题目内容

I can remember the day my father came home from the war. As he walked up the front path of our home, he saw Mum and me and he dropped the suitcase.
I was only five years old so Dad made a fuss of me, then began making an even bigger fuss of my mother. This left me free to examine all the stuff lying around the broken suitcase, and I was quick to notice a newspaper advertisement displaying a new piano. When Dad saw me holding up the newspaper cutting, he smiled.
“Yes, that’s right,” he said. “I bought your mum a piano for ten pounds down and two pounds a week.”
A few moments later, a horse pulled a cart with a piano on top. Soon we all stared at it in our small lounger room. Mum had never been close to a piano before, except at the kindergarten I attended, and she used to say how wonderful it would be if the teachers could teach her to play.
After tea that night, Mum began to teach herself to play. She plinked the keys for about two hours and drove everybody in the street mad, until Dad gently said, “Enough is enough.”
From that day on, she would plink between doing the cooking and housework. Three months went by and Mum was now a skilled pianist, holding parties with all the neighbors gathering around to sing.
Although we were poor, Mum felt like a princess and was delighted at all the attention she was receiving.
At the height of Mum’s happiness, I began to notice that Dad was looking increasingly worried. It turned out that since returning from the war, he’d been unable to find a job. Then, a few weeks later, I observed two men taking Mum’s piano away. Mum sobbed in the kitchen. Suddenly, it all became clear to me: no job, no money, no piano.
Dad finally got a job. Mum was happy again as if he’d just win the lottery(彩票). Dad had to study to qualify as an account. Every night after dinner he’d place a stack of books on the kitchen table and study late into the night. Mum didn’t say much but I could tell she was proud of Dad.
Two years later, Dad bought Mum another piano. This time he paid cash for it.
【小题1】How did the author’s Dad buy the piano for his mum?

A.He paid part of the bill regularly.
B.He earned it by winning a bet.
C.He paid cash for it.
D.He bought it as a big bargain.
【小题2】By saying “Enough is enough”, the author’s dad meant_______.
A.practice makes perfect
B.it was time to stop practicing
C.he couldn’t bear being troubled
D.his wife played the piano well enough
【小题3】What happened to the author’s mum’s first piano?
A.It was lost.
B.It was broken by one neighbor.
C.It was sold by his dad.
D.It was taken away.
【小题4】What made the author’s mum proud of his dad?
A.His dad’s willingness to help cook.
B.His dad’s winning the lottery luckily.
C.His dad’s loyalty to his motherland.
D.His dad’s determination to rebuild his life.


【小题1】A
【小题2】B
【小题3】D
【小题4】D

解析试题分析:本文是篇记叙文,作者的父亲从战场上回来,为母亲按揭买了一架钢琴,后来却因为没有工作,无法继续支付钢琴的费用,导致钢琴被搬走,但父亲没有失去生活的信心,通过孜孜不倦的学习,重新获得工作,并用现金为母亲买了一架钢琴。
【小题1】根据I bought your mum a piano for ten pounds down and two pounds a week.可知爸爸给妈妈买这架钢琴是按揭买的,故选A。
【小题2】She plinked the keys for about two hours and drove everybody in the street mad, until Dad gently said, “Enough is enough.” ,故选B。
【小题3】根据Then, a few weeks later, I observed two men taking Mum’s piano away,可知父亲从战场上回来,由于没有工作没有钱继续为钢琴按揭,所以钢琴被人搬走了,故选D。
【小题4】从倒数第二自然段,可以看出父亲很有决心来改变生活,他很珍惜来之不易的工作,每天学习到很晚,故选D。
考点:记叙文阅读理解。
点评:这篇文章非常简单,先看问题,再带着问题读短文,理解了全文内容,很容易选出正确答案。在阅读时,注意体会文章中父亲的对家庭的细腻的情感。

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The school was across the street from our home and I would often watch the kids as they played on the playground. She seemed so small as she pushed her way     36      the crowd of boys on the playground. She    37    from them all. I began to notice her at other times, basketball in hand, playing    38   . She would practice dribbling(运球)and shooting over and over again, sometimes until   39   . One day I asked her   40    she practiced so much. She looked   41    in my eyes and without a moment of hesitation she said, “ I want to go to college. The only way I can   42    is to get a scholarship. I am going to play college basketball. I want to be the best. My daddy told me if the dream is   43    enough, the facts don’t count.”

