题目内容

  Mr Smith had neither wife nor children. He liked nothing but          1________

drinking. He almost spent all of his money drinks. Sometimes he         2________

was hungry but had to borrow some money to buy a little food.          3________

One evening he met a friend of him in the street. The man              4________

asked him to have dinner in a restaurant. He was very happy             5________

that he drank too much. His friend stopped a taxi and ask               6________

the driver to take him home. Soon they reached in the door of           7________

his house. The taxi went away. But he couldn’t put the key into           8________

the keyhole. Just then a policeman went up, offering to help him         9________

but he refused. “The house is circled now. If you can stop it             10________

moving, I can open the door myself,” he said.

 

答案:
解析:

1.wife→a wife

2.money∧→on

3.but→and

4.him→his

5.very→so

6.ask→asked

7.in(删去)

8.√

9.went→came

10.circled→circling

 


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阅读下列短文,掌握其大意,然后从1-25各题所给的四个选项中,选出一个最佳答案

 Where is the bus?I asked myselfI was going to be late  1  the manager wasn't going to be  2  Thank God,here it is !The bus  3  round the corner and I got onTen minures later I was walking into the  4  where I workTwenty-five past nineI  5  the manager doesn't noticeBut no  6  luck!

 Smith!shouted the managerLate againWhat's your  7  this time?”“I'm afraid the bus was late, Mr Brown”“  8  up earlier tomorrow!Anyway, go to your  9  at the counter (柜台).We'll be opening in a few minutes

 My first customer (顾客)was a pretty girl wearing a red dress    10  her was a young man of about 25He seemed very  11  , and every few seconds he looked  12  the main entranceThe girl  13  about opening a bank account (帐户).I gave her the necessary  14  and she walked out    15  , I noticed a tall man by the door, carrying something  16  with brown paperTurning to my next customer, I was terrified to see a gun  17  out of his coatThe next moment a loud noise  18  my earsEverything went blackI was falling After  19  seened a very long time, I opened my eyes and found myself --in bed!  20  shaking from the memory of this terrible dream, I got dressed and ran out of the houseAs  21  , the bus wasn't on time, and I got to the bank at 9:25

 Smith!the manager cried out in a voice like thunder  22  of your excuses! Go start work at once!To my  23  , the first customer was a girl  24  a red dress and behind her stood a man carrying something wrapped in brown paperThe  25  ! Wasn't that the surprise of my life!

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      

(1) Aas

Bbut

Cand

Dor

[  ]

(2) Apleased

Bworried

Csorry

Dpatient

[  ]

(3) Aran

Bcame

Crode

Ddrove

[  ]

(4) Ahotel

Bshop

Cbank

Drestaurant

[  ]

(5) Abelieve

Bexpect

Cguess

Dhope

[  ]

(6) Amuch

Bsuch

Cmore

Dthis

[  ]

(7) Aexcuse

Bidea

Ccause

Danswer

[  ]

(8) AHurry

BSet

CCatch

DGet

[  ]

(9) ABusiness

Bjob

Cplace

Dspot

[  ]

(10) ABefore

BBehind

CBeyond

DAgainst

[  ]

(11) ANervous

Bshy

Ccalm

Dangry

[  ]

(12) Adown

Bfor

Ctowards

Dthrough

[  ]

(13) Acared

Btalked

Casked

Dworried

[  ]

(14) Ainformation

  

Boffer

  

  Cintroduction

  

Dsupport

  

[  ]

  

(15) AAgain

BThen

CThus

DHowever

[  ]

(16) Ahidden

Brolled

Cfilled

Dcovered

[  ]

(17) Agetting

Baiming

Cappearing

Dsticking

[  ]

(18) Atook

Bshook

Cfilled

Dtore

[  ]

(19) Awhat

Bwhen

Cthat

Dwhich

[  ]

(20) AEven

BStill

CJust

DEver

[  ]

(21) Ausual

Bpast

Csuch

Dyet

[  ]

(22) ALess

BPlenty

CMore

DNone

[  ]

(23) Abelief

Bsurprise

Cjoy

Dregret

[  ]

(24) Aof

Bwith

Con

Din

[  ]

(25) Adream

Bstory

Caffair

Dincident

[  ]

完形填空:

  Just after the last war, people were very willing to give money to help those who had 1 it. But not everyone who 2 money was honest. The newspapers were 3 stories of people who had been 4 by men who went from house to house saying that they were collecting money for soldiers who had been 5 in the war, or for people who had 6 their homes, or for 7 noble causes, while 8 they were putting the money they collected into their own 9 instead of using it for the purposes they had said.

