题目内容

________ a deep breath, they dived into the water.( )

A. Taken       B. Taking     C. Having taken  D. Took 

 

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My friend Dr. Dong had a wonderful chance to go to Seattle to present a paper at a professional meeting. When he got back to Beijing, he told me his experience.

   Dr. Dong enjoyed his first days very much. At the medical conference, he felt quite confident in his area of research and was able to perform well in his presentation. But after a few days, he began to feel uncomfortable. His medical English was fine, but the social communication skills were different.

   He got more and more worried that he was misunderstanding simple English greetings and table talk conventions(习俗). When someone greeted him with, “Hi, how’s it going?” he thought they had asked him “Where are you going?” and answered with the name of the conference hall, only to get a surprised stare from them. At a western style dinner, a colleague asked, “So how’re you enjoyin’ the States?” he thought he heard, “how are you enjoying your steak?” and answered that he was eating chicken, not beef. That time, they smiled, and patiently repeated the question, then both laughed at the error.

By the end of the meetings, Dr. Dong felt a deep sense of “cultural stress” and was worn out from having to pay attention to so many new expressions and ways of dealing with things. He felt his handshake was not as firm as Americans’, found that people reacted unusually when he modestly insisted his English was not good after they complimented(称赞) him, didn’t know how to accept dinner invitations properly and therefore missed out on going to several lunches, and so on. Eventually, he was so confused that he felt the full impact of “culture shock”.

Why did Dr. Dong travel to Seattle?

A. To improve his spoken English.  B. To experience culture shock.

C. To give lectures on his research.   D. To attend a medical conference.

Which of the following best describes Dr. Dong’s experience in Seattle?

   A. Comfortable—very uncomfortable—uncomfortable.

   B. comfortable—very uncomfortable—comfortable.

   C. Comfortable—uncomfortable – very uncomfortable.

   D. Comfortable—uncomfortable – very comfortable.

Dr. Dong felt a deep sense of “cultural stress” mainly because_______.

   A. he was too modest      B. he didn’t understand cultural differences

   C. he lacked confidence     D. he was not good at English listening

                                       

Peggy Hilt wanted to be a good mother. But day after day, she got out of bed feeling like a failure. No matter what she tried, she couldn’t connect with Nina, the 2-year -old girl she’d adopted from Russia as an infant (幼儿). The preschooler (学龄前儿童)pulled away whenever Hilt tried to hug or kiss her. Nina was physically aggressive with her 4-year-old sister, who had been adopted from Ukraine, and had violent tantrums(发脾气). Whenever Hilt wasn’t watching, she destroyed the family’s furniture and possessions. “Every day with Nina had become a struggle,” she recalls now.

    As the girl grew older, things got worse. Hilt fell into a deep depression. She started drinking heavily, something she’d never done before. Ashamed, she hid her problem from everyone, including her husband.

    On the morning of July 1, 2005, Hilt was packing for a family vocation, all the while swallowing one beer after another and growing increasingly angry and impatient with Nina’s deeds. “Everything she did just got to me,” Hilt said. When Hilt caught her reaching into her diaper(尿布)and smearing feces(粪便)on the walls and furniture, “a year and a half of frustration came to a head,” Hilt says. “I snapped(崩溃). I felt this uncontrollable rage.”

    Then Hilt did something unthinkable. She grabbed Nina around the neck, shook her and then dropped her to the floor, where she kicked her repeatedly before dragging her up to her room, punching her as they went. “I had never hit a child before,” she says. “I felt horrible and promised myself that this would never happen again.” But it was too late for that. Nina woke up with a fever, and then started throwing up. The next day she stopped breathing. By the time the ambulance got the child to the hospital, she was dead.

Hilt is now serving a 19-year sentence for second-degree murder in a Virginia prison. She and her husband divorced, and he is raising their other daughter. She realizes the horror of her crime and says she isn’t looking for sympathy. “There is no punishment severe enough for what I did,” she told NEWSWEEK in an interview at the prison.

This story mainly tells us __________.

A. a cruel mother who killed her daughter

B. a social problem of adoption

C. a family problem in Western countries

D. an unlucky child’s fortune

How did Hilt let out her depression at the beginning?

A. By hitting her adopted girl.

B. By showing her more love.

C. By drinking heavily.

D. By hugging and kissing her.

What does the underlined sentence in Para.4 mean?

A. It was too late to hit the girl in order to make her good.

B. It was too late to save the girl’s life.

C. It was too late to regret hitting the girl.

D. It was too late to regret adopting the girl.

“NEWSWEEK” in the last sentence of this text refers to a __________.

A. magazine         B. journalist       C. book        D. policeman

Why do some adoptions go so wrong?

   A. It’s the kid’s fault.              B. It’s the mother’s fault.

   C. It’s the fault of the society.           D. The writer doesn’t mention the reason.

Since my family were not going to be helpful, I decided I would look for one all by myself and not tell them about it till I’d got one.

