题目内容

Sometimes I really doubt whether there is love between my parents. Every day they are very busy trying to earn money in order to pay the 16 tuition(学费) for my brother and me. They don’t 17  in the romantic ways that I read in books or I see on TV. My father has a bad temper(脾气); it’s easy for him to lose his temper.
One day, my mother was sewing a quilt(缝被子). I 18 sat down beside her and looked at her.
“Is there any 19  between you and Dad?” I asked her in a very low voice.My mother stopped her work and raised her head with  20  in her eyes. She didn’t answer immediately. Then she bowed her head and continued to sew the quilt. 21 at last I heard my mother say the following words:“Susan,” she said 22  , “Look at this thread(线). Sometimes it appears, but most of it disappears in the quilt. The thread really makes the quilt strong and durable(耐用). If life is a 23  , then love should be a thread. It can 24  be seen anywhere or anytime, but it’s really there. Love is 25.
I listened carefully but I couldn’t understand her until the next  26  . At that time, my father suddenly got sick seriously. My mother had to stay with him in the hospital for a month. After they were 27, every day in the morning and dusk, my mother helped my father walk 28 on the country road. My father had never been so 29 . Along the country road, there were many beautiful flowers, green grass and trees. The sun gently shone through the leaves. All of these 30  the most beautiful picture in the world. The doctor had said my father would 31 in two months. But after two months he still couldn’t walk alone. We were all worried.
“Dad, how are you feeling now?” I asked him one day. “Susan,” he said gently, “to tell you the truth, I just like 32  with your mom. I like this kind of life.” 33  his eyes, I knew he loved my mother deeply.
Once I thought love meant flowers, gifts and sweet kisses. But from this  34  , I understand that love is just a  35  in the quilt of out life. Love is inside, making life strong and warm.
小题1:
A.expensiveB.low C.cheapD.high
小题2:
A.playB.talkC.act D.perform
小题3:
A.silentlyB.carefullyC.certainlyD.happily
小题4:
A.money B.loveC.timeD.distance
小题5:
A.surpriseB.prideC.disappointmentD.satisfaction
小题6:
A.SoB.ButC.AndD.For
小题7:
A.sadlyB.excitedlyC.regretfully D.thoughtfully
小题8:
A.troubleB.pleasureC.quiltD.cloth
小题9:
A.hardlyB.oftenC.alwaysD.ever
小题10:
A.valuableB.insideC.trueD.priceless
小题11:
A.winterB.autumnC.summerD.spring
小题12:
A.freeB.backC.fine D.ready
小题13:
A.continuouslyB.worriedlyC.constantlyD.slowly
小题14:
A.gentleB.perfectC.pleasedD.thankful
小题15:
A.put upB.took upC.made upD.set up
小题16:
A.runB.recoverC.stand D.work
小题17:
A.walkingB.livingC.sittingD.chatting
小题18:
A.ExaminingB.Seeing C.NoticingD.Reading
小题19:
A.practiceB.observationC.experienceD.activity
小题20:
A.threadB.thingC.jewelD.light

小题1:D
小题2:C
小题3:A
小题4:B
小题5:A
小题6:B
小题7:D
小题8:C
小题9:A
小题10:B
小题11:D
小题12:B
小题13:D
小题14:A
小题15:C
小题16:B
小题17:A
小题18:D
小题19:C
小题20:A
文章通过一个温情的故事把爱比喻成缝被子的线,时隐时现,并不是一直表现在外。文章告诉我们真正的爱是相濡以沫,平平淡淡。
小题1:D 形容词辨析。后面的名词tuition用high修饰,高昂的学费。Expensive指昂贵的物品。、
小题2:C 动词辨析。A玩耍;B谈话;C行为举止;D表现。这里指父母的行为不像我在书里看见的那样的浪漫。
小题3:A 副词辨析。指我静静第看着妈妈在缝被子。
小题4:B 上下文串联。根据下文可知我询问妈妈:在她何爸爸之间是否有爱?
