
C. explain  
C. love      
C. unknown  
C. found    
C. analyzing
C. chatted  
C. lazy      
C. brilliant
C. Indeed    
C. talking with
C. wish      
C. pity      
C. parents  
C. However  
C. different
C. added    
C. shape    
C. travelers
C. wisdom    
C. rougher  
D.  explore      
D.  agreement    
D.  unpopular    
D.  shared        
D.  guessing      
D.  listened      
D.  blind        
D.  humorous      
D.  Anyhow        
D.  fighting with
D.  major        
D.  fault        
D.  families      
D.  For          
D.  unique        
D.  saved        
D.  enjoy        
D.  leaders      
D.  knowledge    
D.  clearer      
阅读理解。
     I was wondering when it would happen. As everyone who lives in London and other cities
around Britain will know, urban foxes are now commonplace. I recently saw one in the middle
of the day, wandering along a street in Pimlico. Twenty years ago, that sight would have stopped
the traffic. Now, it is barely worth a remark. Foxes are large animals, as big as many dogs. Of
course, as in the terrifying incident at Homerton, one would attack a baby sooner or later.
    Actually, this has already happened. In 2002, at Dartford in Kent, a fox bit a 14-week-old boy
in the living room of the family home while his mother was sleeping. The last government preferred
to ignore the incident; it was, after all trying to ban foxhunting at the time. It could see that some folk
love urban foxes, perhaps having the same affection for wildlife as the people I have seen in London
parks feeding rats along with squirrels and ducks.
    The foxites even include animal scientists, who would seem to have persuaded Bristol City
Council (whose advisory Living with Urban Foxes has been adopted by the Chartered Institute
of Environmental Health) that foxes never attack humans. But then they also deny that country foxes
target lambs, when every hill farmer I know would tell them differently. A lamb is much the same
size as a baby. It is no more difficult to get into a house than into a hen cage.
    According to Living with Urban Foxes, “the fox population is stable”, and has not significantly
increased. Is this true? When I first lived in London in the late 1970s, urban foxes had an almost
mythical status. They were like yetis. You never saw one; you weren’t sure they really existed.
Now, they are part of the scene. I wouldn’t be surprised to find one. Friends in the suburbs are
plagued(困扰)with them. A study in Bristol showed that an astonishing 8 percent of pets caged
in gardens are killed by foxes each year.
    Surely, if foxes are now harming babies, it is time for something to be done about them, yet this is
not as straightforward as it might seem. While country residents refer to foxes as harmful animals,
that is not how they are officially classified; this means that local authorities do not have a statutory
obligation(法定的义务)to control them. It would be an easy thing for this government to change
the legislation.
1.What is the author’s purpose in writing the passage?
A. To urge the government to control urban foxes.
B. To show how to provide food for urban foxes.
C. To protect urban foxes from traffic accidents.
D. To prove urban foxes are not dangerous as expected.
2.The underlined word “foxites” in Paragraph 3 probably refers to those who ______.
A. hate urban foxes
B. love urban foxes
C. support foxhunting
D. oppose foxhunting
3.What is the author’s attitude toward Living with Urban Foxes?
A. Support.
B. Praise.
C. Disbelief.
D. Tolerance.
4.What kind of people is the author worried about most?
A. Farmers.
B. Students.
C. Drivers.
D. Babies.
阅读理解。
     One day Edward brought a caterpillar ( a kind of worm) into the classroom he had found in an
ear of corn. We placed the caterpillar in a glass fish tank with a metal mesh(网状物)cover for
its protection. We couldn’t be sure what type of leaves the caterpillar would eat, but as it had been
found in an ear of corn we decided to feed it leaves from particular garden vegetables.
     Soon we began collecting information about the caterpillar and noticing changes. The children
wrote about what they saw in small groups. Three weeks into the caterpillar observation, the teacher
started a whole-group discussion going like this:
     Teacher: “What do you notice about the caterpillar?”
     Students: “It’s twice as big as when Edward brought it to the class.”
     The students also commented that the caterpillar’s color had changed- yellowish and brownish
colors clearly appeared.
     Teacher: “What do you think will happen next?”
     Students: “I think it’s gonna make a cocoon(茧).”
     Teacher: “Wait a minute! What do you mean? The caterpillar will become a cocoon?”
     There was a considerable pause allowing the children to organize their thoughts and make a
prediction. At this point we took an informal survey showing more than half the class believed the
caterpillar would make a cocoon.
     Then, to further our learning, we connected the research to literature by reading The Very Hungry
Caterpillar
by Eric Carle(1969). This book presents a fictional account of the “transformation”
undergoing by a caterpillar: egg- larva- pupa- butterfly. When reading the book, the teacher used the
terms kids already knew like larva or pupa. She also pointed out an error in the book, moths have
cocoons and butterflies have chrysalides(蝶蛹).
     Eventually, it developed a cocoon, which lay unnoticed for a week as the children had become
distracted by other activities and events in our school and classroom. One day, the class noticed an
open “case” with the contents gone. The children decided the caterpillar had “finished growing” and
had changed into a butterfly or a moth. They guessed the creature had managed to escape through
a tear in the mesh cover of the tank and found its way to a nearby park where there were many trees
and some gardens. All these conjectures seemed reasonable and were supported by the teacher.
1.The children gave the caterpillar vegetable leaves in the garden as food based on ______.
A. what it looked like
B. where it tended to make its way
C. where it had been found
D. what they had learned from watching it
2.Which is NOT one of the changes happening to the caterpillar while it was in the classroom?
A. Color.
B. Size.
C. Form.
D. Behavior.
3.The underlined word “conjectures” in the last paragraph could be replaced by ______.
