题目内容

“Look, it’s Baldy!” A boy shouted in my direction across the playground. Even though I was
used to regular insults(侮辱)because of the   41  on my head, it was   42  horrible to hear. I sighed as I headed back to the class.
When I was just 20 months old, I suffered serious   43  after a bowl full of hot oil fell on my head. I was   44  to hospital and had to stay there for weeks while the doctors   45  to save my life. “Holly’s very   46  to be alive,” they told Mum and Dad. “But she’ll be   47  with scars on her head, and of course her hair won’t grow there.”
As a child, I cared much about my scars, so I   48  wore a scarf to cover them up when I left home.   49  I didn’t, people would call me horrible names like Baldy. Although my friends were always comforting me, they never   50  understood how it felt.
Then through the hospital I was   51  to a children’s burns camp, where children like me can get any help. There I   52  14-year-old Stephanie, whose burns are a lot more serious than mine. But she is so  53  that she never lets anyone put her down. “You shouldn’t   54  what people say about what you look like because we’re not different from anyone else, Holly, ”  She   55  me. “And you don’t need to wear a scarf because you look great   56  it!” For the first time in my life I could speak to someone who’d been through something   57  . So weeks later, at my 13th birthday party,   58  by her bravery, I gave up my scarf and showed off my scars. It felt amazing not having to   59  away behind my scarf.
Now, I am   60  of what I look like and much happier, because I have realized it is your personality that decides who you are.
小题1:
A.hatB.scarfC.scarsD.cuts
小题2:
A.stillB.justC.neverD.seldom
小题3:
A.hungerB.coldC.defeatsD.burns
小题4:
A.rushedB.ledC.invitedD.forced
小题5:
A.learnedB.foughtC.returnedD.decided
小题6:
A.happyB.luckyC.lonelyD.poor
小题7:
A.pressedB.occupiedC.leftD.painted
小题8:
A.possiblyB.usuallyC.finallyD.nearly
小题9:
A.AlthoughB.SinceC.IfD.Before
小题10:
A.correctlyB.roughlyC.easilyD.really
小题11:
A.promotedB.introducedC.reportedD.carried
小题12:
A.metB.recognizedC.rememberedD.caught
小题13:
A.honestB.strongC.activeD.young
小题14:
A.write downB.agree withC.pass onD.listen to
小题15:
A.promisedB.encouragedC.orderedD.calmed
小题16:
A.inB.forC.withoutD.beyond
小题17:
A.similarB.strangeC.hardD.important
小题18:
A.allowedB.requiredC.guidedD.inspired
小题19:
A.hideB.giveC.keepD.put
小题20:
A.sickB.awakeC.tiredD.proud

小题1:C
小题2:A
小题3:D
小题4:A
小题5:B
小题6:B
小题7:C
小题8:B
小题9:C
小题10:D
小题11:B
小题12:A
小题13:B
小题14:D
小题15:B
小题16:C
小题17:A
小题18:D
小题19:A
小题20:D

试题分析:文章以记叙文为题材,讲述了作者小时候因外被烫伤而造成头部有伤疤,因为别扭别人喊自己秃子所以用头巾包裹,但受到了与自己有类似经历的勇敢的斯蒂芬的坚强所鼓励,摘下头巾走出自卑的阴影的故事。
