题目内容
| 完形填空。 | ||||
| I grew up poor, living with my wonderful mother. We had little money but plenty of love and attention. I was 1 and energetic. I understood that no matter how poor a person was, he could still 2 a dream. My dream was to be a sportsman. 3 I was sixteen, I had started playing baseball. I could throw a ninety-mile-per-hour fastball and hit anything that moved on the football field. I was also 4 : my high-school coach was Ollie Jarvis, who not only believed in me, but taught me 5 to believe in myself. He 6 me the difference between having a dream and realizing the dream. One particular 7 with Coach Jarvis changed my life forever. It was the summer between my junior and senior years, and a friend recommended (推荐) me for a summer job. This meant a chance for money in my pocket-money for a new bike and new clothes, and the 8 of savings for a house for my mother. Then I realized I would have to 9 summer baseball to deal with the work schedule, and that meant I would have to tell Coach Jarvis I wouldn't be playing. When I told Coach Jarvis, he was as 10 as I expected him to be. "You have your whole life to work," he said. "Your playing days are limited. You can't 11 to waste them." I stood before him with my head hanging, trying to think of the 12 that would explain 13 him why my dream of buying my mom a house and having money in my pocket was worth facing his 14 in me. "How much are you going to make at this job, son?" he asked. "Three twenty-five an hour," I replied. "Well," he asked, "is $3.25 an hour the 15 of a dream?" That simple question made it 16 to me the difference between 17 something right now and following a dream. I 18 myself to sports that summer, and within the year I was 19 by the Pittsburgh Pirates to play baseball, and was 20 a $20,000 contract. In 2000, I bought my mother the house of my dream! | ||||
|
1-5: ABACA 6-10: BDCCA 11-15: BCBDC 16-20: BABDC
练习册系列答案
相关题目
| 完形填空。 | ||||
| I can still remember it like it was yesterday. I was a college freshman and had 1 up most of the night before laughing and talking with friends. Now just before my first 2 of the day my eyelids were feeling heavier and heavier and my he ad was drifting down to my desk to make my textbook a 3 . A few minutes nap (瞌睡) time before class couldn't 4 , I thought. BOOM! I lifted my head suddenly and my eyes opened wider than saucers. I looked around with my 5 beating wildly trying to find the cause of the 6 . My young professor was looking back at me with a boyish smile on his face. He had 7 dropped the textbooks he was carrying onto his desk. "Good morning!", he said still 8 . "I am glad to see everyone is 9 . Now let's get started." For the next hour I wasn't sleepy at all. It wasn't from the 10 of my professor's textbook alarm clock either. It was instead from the 11 discussion he led. With knowledge and good 12 he made the material come 13 . His insights were full of both wisdom and loving-kindness. And the enthusiasm and joy that he 14 with were contagious (富有感染力的). I 15 the classroom not only wide awake, but a little 16 and a little better as well. I learned something far more important than not 17 in class that day too. I learned that if you are going to do something in this life, do it well, do it with 18 . What a wonderful place this would be if all of us did our work joyously and well. Don't sleepwalk your way through 19 then. Wake up! Let your love fill your work. Life is too 20 not to live it well. | ||||
|