题目内容

My First Day
I was still shy in the presence of a crowd. And my first day at the new1made me a laughing stock(笑柄) of the classroom .I was sent to the blackboard to write my 2. I knew my name, and knew how to write it , but standing at the blackboard with the 3of so many pupils on my back made me4inside and I was unable to write a single letter.
“Write your name,” the teacher called to me. I 5the white chalk to the blackboard, as I was about to write, my mind went blank, I could not remember my name,6the first letter. Somebody laughed and I became 7 .
“Just forget us and write your name,” the teacher called and walked to my side,8at me to give me confidence.
“What is your name?” she asked.
“Richard,” I9
“Then write it.”
I turned to the blackboard and lifted my hand to write, but then I was10again. I tried to 11my senses but I could remember nothing. I realized how totally I was12and I grew weak and leaned my hot forehead13the cold blackboard. The room burst into a loud14and my muscles froze. I sat and15myself. Why did I always appear so dumb 16I was called upon to perform in a crowd? I knew how to write as well as any other pupil in the classroom, and there was no17I could read better than any of them, and I could talk 18when I was sure of myself. Then why did strange19make me freeze? I sat with my ears and neck 20, hearing the pupils around me whisper, hating myself.

  1. 1.
    1. A.
      school
    2. B.
      house
    3. C.
      office
    4. D.
      lab
  2. 2.
    1. A.
      address
    2. B.
      name
    3. C.
      website
    4. D.
      hobby
  3. 3.
    1. A.
      presence
    2. B.
      pressure
    3. C.
      eyes
    4. D.
      smiles
  4. 4.
    1. A.
      freeze
    2. B.
      struggle
    3. C.
      fall
    4. D.
      think
  5. 5.
    1. A.
      took
    2. B.
      picked
    3. C.
      carried
    4. D.
      lifted
  6. 6.
    1. A.
      still
    2. B.
      ever
    3. C.
      even
    4. D.
      also
  7. 7.
    1. A.
      delighted
    2. B.
      nervous
    3. C.
      disappointed
    4. D.
      angry
  8. 8.
    1. A.
      pointing
    2. B.
      looking
    3. C.
      smiling
    4. D.
      waving
  9. 9.
    1. A.
      whispered
    2. B.
      explained
    3. C.
      shouted
    4. D.
      nodded
  10. 10.
    1. A.
      empty
    2. B.
      stupid
    3. C.
      quiet
    4. D.
      blank
  11. 11.
    1. A.
      form
    2. B.
      collect
    3. C.
      make
    4. D.
      catch
  12. 12.
    1. A.
      fighting
    2. B.
      feeling
    3. C.
      failing
    4. D.
      falling
  13. 13.
    1. A.
      by
    2. B.
      before
    3. C.
      from
    4. D.
      against
  14. 14.
    1. A.
      laugh
    2. B.
      noise
    3. C.
      cry
    4. D.
      cheer
  15. 15.
    1. A.
      calmed
    2. B.
      hid
    3. C.
      comforted
    4. D.
      blamed
  16. 16.
    1. A.
      where
    2. B.
      that
    3. C.
      when
    4. D.
      because
  17. 17.
    1. A.
      need
    2. B.
      doubt
    3. C.
      wonder
    4. D.
      use
  18. 18.
    1. A.
      correctly
    2. B.
      anxiously
    3. C.
      clearly
    4. D.
      freely
  19. 19.
    1. A.
      faces
    2. B.
      teachers
    3. C.
      places
    4. D.
      classrooms
  20. 20.
    1. A.
      shaking
    2. B.
      suffering
    3. C.
      burning
    4. D.
      hurting
ABCAD CBCAD BCDAD CBDAC
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Blogs allow readers to post comments. There were millions of blogs out there, so I   36   expected anyone to read mine,   37   respond. But almost immediately they did. Twelve messages were   38   after my first entry. I went to the library five times that day—each time there were more.

    The next morning I couldn’t wait to get up and hurry to the library.   39   I told my story. It gave structure and a purpose to my day.

    For so long I’d been unable to   40   in the real world, afraid of rejection or pity or scorn(轻蔑).   41   here it was safe. This   42   with people on the other side of the screen, many on the other side of the world, was   43   me back to life again.

    One particularly cold Tuesday I opened my   44   to see, among emails from bloggers   45   how I was surviving the snow, one saying: “New York Times Journalist Trying to Contact You.” Ian Urbina had discovered my blog   46   when researching an article on people living in their   47   in the U.S. exchanged emails and later he called me up. I hadn’t spoken to   48   for months but, as rain streamed down the glass   49  , the words came. I had been living in the car for almost nine months.