小题1:C区分词义题。A. hat帽子B. scarf头巾C. scars伤疤D. cuts割伤,划伤,从第二段中第一行after a bowl full of hot oil fell on my head得知男孩是被热油烫伤,所以头上应该是疤痕,也可根据第三行But she’ll be       with scars on her head得出C正确。
小题2:A 词义和语境的理解。AA. still仍然B. just仅仅C. never从不D. seldom很少,根据eventhough引导的让步状语从句Even though I was used to regular insults(侮辱)because of the        on my head, it was       horrible to hea可以看出作者仍然感觉听到那些外号很糟糕,所以答案是A
小题3:D上下文的理解。根据整整一碗滚烫的热油落到头上,当然是烫伤所以D正确。
小题4:A 区分固定短语和语境理解。A be rushed to 被紧急的送到 be  led to 被带到be  invited to 被邀请  be forced to 被迫,作者被烫伤后,当然是紧急的送到医院,所以A正确。
小题5:B. 区分固定短语和语境理解。Learn to do 学会做 ,  fight   to do 努力做,拼命做returneto do返回做     decide to do决定做。根据文意应该是医生努力拯救我的生命,所以B正确。
小题6:B.语境的理解。 A. happy高兴B. lucky 幸运 C. lonely 孤独D. poor可怜,医生一定是告诉父母能活下来是很幸运了,所以B正确。
小题7:C区分固定短语和语境理解be pressed with 窘迫于be  occupied with 忙于be  left with被留下 be     painted witdh 被画上,本题应该是头上留下了伤疤,所以C正确。
小题8:B 区分副词词义。A. possibly 可能地  B. usually通常  C. finally 最终D. nearly几乎,根据句义当然是总是带着头巾,所以B正确。
小题9:C 上下文的理解。据下句people would call me horrible names like Baldy人们总是喊我像秃子这样难听的名字,所以前句应该是如果我不戴头巾即if引导条件状语从句,所以C正确。
小题10:D 上下文的理解。A. correctly正确地B. roughly大概地C. easily容易地D. really真正地,本题句义:尽管我的朋友总是安慰我,但他们从未____理解那是怎样的感觉,所以D正确。
小题11:B 上下文的理解。A. promoted 提升B. introduced介绍C. reported报道  D. carried携带,本题Then through the hospital I was       to a children’s burns camp, 然后通过医院,我当然是被别人介绍去的烧伤儿童夏令营,所以B正确。
小题12:A句义的理解。 A. met 遇见 B. recognized 认出 C. remembered记得 D. caught抓住,本题当然是我遇到了十四岁的斯蒂芬,所以A正确。
小题13:BA.honest诚实的 B. strong  强壮的 ,坚强的    C. active  活跃的 D. young年轻的据后句she never lets anyone put her down.她从来不被被任何人打垮,所以前句是他那么的坚强,所以B正确。
小题14:D固定短语和上下文的理解。A. write down写下B. agree with同意C. pass on传递D.listen to听,据后句because we’re not different from anyone else因为我们跟别人没什么不同,所以本题是不要听别人说的话,素养D正确。
小题15:B.上下文的理解。 A. promised 允诺B. encouraged鼓励 C. ordered命令D. calmed使冷静,据题意即所说的话应该是鼓励,所以B正确。
小题16:C上下文的理解。斯蒂芬告诉作者,即使 不戴头巾也很漂亮,注意句末的it指的是scarf头巾,所以不戴头巾即without,所以C正确。
小题17:A区分词义和上下文的理解。A. similar相似的       B. strange奇怪的    C. hard 艰难的  D. important重要的,斯蒂芬妮和我的经历是相似的,我人生中第一次和我有着相似经历的人交流,所以A正确。
小题18:D 上下文的理解。A. allowed 允许 B. required 要求 C. guided指导 D. inspired激励,作者勇敢的取下头巾,是被史蒂芬妮的勇敢激励的结果,所以D正确。
小题19:A.区分固定短语和上下文的理解。 hide away 藏起来  give  away 捐出 keep    away不接近 put away收起来,作者之前一直是用头巾掩盖伤疤,所以A正确。
小题20:D 区分固定短语和上下文的理解。be sick of 厌倦了  be  aware of 知道,了解 be tired of 厌烦 be  proud of 以…..为自豪,根据文章内容,在与史蒂芬妮交往以后,我对自己的外貌不再自卑,所以D正确。
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In 1859,during the Gold Rush,a twenty- year-old immigrant(移民)from Bavaria named Levi Strauss stepped off the boat in San Francisco. He had with him a special cloth called Serge de Nimes that was later called denim in America. Levi Strauss hoped to sell the denim as material to make tents and covers for wagons to the men who were going to the goldfields to look for gold.
