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Early in the 18th century, Captain Cook, a famous explorer of Australia, unexpectedly caught sight of an unusual animal during his first visit to Australia. The animal had a large mouse like head and jumped along on its large legs. To his great surprise, the unusual animal carried its young in a special pocket of flesh. Captain Cook pointed to the animal which was eating grass in the distance and asked his native guide what the animal was referred to. The guide seemed not to know that he was pointing at and finally said “Kang-a-roo”, but their requests were met with puzzled looks of the native people. Before long they got to discover that the native guide who made the answer to Cook’s question really meant, “I don’t know what you pointing at. “ Funny enough, the name “ Kang-a-roo”, stuck and it is still in use today.
【小题1】Which of the following sentences best expresses the main idea?
A.captain Cook’s guide made a joke. |
B.Native Australians could not speak English in Cook’s time. |
C.Some words have rather funny origins (起源). |
D.Captain Cook was a lover of wild animals. |
A.Ah, it is a special kind of animal |
B.I wonder what you have said |
C.What do you mean by pointing at that animal? |
D.I have no idea of what you are referring to. |
A.we should learn many different languages |
B.Captain Cook made a mistake in understanding |
C.Captain Cook was a foolish explorer |
D.the importance of a language in common |
—Sorry I’m late.I got stuck in traffic.
—________.You’re here now.Come in and sit down.(2012·山东,22)
A.You are welcome? B.That’s right
C.I have no idea? D.Never mind
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C
Hobbs was an orphan(孤儿). He worked in a factory and every day he got a little money. Hard work made him thin and weak. He wanted to borrow a lot of money to learn to paint pictures, but he did not think he could pay off the debts.
One day a lawyer said to him, “One thousand dollars, and here is the money.” As Hobbs took the package of notes, he was very dumbfounded. He didn’t know where the money came from and how to spend it. He said to himself, “I could go to find a hotel and live like a rich man for a few days; or I give up my work in the factory and do what I’d like to do: painting pictures. I could do that for a few weeks, but what would I do after that? I should have lost my place in the factory and have no money to live on. If it were a little less money, I would buy a new coat, or a radio, or give a dinner to my friends. If it were more, I could give up the work and pay for painting pictures. But it’s too much for one and too little for the other.”
“Here is the reading of your uncle’s will(遗嘱),” said the lawyer, “telling what is to be done with this money after his death. I must ask you to remember one point. Your uncle has said you must bring me a paper showing exactly what you did with his money, as soon as you have spent it.”
“Yes, I see. I’ll do that,” said the young man.
49.Hobbs wanted to borrow money to _______.
A. study abroad B. work abroad C. pay off the debts D. learn to paint pictures
50.What does the underlined word “dumbfounded” (in Paragraph 2) probably mean?
A. surprised. B. frightened. C. satisfied. D. excited.
51.With the money he got, at first Hobbs _______.
A. planned to have a happy life for a few days
B. decided to give up his work in the factory
C. was to give a dinner to his friends
D. had no idea what to do
52.Hobbs was asked to _______.
A. tell the lawyer what he did with the money after spending it
B. tell the lawyer what was to be done with the money
C. buy some pictures
D. read his uncle’s will
A Tchaikovsky concerto(协奏曲)is what made Romel Joseph fall in love with the violin.
He learned how to play in Haiti, where he was born, but a Fulbright scholarship brought him to the United States, and he finally earned a master’s degree, reports CBS News reporter Katie Couric. Music had changed his life. He wanted to do the same for the children of Haiti.
Joseph built a school in Port-au-Prince nearly 20 years ago. He was on the third floor when suddenly “It was like boom boom boom and everything just opened,” Joseph said. “And the next thing I knew I was on the ground.”
Blind since birth, Joseph tried to feel his way out, but was pinned(夹)beneath heavy concrete(混凝土). He remained trapped for 18 hours. He prays that his new wife, seven months pregnant(怀孕的), will be found.
