题目内容
The day he had been looking forward to _____at last.
A.coming | B.came | C.had come | D.have come |
B
解析试题分析:考查句子结构。本句中的定语从句he had been looking forward to修饰先行词the day,came是真正的谓语动词。句意:他一直期待的那一天终于到来了。故B正确。
考点:考查句子结构
点评:句子结构是高考中必考部分,考生在平时一定要加强句子成分的分析,提高分析能力。
12-year-old John Thomas Robertson is a born train fan. "I’ve liked trains probably from the day I was born," he told Good Morning America. "When I was very little," he said, "my grandpa got me a train model. I would just watch it go round for hours and hours."
When Robertson finally had the opportunity to ride on a train, he felt great. His journey was so mind-blowing that he couldn’t keep it to himself: he decided to take all his classmates to go on a ride with him. When he found that some of his classmates couldn’t pay the fare, he collected cans (罐子) and bottles and raised more than $1,000 for them.
That trip was such a happy one that he made it a yearly action. "It never gets boring for some reason; it’s just fun," he said. "It really lets people get away from their busy life and have fun.
Every October, Robertson takes a new group of children to ride on the train —but now, he has a problem. Several disabled children were refused because the train was not accessible (可用的) to disabled people. "He was angry to think that children of his own age couldn’t ride a train," his mother said.
But he wouldn’t say no: he recently sent a letter to the train office for help. To his surprise, the leader, Ty Pennington, accepted the letter in person. He said that he and his workers would work on making a train accessible to disabled people.
【小题1】The first time John Thomas Robertson took a train, ________.
A.he was frightened by it |
B.he acted as a driver |
C.he watched it for hours |
D.he fell in love with it |
A.was greatly attracted to trains since early childhood |
B.said so in Good Morning America |
C.took a group of disabled children to travel by train |
D.was taken to a train the day he was born |
A.important | B.terrible | C.amazing | D.disappointing |
A.the trains then weren’t accessible to the disabled |
B.Robertson had not saved enough money for the tickets |
C.they couldn’t afford the train tickets |
D.the driver would not allow them to do so |
A.helpful and crazy | B.kind and clever |
C.kind but boring | D.lazy but kind |
John keeps a record of new words and expressions in English. He usually writes them in a note-book. Then, later in the day, he asks his teacher about them. “Mrs. Thomas, these expressions are new to me. ‘She’s blue today.’, ‘You’re yellow’, ‘A little white lie’, ‘She has green fingers’.” After looking at the note-book, Mrs. Thomas says, “In everyday English, John,‘blue’ sometimes means sad. ‘Yellow’ means afraid. A person with ‘green fingers’ grows plants successfully. And ‘a white lie’ is not a bad lie.” “I don’t understand. Please give me an example.” “ For example, I offer you some cake. The truth is that you don’t like my cake. You don’t say that. Instead, you say, ‘No, thanks, I'm not hungry.’ That’s a white lie.” John says, “I see , thanks for the explanation!”
1.“Blue” sometimes means in spoken English “_____”.
A.angry |
B.lucky |
C.glad |
D.unhappy |
2.A person with “green fingers” is one who _____ planting.
A.is a new hand in |
B.is good at |
C.works hard at |
D.is interested in |
3.“You’re yellow to fight.” means “_____.”
A.You dare not fight |
B.You dare to fight |
C.You're afraid to see a fight |
D.You’re able to fight |
4.If you say “It’s a white lie.”, it means that someone _____.
A.says something unreal and harmful |
B.is unfriendly to talk to others |
C.refuses to tell the truth in a polite way |
D.is telling a big lie |
Thomas Edison was one of ten said to be the greatest genius of his age. There are only a few men in all of the history, who have changed the lives of other men as much as the inventor of the first useful electric light. But Edison could never be happy only because someone said he was a genius.“ There is no such thing as genius,” Edison said. He said that what people called genius was mostly hard work.
But Edison was a dreamer as well as a worker. From his earliest days as a child he wondered about the secrets of nature. Nature, he often said, is full of secrets. He tried to understand them; then, he tried to learn what could usefully be done with them.
Edison enjoyed thinking. He knew that most people will do almost anything instead of the difficult work of thinking, especially if they do not think very often. But he knew, too, that thinking can give men enjoyment and pleasure.
Edison could not understand how anyone could be uninterested in life. As he loved to think, he also loved to work. On the day he became 75 years old, someone asked him what ideas he had about life. “ Work,” he answered. “Discovering the secrets of nature and using them to make men happier.” He said he had enough inventions in his mind to give him another 100 years of work.
1. Which of the following is NOT true according to the passage?
A.Edison invented the electric light. |
B.Many other people have changed Edison’s life. |
C.Edison has changed the life of many other people. |
D.Few men in history can change other people’s life. |
2. Edison thought .
A.he could be happy if he was a genius |
B.genius plays the most important part in one’s success |
C.hard work could do better than genius |
D.genius could do better than hard work |
3. Edison was .
A.very much interested in nature |
B.interested in discovering the secrets of nature |
C.interested in changing people’s ideas |
D.uninterested in making people happier by discovering the secrets of nature |
4.In Edison’s opinion, .
A.thinking can supply people with enjoyment and pleasure as well as help |
B.people’s success lies mostly in genius |
C.hard work is the second important thing in making people successful |
D.there are few secrets for him to discover later |