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2£®Each time I see a balloon£¬my mind flies back to a memory of when I was a six-year-old girl£®It was a rainy Sunday and my father had recently died£®I asked my mom if Dad had gone to heaven£®"Yes£¬honey£®Of course£®"she said£®"Can we write him a letter£¿"
She paused£¬the longest pause of my short life£¬and answered£¬"Yes£®"
My heart jumped£®"How£¿Does the mailman go there£¿"I asked£®
"No£¬but I have an idea£®"Mom drove to a party store and returned with a red balloon£®I asked her what it was for£®
"Just wait£¬honey£®You'll see£®"Mom told me to write my letter£®Eagerly£¬I got my favorite pen£¬and poured out my six-year-old heart in the form of blue ink£®I wrote about my day£¬what I learned at school£¬how Mom was doing£¬and even about what happened in a story I had read£®For a few minutes it was as if Dad were still alive£®I gave the letter to Mom£®She read it over£¬and a smile crossed her face£®
She made a hole in the corner of the letter where she looped the balloon string£®We went outside and she gave me the balloon£®It was still raining£®
"Okay£¬on the count of three£¬let go£®One£¬two£¬three£®"
The balloon£¬carrying my letter£¬darted upward against the rain£®We watched until it was swallowed by the mass of clouds£®
Later I realized£¬like the balloon£¬that Dad had never let his sickness get him down£®He was strong£®No matter what he suffered£¬he'd persevere£¬hang on£¬and finally transcend this cold world and his sick body£®He rose into sky and became something beautiful£®I watched until the balloon disappeared into the gray and white and I prayed that his strength was hereditary£®I prayed to be a balloon£®
32£®When the girl asked her mother if they could write to her father£¬her motherD£®
A£®found it easy to lie
B£®thought her a creative girl
C£®believed it easy to do so
D£®felt it hard to answer
33£®When the girl was told that she could send a letter to her father£¬sheA£®
A£®became excited
B£®jumped with joy
C£®started writing immediately
D£®was worried that it couldn't be delivered
34£®In the eyes of the author£¬what was the rain like£¿D
A£®An incurable disease£®
B£®An unforgettable memory£®
C£®The failures her father experienced£®
