题目内容

 (05·全国Ⅰ)

One afternoon I was sitting at my favorite table in a restaurant, waiting for the food I had ordered to arrive. Suddenly I ___36___ that a man sitting at a table near the window kept glancing in my direction, ___37___ he knew me. The man had a newspaper ___38___ in front of him, which he was ___39___ to read, but I could ___40___ that he was keeping an eye on me. When the waiter brought my ___41___the man was clearly puzzled (困惑) by the ___42___ way in which the waiter and I ___43___each other. He seemed even more puzzled as ___44___went on and it became ___45___that all the waiters in the restaurant knew me. Finally he got up and went into the ___46___. When he came out, he paid his bill and ___47___without another glance in my direction.
   I called the owner of the restaurant and asked what the man had  ___48___. “Well,” he said, “that man was a detective (侦探). He ___49___ you here because he thought you were the man he ___50___. ” “What? ” I said, showing my ___51___. The owner continued, “He came into the kitchen and showed me a photo of the wanted man. I ___52___ say he looked very much like you! Of course, since we know you, we told him that he had made a ___53___. ” “Well, it’s really ___54___I came to a restaurant where I’m known, ” I said. “___55___, I might have been in trouble. ”
36. A. knew                  B. understood               C. noticed                     D. recognized
37. A. since                  B. even if                      C. though                            D. as if
38. A. flat                     B. open                        C. cut                          D. fixed
39. A. hoping                B. thinking                    C. pretending                D. continuing
40. A. see                     B. find                          C. guess                       D. learn
41. A. menu                  B. bill                           C. paper                       D. food
42. A. direct                  B. familiar                     C. strange                     D. funny
43. A. chatted with        B. looked at                  C. laughed at                 D. talked about
44. A. the waiter            B. time                         C. I                              D. the dinner
45. A. true                    B. hopeful                     C. clear                        D. possible
46. A. restaurant            B. washroom                C. office                       D. kitchen
47. A. left                     B. acted                        C. sat down                  D. calmed down
48. A. wanted               B. tried                         C. ordered                    D. wished
49. A. met                    B. caught                      C. followed                   D. discovered
50. A. was to beat         B. was dealing with       C. was to meet             D. was looking for
51. A. care                    B. surprise                    C. worry                      D. regret
52. A. must                   B. can                          C. need                        D. may
53. A. discovery            B. mistake                    C. decision                   D. fortune
54. A. a pity                  B. natural                      C. a chance                  D. lucky
55. A. Thus                  B. However                  C. Otherwise                D. Therefore

    

答案  36.C  37.D  38.B  39.C  40.A  41.D  42.A  43.B  44.C  45.A  46.D  47.A  48.A  49.C  50.D  51.B  52.A  53.B  54.D  55.C

    

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 (05·全国Ⅱ、全国Ⅲ)

As I drove my blue Buick into the garage. I saw that a yellow Oldsmobile was   21   too close to my space. I had to drive back and forth to get my car into the   22   space. That left

  23    enough room to open the door. Then one day I arrived home   24  , and just as I turned off the engine, the yellow Oldsmobile entered its space - too close to my car,   25  . At last I had a chance to meet the driver. My patience had   26   and I shouted at her, “Can’t you see you’re not   27   me enough space” Park father over.” Banging(猛推) open her door into  28 ,

the driver shouted back: “Make me!”   29   this she stepped out of the garage. Still, each time she got home first, she parked too close to my   30  . Then one day, I thought, “What can I do?” I soon found   31  . The next day the woman   32   a note on her windshield(挡风玻璃):

Dear Yellow Oldsmobile,

I’m sorry mistress(女主人) shouted at yours the other day. She’s been sorry about it. I

know  it because she doesn’t sing anymore while   33  . It wasn’t like her to scream   34  . Fact is, she’d just got bad news and was taking it out on you two. I   35   you and your mistress will   36   her.

                                                    Your neighbor,

                                                   Blue Buick

When I went to the   37   the next morning, the Oldsmobile was gone, but there was a

note on my windshield:

Dear Blue Buick,

My mistress is sorry, too. She parked so   38   because she just learned to drive. We will

park much farther over after this. I’m glad we can be   39   now.

