题目内容

完形填空。
     Jenna, a popular girl from Westwood Middle School, had graduated first in her class and was ready for new 
  1   in high school. 
       2  , high school was different. In the first week, Jenna went to tryouts (选拔赛) for cheerleaders
(拉拉队队员). She was competing against very talented girls, and she knew it would be   3   for her to
be selected. Two hours later, the   4   read a list of the girls for a second tryout. Her heart   5   as the list
ended without her name. Feeling   6  , she walked home carrying her schoolbag full of homework.
     Arriving home, she started with math. She had always been a good math student, but now she was
  7  . She moved on to English and history, and was   8   to find that she didn't have any trouble with those
subjects. Feeling better, she decided not to   9  math for the time being.
     The nest day Jenna went to see Mrs. Biden about being on the school  10  . Mrs. Biden wasn't as  11   
as Jenna. "I'm sorry, but we have enough  12  for the newspaper already. Come back next year and we'll
talk then." Jenna smiled  13   and left. "Why is high school so  14  ?" she sighed.
     Later in  15  class, Jenna devoted herself to figuring out the problems that had given her so much  16  .
By the end of class, she understood how to get them right. As she gathered her books, Jenna decided she'd
continue to try to  17   at her new school. She wasn't sure if she'd succeed, but she knew she had to  18  .
High school was just as her mom had said: "You will feel like a small fish in a big pond  19  a big fish in a
small pond. The challenge is to become the  20  fish you can be."
(     )1. A. processes     
(     )2. A. Therefore     
(     )3. A. difficult     
(     )4. A. editor        
(     )5. A. jumped        
(     )6. A. strange       
(     )7. A. struggling    
(     )8. A. ashamed       
(     )9. A. put up        
(     )10. A. committee    
(     )11. A. enthusiastic 
(     )12. A. speakers     
(     )13. A. widely       
(     )14. A. similar      
(     )15. A. physics      
(     )16. A. pleasure     
(     )17. A. fit in       
(     )18. A. swim         
(     )19. A. in return for
(     )20. A. slimmest     
B. decision      
B. However        
B. easy         
B. boss          
B. sank           
B. happy          
B. improving   
B. disappointed   
B. prepare for  
B. newspaper       
B. artistic     
B. readers        
B. weakly                       
B. ordinary       
B. history        
B. hope           
B. look out      
B. try            
B. in case of  
B. smallest      
C. challenges         
C. Otherwise              
C. boring              
C. candidate            
C. stopped               
C. awful              
C. working              
C. shocked               
C. worry about           
C. radio                    
C. sympathetic      
C. cheerleaders        
C. excitedly             
C. different                         
C. English             
C. trouble                
C. stay up            
C. ask                     
C. in terms of       
C. best             
D. exercises               
D. Besides                    
D. interesting              
D. judge                   
D. raced                     
D. lonely                  
D. complaining               
D. relieved                      
D. give up              
D. team                          
D. realistic            
D. writers                 
D. brightly                  
D. familiar                
D. math                     
D. sorrow                      
D. get around            
D. escape                        
D. instead of          
D. gentlest               
1-5: CBADB          6-10: CADCB          11-15:  ADBCD        16-20:   CABDC
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相关题目
完形填空。
     I was a single parent of four small children, working at a low-paid job. Money was always tight, but we
had a   1   over our heads, food on the table, clothes on our backs, and if not a lot, always   2  . Not knowing
we were poor, my kids (孩子们) just thought I was   3  . I've always been glad about that.
     It was Christmas time, and although there wasn't   4   for a lot of gifts, we planned to celebrate with a family
party. But the big   5   for the kids was the fun of Christmas   6  .
     They planned weeks ahead of time, asking   7   what they wanted for Christmas. Fortunately, I had saved
$120 for   8   to share by all five of us.
     The big   9   arrived. I gave each kid a twenty-dollar bill and  10  them to look for gifts of about four dollars
each. Then everyone scattered (散开). We had two hours to shop; then we would  11  back at the "Santa's
Workshop".
     Driving home, everyone was in high Christmas spirits,  12  my younger daughter, Ginger, who was unusuall
 13 . She had only one small, flat bag with a few candies-fifty-cent candies! I was so angry, but I didn't say
anything  14  we got home. I called her into my bedroom and closed the door,  15  to be angry again. This is
what she told me.
     "I was looking  16  thinking of what to buy, and I  17  to read the little cards on the 'Giving Trees.' One was
for a little girl, four years old, and all she  18  for Christmas was a doll (玩具娃娃). So I took the card off the
tree and  19  the doll for her. We have so much and she doesn't have anything."
