题目内容
Smiles
It amazed me ------every time I saw Joe he was smiling.It didn’t matter whether he had to 1 at a stop light, or if he were the seventh person in 2 at the bank , and the teller closed her window just 3 he got there.Joe always smiled.It made me wonder why he always seemed so 4
Having observed Joe with other people, I also noticed something else.Joe 5 people how they were doing, and really seemed to listen to their answers.He was 6 if someone was hurt , and had kind words, and 7 to help in any way he could.
It made me think ……what if I tried to smile more? An 8 of sorts began when I went to a grocery store.I 9 as I went up and down the aisles( 过道 )…… and people I didn’t even 10 smiled back at me.Some even 11 ! The little kid in the cart who was giving his mother a 12 time saw me smile and stopped talking…and, you guessed it --- he made a little 13 attempt at a smile.The man in the handicapped cart 14 a person to reach something…… I could get that for him.The smile even 15 to him, and he thanked me and smiled at me .
As I 16 home, I was smiling.I thought about what I had just 17 , and when someone passed my car and gave me a gesture, I smiles at him.He looked 18 .
Now I know a smile is a 19 thing , but what if we were all to try to smile a few more times each day? I couldn’t believe how great I felt. 20 in my life had changed ---but maybe it had.For what I learned was that such a small thing could lift not only my spirits, but those around me as well.
1.A.wait B.suffer C.look D.slide
2.A.advance B.addition C.total D.line
3.A.though B.before C.while D.because
4.A.patient B.active C.happy D.wise
5.A.asked B.observed C.recorded D.analyzed
6.A.angry B.nervous C.fearful D.sympathetic
7.A.agreed B.offered C.refused D.used
8.A.example B.experiment C.instance D.arrangement
9.A.sang B.nodded C.smiled D.talked
10.A.welcome B.greet C.recognize D.know
11.A.spoke B.laughed C.whispered D.shouted
12.A.pleasant B.hard C.smooth D.good
13.A.weak B.polite C.shy D.sincere
14.A.required B.demanded C.ordered D.needed
15.A.spread B.approached C.advanced D.reached
16.A.walked B.drove C.ran D.moved
17.A.learned B.paid C.wasted D.sacrificed
18.A.scared B.disappointed C.puzzled D.annoyed
19.A.funny B.worthy C.valuable D.small
20.A.Nothing B.Everything C.Something D.Anything
1-5 ADBCA 6-10 DBBCD 11-15 ABCDA 16-20 BACDA
Nearly two decades has passed, I still remember my favourite professor, James Sehwartz. Whenever he smiles, it’s as if you’d just been told the funniest joke on earth. Almost all his students are his friends, and almost all his students know his life story.
When James was a teenager, his father 36 him to a fur factory where he worked . This was during the Great Depression. The 37 was to get James a job.
James entered the factory, and immediately felt as if the 38 had closed in around him. The room was dark and hot, the windows covered with dust, and the 39 were packed tightly together, running like trains. The fur hairs were flying, 40 a thickened air, and the workers, 41 the pieces of fur together, were bent over their needles 42 the boss marched up and down the rows, searching for them to go faster .James could hardly 43 . He stood next to his father, frozen with fear, hoping the boss wouldn’t 44 at him, too.
During lunch break, his father took James to the boss and pushed him in front of him, 45 if there was any work for his son. But 46 there was hardly enough 47 for the adult labours, for no one would give it up once he took a job.
Thus, for James, it was a 48 . He hated the place. He made a 49 that he kept to the end of his life: he would never do any work that brought 50 to someone else, and he would never allow himself to 51 money off the seat of others.
“What will you do?” his mother, Eva, would ask him.
“I don’t know,” he 52 say. He ruled out law, because he didn’t like 53 , and he ruled out medicine, because he couldn’t take the 54 of blood.
“What will you do?”
55 , my best professor I ever had became—he thought it was the job not to hurt anybody.
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Nearly two decades has passed, I still remember my favourite professor, James Sehwartz. Whenever he smiles, it’s as if you’d just been told the funniest joke on earth. Almost all his students are his friends, and almost all his students know his life story.
When James was a teenager, his father 36 him to a fur factory where he worked . This was during the Great Depression. The 37 was to get James a job.
James entered the factory, and immediately felt as if the 38 had closed in around him. The room was dark and hot, the windows covered with dust, and the 39 were packed tightly together, running like trains. The fur hairs were flying, 40 a thickened air, and the workers, 41 the pieces of fur together, were bent over their needles 42 the boss marched up and down the rows, searching for them to go faster .James could hardly 43 . He stood next to his father, frozen with fear, hoping the boss wouldn’t 44 at him, too.
During lunch break, his father took James to the boss and pushed him in front of him, 45 if there was any work for his son. But 46 there was hardly enough 47 for the adult labours, for no one would give it up once he took a job.
Thus, for James, it was a 48 . He hated the place. He made a 49 that he kept to the end of his life: he would never do any work that brought 50 to someone else, and he would never allow himself to 51 money off the seat of others.
“What will you do?” his mother, Eva, would ask him.
“I don’t know,” he 52 say. He ruled out law, because he didn’t like 53 , and he ruled out medicine, because he couldn’t take the 54 of blood.
“What will you do?”
55 , my best professor I ever had became—he thought it was the job not to hurt anybody.
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