摘要: The man said that the car day after day by him for ten years by the end of next year. A. would be driven B. would be driving C. would have been driven D. would have been driving

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At Blossom End Railroad Station, 22-year-old Stanley Vine sat, waiting for his new employer. The surrounding green fields were so unlike the muddy landscape of war-torn France. After four horrible years as an army private fighting in Europe, Stanley had returned to England in February 1946. Armed now with some savings and with no prospects for a job in England, he answered a newspaper ad for farm help in Canada. Two months later he was on his way.

When the old car rumbled toward the tiny station, Stanley rose to his feet, trying to make the most of his five foot, four inch frame. The farmer, Alphonse Lapine, shook his head and complained, “You’re a skinny thing.” On the way to his dairy farm, Alphonse explained that he had a wife and seven kids. “Money’s tight. You’ll get room and board. You’ll get up at dawn for milking, and then help me around the farm until evening milking time again. Ten dollars a week. Sundays off.” Stanley nodded. He had never been on a farm before, but he took the job.

From the beginning Stanley was treated horribly by the whole family. They made fun of the way he dressed and talked. He could do nothing right. The humourless farmer frequently lost his temper, criticizing Stanley for the slightest mistake. The oldest son, 13-year-old Armand, constantly played nasty tricks on him. But the kind-hearted Stanley never responded.

Stanley never became part of the Lapine family. After work, they ignored him. He spent his nights alone in a tiny bedroom. However, each evening before retiring, he lovingly cared for the farmer’s horses, eagerly awaiting him at the field gate. He called them his gentle giants. On Saturday nights he hitch-hiked into the nearest town and wandered the streets or enjoyed a restaurant meal before returning to the farm.

Early one November morning Alphonse Lapine discovered that Stanley had disappeared, after only six months as his farmhand. The railway station master, when questioned later that week, said he had not seen him. In fact no one in the community ever heard of him again. That is, until one evening, almost 20 years later, when Armand, opened an American sports magazine and came across a shocking headline, “Millionaire jockey, Stanley Vine, ex-British soldier and 5-time horse riding champion, began life in North America as a farmhand in Canada.”

41. Stanley Vine decided to go to Canada because ________.

A. he wanted to escape from war-torn France

B. he wanted to serve in the Canadian army

C. he couldn’t find a job in England

D. he loved working as a farmhand

42. Which of the following is True according to the passage?

A. Stanley joined the French army when he was 18 years old.

B. On the farm Stanley had to milk the cows 14 times a week.

C. The Lapine family were rich but cruel to Stanley.

D. Stanley read about the job offer in a newspaper.

43. What can we infer from the passage?

A. When Stanley first met his employer, he tried to impress him but failed.

B. Stanley had never worked on a farm, so he made a lot of mistakes.

C. Stanley’s weekly salary was not enough for him to live on.

D. Stanley left the farm by train, without telling anyone why he did so.

44. What did Stanley like doing after work each day?

A. Hitch-hiking to different towns.

B. Caring for the farmer’s horses.

C. Wandering around the farm alone.

D. Preparing meals on the farm.

45. Why was Armand so astonished when he read about Stanley in the magazine?

A. He didn’t know Stanley had been a British soldier.

B. He had no idea Stanley had always been a wealthy man.

C. He didn’t know his father paid Stanley so little money.

D. He didn’t expect Stanley to become such a success.

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完形填空

  Life is not always smooth.There was a man who had   1   numerous failures in his life.But he said, “One success is   2   for me!”

  When he was five years old, his father died of illness without leaving him any   3  .Since then, his mother worked outside   4   he had to stay at home and take care of his siblings.He learnt cooking since then.

  When he was fourteen, he dropped   5   and began his life of loving.

When he was eighteen, he married a girl, who,   6  , sold out all his properties and went back to her home several months after their marriage.

  When he was twenty, he   7   his job from electrician to ferry staff to railway worker.All his jobs were   8   for him.

