题目内容

    It’s just a small, white envelope stuck among the branches of our Christmas tree.No name, to 36  .It has peeked (looked quickly)through the branches of our tree for the past 10 years or so.

    It all began because my husband Mike  37 Christmas-oh, out the true meaning of Christmas, but the 38  aspects of it- overspending and the frantic(匆忙地) running around at the last minute to get gifts because you couldn't think of anything else. So, I decided one year to bypass the usual shirts, sweaters and ties and reach for something   39 just for Mike.

    The inspiration came in an  40 way. Our son Kevin, who was 12 that year, was wrestling at the school he attended; and shortly before Christmas, there was a match against a team of mostly black kids sponsored by a church. These young men, dressed in ragged sneakers,  41 a sharp contrast to our boys in their nice uniforms and sparkling new wrestling shoes. As the match began, I was alarmed to see that the other team was wrestling without helmets, a luxury that they obviously couldn’t  42  . Well, we thoroughly defeated them and took every weight class. Mike shook his head 43  , "I wish just one of them could have won," he said. "They have a lot of potential, but losing like this could take the heart right out of them.1"

    Mike loved kids and he knew them. That's when the  44  for his present came. That afternoon, I went to a local  45  goods store and bought wrestling headgear and shoes and sent them anonymously(慝名) to the church. On Christmas Eve, I placed the envelope on the tree, the note inside telling Mike what I had done and that this was my gift from him. His  46 was the brightest thing about Christmas that year and in  47  years.

36.A.participation      B.edition C.identification      D.qualification

37.A.loved           B.celebrated        C.spent           D.hated

38.A.educational       B.commercial       C.spiritual          D.social

39.A.expensive         B.practical         C.especial          D.special

40.A.unusual          B.awkward        C.astonishing       D.attractive

41.A.presented        B.possessed C.prohibited        D.preserved

42.A.advocate         B.abuse           C.adopt           D.afford

43.A.heavily B.happily C.sadly           D.deliberately

44.A.envelope         B.idea            C.money          D.shop

45.A.sporting         B.clothing          C.cheap           D.opening

46.A.car             B.smile           C.eye             D.helmet

47.A.succeeding       B.past C.passing          D.fascinating

36.C

37.D

38.B

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Last Thursday, the day before I got on the plane to fly to China, I went to see a movie. It wasn’t just any movie, but the recently released(上映)Harry Potter blockbuster(耗费巨资拍摄的电影)“The philosopher’s Stone” that has   1   Britain, America, and now Japan, by storm.

  The film is a tale of witchcraft(魔法)  2   in modern-day Britain. Based on a book by J. K. Rowling,   3   tells the story of a very   4   baby, seared at birth by an evil wizard who kills his parents. The only legacy (遗赠物)of the tragedy is a red   5   on the baby’s forehead-and magical   6   , inherited(继承)from his mother and father, to fight against and overcome evil.

  The Harry Potter myth was founded five years ago by Joanne Rowling, a   7   single mother living in Edinburgh, in the north of the United Kingdom. To date, 110 million   8   of her books have been sold worldwide. But before her publishers would   9   the first manuscript(手稿),Joanne Rowling   10   agree to change her name on the book cover to J. K. Rowling

   11   it was feared that child,   12   young boys,   13   not read an adventure story written by a woman.   14   , when the books became an overnight success, did it become generally known that the talented and creative author was   15   a young and attractive woman.

  At the start of production, forty thousand   16   actors were auditioned(试演)and

   17   for the screen role, yet Daniel Radcliffe was discovered when the producers took a

   18   and went out to a theatre in London’s west end. There in the   19   row sat young Daniel who was visiting the theatre with his father for an evening’s entertainment. Daniel was screen tested and with J. K. Rowling’s agreement was immediately   20   the part. Now kids around the world together with their parents are quite familiar with Harry Potter and the actor Daniel Reddiffe.

