题目内容
--Need I start from beginning?
--Yes, you ________.
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提示:
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need的疑问句,肯定答语用must,否定答语用needn't |
December 2
Sharon called about four times today. At least it shows she’s trying to explain something to me. I feel a little better.
December 3
This morning Sharon said she had only told one person and didn’t know why everyone seemed to know. Yes, I am an adopted (收养的) daughter. But she had promised to keep it a secret for ever!
December 5
I wish I had a friend I could really trust all of the time. I thought I found that friend, but I haven’t and it’s making me miserable (痛苦的)! It’s wrong to tell her all about it. She gains my trust, and then loses it.
December 7
I have a nice room, beautiful house and everything I’ve ever wanted. My adoptive parents will give me all the things I’ve ever dreamed of. Yet all the money in the world can’t buy what I want now. I want for Sharon to be my best friend again.
December 10
Sharon just called. She said she thought it might help if we spent more time together. She worried that I would switch schools (转学). She is the best friend I’ve ever had. When I’m with Sharon, I can be myself. I need Sharon’s friendship. I need it more than I’ve ever known.
December 16
I just had the most fantastic two days of my life! This was the best time I’ve had for a long, long while. Yesterday, we walked five times around the park and today we walked along the river for twenty minutes. We talked so much. Sharon, Sharon, no brick wall between us now.
【小题1】What is the author mainly worried about?
| A.How she was adopted. | B.Why she switched schools. |
| C.Her family life. | D.Her friendship with Sharon. |
| A.didn’t keep the author’s secret |
| B.didn’t like the author any more |
| C.told the author’s past life to everyone |
| D.often refused to help the author |
| A.funny | B.wonderful | C.sad | D.lucky |
| A.were not friends anymore |
| B.became good friends again |
| C.would switch to another school together |
| D.could hardly understand each other |
Greg Woodburn, a student at the University of Southern California, spends a lot of time cleaning sneakers he collected.But soon the shoes will be sent to poor children in the United States and 20 other countries, thanks to Woodburn’s Share Our Soles (S.O.S.) charity.
A high school track star in the town of Ventura, California, Woodburn was treated in hospital for months with knee and hip injuries.
“I started thinking about the health benefits, the friendship and the confidence I got from running,” he says, “And I realized there are children who don’t even have shoes.”
Woodburn gathered up his old sneakers, then asked his friends to donate.His goal was to have 100 pairs by Christmas this year.When he collected more than 500 pairs, he decided to turn the shoe drive into a year-round endeavor.
Back then, the sneakers came from donation boxes at the YMCA and the local sporting goods store and from door-to-door pickups.Woodburn has now set up collection boxes at two high schools, city gym and recreation center.He has started accepting adult sizes and sandals.So far, S.O.S has collected and donated more than 3,000 pairs.
Woodburn has cleaned all the shoes.After sorting the shoes by size, Woodburn selects the good shoes for the washing machine and the worn-out ones for recycling.
To ship the footwear, Woodburn teamed with Sports Gift, a nonprofit organization that provides soccer and baseball equipment to children around the world.Keven Baxter, founder and president, says, “We’d send kids balls and shoes.I've heard that for many of these kids, these old sneakers are the only shoes they had.They wear them to school and to do sports.So Greg’s running shoes were a nice addition for us.”
For many recipients, the shoes represent opportunity.Two young boys in Southern California attended school on alternate days because they shared a pair of shoes.They were too big for one boy and too small for the other.Thanks to S.O.S., each brother received his own pair of shoes.The boys now attend school daily and enjoy their learning.When they graduate, they say, they will help a stranger, just as Woodburn helped them.
【小题1】What caused Greg Woodburn to donate old shoes for poor children?
| A.The benefits from playing sports. |
| B.News about some poor children. |
| C.His reflection to school life. |
| D.The medical treatment he received. |
| A.include adult sizes and sandals |
| B.set up branches in different cities |
| C.collect shoes throughout the year |
| D.expand his endeavor in the whole city |
| A.By sending them by mail. |
| B.By working with Sports Gift. |
| C.By advertising for those in need. |
| D.By offering them from door to door. |
| A.Sports Gift is popular around the world. |
| B.Many children need Greg’s old sneakers. |
| C.Greg’s running shoes are the best gifts for children. |
| D.International organization should provide more help. |
The quest for success always begins with a target. As Berra once said , "you get to be very careful if you don't know where you're going, because you might not get there."