  When he was thirty-five, misfortune again   9   on him.When he was driving across a huge bridge, the steel ropes along the edge of the bridge were broken and he fell into the river with his car.He suffered such severe injuries that he could no longer continue his   10  .

  When he was   11  , he opened a gas station in a town.However, he   12   dispute(争端)because he beat his competitors   13   the billboard hanging problems.

  When he was forty-seven, he   14   his second wife, which had   15   stricken his three children.

  When he was sixty-six, he made a living by   16   his chicken-frying techniques to various restaurants in different places.

  When he was seventy-five, he felt   17   to maintain his company, so he transferred his brand and patent to others.The new owner suggested giving him ten thousand stock shares as part of the purchasing price.But he   18   the suggestion.Later the price of the stocks of the company soared and he lost the chance of being a billionaire.

  When he was eighty-eight, he achieved great success and became well-known to the whole world.

  He was exactly the founder of Kentucky Fried Chicken, Ha Lunda Sandoz.He often said, “People always complain about the bad   19  .Actually it is not bad at all.As long as you are   2   and confident all the time, you will have a good weather every day.”

(1)

[  ]

A.

achieved

B.

undergone

C.

tried

D.

undertook

(2)

[  ]

A.

great

B.

important

C.

valuable

D.

enough

(3)

[  ]

A.

words

B.

money

C.

property

D.

families

(4)

[  ]

A.

while

B.

but

C.

when

D.

so

(5)

[  ]

A.

in

B.

out

C.

down

D.

up

(6)

[  ]

A.

meanwhile

B.

moreover

C.

however

D.

therefore

(7)

[  ]

A.

started

B.

took

C.

lost

D.

changed

(8)

[  ]

A.

fit

B.

tough

C.

unusual

D.

adequate

(9)

[  ]

A.

fell

B.

hit

C.

put

D.

rested

(10)

[  ]

A.

life

B.

major

C.

job

D.

education

(11)

[  ]

A.

forty

B.

thirty-five

C.

fifty-three

D.

seventy

(12)

[  ]

A.

went through

B.

came into

C.

came about

D.

went against

(13)

[  ]

A.

contributing to

B.

judging from

C.

owing to

D.

leading to

(14)

[  ]

A.

changed

B.

married

C.

missed

D.

divorced

(15)

[  ]

A.

deeply

B.

highly

C.

generally

D.

thickly

(16)

[  ]

A.

learning

B.

promoting

C.

developing

D.

teaching

(17)

[  ]

A.

powerless

B.

depressed

C.

disappointed

D.

hopeless

(18)

[  ]

A.

turned up

B.

turned to

C.

turned down

D.

turned in

(19)

[  ]

A.

difficulties

B.

misfortune

C.

life

D.

weather

(20)

[  ]

A.

hard-working

B.

brave

C.

cautious

D.

optimistic

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Pete Richards was the loneliest man in town on the day that little Jean Grace opened the door of his shop.

         Pete's grandfather had owned the shop until his death. Then the shop became Pete's. The front window was full of beautiful old things: jewelry of a hundred years ago, gold and silver boxes, carved figures from China and Japan and other nations.

         On this winter afternoon, a child stood there, her face close to the window. With large and serious eyes, she studied each piece in the window. Then, looking pleased, she stepped back from the window and went into the shop. Pete himself stood behind the counter. His eyes were cold as he looked at the small girl. “Please,” she began, “would you let me look at the pretty string of blue beads in the window?” Pete took the string of blue beads from the window. The beads were beautiful against his hand as he held the necklace up for her to see.

         “They are just right,” said the child as though she were alone with the beads. “Will you wrap them up in pretty paper for me, please? I've been looking for a really wonderful Christmas present for my sister.”

         “How much money do you have?” asked Pete.

         She put a handful of pennies on the counter. “This is all I have,” she explained simply. “I've been saving the money for my sister's present.”