A. experiments
B. guesses
C. statistics
D. elements
4.Which of the following might be the best title of the passage?
A. Firsthand Nature
B. Animal Protection
C. An Amazing Caterpillar
D. An interesting Experience
完形填空。
     The night was dark, though sometimes the moving clouds allowed a  star or two to be seen in the sky. The poor men held on to any bit of wood they could find. They called to the Marie (圣母玛丽亚) for 
_1_, but she was far  _2_  the reach of the human voice. At one o"clock in the morning, the water was 
getting  _3_ , and a strong  _4_  had begun to blow. Suddenly  _5_ were seen in the distance; another 
ship! The shouts of the swimmers were heard on board, and willing hands pulled them out of the water. 
The  _6_  of the ship that had so  _7_   arrived on the scene in time to save their lives was Ellen. What
had brought her to the exact spot through the  _8_  and the pathless sea? Her captain had known  _9
about the wreck (沉船) and had indeed attempted to sail away from it. But let him speak for himself.
     "I was forced by the wind," he said long afterwards, "to  _10_  my course (航道). Just as I did it, 
a small  _11_  flew across the ship once or twice and then  _12_  at my face. I took  _13_  of this until 
exactly the same thing happened at a   _14_  time, which caused me to think it rather  _15_ , while I was
thus  _16_  it, the same bird for the third time, made its appearance and flew   _17_ in the same way as 
before. I was then  _18_  to change my course back to the original (原来的) one. I had not gone far  
_19_  I heard strange noises; and when I tried to   _20_  where they came from, I found I was in the 
middle of people who had been shipwrecked (船只失事). I immediately did my best to save them."
(     )1. A. food     
(     )2. A. between  
(     )3. A. colder     
(     )4. A. smoke      
(     )5. A. people     
(     )6. A. name       
(     )7. A. slowly   
(     )8. A. light    
(     )9. A. everything 
(     )10.A. continue  
(     )11.A. light     
(     )12.A. flew     
(     )13.A. no care   
(     )14.A. good       
(     )15.A. interesting
(     )16.A. searching  
(     )17.A. back     
(     )18.A. decided  
(     )19.A. when     
(     )20.A. listen to  
B. help        
B. out         
B. deeper      
B. wave     
B. lights      
B. owner       
B. early       
B. wind     
B. nothing    
B. turn       
B. fish       
B. stopped    
B. good care 
B. second     
B. funny    
B. expecting  
B. about       
B. advised     
B. while     
B. search for
C. rest       
C. beyond   
C. saltier    
C. sand       
C. ships      
C. captain    
C. immediately
C. darkness   
C. something  
C. change     
C. plane      
C. stayed     
C. no notice  
C. third      
C. common    
C. considering
C. up         
C. persuaded  
C. as         
C. make sure  
D. stop       
D. in         
D. warmer     
D. wind       
D. houses     
D. person     
D. fortunately
D. water      
D. anything   
D. sail       
D. bird       
D. looked     
D. some notice
D. long       
D. unusual    
D. hearing    
D. down       
D. invited    
D. after      
D. look out   

     It was eleven o"clock, and Mr. Sims had just asked the class to pay attention for the fiftieth time
while he explained a math problem. Carson Webster was sitting over by the window trying to listen to
the teacher, but his mind was not on the problem Mr. Sims was discussing. Carson"s mind was on a
little mouse named Millie that was busily moving around in his pocket. Millie was not very happy. At
breakfast, she had climbed into Carson"s pocket and gone to sleep while Carson ate two pieces of
bread and read the newspaper. Carson had forgotten Millie was there until he was halfway in class.
Now that Millie"s morning sleep was over, she was ready to exercise. Luckily for Carson, Millie was
in a pocket with a button, or he might be in serious trouble.
     "Carson?" Mr. Sims, who was usually rather strict with his students, was suddenly looking at Carson
with his eyes wide open, rolling his stick in his hand. Carson had to pay attention.
     "Could you please repeat the question?" said Carson, feeling his pocket.
     "I asked if you would agree with the statement," said Mr. Sims pleasantly.
     "Well, I"m not really attentive at the moment," said Carson. "I think I would need to give it more
consideration." Carson did not have the slightest idea as to what Mr. Sims was talking about. 
     "I see, "said Mr. Sims seriously, "Then I guess you"re uncertain about whether the product of
zero by any other number is always zero?"
     "Oh, I know that," said Carson, who could feel himself turning red as a couple of kids including Bob
began to laugh. He knew his punishment would come soon. To his surprise, however, the teacher
didn"t seem angry.
     "I"m so glad, "said Mr. Sims, turning back to the blackboard. "Oh, and by the way, Carson,"he
continued, "I think a cage would be a healthier place for your little friend. Would you agree with that
statement?" Just at that time, Millie let out a weak but clear cry and stuck her head out of Carson"s
pocket.
     "Yes," Carson said with a smile, "I would totally agree with that statement!"


1. Which of the following is NOT a person"s name?
A. Carson.    
B. Sims.    
C. Millie.    
D. Bob
2. Which of the following statements is true according to the story?
A. Bob was not the only student who laughed at Carson.
B. The little mouse escaped from Carson’s pocket in class.
C. Mr. Sims was too anxious to satisfy his students in class.
D. When Carson was in class, Millie was fast asleep in his pocket.
3. What do you think of Mr. Sims after reading the story?
A. He always gave his students punishment when they made trouble.
B. He was a teacher who was not only strict but also humorous.
C. He liked to ask his students to repeat what he said in class.
D. He was a teacher who was always kind to his students.