题目内容
-Almost.He__________his speech with a lot of gestures.
B.created
C.accompanied
D.prepared
This is time of year when we think about giving and receiving presents. Can you find a little extra to give? On this page we suggest a few organizations you might like to help.
Littleton Children’s Home
We don’t want your money, but children’s toys, books and clothes in good condition would be very welcome.
Also—we are looking for friendly families who would take our children into their homes for a few hours or days as guests. You have so much—will you share it?
Phone Sister Thomas on 55671.
Children’s Hospice
We look after a small number of very sick children. This important work needs skill and love. We cannot continue without gifts of money to pay for more nursing staff. We also need story books and toys suitable for quiet games.
Please contact The Secretary, Little Children’s Hospice, Newby Road.w.^w.k.s.5*u.c.#o@m
Street Food
In the winter weather, it’s no fun being homeless. It’s even worse if you’re hungry. We give hot food to at least fifty people every night. It’s hard work, but necessary. Can you come and help? If not, can you find a little money? We use a very old kitchen, and we urgently need some new saucepans. Money for new ones would be most welcome indeed.
Contact Street Food, c/o Mary’s House, Elming Way, Littleton. Phone 27713.
Littleton Youth Club
Have you got an unwanted chair?—a record player?—a pot of paint?
Because we can use them!
We want to get to work on our meeting room!
Please phone 66231 and we’ll be happy to collect anything you can give us.
Thank you!
The Night Shelter
We offer a warm bed for the night to anyone who has nowhere to go. We rent the former Commercial Hotel on Green Street. Although it is not expensive, we never seem to have quite enough money. Can you let us have a few pounds? Any amount, however small, will be such a help.
Send it to us at 15, Green St, Littleton. Please make check payable to Night Shelter.
【小题1】Reading the passage, you might like to help these organizations which work for
| A.homeless and sick children |
| B.less fortunate members of our society |
| C.hungry people who have no beds to sleep in |
| D.friendly members of our society to help others |
| A.Street Food | B.Night Shelter | C.Children’s Home | D.Children’s Hospice |
| A.there are too many social problems in this country |
| B.people are very poor during the time for giving presents |
| C.warm-hearted people like to give away money |
| D.this passage is taken from a local newspaper |
| A.Children’s Home and Children’s Hospice | B.Youth Club and Children’s Home |
| C.Children’s Hospice and Night Shelter | D.Youth Club and Night Shelter |
He wishes the holiday season would end already. His back aches, his red suit feels like a spacesuit , his cheeks have gone tight from smiling for 12 hours —and still the kids keep coming and coming , like ants at a picnic . As Christmas becomes more commercialized (商业化) across the U. S. and Canada, so must Santas. As the holiday begins earlier each year, so must its spokesmen .
The questions from children these days are harder than ever. Now, with thousands of children expecting a father or mother serving in Iraq or Afghanistan, the questions are as heart-breaking as they are unanswerable. For example, “Can you please bring Daddy home from the war in time for Christmas morning?”
Santas also have a pretty good chance of getting sued (指控). A professional Santa Claus in Canada told a story: A Santa had a girl on his knee, and he commented, “You have nice eyes and nice hair.” The girl later said it was sexual harassment (骚扰) . When a Santa feels anxious, he often shows it in the same ways ordinary people do: The Santas were always seen to hang around at the dinner table when the show ended. Many of them just sleep in bed for several days and don’t see other children again.
【小题1】In the first paragraph, “spokesmen” refers to .
| A.businessmen | B.political leaders |
| C.organizers of the activities | D.Santa Clauses |
| A.well-paid | B.very hard | C.worth doing | D.dangerous |
| A.doing something against the law | B.hanging around the dinner table |
| C.being lazy and sleeping in bed for days | D.not playing their roles as expected |
| A.Christmas: Not a Good Festival for Santas | B.Is Santa Claus Really Alive? |
| C.A Christmas Story | D.What Does Santa Claus Do for Children? |
Can you understand the beginning of this article?
“My smmr hols wr CWOT. B4, we usd 2go2 NY 2C my bro, his GF & 3 kds FTF.”
The Scottish teacher who received it in class had no idea what the girl who wrote it meant. The essay was written in a form of English used in cell phone text messages. Text messages (also called SMS2) through cell phones became very popular in the late 1990s. At first, mobile phone companies thought that text messaging would be a good way to send messages to customers, but customers quickly began to use the text messaging service to send messages to each other. Teenagers in particular enjoyed using text messaging, and they began to create a new language for messages called texting.
A text message is limited to 160 characters, including letters, spaces, and numbers, so messages must be kept short. In addition, typing on the small keypad of a cell phone is difficult, so it’s common to make words shorter. In texting, a single letter or number can represent a word, like “r” for “are,” “u” for “you,” and “2” for “to.” Several letters can also represent a phrase, like “lol” for “laughing out loud.” Another characteristic of texting is the leaving out of letters in a word, like spelling “please” as “pls.”
