题目内容

12、Since you are busy.I won’t ______too much of your time.

A.make up              B.pick up                C.put up               D.take up

试题答案

12、D

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  “Mom, I have cancer.”These four words catapulted my son and me on a journey that lasted two years.On that dat I felt a wave of paralyzing fear.

  Scott was the oldest of my four children.He was 33 years old and a successful assistant principal at SamRayburn Hifht School in Pasadena, Texas.He and his wife Carolyn were busy raising four active children.Scott was 6'2'', weighed 200 pounds and had never been sick a day in his life.

  A few month earlier a mole(痣)on his neck had changed color.“Dr.Warner called,” Scott said that spring morning.“It's melanoma.(黑素瘤)” I tried to comfort him, naming all the people I knew who had survived skin cancer.Yet, I felt small tentacles of fear begin to wrap around my chest.

  Our next stop was MDAnderson, the famous cancer hospital in Houston.Scott had surgery at the end of May and was scheduled for radiation treatments over the summmer recess.“There is an 80 percent chance it won't reoccur,” the doctors said.At the end of summer, all his tests came back negative and Scott was back at school in the fall.However, in December, Scott discovered a lump on his neck.It was examined and the result came back “malignant.(恶性的)” We now relized that Scott fell into the 20 percent category.I could feel the tentacles tightening around my chest.He entered the hospital for an aggressive treatment, a combination of interferon and interleukin.

  After five months of treatment, he had radical surgery on his neck.The test results were encourging, only three of the 33 lymph nodes(淋巴结)removed were malignant.We were very hopefull.

  For the next six months, Scott's follow-up visits went well.Then in October, X-ray revealed a spot on his lung.The spot was removed during surgery and the doctors tried to be optimistic.It was a daily battle to control the fear and panic each setback brought.

  In January, he was diagnosed as having had a “disease explosion.” The cancer had spread to his lungs, spine and liver and he was given three to six months to live.There were times during this period when I felt like I was having a heart attack.The bands constricting my chest made breathing difficult.

  When you watch your child battle cancer, you experience a roller coaster of emotions.There are moments of hope and optimism but a bad test result or even an unusual pain can bring on dread and panic.

  Scott was readmitted to the hospital for one last try with chemotherapy.He died, quite suddenly, just six weeks after his last diagnosis.I was completely destroyed.I had counted on those last few months.

  The next morning I was busy notifying people and making funeral arrangements.I remember having this nagging feeling that something was physically wrong with me.It took a moment to realize that the crushing sensation in my chest was gone.The thing every parent fears the most had happened.My son was gone.Of course, the fear had been replaced by unbearable sorrow.

  After you lose a child, it is so difficult to go on.The most minimal tasks, combing your hair or taking a shower, becoming monumental.For months I just sat and stared into space.That spring, the trees began to bloom; flowers began to pop up in my garden.Friendswood was coming back to life but I was dead inside.

  During those last weeks, Scott and I often spoke about life and death.Fragments of those conversations kept playing over and over in my mind.

  “Don't let this ruin your life, Mom.”

  “Make sure Dad re models his workshop.”

  “Please, take care of my family.”

  I remember wishing I could have just one more conversation with him.I knew what I would say, but what would Scott say? “I know how much you love me, Mom.So just sit on the couch and cry.” No, I knew him better than that.Scott loved life and knew how precious it is.I could almost hear his voice saying, “Get up Mom, Get on with your life.It's too valuable to waste.”

  That was the day I began to move forward.I signed up for a cake decorating class.Soon I was making cakes for holidays and birthdays.My daughter-in-law told me about a writing class in Houston.I hadn't written in years, but since I was retired I decided it be time to start again.The local college advertised a Life Story Writing class that I joined.There I met women who had also lost their children.The Poet Laureate of Texas was scheduled to speak at our local Barnes and Noble.I attended and joined our local poetry society.I never dreamed that writing essays and poems about Scott could be so therapeutic.Several of those poems have ever been published.In addition, each group brought more and more people into my life..

  I don't believe you ever recover from the loss of a child.Scott is in my heart and mind every day.However, I do believe you can survive.

  Scott fought so bravery to live and he never gave up.He taught me that life is a gift that should be cherished, not wasted.It has taken years to become the person I am today.The journey has been a difficult , painful process but certainly worth the effort and I know that my son would be proud.

(1)

What might be the best title of the passage?

[  ]

A.

Life is valuable

B.

Grieving and Recovery

C.

Love and sorrow

D.

Alive or dead

(2)

How old was Scott probably when he died?

[  ]

A.

33

B.

35

C.

37

D.

40

(3)

What does the underlined sentence “ The bands constricting my chest made breathing difficult” probably imply?

[  ]

A.

It implies that Scott's mother was likely to have a heart attack.

B.

It implies that there was something wrong with Scott's mother's chest.

C.

It implies that Scott's mother was very upset and panic because of Scott's severe illness.

D.

It implies that the cancer had spread to her chest just like her son.

(4)

Which of the following statements best shows the author's feeling about Scott's dath?

[  ]

A.