“You should have brought trousers to sell. In the goldfields we need strong trousers that don‘t wear out,”one young miner advised Strauss. So Levi Strauss took some of his denim to the nearest tailor and had him make the miner a pair of trousers. The miner was so pleased that he told other miners about the wonderful newcomer,Levi,and soon Levi Strauss had to open a shop,producing enough trousers for the miners. The miners wanted trousers that were comfortable to ride in and were low cut so that they could bend over easily to pick up the gold from under their feet. Besides they wanted the trousers to have big useful pockets. One miner complained that the gold in his pockets kept tearing them. So Levi put metal corners in the pockets to make them stronger. Very soon,miners and cowboys from all over came to get fitted up with Levi‘s trousers. Today more than a hundred years later, Levi’s trousers walk the world a Levi‘s blue jeans(牛仔裤)。
小题1:The denim cloth was originally(起初)meant for____.
A.making tent covers and wagons
B.making tents for wagons
C.making trousers for the miners
D.making wagon covers and tents
小题2:What kind of material do you think is denim?
A.A strong type of cloth that is not torn by strong wears.
B.A special type of cloth that cannot be washed away by rain.
C.A smooth type of cloth that is for underwear.
D.A wonderful type of cloth that is as good as metal.
小题3:A miner advised Strauss to sell trousers because ____.
A.the miners didn‘t have enough trousers
B.the miner‘s trousers had not been strong enough
C.the miner‘s trousers did not wear out easily
D.the tailor on the goldfield could not make trousers
小题4:Why did the miners need strong pockets in the trousers?
A.Their pockets kept tearing the gold.
B.Their pockets were not made of metal.
C.The gold they found was too sharp and heavy to tear their pockets.
D.The gold they collected easily tore their pockets.
阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上涂黑。
Stephanie McRae was used to driving in bad weather. Although  16 still beat the windshield of her SUV(运动越野车), the worst of the day's storm seemed to have passed as she  17 her 11-year-old daughter, Maddie, home at 8:30 pm.
Maddie  18  in front, while two young kids sat strapped into their SUV  19 in back. Driving along the mad by a river, McRae, 39,  20 a terrifying sight: The road just ahead had been craved in and  21 . She stepped heavily on the brake. The SUV  22 into a flooded hole some 6 metres below, and was washed into the   23 , which the storm had turned into a   24 river 30 metres wide. Rocks and fallen tree  25 knocked into her SUV, making it upside down. The pressure blew out the window.
No one was hurt,   26 there was no way to escape either, The SUV was being  27 towards the middle of the river, about 400 metres away. McRae  28 helplessly and prayed aloud with Maddie: “Please, God, please, help us!” The SUV, submerged and   29  with water, came to a stop when it parked at an angle in a logjam(浮木阻塞). 
It was Maddie who took control. Pushing her way out of the   30 back window, the slight but athletic Maddie  31 onto the top of the SUV, which had righted itself, and yelled to her mother to hoist up the younger children. Soon the  32 were crowded on the top of the SUV’s roof.   33 to hold on as the water swept over them. McRae caught hold of the two-year-old kid to her chest while holding the three-year-old on her leg. Both children were so   34 that MeRac wondered if they were all right. With her mother’s permission, the 11-year-old girl-Meddie got over lots of problems to ask for help in a   35 village and fortunately they were saved.