  1Aarrived         Btaken        Chit               Dbrought

  2Apublished       Bshown        Cset               Dseen

  3Ahe             Bwhich       Cone              Dit

  4Alovely          Binteresting     Cpoor              Dspecial

  5Amark           Bsign          Cnote             Dcharacter

  6Aenergies         Bstrength      Cpowers            Dforce

  7Alonely          Bserious        Cweak             Dpoor

  8Akinds           Bcopies       Cpieces            Dsets

  9Areceive         Badmit        Caccept           Dallow

  10Awas to         Bplanned to     Chad to            Dpreferred to

  11Aso            Bsince         Calthough           Dbecause

  12Aparticularly     Bfrequently      Cgreatly           Drecently

  13Ashould          Bcould        Cwould            Dmight

  14AEven later       BOnly later      CLater in the year      DSooner or later

  15Ain fact          Bafter all       Cat least           Din time

  16Amen           Bfilm          Cplay             Dchild

  17Achecked       Bexamined     Ctested            Dquestioned

  18Abus            Bwalk         Cbreak             Dlook

  19Aback          Bnext          Cfront              Dopposite

  20Asupplied       Bprovided      Cacted             Doffered

 

Last Thursday, the day before I got on the plane to fly to China, I went to see a movie. It wasn’t just any movie, but the recently released(上映)Harry Potter blockbuster(耗费巨资拍摄的电影)“The philosopher’s Stone” that has   1   Britain, America, and now Japan, by storm.

  The film is a tale of witchcraft(魔法)  2   in modern-day Britain. Based on a book by J. K. Rowling,   3   tells the story of a very   4   baby, seared at birth by an evil wizard who kills his parents. The only legacy (遗赠物)of the tragedy is a red   5   on the baby’s forehead-and magical   6   , inherited(继承)from his mother and father, to fight against and overcome evil.

  The Harry Potter myth was founded five years ago by Joanne Rowling, a   7   single mother living in Edinburgh, in the north of the United Kingdom. To date, 110 million   8   of her books have been sold worldwide. But before her publishers would   9   the first manuscript(手稿),Joanne Rowling   10   agree to change her name on the book cover to J. K. Rowling

   11   it was feared that child,   12   young boys,   13   not read an adventure story written by a woman.   14   , when the books became an overnight success, did it become generally known that the talented and creative author was   15   a young and attractive woman.

  At the start of production, forty thousand   16   actors were auditioned(试演)and

   17   for the screen role, yet Daniel Radcliffe was discovered when the producers took a

   18   and went out to a theatre in London’s west end. There in the   19   row sat young Daniel who was visiting the theatre with his father for an evening’s entertainment. Daniel was screen tested and with J. K. Rowling’s agreement was immediately   20   the part. Now kids around the world together with their parents are quite familiar with Harry Potter and the actor Daniel Reddiffe.

  1Aarrived         Btaken        Chit               Dbrought

  2Apublished       Bshown        Cset               Dseen

  3Ahe             Bwhich       Cone              Dit

  4Alovely          Binteresting     Cpoor              Dspecial

  5Amark           Bsign          Cnote             Dcharacter

  6Aenergies         Bstrength      Cpowers            Dforce

  7Alonely          Bserious        Cweak             Dpoor

  8Akinds           Bcopies       Cpieces            Dsets

  9Areceive         Badmit        Caccept           Dallow

  10Awas to         Bplanned to     Chad to            Dpreferred to

  11Aso            Bsince         Calthough           Dbecause

  12Aparticularly     Bfrequently      Cgreatly           Drecently

  13Ashould          Bcould        Cwould            Dmight

  14AEven later       BOnly later      CLater in the year      DSooner or later

  15Ain fact          Bafter all       Cat least           Din time

  16Amen           Bfilm          Cplay             Dchild

  17Achecked       Bexamined     Ctested              Dquestioned

  18Abus            Bwalk         Cbreak             Dlook

  19Aback          Bnext          Cfront              Dopposite

  20Asupplied       Bprovided      Cacted             Doffered

 

Ever since Jonathan had set up the house in Comton Street, she had looked after it very  1  . Before she left the house in the morning, she carefully closed all the  2  downstairs, opened some windows to  3  the air in and looked at the front gate for the safe. Everything Jonathan did was  4  .