小题5:A 上下文串联。指妈妈听到我这样问很惊讶第看着我。
小题6:B 连词辨析,上文说妈妈听了我的问题没有说话,但最后还是回到了我的问题,上下文是转折关系。
小题7:D 副词辨析。A悲伤地;B兴奋地;C遗憾地;D深思熟虑地;指妈妈回答我的问题是经过认真思考的。
小题8:C 上下文串联。指妈妈把生活比喻成被子。
小题9:A 副词辨析。A几乎不;B经常;C总是;D曾经;指线几乎不能总是被看见。线在被子里时隐时现。
小题10:B 词义辨析。A贵重的;B里面的;C真实的;D无价的。指爱被隐藏在被子里。
小题11:D 上下文串联。是在来年春天爸爸病了以后我才理解这一切。
小题12:B 词义辨析。根据上文可知爸爸住院一个月,那么应该是出院了回家了。
小题13:D 副词辨析。指爸爸妈妈在路上慢慢地走。
小题14:A 形容词辨析。上文提及爸爸的脾气很差,故这里说他从来没有这么温柔。
小题15:C 短语辨析。A张贴,搭建;留宿;B占据,从事于,开始做;C组成,编造;D建立,设立;指所有这一切组成了最美丽的图片。
小题16:B 动词辨析。Recover康复。指医生说我爸爸两个月后就可以康复。
小题17:A 上下文串联。指爸爸很喜欢和妈妈一起散步。
小题18:D 动词辨析。Read理解。指我理解了爸爸的眼神。
小题19:C 名词辨析。A做法;C经历;D行动;指我从这次经历中理解了什么是真正的爱。故C正确。
小题20:A 上下文串联。指爱就是线,正是这些线串联起生活。
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Rowena and Billy Wrangler are model high school students. They study hard and do extremely well on achievement tests. And next year,Rowena will be attending Harvard University.Billy,her younger brother,hopes to go to Cornell.What makes Rowena and Billy different from most students is that they don't go to school.In fact,they've never been to school.Since kindergarten,they've studied at home.Like many of more than one million people who receive home schooling in the United States, they feel as if they've gotten a good education.
The home-schooling trend began in the U.S.in the 1980s with parents keeping their children out of public schools so they could provide religious education at home. Today,as the home-schooling trend continues to grow,parents are more likely to consider home schooling as an option because they believe schools don't do a very good job of teaching and are occasionally dangerous places.But can parents really do a better job?
The answer in many cases is yes.In many studies,students taught at home ranked average or above average when compared to students who went to public schools.More importantly,these students were often more self-directed and have a greater depth of knowledge.They were well prepared for academic challenges.
One such student,Robert Conrad, now a sophomore at university, claims he really learned how to study and schedule his time during his eight years of home schooling.Still, not every student is as successful as Robert.
“For every home-schooling success story,there are an equal number of failures.”states Henry Lipscomb,an educational researcher.“There are just so many disadvantages that students taught at home have to overcome.” For example,they have fewer chances to get in touch with others of their own age.Consequently,they sometimes lack the usual social skills.“No matter what,though,”states Lipscomb,“home-schooling is a growing trend.I think we'll be seeing more and more of this.”
小题1:Compared with other students, Rowena and Billy are most different in the fact that ___________.
A.they preferred to teach themselves
B.they do extremely well on achievement tests
C.they don't go to school as other teenagers
D.they feel they have gotten a good education
小题2:According to the article, what is NOT the advantage of being educated at home?
A.Home is a safer place for children.
B.Students taught at home are more self-directed.
C.Students taught at home have a greater depth of knowledge.
D.Students taught at home can go to good universities.
小题3:The writer thinks __________ .
A.parents can do a better job than schools
B.home-schooling will be more and more useful
C.home-schooling is good in some aspects
D.students taught at home make greater achievements
小题4:The best title of this text might be ________ .
A.Home-schooling:A Growing Trend
B.Home-schooling:A Better Choice
C.Home-schooling:A Way to Success
D.Home-schooling:A New Method of Education
Robby was 11 years old when his mother dropped him off for his first piano lesson. I  36  that students begin at an earlier age, which I explained to Robby, but Robby said that it had been his mother’s  37  to hear him play the piano. So I took him as a student.
Hard  38  Robby tried, he lacked the basic sense of music. However, he persisted, and at the end of each weekly  39 , he always said, “My mom’s going to hear me play some day.” But it seemed  40 . He just did not have any gift for music.
I only knew his mother from a distance as she dropped Robby  41  or waited in her old car to  42  him up. She always  43  and smiled but never visited my class. Then one day Robby  44  coming to our lessons. He telephoned me and said his mother was  45 .
Several weeks later I was preparing my students for the upcoming recital(独奏会)  46  Robby came and asked me if he could be in the recital. “Miss Hondorf ... I’ve just got to  47 !” he insisted. I agreed.
