题目内容

    In my living room, there is a plaque (匾) that advises me to “Bloom (开花) where you are planted.” It reminds me of Dorothy. I got to know Dorothy in the early 1980s, when I was teaching Early Childhood Development through a program with Union College in Barbourville, Kentucky. The job responsibilities required occasional visits to the classroom of each teacher in the program. Dorothy stands out in my memory as one who “bloomed” in her remote area.

       Dorothy taught in a school in Harlan County, Kentucky, Appalachian Mountain area. To get to her school from the town of Harlan, I followed a road winding around the mountain. In the eight-mile journey, I crossed the same railroad track five times, giving the possibility of getting caught by the same train five times. Rather than feeling excited by this drive through the mountains, I found it depressing. The poverty level was shocking and the small shabby houses gave me the greatest feeling of hopelessness.

       From the moment of my arrival at the little school, all gloom (忧郁) disappeared. Upon arriving at Dorothy’s classroom. I was greeted with smiling faces and treated like a queen. The children had been prepared to show me their latest projects. Dorothy told me with a big smile that they were serving poke greens salad and cornbread for “dinner” (lunch). In case you don’t know, poke greens are a weed-type plant that grows wild, especially on poor ground.

       Dorothy never ran out of reports of exciting activities of her students. Her enthusiasm never cooled down. When the time came to sit for the testing and interviewing required to receive her Child Development Associate Certification, Dorothy was ready. She came to the assessment and passed in all areas. Afterwards, she invited me to the one-and-only steak house in the area to celebrate her victory, as if she had received her Ph. D. degree. After the meal, she placed a little box containing an old pen in my hand. She said it was a family heirloom (传家宝), but to me it is a treasured symbol of appreciation and pride that cannot be matched with things. 

66. “Early Childhood Development” in Paragraph 1 refers to __________.

    A. a program directed by Dorothy               B. a course given by the author

    C. an activity held by the students               D. an organization sponsored by Union college

67. In the journey, the author was most disappointed at seeing _________.

    A. the long track                                       B. the poor houses

    C. the same train                                       D. the winding road

68. Upon arriving at the classroom, the author was cheered up by _________.

    A. a warm welcome                                         B. the sight of poke greens

    C. Dorothy’s latest projects                        D. a big dinner made for her

69. What can we know about Dorothy from the last paragraph?

    A. She was invited to a celebration at a restaurant. B. She got a pen as a gift from the author.

    C. She passed the required assessment.                     D. She received her Ph. D. degree.
 70. What does the author mainly intend to tell us?

    A. Whatever you do, you must do it carefully.

    B. Whoever you are, you deserve equal treatment.

    C. However poor you are, you have the right to education,

 D. Wherever you are, you can accomplish your achievement.                                      

                   

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One evening in November, Berlin received a telephone call from Mrs. Green. “Please, Dr Berlin, come to my house. I had 50,000 dollars on my desk and now it is gone.”
Dr Berlin arrived at Mrs. Green’s house at eight o’clock. First he asked Mrs. Green, “When did you see the money last?”
“At seven o’clock. I put it on my desk in my living room. Then I went to wash my hair. I came back at seven thirty and the money was gone.”
“I see.” Dr Berlin said. “Were you alone in the house?”
“No. My sister’s son Jack is here, too.” Then Dr Berlin and Mrs. Green went to Jack’s room.”
“Please, sit down,” Jack said. Dr Berlin sat on the only chair in the room, and the chair was cold. He also saw some books on the ground near his feet.
“What have you been doing this evening?” Dr Berlin asked.
“I came home at six-thirty, and went right to my room. I’ve been sitting in that chair and reading all the evening. I never got up and I never left the room. Maybe somebody came into the house and took my aunt’s money.”
After hearing that, Dr Berlin was clear about who had taken the money.
59. When did Dr Berlin answer the phone from Mrs. Green?
A. At 6:30      B. At 7:00      C. After 7:30  D. At 8:00
60. Where did Mrs. Green put her money?
A. In her living room.   B. In her washing room.
C. In Jack’s room.                  D. In her office.
61. When did the thief take Mrs. Green’s money?
A. Before Mrs. Green came back home.
B. When Jack was reading.
C. After Mrs. Green went to wash her hair.
D. When Dr Berlin was answering the phone.
62. Which of the following is WRONG?
A. Mrs. Green didn’t live alone.     
B. Jack had given a careless reply (回答).
C. Dr Berlin found out who had taken the money.
D. Jack had been really reading books all that evening.

In my living roomthere is a plaque () that advises me to“Bloom (开花) where you are planted.” It reminds me of Dorothy.I got to know Dorothy in the early 1980swhen I was teaching Early Childhood Development through a program with Union College in BarbourvilleKentucky.The job responsibilities required occasional visits to the classroom of each teacher in the program.Dorothy stands out in my memory as one who“bloomed”in her remote area.