                                                 Your neighbor,

                                                 Yellow Oldsmobile

After that, whenever Blue Buick   40   Yellow Oldsmobile on the road, their drivers

waved cheerfully and smiled.

21.A.driven              B.parked             C.stopped                      D.stayed

22.A.complete          B.close               C.narrow                       D.fixed

23.A.quite                B.nearly              C.seldom                       D.hardly

24.A.hurriedly          B.first                 C.finally                        D.timely

25.A.as usual           B.as planned        C.as well                       D.as yet

26.A.run into           B.run about         C.run out                       D.run off

27.A.keeping            B.saving              C.offering                      D.leaving

28.A.mine                B.hers                 C.itself                          D.ours

29.A.For                 B.With                C.From                         D.Upon

30.A.room               B.area                 C.front                          D.side

31.A.an instruction   B.a result            C.an answer                  D.a chance

32.A.put                  B.wrote              C.sent                           D.discovered

33.A.working           B.driving             C.returning                    D.cooking

34.A.on end             B.so long            C.like that                      D.any more

35.A.hope                B.know               C.suppose                     D.suggest

36.A.comfort           B.help                 C.forgive                       D.please

37.A.office              B.flat                  C.place                          D.garage

38.A.crazily             B.eagerly             C.noisily                        D.early

39.A.neighbors         B.friends             C.drivers                       D.writers

40.A.followed          B.passed             C.found                         D.greeted

    

 (05·全国ⅡC篇)

Taiwan police cannot decide whether to treat it as an extremely eleven act of stealing or an even elev-ecer cheat (诈骗). Either way , it could be the perfect crime (犯罪), because the criminals are birds—horning pigeons !

The crime begins with a telephone message to the owner of a stolen car : if you want the car back, pay up then, the car owner is directed to a park, told where to find a bird cage and how to attach money to the neck of the pigeon inside . Carrying the money in a tiny bag , the pigeon flies off .

There have been at least four such pigeon pick-ups in Changwa. What at first seemed like the work of a clever stay-at-home car thief, however , may in fact be the work of an even lazier and more inventive criminal mind—one that avoid (避免)not only collecting money but going out to steal the car in the first place . Police officer Chen says that the criminal probably has pulled a double trick: he gets money for things he cannot possibly return . Instead of stealing cars , he lets someone else do it and then waits for the car-owner to place an ad (启事) in the newspaper asking for help .

The theory is supported by the fact that , so far , none of the stolen cars have been returned . Also, the amount of money demanded-under 3,000 Taiwanese dollars –seems too little for a car worth many times more .

Demands for pigeon-delivered money stopped as soon as the press reported the story. And even if they start again, Chen holds little hope of catching the criminal . “We have more important things to do, ” he said .

49.After the car owner received a phone call. He         

       A.went to a certain pigeon and put some money in the bag it carried

       B.gave the money to the thief and had his car back in a park

       C.sent some money to the thief by mail

       D.told the press about it

50.The “lazier and more inventive” criminal refers to          .

       A.the car thief who stays at home

B.one of those who put the ads in the paper

       C.one of the policemen in Changwa

D.the owner of the pigeons

51.The writer mentions the fact that “none of the stolen cars have been returned” to show       .

       A.how easily people get fooled by criminals

       B.what Chen thinks might be correct

       C.the thief is extremely clever

       D.the money paid is too little

52.The underlined word “they” in the last paragraph refers to          .

       A.criminals

B.pigeons

C.the stolen cars

D.demands for money

53.We may infer from the text that the criminal knows how to reach the car owners because     .