I had seen an agency (中介机构) advertised in a local newspaper. I rushed out of the  1  in search of it. I was wildly excited, and as  as if I were going on the stage. Finding the  quite easily, I ran breathlessly through a door which said “Enter without knocking, if you please.”

The simple atmosphere of the office   4  me. The woman looked carefully at me  5  through her glasses, and then  me in a low voice. I answered softly. All of a sudden I started to feel rather  7  . She wondered why I was looking for this sort of  8  . I felt even more helpless when she told me that it would be   9  to get a job without  10  . I wondered whether I ought to leave,   11 the telephone on her desk rang. I heard her say: “  12 , I’ve got someone in the  13  at this very moment who might  14 .” She wrote down a  15 , and held it out to me, saying: “ Ring up this lady. She wants a   16  immediately. In fact, you would have to start tomorrow by cooking a dinner for ten people.”

“ Oh yes,” said I —  17  having cooked for more than four in my life. I  18  her again and again, and rushed out to the   19  telephone box. I collected my thoughts, took a deep breath, and rang the number. I said confidently that I was just what she was looking for. I spent the next few hours   20  cook books.

1.A. bed         B house      C. agency              D. office

2.                A.proud          B.pleased         C.nervous D.worried

 

3.                A.family          B.door           C.place D.stage

 

4.                A.calmed         B.excited         C.frightened D.disturbed

 

5.                A.as usual        B.for a while       C.in a minute    D.once again

 

6.                A.advised         B.examined       C.informed D.questioned

 

7.                A.encouraged     B.dissatisfied      C.hopeless  D.pleased

 

8.                A.place          B.job            C.advice    D.help

 

9.                A.difficult         B.helpless        C.possible  D.unusual

 

10.               A.ability          B.experience      C.knowledge D.study

 

11.               A.after           B.since          C.until  D.when

 

12.               A.Above all       B.As a matter of fact     C.As a result D.In spite of that

 

13.               A.family          B.house          C.office     D.restaurant

 

14.               A.hire           B.accept         C.suit   D.offer

 

15.               A.letter          B.name          C.note D.number

 

16.               A.cook           B.help           C.teacher   D.secretary

 

17.               A.almost         B.never          C.nearly     D.really

 

18.               A.answered       B.promised       C.thanked   D.told

 

19.               A.outside         B.local           C.closest    D.nearest

 

20.               A.borrowing      B.buying         C.reading    D.writing

 

 

完形填空 (共20小题;每小题1.5分,满分30分)

阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。

   I was standing on stage before 200 people, dressed up as George Washington. I had the lead role in my sixth grade  36  and, for the past two months, I had walked back and forth in my room   37  to say my lines.

    Now it was time to give a  38  , and my heart was beating rapidly. At my  39 , I began to speak smoothly and clearly, but then it  40  : I stuttered(口吃). I knew I would, and I did.

    From that moment on, I  41  that my role in that play would be my first and my last. My speech problem affected  42  .

    As a child, I struggled to say a full sentence, repeatedly hearing the  43  comments of my parents. “Take a deep breath and think about what you’re going to say.” I was too  44  to admit I had a problem.

     45  my school career progressed my speech problem became less noticeable, but it never 46  . It held me back.

    After realizing that class officers had to speak in front of the entire student body, I  47 running in class elections . I feared reading aloud and meeting new people.

    I would  48  sit in my room and cry, imagining what it would be like to be  49 , like everyone else.

    Finally, I came to my senses. I read articles about famous people who 50  their speech problems. I  51  the fact that I do have a problem that will always be with me.

    It has made me a  52  person and, with time, I know I’ll gain the confidence to stand up and 53  to myself that it will never hold me back.  54  , I know that I’m not the only one who  55 , because nobody is perfect.

1.  A. play             B. game                 C. dance                D . concert

2.  A. desiring             B. waiting         C. struggling           D. hesitating

3.A. test               B. performance     C. suggestion           D. judgment

4.A. sight              B. angle                C. news             D. turn

5.A. happened           B. seemed           C. broke                D. remained

6.  A. urged                B. promised         C. admitted         D. repeated

7.A. nothing            B. something            C. everything           D. anything

8.A. exciting           B. surprising           C. puzzling         D. annoying

9.A. ashamed            B. willing         C. weak             D. eager

10.A. Though            B. As               C. Before               D. Unless

11. A. failed               B. disappeared          C. burst                D. combined

12.A. insisted on           B. put off             C. approved of          D. gave up

13.A. never             B. seldom           C. sometime         D. constantly

14.A. normal            B. special         C. usual                D. alive

15.A. realized          B. refused          C. overcame         D. avoided

16. A. doubted          B. changed          C. hid              D. faced

17.A. stronger          B. greater              C. wiser                D. purer

18. A. explain          B. prove                C. respond          D. scream

19.A. On the contrary       B. On the other hand    C. Above all            D. At most

20. A. attempts         B. argues              C. suffers              D. risks

 

 

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