Temperature is part of my married romance.Coming to New York from Baltimore-where there is just one small snowstorm each year-I was 1 by a fireplace in my new home, with fires 2 all day, just as what ancient people did at a wedding.
My husband, Peter, comes from northern Ontario, where winter 3 from September to May and cold wind is 4 .“When Canadians have 30 below, they 5 it.”He says.“Cold wind is for crybabies.”
So to marry this man I had to learn to 6 for serious cold.To get me from Baltimore's Inner Harbor to Albany's frozen Hudson, Peter piled me 7 jackets and sweaters, scarves and gloves, even a hat with earflaps.The gift of Sorel boots-comfortably warm at Canada's 30 below, was a 8 we were getting serious.
That first winter together, living in upstate New York, I thought I'd 9 .My boots were good below freezing, but my fingers could 10 tie them.Physical adaptation is real, but it came slowly.And there is also emotional 11 to cold.Some days I tell myself that I have enough beach memories to stick to on 12 days and other days I am reminded that living cold does indeed build 13 .
14 , having a warm house is important.After my first marriage ended, for years I 15 went on a second date with a man whose response to my“I'm cold.”was,“Put on a sweater.”Now I'm married to a man who 16 that cold hands do not mean a warm heart, and that a big oil bill is better than roses.But surprisingly, I've grown, too.I am 17 , in this new life and climate, to go and look for that cost-saving sweater.
The word comfortable did not 18 refer to being contented.Its Latin root, comfortare, means to strengthen.The Holy Spirit is Comforter:not to make us comfortable, but to make us 19 .We 20 not be warm but we are indeed comforted.
In my third year as a high school athletics coach, I gave a speech telling students and parents about the benefits of football.I gave the same 1 each year, aimin g at recruiting(招收)new team members.I talked about 2 football wasn't just for 3 athletes and how everyone could 4 from it.This year, a 5 looking couple approached me after my speech.They said their son really wanted to play football.They had tried to 6 him out of it, but he had his heart 7 on joining the team.
When they told me his name, my heart sank.Michael was five feet and ten inches tall and weighed about 108 pounds.He was a 8 boy, the constant target of other kids' jokes, and as far as I knew he had never 9 sports.I knew he would never 10 it through football practice, let 11 as a player.But we told them we could give it a try.
On the opening day of practice, Michael was the first player on the field, we did 30 minutes of warming-up 12 starting a one-mile jog around the track.I 13 my eye on Michael.At 50 yards he fell, and I helped him to his feet.“Michael,”I said,“Why don't you just 14 the mile?”He said in tears that he wanted to run with the others, so I let him go on. 15 he fell, but each time 16 himself up.
The same thing happened every day for weeks, and Michael gained strength both 17 and physically.By the last week of practice, Michael could run the mile without falling, we had 18 only one game that season, 19 the team cheered louder for Michael's run than the victory they had, Afterward, Michael approached me, and I told him how 20 I was of him.
(1)
[ ]
A.
lecture
B.
lesson
C.
training
D.
speech
(2)
[ ]
A.
how
B.
why
C.
whether
D.
that
(3)
[ ]
A.
star
B.
average
C.
ordinary
D.
important
(4)
[ ]
A.
learn
B.
benefit
C.
take
D.
get
(5)
[ ]
A.
worried
B.
worrying
C.
anxious
D.
eager
(6)
[ ]
A.
keep
B.
talk
C.
pull
D.
take
(7)
[ ]
A.
put
B.
set
C.
placed
D.
kept
(8)
[ ]
A.
alone
B.
lonely
C.
tall
D.
strong
(9)
[ ]
A.
attended
B.
participated in
C.
join
D.
take part
(10)
[ ]
A.
get
B.
realize
C.
make
D.
achieve
(11)
[ ]
A.
alone
B.
aside
C.
away
D.
down
(12)
[ ]
A.
before
B.
when
C.
then
D.
until
(13)
[ ]
A.
fixed
B.
put
C.
kept
D.
paid
(14)
[ ]
A.
run
B.
walk
C.
jog
D.
go
(15)
[ ]
A.
Unfortunately
B.
Repeatedly
C.
Secondly
D.
Luckily
(16)
[ ]
A.
stood
B.
picked
C.
struggled
D.
raised
(17)
[ ]
A.
mentally
B.
socially
C.
emotionally
D.
technically
(18)
[ ]
A.
won
B.
defeated
C.
beat
D.
got
(19)
[ ]
A.
yet
B.
however
C.
though
D.
while
(20)
[ ]
A.
pleased
B.
satisfied
C.
proud
D.
ashamed
完形填空。
The film starts out as a normal day at a typical American high school.Friends chat in the dining room and boys play football.
But there's a big surprise when the movie 1 with two students going crazy in the 2 shooting and killing people.
This is“Elephant”.Filmed in just 20 days, it stars real high school kids.American 3 Gus Van Sant had no ready made lines(台词).The student actors 4 their own dialogue, with Van Sant asking them to base their characters on their own 5 .
6 it may not sound very high quality, the film won the Palmed' Or(金棕榈奖)for Best Film and the award for Best Director at the Cannes 7 festival in France on May 25.
The film is based on the 8 at a high school in the US, where two boys 9 13 people and then themselves in 1999.
The title of the 10 refers to the old expression about a 11 that's as hard to ignore as an elephant in the house.
The film takes a close look at a few hours in the lives of the victims(受害者)and the 12 .It shows how high school is a different experience for everyone-fun and friendly, or hard and 13 .
In many ways, the two boys, who carry out the shooting, act like ordinary 14 .But, there are hints(暗示)of the 15 they feel inside.One of the boys is bullied at school.The other plays violent 16 games.But Van Sant isn't 17 their killings on either bullying or violent video games.In fact, the film doesn't offer any 18 for why school violence happens.
“I didn't want to 19 anything.It's up to the audience to draw its own 20 ,”said the 51-year-old director.