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完形填空。     Across the street from our home was a school and I would often watch the kids as they played basketball
during the break. I often noticed a small   1   playing with boys. I watched in   2   as she ran circles around the
other kids. She   3   to shoot jump shots just over their heads and into the net. The boys always tried to stop
her but no one could. At other times I saw her playing alone, sometimes until   4  .
     One day I asked her way she   5   so much. She looked   6   in my eyes and without a moment of hesitation
she said, "The only way I can go to   7   is to get a scholarship. I believe that I would get it if I were good
enough at   8  . My Daddy told me if the dream is big enough, the facts don"t   9  ." Then with a determined
smile she ran towards the court, I watched her  10  those junior high school years and into high school. Every
week, she led her team to victory.
     One day in her senior year, I saw her sitting in the grass, head  11  in her arms. The coach told her that at
5 feet 5 inches she would  12   never get to play for a top ranked team--much less offered a scholarship-so
she should  13  dreaming about college. I asked her if she had talked to her dad about it yet. She  14   her head
from her hands and told me that her father said those coaches just did not understand the  15  of a dream. He
told her that if she truly wanted a scholarship,  16  could stop her except one thing-her own attitude.
     The next year,  17  she and her team went to the Northern California Championship game, she was seen by
a college coach. She was indeed  18  a scholarship, a full one. She was going to get the college education that
she had  19   and worked toward for all those years. It"s  20  : If the dream is big enough, the facts don"t count.
答案
核心考点
试题【完形填空。     Across the street from our home was a school and I would often watch t】;主要考察你对题材分类等知识点的理解。[详细]
举一反三
(     )1. A. boy           
(     )2. A. doubt         
(     )3. A. managed       
(     )4. A. morning       
(     )5. A. practised     
(     )6. A. slowly        
(     )7. A. work          
(     )8. A.football       
(     )9. A. damage        
(     )10. A. past         
(     )11. A. buried       
(     )12. A. firmly       
(     )13. A. stop         
(     )14. A. lowered      
(     )15. A. effect       
(     )16. A. something    
(     )17. A. after        
(     )18. A. brought      
(     )19. A. thought of   
(     )20. A. true         
B. girl             
B. shock            
B. tried            
B. noon             
B. suffered        
B. quickly          
B. court             
B. basketball     
B. delay            
B.over             
B. placed          
B. sadly           
B. begin           
B. lifted           
B. power          
B. anything         
B. before         
B. handed           
B. dreamed of     
B. possible      
C. student           
C. wonder            
C. failed          
C. dark               
C. performed        
C. quietly          
C. college            
C. my lessons      
C. count             
C. beyond            
C. hidden           
C. nearly           
C. continue          
C. turned          
C. aim              
C. nobody            
C. as              
C. sent               
C. asked for       
C. proper        
D. teacher                
D. delight                    
D. attempted              
D. dawn                        
D. drilled                   
D. directly               
D. school                     
D. the exams             
D. fail                    
D. through                     
D. dropped                   
D. probably                
D. start                     
D. moved                   
D. advantage                
D. nothing                   
D. once                     
D. offered                  
D. referred to             
D. perfect             
1-5: BCA C A 6-10: D CBCD 11-15: ADABB 16-20: DCDBA
完形填空。
     I grew up in a community called Estepona. I was seventeen when one morning Dad told me I could   1 
 him to a distant village, and then take the car to a   2   garage. I readily accepted. When we got to the village,
  3   to pick him up at 4 pm, then dropped off the ear at the garage. With several hours to   4  , I went to a
theater. However, when the last movie   5  , it was six. I was two hours late!
     I knew Dad would be   6   if he found out rd been watching movies. So I decided not to tell him the   7  .
when I hurried there I. apologized for being late, and told him I"d come as quickly as I could,   8   that the car
had needed some major repairs. I"ll never forget the   9   he gave me. "I"m disappointed you feel you have to
  10  to me, Jason." Dad looked at me again. "When you didn"t turn up". called the garage to ask if there were
any  11 , and they told me you hadn"t yet picked up the car."
     I felt  12  as I weakly told him the real reason.  13  passed through Dad as he listened attentively. "I"m
angry with  14  . I realize I"ve failed as a father. I"m going to walk home now and think seriously about  15  
I"ve gone wrong all these years." "But Dad, it"s eighteen miles!" My apologies were  16  . Dad walked home
that day. I drove behind him,  17   him all the way, but he walked  18  .
     Seeing Dad in so much physical and emotional  19   was my most unforgettable experience. However, it
was also the most  20  lesson. I have never lied since.
