摘要: She living in the countryside. A. is used to B. used to C. was got used to D. has used to

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       To "sacrifice" means to give up something for the sake of something else.We decided to sacrifice our luxurious city life to move to a seaside village with our children aged 9 and 3.In the city, we had a beautiful home and plenty of money but little real security because crime was on the increase every day.We never knew if we would all make it home safely each night.

       We were very happy in the new town but life was very difficult economically.Our income was very much dependent on tourism and the jobs at other times are few.Although many of the long-standing residents live well, it is a very competitive environment for newcomers.

       Reading the newspapers from big cities assured us that we had made the right choice.There is so much violence and crime there! However, it was not always easy to explain to the children why they could no longer have what they used to have, especially when our "rich" friends came from the city to visit us.Generally, they have so much but think they have so little and are always looking for more.

       One day, one of our rich friends came to visit us.His son preferred riding in the back of our beat-up little pickup (小卡车) to his father' s big modern car.Our little daughter called me and said, “Mom, please help me to explain to James the reason why he is wrong.He said, ' today, if you don't have money you are nothing.' I know that is not true.If you do have money you share it with your friends and if they don't have money, you share it with them.That is what makes us all rich." This made me realize that the sacrifice was well worth it.Our kids understand that they may not have all the spoils of city life but they do have a solid set of values and they know that our most precious gifts are our good friends and a wonderful environment.

1.What was the reason why the family moved away from the city?

       A.They were tired of city life.

       B.The city was not safe enough.

       C.The people in the city were not friendly.

       D.The cost of living in the city was too high.

2.Why was it "a very competitive environment" for them according to the author?

       A.The residents were all very poor.

       B.It was hard to make a living.

       C.Their children couldn't get what they had in the city.

       D.They had few friends in their new environment.

3.What assured the author that they had made the right choice according to the passage?

       A.What she read in the newspaper.

       B.The beautiful scenery of countryside.

       C.The residents' living conditions.

       D.That fact that they had been accustomed to the new place.

4.What did the family gain from their sacrifice?

       A.They had a beautiful house in the seaside village.

       B.They made a lot of money during the tourist seasons.

       C.The parents got very good jobs in the new town.

       D.The children developed good values.

 

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More than three years after moving from Australia to this remote part of England, we are still learning how things are done here.

Not too long after we arrived and unpacked, we were invited for “a drink on Sunday morning” by a retired couple nearby. We got there about noon, to find the living-room crowded — lots of chat and discussions, and in all a very jolly occasion.

Trouble was, there was no food — no self-respecting Australian would regard a tray of crisps as food. In Sydney, when you are invited for a drink any time after midday on a Sunday, you know you will be fed as well as watered and you plan accordingly. Meaning the hardworked little woman makes no plans to cook lunch because you are eating out.

By one-fifteen my stomach was sending up “please explain” to me. Even the crisps had gone. There was nothing we could do except wait, and wonder if the hostess was going to perform some magic and feed us fashionably late. Then, as quickly as if word had spread that there was free beer at the local pub, the room emptied. By one-forty-five there were only a few guests left, so we decided to go home. Tinned soup for lunch that day because the little woman was not really interested in real cooking for us.

A few weeks ago we were invited out for “supper” and the hostess suggested 8:15. Ah, we thought greedily, “this is going to be the real thing.”

We dressed with some care — I putting on a dark suit — and arrived on time. My wife looked pretty good, I thought — a little black dress and so on. But when we walked in I had a terrible feeling we had got the night wrong because the hostess was dressed in a daytime kind of way and the husband was in jeans and an open-neck shirt. But no, we were greeted and shown into the sitting-room.

After a drink I looked around and saw that this was indeed a superior cottage because it had a (more or less) separate dining-room. But there were no signs of a table-setting. Not again! I thought. Were we meant to eat before we came? I decided that in future my wife and I would always carry a chocolate bar. About 9:28 our hostess went out of the room, saying something about food. Ten minutes later she returned and asked us to follow. We were led out to the kitchen. There on the table were country style plates and a huge bowl of soup, rough bread and all the makings of a simple meal. And that is what it was. In other words we had not read the signals right when we were invited for “supper”. If they want you to come to dinner, they say so, and you know that means dark suits and so on. If they mean supper, they say it, and you get fed in the kitchen.

1.When the author and his wife were invited out for “a drink on Sunday morning”, they thought _________.

A. they would be the only people there

B. they would be given lunch as well

C. they would be taken to a restaurant for lunch

D. they would be asked to take some food with them

2.The “party” had been going on for about an hour and three quarters when _________.