     I never felt so  20  as I did that day.
(     )1. A. roof    
(     )2. A. little   
(     )3. A. busy    
(     )4. A. effort  
(     )5. A. improvement
(     )6. A. shopping  
(     )7. A. the other 
(     )8. A. toys     
(     )9. A. day   
(     )10. A. forced 
(     )11. A. draw   
(     )12. A. including 
(     )13. A. quiet   
(     )14. A. since   
(     )15. A. waiting 
(     )16. A. out   
(     )17. A. forgot  
(     )18. A. wanted  
(     )19. A. made   
(     )20. A. angry   
B. hat     
B. less     
B. serious   
B. room     
B. problem   
B. travelling  
B. each other 
B. clothes   
B. chance    
B. reminded    
B. stay     
B. besides   
B. excited   
B. after    
B. ready    
B. over     
B. stopped   
B. did     
B. searched       
B. rich     
C. sky    
C. enough   
C. strict   
C. time    
C. surprise 
C. parties  
C. one by one    
C. presents  
C. cheque   
C. invited  
C. move    
C. except  
C. happy   
C. while   
C. hoping   
C. forward  
C. failed   
C. got    
C. bought  
C. patient  
D. star            
D. more            
D. kind            
D. money           
D. excitement      
D. greetings       
D. every other one              
D. bills           
D. tree            
D. begged          
D. meet            
D. regarding       
D. ashamed         
D. until           
D. afraid          
D. around          
D. hated           
D. played          
D. fetched         
D. bitter          
完形填空。
     Not too long ago, an incident that happened at Walt Disney touched me greatly. A guest   1   out of our
Polynesian Village resort (度假胜地) at Walt Disney was asked how she   2   her visit. She told the
front-desk clerk she had had a (n)   3   vacation, but was heartbroken about   4   several rolls of Kodak color
film she had not yet   5  . At that moment she was particularly   6   over the loss of the pictures she had shot
at our Polynesian Luau,   7   this was a memory she especially treasured.
     Now, please understand that we have no written service rules   8   lost photos in the park.   9  , the clerk
at the front desk   10   Disney's idea of caring for our   11  . She asked the woman to leave her a couple rolls
of  12   film, promising she would take care of the rest of our show at Polynesian Luau.
     Two weeks later the guest received a  13   at her home.In it were photos of all the actors of our show, 
  14   signed by each performer. There were also   15   of the public procession (游行队伍) and fireworks in
the park, taken by the front-desk clerk in her own   16   after work. I happened to know this  17   because this
guest wrote us a letter. She said that  18   in her life had she received such good service from any business.
     Excellent   19   does not come from policy (政策性的) handbooks.It comes from people who  20  -and
from a culture that encourages and models that attitude.
(     )1. A. working    
(     )2. A. expected    
(     )3. A. disappointing
(     )4. A. taking      
(     )5. A. developed  
(     )6. A. silly      
(     )7. A. when        
(     )8. A. covering    
(     )9. A. Excitedly  
(     )10. A. understood
 (     )11. A. workers    
(     )12. A. printed    
(     )13. A. film      
(     )14. A. frequently 
(     )15. A. rules      
(     )16. A. case      
(     )17. A. story      
(     )18. A. only      
(     )19. A. advice    
(     )20. A. care      
B. checking  
B. realized  
B. wonderful 
B. dropping  
B. taken    
B. nervous  
B. where    
B. finding  
B. Fortunately
B. reminded  
B. guests    
B. shot      
B. card      
B. personally 
B. pictures  
B. work      
B. place    
B. almost    
B. experience
B. serve    
C. trying        
C. paid          
C. uncomfortable 
C. losing        
C. washed        
C. calm          
C. as            
C. making      
C. Therefore    
C. trusted      
C. managers      
C. unused        
C. camera        
C. alone        
C. handbooks    
C. time          
C. photo        
C. never        
C. quality      
C. like        
D. staying         
D. enjoyed       
D. important       
D. breaking        
D. loaded          
D. sad             
D. which           
D. keeping         
D. Quietly         
D. discovered      
D. clerks          
D. recorded        
D. packet          
D. actually        
D. performances    
D. position        
D. show            
D. nearly          
D. service         
D. know          
完形填空。
     It's fourteen years since I left the Philippines to live with my family in the USA. A month ago, while on
summer vacation back in my motherland, I learned a lesson from mosquito (蚊子) bites. Right before   1   
Kennedy Airport in New York, my grandma   2   me of the behavior of the native mosquitoes around the   3 
 like me. She said, "There's an old saying-the   4   you stay away from the motherland, the sweeter your blood 
  5   to the mosquitoes. " Not   6   it, I replied, "Grandma, that's just an old wives' tale!"
