题目内容
10.My bike is broken,I will have it repairing.repairing 改repaired.分析 我的自行车坏了,我会去让人修一修.
解答 答案:repairing 改repaired.考查非谓语动词做宾补.表示"让某事被做"用"have sth done",it 和repair之间是被动关系,所以repairing 改repaired.
点评 考查汉译英.have可以用do\doing\done做宾补,用法不同.
比如说:
1 I had Tom repair my bike yesterday--------have sb.do sth (昨天我让TOM修理我的自行车)
═I had my bike repaired yesterday---------have sth done (昨天我使我的自行车被修)
2 I had Mary doing the work all afternoon yesterday------have sb.doing sth-----(昨天下午我一直让Mary做这份工作)
3 I won't have you wasting your time like this----------have sb.doing sth.(我不允许你这样浪费时间)
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1.Nicole Basil set up Pedal Power in 2008.The charity donates (21)Bto students in Chicago public schools.
(22)D a bike is great fun.But what do you do with a bike after you outgrow(长大而不适于) it?Nicole Basil,from Wilmette,Illinois,has a(n) (23)Banswer to this question.When she was eight years old,she created Pedal Power,which is a charity that (24)C bikes that kids have outgrown and donates them to Chicago public schools.
Every November,Nicole(25)A for a bike drive.She held her first drive in Wilmette in 2008.She passed out flyers(传单) in her school to (26)C the word.Her friends helped add two more donation locations in Northbrook and Park Ridge,Illinois.Since then,Nicole has collected and donated more than 1,000bikes.(27)A,Pedal Power supplied riders with 400helmets last year."It is important to ride (28)Bon a bike,and(29)Dare a big part of that,"Nicole says.
The Wilmette Bicycle & Sport Shops helps to be (30)A all donated bikes are safe to ride.Each bike (31)A a five-minute check-up by the shop's employees.The owner of the shop said he was (32)C to help a charity that(33)D the community."We need more people like Nicole that will do things just to (34)Dpeople,"he said.
The bikes are given as (35)B to students who have good grades and perfect(36)B."Some kids aren't as lucky as others,(37)Athey still do well in school,"Nicole says."And I think they should be rewarded for that"
Barton Dassinger,a teacher in Chicago,said,"It's been a great way to (38)Cstudents to do their best.They work hard to try to make it happen."
Nicole has received e-mails and phone calls from parents and teachers that say test scores and grades are (39)C."Bikes can take you(40)D,"she says."Good grades can take you even further."
(22)D a bike is great fun.But what do you do with a bike after you outgrow(长大而不适于) it?Nicole Basil,from Wilmette,Illinois,has a(n) (23)Banswer to this question.When she was eight years old,she created Pedal Power,which is a charity that (24)C bikes that kids have outgrown and donates them to Chicago public schools.
Every November,Nicole(25)A for a bike drive.She held her first drive in Wilmette in 2008.She passed out flyers(传单) in her school to (26)C the word.Her friends helped add two more donation locations in Northbrook and Park Ridge,Illinois.Since then,Nicole has collected and donated more than 1,000bikes.(27)A,Pedal Power supplied riders with 400helmets last year."It is important to ride (28)Bon a bike,and(29)Dare a big part of that,"Nicole says.
The Wilmette Bicycle & Sport Shops helps to be (30)A all donated bikes are safe to ride.Each bike (31)A a five-minute check-up by the shop's employees.The owner of the shop said he was (32)C to help a charity that(33)D the community."We need more people like Nicole that will do things just to (34)Dpeople,"he said.
The bikes are given as (35)B to students who have good grades and perfect(36)B."Some kids aren't as lucky as others,(37)Athey still do well in school,"Nicole says."And I think they should be rewarded for that"
Barton Dassinger,a teacher in Chicago,said,"It's been a great way to (38)Cstudents to do their best.They work hard to try to make it happen."
Nicole has received e-mails and phone calls from parents and teachers that say test scores and grades are (39)C."Bikes can take you(40)D,"she says."Good grades can take you even further."