    The article   50   on the front page. I didn’t know until I opened my computer. There were emails from people around the world. For almost a year on one had known I   51   existed but now here were hundreds wishing me well. They said they were   52   for me.

    Now every time I pressed “Check Mail”, there were more messages. I watched the numbers of the visitors counter on my blog   53   by the hundreds. These were people at their computers all over the world. I felt as of I was viewing a miracle unfold(展开).

    Over the next week, in libraries and in the car   54   under lamp posts at night, I wrote my papers. I had notepaper spread   55   the dashboard(仪表盘). And every morning in the quiet of the lane, I wrote for my life.

1.A. nearly         B. eagerly      C. patiently            D. hardly

2.A. rather than        B. more than        C. let alone            D. other than

3.A. read           B. printed          C. left             D. taken

4.A. The other day  B. Day and night    C. All day long         D. Another day

5.A. give out       B. reach out        C. make out         D. hand out

6.A. But            B. And          C. Or               D. Then

7.A. problem        B. work         C. appointment      D. connection

8.A. paying         B. giving           C. binging          D. writing

9.A. website        B. mailbox      C. blog             D. newspaper

10. A. concerned about B. bored with        C. careless of          D. disappointed at     

11.A. by mistake        B. in time          C. by chance            D. at last

12.A. homes         B. offices          C. cars             D. libraries

13.A. everybody     B. anyone       C. another          D. other

14.A. inwards       B. inside           C. outwards         D. outside

15.A. carried           B. published        C. appeared         D. contributed

16.A. already       B. even         C. almost               D. only

17.A. praying       B. fighting     C. voting               D. looking

18.A. ending            B. increasing       C. dropping         D. expanding

19.A. repaired      B. washed       C. crashed          D. parked

20.A. through       B. beyond       C. across           D. above

 

阅读下面短文,从短文后所给各题的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。

Temperature is part of my married romance. Coming to New York from Baltimore--where there is just one small snowstorm each year---I was 36 by a fireplace in my new home, with fires 37 all day, just as what ancient people did at a wedding.

My husband, Peter, comes from northern Ontario, where winter 38 from September to May and cold wind is 39. “When Canadians have 30 below, they 40 it.” He says. “Cold wind is for crybabies.”

So to marry this man I had to learn to 41 for serious cold. To get me from Baltimore’s Inner Harbor to Albany’s frozen Hudson, Peter piled me 42 jackets and sweaters, scarves and gloves, even a hat with earflaps. The gift of Sorel boots—comfortably warm at Canada’s 30 below, was a 43 we were getting serious

That first winter together, living in upstate New York, I thought I’d 44. My boots were good below freezing, but my fingers could 45 tie them. Physical adaptation is real, but it came slowly. And there is also emotional 46 to cold. Some days I tell myself that I have enough beach memories to stick to on 47 days and other days I am reminded that living cold does indeed build 48.

49, having a warm house is important. After my first marriage ended, for years I 50 went on a second date with a man whose response to my “I’m cold.” was, “Put on a sweater.” Now I’m married to a man who 51 that cold hands do not mean a warm heart, and that a big oil bill is better than roses. But surprisingly, I’ve grown, too. I am 52, in this new life and climate, to go and look for that cost-saving sweater.

The word comfortable did not 53 refer to being contented. Its Latin root, comfortare, means to strengthen. The Holy Spirit is Comforter: not to make us comfortable, but to make us 54. We 55 not be warm but we are indeed comforted.

1.A. set down

B. set about

C. set up 

D. set out

2.A. lighting

B. burning

C. going

D. flashing

3.A. appears

B. starts

C. keeps

D. runs

4.A. something

B. everything

C. nothing

D. none

5.A. suggest

B. mean

C. overlook

D. enjoy

6.A. wear

B. stand

C. dress

D. ride

7. A. under

B. over

C. inside

D. with

8.A. remark

B. sign

C. warning

D. show

9.A. sleep

B. forget

C. die

D. continue

10.A. hardly

B. easily

C. tightly

D. loosely

11.A. health

B. reaction

C. feelings

D. adaptation

12.A. rainy

B. freezing

C. sunny

D. happy

13.A. character

B. love

C. hope

D. hardship

14.A. Meanwhile

B. However

C. Therefore

D. Besides

15. A. merely

B. ever

C. never

D. just

16.A. wonders

B. knows

C. states

D. decides

17.A. unable

B. accustomed

C. interested

D. willing

18.A. originally

B. exactly

C. actually

D. namely

19.A. wild

B. cold

C. strong

D. warm

20.A. will

B. must

C. can

D. may

 

Last summer I went through a training program and became a literacy volunteer(扫盲志愿者). The training I received, though excellent, did not tell me how it was to work with a real student, however. When I began to discover what other people’s lives were like because they could not read, I realized the true importance of reading.