     Well, less than a week   7   my arrival in Manila, I was already carpeted with a   8   of mosquito bites. I
took many measures to keep myself from being   9   , but they all proved useless.
     Late one  10   in my cousin's home, I couldn't bear the  11  of the bites. Hoping to find some comfort, I 
12  my cousin, who was sleeping peacefully in the bed next to mine. Unhappy for being  13  she said, "There
nothing you can do. Go back to sleep." With a few turns, she slept again. Enviously (妒嫉地)  14  her sleep,
I hoped a big mosquito would  15  on her face. However, the mosquitoes would just lightly dance around her
forehead and fly away quickly, never biting her. Amazed (惊奇的), I ran to others'  16 , only to find they were
all sleeping  17  as the same thing occurred again and again. From those bites, I came to  18  my grandma's silly
tale.
     From then on, I've always tried to keep a(n)  19  mind about those strange old wives' tales  20  they do have
some truth to them.
(     )1. A. leaving  
(     )2. A. persuaded
(     )3. A. students 
(     )4. A. earlier  
(     )5. A. grows    
(     )6. A. expecting
(     )7. A. after    
(     )8. A. shade    
(     )9. A. touched  
(     )10. A. morning 
(     )11. A. noise   
(     )12. A. woke up 
(     )13. A. blamed  
(     )14. A. having  
(     )15. A. land    
(     )16. A. houses  
(     )17. A. joyfully
(     )18. A. tell    
(     )19. A. open    
(     )20. A. and     

B. passing     
B. reminded        
B. foreigners  
B. longer        
B. goes        
B. understanding     
B. before    
B. pile              
B. bitten        
B. afternoon     
B. hit           
B. shouted at    
B. interrupted  
B. watching      
B. fly            
B. flats            
B. anxiously     
B. know        
B. active      
B. so        

C. visiting          
C.  warned               
C. passengers       
C. sooner            
C. flows             
C. recognizing         
C. when          
C. cloud                
C. defeated            
C. evening           
C. pain                
C. looked for        
C. moved         
C. making            
C. fall                
C. rooms               
C. soundlessly     
C. remember         
C. clear               
C. because       
D. finding            
D.  informed               
D. visitors           
D. later                
D. remains               
D. believing             
D. as                 
D. blanket                
D. discovered             
D. night                
D. effect                  
D. dropped on       
D. frightened       
D. helping                 
D. wait                 
D. homes                   
D. worriedly        
D. accept               
D. honest                 
D. until            
阅读理解。
     We spent a day in the country, picking wild flowers. With the car full of flowers we were going home.
On our way back my wife noticed a cupboard outside a furniture shop. It was tall and narrow."Buy it," my
wife said at once. "We'll carry it home on the roof rack. I've always wanted one like that."
     What could I do? Ten minutes later I was £20 poorer; and the cupboard was tied on the roof rack. It
was six feet long and eighteen inches square, quite heavy too.
     In the gathering darkness I drove slowly. Other drivers seemed unusually polite that evening. The police
even stopped traffic to let us through. Carrying furniture was a good idea.
     After a time my wife said, "There's a long line of cars behind. Why don't they overtake, I wonder?" In
fact a police car did overtake. The two officers inside looked at us seriously as they passed. But then, with
great kindness, they led us through the rush-hour traffic. The police car stopped at our village church. One
of the officers came to me.
     "Right, sir," he said. "Do you need any more help?"
     I was a bit puzzled. "Thanks, officer," I said. "You have been very kind. I live just on the road."
     He was staring at our car, first at the flowers, then at the cupboard. "Well, well," he said, laughing. "It's
a cupboard you've got there! We thought it was something else."
     My wife began to laugh. The truth hit me like a stone between the eyes. I smiled at the officer. "Yes, it's
a cupboard, but thanks again." I drove home as fast as I could.