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(     )1. A. push      
(     )2. A. different   
(     )3. A. managed     
(     )4. A. spare      
(     )5. A. closed     
(     )6. A. angry      
(     )7. A. opinion      
(     )8. A. so         
(     )9. A. news      
(     )10. A. 1ie       
(     )11. A. questions  
(     )12. A. ashamed     
(     )13. A. carelessness
(     )14. A. you      
(     )15. A. where      
(     )16. A. meaningless
(     )17. A. informing  
(     )18. A. heavily    
(     )19. A. pain       
(     )20. A. enjoyable  
B. drive      
B. quiet       
B. expected     
B. waste       
B. performed    
B. surprised    
B. truth       
B. or          
B. sound        
B. talk      
B. problems     
B. frightened   
B. sadness      
B. myself       
B. how      
B. useless     
B. persuading   
B. awfully     
B. hurt        
B. powerful   

C. move     
C. useful   
C. learned   
C. pick    
C. finished  
C. puzzled   
C. result    
C. and     
C. look    
C. explain   
C. mistakes  
C. confused  
C. nervousness
C. me     
C. why     
C. helpless  
C. begging   
C. silently  
C. ruin    
C. practical  

D. lead        
D. nearby      
D. promised    
D. cover       
D. disappeared 
D. anxious     
D. story       
D. but         
D. reason      
D. reply       
D. faults      
D. disappointed
D. weakness    
D. yourself    
D. when        
D. worthless   
D. inspiring   
D. naturally   
D. loss        
D. successful  
阅读理解。
     My most memorable experience will stay in my mind forever. For most people, horses are just animals
that should only be used for racing. Ever since 1 was a child, my dream was to ride a horse. When that
time finally carne, my heart beat a thousand times a minute.
     It Was a warm summer day, and we were at a park. My mom was buying several things for home while
I wandered around to find something interesting. Suddenly I found a horse standing down the block. I ran up
to it, not even knowing how to pet it, just excited to see the most beautiful animal. He was shining white, with
a well-brushed tail. Where was the owner?
     Right away I made up my mind to ride this horse. I found my morn and dragged her to where the horse
was. The owner was back and stated that I couldn"t ride it. Tears flooded down my cheeks as my mom tried
to convince the man to let me ride the horse. He finally agreed for a costly price. Being on the horse awakened
all the senses in me. I was the happiest little girl, having the time of my life. I began planning to buy a horse
after I became a millionaire. Before I knew it, the ride was over. Surprisingly, I actually learned to control the
horse.
     That day was probably the happiest time of my life. Most children wouldn"t have as much fun as I did.
Several years later, I began to get involved in show jumping. If it weren"t for that special experience. I wouldn"t
be able to enjoy the most amazing sport.
1. The writer wanted to ride the horse because _______.
A. she could control the horse well
B. she knew she would ride the horse for free
C. she expected to take part in the show jumping
D. she fell in love with the horse at the first sight
2. The writer was _______when her mother tried to persuade the owner of the horse.
A. worried
B. satisfied
C. proud
D. tired
3. From the passage, we can infer that _______.
A. the horse owner was a kind and rich man
B. the horse was one of the best horses in the area
C. the experience opened doors for her to get into the sport
D. the writer"s mother loved the horse as much as her daughter
4. Which would be the best title for the passage?
A. Love for Animals
B. An Amazing Ride
C. Interest in Sports
D. An Excited Girl
阅读理解。
     He was her best friend"s boyfriend. It sounds like a lifetime TV movie. Back in high school in Chicago, Sue
Napolitano and Larry McNevin were just friends. They wore jackets and were always sitting on the bridge
smoking. But neither gave the other a romantic thought. In fact, asked to describe each other back in those
days, Sue and Larry both came up with the adjective:"nice". 
    On Sept.11, 2004, after 35 years, the high school friends were about to find out how nice "nice" could be.
Larry was looking for another friend with whom he went to high school through Classmates.com, a service
that reconnects high school friends through e-mails. That friend suggested he call Sue.
     Then Larry and Sue talked from the topics of music to food and found they shared similar tastes. After that,
they both ran to their closets to dig out their yearbooks to find the other"s picture.
     With that one call, Sue, who divorced (离婚) in 1985 after five years of marriage, and Larry, who divorced
in 1997, began calling and e-mailing each other daily. A month later Sue flew to Chicago. Larry and Sue hugged
and cried when they met at the airport. They were like two lovers separated for years.
     On April 11, 2005, while the two were in Las Vegas, they got married. After the wedding, Larry said it make
more sense for him to move to Phoenix, since he planned on retiring to some place warm, and few places are
warmer. They now live in Phoenix and are surprised how high school friends found their way back together
after 35 years.
1. When Sue and Lorry were in high school, ____.
A. Sue was Larry"s girlfriend
B. they felt it was nice to stay together
C. they both liked lifetime TV movies
D. they always had romantic ideas with each other
2. On Sept.11, 2004, Larry was surfing at Classmates.com with the purpose to _____.
A. search or his girlfriend
B. look for how to reconnect Sue
C. seek advice about marriage
D. search for another schoolmate
3. According to the passage, the climate in Phoenix is probably _____.
A. cold
B. warm
C. wet
D. dry
4. After so many years, Sue and Larry got married, which they both felt ____.
A. amusing
B. foreseeable
C. amazing
D. impossible
阅读理解。
     Odland remembers like it was yesterday working in an expensive French restaurant in Denver. The ice
cream he was serving fell onto the white dress of a rich and important woman.