A. the hostess decided to feed her guests

B. everyone had tinned soup for lunch

C. most of the guests went to lunch at the pub

D. the author realized he would go home hungry

3.When invited out for “supper” a few weeks later, the writer _________.

A. expected to be served a proper dinner

B. arrived on the wrong evening

C. interpreted the invitation correctly this time

D. realized there was no dining-room in the cottage

4.As the evening wore on, the writer became aware that _________.

A. no one used their dining-rooms in the countryside

B. he should have had a meal before going out

C. “supper” meant a simple, informal meal

D. he should, in future, eat only chocolate in the evening

 

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       More than three years after moving from Australia to this remote part of England, we are still learning how things are done here.

       Not too long after we arrived and unpacked, we were invited for “a drink on Sunday morning” by a retired couple nearby. We got there about noon, to find the living-room crowded — lots of chat and discussions, and in all a very jolly occasion.

       Trouble was, there was no food — no self-respecting Australian would regard a tray of crisps as food. In Sydney, when you are invited for a drink any time after midday on a Sunday, you know you will be fed as well as watered and you plan accordingly. Meaning the hardworked little woman makes no plans to cook lunch because you are eating out.

       By one-fifteen my stomach was sending up “please explain” to me. Even the crisps had gone. There was nothing we could do except wait, and wonder if the hostess was going to perform some magic and feed us fashionably late. Then, as quickly as if word had spread that there was free beer at the local pub, the room emptied. By one-forty-five there were only a few guests left, so we decided to go home. Tinned soup for lunch that day because the little woman was not really interested in real cooking for us.

       A few weeks ago we were invited out for “supper” and the hostess suggested 8:15. Ah, we thought greedily, “this is going to be the real thing.”

       We dressed with some care — I putting on a dark suit — and arrived on time. My wife looked pretty good, I thought — a little black dress and so on. But when we walked in I had a terrible feeling we had got the night wrong because the hostess was dressed in a daytime kind of way and the husband was in jeans and an open-neck shirt. But no, we were greeted and shown into the sitting-room.

       After a drink I looked around and saw that this was indeed a superior cottage because it had a (more or less) separate dining-room. But there were no signs of a table-setting. Not again! I thought. Were we meant to eat before we came? I decided that in future my wife and I would always carry a chocolate bar. About 9:28 our hostess went out of the room, saying something about food. Ten minutes later she returned and asked us to follow. We were led out to the kitchen. There on the table were country style plates and a huge bowl of soup, rough bread and all the makings of a simple meal. And that is what it was. In other words we had not read the signals right when we were invited for “supper”. If they want you to come to dinner, they say so, and you know that means dark suits and so on. If they mean supper, they say it, and you get fed in the kitchen.

1.When the author and his wife were invited out for “a drink on Sunday morning”, they thought _________.

       A. they would be the only people there

B. they would be given lunch as well

C. they would be taken to a restaurant for lunch

D. they would be asked to take some food with them

2.The “party” had been going on for about an hour and three quarters when _________.

       A. the hostess decided to feed her guests

B. everyone had tinned soup for lunch

C. most of the guests went to lunch at the pub

D. the author realized he would go home hungry

3.When invited out for “supper” a few weeks later, the writer _________.

       A. expected to be served a proper dinner

B. arrived on the wrong evening

C. interpreted the invitation correctly this time

D. realized there was no dining-room in the cottage

4.As the evening wore on, the writer became aware that _________.

       A. no one used their dining-rooms in the countryside

B. he should have had a meal before going out

C. “supper” meant a simple, informal meal

D. he should, in future, eat only chocolate in the evening

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Have you ever been to an Irish wedding? I have just returned from one.It is a quarter to five in the morning:the sun has already climbed about the horizon;the birds are busy celebrating the new day and have eagerly been in search of food.But some of the guests have not yet left.They are still prolonging the night:dancing,singing,gossiping,putting off the unfortunate necessity of undertaking a day’s work in the fields after a sleepless night.

Throughout most of her life,Bridget Mary,the bride,has been living in the small whitewashed thatched(茅草屋顶)cottage I have just left.Twelve children have been brought up there but only two are still living at home.The eldest son,heir(继承人)to the small farm, is helping his father with the farm work(they employ no farm laborers):the youngest daughter is still at school.Two years ago,Bridget Mary went to England to take up domestic work in a hospital and it was while she was living there that she met her future husband,Terry.He himself is an Irishman who used to live in Dublin and now has a well-paid job in a light engineering works in England.They got engaged and started saving.Now they are thinking of buying a small house near Terry’s factor.