My first student Marie was a 44-year-old single mother of three. In the first lesson, I found out she walked two miles to the nearest supermarket twice a week because she didn’t know which bus to take. When I told her I would get her a bus schedule. She told me it would not help because she could not read it. She said she also had difficulty once she got to the supermarket, because she couldn’t always remember what she needed. Since she did not know words, she could not write out a shopping list. Also, she could only recognize items by sight, so if the product had a different label, she would not recognize it as the product she wanted.

As we worked together, learning how to read built Marie’s self-confidence, which encouraged her to continue in her studies. She began to make rapid progress and was even able to take the bus to the supermarket. After this successful trip, she reported how self-confident she felt. At the end of the program, she began helping her youngest son, Tony, a shy first grader, with his reading. She sat with him before he went to sleep and together they would read bedtime stories. When his eyes became wide with excitement as she read, pride was written all over her face, and she began to see how her own hard work in learning to read paid off. As she described this experience, I was proud of myself as well. I found that helping Marie to build her self-confidence was more rewarding than anything I had ever done before.

As a literacy volunteer, I learned a great deal about teaching and helping others. In fact, I may have learned more from the experience than Marie did.

1.What did the author do last summer?

A.She worked in the supermarket.

B.She helped someone to learn to read.

C.She gave single mothers the help they needed.

D.She went to a training program to help a literacy volunteer.

2.Why didn’t Marie go to the supermarket by bus at first?

A.Because she liked to walk to the supermarket.

B.Because she lived far away from the bus stop.

C.Because she couldn’t afford the bus ticket.

D.Because she couldn’t find the right bus.

3.How did Marie use to find the goods she wanted in the supermarket?

A.She knew where the goods were in the supermarket.

B.She asked others to take her to the right place.

C.She managed to find the goods by their looks.

D.She remembered the names of the goods.

4.Which of the following statements is true about Marie?

A.Marie could do things she had not been able to do before.

B.Marie was able to read stories with the help of her son.

C.Marie decided to continue her studies in school

D.Marie paid for her own lessons.

 

Can you understand the beginning of this essay?

“My smmr hols wr CWOTT. B4, we usd 2go2 NY 2C my bro, his GF & 3 kds FTF.”

The Scottish teacher who received it in class had no idea what the girl who wrote it meant. The essay was written in a form of English used in cell phone text messages. Text messages (also called SMS2) through cell phones became very popular in the late 1990s. At first, mobile phone companies thought that text messaging would be a good way to send messages to customers, but customers quickly began to use the text messaging service to send messages to each other. Teenagers in particular enjoyed using text messaging, and they began to create a new language for messages called texting.

A text message is limited to 160 characters, including letters, spaces, and numbers, so messages must be kept short. In addition, typing on the small keypad of a cell phone is difficult, so it’s common to make words shorter. In texting, a single letter or number can represent a word, like “r” for “are,” “u” for “you,” and “2” for “to.” Several letters can also represent a phrase, like “lol” for “laughing out loud.” Another characteristic of texting is the leaving out of letters in a word, like spelling “please” as “pls.”

Some parents and teachers worry that texting will make children bad spellers and bad writers. The student who wrote the essay at the top of this page said writing that way was more comfortable for her. (The essay said, “My summer holidays were a complete waste of time. Before, we used to go to New York to see my brother, his girlfriend, and their three kids face to face.”)

Not everyone agrees that texting is a bad thing. Some experts say languages always evolve, and this is just another way for English to change. Other people believe texting will disappear soon. New technology for voice messages may soon make text messages a thing of the past.

1.What is the writer’s opinion of text messaging?

A. It is fun and easy to do.

B. It is not bad for children.

C. It will make children bad writers.

D. The writer does not give an opinion.

2.Which characteristic of texting is NOT described in the passage?

A. Using phrases to represent essays

B. Using numbers to represent words

C. Using letters to represent phrases

D. Using letters to represent words

3.Which of the following was most probably the title of the student’s essay?

A. My Gr8 Tchr          B. CU in LA          C. My GF        D. My Smmr Hols

4.  Why do some people think that texting is bad?

    A. It costs too much.                           B. It’s too difficult to type.

    C. Children won’t learn to write correctly.          D. It’s not comfortable.

5.Why aren’t some people worried about the effect of texting?

A. Not many people use texting.

B. Spelling in English is too difficult.

C. Children quickly become bored with texting.

D. Texting will disappear because of new technology.

 

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