摘要:Hardly the bus stop the bus arrived. A. we had got to, when B. we had got to, then C. had we got to, than D. had we got to, when

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The sun was shining when I got on No. 151 bus. We passengers sat jammed in heavy clothes. No one  36  . That’s one of the unwritten rules  37  we see the same faces every day, we prefer to  38  behind our newspapers. People who sit so close together are using them to keep  39  distance.

   As the bus came near the Mile, a  40  suddenly rang out, “Attention! This is your  41  speaking.” We looked at the back of the driver’s head. “Put your  42  down, all of you.” The papers came down. “Now, turn and  43  the person next to you.”

   Surprisingly we all did it. Still no one smiled. I faced an old woman. I saw her  44  every day. We waited for the next  45  from the driver. “Now repeat after me. Good morning, neighbor!”

   But our voices were a little  46  . For many of us, this was the  47  word we had spoken that day. When we said them together, like  48  to people beside us, we couldn’t help  49  . There was the feeling of relief. Moreover, there was the sense of ice being  50  . To say the three words was not so  51  after all.

   The bus driver said nothing more. He didn’t  52  to. Not a single newspaper went back up. I heard laughter, a  53  sound I had never heard before in this bus.

   When I  54  my stop, I said goodbye to my seatmate, and then  55  the bus. That day I was starting happily.

A. spoke         B. said          C. stood        D. told 

A. as            B. because       C. when        D. although

A. read          B. sit            C. talk         D. hide 

A. ours          B. your          C. their         D. its

A. call           B. noise         C. sound        D. voice

A. conductor      B. driver        C. neighbor      D. seatmate

A. papers        B. bags          C. books        D. clothes

A. see          B. meet           C. face         D. greet

A. still          B. nearly         C. even         D. hardly

A. turn         B. talk           C. order         D. remark

A. loud         B. neat          C. slow          D. weak

A. first         B. last           C. best          D. only

A. passengers    B. citizens        C. patients     D. school children

A. shouting      B. crying         C. smiling       D. wondering

A. formed       B. heated         C. broken        D. frozen

A. sad          B. hard           C. ordinary       D. shy

A. need         B. want           C. like          D. begin

A. different      B. warm          C. loud          D. happy

A. arrived       B. reached        C. left           D. found 

A. jumped off    B. left for         C. got on        D. waited for

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完形填空(共20小题,20分)

The sun was shining when I got on No. 151 bus. We passengers sat jammed in heavy clothes. No one  36  . That’s one of the unwritten rules  37  we see the same faces every day, we prefer to  38  behind our newspapers. People who sit so close together are using them to keep  39  distance.

   As the bus came near the Mile, a  40  suddenly rang out, “Attention! This is your  41  speaking.” We looked at the back of the driver’s head. “Put your  42  down, all of you.” The papers came down. “Now, turn and  43  the person next to you.”

   Surprisingly we all did it. Still no one smiled. I faced an old woman. I saw her  44  every day. We waited for the next  45  from the driver. “Now repeat after me. Good morning, neighbor!”

   But our voices were a little  46  . For many of us, this was the  47  word we had spoken that day. When we said them together, like  48  to people beside us, we couldn’t help  49  . There was the feeling of relief. Moreover, there was the sense of ice being  50  . To say the three words was not so  51  after all.

   The bus driver said nothing more. He didn’t  52  to. Not a single newspaper went back up. I heard laughter, a  53  sound I had never heard before in this bus.

   When I  54  my stop, I said goodbye to my seatmate, and then  55  the bus. That day I was starting happily.

