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My son Joey was born with club feet£®The doctors told us that he would be able to walk£¬but would never run very well£®By the time he was eight£¬you wouldn't know he had a problem when you saw him walk£®
The children in our neighborhood ran around playing£¬and Joey would join them£¬ run and play£¬too£®We never told him that he probably wouldn't be able to run as well as the other children£®So he didn't know£®
In seventh grade he decided to go out for the cross-country team£®Every day he worked harder and ran more than any of the others£®Although the entire team runs£¬only the top seven runners score for the school£®We didn't tell him he probably would never be on the team£¬so he didn't know£®
He continued to run four to five miles a day£¬every day - even the day he had a high fever£®I was worried£¬so I went to see him after school£®I found him running all alone£®I asked him how he felt£®"Okay£¬" he said£®He had two more miles to go£®Yet he looked straight ahead and kept running£®We never told him he couldn't run miles with a high fever£®So he didn't know£®
Two weeks later£¬the names of the team runners were called£®Joey was Number Six on the list£®Joey was on the team! He was in seventh grade£®We never told him he couldn¡¯t do it!
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ1¡¿The doctor believed Joey would never run very well because ____£®
A£®Joey didn¡¯t like running
B£®Joey couldn¡¯t jump
C£®Something was wrong with his feet
D£®Joey was too young to run
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ2¡¿Few people know Joey¡¯s club feet before ____£®
A£®he was eight years old
B£®he was in seven grade
C£®he ran for the cross-country team
D£®he was on the cross-country team
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ3¡¿How many runners can score for the school?
A£®SixB£®SevenC£®EightD£®Thirteen
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ4¡¿Which of the following is true according to the story?
A£®Joey¡¯s parents didn¡¯t love him         
B£®Joey was a boy with a strong mind£®
C£®Joey¡¯s parents stopped him joining the team 
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ5¡¿The writer wants to tell us _____£®
A£®children shouldn¡¯t do what they can¡¯t do
B£®children with club feet can¡¯t take part in sports
C£®parents should tell their children what they can do
D£®parents should know how to help their children in the right way£®

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I had said goodbye to my husband, Joe, so often, but this time was ____.

We now had our first child. After nights of talks, we made the difficult ____ that Joe would go by himself to Alabama for the six-month training course, and I would stay behind with our new son. It was important that I ____ my teaching position near our home at Fort Hood. Also we were part of a strong network of friends ____ I could turn to for help.

On Joe's ____ evening at home, I bathed little Joey, got him into his sleeper and was heading to the bedroom when Joe gently touched ____ on the shoulder. Lifting the baby from my arms, he said he wanted to put Joey to bed tonight.

They headed down the hall, and I busied myself with meaningless tasks, ____ Joe to turn up from the bedroom within a few minutes. A half hour went by, and ____ he had not come back. Thinking he was having ____ getting our son to fall asleep, I walked quietly to the baby's room and ____ into the dimly-lit£¨µÆ¹â°µµ­µÄ£©room.

Sitting in the rocking chair, moving slowly back and forth, was my husband with ____ in his eyes. He was holding our baby in his arms ____ he had fallen asleep long before. When his pained eyes met mine, he said, "I just can't put him down."

That night we stood over Joey's bed, holding each other and saying over and over that we would make it through this leaving and be ____ again soon.

Joey is six now, and he has a four-year-old brother named Jack. There have been many goodbyes ____ that night, yet my soldier still fights back tears when it's time to ____ once again in service to his country and give his boys that last, long hug goodbye.

1.A. dangerous                   B. different                C. impossible    D. terrible

2.A. promise                  B. wish                         C. suggestion             D. decision

3.A. miss                     B. keep                       C. get                          D. accept

4.A. whom                     B. whose            C. which            D. what

5.A. first                     B. next                        C. other                      D. last

6.A. us                            B. them                        C. me                          D. her

7.A. expecting                    B. remembering       C. agreeing                D. allowing

8.A. again                            B. still                          C. then                        D. ever

9.A. excuse                    B. fun                           C. trouble                   D. chance

10.A. moved                  B. talked             C. turned                    D. looked

11.A. colors                   B. tears                        C. joys                         D. fears

12.A. even though       B. as if                          C. so that                    D. now that

13.A. sure                           B. proud            C. alone                     D. together

14.A. on                         B. for                            C. since                       D. through

15.A. visit                             B. sleep                      C. leave                      D. play

 

ÔĶÁÀí½â¡£
    Mr. Brown lived in a small town, but he got a job in a big city, so he moved there with his wife and his
two children last Tuesday.
    The next day Mr. Brown took his new car out of the garage and was washing it when a neighbour came.
The neighbour stopped and looked at the new car for a minute. Then Mr. Brown turned and saw him.
    The neighbour said, "That's a new car. Is it yours?"
    "Sometimes," Mr. Brown answered.
    The neighbour was surprised. "Sometimes?" he said. "What do you mean?"
    "Well," answered Mr. Brown slowly, "when there's a party in town, it belongs to my daughter, Jean.
When there's a football game, it belongs to my son, Joe. When I have washed it and it looks really nice and
clean, it belongs to my wife, Mary. And when it needs gas, it's mine."
New words:
1. garage n. ³µ¿â
2. neighbour n. ÁÚ¾Ó
3. surprise v. ʹ¾ªÆæ
4. belong to ÊôÓÚ
5. gas n. ÆûÓÍ
1. There are ______ people in the story.
[     ]
A. three
B. four
C. six
D. five
2. Mr. Brown worked in ______.
[     ]
A. a small town
B. a big city
C. the garage
D. the gas station
3. When Mr. Brown was washing the new car, his neighbour came to ask him ______.
[     ]
A. if the car was new
B. what car it was
C. if the car was Mr. Brown's
D. whose car it was
4. When there was a football match, the car belonged to ______.
[     ]
A. Mr. Brown
B. the neighbour
C. Jean's brother
D. Jean
5. "Sometimes" in the story means that ______.
[     ]
A. when there was a party in town, the car belonged to his daughter
B. when there was a football game, it was his son's
C. when the car looked nice and clean, it was his wife's
D. when the car wanted gas, it belonged to him
E. all above.

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