The night for the recital came. The high school gymnasium was  48  with parents, friends and relatives. The recital went off well. Finally Robby came up on stage. I was  49  when he announced that he had chosen Mozart’s Concerto(协奏曲) No. 21 in C Major. I was not  50  what I heard next. His fingers were light on the keys. He played so  51  that everyone  52  to applaud him. In tears I ran up on  53 . “Oh, Robby! How did you do it?”
“Well, Miss Hondorf ... I kept on  54  at home. Remember I told you my mom was sick? Well, _55  she had cancer and passed away this morning. And well ... she was born deaf, so tonight was the first time she ever heard me play ...”
小题1:
A.preferB.imagineC.supposeD.wish
小题2:
A.planB.beliefC.needD.dream
小题3:
A.althoughB.whileC.asD.if
小题4:
A.conferenceB.lessonC.testD.show
小题5:
A.successfulB.senselessC.wonderfulD.hopeless
小题6:
A.onB.inC.offD.away
小题7:
A.pickB.putC.takeD.hold
小题8:
A.wavedB.sangC.jumpedD.left
小题9:
A.finishedB.broke C.stoppedD.continued
小题10:
A.tiredB.sickC.deafD.unhappy
小题11:
A.asB.sinceC.whileD.when
小题12:
A.succeed B.learnC.playD.listen
小题13:
A.seatedB.filledC.surroundedD.mixed
小题14:
A.surprisedB.certain C.disappointedD.angry
小题15:
A.pleased withB.interested in
C.eager forD.prepared for
小题16:
A.badB.hardC.differently D.well
小题17:
A.raisedB.roseC.liftedD.left
小题18:
A.platformB.stairsC.stageD.floor
小题19:
A.practisingB.listeningC.trainingD.performing
小题20:
A.luckilyB.thereforeC.howeverD.actually
As kids, my friends and I spent a lot of time out in the woods. “The woods” was our part-time address, destination, purpose, and excuse. If I went to a friends house and found him not at home, his mother might say, “Oh, he’s out in the woods, ” with a tone(语气) of airy acceptance. It is similar to the tone people sometimes use nowadays to tell me that someone I’m looking for is on the golf course or at the gym, or even “away from his desk.” For us ten-year-olds, “being out in the woods” was just an excuse to do whatever we feel like for a while.
We sometimes told ourselves that what we were doing in the woods was exploring(探索). Exploring was a more popular idea back then than it is today. History seemed to be mostly about explorers. Our explorations, though, seemed to have less system than the historic kind: something usually came up along the way. Say we stayed in the woods, throwing rocks, shooting frogs, picking blackberries, digging in what we were briefly persuaded was an Indian burial mound.
Often we got “lost” and had to climb a tree to find out where we were. If you read a story in which someone does that successfully, be skeptical: the topmost branches are usually too skinny to hold weight, and we could never climb high enough to see anything except other trees. There were four or five trees that we visited regularly—tall beeches, easy to climb and comfortable to sit in.
It was in a tree, too, that our days of fooling around in the woods came to an end. By then some of us had reached seventh grade and had begun the rough ride of adolescence(青春期). In March, the month when we usually took to the woods again after winter, two friends and I set out to go exploring. We climbed a tree, and all of a sudden it occurred to all three of us at the same time that we really were rather big to be up in a tree. Soon there would be the spring dances on Friday evenings in the high school cafeteria.
小题1:The author and his friends were often out in the woods to _______.
A.spend their free time
B.play golf and other sports
C.avoid doing their schoolwork
D.keep away from their parents
小题2:What can we infer from Paragraph 2 ?
A.The activities in the woods were well planned.
B.Human history is not the result of exploration.
C.Exploration should be a systematic activity.
D.The author explored in the woods aimlessly.
小题3:The underlined word “skeptical” in Paragraph 3 is closest in meaning to ______.
A.calmB.doubtfuC.seriousD.optimistic
小题4:How does the author feel about his childhood?
A.Happy but short.B.Lonely but memorable.
C.Boring and meaninglessD.Long and unforgettable.
Supermarket Morrisons today announced to launch an online shopping operation within two years in a move to catch up with its web-savvy rivals. The UK's fourth biggest supermarket said Morrisons.com would offer grocery and non-food products but would take time to build from zero.