One summer evening Jonathan returned home  5  at five minutes to seven exactly. When she opened the front gate she immediately noticed something  6  . There was a heavy footprint in the   7  in one of the flower beds.

Jonathan was just going to blame the milkman or the postman  8  she noticed that one of the curtains in the front room downstairs was out of order. Jonathan never  9  anything out of order.

She walked  10  to the front door and opened it quietly. She  11  carefully for a few moments but could find nothing. The front room door was half open. Jonathan studied it thoughtfully,   12  if she had forgotten to close it that morning. She had never forgotten before. She stepped silently  13  the hall to the door and looked  14  the room. The shadow of a man was clearly reflected on the far wall in the afternoon sunlight. He had  15  been standing behind the door since Jonathan’s return. Jonathan grabbed the door handle,   16  the door quickly and turned the key. Then she calmly  17  the telephone in the hall and set about calling the police.

The thief tried to  18  through a window to get out but Jonathan had  19  that. Three minutes later the police arrived on the scene. Jonathan was a little angry that she  20  have dinner later than usual but on the whole she felt quite pleased with herself.

1. A. easily            B. carefully           C. carelessly         D. difficulty

2. A. windows           B. doors             C. rooms            D. house

3. A. send           B. give             C. let                D. blow

4. A. slow           B. quick             C. orderly           D. disorderly

5. A. as usual          B. all the same         C. right away          D. as soon as

6. A. usual            B. strange           C. interesting          D. happy

7. A. circle            B. surface           C. land             D. earth

8. A. that            B. since              C. when             D. because

9. A. left             B. designed           C. arranged           D. planned

10. A. down          B. up                C. in                   D. on

11. A. listened         B. heard        &nbsJp;    C. looked            D. watched

12. A. thinking        B. guessing           C. wondering          D. surprising

13. A. across          B. along              C. into              D. onto

14. A. at               B. through            C. inside             D. over

15. A. happily          B. frightenedly        C. calmly            D. angrily

16. A. opened          B. locked            C. shut             D. tired

17. A. picked away      B. picked up         C. picked out          D. picked down

18. A. roll           B. climb             C. rush             D. dive

19. A. hoped         B. wished           C. expected          D. supposed

20. A. must           B. had to            C. should            D. ought to

 

Like that of her own character, Harry Potter, J.K. Rowling’s life is like a fairy tale. Divorced, living on public assistance in a tiny Edinburgh flat with her infant daughter, Rowling  1 Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone  2 a table in a café during her daughter’s naps – and it was Harry Potter  3 rescued her.

Rowling  4 that she always wanted to write and that the first  5 she actually wrote down, when she was five or six, was a story about a rabbit  6 Rabbit. Many of her favorite  7 center around reading – hearing The Wind in the Willows  8 aloud by her father when she had the measles(麻疹), enjoying the fantastic adventure stories of E. Nesbit, and her favorite story of all, The little White Horse.

At Exeter University Rowling took her degree in French and  9 one year studying in Paris. After college she moved to London to  10 as a researcher and bilingual secretary. The best thing about working in an office, she has said, was  11 up stories on the computer when no one was  12 . During this time, on a particularly long train ride from Manchester to London in the summer of 1990, the idea  13 her of a boy who is a wizard and doesn’t know it. He  14 a school for wizardry – she could see him very plainly in her mind. By the time the train  15 into Kings Cross station four hours later, many of the characters and the early stages of the plot were fully  16 in her head. The story took further shape as she continued working on it in  17 and cafes over her lunch hours.

After her marriage to a Portuguese TV journalist ended in divorce, Rowling returned to Britain with her infant daughter and a suitcase full of Harry Potter notes and  18 . She settled in Edinburgh to be near her sister and  19 to finish the book before looking for a teaching job. Wheeling her daughter’s carriage around the city to escape their  20 , cold apartment, she would duck into coffee shops to write when the baby fell asleep. In this way she finished the book and started sending it to publishers.

