题目内容
阅读表达。
阅读短文,并按照题目要求用英语回答问题.
This is a story from the Ming Dynasty period of China's history. There was a miner official called
Wan Hu, whose dream was to "fly to the moon". One day he tied himself to a chair with 47 "rockets"
and disappeared into the sky and was never seen again. Hundreds of years later in 1969, when US
astronaut Neil Armstrong stepped down from Apollo 11 and set his foot on the moon's surface, the
dream of Wan, as well as the rest of humankind was realized. To honor Wan, a crater (环形山) on
the far side of the moon is named after him.
Mankind has been able to change the world for the better because there are people like Wan who
never stopped pursuing their dreams.
"I have a dream!" American civil rights leader Martin Luther King once said. It was that dream that
helped black Americans to get equal legal rights.
To realize his dream of feeding everyone in China, Yuan Longping worked in fields day and night
and invented hybrid rice that now feeds almost one quarter of the world's population.
Dreams are important because they give us vision (远景). We grew great with them. They provide
direction for our life. With dreams we set goals and make plans, so we can change our present situation
for the better. And our dreams appeal to the likeminded. As individuals we are better off with
dreams-and so are our families, communities and society. Life would be dull without a dream.
When we have a burning desire and we decided to go after it we are full of enthusiasm. As American
novelist Louisa May Alcott, who wrote Little Women said: "Far away there in the sunshine are my
highest aspirations". I may not reach them, but I can look up and see their beauty, believe in them, and
follow where they lead.
1. How many people who had dreams are mentioned in the passage? (1 word)
________________________________________________________________________
2. According to the passage, what was it that changed the world for the better? (No more than 20 words)
________________________________________________________________________
3. How do people remember Wan Hu? (No more than 20 words)
________________________________________________________________________
4. What can we learn from the fifth paragraph? (No more than 10 words)
________________________________________________________________________
5. What's the meaning of the underlined word "aspirations" in the last paragraph? (1 word)
________________________________________________________________________
阅读短文,并按照题目要求用英语回答问题.
This is a story from the Ming Dynasty period of China's history. There was a miner official called
Wan Hu, whose dream was to "fly to the moon". One day he tied himself to a chair with 47 "rockets"
and disappeared into the sky and was never seen again. Hundreds of years later in 1969, when US
astronaut Neil Armstrong stepped down from Apollo 11 and set his foot on the moon's surface, the
dream of Wan, as well as the rest of humankind was realized. To honor Wan, a crater (环形山) on
the far side of the moon is named after him.
Mankind has been able to change the world for the better because there are people like Wan who
never stopped pursuing their dreams.
"I have a dream!" American civil rights leader Martin Luther King once said. It was that dream that
helped black Americans to get equal legal rights.
To realize his dream of feeding everyone in China, Yuan Longping worked in fields day and night
and invented hybrid rice that now feeds almost one quarter of the world's population.
Dreams are important because they give us vision (远景). We grew great with them. They provide
direction for our life. With dreams we set goals and make plans, so we can change our present situation
for the better. And our dreams appeal to the likeminded. As individuals we are better off with
dreams-and so are our families, communities and society. Life would be dull without a dream.
When we have a burning desire and we decided to go after it we are full of enthusiasm. As American
novelist Louisa May Alcott, who wrote Little Women said: "Far away there in the sunshine are my
highest aspirations". I may not reach them, but I can look up and see their beauty, believe in them, and
follow where they lead.
1. How many people who had dreams are mentioned in the passage? (1 word)
________________________________________________________________________
2. According to the passage, what was it that changed the world for the better? (No more than 20 words)
________________________________________________________________________
3. How do people remember Wan Hu? (No more than 20 words)
________________________________________________________________________
4. What can we learn from the fifth paragraph? (No more than 10 words)
________________________________________________________________________
5. What's the meaning of the underlined word "aspirations" in the last paragraph? (1 word)
________________________________________________________________________
1. Four./4.
2. It was people like Wan who never stopped pursuing their dreams that changed the world for the better.
3. To remember Wan, a crater on the far side of the moon is named after him.
4. We must have dreams in our life.
5. Wishes/Dreams.
2. It was people like Wan who never stopped pursuing their dreams that changed the world for the better.
3. To remember Wan, a crater on the far side of the moon is named after him.
4. We must have dreams in our life.
5. Wishes/Dreams.
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