  One day Mr Smith came back with another 10 of this kind. He told his wife that a group of people had collected thousands of dollars for the widow(寡妇)of the Unknown Soldier.

  Then someone had written to 11 about it, and they had written articles to 12 other people. Mr Smith said that he and his friends at the office had had a good 13 about the story when they had read it in the newspaper.

  “Can you 14 anyone being so stupid as to believe that story and give money to the widow of the Unknown Soldier?” he asked his wife.

  She looked 15 at first, but then her face brightened. “Oh, yes. I see now.” She answered. “Of course, the government pays the widow of the Unknown Soldier.”

[ ]1Amissed       Blost

   Csuffered from   Ddied from

[ ]2Agave     Bcollected

  Coffered    Dsaved   

[ ]3Afilled of   Bfull of

   Cwritten   Dpublished

[ ]4Acheated   Blaughed

   Cforced   Drobbed 

[ ]5Adied   Bhurt

   Cwounded   Dinured 

[ ]6Amissed   Blost

   Cbuilt   Dfounded   

[ ]7Asome another   Bsome other

   Canother some   Dother some   

[ ]8Aall the time   Bfor a time

   Cat a time   Don time   

[ ]9Ahouses   Bcontrol

   Cpockets   Duse   

[ ]10Abusiness   Bstory

    Cmoney   Dman  

[ ]11Agovernments   Bpapers

    Cwidows   Dsoldiers   

[ ]12Awarn   Bsuggest

    Cfrighten   Dplease   

[ ]13Asmile   Blaugh

    Clesson   Dtime   

[ ]14Athink   Bimagine

    Chope   Dlet  

[ ]15Aworried   Bpuzzled

    Chappy   Dexcited  

完形填空

  As an intern(实习医生), I grew to understand that nursing home(疗养所)patients was a valuable part of my education-not just from a   1   angle, but for what they could   2   me personally.

  Mr.Smith was my first   3   to the nursing home.His condition, regrettably, can probably exist in countless hospitals across our nation.An acute illness had brought him to our nursing home years ago, and his family   4   him shortly before he left hospital.Helpless and unable to care for himself, he had no   5   except for nursing home care,   6   he lay until I met him when I was an intern.

  Mr.Smith was almost non-communicative.After transferring to the nursing home, he   7   into a tense and   8   state, waiting for his life to end.All efforts to bring him back to the mainstream life were   9  .Nurses faithfully tended to his physical needs, while he   10   as a shell of flesh and bone, completely   11   in life.For three years, I saw him every week, but not once did I hear him speak a word.Not once could I   12   his innermost thoughts.

  On my last nursing home visit, an idea struck me.I brought my   13   into Mr.Smith’s room as part of a(n)  14   in “pet treatment.” Something   15   occurred.All of a sudden, he sat up and started talking, telling me of the days when he was a boy and had a dog   16   to my own.He told me stories of adventures he and his dog had had.For the first time, I saw the soul   17   from what had been a living corpse(尸体).

  That experience taught me not to underestimate the ability of the simple things in life to   18   hearts when carefully-made medicine has failed, and never to forget that within even the weakest of human bodies lies a life that is precious indeed-  19   that needs to be   20   and honored, even if it can’t speak for itself.

