题目内容

Once in Japan there lived two frogs, one of whom made his home near the town of Osaka, while the other lived in Kyoto.  36 , they didn’t know each other. Bothof them liked to see a little of the world: the Kyoto frog wanted to visit Osaka, and the Osaka frog wished to go to Kyoto.

So one morning they  37. However, the journey was more  38  than they had expected, for they didn’t know much about traveling. Half-way between the two towns, at the top of a mountain, the two frogs  39  each other! Soon they fell into  40 .

“What a(n)  41  we are too small, ” said the Osaka frog. “Otherwise, we could see both towns from here, and  42  if it is worth our going on.”

“Oh, that is easily  43 ,” replied the Kyoto frog. “We have only got to stand up on our hind (后面的) legs, and hold on to each other  44  we won’t fall down, and then we can both look at the towns we are  45  to.”

This idea  46  the Osaka frog; he stood up and put his front paws on the  47 of the other frog, who had risen also. There they both stood, stretching themselves as  48  as they could. The Kyoto frog turned his nose towards Osaka, and the Osaka frog, towards Kyoto, but the  49  frogs forgot that when they stood up, their eyes were in the backs of their heads, and that  50  their noses pointed to their destinations, yet their eyes looked at the places  51  which they had come.

“Dear me!” cried the Osaka frog. “Kyoto is  52  like Osaka. It is certainly not worth such a long journey.”

“If I had known that Osaka was only a  53  of Kyoto I should never have traveled all this way,”  54  the frog from Kyoto. Then they started off for their  55  again.

1.                A.Surprisingly      B.However        C.Fortunately    D.Undoubtedly

 

2.                A.showed off      B.left out         C.turned away   D.set out

 

3.                A.wonderful      B.dangerous       C.exhausting D.exciting

 

4.                A.endangered     B.encouraged     C.encountered  D.embarrassed

 

5.                A.conversation    B.disagreement    C.competition   D.consideration

 

6.                A.shame          B.surprise        C.shortcoming   D.coincidence

 

7.                A.doubt          B.wonder         C.show     D.tell

 

8.                A.finished        B.managed        C.imagined  D.prepared

 

9.                A.as long as       B.in case         C.so that   D.unless

 

10.               A.turning         B.traveling        C.settling    D.adapting

 

11.               A.worried        B.disturbed       C.confused  D.pleased

 

12.               A.legs           B.shoulders       C.head D.nose

 

13.               A.high           B.wide           C.far   D.quickly

 

14.               A.adventurous     B.close          C.smart D.foolish

 

15.               A.because        B.though         C.since D.if

 

16.               A.from           B.to             C.around    D.in

 

17.               A.hardly         B.partly          C.mostly D.exactly

 

18.               A.corner         B.part           C.copy  D.spot

 

19.               A.exclaimed      B.announced      C.hesitated  D.thought

 

20.               A.destinations     B.dreams         C.homes    D.countries

 

 