Well, I had to give in to her—she was   44   . One day, I saw her sitting in the grass, head   45    in her arms. I walked toward her and   46    asked what was the matter. “Oh, nothing,” came a soft reply, “ I am just too short.” The coach told her that at her height she would probably   47    get to play for a top ranked team,    48    offered a scholarship. So she   49    stop dreaming about college.

She was   50    and I sensed her disappointment. I asked her if she had talked to her dad about it yet. She told me that her father said those coaches were wrong. They just did not   51    the power of the dream. He told her   52    she really wanted to pay for a good college, if she truly wanted a scholarship,   53    could stop her except one thing---her own attitude. He told her again, “If the dream is big enough, the facts don’t count.”

The next year, as she and her team went to the Northern California Championship game, she was   54    by a college recruiter(招聘人员). She was indeed offered a scholarship. She was going to get the college education that she had   55    and worked for all those years.

A. through

B. across

C. over

D. into

A. brought out

B. showed out

C. stood out

D. worked out

A. friendly

B. lonely

C. simply

D. alone

A. dark

B. dawn

C. midnight

D. daybreak

A. how

B. when

C. why

D. what

A. worriedly

B. shyly

C. quietly

D. directly

A. go

B. get

C. enter

D. attend

A. small

B. big

C. real

D. false

A. determined

B. encouraged

C. fascinated

D. struck

A. covered

B. enclosed

C. dropped

D. buried

A. quietly

B. excitedly

C. angrily

D. hurriedly

A. ever

B. even

C. once

D. never

A. far more

B. much less

C. much fewer

D. many more

A. should

B. must

C. can

D. may

A. overjoyed

B. satisfied

C. embarrassed

D. heartbroken

A. understand

B. experience

C. learn

D. lose

A. even if

B. as if

C. that if

D. only if

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D. everything

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D. annoyed

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Dear all,

    Please read Professor Hume’s email about his next lecture on Rosa Parks.

Susan Miller

Secretary

***************************************

Dear Susan,

Please forward this message to students of my history class.

Besides the life story of Rosa Parks in the textbook,the students are also required to read the passage below and some related stories that can be borrowed from the school library.

Ted Hume

    The early experiences of Rosa Parks(1913-2005),long known as the “mother of the civil rights movement.” were not different from those of many African-Americans at that time. The black woman,however,turned the course of American history in December 1955 when she refused to give up her scat on a bus to a white man. “By sitting down.” remarked John Lewis,“she was standing up for all Americans.”

    Among the numerous awards Parks received in her life were the Presidential Medal of Freedom(1996)and the Congressional Gold Medal(1999).

    Parks died on Oct.24,2005,At St. Paul A,M,E,Church in Montgomery,a large crowd including Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice celebrated her life. Rice said she and others,who grew up when the political activities of Parks held public attention. might not have realized her impact(影响)on their lives,“but I can honestly say that without Mrs. Parks,I probably would not be standing here as Secretary of State.”

    After her casket(灵柩)was placed at the Capitol. U.S. President Bush,members of Congress and ordinary Americans paid their respects. In American history Parks is the first woman to lie in state at the Capitol,a very high regard usually reserved for Presidents of the United States.

63. What is the main purpose of Susan’s email?

A. To make arrangements for Professor Hume’s class.

B. To introduce to the students Rosa Parks.

C. To help the students organize a lecture.                  D. To answer Professor Hume’s last email.

64. What does the underlined word “forward” mean?

A. Explain.            B. Send.            C. Take.              D. Read.

65. The political impact of lose Parks lies in the fact that she ___________.

A. helped Condoleezza Rice achieve political success

B. joined the civil rights movement at a young age

C. made racial equality a common value in American society

D. set a good example in her early life for other black Americans

66. How was Rosa Parks treated after her death?

A. She was named “mother of the civil rights movement.”

B. She was received by President Bush at the Capitol.

C. She was given the President Medal of Freedom.

D. She was honored to lie in state at the Capitol.

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