Jenny lived in a town.Her father,Mr.Young,had a shop there and sold clothes in it.The shopkeeper was born in a poor family and was in school no more than a year.He was always sorry for it though he had much money now.He hoped his daughter could become a scientist.But the girl didn’t 1ike anything else except singing.She often went to the concerts,bought a lot of records the famous pop stars made and insisted on listening to the music when she was free.Of course she wanted to be a pop star,too.Her parents wanted to prevent her,but she didn’t listen to
them and they had to agree to her choice.They engaged an old man who was good at music as a private teacher.
Five years passed.Mr.Young bought all kinds of musical instruments for Jenny and they visited some places where the famous singers were born.Of course he spent a lot of money on it.But he found the girl didn’t make any progress.At last the teacher didn’t think the girl could become a singer at all and had to tell Mr.Young about it.The man became angry and said,“Why didn’t you tell me about it earlier? My daughter learned nothing but I paid you month after month!”
“I think you should thank me for it,”said the teacher.“Another teacher, who teaches
badly,is paid more than I was.And I saved much money for you!”
【小题1】Mr. Young was in school for a short time because______ .
| A.he was too poor to go on studying | B.he had to help his parents |
| C.he was weak in his lessons | D.he didn’t like studying at all |
| A.visit some places | B.know some pop stars |
| C.become a pop star | D.1earn singing |
| A.he paid a lot of money to the teacher |
| B.his daughter decided to drop music |
| C.his daughter spent four years on music |
| D.the teacher taught his daughter nothing |
A tourist comes out of the airport.There are a lot of taxis,but the tourist asks every taxi—driver his name.He takes the third taxi.It costs£5 from the airport to the hotel.“How much does it cost for the whole day?” the tourist asks.“£100”,says the taxi-driver.This is very expensive,the tourist accepts the price.
The taxi—driver takes the tourist everywhere.He shows him all monuments and all the museums.In the evening they go back to the hotel.The tourist gives the taxi-driver£100 and says,“What about tomorrow?” The taxi-driver looks at the tourist.“Tomorrow? It’s another£ 100 tomorrow.”But the tourist says,“That’s OK.If that’s the price,that is the price.See you tomorrow.”The taxi—driver is very pleased.
The next day the taxi-driver takes the tourist everywhere again.They visit all the museums and all the monuments again.And in the second evening they go back to the hotel.The tourist gives the taxi—driver another£100 and says,“I’m going home tomorrow.”The taxi-driver is sorry.He likes the tourist and,above all,£100 a day is good money.“So you are going home.Where do you come from?” he asks.
“I come from New York.”
“New York!” says the taxi-driver,“I have a sister in New York.Her name is Susannah.Do you know her?”
“Of course 1 know her.She gave me£200 for you.”
【小题1】The tourist is______ .
| A.an Englishman | B.a Frenchman | C.a Swedish | D.an American |
| A.he is afraid of being cheated | B.he wants to remember all of the taxi—drivers’names |
| C.he knows of one of the taxi-drivers | D.there is a friend of his among the taxi drivers |
| A.None but the tourist agrees to the price given without arguing with him. |
| B.His sister knows the tourist. |
| C.His sister has brought so much money to him. |
| D.He wants to be the guide of the tourist. |
| A.the tourist will give the taxi-driver another£200 |
| B.the tourist makes fun of the taxi—driver |
| C.the tourist will give the taxi—driver half of the sum |
| D.the taxi-driver insists that the tourist should pay him another£200 |
Jean Driscoll can go faster in her wheelchair than the world’s best marathoners(马拉松运动员) can run!
In April, Jean finished the Boston Marathon in 1 hour 34 minutes 22 seconds. That’s about 33 minutes faster than the winning male runner! She competed on the track, too. She was se
cond in the 800 meter wheelchair race at the 1992 Olympics.
Jean doesn’t like to be told she’s brave. “I’m in sports because I’m a competitive person!” Jean was born with spina befida(脊柱裂), a birth illness that damages the spine(脊椎). She began to use a wheelchair to get around in high school. Then she tried wheelchair race and was amazed.” Players crashed into each other and fell out of their chairs,” she says, “It was fun.”