【答案】

1.D

2.D

3.C

4.C

5.A

6.A

7.D

8.B

9.C

10.B

11.D

12.B

13.A

14.D

15.B

16.A

17.D

18.C

19.A

20.C

【解析】

试题分析:本文是日本版的井底之蛙,叙述了两只愚蠢的青蛙到对方的城市旅游的经历,到了半路上所发生的事情。

1.D 副词辨析。A惊讶地B然而C幸运地D毫无疑问;这两只青蛙生活在不同的城市,毫无疑问是都不认识对方。

2.D 短语辨析。A炫耀B离开C转身D出发;指这两只青蛙出发出了对方的城市。

3.C 形容词辨析。A很棒B危险C筋疲力尽D兴奋;这次旅行比它们原来认为还让人疲惫。

4.C 动词辨析。A使…危险B鼓励C相遇D使…尴尬;这两只青蛙在一座山顶上相遇了。

5.A 上下文串联。根据下文可知这两只青蛙进行了一次对话。conversation对话。

6.A 名词辨析。A遗憾B惊讶C缺点D巧合的事;我们个子太小了,这真让人遗憾。

7.D 动词辨析。A怀疑B想知道C展示D告诉;告诉对方是否值得去这个地方。

8.B 动词辨析。A完成B设法做到C想象D准备;这是很容易做到的。

9.C 连词辨析。A只要B以防C以至于D除非;指两只青蛙相互支持以至于不摔倒下来。

10.B 上下文串联。根据上文可知他们是去对方的城市旅行的。

11.D 动词辨析。A使…担忧B打扰C使…困惑D使…高兴;这想法让另一个青蛙很高兴。

12.B 名词辨析。A腿B肩膀C头D鼻子;根据上文描述可知这这两只青蛙是相互附着对方的肩膀才能站立起来。

13.A 形容词辨析。A高B宽C远D快;指这两只青蛙尽量地伸展身体让自己站得更高。

14.D 形容词辨析。A冒险的B亲密的C聪明的D愚蠢的;根据下文描述这两只青蛙很愚蠢,他们最终看见的都是自己所在的城市。

15.B 上下文串联。根据下文的yet说明存在着转折关系,尽管他们的鼻子指向目的地,但是他们的眼睛所看见的却是自己来自的城市。

16.A 介词辨析。但是他们的眼睛所看见的却是自己来自的城市。

17.D 副词辨析。A几乎不B部分C大部分D完全地;Kyoto与Osaka完全一样。

18.C 名词辨析。A角落B部分C复制品D点;Osaka只是Kyoto的复制品。

19.A 动词辨析。A惊呼B宣布C犹豫D认为;一只青蛙惊呼:如果我知道Osaka只是Kyoto的复制品,我又为什么要一路在这里呢?

20.C 上下文串联。这两只青蛙都认为自己没有必要去了,那么他们就回家去了。

考点:考查寓言类短文阅读

点评:本文是日本版的井底之蛙,叙述了两只愚蠢的青蛙到对方的城市旅游的经历,到了半路上所发生的事情。答题前一定要读懂全文,弄清文章要表达的思想,注意前后段落之间的关系。答题中,一定要认真分析,注意选项与上下文的关系,与前后单词的关系。对于一时没有太大的把握的题可以放到最后再来完成,因为有时答案可以从下文内容体现出来。答完后再通读一篇文章,看看所选选项能不能是语句通顺,语意连贯。

 

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Section  B

Directions: Read the following passage. Answer the questions according to the information given in the passage and required words limit.

Junior Achievement is an international movement to educate young people about business and economics. It has helped many of them succeed in a world economy since it was founded.

The organization is the largest of its kind. JA Worldwide says it reaches over eight million students each year in more than one hundred countries. Programs begin in elementary school and continue through middle and high school. The education is based on the ideas of market-based economics and entrepreneurship.

Junior Achievement began in 1919 in Springfield, Massachusetts. Two business leaders, Horace Moses and Theodore Vail, joined with Senator Murray Crane of Massachusetts to start it.

For more than fifty years, Junior Achievement programs met after school. They began as a group of business clubs. The organization started with a number of children of ages ten to twelve.

But in nineteen seventy-five, Junior Achievement began to offer classes during school hours. Many more young people joined the organization once it began to teach business skills as part of the school day.

Volunteers from the community teach about businesses, such as how they are organized, and how products are made and sold. They also teach about the American and world economies and about industry and trade.

The Junior Achievement Company Program teaches young people how entrepreneurship works. They learn about business by operating their own companies.

The students develop a product and sell shares in their company. They use the money to buy the materials they need to make their product, which then they sell. Finally, they return the profits to the people who bought shares in the company.

Junior Achievement says two hundred eighty-seven thousand volunteers support its programs around the world. In the United States alone, there are more than twenty-two thousand places that hold Junior Achievement events.

