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完形填空。     Norman Cousins was a businessman from the United States who often traveled around the world on
business. He enjoyed his   1   and traveling. Then, after returning to the United States from a   2   trip to
the Union of Soviet Socialist Republic (USSR), Mr. Cousins got sick. Because he had pushed his body to
   3   of its strength on the trip, a change began to take place   4   him. The material between his bones
became   5  .
     In less than one week after his return, he could not   6  . Every move that he   7   was painful. He was
not able to sleep at night. The doctors told him that they did not know how to cure Mr. Cousins" problem
and he might never   8   over the illness. Mr. Cousins, however, refused to give up   9  .
     Mr. cousins thought that  10  thoughts were causing bad chemical changes in his body. He did not want
to take medicine to cure himself.  11 , he felt that happy thoughts or  12  might cure his illness. He began to
  13  on himself while still in the hospital by watching funny shows on television. Mr. Cousins quickly found
that 10 minutes real laughter during the  14  gave him two hours of pain-free sleep at night. 
      15  the doctors could not help him, Mr. Cousins left the hospital and checked into a hotel room where he
could   1   his experiments with laughter. For eight days, Mr. Cousins tested in the hotel room watching funny
shows on television, reading funny books, and sleeping  17  he felt tired. Within three weeks, he felt well  18 
 to take a vacation to Puerto Rico where he began running on the beach for  19  .
     After a few months, Mr. Cousins returned to work. He had laughed himself back to  20 .
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试题【完形填空。     Norman Cousins was a businessman from the United States who often trav】;主要考察你对题材分类等知识点的理解。[详细]
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(     )1. A. time    
(     )2. A. boring    
(     )3. A. top    
(     )4. A. from    
(     )5. A. weak    
(     )6. A. speak   
(     )7. A. made    
(     )8. A. look    
(     )9. A. effort   
(     )10. A. foolish  
(     )11. A. Instead  
(     )12. A. sleep   
(     )13. A. rescue  
(     )14. A. day    
(     )15. A. Promising 
(     )16. A. invent   
(     )17. A. until   
(     )18. A. soon    
(     )19. A. exercise  
(     )20. A. power   
B. holiday  
B. tiring   
B. degree   
B. around   
B. ill    
B. breathe  
B. did    
B. get    
B. hope    
B. unusual  
B. However  
B. travel   
B. operate  
B. week    
B. Deciding  
B. begin   
B. whenever  
B. completely    
B. illness 
B. sense   
C. sleep   
C. dangerous 
C. problem  
C. inside   
C. false   
C. stand  
C. took    
C. turn    
C. treatment 
C. funny   
C. Therefore 
C. laughter  
C. examine  
C. month   
C. Doubting     
C. continue  
C. unless   
C. slowly  
C. rest    
C. health   
D. work         
D. pleasant     
D. limit        
D. beside       
D. painful      
D. see          
D. gave         
D. think        
D. arrangement               
D. unhappy      
D. Otherwise    
D. television   
D. experiment   
D. year         
D. Recognizing  
D. prove        
D. so that      
D. enough       
D. pleasure     
D. happiness    
1-5 DBDCA   6-10 CABBD   11-15 ACDAB   16-20 CBDAC
阅读理解。
     My father had returned from his business visit to London when I came in, rather late, to supper. I could
tell at once that he and my mother had been discussing something. In that half-playful, half-serious way I
knew so well, he said, "How would you like to go to Eton?"
     "You bet," I cried quickly catching the joke. Everyone knew it was the most expensive, the most famous
of schools. You had to be entered at birth, if not before. Besides, even at 12 or 13, I understood my father.
He disliked any form of showing off. He always knew his proper station in life, which was in the middle of
the middle class, our house was medium-sized; he had avoided joining Royal Liverpool Golf Club and went
to a smaller one instead; though once he had got a second-hand Rolls-Royce at a remarkably low price, he
felt embarrassed driving it, and quickly changed it for an Austin 1100.
     This could only be his delightful way of telling me that the whole boarding school idea was to be dropped.
Alas! I should also have remembered that he had a liking for being different from everyone else, if it did not
conflict (冲突) with his fear of drawing attention to himself.
