题目内容

—Is Anne coming tomorrow?

—_____.If she were to come, she would have called me.

A. Go ahead B. Certainly C. That’s right D. I don’t think so

 

D

【解析】

试题分析:由答语中的“If she were to come,she would have called me.”可知,Anne没有给说话者打电话,由此可推知,说话者认为Anne明天不会来。句意为:—Anne明天来吗?—我想她不会来。如果她想来就会给我打电话了。A项意为“继续,可以”;B项意为“当然”;C项意为“好吧”;D项意为“我不这样认为”。根据句意可知,答案选D。

考点:考查交际用语。

 

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Parents feel that it is difficult to live with teenagers. Then again, teenagers have feelings about their parents, saying that it is not easy living with them. According to a recent research, the most common between parents and teenagers is that regarding untidiness and daily routine tasks. On the one hand, parents go mad over rooms, clothes thrown on the floor and their children’s refusal to help with the . On the other hand, teenagers lose their patience continually when parents blame them for the towel in the bathroom, not cleaning up their room or refusing to do the shopping at the supermarket.

The research, conducted by St. George University, shows that different parents have different to these problems. However, some approaches are more than others. For example, those parents who yell at their children for their untidiness, but clean the room for them, have fewer chances of changing their children’s . On the contrary, those who let teenagers experience the of their actions can do better. For example, when teenagers who don’t help their parents with the shopping don’t find their favorite drink in the refrigerator, they are forced to their actions.

Psychologists say that is the most important thing in parent-child relationships. Parents should to their children but at the same time they should lend an ear to what they have to say. Parents may their children when they are untidy but they should also understand that their room is their own private space. Communication is a two-way process. It is only by listening to and each other that problems between parents and children can be settled.

1.A. natural B. strongC. guilty D. similar

2.A. interest B. argumentC. link D.knowledge

3.A. noisy B. crowdedC. messy D. locked

4.A. homework B. houseworkC. problem D. research

5.A. washing B. using C. dropping D. replacing

6.A. approaches B. contributions C. introductions D. attitudes

7.A. complex B. popular C. scientific D. successful

8.A. later B. deliberately C. seldom D. thoroughly

9.A. behavior B. taste C. future D. nature

10.A. failures B. changes C. consequences D. thrills

11.A. defend B. delay C. repeat D. reconsider

12.A. communication B. bond C. friendship D. trust

13.A. reply B. attend C. attach D. talk

14.A. hate B. scold C. frighten D. stop

15.A. loving B. observing C. understanding D. praising

 

One morning, Ann’s neighbor Tracy found a lost dog wandering around the local elementary school. She asked Ann if she could keep an eye on the dog. Ann said that she could watch it only for the day.

Tracy took photos of the dog and printed off 400 FOUND fliers(传单), and put them in mailboxes. Meanwhile, Ann went to the dollar store and bought some pet supplies, warning her two sons not to fall in love with the dog. At the time, Ann’s son Thomas was 10 years old, and Jack, who was recovering from a heart operation, was 21 years old.

Four days later Ann was still looking after the dog, whom they had started to call Riley. When she arrived home from work, the dog threw itself against the screen door and barked madly at her. As soon as she opened the door, Riley dashed into the boys’ room where Ann found Jack suffering from a heart attack. Riley ran over to Jack, but as soon as Ann bent over to help him the dog went silent.

“If it hadn’t come to get me, the doctor said Jack would have died,” Ann reported to a local newspaper. At this point, no one had called to claim the dog, so Ann decided to keep it.

The next morning Tracy got a call. A man named Peter recognized his lost dog and called the number on the flier. Tracy started crying, and told him, “That dog saved my friend’s son.”

Peter drove to Ann’s house to pick up his dog, and saw Thomas and Jack crying in the window. After a few moments Peter said, “Maybe Odie was supposed to find you, maybe you should keep it.”

1.What did Tracy do after finding the dog?

A. She looked for its owner

B. She gave it to Ann as a gift.

C. She sold it to the dollar store.

D. She bought some food for it.

2.How did the dog help save Jack?

A. By breaking the door for Ann.

B. By leading Ann to Jack’s room.

C. By dragging Jack out of the room.

D. By attending Jack when Ann was out.

3.What was Ann’s attitude to the dog according to Paragraph 4?

A. Sympathetic B. Doubtful C. Tolerant D. Grateful

4.For what purpose did Peter call Tracy?

A. To help her friend’s son. B. To interview Tracy

C. To take back his dog. D. To return the flier to her.

5.What can we infer about the dog from the last paragraph?

A. It would be given to Odie.

B. It would be kept by Ann’ family.

C. It would be returned to Peter.

D. It would be taken away by Tracy.

 

You are the collector in the gallery of your life. You collect. You might not mean to but you do. One out of three people collects tangible(有形的)things such as cats, photos and noisy toys.

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Some of the collections are fairly common—records, model houses. Others are strangely beautiful—branches that have fallen from tree, for example. But they all reveal (显露)a lot of things: ask someone what they collect and their answers will tell you who they are.

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Some collectors say they started or stopped making collections at important point: the beginning or end of adolescence—“it’s a growing-up thing; you stop when you grow up,”says one. Other painful times are mentioned, such as the end of a relationship. For time and life can seem so uncontrollable that a steady serial(顺序排列的)arrangement is comforting.

1.How will the new museums promote a popular culture of museums?

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B. By showing what ordinary people have collected.

C. By correcting what museums normally represent.

D. By accumulating 40 collections two years from now.

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D. Why they might not mean to collect.

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D. To find out why people visit museums.

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