It was a daily battle to control the fear and panic each setback brought.

B.

She felt a wave of fear.

C.

She felt a feeling of fear begin to wrap around her chest.

D.

The fear had been replaced by unbearable sorrow.

(5)

From Scott and his mother's conversation, we can know that Scott is ________.

[  ]

A.

considerable

B.

humorous

C.

determined

D.

sensitive

(6)

The author intends to tell us that ________.

[  ]

A.

it takes a long time to make a person recover from the shock of losing a child

B.

Scott is proud of his mother

C.

life is full of happiness and sorrow.

D.

We'd better make our life count instead of counting your days.

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One day Marilla said, “Anne, your new teacher, Miss Stacy, spoke to me yesterday. She says you must study for the examinations for Queen’s College in two years’ time. Then if you do well, you can study at Queen’s in Charlottetown for a year, and after that you’ll be a teacher!”

“That doesn’t matter, Anne. When Matthew and I adopted you three years ago, we decided to look after you as well as we could. Of course we’ll pay for you to study.”So in the afternoons Anne and some of her friends stayed late at school, and Miss Stacy helped them with the special examination work. Diana didn’t want to go to Queen’s, so she went home early, but Gilbert stayed. He and Anne still never spoke and everybody knew that they were enemies, because they both wanted to be first in the examination. Secretly, Anne was sorry that she and Gilbert weren’t friends, but it was too late now.

For two years, Anne studied hard at school. She enjoyed learning, and Miss Stacy was pleased with her. But she didn’t study all the time. In the evenings and at weekends she visited her friends, or walked through the fields with Diana, or sat talking to Matthew.

“Your Anne is a big girl now. She’s taller than you,” Rachel Lynde told Marilla one day.

“You’re right, Rachel!” said Marilla in surprise.

“And she’s a very good girl now, isn’t she? She doesn’t get into trouble these days. I’m sure she helps you a lot with the housework, Marilla.”

“Yes, I don’t know what I’d do without her,” said Marilla, smiling.

“And look at her! Those beautiful grey eyes, and that red-brown hair! You know, Marilla, I thought you and Matthew made a mistake when you adopted her. But now I see I was wrong. You’ve looked after her very well.”

“Well, thank you, Rachel,” replied Marilla, pleased.

That evening, when Matthew came into the kitchen, he saw that his sister was crying.

“What’s the matter?” he asked, surprised. “You haven’t cried since… well, I can’t remember when.”

“It’s just… well, I was thinking about Anne,” said Marilla. “I’ll…I’ll miss her when she goes away.”

“When she goes to Queen’s, you mean? Yes, but she can come home at weekends, on the train.”

“I’ll still miss her,” said Marilla sadly.”

In June the Avonlea boys and girls had to go to Charlottetown to take their examinations.

“Oh, I do hope that I’ve done well,” Anne told Diana when she arrived back at Green Gables. “The examinations were very difficult. And I’ve got to wait for three weeks before I know! Three weeks! I’ll die!”

Anne wanted to do better than Gilbert. But she also wanted to do well for Matthew and Marilla. That was very important to her.

Diana was the first to hear the news, she ran into the kitchen at Green Gables and shouted, “Look, Anne! It’s in Father’s newspaper! You’re first… with Gilbert… out of all the students on the island! Oh, how wonderful!” Anne took the paper with shaking hands, and saw her name, at the top of the list of two hundred. She could not speak.

“Well, now, I knew it,” said Matthew with a warm smile.

“You’ve done well, I must say, Anne,” said Marilla, who was secretly very pleased.

For the next three weeks Anne and Marilla were very busy. Anne needs new dresses to take to Charlottetown.

1.Which of the following statements is true?

A.To be a teacher was one of Annes’ dreams.

B.Both Anne and Diana studied hard for the special examination.

C.Matthew and Marilla were Anne’s parents.

D.Anne was adopted by Matthew and Marilla.

2.Why are Anne and Gilbert enemies? Because _____________.

A.they were competitors in school            B.they didn’t like each other

C.it wasn’t mentioned in the passage         D.their parents were enemies

3.The paragraph “Oh Marilla! I’d love to be a teacher! But won’t it be very expensive?” should be put between___________.

A.paragraph ③ and ④                    B.paragraph ⑦ and ⑧

C.paragraph ① and ②                    D.paragraph ⑨ and ⑩

4.What will be written in the following paragraph?

A.Anne’s summer holiday.

B.What will Anne talk about her college life with Diana

C.How will Miss Stacy help Anne study.

D.What will Anne do before attending college.

5.From the passage, we can learn that _____________.

A.Miss Stay liked Anne very much

B.when Anne became a teacher, she would have lived in the family for six years

C.Marilla cried because Anne would leave for ever

D.Rachel was a teacher of Anne’s

 

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“Mom, I have cancer.” These four words catapulted my son and me on a journey that lasted two years. On that day I felt a wave of paralyzing fear.

Scott was the oldest of my four children. He was 33 years old and a successful assistant principal at SamRayburn Hifht School in Pasadena, Texas. He and his wife Carolyn were busy raising four active children. Scott was 6’2’’, weighed 200 pounds and had never been sick a day in his life.