36. A. spoke         B. said          C. stood        D. told 

37. A. as            B. because       C. when        D. although

38. A. read          B. sit            C. talk         D. hide 

39. A. ours          B. your          C. their         D. its

40. A. call           B. noise         C. sound        D. voice

41. A. conductor      B. driver        C. neighbor      D. seatmate

42. A. papers        B. bags          C. books        D. clothes

43. A. see          B. meet           C. face         D. greet

44. A. still          B. nearly         C. even         D. hardly

45. A. turn         B. talk           C. order         D. remark

46. A. loud         B. neat          C. slow          D. weak

47. A. first         B. last           C. best          D. only

48. A. passengers    B. citizens        C. patients     D. school children

49. A. shouting      B. crying         C. smiling       D. wondering

50. A. formed       B. heated         C. broken        D. frozen

51. A. sad          B. hard           C. ordinary       D. shy

52. A. need         B. want           C. like          D. begin

53. A. different      B. warm          C. loud          D. happy

54. A. arrived       B. reached        C. left           D. found 

55. A. jumped off    B. left for         C. got on        D. waited for

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第二节 完形填空(共20小题,20分)

The sun was shining when I got on No. 151 bus. We passengers sat jammed in heavy clothes. No one  36  . That’s one of the unwritten rules  37  we see the same faces every day, we prefer to  38  behind our newspapers. People who sit so close together are using them to keep  39  distance.

   As the bus came near the Mile, a  40  suddenly rang out, “Attention! This is your  41  speaking.” We looked at the back of the driver’s head. “Put your  42  down, all of you.” The papers came down. “Now, turn and  43  the person next to you.”

   Surprisingly we all did it. Still no one smiled. I faced an old woman. I saw her  44  every day. We waited for the next  45  from the driver. “Now repeat after me. Good morning, neighbor!”

   But our voices were a little  46  . For many of us, this was the  47  word we had spoken that day. When we said them together, like  48  to people beside us, we couldn’t help  49  . There was the feeling of relief. Moreover, there was the sense of ice being  50  . To say the three words was not so  51  after all.

   The bus driver said nothing more. He didn’t  52  to. Not a single newspaper went back up. I heard laughter, a  53  sound I had never heard before in this bus.

   When I  54  my stop, I said goodbye to my seatmate, and then  55  the bus. That day I was starting happily.

36. A. spoke         B. said          C. stood        D. told 

37. A. as            B. because       C. when        D. although

38. A. read          B. sit            C. talk         D. hide 

39. A. ours          B. your          C. their         D. its

40. A. call           B. noise         C. sound        D. voice

41. A. conductor      B. driver        C. neighbor      D. seatmate

42. A. papers        B. bags          C. books        D. clothes

43. A. see          B. meet           C. face         D. greet

44. A. still          B. nearly         C. even         D. hardly

45. A. turn         B. talk           C. order         D. remark

46. A. loud         B. neat          C. slow          D. weak

47. A. first         B. last           C. best          D. only

48. A. passengers    B. citizens        C. patients     D. school children  

49. A. shouting      B. crying         C. smiling       D. wondering

50. A. formed       B. heated         C. broken        D. frozen

51. A. sad          B. hard           C. ordinary       D. shy

52. A. need         B. want           C. like          D. begin

53. A. different      B. warm          C. loud          D. happy

54. A. arrived       B. reached        C. left           D. found 

55. A. jumped off    B. left for         C. got on        D. waited for

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I finished my last evening shift of the week and could hardly wait to get home. I took off my nursing shoes, relaxed and then said goodnight to the rest of the girls and headed out of the door.

It was so cold and I could see the ice crystals in the air. As I approached my car, I saw one of my coworkers standing by the bus stop. I thought it would only take a couple of extra minutes to give her a ride home, and besides, it was too cold to be standing outside on the coldest night in January.

We chatted as I drove and before we knew it, we arrived at her house. As she headed up the steps to her door she turned around. “Do you know how to get to your house from here?” “How hard can it be? I’ll just backtrack the way I came.”

I started driving. Nothing looked familiar, but at first that didn’t bother me since I’d never been to this neighborhood before. I kept driving, and soon I sensed that something was wrong. I recognized nothing, not the neighborhoods, not even the street names. My husband would be worried about me. I looked down at my watch. It was now 2:30. I’d left work at 11:30 pm.