小题1:
A.rainB.snowC.windD.mud
小题2:
A.walkedB.droveC.ranD.rushed
小题3:
A.stoodB.layC.criedD.sat
小题4:
A.beltsB.backsC.seatsD.toys
小题5:
A.worriedB.thoughtC.sawD.feard
小题6:
A.washed awayB.taken awayC.gone awayD.moved away
小题7:
A.changedB.fellC.jumpedD.knocked
小题8:
A.seaB.bankC.takeD.river
小题9:
A.risingB.leavingC.singingD.falling
小题10:
A.leavesB.branchesC.skinsD.flowers
小题11:
A.andB.orC.butD.so
小题12:
A.carriedB.setC.turnedD.swept
小题13:
A.beggedB.screamedC.askedD.applied
小题14:
A.fillingB.burdeningC.fighteningD.talking
小题15:
A.hiddenB.closedC.brokenD.covered
小题16:
A.climbedB.sleptC.rolledD.tied
小题17:
A.twoB.threeC.fourD.five
小题18:
A.losingB.tryingC.findingD.getting
小题19:
A.noisyB.happyC.excitedD.quiet
小题20:
A.remoteB.closeC.crowdedD.unknown
It was an autumn morning shortly after my husband and I moved into our first house. Children were upstairs unpacking , and I was looking out of the window at my father moving around mysteriously on the front lawn. My parents lived nearby ,and Dad had visited us several times already. “What are you doing out there?” I called to him .He looked up, smiling. “I’m making you a surprise.” Knowing my father, I thought it could be just about anything. A self-employed jobber, he was always building things out of odds and ends. When we were kids, he always created something surprising for us.
Today, however, Dad would say no more, and caught ups in the busyness of our new life, I eventually forgot about his surprise. Until one gloomy day the following March when I glanced out of the window. Any yet… I saw a dot of blue across the yard. I headed outside for a closer look. They were crocuses (番红花), throughout the front lawn. Lavender, blue, yellow and my favorite pink ---- little faces moved up and down in the cold wind.
Dad! I smiled, remembering the things he had secretly planted last autumn. He knew how the darkness and dullness of winter always got me down. What could have been more perfectly timely to my needs?
My father’s crocuses bloomed each spring for the next four or five seasons, bringing the same assurance every time they arrived: hard times was almost over. Hold on, keep going, light is coming soon.
Then a spring came with only half the usual blooms. The next spring there were none. I missed the crocuses. I would ask Dad to come over and plant new bulbs. But I never did.
He died suddenly one October day. My family was in deep sorrow, leaning on our faith. I missed him terribly.
Four years passed, and on a dismal spring afternoon I was driving back when I found myself feeling depressed. “You’ve got the winter depression again and you get them every year.” I told myself.
It was Dad’s birthday, and I found myself thinking about him. This was not unusual --- my family often talked about him, remembering how he lived his faith. Once I saw him give his coat to a homeless man.
Suddenly I slowed as I turned into our driveway. I stopped and stared at the lawn. And there on the muddy grass and small gray piles of melting snow, bravely waving in the wind, was one pink crocus.
How could a flower bloom from a bulb more than 18 years old, one that had not blossomed in over a decade? But there was the crocus. Tears filled my eyes as I realized its significance.
Hold on, keep going, light is coming soon. The pink crocus bloomed for only a day. But it built my faith for a lifetime.
小题1:According to the first three paragraphs, we learn that _________.
A.the writer was unpacking when her father was making the surprise
B.the writer knew what the surprise was because she knew her father
C.it was not the first time that the writer’s father had made a surprise
D.it kept bothering the writer not knowing what the surprise was
小题2:Which of the following would most probably be the worst time of the year as seen by the writer?
A.Spring.B.Summer.C.Autumn.D.Winter.
小题3:Which of the following is NOT true, according to the passage?
A.The writer’s father planted the crocus to lift her low spirit.
B.The crocuses bloomed each spring before the writer’s father died.
C.The writer often thought about her father since her father died.
D.The writer’s father died some years after he planted the crocus.
小题4:The writer’s father should be best described as_________.
A.a full-time gardener with skillful hands
B.a part-time jobber who loved flowers
C.a kind-hearted man who lived with faith
D.an ordinary man with doubts in his life
小题5:Crocus was viewed as the symbol of _________ by the writer.