D£®The hard time her father had£®
35£®What would be the best title for the passage£¿C
A£®An unforgettable experience
B£®Fly to paradise
C£®The strong red balloon
D£®A great father£®
·ÖÎö ±¾ÎÄÊôÓÚ¼ÇÐðÎÄÔĶÁ£®×÷ÕßÖ÷Ҫͨ¹ý±¾ÆªÎÄÕ½²ÊöÁËÅ®¶ùÏëºÍÒѹʵĸ¸Ç×ͨÐÅ£¬ÕâʹĸÇ׺ÜΪÄÑ£®µ«´ÏÃ÷µÄĸÇ×ÓúìÆøÇò×÷ΪÓʵÝÔ±°ÑÅ®¶ùд¸ø¸¸Ç×µÄÐÅ£¬¼ÄÍùÌìÌã¬Ê¹Å®¶ù¸Ðµ½¸¸Ç×»¹»î×ŵĹÊÊ£®
½â´ð 32£®D£®ÍÆÀíÅжÏÌ⣮¸ù¾ÝÎÄÕµÚÈý¶ÎÖеÄShe paused£¬the longest pause of my short life£¬and answered£¬"Yes£®"¿ÉÖª£¬Ä¸Ç×Í£¶ÙÁ˺ܳ¤µÄʱ¼ä£¬ÕâÒâζ×ÅËý˼¿¼Á˽ϳ¤µÄʱ¼ä²Å»Ø´ðÁËÅ®¶ùµÄÎÊÌ⣮Õâ˵Ã÷Å®¶ùµÄÎÊÌâÄѻش𣻹ÊÑ¡D£®£®
33£®A£®Ï¸½ÚÀí½âÌ⣮¸ù¾ÝÎÄÕµÚ6¶ÎEagerly£¬I got my favorite pen£¬and poured out my six-year-old heart in the form of blue ink£®I wrote about my day£¬what I learned at school£¬how Mom was doing£¬and even about what happened in a story I had read£®¿ÉÖªÎÒµÃÖª¿ÉÒÔ¸ø¸¸Ç×дÐŵÄʱºò·Ç³£¸ßÐË£®Á¢¿Ì¾ÍÐж¯ÁËÆðÀ´£»¹ÊÑ¡A£®
34£®D£®ÍÆÀíÅжÏÌ⣮¸ù¾ÝÎÄÕÂ×îºóÒ»¶ÎÖеÄNo matter what he suffered£¬he'd persevere£¬dart up£¬and finally transcend this cold world and his sick body£®He rose into sky and became something beautiful£®¿ÉÖª£¬Óê¾ÍÏñ¸¸Ç×¾ÀúµÄ¼èÄÑʱ¹â£»¹ÊÑ¡D£®
35£®C£®Ö÷Ö¼´óÒâÌ⣮ͨ¶ÁÈ«ÎÄ£¬¿ÉÖª±¾ÎÄÊÇһƪ¼ÇÐðÎÄ£¬ÎÄÕÂÒÔºìÆøÇòΪÖ÷Ï߹ᴩÕû¸öÎÄÕ£¬ºìÆøÇòÒ²ÏóÕ÷ן¸Ç×£¬Òò´Ë¿ÉÖª×îºÏÊʵıêÌâΪºìÆøÇò£»¹ÊÑ¡C£®
µãÆÀ ±¾ÎÄÊÇÒ»¸ö¹ã¸æ²¼¸æÀàÔĶÁÀí½â£¬ÌâÄ¿Éæ¼°¶àµÀϸ½ÚÀí½âÌ⣬×öÌâʱ½áºÏÔÎĺÍÌâÄ¿ÓÐÕë¶ÔÐÔµÄÕÒ³öÏà¹ØÓï¾ä½øÐÐ×Ðϸ·ÖÎö£¬½áºÏÑ¡ÏîÑ¡³öÕýÈ·´ð°¸£®ÍÆÀíÅжÏÌâÒ²ÊÇÒªÔÚץס¹Ø¼ü¾ä×ӵĻù´¡ÉϺÏÀíµÄ·ÖÎö²ÅÄܵóöÕýÈ·´ð°¸£¬ÇмɺúÂҲ²⣬һ¶¨Òª×öµ½ÓÐÀíÓоݣ®
But the doctor's soft words dropped like £¨42£©B£®"I don't think she's going to make it"he said£®"There's only a 10-percent£¨43£©A she will pull through the night£¬and even then£¬if by some chance she does make it£¬her future could be a very£¨44£©C one£®"
David and Diana listened as the doctor £¨45£©D the serious problems the newly-born baby£¬Anna£¬would £¨46£©B face if she survived£®She would never walk£»she would never£¨47£©A£»she would probably be blind£»and so on£®
"No!No!"was all Diana could £¨48£©C£®She and David£¬with their 5-year-old son Dusfin£¬had long£¨49£©Dthe day they would have a daughter to become a £¨50£©A of four£®Now£¬within a matter of hours£¬that dream was slipping away£®But Diana insisted£¬"I don't care what the doctors say!One day she will be coining home with us!"