Dorothy taught in a school in Harlan CountyKentuckyAppalachian Mountain area.To get to her school from the town of HarlanI followed a road winding around the mountain.In the eight?mile journeyI crossed the same railroad track five timesgiving the possibility of getting caught by the same train five times.Rather than feeling excited by this drive through the mountainsI found it depressing.The poverty level was shocking and the small shabby houses gave me the greatest feeling of hopelessness.

From the moment of my arrival at the little schoolall gloom (忧郁) disappeared.Upon arriving at Dorothy’s classroom.I was greeted with smiling faces and treated like a queen.The children had been prepared to show me their latest projects.Dorothy told me with a big smile that they were serving poke greens salad and cornbread for“dinner”(lunch)In case you don’t knowpoke greens are a weed?type plant that grows wildespecially on poor ground.

Dorothy never ran out of reports of exciting activities of her students.Her enthusiasm never cooled down.When it came time to sit for the testing and interviewing required to receive her Child Development Associate CertificationDorothy was ready.She came to the assessment and passed in all areas.Afterwardshe invited me to the one?and?only steak house in the area to celebrate her victoryas if she had received her Ph.D.degree.After the mealshe placed a little box containing an old pen in my hand.She said it was a family heirloom (传家宝)but to me it is a treasured symbol of appreciation and pride that cannot be matched with things.

1.“Early Childhood Development”in Paragraph 1 refers to________.

Aa program directed by Dorothy

Ba course given by the author

Can activity held by the students

Dan organization sponsored by Union college

2.In the journeythe author was most disappointed at seeing________.

Athe long track

Bthe poor houses

Cthe same train

Dthe winding road

3.Upon arriving at the classroomthe author was cheered up by________.

Aa warm welcome

Bthe sight of poke greens

CDorothy’s latest projects

Da big dinner made for her

4.What can we know about Dorothy from the last paragraph?

AShe was invited to a celebration at a restaurant.

BShe got a pen as a gift from the author.

CShe passed the required assessment.

DShe received her Ph.D.degree.

5.What does the author mainly intend to tell us?

AWhatever you doyou must do it carefully.

BWhoever you areyou deserve equal treatment.

CHowever poor you areyou have the right to education.

DWherever you areyou can accomplish your achievement.

 

Flowers only bloom(开花) when they are planted in the right soil. That is also true for me.

I first moved to Foxboro, Massachusetts, as a single mother with my baby daughter, Darcy. I was drawn to its New England beauty, friendly people and rich history. It happened that there were a lot of forsythia(连翘) bushes around the house in which I lived just like my childhood home. I joined St. Mark’s Episcopal Church where I taught the Sunday school. At church, I met my second husband, Dean. For more than 25 years, I bloomed in Foxboro, and I had another two children.

Then, when Darcy was a few years out of college, she moved to Alameda, California, to be near friends. I missed her badly. A year later my beloved husband Dean had deadly cancer. He only made it eight months. My heart was broken. Later I moved to Alameda with my children. It was a beautiful Victorian island, and I was grateful to spend more time with Darcy. I even attended a church and made a few friends there. Still, I couldn’t help but miss Foxboro. It had everything and everyone I loved.

One spring day, when I was walking by a school, something yellow caught my eyes. Forsythia bushes! They made me homesick and I kept back my tears. “I miss you, Foxboro,” I whispered. Then I went into a shop and looked at some ceramic(陶瓷的) pots lined up on a shelf. A large white one seemed to catch my attention. “That’ll be perfect in my living room,” I thought.

I turned it over to look at the price. Instead I found these words: “New England Pottery, Foxboro, Massachusetts.” A piece of artwork, from my second hometown, was right here. It was able to spread across the country and so were forsythia bushes. I took it as a sign that I can bloom, right where I am.

1.From the text we learn that the author ____.

A.gave birth to three children in Foxboro

B.planted forsythia bushes around her house

C.got to know her second husband at church

D.worked as a middle school teacher in Foxboro

2.The author moved to Alameda so that she could ____.

A.have more time together with Darcy

B.forget the sorrow at her husband’s death

C.visit her children at Alameda College frequently

D.enjoy the beautiful scenery on the Victorian island

3.When the author saw forsythia bushes at a school she _____.

A.wanted to buy a ceramic pot to put them in

B.thought of her life in Foxboro

C.felt they would look great in her living room

D.believed they were real art work

4.Why does the author compare herself to flowers?

A.Because she wanted to show she likes flowers.

B.Because she can live in any place that is right like flowers.

C.Because she moved across the country just like flowers.

D.Because girls are like flowers that are blooming.