A.faithB.familyC.loveD.friendship
A few weeks after my first wife, Georgia, was called to heaven, I was cooking dinner for my son and myself. For a   11  , I had decided on frozen peas. As I was cutting open the bag, it   12  from my hand and crashed to the floor. The peas, like marbles(弹珠),   13  everywhere. I tried to use a broom(扫帚),    14  with each sweep, they just rolled across the kitchen.
For the next week, every time I was in the   15  , I found a pea——in a corner, or behind a table leg. They kept   16  . Eight months later I pulled out the refrigerator to clean behind it, and   17__  12 frozen peas hidden underneath.
At the time I found those few remaining   18  , I was in a new relationship with a wonderful  __19  I’d met in a support group. After we married, I was reminded   20  those peas under the refrigerator, and realized that my   21  had been like that bag of frozen peas. It had scattered(分散). My wife had died; I was in a new city with a busy job, and with a son having trouble   22  his new surroundings and the   23  of his mother. I was a bag of spilled frozen peas; my life had come apart and scattered.
When life gets you   24  , when everything you know comes apart, and when you think you’ll never   25  , remember that it’s just a bag of scattered frozen peas. The peas can be   26  , and life will move on. You’ll find all the peas   27  , including the ones that are hardest to find. And when you’ve got them   28  you’ll start to feel whole again.
The life you know can break apart at any time. But you’ll have to   29  , and how fast you collect your peas depends on you. Will you keep scattering them around with a broom,   30   will you pick them up one by one and put your life back together?
小题1:
A.drinkB.fruitC.vegetableD.meat
小题2:
A.movedB.walkedC.ranD.slipped
小题3:
A.rubbedB.rolledC.grewD.existed
小题4:
A.butB.andC.althoughD.so
小题5:
A.bedroomB.living roomC.kitchenD.storeroom
小题6:
A.getting upB.turning upC.taking upD.using up
小题7:
A.foundB.ateC.leftD.planted
小题8:
A.presentsB.cansC.vegetablesD.peas
小题9:
A.manB.childC.womanD.boy
小题10:
A.ofB.forC.withD.in
小题11:
A.wifeB.lifeC.sonD.friend
小题12:
A.turning toB.leading toC.adjusting toD.adding to
小题13:
A.thankB.loveC.helpD.loss
小题14:
A.downB.nearC.closeD.wide
小题15:
A.get itB.make itC.take itD.leave it
小题16:
A.grewB.boughtC.collectedD.frozen
小题17:
A.eventuallyB.fortunatelyC.properlyD.specially
小题18:
A.bothB.allC.eitherD.each
小题19:
A.call onB.put onC.bring onD.move on
小题20:
A.whileB.becauseC.sinceD.or
One day, Jack threw some papers on my desk. “What’s wrong?” I asked. “Next time you want to change anything, ask me first,” he said, and left. I had made just one small change. But it’s not that I hadn’t been warned. My colleagues had said he was responsible for the resignations of the two previous secretaries. As the weeks went by, I came to look down on Jack.
After another of his episodes had left me in tears I stormed into his office. “what?” he said suddenly. “Jack, the way you’ve been treating me is wrong. I’ve never had anyone speak to me that way. As a professional, it’s wrong for me to allow it to continue,” I said. Jack smiled nervously, “Susan, I make you a promise that I will be a friend. I will treat you as you deserve to be treated, with respect and kindness.”
Jack avoided me the rest of the week, and never questioned my work again. I brought cookies to the office one day and left some on his desk. Another day I left a note: ”Hope your day is going great. ” Over the next few weeks, there were no more Jack episodes. One year later
I discovered I had breast cancer, and was scared. The statistics were not great for my long-term survival.