As part of its online development, Morrisons - the only one of the "Big Four" grocers to have a significant internet business - revealed it had invested £32 million in a 10% stake of a New York-based online grocer. The announcement came as Morrisons posted a 13% increase in underlying pre-tax profits of £869 million in the year to January 30.
Morrisons is implementing a growth strategy which is focused on expanding its e-commerce business and moving into the convenience store market. It has earmarked £3 billion in investment over the next three years. The supermarket floated the idea of launching its own website last year and today is the first firm commitment to realising that goal.
Last month, the company took its first major step to launching an online operation with the acquisition of internet retailer Kiddicare for £70 million. The company said this move, along with the 10% "strategic" stake in American online grocer FreshDirect announced today, would help it launch its own website in the future. FreshDirect was launched in 2002 and serves 600,000 customers in New York, New Jersey and Connecticut. The deal will see Morrisons chief executive Dalton Philips join the company's board.
Morrisons also revealed it would open three convenience stores, around 3,000 sq ft in size, in July under the name M Local. The shops will be located in Morrisons' heartland in the north of England, in neighbourhoods around the M62 motorway. The company said the convenience business was the second-fastest growing part of the market. Rival models include Tesco Metro and Sainsburys Local.
小题1:FreshDirect severs 600,000 customers in          .
A.ConnecticutB.New JerseyC.New YorkD.certain states
小题2:Which would help Morrisons launch its own wesbsite in the future?
A.Taking measures to beat its rivals as quickly as it could
B.Offering enough grocery and non-food products from zero
C.Building more convenience stores and market in the United States
D.Launching an online operation with the acquisition of interest retailer
小题3:Which of the following would be the best title of the passage?
A.Morrisons Has Many Business Rvials
B.Morrisons Will Launch an Online Operation
C.Morrisons Switches to Run Online Shopping
D.Morrisons Wants to Establish Branches
Beauty has always been regarded as something admirable. Almost everyone thinks attractive people are happier and healthier, have better marriages and have more respectable jobs. Personal consultants (顾问) give them better advice for finding jobs. Even judges are softer on attractive persons. But in the executive circle (政界), beauty can become a liability.
While attractiveness is a positive thing for a man’s rise, it is harmful to a woman. Handsome male executives were considered as having more honesty than plainer men; effort and ability were thought to be the reasons for their success. Attractive female executives were considered to have less honesty than unattractive ones; their success was attributed not to ability but to factors such as luck. All unattractive women executives were thought to have more honesty and to be more capable than the attractive female executives.
Why are attractive woman not thought to be able? An attractive woman is thought to be more feminine (女性的) and an attractive man more masculine (男性的) than the less attractive ones. Thus, an attractive woman has an advantage in traditionally female jobs, but an attractive woman in a traditionally masculine position appears to lack the "masculine" qualities required.
This is true even in politics. Anne Bowman recently published a study on the effects of attractiveness on political candidates (候选人). She asked 125 undergraduate students to rank two groups of photographs, one of men and one of women in order of attractiveness. The students were told the photographs were of candidates for political offices. They were asked lo rank them again, in the order they would vote for them.
The results showed that attractive males completely defeated unattractive men, but the woman who had been ranked most attractive always received the fewest votes.
小题1:In traditionally female jobs, attractiveness _____.
A.strengthens the feminine qualities required
B.makes women look more honest and capable
C.is of great importance to women
D.often enables women to succeed quickly
小题2:Bowman’s experiment shows that when it comes to politics, attractiveness _____.
A.turns out to be an obstacle to men
B.affects men and women alike
C.has as little effect on men as on women
D.is more of an obstacle than a benefit to women
小题3:It can be inferred from the passage that people's views on beauty are often _____.
A.practicalB.old-fashionedC.prejudiced (偏见的) D.serious
小题4:The author writes this passage to _____.
A.discuss the negative aspects of being attractive
B.give advice to job-seekers who are attractive
C.demand equal rights for women
D.emphasize the importance of appearance
Modern life is impossible without travelling. The fastest way of travelling is by plane. With a modern airline you can travel in one day to places which it took a month or more to get to hundred years ago.
Travelling by train is slower than by plane, but it has its advantages(便利). You can see the country you are travelling through. Modern trains have comfortable seats and dining-cars. They make even the longest journey enjoyable.
Some people prefer to travel by sea when possible. There are large liners and river boats. You can visit many other countries and different parts of your country on them. Ships are not so fast as trains or planes, but travelling by sea is a very pleasant way to spend a holiday.