Junior Achievement Incorporated and Junior Achievement International combined their operation in two thousand four. They formed Junior Achievement Worldwide. Its headquarters are in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

81. What is the passage mainly about?(within 15 words)

___________________________________________________________________________

82. How long a history does JA have? (within 8 words)

___________________________________________________________________________

83. What do volunteers of JA teach about? (within 10 words)

___________________________________________________________________________

84. What achievements has JA achieved? (within 15 words)

___________________________________________________________________________

 

Section  B

Directions: Read the following passage. Answer the questions according to the information given in the passage and required words limit.

Junior Achievement is an international movement to educate young people about business and economics. It has helped many of them succeed in a world economy since it was founded.

The organization is the largest of its kind. JA Worldwide says it reaches over eight million students each year in more than one hundred countries. Programs begin in elementary school and continue through middle and high school. The education is based on the ideas of market-based economics and entrepreneurship.

Junior Achievement began in 1919 in Springfield, Massachusetts. Two business leaders, Horace Moses and Theodore Vail, joined with Senator Murray Crane of Massachusetts to start it.

For more than fifty years, Junior Achievement programs met after school. They began as a group of business clubs. The organization started with a number of children of ages ten to twelve.

But in nineteen seventy-five, Junior Achievement began to offer classes during school hours. Many more young people joined the organization once it began to teach business skills as part of the school day.

Volunteers from the community teach about businesses, such as how they are organized, and how products are made and sold. They also teach about the American and world economies and about industry and trade.

The Junior Achievement Company Program teaches young people how entrepreneurship works. They learn about business by operating their own companies.

The students develop a product and sell shares in their company. They use the money to buy the materials they need to make their product, which then they sell. Finally, they return the profits to the people who bought shares in the company.

Junior Achievement says two hundred eighty-seven thousand volunteers support its programs around the world. In the United States alone, there are more than twenty-two thousand places that hold Junior Achievement events.

Junior Achievement Incorporated and Junior Achievement International combined their operation in two thousand four. They formed Junior Achievement Worldwide. Its headquarters are in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

81. What is the passage mainly about?(within 15 words)

___________________________________________________________________________

82. How long a history does JA have? (within 8 words)

___________________________________________________________________________

83. What do volunteers of JA teach about? (within 10 words)

___________________________________________________________________________

84. What achievements has JA achieved? (within 15 words)

___________________________________________________________________________

Section  B

Directions: Read the following passage. Answer the questions according to the information given in the passage and required words limit.

Junior Achievement is an international movement to educate young people about business and economics. It has helped many of them succeed in a world economy since it was founded.

The organization is the largest of its kind. JA Worldwide says it reaches over eight million students each year in more than one hundred countries. Programs begin in elementary school and continue through middle and high school. The education is based on the ideas of market-based economics and entrepreneurship.

Junior Achievement began in 1919 in Springfield, Massachusetts. Two business leaders, Horace Moses and Theodore Vail, joined with Senator Murray Crane of Massachusetts to start it.

For more than fifty years, Junior Achievement programs met after school. They began as a group of business clubs. The organization started with a number of children of ages ten to twelve.

But in nineteen seventy-five, Junior Achievement began to offer classes during school hours. Many more young people joined the organization once it began to teach business skills as part of the school day.

Volunteers from the community teach about businesses, such as how they are organized, and how products are made and sold. They also teach about the American and world economies and about industry and trade.

The Junior Achievement Company Program teaches young people how entrepreneurship works. They learn about business by operating their own companies.

The students develop a product and sell shares in their company. They use the money to buy the materials they need to make their product, which then they sell. Finally, they return the profits to the people who bought shares in the company.

Junior Achievement says two hundred eighty-seven thousand volunteers support its programs around the world. In the United States alone, there are more than twenty-two thousand places that hold Junior Achievement events.

Junior Achievement Incorporated and Junior Achievement International combined their operation in two thousand four. They formed Junior Achievement Worldwide. Its headquarters are in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

81. What is the passage mainly about?(within 15 words)

___________________________________________________________________________

82. How long a history does JA have? (within 8 words)

___________________________________________________________________________

83. What do volunteers of JA teach about? (within 10 words)

___________________________________________________________________________

84. What achievements has JA achieved? (within 15 words)

___________________________________________________________________________

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