 

One evening in November, Berlin received a telephone call from Mrs. Green. “Please, Dr Berlin, come to my house. I had 50,000 dollars on my desk and now it is gone.”

Dr Berlin arrived at Mrs. Green’s house at eight o’clock. First he asked Mrs. Green, “When did you see the money last?”

“At seven o’clock. I put it on my desk in my living room. Then I went to wash my hair. I came back at seven thirty and the money was gone.”

“I see.” Dr Berlin said. “Were you alone in the house?”

“No. My sister’s son Jack is here, too.” Then Dr Berlin and Mrs. Green went to Jack’s room.”

“Please, sit down,” Jack said. Dr Berlin sat on the only chair in the room, and the chair was cold. He also saw some books on the ground near his feet.

“What have you been doing this evening?” Dr Berlin asked.

“I came home at six-thirty, and went right to my room. I’ve been sitting in that chair and reading all the evening. I never got up and I never left the room. Maybe somebody came into the house and took my aunt’s money.”

After hearing that, Dr Berlin was clear about who had taken the money.

59. When did Dr Berlin answer the phone from Mrs. Green?

A. At 6:30      B. At 7:00      C. After 7:30  D. At 8:00

60. Where did Mrs. Green put her money?

A. In her living room.   B. In her washing room.

C. In Jack’s room.                  D. In her office.

61. When did the thief take Mrs. Green’s money?

A. Before Mrs. Green came back home.

B. When Jack was reading.

C. After Mrs. Green went to wash her hair.

D. When Dr Berlin was answering the phone.

62. Which of the following is WRONG?

A. Mrs. Green didn’t live alone.     

B. Jack had given a careless reply (回答).

C. Dr Berlin found out who had taken the money.

D. Jack had been really reading books all that evening.

 

完形填空 (共20小题;每小题l分,满分20分)

请认真阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。

My husband and I went into a shop that sold handcrafted items in hopes of finding a few last-minute Christmas gifts.

There was a lot  36   . Every shelf and   37  was loaded with different crafters' handiwork. As I walked through the store, I noticed a wooden plaque(瓷花金属板) hanging on a wall. I turned to take  38   look and remember shaking my head "yes" at   39   printed on the plaque.

"Life isn't about waiting for the   40  to pass," the plaque proclaimed(宣布). "It's about learning to dance in the rain."

As I pulled my husband over and directed his attention to the plaque, I could see that he too   41 the simple lesson the plaque shared. How often in our daily lives had we put conditions on our   42  ? When we get the house paid off, then we can be happy. When things settle down with the kids, then we'll be able to do more together. There is so little joy for the here and now in the uncertainties of the   43  and thens.

Looking at the plaque, I found myself  44   to a hot and muggy day the summer before, when I unknowingly   45  the plaque's message. Light rain continued to fall as I walked out to get my mail. Water was still running   46   through the gutters(屋顶檐槽). I don't know what came over me,  47  I suddenly felt forced to do something a little crazy   48 my fifty-plus years.

I   49  my shoes and stockings and began walking barefoot through the water. It was deliciously   50  , heated by the pavement that had been   51  by the summer heat.

I'm sure my neighbors thought that I had   52  my last vestige of sanity(神智健全), but I didn't care. For in that moment, I was alive. I wasn't worried about bills, the future or any other day-to-day cares. I was   53  a gift — a pure and simple moment of joy!

The plaque now hangs in my living room, a Christmas gift from my husband. I walk past it multiple times each day and  54   pause to ask myself, "So, am I   55  in the rain?"

I think I am. I know I try to. One step at a time, I am learning to dance in the rain!

1.A. to purchase         B. to see          C. to choose           D. to order

2.A. wall           B. counter         C. drawer          D. panel

3. A. a first           B. a second            C. a better        D. a worse

4.A. the word        B. the design          C. the note        D. the message

5.A. trouble        B. happiness           C. storm               D. fortune

6.A. considered     B. recalled            C. appreciated         D. acknowledged

7. A. happiness      B. responsibility      C. desire          D. virtue

8. A. wheres        B. ifs             C. buts            D. whens

9.A. keeping back     B. thinking back      C. going back        D. dating back

10.A. interpret      B. understood      C. conveyed            D. lived

11.A. high           B. fiercely            C. deep            D. low

12. A. ortherwise       B. and                 C. but                 D. thus 

13. A. in                B. for             C. above               D. at

14.A. come off       B. put on          C. throw away          D. slipped off

15.A. cold               B. warm            C. smooth          D. swift

16.A. baked          B. swollen         C. removed         D. burned

17.A. dismissed      B. suffered            C. lost            D. gained

18. A. experiencing     B. distributing        C. receiving           D. presenting

19. A. hardly            B. incidentally        C. seldom          D. frequently

20.A. stuck         B. running         C. dancing         D. caught

 

 

 

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