The wedding ceremony was performed in the church in the nearest town at half past eight yesterday morning.Another couple were being married at the same time.Nobody worried about the cost of the celebrations:four luxurious cars brought bride,bridegroom,family and friends home,and forty people were crowded into the tiled kitchen and the tiny living—room,hung with framed school certificates and religious pictures.A big meal was given;the wedding cake was cut and toasts were drunk in whisky or sherry(葡萄酒)。And while the remains of the feast were being cleared away and the rooms swept,the four cars set out again,taking the married couple and relations for a drive round the country—side.

1.What makes it clear that this is a country wedding?

       A.People get up so early.                       B.Birds are busy searching for food.

       C.The bride is one of a large family.       D.The people’s occupations.

2.From the passage, we know that         

       A.nobody worried about the cost of the wedding because the two couples who got married at the same time would share the cost

       B.the family is too poor to employ any farm workers

       C.the author thought much of the country wedding

       D.the author left the moment the wedding ceremony was completed

3.The young couple will not live on the farm after their marriage because          

       A.Terry gets used to living in Dublin

       B.they are both employed elsewhere

       C.it’s the bride’s brother who will inherit(继承)the farm

       D.they have a house in England

4.Why were the guests taken for a ride round the countryside?

       A.To give them an opportunity of seeing the surroundings.

       B.To enable the neighbors to see the married people.

       C.To get them out of the way.

       D.As a way of passing the time.

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More than three years after moving from Australia to this remote part of England, we are still learning how things are done here.

  Not too long after we arrived and unpacked, we were invited for “a drink on Sunday morning” by a retired couple nearby. We got there about noon, to find the living-room crowded — lots of chat and discussions, and in all a very jolly occasion.

  Trouble was, there was no food — no self-respecting Australian would regard a tray of crisps as food. In Sydney, when you are invited for a drink any time after midday on a Sunday, you know you will be fed as well as watered and you plan accordingly. Meaning the hardworked little woman makes no plans to cook lunch because you are eating out.

  By one-fifteen my stomach was sending up “please explain” to me. Even the crisps had gone. There was nothing we could do except wait, and wonder if the hostess was going to perform some magic and feed us fashionably late. Then, as quickly as if word had spread that there was free beer at the local pub, the room emptied. By one-forty-five there were only a few guests left, so we decided to go home. Tinned soup for lunch that day because the little woman was not really interested in real cooking for us.

  A few weeks ago we were invited out for “supper” and the hostess suggested 8:15. Ah, we thought greedily, “this is going to be the real thing.”

  We dressed with some care — I putting on a dark suit — and arrived on time. My wife looked pretty good, I thought, a little black dress and so on. But when we walked in I had a terrible feeling we had got the night wrong because the hostess was dressed in a daytime kind of way and the husband was in jeans and an open-neck shirt. But no, we were greeted and shown into the sitting-room.

  After a drink I looked around and saw that this was indeed a superior cottage because it had a (more or less) separate dining-room. But there were no signs of a table-setting. Not again! I thought. Were we meant to eat before we came? I decided that in future my wife and I would always carry a chocolate bar. About 9:28 our hostess went out of the room, saying something about food. Ten minutes later she returned and asked us to follow. We were led out to the kitchen. There on the table were country style plates and a huge bowl of soup, rough bread and all the makings of a simple meal. And that is what it was. In other words we had not read the signals right when we were invited for “supper”. If they want you to come to dinner, they say so, and you know that means dark suits and so on. If they mean supper, they say it, and you get fed in the kitchen.

When the author and his wife were invited out for “a drink on Sunday morning”, they thought _______.

       A. they would be the only people there

       B. they would be given lunch as well

       C. they would be taken to a restaurant for lunch

       D. they would be asked to take some food with them

The “party” had been going on for about an hour and three quarters when _________.

       A. the hostess decided to feed her guests      B. everyone had tinned soup for lunch

       C. most of the guests went to lunch at the pub     D. the author realized he would go home hungry

When invited out for “supper” a few weeks later, the writer _________.

       A. expected to be served a proper dinner

       B. arrived on the wrong evening

       C. interpreted the invitation correctly this time

       D. realized there was no dining-room in the cottage

As the evening went on, the writer became aware that _________.

       A. no one used their dining-rooms in the countryside

       B. he should have had a meal before going out

       C. “supper” meant a simple, informal meal

     D. he should, in future, eat only chocolate in the evening

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