题目内容

Of all ______reasons for my decision to major in social work, my father’s advice was _______most important one.

A. the; a                            B.不填;a                  C.不填;the                  D. the; the 

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Some British and American people like to invite friends for a meal at home. You should not be upset if your English friends don't invite you home. It doesn't mean they don't like you! Dinner parties usually start between 7 and 8 p.m., And end at about 11. Ask your hosts what time you should arrive. It's polite to bring flowers, chocolates or a bottle of wine as gift. Usually the evening starts with drinks and snacks. Do you want to be extra polite? Say how much you like the room, or the pictures on the wall. But remember---- it's not polite to ask how much things cost. In many families, the husband sits at one end of the table and the wife sits at the other end. They eat with their guests.
You'll probably start meal with soup or something small, and then you have meat of fish with vegetables, and then desert, followed by coffee. It's polite to finish everything on your plate and have more if you want it. Did you enjoy the evening? Call your host and hostess the next day, or write them a short "thank you" letter. British and American people like to say "thank you, thank you, thank you" all the time!
【小题1】You're not invited to the evening by a friend, which              .

A.means you are not welcome f or some bad manners
B.means he or she doesn't like you for some unknown reasons
C.means you should pay more visits to them and bring more gifts
D.doesn't mean he or she doesn't like you
【小题2】You should never              .
A.say you like the host's house very much
B.ask the host the price of the things in the house
C.have drinks and some snacks before the evening
D.sit beside the host or hostess when having dinner
【小题3】As a guest, you should finish everything to show              .
A.you are healthyB.you rea lly like the food
C.you like cookingD.you have a good appetite.(胃口)

Some British and American people like to invite friends for a meal at home. You should not be upset if your English friends don't invite you home. It doesn't mean they don't like you! Dinner parties usually start between 7 and 8 p.m., And end at about 11. Ask your hosts what time you should arrive. It's polite to bring flowers, chocolates or a bottle of wine as gift. Usually the evening starts with drinks and snacks. Do you want to be extra polite? Say how much you like the room, or the pictures on the wall. But remember---- it's not polite to ask how much things cost. In many families, the husband sits at one end of the table and the wife sits at the other end. They eat with their guests.

You'll probably start meal with soup or something small, and then you have meat of fish with vegetables, and then desert, followed by coffee. It's polite to finish everything on your plate and have more if you want it. Did you enjoy the evening? Call your host and hostess the next day, or write them a short "thank you" letter. British and American people like to say "thank you, thank you, thank you" all the time!

1.You're not invited to the evening by a friend, which              .

A.means you are not welcome f or some bad manners

B.means he or she doesn't like you for some unknown reasons

C.means you should pay more visits to them and bring more gifts

D.doesn't mean he or she doesn't like you

2.You should never              .

A.say you like the host's house very much

B.ask the host the price of the things in the house

C.have drinks and some snacks before the evening

D.sit beside the host or hostess when having dinner

3.As a guest, you should finish everything to show              .

A.you are healthy                         B.you rea lly like the food

C.you like cooking                        D.you have a good appetite.(胃口)

 

Some British and American people like to invite friends for a meal at home. You should not be upset if your English friends don't invite you home. It doesn't mean they don't like you! Dinner parties usually start between 7 and 8 p.m., And end at about 11. Ask your hosts what time you should arrive. It's polite to bring flowers, chocolates or a bottle of wine as gift. Usually the evening starts with drinks and snacks. Do you want to be extra polite? Say how much you like the room, or the pictures on the wall. But remember---- it's not polite to ask how much things cost. In many families, the husband sits at one end of the table and the wife sits at the other end. They eat with their guests.
You'll probably start meal with soup or something small, and then you have meat of fish with vegetables, and then desert, followed by coffee. It's polite to finish everything on your plate and have more if you want it. Did you enjoy the evening? Call your host and hostess the next day, or write them a short "thank you" letter. British and American people like to say "thank you, thank you, thank you" all the time!

  1. 1.

    You're not invited to the evening by a friend, which              

    1. A.
      means you are not welcome f or some bad manners
    2. B.
      means he or she doesn't like you for some unknown reasons
    3. C.
      means you should pay more visits to them and bring more gifts
    4. D.
      doesn't mean he or she doesn't like you
  2. 2.

    You should never              

    1. A.
      say you like the host's house very much
    2. B.
      ask the host the price of the things in the house
    3. C.
      have drinks and some snacks before the evening
    4. D.
      sit beside the host or hostess when having dinner
  3. 3.

    As a guest, you should finish everything to show              

    1. A.
      you are healthy
    2. B.
      you rea lly like the food
    3. C.
      you like cooking
    4. D.
      you have a good appetite.(胃口)
完形填空。
     When Mike told me he was leaving I felt like a vase which had just broken. There were
pieces of me all over the tidy floor. He kept talking, telling me why he was leaving,___1__it
was for the best, I could do better, it was his __2__and not mine. I had heard it before many
times and yet somehow was still hurt; perhaps one cannot __3__such pain.
     He left and I tried to __4__my life. I filled the kettle (水壶), put it on to boil, took out my
old red cup and __5__the coffee powder falling into the bone china. Somehow when the kettle
piped its finishing warning, I __6__not to hear it. That's what Mike's leaving had been like,
sudden and with a(n) __7__end. I would rather just __8__in uncertainty than have things
finished. I laughed at myself. Just about a cup of coffee, I must be getting __9__.
     And yet it was a young woman who __10__back at me from the mirror, a young woman
full of __11__and hope, a young woman with bright eyes just waiting to see the world.__12__,
there are more important things. More important than __13__, I insist to myself firmly. The lid
goes back on the coffee just like closing on the whole Mike experience.
     He didn't __14__my dreams as I feared that night. __15__, I am flying far across fields
and woods, __16__on those below me. I fly free until I meet another bird who flies with me
in perfect harmony. I realize with some __17__that there is a bird out there for me, there is
another person, not necessarily a lover perhaps just a __18__, but there is someone out
there who is my soul mate. I think about being a broken __19__again and realize that I have
gathered myself back together, what Mike has is __20__a little part of my time in earth, a
little understanding of my physical being. He has merely, a little piece of me.
(     )1.A. complaining
(     )2.A. business
(     )3.A. pass
(     )4.A. get close to
(     )5.A. watched
(     )6.A. announced
(     )7.A. optimistic
(     )8.A. wander
(     )9.A. mad
(     )10.A. flashed
(     )11.A. promise
(     )12.A. Therefore
(     )13.A. friendship
(     )14.A. visit
(     )15.A. Deliberately
(     )16.A. taking off
(     )17.A. sorrow
(     )18.A. friend
(     )19.A. heart
(     )20.A. mostly

B. suggesting
B. fault
B. defend
B. get on with
B. made
B. decided
B. sceptical
B. move
B. old
B. swung
B. delight
B. Besides
B. life
B. have
B. Meanwhile
B. looking down
B. worry
B. bird
B. vase
B. hardly

C. explaining
C. luck
C. feel
C. get away with
C. let
C. pretended
C. splendid
C. keep
C. nervous
C. stared
C. dilemmas
C. Finally
C. love
C. reject
C. Thus
C. breaking away
C. relief
C. dream
C. mirror
C. usually

D. whispering
D. rea son
D. ease
D. get down to
D. wanted
D. concluded
D. unpleasant
D. take
D. uncertain
D. pointed
D. conflicts
D. Constantly
D. health
D. spin
D. Instead
D. getting over
D. doubt
D. job
D. cup
D. only

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