    It seemed that he had happened to be talking to Graham Brown of the London office, a very nice fellow,
and Graham had a friend who had just entered his boy at the school, and while he was in that part of the
world he thought he might just as well phone them. I remember my eyes stinging (刺痛) and my hands
shaking with the puzzlement of my feelings. There was excitement, at the heart of great sadness.
     "Oh, he doesn"t want to go away," said my mother, "You shouldn"t go on like this." "It"s up to him," said
my father. "He can make up his own mind."
1. The house the writer"s family lived in was _____.
[     ]
A. the best they could afford
B. right for their social position
C. for showing off
D. rather small
2. His father sold his Roils-Royce because _____.
[     ]
A. it made him feel uneasy
B. it was too old to work well
C. it was too expensive to possess
D. it was too cheap
3. The writer"s father enjoyed being different as long as _____.
[     ]
A. it drew attention to him
B. it didn"t bring him in arguments
C. it was understood as a joke
D. there was no danger of his showing off
4. What was the writer"s reaction to the idea of going to Eton?
[     ]
A. He was very unhappy.
B. He didn"t believe it.
C. He was delighted.
D. He had mixed feelings.
5. We can know from the passage that _____.
[     ]
A. Children who can go to Eton are very famous
B. Children can go to Eton if they will
C. It is very difficult for a child to get admitted by Eton
D. Children don"t have the right to decide whether they will go to Eton
阅读理解。
     Mr. Fitzpatrick has given much attention to his "Weight reduction" (减轻体重) programs. Just last year,
for example, when he was the main speaker at the company dinner, he said he put on twenty pounds instead
of losing thirty he promised he would.
     The year before that, he joined a health club. He exercised every day and ate less food. At the end of three
months, however, he began making excuses about why he couldn"t go there more often.
     After the health club failed to work, he joined Weight Watchers but stopped going because he was the only
man there. And he hated following any of the diet programs. Fitz"s latest idea is to join a walking club to "walk
off" the weight.
1. Mr. Fitzpatrick was _____ when spoke at the company dinner last year.
[     ]
A. lighter than the year before
B. planning to go on a diet
C. heavier than the year before
D. with the Weight Watchers 
2. He did not stay with Weight Watchers because _____.
[     ]
A. he couldn"t do as the diet programs required him
B. he felt uncomfortable being watched by women
C. the members of Weight Watchers were all women but him
D. Both A and C 
3. Which of the following can best explain the main idea of the passage?
[     ]
A. There is no good way to lose weight.
B. One can do nothing without a strong will.
C. There are different ways to lose weight.
D. Walking is the best way of losing weight.
阅读理解。
     The man from the west stopped and drew back his arm. "You"re not Jimmy Wells," he said in a quick and
angry way, "Twenty years is a long time, but not long enough to change a man" nose from a Roman to pug."
"It sometimes changes a good man into a bad one," said the tall man, "you"ve been under arrest for ten minutes.
Silky Bob. Chicago thinks you may have dropped over our way and phones us she wants to have a word with
you. Going quietly, are you? That"s sensible. Now before we go to the station here"s a note I was asked to hand
you. You may read it here at the window. It"s from Patrolman Wells.?" The man from the West opened the little
piece of paper handed him. His hand was steady when he began to read, but it trembled a little by the time he
finished. The note was rather short. Bob: I was at the right place on time. When you struck the match to light
your cigar I saw it was the face wanted in Chicago. Somehow I couldn"t do it myself, so I went around and
got a plain clothes man (便衣) to do the job.
1. The man from the West must have broken the law _____.
[     ]
A. in Chicago
B. in New York
C. in his hometown
D. somewhere else
2. The man from the West recognized the tall man not to be the one he had been waiting for because the tall
    man _____.
[     ]
A. had a different accent from his
B. had a different nose from his friend"s
C. was his another old friend
D. said "Chicago wants to talk with you?"
3. The two men may have walked _____.
[     ]
A. for ten minutes
B. arm in arm
C. face to face
D. both A and B
4. We can suppose Jim _____.
[     ]
A. was afraid of the man from the West
B. got another man to help him when necessary
C. had an appointment with Bob 20 years ago
D. had something else to do and couldn"t come himself
完形填空。
     I have been blessed with the opportunity in my life. It took the near-death experience of my dad to make
me realize that my purpose in life is to   1   others. My dad suffered from leukemia (白血病) in 1998.   2  
 the pain and treatment that he endured inspired me to be a more kind and   3   person. I realized life is just
too   4   and it was time for me to make some changes-do the things in life that I wanted to do without
making   5   why I couldn"t do them.