A few month earlier a mole(痣)on his neck had changed color. “Dr.Warner called,” Scott said that spring morning. “It’s melanoma.(黑素瘤)” I tried to comfort him, naming all the people I knew who had survived skin cancer. Yet, I felt small tentacles of fear begin to wrap around my chest.

Our next stop was MDAnderson, the famous cancer hospital in Houston. Scott had surgery at the end of May and was scheduled for radiation treatments over the summer recess. “There is an 80 percent chance it won’t reoccur,” the doctors said. At the end of summer, all his tests came back negative and Scott was back at school in the fall. However, in December, Scott discovered a lump on his neck. It was examined and the result came back “malignant.(恶性的)” We now realized that Scott fell into the 20 percent category. I could feel the tentacles tightening around my chest. He entered the hospital for an aggressive treatment, a combination of interferon and interleukin.

After five months of treatment, he had radical surgery on his neck. The test results were encouraging, only three of the 33 lymph nodes(淋巴结) removed were malignant. We were very hopeful.

For the next six months, Scott’s follow-up visits went well. Then in October, X-ray revealed a spot on his lung. The spot was removed during surgery and the doctors tried to be optimistic. It was a daily battle to control the fear and panic each setback brought.

In January, he was diagnosed as having had a “disease explosion.” The cancer had spread to his lungs, spine and liver and he was given three to six months to live. There were times during this period when I felt like I was having a heart attack. The bands constricting my chest made breathing difficult.

When you watch your child battle cancer, you experience a roller coaster of emotions. There are moments of hope and optimism but a bad test result or even an unusual pain can bring on dread and panic.

Scott was readmitted to the hospital for one last try with chemotherapy. He died, quite suddenly, just six weeks after his last diagnosis. I was completely destroyed. I had counted on those last few months.

The next morning I was busy notifying people and making funeral arrangements. I remember having this nagging feeling that something was physically wrong with me. It took a moment to realize that the crushing sensation in my chest was gone. The thing every parent fears the most had happened. My son was gone. Of course, the fear had been replaced by unbearable sorrow.

After you lose a child, it is so difficult to go on. The most minimal tasks, combing your hair or taking a shower, becoming monumental. For months I just sat and stared into space. That spring, the trees began to bloom; flowers began to pop up in my garden. Friendswood was coming back to life but I was dead inside.

During those last weeks, Scott and I often spoke about life and death. Fragments of those conversations kept playing over and over in my mind.

“Don’t let this ruin your life, Mom.”

“Make sure Dad re models his workshop.”

“Please, take care of my family.”

I remember wishing I could have just one more conversation with him. I knew what I would say, but what would Scott say? “I know how much you love me, Mom. So just sit on the couch and cry.” No, I knew him better than that. Scott loved life and knew how precious it is. I could almost hear his voice saying, “Get up Mom, Get on with your life. It’s too valuable to waste.”

That was the day I began to move forward. I signed up for a cake decorating class. Soon I was making cakes for holidays and birthdays. My daughter-in-law told me about a writing class in Houston. I hadn’t written in years, but since I was retired I decided it be time to start again. The local college advertised a Life Story Writing class that I joined. There I met women who had also lost their children. The Poet Laureate of Texas was scheduled to speak at our local Barnes and Noble. I attended and joined our local poetry society. I never dreamed that writing essays and poems about Scott could be so therapeutic. Several of those poems have ever been published. In addition, each group brought more and more people into my life..

I don’t believe you ever recover from the loss of a child. Scott is in my heart and mind every day. However, I do believe you can survive.

Scott fought so bravery to live and he never gave up. He taught me that life is a gift that should be cherished, not wasted. It has taken years to become the person I am today. The journey has been a difficult, painful process but certainly worth the effort and I know that my son would be proud.

1.How old was Scott probably when he died?

A.33               B.35                 C.37           D.40

2.What does the underlined sentence “ The bands constricting my chest made breathing difficult” probably imply?

A.It implies that Scott’s mother was likely to have a heart attack.

B.It implies that there was something wrong with Scott’s mother’s chest.

C.It implies that Scott’s mother was very upset and panic because of Scott’s severe illness.

D.It implies that the cancer had spread to her chest just like her son.

3.Which of the following statements best shows the author’s feeling about Scott’s death?

A.It was a daily battle to control the fear and panic each setback brought.

B.She felt a wave of fear.

C.She felt a feeling of fear begin to wrap around her chest.

D.The fear had been replaced by unbearable sorrow.

4.From Scott and his mother’s conversation, we can know that Scott is ________.

A.considerable      B.humorous         C.determined      D.sensitive

5.The author intends to tell us that___________.

A.it takes a long time to make a person recover from the shock of losing a child

B.Scott is proud of his mother

C.life is full of happiness and sorrow.

D.We’d better make our life count instead of counting your days.

6.What might be the best title of the passage ?

A.Life is valuable                         B.Grieving and Recovery

C.Love and sorrow                        D.Alive or dead

 

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