题目内容

______ is surprising to us is that Tom, for ______ English was once boring, can speak English fluently as though he were a native speaker.

A.What; whomB.What; whoseC.It; whoseD.As; whom

A

解析试题分析:考查主语从句的定语从句。本题第一空是what引导的主语从句what is surprising to us,what在句中做主语。第二空是一个定语从句,whom指代Tom作为介词for的宾语。句意:让我们惊讶的是Tom能够讲流利的英语就好像是他的母语一样。,对他来说英语曾经很乏味。故A正确。
考点:考查主语从句和定语从句
点评:任何一个从句的考查都主要考查的是连接词,定语从句的考查主要就是考查关系词的辨析,关系代词that, which, whose, whom, as, who在句中做主语,宾语,表语或者定语;where, why, how在句中做状语。要分析句子成分,看缺少什么成分,就选用相应的关系词。名词性从句的考查集中在引导词的选择上,连接词that, whether, if在句中不充当任何成分,只起连接作用;连接代词who(ever), which(ever), whom(ever),whose(ever),what(ever)在句中做主语,宾语,表语和定语;连接副词when, why, where, how,在句中做状语。应从上下句的句法关系着手分析,切不可‘望句形生答案’总的来说,考生在解答此类型时,可用排除法或造句法,造句法就是仿造原句的语法功能仿造出一个易懂易理解的句子,帮助判断。

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阅读下列短文,从每题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项。

  With kings,artists and writers playing chess,you mightget the idea that chess is the most civilized game.But you'dbe wrong.

  A Scandinavian manuscript(手稿),900 years old,tells ofhow one player,who lost a game,picked up the board and hithis opponent on the head with it.Boards were made of stone inthose days.

  Grandmasters have called it“a blood sport”,“like a fightto the death with broken bottles”and“very dangerous-you have to kill people.”

  If you agree with the old saying that life is too short for chess,play blitz chess.Five minutes on the clock.Non-play-ers think chess is slow and boring,but blitz is an extremely exciting sport.And as aggressive(进攻性的)as any martial art(武术).In parks in Russia,where they gather in summer to play blitz,the players don't just take pieces,they knock them off the board onto the ground.And in the classic game,even world championship players have been known to kick each other under the table.

  With all this aggression,and the stories of nervous breakdowns among chess players,it's worth remembering that chess can heal as well as harm.My own favourite chess story is that of John Healy.His autobiography(自传),The Grass Arena,was made into a great film by the BBC.Healy was a failed boxer who became the most serious kind of alcoholic(酒鬼).He became homeless.The bottle nearly killed him.But in prison,he discovered chess,and managed to give up drinking completely.He is now a successful chess player,journalist and writer.

  Healy is played in the film by the British actor Mark Rylance.It's the performance of a lifetime-chess makes surpris-ingly good cinema.There is a moving scene where Healy tries to find the words to describe how his life has changed.“It's like boxing again…but not with fists…with the mind.”

(1)

The underlined sentence in the second paragraph suggests________

[  ]

A.

the board couldn't have been broken by the player

B.

the player was a very strong man

C.

the opponent must have been seriously injured

D.

stone chess boards were very popular at the time

(2)

Which of the following best describes blitz chess?

[  ]

A.

Slow and boring

B.

Fast and interesting.

C.

Peaceful but exciting.

D.

Quick and violent.

(3)

Which of the following is the correct order of whathappened to John Healy?

a.He began to play chess.

b.He gave up drinking completely.

c.He wrote The Grass Arena.

d.He broke the law.

e.He became homekss.

f.He was defeated in boxing.

g.He became alcoholic

[  ]

A.

f— g— d— e— a— c— b

B.

f— g— e— d— b— a— c

C.

f— g— e— d— a— b— c

D.

c— b— d— a— e— g— f

(4)

John Healy's story shows chess can ________

[  ]

A.

heal

B.

harm

C.

trick

D.

kill

(5)

The underlined sentence in the last paragraph means ________

[  ]

A.

Mark Rylance performed very well in this film

B.

Mark Rylance performed only once in his life

C.

it was the last performance in Mark Rylance's life

D.

