题目内容

动词填空(每小题0.5分,满分5分)

1.He will spend as much time as he can ________ (help) the disabled people.

2.It remains ________ (see) whether you are right or wrong.

3.The young gentleman _______ (refer) to has made another invention this year.

4.When I got home, my mother happened __________ (call) my teacher over the phone.

5.The doctor recommended that the patient ________ (take) a long rest.

6.With great changes _____________ (take place) in his hometown, he could hardly recognize it.

7.Taking such kind of medicine, if __________ (continue), will possibly do you great harm.

8.—What were you doing when I phoned you?

—I _____________ (just finish) my work, and I wanted to go out.

9.Amy did so well in the exam that she came home _________ (wear) a big smile on her face.

10.If you wear colourful clothing, you will be more likely ___________ (attack) by a shark.

 

1.helping

2.to be seen

3.referred

4.to be calling

5.take

6.taking place

7.continued

8.had just finished

9.wearing

10.to be attacked

【解析】

试题分析:

1.spend … (in) doing花费(时间、金钱等)做某事,故用v-ing形式。

2.非谓语动词。本题考查It remains to be seen拭目以待。

3.非谓语动词。本题考查非谓语动词作定语,The young gentleman与refer to之间为被动关系,故用过去分词。

4.非谓语动词。动词happen后接不定式结构,根据句意可知用不定式的进行时,表示正在做某事。

5.虚拟语气。动词recommend作“建议”,其后从句用should + v原形的虚拟语气,should可以省略。

6.题中宾语great changes与take place之间为主动关系,故用现在分词作宾语补足语。

7.句中continue与逻辑主语之间为被动关系,故用过去分词。

8.时态。根据句意可知用过去完成时,表示过去完成某事。

9.非谓语动词。考查现在分词作伴随状语。

10.非谓语动词。短语be likely to有可能……,动词attack与主语you之间为被动关系,故用其不定式的被动形式。

考点:考查词汇语法用法

练习册系列答案
相关题目

Humans may not have landed on Mars (火星) just yet, but that isn’t stopping a European company from devising a plan to send four people to the Red Planet within the next few years. This project, called Mars One, aims to send a small group of people to Mars in 2022 and eventually establish a permanent colony on the planet.

“Everything we need to go to Mars exists,” said Mars One co-founder Bas Lansdorp in March 2014. “We have the rockets to send people to Mars, the equipment to land on Mars, the robots to prepare the settlement for humans. For a one-way mission, all the technology exists.” Yet the four astronauts chosen for the trip will be stuck on Mars—forever. And despite Mars One’s thorough planning, there are a number of challenges that may prevent the mission from ever taking place. The biggest road block could be the mission's huge cost ($6 billion). However, Lansdorp is confident that Mars One will be able to fund the project by selling the broadcast rights for the mission and subsequent experiences living on the planet.

Those broadcast rights will also play a part in helping to select the people who will be sent to Mars. Lansdorp said the company will hold a selection process similar to a reality show. Lansdorp is expecting at least 1 million applications from people around the world. In addition to the cost, several other potential problems could inhibit (阻止) the mission to Mars.

“It’s even more challenging to send people there with life support, with food, with air, with all the other things like books, entertainment, means of communication and of providing for their own resources for a long stay on Mars,” said Adam Baker, senior lecturer in space engineering at Kingston University in London. “The size of the rockets you’d need to do this would be absolutely colossal.”

1.According to Project Mars One, humans could send four people to Mars within the next ________years.

A. seven B. eight C. ten D. six

2.According to Bas Lansdorp, which of the following is NOT TRUE?

A. Robots are prepared for the settlement for humans.

B. He could not come up with the fund for Mars One.

C. We humans have the rockets to send people to Mars.

D. The equipment is ready for humans to land on Mars.

3.The word “colossal” in the last paragraph is closest in meaning to ___________.

A. very large B. very small

C. medium D. average

4.Which of the following is an appropriate title for this passage?

A. Ready for a Round Trip to Mars

B. Ready for a Short Visit to Mars

C. Ready for a One-way Trip to Mars

D. Ready for a Walk on Mars

 

The huge Florida wetland known as the Everglades is a slow-moving river 80 kilometres wide but only a few centimeters deep. People call the Everglades a “river of grass” because sawgrass covers most of it. Sawgrass is not really grass. It is a plant that has leaves edged with tiny sharp teeth that can easily cut through clothes—and skin!

