题目内容

_____ to hospital in time, the patient infected with flu was saved at last.

A.Taking  B.Having taken
C.To be taken D.Having been taken

D

解析试题分析:考查分词做状语。本题句子的主语the patient与动词take构成被动关系,且该动作是在谓语动作之前就发生的发生的,可以使用Taken也可以使用having been taken。句意:被及时送到了医院,那个感染了流感的病人的生命最后被挽救了。故D正确。
考点:考查分词做状语
点评:考查分词做状语。当分词做状语的时候,如果构成分词的动词与句子的主语构成主动关系,就使用现在分词做状语;当二者构成被动关系,使用过去分词做状语。如果分词的动作发生在谓语动词之前,就使用分词的完成式。如果分词与句子的主语没有关系,可以使用状语从句或者独立主格结构。

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阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的四个选项中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。

I live in a big city. It’s noisy and dirty and I got very  36 .At the weekends I like to leave the city and get some  37  air and a good rest. A few weeks ago I decided to go to see my  38 . I was really looking forward to it.

My parents live a long way  39 .I went to see them with James, a friend, and we drove on Friday night. In the middle of the  40  it began to rain. The road become very  41  and it was difficult to drive. We arrived home just after midnight, feeling very  42 .The next  43  it was still raining. James took his  44  to a garage which was very good.

In the afternoon the  45  improved, we wanted to go for a  46 . My parents lent us their car. That was no good. Their car didn’t  47 .We rang up the garage. “Oh,” They said, “Your car  48  be ready till tomorrow.” So it wasn’t  49  to go for a drive. We decided to play a word game. When we didn’t agree  50  a word we looked for a dictionary. It wasn’t there.  51  my mother remembered, “I lent it to your sister. She took it with her when she left.” The word game wasn’t any good  52  a dictionary.

On Sunday my mother dropped a heavy box on her  53  and we had to hire a  54  to take her to hospital. When James and I drove back we got stuck in a car accident. Next time I want a rest, I’ll stay  55 .

1.          

A.angry

B.surprised

C.tiring

D.tired

2.          

A.warm

B.cool

C.cold

D.fresh

3.          

A.comrades

B.friends

C.parents

D.hometown

4.          

A.away

B.here

C.there

D.far

5.          

A.day

B.night

C.journey

D.road

6.          

A.narrow

B.wet

C.dirty

D.dry

7.          

A.happy

B.excited

C.tired

D.thirsty

8.          

A.morning

B.day

C.afternoon

D.evening

9.          

A.clothes

B.car

C.books

D.machine

10.      

A.car

B.clothes

C.weather

D.work

11.      

A.drive

B.look

C.trip

D.walk

12.      

A.move

B.roll

C.begin

D.work

13.      

A.mustn’t

B.couldn’t

C.wouldn’t

D.won’t

14.      

A.interesting

B.necessary

C.possible

D.wonderful

15.      

A.on

B.over

C.for

D.with

16.      

A.Luckily

B.Suddenly

C.Gradually

D.Quickly

17.      

A.for

B.in

C.with

D.without

18.      

A.foot

B.leg

C.head

D.floor

19.      

A.truck

B.taxi

C.bike

D.bus

20.      

A.in the country

B.in the city

C.in my office

D.in the garage

 

Tess was eight years old. Her little brother Andrew was very sick and their parents were completely out of money. She heard Daddy say to her tearful Mother, “Only a miracle can save him now.”

Tess took her money and made her way six blocks to Rexall’s Drug Store.

“And what do you want?” the chemist asked in an annoyed tone of voice. “I’m talking to my brother from Chicago whom I haven’t seen for ages.”

“Well, I want to talk to you about my brother,” Tess answered back in the same annoyed tone. “He’s really sick. He has something bad growing inside his head and my Daddy says only a miracle can save him now. So how much does a miracle cost?”

“We don’t sell miracles here, little girl. I’m sorry but I can’t help you,” the chemist said, softening a little.

“Listen, I can help you.” The chemist’s brother was a well-dressed man. He asked Tess, “What kind of miracle does your brother need?”

“I don’t know,” Tess replied. “Mommy says he needs an operation. But my Daddy can’t pay for it, so I want to use my money.”

“How much do you have?” asked the man from Chicago. “One dollar and eleven cents,” Tess answered. “And it’s all the money I have, but I can get some more, if I need to.”

“Well,what a coincidence (巧合),” smiled the man. “A dollar and eleven cents - the exact price of a miracle for your little brother. Take me to where you live. Let’s see if 1 have the kind of miracle you need.”

That man was Dr. Carlton Armstrong, a surgeon in neurosurgery (神经外科). The operation was completed without charge and it wasn’t long until Andrew was home again and doing well.

Tess smiled. She knew exactly how much a miracle cost… one dollar and eleven  cents… plus the faith of a little child.

1.What can we learn from the first paragraph?

A.Tess’s brother would recover because there was a miracle.

B.Tess’s brother would die because his family had no money to treat his illness.

C.Tess’s family would look for a miracle to treat Andrew’s illness.

D.Andrew should go to hospital for a miracle.

2.Why did the chemist get annoyed first?

A.Because he was a nervous man.

B.Because Tess didn’t buy his medicine.

C.Because Tess had bothered him and his brother.

D.Because Tess was poorly dressed.

3.What can we learn about Dr. Carlton Armstrong?

A.He was a stone-hearted man.

B.He cared for only a little money.

C.He never helped others unless given a lot of money.

D.He was a kind gentleman and ready to help others.

4.What can be the best title?

A.A dying boy and her sister

B.A miracle of $ 1.10

C.A kind doctor and his brother

D.A poor girl and a doctor

 

The TV shows a baby’s pram (婴儿车) rolling off a train platform as the mother makes a mad rush to save her son, but she is too late and it falls onto the rails in front of an incoming train. This heart-stopping scene happened yesterday at Ashburton station in Melbourne, Australia. But the story has a happy ending: the six-month-old baby survived with just a cut on his forehead, although the pram was dragged about 35 metres by the braking train. The nurse Jon Wright said the boy just “needed a feed and a sleep” and didn’t need to stay in hospital.

“Luckily, he was strapped (绑) into his pram at the time, which probably saved his life. I think the child is extremely lucky, ” Wright told the Herald Sun newspaper after the baby was taken to hospital with minor injuries.

Fortunately the train was already slowing down to stop at the station so it stopped quickly when the driver put on the brakes as soon as he saw the pram fall in front of him. Rail firm Connex is to look into how the pram rolled off the platform. The accident came one day after Connex started a child safety awareness activity warning parents to keep babies strapped into their prams at all times while on platforms.

The accident happened at the same time as the “balloon boy ”story in the US, in which a six-year-old Colorado boy was reported to be trapped in a flyaway balloon. However, he was later found hiding in the family’s garage. Many people believe that it had all been a publicity stunt by the parents. No such doubts surround the baby on the train platform.

1.In the accident, the baby           .

A.almost fell onto the rails

B.needed to stay in hospital

C.was badly injured by the train

D.was pulled a long distance in the pram by the train

2.The child was not killed most probably because        .

A.the mother strapped him into his pram

B.the platform is not very high

C.he was well fed and asleep

D.the mother rushed to save him

3.Why could the train stop quickly?

A.Because it had just begun to move.

B.Because it was moving slowly at that time.

C.Because the mother took measures quickly.

D.Because the driver saw the pram fall.

4.The underlined word “stunt” in the last paragraph probably means           .

A.something silly

B.something funny

C.something done to attract attention

D.something done to avoid bad luck

 

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