One day, however, Jack visited me in the hospital and silently handed me a bundle with several bulbs inside. “Tulips(郁金香),” he said. I smiled, not understanding. “If you plant them when you get home, they’ll come up next spring. I think you will be there to see them when they come up. Next spring you will see the colours I picked out for you.” Tears clouded my eyes and he left. I have seen those red and white striped(有条纹的) tulips push through the soil every spring for over ten years now. This past September the doctor declared me cured. At a moment when I was praying for just the right word, a man with very few words said all the right things. After all, that’s what friends do.
小题1:Jack became angry that day because__________.
A.he was feeling unwell
B.Susan had failed to keep his office clean
C.he felt Susan changed too much about the papers
D.Susan had changed something without his permission
小题2:Susan stormed into jack’s office to tell Jack that__________.
A.he wasn’t worthy of respect
B.he should apologize to her right away
C.she would treat him the way he treated her
D.one should show others respect and kindness
小题3:Which of the following describes Susan?
A.Moody but firm.
B.Shy and demanding
C.Confident and friendly.
D.Tough and troublesome.
小题4:From the passage, we can conclude that__________.
A.Jack cares about his employees
B.Jack gets along well with his employees
C.Jack is always particular about his work
D.Jack doesn’t care about the feelings of others
小题5:We can infer from the passage that__________.
A.a friend in need is a friend in deed
B.a few words can be as meaningful as many
C.a friend who says little must be a good friend
D.we must treat disrespectful people with disrespect
Bertie knew there was something in the wind.His mother had been sad in recent days, not sick, just strangely sad. The lion had just lain down beside him, his head warm on Bertie’s feet when Father cleared his throat and began, “You’ll soon be eight, Bertie. A boy needs a proper education. We’ve found the right place for you, a school near Salisbury in England.”
His heart filled with a terrible fear, all Bertie could think of was his white lion. “But the lion,” he cried, “What about the lion?”
“I’m afraid there’s something else I have to tell you,” his father said. Looking across at Bertie’s mother, he took a deep breath. Then he told Bertie he had met a circus owner from France, who was over in Africa looking for lions to buy. He would come to their farm in a few days.
“No! You can’t send him to a circus!” said Bertie. “People will come to see him. He’ll be shut up behind bars. I promised him he never would be. And they will laugh at him. He’d rather die. Any animal would!” But as he looked across the table at them, he knew their minds were quite made up.
Bertie felt completely betrayed. He waited until he heard his father’s deep breathing next door. With his white lion at his heels, he slipped downstairs, took down his father’s hunting rifle from the rack and stepped out into the night. He ran and ran till his legs could run no more. As the sun came up over the grassland, he climbed to the top of a hill and sat down, his arms round the lion’s neck. The time had come.
“Be wild now,” he whispered. “You’ve got to be wild. Don’t ever come home. All my life I’ll think of you. I promise I will.” He buried his head in the lion’s neck. Then, Bertie clambered down the hill and walked away.
When he looked back, the lion was still sitting there watching him; but then he stood up, yawned, stretched, and sprang down after him. Bertie shouted at him, but he kept coming. He threw sticks. He threw stones. Nothing worked.
There was only one thing left to do. With tears filling his eyes and his mouth, he lifted the rifle to his shoulder and fired over the lion’s head.
小题1:Bertie’s mother was sad probably because she ______.
A.had been seriously ill recently
B.had decided to send Bertie to school
C.knew selling the lion would upset Bertie
D.knew Bertie would hate to go to England
小题2:In the last paragraph, the boy lifted the rifle to ______.
A.kill the lion out of angerB.show his anger towards his father
C.protect himself from the lionD.threaten the lion back to the wild
小题3:The passage intends to show that ______.
A.animal-hunting is popular in Africa
B.parents are sometimes cruel to their children
C.people and animals can be faithful to each other
D.animals usually lead a miserable life in circuses
Dear Guys,
I’d like to talk to you about the shame you subjected me to last night. Let me first refresh your memory: You, a group of fit, young men, were playing soccer on the field across from my apartment building. I, a better-than-average looking young woman, was walking along the sidewalk with my groceries. That’s when your ball came flying over the fence and landed in front of me.