He is now being treated at Miami’s Jackson Memorial Hospital for two injured legs and an arm.
Joseph wonders if he’ll ever play the violin again. He can feel sensation(知觉)in his fingertips. He said, “If you were to give me a violin and if I didn’t have to fold the fingers, I would be able to play.”
Joseph’s daughter Victoria spent three terrifying days unsure of her father’s fate. For her, having him home is the sweetest music.
“Can you imagine your dad not being able to play the violin?” Couric asked.
“No, I can’t,” Victoria Joseph said. “But I will love him all the same if he can’t.”
Romel doesn’t know how many of his 300 students died in the quake. As he waits for news about his wife, Romel Joseph is already planning a return to Haiti to rebuild the school and continue teaching there.
“We can save two children, 20, 200, 300, 500 through education and music, and these children will make a difference,” Romel Joseph said.
【小题1】 Romel began to like music ________.
A.because he was blind since birth |
B.after he had listened to a famous piece of music |
C.when he got a scholarship to study in America |
D.since he was born in Haiti |
A.upset | B.fearful | C.excited | D.optimistic |
A.to see her father recover from the injury quickly |
B.to listen to her father playing the sweetest music |
C.to play the violin as well as her father |
D.to be sure that her father could play the violin |
A.To save his students from the earthquake. |
B.To change the life of children by teaching music. |
C.To find out how seriously his school was damaged. |
D.To look for his wife who is pregnant. |
A.Music education: keep your creativity alive |
B.A great blind musician and his students |
C.Haiti earthquake: a story of a music teacher |
D.How did some Haiti earthquake victims survive |
An allowance(零花钱) is an important tool for teaching kids how to make plans for the use of money, save and make their own decisions. Children remember and learn from mistakes when their own dollars are lost or spent foolishly.
How large an allowance is suitable? Experts say there is not right amount. Actual amounts differ from region to region, and from family to family.
To set an suitable allowance for your child, work up a weekly plan. Allow for entertainment costs such as movies and snacks. Next, include everyday expenses such as lunch money, bus fare, school supplies. "If you make the child responsible for these bills’," says Josephine Swanson, a consumer specialist, " he or she will learn to plan for necessary costs."
Finally, add some extra money to make saving possible. If you can keep your child’s allowance in line with that of his friends. A child whose buying power falls away below his peers’ can feel left out.
It can be tough, but don’t excuse your children when they make a mistake with their allowance. When Brooke Stephens was ten and growing up in Jacksonville, her mother gave her $5 a week, $1.75 of which was for bus fare and lunch." If you lose your money," Brooke’s mother told her, "you walk home."
One week the girl spent all her allowance in a candy store, then she called home for a ride. " Mom made me walk home," recalls Stephens, now a financial planner in Brooklyn. " At first I was angry. But I finally realized that she was trying to teach me an important lesson. "
Experts advise that an allowance should not be tied directly to a child’s daily housework at home. Kids should help around the house not because they get paid for it but because they share responsibilities as members of a family. You might, however, pay a child for doing extra jobs at home, which can develop his or her early habits.
【小题1】Which of the following is the possible title of the passage?
A.How to develop a child’s early habits. |
B.How to work up an amount of pocket money. |
C.How to teach a child about money. |
D.How to teach a child to save money. |
A.spend all the money very soon |
B.fall into the bad habit of wasting money |
C.feel responsible and careful about money |
D.lose the money and can not return home |
A.his parents | B.his friends |
C.his financial experts | D.his teachers |
A.To question the opinion about pocket money. |
B.To compare Stephens with other financial experts. |
C.To explain that parents should be strict when children are developing good habits about money. |
D.To suggest pocket money is useless in developing a child’s sense of responsibility. |
A.children may feel lonely if they have no pocket money |
B.a child’s early good habits can be developed if he or she is paid for all the housework |
C.paying children for their housework is no good |
D.children may learn to put aside some money if they are given a great amount of pocket money |