1. In fact the husband _____ the cupboard.
A. would like very much to buy
B. badly wanted
C. was glad to have bought
D. would rather not buy
2. Other drivers thought they were _____.
A. carrying a cupboard to the church
B. sending flowers to the church
C. carrying nothing but a piece of furniture
D. going to attend a funeral at the church
3. The police will be more polite to those who are _____.
A. driving in gathering darkness
B. in great sorrow
C. driving with wild flowers in the car
D. carrying furniture
4. What did the husband think of this matter?
A. It was very strange.
B. He felt ashamed of it.
C. He took great pride in it.
D. He was puzzled at it.
阅读理解。
     Topping the class academically was certainly an advantage. Studying was a breeze for Nigel. The
reward was certainly incomparable to the little effort that he had to put it. It begin when he was selected
to help the teachers in the computer laboratories.
     The peak of his school career came not when he topped the school but when he was selected for the
nationwide competition. Unlike everyone else, Nigel wanted to join the contest because he liked playing
with the Lego sets and making something out of them. Nigel spent the next two months rebuilding the
robot. It was during the time that Nigel found out about the prizes for the competition. Its well us auspices
competitor. Alicia, from a neighboring school. His early intentions were forgotten. Getting the
thousand-dollar prize was more important than anything else. Nigel decided to befriend Alicia. Unaware of
his intentions, she told him all about the robot that she had been building for the competition. He even helped
her to put the finishing branches to her robot. He was glad with the way things had progressed. His robot
looked even better than Alicia's and it was able to become a ball with its arms, something Alicia had failed to
do.
      On the day of the competition, he says Alicia. Everything dawned on her the minute she saw him among
the competition. She stared at him, puzzled at first, then angry and finally a look of helplessness came over
her.
     The flashbulbs of the camera exploded in Nigel's try. The robot bird performed actions so unique and
different that the specialist judgments were the same. Nigel was so personal with himself that he did not
even notice the girl standing a few feet away from him. Without her, he would never win the competition.
1. What reward did Nigel receive for doing well in his school work?
A. He was offered a part-time job
B. He was honored with a scholarship
C. He helped his teacher construct a robot
D. He helped in the computer laboratories
2. Nigel's original intention of joining the contest was to ___.
A. be the top student of the school
B. being great honor to his school
C. constructs a robot with the Lego sets
D. wins the thousand-dollar prize
3. Why did Nigel help Alicia finish her robot?
A. He tried to make friends with her
B. He was fond of building robots
C. He intended to help her
D. He didn't want her to suspect him
4. What is the author's attitude towards Nigel's actions?
A. He is mildly critical
B. He is strongly critical
C. He is in favor of them
D. His attitude is not clear
阅读理解。
     When I met him, I had a lot of anger inside of me. I've lived my whole life in Spanish Harlem, but in
my neighborhood, there are shoot-ups all the time. I know kids who have been shot or beaten up. I have
friends who ended up in prison. I could have ended up that way, too, but Mr. Clark wouldn't let that happen.
     Mr. Clark worked long hours, making sure I did my work. My grades rose. In fact, the scores of our
whole class rose. One day, he took our class to see The Phantom of the Opera, and it was the first time
some kids had ever been out of Harlem. Before the show, he treated us to dinner at a restaurant and taught
us not to talk with our mouths full. We did not want to let him down.
      Mr. Clark was selected as Disney's 2000 Teacher of the Year. He said he would draw three names out
of a hat; those students would go with him to Los Angeles to get the award. But when the time came to draw
names, Mr. Clark said,"You're all going."
     On graduation day, there were a lot of tears. We didn't want his class to end. In 2001, he moved to Atlanta,
but he always kept in touch. He started giving lectures about education, and wrote a bestselling book based
on his classroom rules, The Essential 55.
      In 2003, Mr. Clark took some of us on a trip to South Africa to deliver school supplies and visit
orphanages(孤儿院). It was the most amazing experience of my life. It's now my dream to one day start a
group of women's clubs, helping people from all backgrounds.
1. Without Mr. Clark, the writer _____.
A. might have been put into prison
B. might not have won the prize
C. might have joined a women's club
D. might not have moved to Atlanta
2. The Essential 55 is _____.
A. a show
B. a speech
C. a classroom rule
D. a book
3. How many students'names were finally drawn out of a hat by Mr. Clark?
A. None
B. Three
C. Fifty-five.
D. All.
4. In the passage, the writer intends to tell us that _____.
A. Mr. Clark went to South Africa because he liked travelling
B. Mr. Clark helped to set up a group of women's clubs
C. a good teacher can help raise his or her students' scores
D. a good teacher has a good influence on his or her students
阅读理解。
     Many years ago, when I was fresh out of school and working in Denver, I was driving to my parents'
home in Missouri for Christmas. I stopped at a gas station (加油站) about 50 miles from Oklahoma City,
where I was planning to stop and visit a friend. While I was standing in line at the cash register (收款台),
I said hello to an older couple who were also paying for gas.