Some parents and teachers worry that texting will make children bad spellers and bad writers. The student who wrote the essay at the top of this page said writing that way was more comfortable for her. (The essay said, “My summer holidays were a complete waste of time. Before, we used to go to New York to see my brother, his girlfriend, and their three kids face to face.”)
Not everyone agrees that texting is a bad thing. Some experts say languages always evolve, and this is just another way for English to change. Other people believe texting will disappear soon. New technology for voice messages may soon make text messages a thing of the past.
【小题1】What is the writer’s opinion of text messaging?
| A.It is fun and easy to do. |
| B.It is not bad for children. |
| C.It will make children bad writers. |
| D.The writer does not give an opinion. |
| A.Using phrases to represent essays |
| B.Using numbers to represent words |
| C.Using letters to represent phrases |
| D.Using letters to represent words |
| A.My Gr8 Tchr | B.CU in LA | C.My GF | D.My Smmr Hols |
| A.It has been replaced by voice message |
| B.It’s too difficult to type. |
| C.Teenagers won’t learn to write correctly. |
| D.It’s not comfortable. |
| A.Not many people use texting. |
| B.Spelling in English is too difficult. |
| C.Teenagers quickly become bored with texting. |
| D.Texting will disappear because of new technology. |
Kincaid looked at his watch: eight-seventeen. The truck started on the second try, and he backed out, shifted gears, and moved slowly down the alley under hazy sun. Through the streets of Bellingham he went, heading south on Washington 11, running along the coast of Puget Sound for a few miles, then following the highway as it swung east a little before meeting U.S Route 20.
Turning into the sun, he began the long, winding drive through the Cascades. He liked this country and felt unpressed stopping now and then to make notes about interesting possibilities for future expeditions or to shoot what he called “memory snapshots.” The purpose of these causal photographs was to remind him of places he might want to visit again and approach more seriously. In later afternoon h
e turned north at Spokane, picking up U.S Route 2, which would take him halfway across the northern United States to Duluth, Minnesota.
He wished for the thousandth time in his life that he had a dog, a golden retriever, maybe, for travels like this and to keep him company at home. But he was frequently away; overseas much of the time and it would not be fair to the animal. Still, he thought about it anyway. In a few years he would be getting too old for the hard fieldwork. “I must get a dog then.” He said to himself.
Drives like this
always put him into a sentimental mood. The dog was part of it. Robert Kincaid was alone as it’s possible to be – an only child, parents both dead, distant relatives who had lost track of him and he of them, no close friends.
He thought about Marian. She had left him nine years ago after five years of marriage. He was fifty–two now, that would make her just under forty. Marian had dreams of becoming a musician, a folksinger. She knew all of the Weavers’ songs and sang them pretty well in the coffeehouse of Seattle. When he was home in the old days, he drove her to the shows and sat in the audience while she sang.
His long absences – two or three months sometimes – were hard on the marriage. He knew that. She was aware of what he did when they decided to get married, and both of them had a vague (not clear) sense that it could all be handled somehow. It couldn’t when he came from photographing a story in Iceland and, she was gone. The note read, “Robert, it didn’t work out, I left you the Harmony guitar. Stay in touch.”
He didn’t stay in touch. Neither did she. He signed the divorce papers when they arrived a year later and caught a plane for Australia the next day. She had asked for nothing except her freedom.
【小题1】Which route is the right on
e taken by Kincaid?
| A.Bellingham – Washington 11 – Puget Sound – U.S Route 20 – U.S Route 2 – Duluth |
| B.U.S. Route 2 – Bellingham – Washington 11 – Puget Sound – U.S Route 20 – Duluth |
| C.U.S. Route 2 – U.S Route 20 – Duluth – Bellingham – Washington 11 |
| D.Bellingham – Washington 11 –U.S. Route 2 –U.S Route 20 –Duluth |
| A.Kincaid’s parents were dead and he only kept in touch with some distant relatives. |
| B.Kincaid would have had a dog if he hadn’t been away from home too much. |
| C.Kincaid used to have a golden retriever. |
| D.Kincaid needed a dog in doing his hard fieldwork. |
| A.To write “memory snapshots”. |
| B.To remind himself of places he might want to visit again. |
| C.To avoid forgetting the way back. |
| D.To shoot beautiful scenery along the road. |
| A.She died after five years of marriage. |
| B.She was older than Kincaid. |
| C.She could sing very well and earned big money. |
| D.She was not a professional pop singer. |
| A.Marian knew what would happen before she married Kincaid. |
| B.Kincaid thought his absence would be a problem when he married Marian. |
| C.It turned out that Marian could not stand Kincaid’s absence and left him. |
| D.After Marian left him, they still kept in touch with each other. |