题目内容
I saw her in the office this morning. She ________ back to work without the doctor's permission.
- A.couldn't come
- B.couldn't have come
- C.should have come
- D.should not have come
此题考查情态动词的完成式。“should not have come back”表示“本不该回来”(但实际上已经回来了),含有责备的口气,符合题意。
The school was across the street from our home and I would often watch the kids as they played on the playground. She seemed so small as she pushed her way 36 the crowd of boys on the playground. She 37 from them all. I began to notice her at other times, basketball in hand, playing 38 . She would practice dribbling(运球)and shooting over and over again, sometimes until 39 . One day I asked her 40 she practiced so much. She looked 41 in my eyes and without a moment of hesitation she said, “ I want to go to college. The only way I can 42 is to get a scholarship. I am going to play college basketball. I want to be the best. My daddy told me if the dream is 43 enough, the facts don’t count.”
Well, I had to give in to her—she was 44 . One day, I saw her sitting in the grass, head 45 in her arms. I walked toward her and 46 asked what was the matter. “Oh, nothing,” came a soft reply, “ I am just too short.” The coach told her that at her height she would probably 47 get to play for a top ranked team, 48 offered a scholarship. So she 49 stop dreaming about college.
She was 50 and I sensed her disappointment. I asked her if she had talked to her dad about it yet. She told me that her father said those coaches were wrong. They just did not 51 the power of the dream. He told her 52 she really wanted to pay for a good college, if she truly wanted a scholarship, 53 could stop her except one thing---her own attitude. He told her again, “If the dream is big enough, the facts don’t count.”
The next year, as she and her team went to the Northern California Championship game, she was 54 by a college recruiter(招聘人员). She was indeed offered a scholarship. She was going to get the college education that she had 55 and worked for all those years.
A. through | B. across | C. over | D. into |
A. brought out | B. showed out | C. stood out | D. worked out |
A. friendly | B. lonely | C. simply | D. alone |
A. dark | B. dawn | C. midnight | D. daybreak |
A. how | B. when | C. why | D. what |
A. worriedly | B. shyly | C. quietly | D. directly |
A. go | B. get | C. enter | D. attend |
A. small | B. big | C. real | D. false |
A. determined | B. encouraged | C. fascinated | D. struck |
A. covered | B. enclosed | C. dropped | D. buried |
A. quietly | B. excitedly | C. angrily | D. hurriedly |
A. ever | B. even | C. once | D. never |
A. far more | B. much less | C. much fewer | D. many more |
A. should | B. must | C. can | D. may |
A. overjoyed | B. satisfied | C. embarrassed | D. heartbroken |
A. understand | B. experience | C. learn | D. lose |
A. even if | B. as if | C. that if | D. only if |
A. anything | B. nothing | C. something | D. everything |
A. seen | B. refused | C. treated | D. annoyed |
A. dreamed of | B. accepted | C. thought of | D. appreciated |
“Dad! He took a book without paying!” I yelled.
My father looked surprised. Before the boy could say anything, his mother grabbed his arm and shook it. “Is it true? You stole? Tell me!”
Everyone was quiet. The boy began to cry, and he nodded his head. He pulled out the comic book (漫画书) from under his shirt.
“Oh, Mr. Kim. I am sorry! My Ted made a big mistake!” Mrs. Diaz told my father. She tried to take the comic book, but Ted wouldn’t let go.
“It’s OK. He can keep it,” my father said with a smile.
“Oh no,” Mrs. Diaz said. “Let me pay right now ...” She dug in her purse. “How much?”
“Three seventy-five.”
Mrs. Diaz’s eyes widened, and she dug deeper. I saw her mouth make a small line. “Three seventy-five?” she asked.
“It’s OK. You can pay later,” my father said.
“No,” Mrs. Diaz said. She kept looking in her purse. “I have money here.”
I felt bad for yelling, for I realized that Ted had tried to steal the comic book because he didn’t have the money. Maybe the boy could have a job, I thought.
I had an idea.
“What if he worked with me?” I asked. They turned to me.
I said, “He can work with me to pay for the comic book.”
“Good,” my father said smiling at me. Mrs. Diaz nodded. She turned to her son, “You hear? You will work and buy the comic book!”
“Yes, Mama,” Ted said, hanging his head.
As they left, Ted looked back, and though he still seemed sad, he stuck out (伸出) his tongue at me.
Ted has been working here for two weeks. He has paid for the comic book, but my father says he is such a good worker that he can work with me as long as he wants. We are friends now.
【小题1】Where did the story most probably take place?
A.In a classroom. | B.In a supermarket. | C.At a bookstore. | D.At a library. |
A.took the book by mistake | B.wanted to keep the book |
C.didn’t want to go home | D.didn’t think he was wrong |
A.didn’t think her son stole the book | B.had been out of work for a long time |
C.forgot to take money with her that day | D.couldn’t afford to pay for the book |
A.His idea was successful. | B.Ted didn’t like the job. |
C.He liked Ted very much. | D.Ted was a naughty boy. |