Certainly£¬there was £¨51£©C a moment when Anna suddenly grew£¨52£©B£®But as the weeks went by£¬she did£¨53£©D gain an ounce of weight here and an ounce of£¨54£©A there£®At last£¬when Anna turned two months old£¬her parents were able to£¨55£©Aher in their arms for the very first time though £¨56£©D continued to gently but coldly£¨57£©B that her chances of surviving£¬much less living any kind of normal life£¬were next to zero£®
Finally£¬Anna went home from the hospital£¬just as her mother had £¨58£©C£®Today£¬five years later£¬Anna is a little hut lively young girl with bright gray eyes£¨59£©B a strong interest for life£®She shows no £¨60£©C of any mental or physical injuries Simply£¬she is everything a little girl can be£®
41£®A£®showing | B£®counting | C£®measuring | D£®weighing |
42£®A£®gifts | B£®bombs | C£®orders | D£®comforts |
43£®A£®chance | B£®right | C£®time | D£®result |
44£®A£®easy | B£®common | C£®cruel | D£®peaceful |
45£®A£®solved | B£®tollected | C£®created | D£®described |
46£®A£®bravely | B£®1ikely | C£®completely | D£®firmly |
47£®A£®talk | B£®taste | C£®breathe | D£®see |
48£®A£®act | B£®consider | C£®say | D£®refuse |
49£®A£®gone through | B£®given up | C£®relied on | D£®dreamed of |
50£®A£®family | B£®group | C£®team | D£®unit |
51£®A£®ever | B£®even | C£®never | D£®still |
52£®A£®happier | B£®stronger | C£®quieter | D£®calmer |
53£®A£®strangely | B£®sharply | C£®particularly | D£®slowly |
54£®A£®strength | B£®progress | C£®skill | D£®wisdom |
55£®A£®hold | B£®grasp | C£®touch | D£®defend |
56£®A£®nurses | B£®parents | C£®relatives | D£®doctors |
57£®A£®notice | B£®warn | C£®judge | D£®urge |
58£®A£®doubted | B£®feared | C£®hoped | D£®accused |
59£®A£®but | B£®and | C£®so | D£®or |
60£®A£®effects | B£®marks | C£®signs | D£®evidences£® |
A£® | attend to | B£® | attach to | C£® | tend to | D£® | turn to |
When the girl£¨43£©B£¬the woman called out£º"That was£¨44£©A£®You looked like a bag of potatoes falling downhill£®"The girl burst into£¨45£©C£®
The scene reminded me of my£¨46£©Dof the day when one of my own gymnastic performances put me close to tears£®
My mother became seriously ill when she was young£¬and she has£¨47£©Aa wheelchair ever since£®But she never let that£¨48£©Cher£®She has raised five children and has a career as well£®
One day I joined a gymnastics program at a nearby park£®Before long£¬I was totally£¨49£©Bin it£®By 1972£¬I was on the National Gymnastics Team for the Olympic Games£®I couldn't think of anything else but£¨50£©Ba gold medal£®
Before the competition£¬all in my mind was£¨51£©Anot to disgrace£¨Ê¹¡¶ªÁ³£©my country and myself£®But£¬though I tried my best£¬I didn't win a gold medal£®I was so £¨52£©B£®When the winners were receiving£¨53£©D£¬I joined my parents in the stands£¬and we all cried£®"I'm sorry£®I did my best£¬"said me£®
She said nothing but ten words I never£¨54£©D£º"Doing your best is more important than being the best£®"Suddenly I understood my mother£¨55£©Bthan ever before£®She had never let her handicap£¨²Ð¼²£©£¨56£©Aher from always doing her best£®
Now I approached the crying girl and put a£¨n£©£¨57£©Aaround her£®"Honey£¬"I said£®"I know you have done your best£¬and doing your best is more important than being the best£®I'm£¨58£©Cyou£®"
She£¨59£©Bat me with tears in her eyes£®Maybe somewhere£¬someday£¬she'11£¨60£©Cthose words along£®
41£®A£®as | B£®if | C£®because | D£®though |
42£®A£®excited | B£®frightened | C£®anxious | D£®nervous |
43£®A£®stopped | B£®finished | C£®began | D£®paused |
44£®A£®awful | B£®wonderful | C£®great | D£®meaningless |
45£®A.1aughter | B£®anger | C£®tears | D£®excitement |
46£®A£®experiences | B£®success | C£®regrets | D£®memories |
47£®A£®needed | B£®made | C£®wanted | D£®expected |
48£®A£®control | B£®challenge | C£®discourage | D£®disturb |
49£®A£®confident | B£®absorbed | C£®involved | D£®trapped |
50£®A£®finding | B£®winning | C£®earning | D£®making |
51£®A£®determination | B£®satisfaction | C£®encouragement | D£®effort |
52£®A£®annoyed | B£®disappointed | C£®embarrassed | D£®worded |
53£®A£®applauses | B£®rewards | C£®gifts | D£®awards |
54£®A£®remembered | B£®ignored | C£®understood | D£®forgot |
55£®A£®faster | B£®better | C£®closer | D£®easier |
56£®A£®prevent | B£®save | C£®protect | D£®forbid |
57£®A£®arm | B£®hand | C£®ring | D£®scarf |
58£®A£®curious about | B£®concerned about | C£®proud of | D£®sure of |
59£®A£®glanced | B£®smiled | C.1aughed | D£®shouted |
60£®A£®continue | B£®treat | C£®pass | D£®use |