     My dad   6   a bone marrow transplant (骨髓移植) operation, and after that he was able to reuse his own
"cleaned" marrow, so a donor (捐献者) was not needed. That was excellent   7   because donors who are a
match are hard to come by. That   8   me to become a bone marrow donor and hopefully help someone else
one day. I also   9   money for the cancer patients. Yet, I was not satisfied with just that. I had to do more,
 10  blood every other month and seek opportunities to do other acts of kindness daily. The opportunity,
some days, presents itself very  11  and some days I have to seek it out. Either way, it comes.
     I would like to  12  one of my favorite quotes with you all.
     "In an average lifetime, a person  13  about sixty-five thousand miles. That"s two and half times around
the world I wonder  14  your steps will take you. I wonder how you"ll use the rest of the  15  you"re given."
     I want to use my miles to create foot prints of love in this world.
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(     )1. A. advise       
(     )2. A. Suffering   
(     )3. A. stronger     
(     )4. A. short        
(     )5. A. efforts      
(     )6. A. refused      
(     )7. A. expression            
(     )8. A. forced       
(     )9. A. raised       
(     )10. A. check        
(     )11. A. secretly     
(     )12. A. share        
(     )13. A. conveys      
(     )14. A. where        
(     )15. A. materials    
B. ask         
B. Watching      
B. independent
B. wonderful     
B. promises     
B. had            
B. knowledge             
B. inspired     
B. kept        
B. test        
B. clearly    
B. divide    
B. owns          
B. why           
B. miles     
C. help           
C. Discovering           
C. giving          
C. dangerous         
C. excuses           
C. learned              
C. news            
C. allowed             
C. paid           
C. donate         
C. peacefully        
C. record           
C. measures          
C. when             
C. world         
D. understand    
D. Bringing          
D. receiving   
D. boring         
D. plans         
D. stopped           
D. sense        
D. expected                      
D. hid           
D. sell          
D. wildly        
D. repeat          
D. walks          
D. if              
D. wealth    
阅读理解。
     When I met him, I had a lot of anger inside of me. I"ve lived my whole life in Spanish Harlem, but in my
neighborhood, there are shoot-ups all the time. I know kids who have been shot or beaten up. I have friends
who ended up in prison. I could have ended up that way, too, but Mr. Clark wouldn"t let that happen.
     Mr. Clark worked long hours, making sure I did my work. My grades rose. In fact, the scores of our
whole class rose. One day, he took our class to see The Phantom of the Opera, and it was the first time some
kids had ever been out of Harlem. Before the show, he treated us to dinner at a restaurant and taught us not to
talk with our mouths full. We did not want to let him down.
     Mr. Clark was selected as Disney"s 2000 Teacher of the Year. He said he would draw three names out of
a hat; those students would go with him to Los Angeles to get the award. But when the time came to draw
names, Mr. Clark said, "You"re all going."
     On graduation day, there were a lot of tears. We didn"t want his class to end. In 2001, he moved to Atlanta,
but he always kept in touch. He started giving lectures about education, and wrote a bestselling book based on
his classroom rules, The Essential 55. In 2003, Mr. Clark took some of us on a trip to South Africa to deliver
school supplies and visit orphanages (孤儿院). It was the most amazing experience of my life. It"s now my
dream to one day start a group of women"s clubs, helping people from all backgrounds.
1. Without Mr. Clark, the writer _____.
[     ]
A. might not have won the prize
B. might have been put into prison
C. might have joined a women"s club
D. might not have moved to Atlanta
2. The Essential 55 is _____.
[     ]
A. a show
B. a speech
C. a book
D. a classroom rule
3. How many students" names were finally drawn out of a hat by Mr. Clark?
[     ]
A. None.
B. Three.
C. Fifty-five.
D. All.
4. In the passage, the writer intends to tell us that _____.
[     ]
A. a good teacher has a good influence on his or her students
B. Mr. Clark helped to set up a group of women"s clubs
C. a good teacher can help raise his or her students" scores
D. Mr. Clark went to South Africa because he liked travelling