题目内容
“I don’t think it’s my________that the TV blew up.I just turned it on,that’s all,” said the boy.
A.error B.mistake
C.fault D.duty
C
本题检测考生在特定语境中对易混淆名词的辨异与使用能力。D项明显与语境不符,可先排除;error,mistake和fault都可译作“错误”,但用法不同。error的使用范围较窄,常指在计算、书写等过程中出现的差错;mistake范围较宽,可指各种错误;fault通常指人的过失,过错。全句译作:男孩说“电视爆炸了不是我的过错。我不过是把它打开了而已。”
It feels like every time my mother and I start to have a conversation, it turns into an argument. We talk about something as simple as dinner plans and suddenly, my mother will push the conversation into World War 3. She’ll talk about my lack of bright future because I don’t plan to be a doctor. And much to her disappointment, I don’t want to do any job related to science, either. In fact, when I was pushed to say that I planned to major(主修) in English and communications, she nearly had a heart attack.
“Why can’t you be like my co-worker’s son?” she bemoans all the time. Her coworker’s son received a four-year scholarship and is now earning 70,000 dollars a year as an engineer. I don’t know what to answer except that I simply can’t be like Mr. Perfect as I’ve called the unnamed co-worker’s son. I can’t be like him. I am the type of the person who loved to help out in the community, write until the sun goes down, and most of all, wants to achieve a career because I love it, not because of a fame or salary.
I understand why my mother is worried about my future major. I’ve seen my mother struggle to raise me on her small salary and work long hours. She leaves the house around 6:30 am and usually comes home around 5 pm or even 6pm. However, I want her to know that by becoming a doctor, it doesn’t mean I’ll be successful. I’d rather follow my dreams and create my own future.
【小题1】Which of the following topics do the writer and his mother often talk about?
A.the writer’s studies | B.wars around the world |
C.dinner plans | D.the writer’s future job |
A.doesn’t think the writer should be a doctor |
B.doesn’t want the writer to major in English |
C.gets along very well with the writer |
D.doesn’t think working in the scientific field is a good idea |
A.disagrees | B.shouts | C.smiles | D.complains |
A.He wants to be like his mother’s co-worker’s son. |
B.He wants to find a job in his community in the future. |
C.He wants to do something he really likes in the future. |
D.He doesn’t think his mother’s co-worker’s son is perfect. |
A.the writer’s mother works very hard for the family |
B.the writer doesn’t know what his future will be like |
C.the writer doesn’t think being a doctor is a good job |
D.the writer sometimes thinks his mother’s advice is very good |
My son. The phrase felt difficult and strange the first time I said it, and I had to practice it a thousand times. I started saying the words to myself the day when the ultrasound told me we were having a baby.
Finally, my son was born.
The nurse came out of the delivery room, holding a tiny, howling human being wrapped in a white sheet, his small hands and delicate fingers shaking nervously. “Baby Sanchez?” she asked, looking at the room full of expectant fathers.
I stood up, holding my breath. She showed me my baby. “My son,” I whispered. The little guy screamed, “waaaaaaaaaah.”
But in my heart I heard him cry out, “Daaaaaaad!” I don’t care if everyone in the room will swear they didn’t hear my baby say that. I called him, “My son,” and he called me “Dad,” and that’s that.
People ask me, “What did you feel at that moment?” I can’t even begin to answer. I’m a writer yet I try hard to find the right words. Joyful isn’t powerful enough. Bliss(狂喜) is not sweet enough. Peaceful isn’t calm enough. Happy isn’t tense enough.
After my son was taken away to the nursery, I sat down and shut my eyes. But tears escaped them away. Then out of the blue, my 80-year-old father entered, and we embraced.
“Dad,” I whispered.
“My son,” my heart heard him saying.
Suddenly the past 33 years folded into the present and I was now the baby bundled in white, with my father standing over me.
“My son,” I imagined him saying.
“Daaaaaaaaaad!” I cried my little lungs out.
At that point, I knew I was going to be a great father. The old man in front of me seemed to agree. He smiled and we walked out of the room in search of the tiny human being that would change our lives for ever.
1.Which of the following statement is TRUE according to the passage?
A.His son called him “Dad” when the writer called him “My son”. |
B.All the people didn’t hear the baby say except the writer. |
C.Sanchez is the writer’s family name. |
D.The baby was taken away because the nurse found there was a mistake. |
2.The author couldn’t tell how he felt at the moment because ________.
A.he was a writer |
B.he was too excited |
C.he was too nervous |
D.it’s a feeling too complex to express |
3.We can learn the following from the passage EXCEPT that ________.
A.the author got his first baby |
B.he probably had a lung disease |
C.the author didn’t really hear “Daaaaad” from his baby |
D.the baby would change the author’s life |
4.Why was the writer sure he was going to be a great father?
A.Because his son is so gifted. |
B.Because he had much experience in bringing up children. |
C.Because his father promised to help him. |
D.Because his father had already set him a good example. |