       A.he reads the ads in the newspaper

B.he lives in the same neighborhood

       C.he has seen the car owners in the park

D.he has trained the pigeons to follow them

  

 (05·全国ⅠC篇)

Welcome to Adventureland!
    Everyone loves Adventureland! The Parks and Exhibitions were built for you to explore(探索), enjoy, and admire their wonders. Every visit will be an unforgettable experience. You will

go away enriched, longing to come back. What are you going to do this time?
The Travel Pavilion
   Explore places you have never been to before, and experience different ways of life.
Visit the Amazon jungle(丛林)village, the Turkish market, the Tai floating market, the Berber mountain house and others. Talk to the people there who will tell you about their lives, and things they make. You can try making a carpet, making nets, fishing…
The Future Tower
   This exhibition shows how progress will touch our lives. It allows us to look into the future and explore the cities of the next century and the way we’ll be living then. Spend some time in our space station and climb into our simulator(模拟装置)for the Journey to Mars!

The Nature Park
    This is not really one park but several.
    In the Safari Park you can drive among African animals in one of our Range Cruisers: see lions, giraffes, elephants in the wild. Move on to the Ocean Park to watch the dolphins and whales. And then there is still the Aviary to see…
The Pyramid
    This is the center of Adventureland. Run out of film, need some postcards and stamps? For all these things and many more, visit our underground shopping center. Come here for information and ideas too.
63. The Travel Pavilion is built to help visitors _______.
   A. realize the importance of travelling
   B. become familiar with mountain countries
   C. learn how to make things such as fishing nets
   D. learn something about different places in the world
64. If you are interested in knowing about what people’s life will be, you may visit _______.
   A. the Travel Pavilion                         B. the Future Tower
   C. the Safari Park                           D. the Pyrmid
65. If you want to get a toy lion to take home, where will you most likely go?
   A. The Pyramid.                             B. The Nature Park.
   C. The Future Tower.                         D. The Travel Parvilion.

 (05·全国Ⅱ、全国ⅢB篇)

The days of elderly women doing nothing but cooking huge meals on holidays are gone. Enter the Red Hat Society -a group holding the belief that old ladies should have fun.

“My grandmothers didn’t do anything but keep house and serve everybody. They were programmed to do that,” said Emils Comette, head of a chapter of the 7-year-old Red Hat Society.

While men have long spent their time fishing and playing golf, women have sometimes seemed to become unnoticed as they age. But the generation now turning 50 is the baby boomers(生育高峰期出生的人), and the same people who refused their parents’ way of being young are now trying a new way of growing old.

If you take into consideration feminism(女权主义), a bit of spare money, and better health for most elderly, the Red Hat Society looks almost inevitable(必然的). In this society, women over 50 wear red hats and purple(紫色的) clothes, while the women under 50 wear pink hats and light purple clothing.

“The organization took the idea from a poem by Jenny Joseph that begins: “When I am an old woman, I shall wear purple. With a red hat which doesn’t go,” said Ellen Cooper, who founded the Red Hat Society in 1998. When the ladies started to wear the red hats, they attracted lots of attention.

“The point of this is that we need a rest from always doing something for someone else,” Cooper said. “Women feel so ashamed and sorry when they do something for themselves.” This is why chapters are discouraged from raising money or doing anything useful. “We’re a ladies’ play group. It couldn’t be more simple,” added Cooper’s assistant Joe Heywood.

44.The underlined word “chapter” in paragraph 2 means __________.

       A.one branch of an organization

B.a written agreement of a club

       C.one part of a collection of poems

D.a period in a society’s history

45.From the text , we know that the “baby boomers” are a group of people who

       A.have gradually become more noticeable

       B.are worried about getting old too quickly

       C.are enjoying a good life with plenty of money to spend

       D.tried living a different life from their parents when they were young

46.It could be inferred from the text that members of the Red Hat Society are          .

       A.interested in raising money for social work

       B.programmers who can plan well for their future

       C.believers in equality between men and women

       D.good at cooking big meals and taking care of others

47.Who set up the Red Hat Society ?

       A.Emily Cornette .

B.Ellen Cooper .

C.Jenny Joseph .

D.Joe Heywood .

48.Women join the Red Hat Society because          .

       A.they want to stay young                     

       B.they would like to appear more attractive

       C.they would like to have fun and live for themselves

       D.they want to be more like their parents

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