     I took off, but had gone only a few miles when black smoke poured from the back of my car. I stopped
and wondered what I should do. A car pulled up behind me. It was the couple I had spoken to at the gas
station. They said they would take me to my friend's. We chatted on the way into the city, and when I got
out of the car, the husband gave me his business card.
     I wrote him and his wife a thank-you note for helping me. Soon afterward, I received a Christmas present
from them. Their note that came with it said that helping me had made their holidays meaningful.
     Years later, I drove to a meeting in a nearby town in the morning. In late afternoon I returned to my car
and found that I'd left the lights on all day, and the battery (电池) was dead. Then I noticed that the Friendly
Ford dealership-a shop selling cars-was right next door. I walked over and found two salesmen in the
showroom.
     "Just how friendly is Friendly Ford?" I asked and explained my trouble. They quickly drove a pickup truck
to my car and started it. They would accept no payment, so when I got home, I wrote them a note to say
thanks. I received a letter back from one of the salesmen. No one had ever taken the time to write him and
say thank you, and it meant a lot, he said.
     "Thank you"-two powerful words. They're easy to say and mean so much.
1. The author planned to stop at Oklahoma City _____.
A. to visit a friend
B. to see his parents
C. to pay or the cash register
D. to have more gas for his car
2. The words "took off" underlined in Paragraph 2 mean "_____".
A. turned off
B. moved off
C. put up
D. set up
3. What happened when the author found smoke coming out of his car?
A. He had it pulled back to the gas station.
B. The couple sent him a business card.
C. The couple offered to help him.
D. He called his friend for help.
4. The battery of the author's car was dead because _____.
A. something went wrong with the lights
B. the meeting lasted a whole day
C. he forgot to turn off the lights
D. he drove too long a distance
5. By telling his own experiences, the author tries to show _____.
A. how to write a thank-you letter
B. how to deal with car problems
C. the kind-heartedness of older people
D. the importance of expressing thanks
阅读理解。
     In Britain, in a population of 60 million, there are 13 million grandparents, many of whom live alone a
long way from their grandchildren.The loneliness of these older people has become an issue that schools
are trying to teach children about.
     On a popular teacher's website, there is a classroom activity to help make children aware of the
implications of the different generations of the same family living far from each other. It's a story about Mrs.
Eiderdown, an elderly lady whose grandchildren have moved to Australia with their parents. She lives alone
and rarely sees her family.
    First of all, the children speculate about Mrs. Eiderdown's life. What does she have for breakfast? what
does she do all day?how does she feel about her life?
     One day, Mrs. Eiderdown decides that she wants a pet to keep her company and puts an advertisement
in a local shop window. Then she waits at home to see if anyone will answer her advertisement.
      A tall thin man rings her doorbell. he is holding a cardboard box. Mrs. Eiderdown chats with the man for
ten minutes before she realizes that she hasn't looked in-side the box to see what the pet is. She can hear a
his-sing sound. The children guess what is in the box (a snake). Mrs. Eiderdown thanks the man but says
she doesn't think the snake is a good idea.
     The next time the doorbell rings, there's a lady on the doorstep, also carrying a cardboard box. In the
bottom of the box, Mrs. Eiderdown sees something black and hairy with eight legs. Again, the children say
what they think it is (a spider). Mrs. Eiderdown thanks the lady for her kindness but says that a spider is not
the sort of pet she has in mind.
     At last, the little girl next door brings her a dog.Mrs. Eiderdown's life improves a lot because of the dog.
more importantly, of course, the little girl, whose own granny lives a long way away, starts to visit Mrs.
Eiderdown more often. This interactive classroom idea has led to a greater awareness among children about
the possible loneliness of older people who live quite near them.
1. What's the main idea of the passage?
A. children get to know about the trouble of the elderly
B. neighbors help select pets for Mrs. Eiderdown
C. society helps the lonely people in the UK
D. school send pets to the lonely elderly
2. What does the underlined sentence in the third paragraph mean?
A. they talk about how she feels about being old
B. they try to experience her loneliness
C. they try to imagine how she lives
D. they write about her life story
3. What can we infer from the passage?
A. the little girl often visits her own granny
B. the people who offer pets are lady's neighbors
C. the farther the elderly live, the lonelier they feel
D. the little girl begins to care more about Mrs. Eiderdown

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