Too many people wander through life like sleepwalkers. Each day they follow familiar routines, never asking, "What am I doing with my life?"and they don't know what they're doing because they lack goals.
Goal-setting is a focus of the will to move in a certain direction. Begin with a clear conception of what you want. Write down your goals and date them---putting them into words clarifies them. Rather than concentrating on objects to acquire and possess, focus on fulfilling your desires to do, to produce, to contribute to goal-setting that yields the true sense of satisfaction we all need.
It’s important to visualize(想象)yourself accomplishing your goal. While losers visualize the penalties(不利) of failure, winners visualize the rewards of success. I’ve seen it among athletes, statistics contrasting air and highway safety, but it made no difference. I had read too many articles describing crash scenes and imagined these scenes vividly. I had programmed myself, without realizing it ,to stay off planes.
Then one summer I had the opportunity to fly on a private plane with friends to a resort; I didn’t want to miss out on a great vacation. So I spent two weeks imagining a smooth flight on a beautiful sunny day and an easy landing.
When the day arrived, I was eager to go . To everyone's surprise, I got on the plane and I loved every minute of it , and I still use the techniques I employed that day.
【小题1】According to the passage, if you want to be successful ,the first thing for you to do is to .
| A.find the right methods | B.be careful about everything |
| C.know your ability | D.have a clear goal |
| A.he didn’t know air travel is safer than highway travel |
| B.he couldn’t imagine himself accomplishing his goal |
| C.he read too much about plane crashes and tried to avoid flying |
| D.he wanted to take a private plane instead of a public one |
| A.Defining Your Goal | B.Visualizing Reward of Success |
| C.Overcoming the Fear of Air Travel | D.Sleepwalking Through life |
Tess was eight years old. Her little brother Andrew was very sick and their parents were completely out of money. She heard Daddy say to her tearful Mother, “Only a miracle can save him now.”
Tess took her money and made her way six blocks to Rexall’s Drug Store.
“And what do you want?” the chemist asked in an annoyed tone of voice. “I’m talking to my brother from Chicago whom I haven’t seen for ages.”
“Well, I want to talk to you about my brother,” Tess answered back in the same annoyed tone. “He’s really sick. He has something bad growing inside his head and my Daddy says only a miracle can save him now. So how much does a miracle cost?”
“We don’t sell miracles here, little girl. I’m sorry but I can’t help you,” the chemist said, softening a little.
“Listen, I can help you.” The chemist’s brother was a well-dressed man. He asked Tess, “What kind of miracle does your brother need?”
“I don’t know,” Tess replied. “Mommy says he needs an operation. But my Daddy can’t pay for it, so I want to use my money.”
“How much do you have?” asked the man from Chicago. “One dollar and eleven cents,” Tess answered. “And it’s all the money I have, but I can get some more, if I need to.”
“Well,what a coincidence (巧合),” smiled the man. “A dollar and eleven cents - the exact price of a miracle for your little brother. Take me to where you live. Let’s see if 1 have the kind of miracle you need.”
That man was Dr. Carlton Armstrong, a surgeon in neurosurgery (神经外科). The operation was completed without charge and it wasn’t long until Andrew was home again and doing well.
Tess smiled. She knew exactly how much a miracle cost… one dollar and eleven cents… plus the faith of a little child.
1.What can we learn from the first paragraph?
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A.Tess’s brother would recover because there was a miracle. |
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B.Tess’s brother would die because his family had no money to treat his illness. |
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C.Tess’s family would look for a miracle to treat Andrew’s illness. |
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D.Andrew should go to hospital for a miracle. |
2.Why did the chemist get annoyed first?
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A.Because he was a nervous man. |
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B.Because Tess didn’t buy his medicine. |
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C.Because Tess had bothered him and his brother. |
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D.Because Tess was poorly dressed. |
3.What can we learn about Dr. Carlton Armstrong?
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A.He was a stone-hearted man. |
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B.He cared for only a little money. |
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C.He never helped others unless given a lot of money. |
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D.He was a kind gentleman and ready to help others. |
4.What can be the best title?
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A.A dying boy and her sister |
B.A miracle of $ 1.10 |
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C.A kind doctor and his brother |
D.A poor girl and a doctor |