5、During my last stay in France, I took to biking down a quiet road. Round a   1   , I found a woman sitting in front of a little shabby house. I don’t know why, but something about her attracted my  2  . I waved at her as I went by, and she must have thought I was some   3    tourist because she didn’t wave back. The same thing happened the second day. But on the third day, the old woman returned a hesitated    4   , and the next day, she   5   got out of her chair as I called out, “Morning, madam!” It became a small ritual(仪式)  6   us. She had no idea who I was, nor   7    I was coming, but she seemed to be    8    for me.

       On my last ride, I bought some flowers and    9    down to the house, only to find she wasn’t there. She had gone to hospital for surgeries.   10   , I tied the flowers to her gate as a    11   gift. Back at my place, I  12    Roger, the gardener, of my missed    13   . “The old lady at the corner is suffering    14    injuries, through which walking has been troubling her,” he said,   15    “by the quiet road there used to be a station. Whenever a train passed, the couple would see the passengers waving    16   , especially the children—for them, such a ride was high adventure.   17   , everything is gone except for this couple.”

       It seems that my bicycle ride    18    mind her past days. As Roger said, “she has   19    the trains and the waves. You brought them back to her.” By reaching out, in a way that cost me    20   , I’d given more than I had realized.

1.A.corner                B.garden               C.hospital            D.shop

2.A.sympathy              B.feeling                 C.impression          D.interest

3.A.humorous            B.silly              C.enthusiastic       D.willing

4.A.smile                 B.wave                C.look                  D.weep

5.A.nearly                  B.hardly                C.merely               D.mostly

6.A.from                   B.beyond              C.between             D.among

7.A.where                 B.whether             C.how                  D.when

8.A.applying              B.looking              C.searching           D.waiting

9.A.counted               B.cycled               C.fled                   D.drove

10.A.Disappointed      B.Relaxed              C.Amazed             D.Exhausted

11.A.greeting             B.visiting               C.parting               D.celebrating

12.A.asked                B.told                   C.reminded           D.convinced

13.A.connection         B.devotion             C.reaction             D.donation

14.A.leg                    B.head                  C.hand                  D.arm

15.A.adding               B.denying              C.predicating         D.concluding

16.A.surprisingly        B.angrily               C.excitedly            D.casually

17.A.Besides              B.Thus                 C.However            D.Therefore

18.A.called back         B.called to             C.called by            D.called for

19.A.missed               B.forgotten            C.lost                   D.passed

20.A.something        B.little             C.much            D.nothing

评卷人

得分

 

 

二、选择题

 

(每空? 分,共? 分)

 

 

4、Geniuses amaze us, impress us and make us all a little jealous. How do they differ from the average person? Scientists are working hard to figure out that answer. Tune in to the National Geographic Channel to find out about the discoveries they’re making in the series My Brilliant Brain.

       When Marc Yu was only two years old, he began to play the piano. After a year, he started learning pieces by Beethoven. Now he’s a world-famous concert pianist at age eight. He learns newer and more difficult pieces with ease and can identify any note he hears. He seems to be specially designed for music. In Born Genius, National Geographic looks at the science behind child prodigies (神童) to explain why some children seem to be born without limits.

       Genius didn’t come naturally to Tommy McHugh. His came only after he nearly died from bleeding in his brain. After recovering, McHugh’s head was filled with new thoughts and pictures. So, he began to express them in the form of poetry and art. Now, he’s a seemingly unstoppable creative machine. Sufferers of autism and brain injury have shown that great mental ability can sometimes come from damage or disease. Accidental Genius explores this puzzling relationship.

       Can normal people be trained to be geniuses? Susan Polger has shown no signs of extraordinary intelligence. Yet, during her childhood, she studied thousands of chess patterns and learned to recognize them immediately. As a result, she was able to beat skilled adult players by age 10 and can now play up to five games at the same time without even seeing the boards. Make Me a Genius examines what it takes to turn an ordinary brain into that of a genius.

       If becoming a genius were easy, we’d all be one. Yet, there is much more to super intelligence than simply being born lucky. Learn more about amazing brains this month on National Geographic’s My Brilliant Brain.

1.My Brilliant Brains is most probably from _______.

       A.a website        B.the radio            C.a magazine         D.a newspaper

2.The author takes Marc Yu as an example to show that a child prodigy is        .

