题目内容
完形填空。 | |||
When I come across a good essay in reading newspapers, I often feel like cutting and keeping it. But just as I am about to do so I find the article on the 1 side is as much interesting. It may be a discussion of the way to keep in good health, or advice about how to be oneself in 2 . If I cut the front essay, the opposite one is bound to 3 damage, leaving out half of it or keeping the text without the subject. As a result, the scissors would 4 before they start, or halfway done when I find out the result that inevitably cause me 5 . Sometimes two things are to be done at the same time, both worthy your 6 . You can only take up one of them, while the other has to wait or be 7 . But you know the future is unpredictable ---- the changed 8 may not allow you to do what is 9 behind. Thus you are caught in a fix and feel sad. 10_ come that nice opportunities and brilliant ideas should gather around all at once? It may 11 that your life changes dramatically on your preference of one 12 to the other. In fact that is what life is like: we are often 13 with the two opposite sides of a thing which are both desirable like newspaper cutting. It often 14 that our attention is drawn to one thing only after we take up another. The former may be more 15 than the latter and give rise to a divided 16 . I still remember a philosopher's remarks, "When one door shuts, another opens in life." 17 a passive choice may not be a bad one. Whatever we do in our lifetime, wherever life's storm makes us 18 , there must be something we can 19 , some shore we can land on. Don't forget God always keeps an alternative door open for every one. While the front door is closed, there must be another 20 for you. | |||
( )1.A. other ( )2.A. society ( )3.A. suffer ( )4.A. fix ( )5.A. fault ( )6.A. thought ( )7.A. put away ( )8.A. chance ( )9.A. done ( )10.A. How ( )11.A. seem ( )12.A. decision ( )13.A. faced ( )14.A.appears ( )15.A. necessary ( )16.A. mind ( )17.A. But ( )18.A. stop ( )19.A. depend ( )20.A. alive |
B. opposite B. your business B. cause B. turn B. regret B. sense B. given up B. situation B. counted B. Why B. happen B. opinion B. mixed B. occurs B. exciting B. subject B. Otherwise B. live B. trea sure B. open |
C. back C. relation C. receive C. stay C. disappointment C. purpose C. let out C. state C. prepared C. Where C. develop C. choice C. provided C. proves C. important C. soul C. And C. pull C. achieve C. familiar |
D. front D. the word D. serve D. close D. trouble D. attention D. held on D. condition D. left D. When D. show D. result D. offered D. explains D. valuable D. brain D. So D. go D. imagine D. suitable |
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完形填空。 | ||||
One day, Raul was miles away from the small ranch (牧场) house in a large valley. 1 seemed to be all right, yet he felt strange and somewhat uneasy. The wind had picked up, and angry, dark clouds 2 across the sky. He could smell the rain coming. And it did. 3 , the lightning flashed through the clouds, nearly 4 Raul. The thunder (雷声) was so loud that he buried his 5 in his hands and rubbed his eyes. Then he heard it. Hoof beats (蹄声). He 6 . There before him stood a tall, white 7 . An old man stared down at him from its back. "Wh-wh-who are y-y-you?" asked Raul. "My name is Gray Cloud," the old man answered 8 . "Come with me." Raul followed on his horse. A 9 feeling came over him. All 10 them the rain was pouring down, 11 not a drop fell on them. They seemed to be 12 back toward Raul's home. Raul lost track of time. Then all at once he found 13 at the ranch gate. The old man turned his horse, 14 his hand, and smiled. Lightning flashed again. The old man and his horse were 15 . Raul's father ran out across the yard to 16 him. "We have been 17 sick about you. Are you okay? Hurry. Let's get in out of the 18 ." "Wait," said Raul. "Have you ever heard of an old man called Gray Cloud?" "Can't say I … wait. I 19 my great-grandfather used to tell storied about a man called Gray Cloud. He died a long time ago. They say he was 20 by lightning during a terrible thunderstorm. Why do you ask?" | ||||
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完形填空。 | ||||
One day, Raul was miles away from the small ranch (牧场) house in a large valley. 1 seemed to be all right, yet he felt strange and somewhat uneasy. The wind had picked up, and angry, dark clouds 2 across the sky. He could smell the rain coming. And it did. 3 , the lightning flashed through the clouds, nearly 4 Raul. The thunder (雷声) was so loud that he buried his 5 in his hands and rubbed his eyes. Then he heard it. Hoof beats (蹄声). He 6 . There before him stood a tall, white 7 . An old man stared down at him from its back. "Wh-wh-who are y-y-you?" asked Raul. "My name is Gray Cloud," the old man answered 8 . "Come with me." Raul followed on his horse. A 9 feeling came over him. All 10 them the rain was pouring down, 11 not a drop fell on them. They seemed to be 12 back toward Raul's home. Raul lost track of time. Then all at once he found 13 at the ranch gate. The old man turned his horse, 14 his hand, and smiled. Lightning flashed again. The old man and his horse were 15 . Raul's father ran out across the yard to 16 him. "We have been 17 sick about you. Are you okay? Hurry. Let's get in out of the 18 ." "Wait," said Raul. "Have you ever heard of an old man called Gray Cloud?" "Can't say I … wait. I 19 my great-grandfather used to tell storied about a man called Gray Cloud. He died a long time ago. They say he was 20 by lightning during a terrible thunderstorm. Why do you ask?" | ||||
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