Mark Rylance had never performed before

完形填空
     In the clinic, I asked if Michael could be retested, so the specialist tested him again.To my __1__,   it
was the same score.
     Later that evening, I __2__ told Frank what I had __3__ that day.After talking it over, we agreed
that we knew our __4__ much better than an IQ test.We __5__ that Michael's score must have been a
__6__ and we should treat him naturally as usual.
     We moved to Indiana in 1962, and Michael studied at Concordia High School in the same year.He
got __7__ grades in the school, __8__ in biology and chemistry, which was a great comfort.
     Michael __9__ Indiana University in 1965 as a premedical student, soon afterwards, his teachers
permitted him to take more courses than __10__.In 1968, he was accepted by the School of Medicine,
Yale University.
     On graduation day in 1972, Frank and I __11__ the ceremony at Yale.After the ceremony, we told
Michael about the low IQ score he got when he was six.Since that day, Michael sometimes would look
at us and say __12__,   "My dear mom and dad never told me that I couldn't be a doctor, not until after
I graduated from medical school!" It is his special way of thanking us for the__13__ we had in him.
     Interestingly, Michael then asked for another IQ test.We went to the same clinic where he had
__14__ the test eighteen years before.This time Michael scored 126, a(n) __15__ of 36 points.A result
like that was supposed to be impossible.
(     )1.  A. disappointment  
(     )2.  A. tearfully      
(     )3.  A. learned        
(     )4.  A. student        
(     )5.  A. argued          
(     )6.  A. joke            
(     )7.  A. poor            
(     )8.  A. especially      
(     )9.  A. visited        
(     )10.  A. allowed        
(     )11.  A. attended      
(     )12.  A. jokingly      
(     )13.  A. faith          
(     )14.  A. gave          
(     )15.  A. decrease      
B.  surpris    
B.  fearfully  
B.  saw        
B.  son        
B.  realized    
B.  mistake    
B.  good        
B.  eventually  
B.  chose      
B.  described  
B.  joined      
B.  sadly      
B.  interest    
B.  received    
B.  increase    
C.  satisfactory  
C.  cheerfully    
C.  heard        
C.  friend        
C.  decided      
C.  warning      
C.  average      
C.  finally      
C.  passed        
C.  required      
C.  gave          
C.  angrily      
C.  pride        
C.  waited        
C.  addition      
D.  regret        
D.  hopefully      
D.  looked        
D.  doctor        
D.  understood    
D.  wonder        
D.  standard      
D.  exactly        
D.  entered        
D.  offered        
D.  held          
D.  contentedly    
D.  delight        
D.  lost          
D.  decline        

In the late 1500s, a large powerful gun was placed on top of the Signal Hill, in Newfoundland, to prevent attacks from the outside. Flags were also flown there to warn sailors of bad weather. It's fitting, then, the Italian Gulielmo Marconi should have chosen this site(场所) to receive the world's first radio signal - in Morse code - from England on December 12, 1901.

    Marconi, combining earlier ideas with his own, led us to a new communications age. For the next 50 years, until the appearance of television, radio ruled the air waves.

    Today, it's the TV that rules. No single person can say to have invented television.

    In 1884, the German Paul Nipkow invented a device (设备) that sent pictures mechanically (机械地), and in 1906, Boris Rosing, a Russian, used a ray and a disc to create the world's first TV system. Then in the early 1920s, another Russian, Vladimir Zworykin,invented a picture display tube. He took out a patent (专利) for color TV, even though it wouldn't be developed for another 25 years.

    In 1924, a Scot entered the scene - John Logie Baird. He first succeeded in sending a moving picture and a year later got the first actual TV picture. In 1926, Baird showed TV in a London laboratory. Two years later in New York, Felix the Cat became the first TV star.

TV excited everyone's imagination, but hardly anyone had a set, with just two thousand in use worldwide in the mid-1930s.

Since the late 1940s, TV technology has developed very quickly. Computers may finally be combined with all televisions to give people a total all-in-one communications network.

Today, it's possible to sit and watch TV in the middle of a forest or in the Arctic. It's surpris-

ing when one considers that Marconi was on Signal Hill in the same century.

1.We can learn from the text that Signal Hill was once used as _________.

       A.a site of communication            

       B.a weather station

       C.a factory to produce weapons    

       D.a battle field to fight enemies from the outside

2.When the writer says that today it is the TV that rules, he means that the TV _________.

    A.has led to a new communications age

    B.is a major means of today's communication

       C.is a device invented with ideas from Marconi

       D.has replaced the radio in today’s communication

3.What is the main idea of Paragraphs 4 and 5?

       A.London is the pace where TV is invented.

       B.John Logie Baird was the chief inventor of television.

       C.A number of people contributed to the invention of television.

       D.Russian scientists played an important role in the invention of television.

4.The writer believes that the day will come when        .

       A.the future computers will be able to do the work TV is now doing

       B.the future computers will become available to everyone in the world

       C.the future computers will be connected to create one international network

       D.the future computers will take the place of televisions and radios

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