1. It is Sunday. Ann and her mother _____.
[ ]
A. are at home
B. are in a clothing shop
C. are in a restaurant
D. are in a park
B. are in a clothing shop
C. are in a restaurant
D. are in a park
2. Ann wants to buy _____.
[ ]
A. an orange
B. an orange sweater
C. an orange for her mother
D. an orange sweater for her mother
B. an orange sweater
C. an orange for her mother
D. an orange sweater for her mother
3. There is only one _____.
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A. shop near her home
B. orange in the first shop
C. orange sweater in the first shop
D. orange sweater in the second shop
B. orange in the first shop
C. orange sweater in the first shop
D. orange sweater in the second shop
4. The sweater in the first shop is _____.
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A. too small
B. OK
C. longer
D. too dear
B. OK
C. longer
D. too dear
5. In the second shop, why don't they buy the sweater?
[ ]
A. Because Ann doesn't like the sweater.
B. Because it's too small.
C. Because they don't have enough (足够的) money.
D. Because they want to buy a cheaper one.
B. Because it's too small.
C. Because they don't have enough (足够的) money.
D. Because they want to buy a cheaper one.
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| Once when I was a teenager, my father and I were standing in line to buy tickets for the circus (马戏团). This is about the family standing ahead of us. The family had eight children. Their clothes were not expensive but 1 . The children were well behaved. They stood in line, two by two behind their parents, holding hands. They were excitedly talking about the clowns (小丑), elephants and other acts they would see that night. You could 2 that they had never been to the circus before. The ticket lady asked the father how many tickets he wanted. He 3 replied, "I want eight children's tickets and two adult tickets please, so I can take my 4 to the circus." The ticket lady quoted (报) the price. The man's wife let go of his hand. The man's lip started to quiver (颤抖).He leaned (靠) toward 5 and asked again, "How much did you say?" The ticket lady quoted the price again. The man didn't have 6 money. How was he supposed to tum and tell his eight kids that he couldn't take them to the circus? My dad put his hand into his pocket, pulled out a $20 bill and 7 it on the ground. (And we weren't rich!) Then he 8 down, picked up the bill, tapped the man on the shoulder and said, ''Excuse me, sir, this 9 out of your pocket." The man knew 10 was going on. He looked into my dad's eyes, held my dad's hand in his, and took the $20 bill. With a tear in his eye, he replied,"Thank you, thank you, sir. This really 11 a lot to me and my family." My father and I went back to our car and drove home. We didn't get to see the circus that night, but we didn't 12 . | ||||
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| I still remember Father spent plenty of time teaching me how to pronounce a word, how to understand something that I saw for the first time and how to be polite to others. And I will never 1 one sentence my father used to say to me, "I love you, son. Say you love me, son." Naturally, I would scream, "I love you, Dad." When I was growing up, I found that I had little in 2 with my father gradually. Sometimes we often argued about something sharply and then the argument changed into a quarrel (争吵). I knew there was a gap between us. I didn't 3 hearing the words "I love you" from my father the last time. To tell you the truth, I couldn't honestly remember when I had last said those words to him, either. Now Father was in hospital. The doctor said it was 4 and he needed an operation at once, 5 he wasn't sure whether my father was able to survive (幸免于, 经受得住) if. Everything in my childhood 6 in my mind. Then I called and said," Dad, I love you!" There was a 7 at the other end and then he replied coldly, "Well, I love you, too!" I cried and said, "Dad, I know you love me, and when you are 8 , I know you will say what you want to say." Fifteen minuets later, my mother called and nervously asked, "Paul, is every thing OK?" A few weeks later, I was working when I received my father's call, "Paul, I love you." I was so 9 that my tears rolled down my cheeks. Perhaps both of us 10 that this special moment had taken our relationship to a new level. A short while after this special moment, my father finally narrowly escaped death following the heart operation. I can't 11 that ifI did not take the first 12 and Dad did not survive the surgery, what kind of life I would lead now. | ||||
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| There is a woman named Atsuko Saeki. When she wasa teenager, she dreamed of going to the United States. Most of what she knew about American 1 was from the textbooks she had read. "I had a 2 in mind: Daddy watching TV in the living room, Mummy baking cakes and their teenage daughter off to the cinema with her boyfriend." Atsuko 3 to attend college in California. When she arrived, however, she found it was not her 4 world. "People had difficulty in doing something and often seemed uneasy," she said. "I felt very lonely." One of her hardest 5 was physical education."We played volleyball," she said. "The other students were good at it, but I wasn't." One aftemoon,the instructor asked Atsuko to 6 the ball to her teammates so they could knock it 7 the net. No problem for most people, but it frightened Atsuko. She was afraid of losing face 8 she failed. A young man on her team realised what she was going through. "He walked up to me and said, Come on. You can do that. " "You will never understand how those words of 9 made me feel Four words: You can do that. I felt like crying with happiness. She made it through the class. Perhaps she thanked the young man; she is not 10 . Six years has passed. Atsuko is back in her country, working as a salesclerk. "I have never forgotten the words," she said. "When things are not going so well, I think of them." She is sure the young man had no idea how much his kindness 11 to her. " He probably doesn't even remember it," she said. That may be the lesson. Whenever you say something to a person-cruel or kind - you have no idea how long the word will 12 . She's all the way over in Japan, but still she hears those four simple words: You can do that. | ||||
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