I stopped my car. I thought I’d better take stock of my situation. My gas gauge (汽油量表) was slowly going down. In total defeat I put my head down on the steering wheel and asked for help. I lifted my head. I saw a shadow down the road in front of me. It was a car. What was a car doing in the middle of nowhere at 2:30 in the morning?

Hesitantly, I got out of my car and knocked on the window of the other car. An elderly man slowly rolled his window down.

I said, “I’m lost and don’t know how to get back into town.”

In silence, he started driving. I drove behind him.

Finally I recognized a familiar street. As I turned to head home, I lost sight of my guiding angel. When I pulled into my driveway the warning light for my gas tank turned on.

66. The first paragraph tells us that the writer _______.

A. lived near her workplace                  

B. used to go home by bus

C. worked in a woman’s hospital          

D. had been working at night for a week

67. Why did the writer stop her car?          

A. To consider and judge the situation.                 B. To check whether there was gas.

C. To prevent the car breaking down.                  D. To turn to somebody for help.

68. How did the old man help the writer?

A. He told her the way to the town.                      B. He led her by driving in front.

C. He called the police to help her.                       D. He sent her to her home with his car.

69. When the writer got home, _______.

A. she thanked the old man very much

B. her husband was waiting for her anxiously

C. the oil in her car was just going to run out

D. she was totally frozen on the cold night

70. What might be the suitable title for the passage?

A. Keep up and you will succeed at last.

B. Meeting a friendly old man in trouble.

C. Giving a ride to my coworker at night.

D. Losing my way on a cold winter night.

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阅读理解。
     I finished my last evening shift of the week and could hardly wait to get home. I took off my nursing
shoes, relaxed and then said goodnight to the rest of the girls and headed out of the door.
     It was so cold and I could see the ice crystals in the air. As I approached my car, I saw one of my
coworkers standing by the bus stop. I thought it would only take a couple of extra minutes to give her a
ride home, and besides, it was too cold to be standing outside on the coldest night in January.
     We chatted as I drove and before we knew it, we arrived at her house. As she headed up the steps
to her door she turned around. "Do you know how to get to your house from here?" "How hard can it
be? I'll just backtrack the way I came."
     I started driving. Nothing looked familiar, but at first that didn't bother me since I'd never been to this
neighborhood before. I kept driving, and soon I sensed that something was wrong. I recognized nothing,
not the neighborhoods, not even the street names. My husband would be worried about me. I looked
down at my watch. It was now 2:30. I'd left work at 11:30 pm.
     I stopped my car. I thought I'd better take stock of my situation. My gas gauge (汽油量表) was
slowly going down. In total defeat I put my head down on the steering wheel and asked for help. I lifted
my head. I saw a shadow down the road in front of me. It was a car. What was a car doing in the middle
of nowhere at 2:30 in the morning?
     Hesitantly, I got out of my car and knocked on the window of the other car. An elderly man slowly
rolled his window down.
      I said, "I'm lost and don't know how to get back into town."
     In silence, he started driving. I drove behind him.
     Finally I recognized a familiar street. As I turned to head home, I lost sight of my guiding angel. When
I pulled into my driveway the warning light for my gas tank turned on.
1. The first paragraph tells us that the writer _______.
A. lived near her workplace
B. used to go home by bus
C. worked in a woman's hospital
D. had been working at night for a week
2. Why did the writer stop her car?
A. To consider and judge the situation.
B. To check whether there was gas.
C. To prevent the car breaking down.
D. To turn to somebody for help.
3. How did the old man help the writer?
A. He told her the way to the town.
B. He led her by driving in front.
C. He called the police to help her.
D. He sent her to her home with his car.
4. When the writer got home, _______.
A. she thanked the old man very much
B. her husband was waiting for her anxiously
C. the oil in her car was just going to run out
D. she was totally frozen on the cold night
5. What might be the suitable title for the passage?
A. Keep up and you will succeed at last.
B. Meeting a friendly old man in trouble.
C. Giving a ride to my coworker at night.
D. Losing my way on a cold winter night.
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