One of you approached and asked politely if I would throw the ball back to you. Fighting the urge to drop my bags and run screaming down the street, I reluctantly (勉强地) agreed.
Before I continue, let me explain something that I didn’t have a chance to mention last night: I hate sports. More specifically, I hate sports involving balls. This results from my lack of natural ability when it comes to throwing, catching and hitting. I’m bad at aiming too. So you can understand why I’d be nervous at what I’m sure seemed to you like a laughably simple request.
However, wanting to appear agreeable, I put my bags down, picked up the ball and, eyes half-shut, threw it as hard as I could.
It hit the middle of the fence and bounced back to me.
Trying to act casually, I said something about being out of practice, then picked up the ball again. If you’ll remember, at your command, I agreed to try throwing underhand. While outwardly I was smiling, in my head, I was praying, Oh God, oh please oh please oh please. I threw the ball upward with all my strength, terrified by what happened next.
The ball hit slightly higher up on the fence and bounced back to me.
This is the point where I start to take issue with you. Wouldn’t it have been a better use of your time, and mine, if you had just walked around the fence and took the ball then? I was clearly struggling; my smiles were more and more forced. And yet, you all just stood there, motionless.
Seeing that you weren’t going to let me out of the trouble, I became desperate. Memories of middle school softball came flooding back. I tried hard to throw the ball but it only went about eight feet, then I decided to pick it up and dash with ball in hand towards the baseline, while annoyed thirteen-year-old boys screamed at me that I was ruining their lives. Children are cruel.
Being a big girl now, I pushed those memories aside and picked up the soccer ball for the third time. I forced a good-natured laugh while crying inside as you patiently shouted words of support over the fence at me.
“Throw it granny-style!” one of you said.
“Just back up a little and give it all you’ve got!” another offered.
And, most embarrassing of all, “You can do it!”
I know you thought you were being encouraging, but it only served to deepen the shame.
Anyway, I accepted your ball-throwing advice, backed up, rocked back and forth a little, took a deep breath and let it fly.
It hit the edge of the fence and bounced back to me.
I surprised myself-and I’m sure you as well-by letting out a cry, “DAMN IT!!!” I then willed myself to have a heart attack and pass out in front of you just so I’d be put out of my misery.
Alas, the heart attack didn’t happen, and you continued to look at me expectantly, like you were content to do this all night. I had become a sort of exhibition for you. I could feel your collective thoughts drifting through the chain-link: “Can she really not do it? But I mean, really?”
Unfortunately for you, I wasn’t really game to continue your experiment. Three failed attempts at a simple task in front of a group of people in a two-minute period was just enough blow for me for one night. I picked up the ball one last time, approached the fence and grumbled, “Please just come get the damn ball.”
And you did. And thanks to you, I decided at that very moment to never throw anything ever again, except disrespectful glances at people who play sports.
Sincerely, Jen Cordery
小题1:The writer agreed to throw the ball because ______.
A.she needed to have a relax carrying the heavy groceries
B.she wanted to refresh her childhood memories
C.she could not refuse the polite request from the young man
D.she had fallen in love with the young man at first sight
小题2:Why did the writer mention her middle school memory?
A.To explain why she failed the attempts to throw the ball back.
B.To complain that she had not mastered the ball throwing skills.
C.To show how cruel those 13-year-old boys were.
D.To express her dislike towards softball.
小题3: What the boys said before the writer’s third attempt actually made the writer _______.
A.inspiredB.encouragedC.embarrassedD.depressed
小题4:What happened to the ball at last?
A.The writer managed to throw the ball back.
B.The boy got the ball back by himself.
C.The writer threw the ball away out of anger.
D.The boys got angry and left without the ball.

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