     Thirty years have passed, but Odland can"t get the memory out of his mind, nor the woman"s kind reaction
(反应). She was shocked, regained calmness and, in a kind voice, told the young Odland, "It"s OK. It wasn"t
your fault." When she left the restaurant, she also left the future Fortune 500CEO (总裁) with a life lesson:
You can tell a lot about a person by the way he or she treats the waiter.
     Odland isn"t the only CEO to have made this discovery. Rather, it seems to be one of those few laws of the
land that every CEO learns on the way up. It"s hard to get a dozen CEOs to agree about anything, but most
agree with the Waiter Rule. They say how others treat the CEO says nothing. But how others treat the waiter
is like a window into the soul.
     Watch out for anyone who pulls out the power card to say something like, "I could buy this p[lace and fir
you," or "I know the owner and I could have you fired." Those who say such things have shown more about
their character(人品) than about their wealth and power.
     The CEO who came up with it, or at least first wrote it down, is Raytheon CEO Bill Swanson. He wrote
a best-selling book called Swanson"s Unwritten Rules of Management.
     "A person who is nice to you but rude to the waiter, or to others, is not a nice person," Swanson says, "I
will never offer a job to the person who is sweet to the boss but rude to someone cleaning the tables."
1. What happened after Odland dropped the ice cream onto the woman"s dress?
A. He was fired.
B. He was blamed.
C. The woman comforted him.
D. The woman left the restaurant at once.
2. Odland learned one of his life lessons from _______.
A. his experience as a waiter
B. the advice given by the CEOs
C. an article in Fortune
D. an interesting best-selling book
3. According to the text, most CEOs have the same opinion about _______.
A. Fortune 500 companies
B. the Management Rules
C. Swanson"s book
D. the Waiter Rule
4. From the text we can learn that ______.
A. one should be nicer to important people
B. CEOs often show their power before others
C. one should respect others no matter who they are
D. CEOs often have meals in expensive restaurants
完形填空。
     I was cleaning out an old box when an old card caught my eyes: Queen City Casket Company.
     "What is it?" I wondered. I   1   it over. There, in faded ink, was a hand-scrawled (手写的)   2  .
Immediately my mind traveled   3   many years.
     I was nine years old, walking down the cold, wet streets of Springfield, with a bag of   4   on my
shoulder. On my rounds that day, I came to that company finally, whose owner, Mr. Rader, had always
taken me there to ask his workers   5   they wanted any magazines.
     Shaking off the   6   like a wet dog, I entered Mr. Rader"s office. After a quick glance he   7   me over
to the fireplace. Noticing the   8   in the top of my shoe,he said."Come with me!"
     Pulling me into his pick-up   9  , he pulled to a stop before a   10   store. Inside, a salesman fitted me
with the finest pair of Oxfords I had  11  seen. I  12   about 100 feet tall when I stood up  13   them."We"d
like a pair of new  14  too." Mr Rader said.
     Back in his office, Mr Rader took out a  15 , wrote something on it, and handed it to me. With  16   eyes,
I read, "Do to others as you would have them do to you." He said affectionately (深情地), "Jimmy, I want
you to  17   I love you." I said goodbye, and for the first time I sensed a hope that somehow things would
be  18  . With people like Mr. Rader in the world, there was hope,  19  and love,and that would always make
 20  .
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(     )1. A. turned  
(     )2. A. address 
(     )3. A. forward
(     )4. A. letters 
(     )5. A. if only 
(     )6. A. dust    
(     )7. A .led    
(     )8. A. water  
(     )9. A. truck   
(     )10. A. magazine
(     )11. A. ever   
(     )12. A. grew  
(     )13. A for    
(     )14. A. socks 
(     )15. A. pen    
(     )16. A. tearful
(     )17. A. admit  
(     )18. A. mistake 
(     )19. A. sadness 
(     )20. A. deal  
B. thought    
B. list        
B. for        
B. magazines  
B. how        
B. sweat      
B. followed    
B. mud        
B. factory     
B. shoe        
B. already    
B. measured    
B. in         
B. shoes      
B. paper      
B. unbelievable
B. know        
B. wrong       
B. kindness    
B. fortune    
C. read       
C. message   
C. ahead     
C. books     
C. whether   
C. tail       
C. watched   
C. hole       
C. home      
C. umbrella   
C. never     
C. rose       
C. on        
C. coat       
C. card       
C. curious    
C. consider   
C. all right 
C. carelessness
C. choice     
D. passed           
D. lesson           
D. back             
D. cards            
D. why              
D. rain             
D. carried          
D. cover            
D. store            
D. bag              
D. hardly           
D. felt             
D. without          
D. gloves           
D. notebook         
D. puzzled          
D. express          
D. possible         
D. awareness        
D. difference