题目内容
The women carrying babies , come in first , ?
A.will you B.will they C.do you D.don’t you
A
【解析】
试题分析:根据逗号及语境可知, The women carrying babies 为称呼语,而come in first为一祈使句,根据祈使句的反意疑问句形式是:will you?句意:包小孩的妇女,先将来,好吗?可知答案应为A。
考点:考查祈使句的反意疑问句
点评:基本原则,若陈述部分为祈使句,反意疑问句通常用will you, won’t you, would you等:Mail the letter today, will you? 今天就把信发掉,好吗? 注意,若陈述部分为否定式,则反意疑问句部分只用will you:Don’t forget to post the letter, will you? 一般说来,用will you, won’t you, would you 等构成的反意疑问句语气较委婉。
I will never forget the year I was about twelve years old. My mother told us that we would not be _36_ Christmas gifts because there was not enough money. I felt sad and thought, “What would I say when the other kids asked what I’d 37 ?” Just when I started to 38 that there would not be a Christmas that year, three women 39 at our house with gifts for all of us. For me they brought a doll. I felt such a sense of 40 that I would no longer have to be embarrassed when I returned to school. I wasn’t 41 . Somebody had thought 42 of me to bring me a gift.
Years later, when I stood in the kitchen of my new house, thinking how I wanted to make my 43 Christmas there special and memorable, I 44 remembered the women’s visit. I decided that I wanted to create that same feeling of 45 for as many children as I could possibly reach.
So I 46 a plan and gathered forty people from my company to help. We gathered about 125 orphans (孤儿) at the Christmas party. For every child, we wrapped colorful packages filled with toys, clothes, and school supplies, 47 with a child’s name. We wanted all of them to know they were 48 . Before I called out their names and handed them their gifts, I 49 them that they couldn’t open their presents 50 every child had come forward. Finally the 51 they had been waiting for came as I called out, “One, two, three. Open your presents!” As the children opened their packages, their faces beamed and their bright smiles 52 up the room. The 53 in the room was obvious, and 54 wasn’t just about toys. It was a feeling –the feeling I knew 55 that Christmas so long ago when the women came to visit. I wasn’t forgotten. Somebody thought of me. I matter.
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