         Pete looked at her, his eyes thoughtful. Then he carefully closed his hand over the price mark on the necklace so that she could not see it. How could he tell her the price? The happy look in her big blue eyes struck him like the pain of an old wound.

         “Just a minute,” he said and went to the back of the shop. “What's your name?” he called out. He was very busy about something.

         “Jean Grace,” answered the child.

         When Pete returned to the front of the shop, he held a package in his hand. It was wrapped in pretty Christmas paper.

         “There you are,” he said. “Don't lose it on the way home.”

         She smiled happily at him as she ran out of the door. Through the window he watched her go. He felt more alone than ever.

         Something about Jean Grace and her string of beads had made him feel once more the pain of his old grief. The child's hair was as yellow as the sunlight; her eyes were as blue as the sea. Once upon a time, Pete had loved a girl with hair of that same yellow and with eyes just as blue. And the necklace of blue stones had been meant for her.

         But one rainy night, a car had gone off the road and struck the girl. After she died, Pete felt that he had nothing left in the world except his grief. The blue eyes of Jean Grace brought him out of that world of self-pity and made him remember again all that he had lost. The pain of remembering was so great that Pete wanted to run away from the happy Christmas shoppers who came to look at his beautiful old things during the next ten days.

         When the last shopper had gone, late on Christmas Eve, the door opened and a young woman came in. Pete could not understand it, but he felt that he had seen her before. Her hair was sunlight yellow and her eyes were sea-blue. Without speaking, she put on the counter a package wrapped in pretty Christmas paper. When Pete opened the package, the string of blue beads lay again before him.

         “Did this come from your shop?” she asked.

         Pete looked at her with eyes no longer cold. “Yes, it did,” he said.

         “Are the stones real?”

         “Yes. They aren't the best turquoise(绿松石), but they are real.”

         “Can you remember to whom you sold them?”

         “She was a small girl. Her name was Jean. She wanted them for her sister's Christmas present.”

         “How much were they?”

         “I can't tell you that,” he said. “The seller never tells anyone else what a buyer pays.”

         “But Jean has never had more than a few pennies. How could she pay for them?”

         “She paid the biggest price one can ever pay,” he said.

         For a moment there was no sound in the little shop. Then somewhere in the city, church bells began to ring. It was midnight and the beginning of another Christmas Day.

         “But why did you do it?” the girl asked.

         Pete put the package into her hands.

         “There is no one else to whom I can give a Christmas present,” he said. “It is already Christmas morning. Will you let me take you to your home? I would like to wish you a Merry Christmas at your door.”

         And so, to the sound of many bells, Pete Richards and a girl whose name he had not yet learned walked out into the hope and happiness of a new Christmas Day.

1.When Pete saw Jean Grace, he was ______.

A. very enthusiastic, hoping for some business to be done

B. cold but he still served the young customer

C. cold, unwilling to serve the young customer

D. very warm to the young customer though he did not want to sell anything to her

2.Pete did not say the price of the necklace because ______.

A. the seller never tells anyone else what a buyer pays

B. he priced the necklace too high

C. he knew it would disappoint the girl

D. he didn't want to sell the necklace

3.The eyes of Jean Grace brought Pete out of his world of self-pity and he ______.

A. tried to forget the memory of his sweetheart

B. began to look at the world optimistically

C. remembered his lost love

D. no longer felt the pain in him

4.A young woman came into the shop because ______.

A. she was afraid that there might be some mistake

B. she thought that the stones she had bought were not real

C. she was not sure if she could get more stones like those

D. she did not like what she had once bought

5.By saying “She paid the biggest price one can ever pay,” Pete meant that Jean Grace     .

A. gave the most money for the necklace

B. gave all she had with her for the necklace

C. appreciated the value of the necklace

D. wanted to have the best thing in the shop

6. At the end of the story we see that Pete _____.

A. found another girl that he could trust

B. met someone who truly loved him

C. found a place to go at last

D. regained his ability to love

 

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