1.   A. read           B. recited         C. wrote          D. copied

2.   A. on            B. in             C. around         D. at

3.   A. what          B. that           C. which          D. who

4.   A. remembers      B. thinks          C. reminds        D. supposes

5.   A. book          B. story          C. novel          D. fiction

6.   A. naming         B. published       C. called          D. replaced

7.   A. songs          B. sports          C. things          D. memories

8.   A. spoken         B. said           C. told           D. read

9.   A. cost           B. spared         C. took           D. spent

10.  A. regard         B. consider        C. work          D. treat

11.  A. searching       B. reading         C. listening        D. typing

12.  A. noticing        B. watching       C. observing       D. seeing

13.  A. came to        B. struck to        C. stuck to        D. hit on

14.  A. studies         B. attends         C. builds          D. goes

15.  A. entered         B. pulled          C. reached         D. arrived

16.  A. organized       B. taken          C. formed         D. appeared

17.  A. theatres        B. pubs           C. cinemas        D. concerts

18.  A. chapters        B. books          C. magazines       D. newspapers

19.  A. set about        B. set off         C. set up          D. set out

20.  A. splendid        B. large           C. comfortable      D. tiny

“Everything happens for the best,” my mother said whenever I faced disappointment. “If you carry on,one day something 36 will happen.And you’ll realize that it wouldn’t have 37 if not for that previous disappointment.” 

M0ther was right, 38 I discovered after graduating from college in 1932.I had decided to try for a job in radio,then work my way up to sports 39 .I hitchhiked(搭车)to Chicago and knocked on the door of every station—and got 40 every time.

In one studio.a kind lady told me that big stations couldn’t risk hiring an 41 person.“Go to the suburbs and find a small station that’ll give you a 42 ,”she said.

I thumbed home to Dixon,lllinois.While there was no radio-announcing jobs in Dixon,my father said Montgomery Ward had opened a store and wanted a local athlete to 43 its sports department.Since Dixon was where I had played high school football,I 44 .The job sounded just right for me.But I wasn’t 45 .

My 46 must have shown.“Everything happens for the best,”Mom 47 me.Dad offered me the car to job 48 .I 49 WOC Radio in Davenport, Iowa. The program director.Peter MacArthur,told me they had already hired an announcer.

As I left his office,my annoyance 50 over.I asked aloud,“How can a fellow 51 .to be a spots announcer if he can’t get a job in a radio station?”

I was waiting for the elevator when I heard MacArthur calling,“What was that you said about  52 ? Do you know anything about football?”Then he stood me before a microphone and asked me to.53 an imaginary game. 

On my way home,as I have many times since,J thought of my mother’s 54.I often wonder what 55 my life might have taken if I’d gotten the job at Montgomery Ward.

36.A.strange        B.good        C.funny       D.boring

37.A.ended         B.stopped      C.happened     D.changed

38.A.as            B.that         C.until        D.when

39.A.coach         B.judge        C.assistant     D.announcer

40.A.turned down    B.picked out  C.found out     D.taken on

41.A.unimportant     B.inexperienced  C.impolite      D.dishonest

42.A.1esson        B.chance       C.ride         D.check

43.A.manage        B.possess      C.describe      D.desert

44.A.retired         B.quit         C.applied       D.refused

45.A.encouraged     B.hired        C.awarded     D.disturbed

46.A.delight         B.excitement    C.surprise      D.disappointment

47.A.reminded       B.criticized     C.inspected     D.informed

48.A. hunt           B.report       C.description       D.design

49.A.phoned        B.tried C. introduced D.interviewed

50.A.rolled        B.fell        C.bent            D.boiled

51.A.get          B.fail        C.pretend          D.appear

52.A.music        B.sport      C.radio            D.program

53.A.host            B.watch      C.broadcast       D.guide

54.A.words       B.promises    C.manners         D.dreams

55.A.stage  B.action  C.measures D.direction

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