       A.a person who learns something easily

       B.a child who is eager to learn new things

       C.a student who practices an instrument a lot

       D.a kid who works hard to do well in school

3.Which of the following is NOT true according to the passage?

       A.New things about the brain are still being discovered.

       B.People without natural abilities can learn to do things well.

       C.Some people naturally have more active brains.

       D.People are usually smarter when they recover from brain injury.

4.What would be the best way to describe Susan Polger’s special abilities?

       A.Born.            B.Magical.         C.Developed.         D.Ridiculous.

5.From the passage, we know that         .

       A.scientists completely understand the brain

       B.people can only be born as geniuses

       C.there’s no such thing as a true genius

       D.there are many factors in being a genius

6.The author develops the passage mainly by         .

       A.providing typical examples

       B.following the natural time order

       C.presenting a cause and analyzing its effects

       D.comparing opinions from different scientists

3、There were times when it was only schoolchildren who felt sick before they got their grades. But now teachers in Germany are scared, too, as they are being graded by their students.

       Many teachers are opposed to it. They don’t mind being evaluated. But they are upset because the results are then being posted on the Internet and accessible to millions of Internet users. On the website www. spickmich. de during the past four months students have posted evaluations of 100,000 teachers.

       The teachers are graded on categories such as “motivated”, “good instruction,” “easy examinations”, or even “sexy.” Many teachers think that their privacy has been violated.

       The creators of the website say that the students are only being offered the chance to provide teachers with some feedback about their classroom instruction. Bernd Dicks, who founded the website with three friends, says that the students are largely quite satisfied with their teachers. On a grading scale of one to six, the teachers’ average grade is 2.7 and it has been improving lately. He often says the impression is that students are bullying(欺负) their teachers. But there is also bullying of the students by teachers.

       “Teachers must also learn to live with criticism,” he added. But still, the website is not totally immune from manipulation(操纵), as one teacher near the northern city of Hanover recently proved. He registered himself on the website as a student and then rated his own teaching colleagues highly. Within a few days, seven of his colleagues were listed in the top 10 rankings of Germany’s best teachers.

1.Many teachers are opposed to the website because        .

       A.their privacy has been violated

       B.they are afraid of being assessed

       C.their evaluations are unfair

       D.the results are not satisfying

2.The founders of the website intended to         .

       A.get the students to know their teachers better

       B.conduct a survey on teachers’ performances

       C.help the teachers to improve their teaching

       D.change the teachers’ ways of giving instructions

3.From what the teacher in Hanover did, we can infer         .

       A.he intended to help his colleagues

       B.there was some disadvantage of the website

       C.his colleagues were more popular than him

       D.he wanted to know how he was evaluated

4.From the passage we can learn that          .

       A.teachers feel upset for their students are bullying them

       B.the website is well received by the teachers

       C.teachers hope to be graded by their teaching skills

       D.teachers have different opinions of the website

5.Which of the following can be the best title of the passage?

       A.Teachers get graded by pupils

       B.Teachers are angry with website

       C.Teachers need self-assessment

       D.New invention in assessing teachers     

29、最近,宁波博物馆宣布免费开放。消息传出,博物馆每天被闻讯涌来的上万名游客挤得近乎“爆棚”。这一现象引发了各方的热烈讨论:博物馆该不该免费开放?下图是中国宁波网做的一次社会调查,请你根据图示用英语给该网站的英语栏目写一篇短文介绍调查结果,并为三种不同的意见拟写各自的理由。

注意: 1.词数120左右(文章开头已经给出,但不计入总词数);

2.可以有适当发挥,以使行文连贯。      

 

Recently a survey entitled “Should museums be free to the public?” has been conducted to find out people’s attitudes towards this question________                                    

                                                                                

                                                                                

                                                                               

                                                                                

                                                                                

                                                                               

                                                                                

 

 

 0  20222  20230  20236  20240  20246  20248  20252  20258  20260  20266  20272  20276  20278  20282  20288  20290  20296  20300  20302  20306  20308  20312  20314  20316  20317  20318  20320  20321  20322  20324  20326  20330  20332  20336  20338  20342  20348  20350  20356  20360  20362  20366  20372  20378  20380  20386  20390  20392  20398  20402  20408  20416  97155 

违法和不良信息举报电话:027-86699610 举报邮箱:58377363@163.com

精英家教网