21.A.money | B.bikes | C.clothes | D.food |
22.A.Repairing | B.Sharing | C.Buying | D.Riding |
23.A.complete | B.brilliant | C.brief | D.honest |
24.A.checks | B.finds | C.colle cts | D.sells |
25.A.prepares | B.applies | C.calls | D.looks |
26.A.catch | B.present | C.spread | D.leave |
27.A.In addition | B.In other words | C.By contrast | D.In all |
28.A.skillful ly | B.safely | C.carefully | D.slowly |
29.A.charities | B.riders | C.students | D.helmets |
30.A.sure | B.aware | C.confident | D.excited |
31.A.receives | B.avoids | C.expects | D.continues |
32.A.calm | B.lucky | C.happy | D.eager |
33.A.connects | B.challenges | C.protects | D.benefits |
34.A.greet | B.please | C.amuse | D.help |
35.A.reminders | B.rewards | C.surprises | D.choices |
36.A.information | B.attendance | C.description | D.statement |
37.A.but | B.because | C.though | D.so |
38.A.allow | B.force | C.inspire | D.persuade |
39.A.slipping | B.changing | C.improving | D.hurting |
40.A.aside | B.away | C.back | D.far |
3.It's no secret that many children would be healthier and happier with adoptive parents than with the parents that nature dealt them.That's especially (36)Cof children who remain in homes where they're badly treated (37)Dthe law blindly favors biological parents.It's also true of children who (38)Cfor years in foster (寄养) homes because of parents who can't or won't care for them but (39)Bto give up custody (监护) rights.
Fourteen-year-old Kimberly Mays (40)Cneither description,but her recent court victory could (41)Bhelp children who do.Kimberly has been the (42)Bof an angry custody battle between the man who raised her and her biological parents,with whom she has never lived.A Florida judge (43)Athat the teenager can remain with the only father she's ever known and that her biological parents have"no legal (44)D"on her.
Shortly after (45)Ain December 1978,Kimberly Mays and another baby were mistakenly switched and sent home with the (46)Dparents.Kimberly's biological parents,Ernest and Regina Twigg,received a child who died of a heart disease in 1988.Medical tests (47)Dthat the child wasn't the Twiggs'own daughter,but Kim only was,thus leading to a custody (48)Awith Robert Mays.In 1989,the two families (49)Cthat Mr.Mays would maintain custody with the Twiggs getting (50)Crights.Those rights were ended when Mr.Mays decided that Kimberly was being (36)A.
The decision to (52)BKimberly with Mr.Mays caused heated discussion.But the judge made clear that Kimberly did have the right to sue (起诉) (53)Cher own behalf.Thus he made it clear that she was (54)Ajust a personal possession of her parents.Biological parentage does not mean an absolute ownership that cancels(取消) all the (55)Cof children.
Fourteen-year-old Kimberly Mays (40)Cneither description,but her recent court victory could (41)Bhelp children who do.Kimberly has been the (42)Bof an angry custody battle between the man who raised her and her biological parents,with whom she has never lived.A Florida judge (43)Athat the teenager can remain with the only father she's ever known and that her biological parents have"no legal (44)D"on her.
Shortly after (45)Ain December 1978,Kimberly Mays and another baby were mistakenly switched and sent home with the (46)Dparents.Kimberly's biological parents,Ernest and Regina Twigg,received a child who died of a heart disease in 1988.Medical tests (47)Dthat the child wasn't the Twiggs'own daughter,but Kim only was,thus leading to a custody (48)Awith Robert Mays.In 1989,the two families (49)Cthat Mr.Mays would maintain custody with the Twiggs getting (50)Crights.Those rights were ended when Mr.Mays decided that Kimberly was being (36)A.
The decision to (52)BKimberly with Mr.Mays caused heated discussion.But the judge made clear that Kimberly did have the right to sue (起诉) (53)Cher own behalf.Thus he made it clear that she was (54)Ajust a personal possession of her parents.Biological parentage does not mean an absolute ownership that cancels(取消) all the (55)Cof children.
36.A.terrible | B.sad | C.true | D.natural |
37.A.but | B.if | C.when | D.because |
38.A.settle | B.live | C.suffer | D.gather |
39.A.have | B.refuse | C.stick | D.fail |
40.A.likes | B.gives | C.fits | D.knows |
41.A.actually | B.eventually | C.successfully | D.abruptly |
42.A.victim | B.object | C.sacrifice | D.teenager |
43.A.ruled | B.believed | C.ordered | D.indicated |
44.A.expectation | B.action | C.effect | D.claim |
45.A.birth | B.judgment | C.operation | D.school |
46.A.biological | B.own | C.kind | D.wrong |
47.A.examined | B.explained | C.decided | D.showed |
48.A.battle | B.right | C.agreement | D.decision |
49.A.thought | B.quarreled | C.agreed | D.prepared |
50.A.equal | B.same | C.visiting | D.speaking |
51.A.harmed | B.forbidden | C.wounded | D.hidden |
52.A.make | B.leave | C.give | D.keep |
53.A.by | B.through | C.on | D.in |
54.A.more than | B.no more than | C.not more than | D.less than |
55.A.freedom | B.happiness | C.rights | D.ideas |