题目内容
The day my fiancé fell to his death, it started to snow, just like the bottom hadn’t fallen out of my world when he fell off the roof. His body, when I found it, was lightly covered with snow. It snowed almost every day for the next four months, while I sat on the couch and watched it pile up.
One morning, I shuffled(拖着脚步走) downstairs and was surprised to see a snowplow(扫雪机) clearing my driveway and the bent back of a woman shoveling my walk. I dropped to my knees, crawled through the living room, and back upstairs so those good Samaritans would not see me. I was mortified. My first thought was, how would I ever repay them? I didn’t have the strength to brush my hair, let alone shovel someone’s walk.
Before Jon’s death, I took pride in the fact that I rarely asked for help or favors. I defined myself by my competence and independence. How could I respect myself if all I did was sit on the couch everyday and watch the snow fall?
Learning how to receive the love and support that came my way wasn’t easy. Friends cooked for me and I cried because I couldn’t even help them set the table. “I’m not usually this lazy,” I swept. Finally, my friend Kathy sat down with me and said, “Mary, cooking for you is not a burden. It makes me feel good to be able to do something for you.”
Over and over, I heard similar words of comfort from the people who supported me during those dark days. One very wise man told me, “You are not doing nothing. Being fully open to your grief may be the hardest work you will ever do.”
In many ways I have changed for the better. I have been surprised to learn that there is incredible freedom that comes from facing one’s worst fear and walking away whole.
1.What made the author feel sad?
A. Her fiancé’s sudden death. B. Constant heavy snow.
C. Her fiancé abandoning her. D. Her job being refused again.
2.What’s the meaning of the underlined word “mortified” in Paragraph 1?
A. Surprised. B. Angry. C. Ashamed. D. Moved.
3.It is _______ that helped the author out of darkness.
A. herself B. her friends C. her fiancé D. a snowplow
4.Which of the following statements is NOT true?
A. The author was a capable and independent woman.
B. The author was so lazy that she wouldn’t shovel the walk.
C. Finally the author got through hardest work bravely.
D. When facing the worst fear, you will get strength.
5.What’s the author’s purpose in the passage?
A. To talk about her hardest work in her life.
B. To talk about her real love between her and her fiancé.
C. To tell us to walk out of hardest work confidently and bravely.
D. To tell us the importance of friendship.
1.A
2.C
3.B
4.B
5.C
【解析】略
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It was a cold winter. The day my husband fell to his death, it started to snow, just 36 any November day. His 37 , when I found it, was lightly covered with snow. It snowed almost every day for the next four months, while I sat on the couch and watched it 38 . One morning, I walked slowly 39 and was surprised to see a snow remover clearing my driveway and the bent back of a woman clearing my walk. I dropped to my knees and crawled back upstairs, 40 those good people would not see me. I was 41 . My first thought was, how would I ever 42 them? I didn’t have the 43 to brush my hair, 44 clear someone’s walk.
Before Jon’s death, I felt proud that I 45 asked for favors. I identified myself by my competence(能力) and 46 . So who was I if I was no longer capable? How could I 47 myself if I just sat on the couch every day and watched the snow fall?
Learning to receive the love and 48 from others wasn’t easy. Friends cooked for me and I cried. Finally, my friend Kathy said, “Mary, cooking for you isn’t a 49 for me; it makes me feel good to be able to do something for you.”
Over and over, I heard 50 words from the people who supported me during those 51 days. One wise man told me, “You aren’t doing nothing because being fully open to your 52 may be the hardest work you will ever do.”
I am not the person I 53 was, but in many ways I have changed for the 54 . I’ve been surprised to learn that there is incredible freedom coming from 55 one’s worst fear and walking away whole. I believe there is strength, for sure, in accepting a dark period of our life.
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I can remember the day my father came home from the war. As he walked up the front path of our home, he saw Mum and me and he dropped the suitcase.
I was only five years old so Dad made a fuss of me, then began making an even bigger fuss of my mother. This left me free to examine all the stuff lying around the broken suitcase, and I was quick to notice a newspaper advertisement displaying a new piano. When Dad saw me holding up the newspaper cutting, he smiled.
“Yes, that’s right,” he said. “I bought your mum a piano for ten pounds down and two pounds a week.”
A few moments later, a horse pulled a cart with a piano on top. Soon we all stared at it in our small lounger room. Mum had never been close to a piano before, except at the kindergarten I attended, and she used to say how wonderful it would be if the teachers could teach her to play.
After tea that night, Mum began to teach herself to play. She plinked the keys for about two hours and drove everybody in the street mad, until Dad gently said, “Enough is enough.”
From that day on, she would plink between doing the cooking and housework. Three months went by and Mum was now a skilled pianist, holding parties with all the neighbors gathering around to sing.
Although we were poor, Mum felt like a princess and was delighted at all the attention she was receiving.
At the height of Mum’s happiness, I began to notice that Dad was looking increasingly worried. It turned out that since returning from the war, he’d been unable to find a job. Then, a few weeks later, I observed two men taking Mum’s piano away. Mum sobbed in the kitchen. Suddenly, it all became clear to me: no job, no money, no piano.
Dad finally got a job. Mum was happy again as if he’d just win the lottery(彩票). Dad had to study to qualify as an account. Every night after dinner he’d place a stack of books on the kitchen table and study late into the night. Mum didn’t say much but I could tell she was proud of Dad.
Two years later, Dad bought Mum another piano. This time he paid cash for it.
【小题1】How did the author’s Dad buy the piano for his mum?
A.He paid part of the bill regularly. |
B.He earned it by winning a bet. |
C.He paid cash for it. |
D.He bought it as a big bargain. |
A.practice makes perfect |
B.it was time to stop practicing |
C.he couldn’t bear being troubled |
D.his wife played the piano well enough |
A.His dad’s willingness to help cook. |
B.His dad’s winning the lottery luckily. |
C.His dad’s loyalty to his motherland. |
D.His dad’s determination to rebuild his life. |
对话填空(共10小题,每小题1分,满分10分)
阅读下面对话,掌握其大意,并根据所给字母的提示,在标有题号的右边横线上写出一个英语单词的完整、正确形式,使对话通顺。
R =" Reporter " Z =" Zhang" Ying R: Mrs. Zhang,last year a heavy earthquake (76) s this area and destroyed almost all the buildings in the village. Can you tell us the details? Z: In two weeks it will be the first anniversary of (77) w the earthquake destroyed our village on May 12,2008. My husband and I had been (78) r a restaurant for several years. On that terrible day,everything was destroyed. My husband was killed in the second quake. R: What happened in the weeks after the quake and how did you get (79)o it? Z: I moved to a nearby village. The death of my husband was of course the (80) w thing. I was desperate. R: What made you decide to reopen the restaurant? Z: First of all,I had to make a living. More importantly,I did it to (81) h my husband. The restaurant had been his greatest achievement. R: Was it easy to reopen the restaurant? Z: No. My friends and relatives put some money together. I received some financial (82) a from the local government. I was also able to take out a (83) l from the bank. With the money and all the help I got,I reopened the restaurant. R: Do you often think about the disaster? Z: Yes. I thought the earthquake was the day my life ended,even though I was a survivor. But I (84) m to cheer up. I just did not know I had the (85) c to keep it up. |
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