(1)

[  ]

A.

mental

B.

medical

C.

personal

D.

moral

(2)

[  ]

A.

guide

B.

assist

C.

teach

D.

move

(3)

[  ]

A.

introduction

B.

visitor

C.

relation

D.

friend

(4)

[  ]

A.

greeted

B.

received

C.

welcomed

D.

abandoned

(5)

[  ]

A.

choice

B.

relative

C.

means

D.

desire

(6)

[  ]

A.

which

B.

what

C.

unless

D.

where

(7)

[  ]

A.

formed

B.

slipped

C.

entered

D.

brought

(8)

[  ]

A.

lonely

B.

desperate

C.

calm

D.

exciting

(9)

[  ]

A.

without meaning

B.

without doubt

C.

in vain

D.

in effect

(10)

[  ]

A.

looked

B.

left

C.

remained

D.

showed

(11)

[  ]

A.

gone

B.

abundant

C.

short

D.

lacking

(12)

[  ]

A.

figure out

B.

pick out

C.

seek out

D.

get out

(13)

[  ]

A.

dog

B.

equipment

C.

medicine

D.

teacher

(14)

[  ]

A.

cure

B.

drug

C.

test

D.

experiment

(15)

[  ]

A.

puzzling

B.

amazing

C.

bothering

D.

disappointing

(16)

[  ]

A.

strange

B.

related

C.

similar

D.

familiar

(17)

[  ]

A.

renew

B.

awake

C.

appear

D.

step

(18)

[  ]

A.

touch

B.

feel

C.

hit

D.

strike

(19)

[  ]

A.

something

B.

one

C.

anything

D.

the one

(20)

[  ]

A.

treated

B.

ignored

C.

respected

D.

cared

Jones, a hardworking blacksmith, used to work all day in his shop. So hard working was he that at times he would make the sparks fly from his   1  .

  The son of Mr. Smith, a rich   2  , would come to see the blacksmith every day and for hours and hours he would enjoy himself   3  how the tradesman worked.

  "Young man, why don't you   4  your hand to learn to make shoe tacks,  5  it is only to pass the time?" said the blacksmith. "  6  knows, one day, it may be of use to you."

  The lazy boy began to see what he could do. But after a little   7 he found that he was becoming very  8 and soon he was making some of the finest tacks.

  Old Mr. Smith died and the son   9  the war lost all his goods. He had to leave home and was forced to   10  residence in another country. It so   11  that in this village there were numerous shoemakers who were spending a lot of money   12  tacks for their shoes and even   13  when they paid high prices they were  14  able to get what they wanted, because in that part of the country there was a high demand for soldiers' shoes.

  Our young Mr. Smith, who was finding it difficult to  15  his daily bread, remembered that once upon a time he had learned the art of making tacks and had the sudden idea of making a   16  with the shoemakers. He told them that he  17  make the tacks if they could help him to  18  a workshop. The shoemakers were   19  willing to do so. And after a while, Mr. Smith found that he was soon making the finest tacks in the village.

  "How funny it seems," he used to say, "even making tacks can bring a   20 .My trade is more useful to me than all my former riches."

1.A.hand      B.finger             C.gun     D.hammer

2. A.classmate  B.neighbor           C.blacksmith    D.workmate

3. A.observing           B.noticing  C.watching   D.finding

4. A.put     B.raise    C.tie     D.try

5. A.even if            B.whether or not       C.only if   D.in that

6. A.He     B.Somebody  C.Who      D.Nobody     

7. A.advice   B.practice           C.knowledge    D.training   

8. A.serious   B.caution           C.devoted      D.skilled    

9. A.on account of  B.regardless of       C.instead of   D.in need of

10.A.take in     B.take up          C.take off     D.take on

11.A.occurred   B.took place          C.happened  D.appeared

12.A.selling   B.buying             C.making   D.promoting

13.A.at times   B.at a time          C.at one time   D.at the time

14.A.never            B.ever     C.often    D.not always

15.A.eat              B.cook     C.earn     D.make

16.A.living            B.bargain    C.mistake   D.sense

17.A.would    B.used to           C.should    D.dared

18.A.set down   B.set out           C.set up     D.set to

19.A.much too   B.too much           C.only too    D.not too

20.A.fortune            B. fame    C.profit     D.welcome

 

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