Many people like to travel by car. You can make your own timetable. You can travel three or four hundred miles or only fifty or one hundred miles a day, just as you like. You can stop wherever you wish where there is something interesting to see, at good restaurant where you can enjoy a good meal, or at a hotel to spend the night. That is why travelling by car is popular for pleasure trips, while people usually take a train or plane when they are travelling on business.
小题1:From the passage, we know the fastest way of travelling is          .
A.by trainB.by seaC.by planeD.by car
小题2:If we travel by car, we can           .
A.make the longest journey enjoyableB.travel to a very far place in several minutes
C.make our own timetableD.travel only fifty or one hundred miles a day
小题3:When people travel on business, they usually take               .
A.a plane or a carB.a car or a boatC.a boat or a trainD.a train or a plane
小题4:How many ways of travelling are mentioned in the passage?
A.FourB.ThreeC.TwoD.Six
St. Paul’s Cathedral
Ludgate Hill, EC4
Underground: St. Paul’s; Bus: 6, 8, 11, 15, 22, 25
Open: Daily 8:00-19:00 (17:00 from Oct. to Mar.)
Entrance free
Designed by the great architect, Sir Christopher Wren, St. Paul’s Cathedral was built following the Great Fire of London of 1666, which destroyed the gothic cathedral on the site at that time. It is an inescapable attraction for all travellers to this great city and the most recognisable gothic cathedral in England. Its choir(唱诗班)is internationally famous. Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer were married here in 1981.
Buckingham Palace
South end of the Mall (SW1)
Underground: St. James’s Park, Victoria, Hyde Park Corner, Green Park; Bus: 2, 11, 14, 16, 19, 22, 24, 29, 30, 38, 52, 73, 74, 137
Buckingham Palace is Queen Elisabeth II’s official residence(住所), and has been the official residence of Britain’s monarch(君主)since 1837. The State Rooms at Buckingham Palace have been opening to the public for the Annual Summer Opening, in August and September, since 1993. The Queen is not at Buckingham Palace when it is open to the public; she goes to one of her country residences. The State Rooms are extremely grand. You can see many of the treasures of the Royal Collection: paintings by Rembrandt, Rubens and Canaletto; and beautiful examples of English and French furniture.
The Tower of London
Tower Hill, EC3
Underground: Tower Hill; Bus: 42, 78
Open: Mon.— Sat.9:00-18:00; Sun.8:00-19:00
Parts of the Tower of London are over nine centuries old, as building began under William the Conqueror in 1078. Famous as a prison in the distant past, the Tower has also been a royal residence, a zoo and an observatory(瞭望台). It is now a museum and many thousands of people visit it every year in particular to see the Crown Jewels. Only by going inside can you experience nearly a thousand years of history and hear the myths and legends that make it “a day out to die for”.
Westminster Abbey
Broad Sanctuary, SW1
Underground: Westminster, St James’s Park; Bus: 3, 11, 12, 24, 29, 39, 53, 59, 76, 77, 88, 109, 155, 168, 170, 172, 184, 503
Open: Daily 8:00-18:00 (Mar. — Dec., Tuesday till 20:00)
Entrance free
Located next to the Houses of Parliament in the heart of London, Westminster Abbey is a gothic church and place of worship. The building of the present Abbey was started by King Henry III in 1245. The oldest parts of the building date back to 1050. Westminster Abbey has hosted many royal weddings including the wedding of The Queen and Prince Philip in 1947 and the wedding of Prince William and Kate in 2011. It is a traditional place of coronation(加冕礼)and burial for English monarchs—38 monarchs have been crowned at the Abbey. There are many tombs there, including those of Queen Elizabeth I, “Bloody” Queen Mary, naturalist Charles Darwin, many poets and writers.
小题1:You can see the inside of all the buildings all the year around except ______.
A.St. Paul’s CathedralB.the Tower of London
C.Westminster AbbeyD.Buckingham Palace
小题2:The two places you can visit by getting off at the same underground station are ______.
A.Buckingham Palace and Westminster Abbey
B.Buckingham Palace and St. Paul’s Cathedral
C.Westminster Abbey and the Tower of London
D.the Tower of London and St. Paul’s Cathedral
小题3:Where is the text most probably taken from?
A.A history book about London.
B.A guidebook for visitors to London.
C.A book about London’s development.
D.A book about London’s churches.

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