Travel in the Everglades is difficult. You cannot walk through shallow water because the sawgrass will cut you. The water is too shallow for regular boats. So, we use an airboat. An airboat is a flat, open boat. Like an airplane, it has a big propeller to move it. The propeller is fixed on the rear of the boat. It makes a tremendous noise, but it does the job. The boat skims along the water’s surface. Although we can still get lost in an airboat, at least we are above the alligators(短吻鳄).

While hundreds of different kinds of animals live in the Everglades, the most famous is surely the alligator. Once endangered, alligators are now protected within Everglades National Park. Visitors are likely to see them both on land and in water.

For a long time, dangers have threatened the Everglades. Around 1900, some people felt this precious wetland should be drained (排干). They said it was just a big swamp and not good for anything. In the 1920s, there was a land boom in Florida. People wanted to build homes everywhere, including in the Everglades. They built canals, levees (防洪堤), and other water systems that stopped the rivers flowing into the Everglades. Factories were built near rivers that flowed into the wetland. These factories dumped poisonous waste that damaged the Everglades ecosystem.

?People are now working to preserve the Everglades National Park for the future. Right now, one big problem is the paperbark tree. This tree is an invader from Australia.

Paperbark trees soak up a lot of water. In the early 1900s, people brought them to Florida because they thought they would help drain the Everglades. However, the invaders adapted too well. Paperbark trees have taken over hundreds of thousands of acres of the Everglades and killed other trees. Scientists are cutting down these invaders or spraying them with herbicides (除草剂) to kill them.

1.Which helps to explain why it is difficult to travel in Everglades?

A. Airboats may make a very big noise.

B. You may get lost when passing through.

C. Paperbark trees soak up too much water there.

D. Many different kinds of animals are to be protected.

2.Why do people use airboats instead of normal boats?

A. They have big propellers to move them faster than alligators.

B. The propeller makes loud noise so as to scare alligators.

C. Their flat bottom can skim along the water surface.

D. They can watch alligators without hurting them.

3.The following measures were taken to drain the Everglades except that people______.

A. built canals and levees to stop the rivers flowing into Everglades

B. built factories near rivers that flowed into the wetland

C. brought Paperbark to soak up water in Everglades

D. are cutting down these Paperbark trees

4.The underlined word "invader" probably means something______.

A. that moves in from another place

B. that enters and takes control

C. that has been brought in

D. that is in danger

 

Michael J. “Crocodile Dundee” (also called Mick), played by Paul Hogan, is the main character in the fictional Crocodile Dundee film series consisting of Crocodile Dundee, Crocodile Dundee II, and Crocodile Dundee in Los Angeles. The character is a crocodile hunter, hence the nickname.

In the first film, Crocodile Dundee, Mick is visited by a New York reporter, Sue Charlton, who travels to Australia to investigate a report she heard of a crocodile hunter, who had his leg bitten off by a crocodile in the outback. The hunter supposedly walked more than a hundred miles back to civilization and miraculously survived his injuries. However, by the time she meets him, the story turns out to be a somewhat exaggerated legend where the “bitten-off leg” turns out to be just being some bad scarring on his leg; a “love bite” as Mick calls it. Still interested by the idea of “Crocodile Dundee”, Sue continues with the story. They travel together out to where the incident occurred, and follow his route through the bush to the nearest hospital. Despite his old-fashioned views, the pair eventually become close, especially after Mick saves Sue from a crocodile attack.

Feeling there is still more to the story, Sue invites Mick back to New York with her, as his first trip to a city (or “first trip anywhere,” as Dundee says). The rest of the film depicts Dundee as a “fish out of water,” showing how, despite his expert knowledge of living outdoors, he knows little of city life. Mick meets Sue’s boyfriend, Richard, but they do not get along. By the end of the film, Mick is on his way home, lovesick, when Sue realizes she loves Mick, too, and not Richard. She runs to the subway station to stop Mick from leaving and, by passing on messages through the packed-to-the-gills crowd, she tells him she won’t marry Richard, and she loves him instead. With the help of the other people in the subway, Mick and Sue have a loving reunion as the film ends.

1.Which of the following statements is true about Mick?

A. He is a crocodile hunter living in Los Angeles.

B. He is based on a real person in Australia.

C. He wrote a film series about himself.

D. He got his nickname because of his job.

2.In the film Crocodile Dundee, Mick ______.

A. pretends he was bitten by a crocodile

B. urges Sue Charlton to write his life story

C. shows Sue Charlton around the town he lives in

D. hasn’t been abroad before his trip to America

3.When in New York, Mick ______.

A. makes friends with Richard

B. makes full use of his bush skills

C. doesn’t know how to fit into city life

D. feels excited about living in a big city

 

违法和不良信息举报电话:027-86699610 举报邮箱:58377363@163.com

精英家教网