Jean tried other wheelchair sports. At the University of Illinois, her wheelchair basketball team won two national titles.
Now Jean coaches and teaches. She tries to get people to set goals. “When I sign my autograph(亲笔签名),says Jean, “I write, dream big and work hard.”
【小题1】What made Jean take part in sports?
| A.She was brave. |
| B.She was competitive. |
| C.She was strong. |
| D.She was disabled. |
| A.High school. |
| B.Junior middle sch |
| C.High education. |
| D.Primary school. |
| A.Work hard. | B.Hope for the best. |
| C.Dream a lot. | D.Have great wishes and work h |
Since 1989, Dave Thomas, who died at age 69, was one of the most recognizable faces on TV. He appeared in more than 800 commercials (商业广告) for the hamburger chain named for his daughter. “As long as it works," he said in 1991, “I’ll continue to do those commercials."
Even though he was successful, Thomas remained troubled by his childhood. “He still won’t let anyone see his feet, which are out of shape because he never had proper fitting shoes," Wendy said in 1993. Born to a single mother, he was adopted(收养) as a baby by Rex and Auleva Thomas of Kalamazoo in Michigan. After Auleva died when he was 5, Thomas spent years on the road as Rex traveled around seeking construction work. “He fed me," Thomas said, “and if I got out of line, he’d beat me."
Moving out on his own at 15, Thomas worked, first as a waiter, in many restaurants. But he had something much better in mind. “I thought if I owned a restaurant," he said, “I could eat for free." A 1956 meeting with Harland Sanders led Thomas to a career as the manager of a Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurant that made him a millionaire in 1968.
In 1969, after breaking with Sanders, Thomas started the first Wendy’s Old Fashioned Hamburgers, in Columbus, Ohio, which set itself apart by serving made to order burgers. With 6,000 restaurants worldwide, the chain now makes $ 6 billion a year in sales.
Although troubled by his own experience with adoption, Thomas, married since 1954 to Lorraine, 66, and with four grown kids besides Wendy, felt it could offer a future for other children. He started the Dave Thomas Foundation (基金会) for Adoption in 1992.
In 1993, Thomas, who had left school at 15, graduated from Coconut Creek High School in Florida. He even took Lorraine to the graduation dance party. The kids voted him Most Likely to Succeed.
“The Dave you saw on TV was the real Dave," says friend Pat Williams. “He wasn’t a great actor or a great speaker. He was just Joe Everybody."
【小题1】What is the article mainly about?
| A.The life of Dave Thomas. | B.The dream of Dave Thomas. |
| C.The schooling of Dave Thomas. | D.The growth of Dave Thomas’s business. |
| A.He lived a poor life. | B.He had caring parents. |
| C. He stayed in one place. | D. He didn’t go to school. |
a. graduated from high school b. started his own business
c. became a millionaire d. started a foundation
e. met Harland Sanders
| A.e,b,c,d,a, | B.a,e,c,b,d, |
| C.e,c,b,d,a, | D.a,e,b,c,d, |
| A.Dave was famous | B.Dave was ordinary |
| C.Dave was showy | D.Dave was shy |
| A.Thomas’s. | B.Wendy’s. | C.Lorraine’s. | D.Rex’s. |
I was walking along the deserted main street of a small seaside town in the north of England looking somewhere to make a phone call. My car had broken down outside the town and I wanted to get in touch with the Automobile Association .Low gray clouds were drifting across the sky and there was a cold damp wind blowing off the sea. It had rained in the night and water was dripping from the bare trees that lined the street. I was glad that I was wearing a thick coat.
There was no sign of a call box, nor was there anyone at that early hour I could ask. I had thought I might find a shop selling the Sunday papers or a milkman doing his job, but the town was completely dead.
Then suddenly I found what I was looking for. There was a small post office, and almost hidden from sight in a dark narrow street next to it was the town’s only public call box, which badly needed a coat of paint, I hurried forward but stopped in astonishment when I saw through the dirty glass that there was a man inside. He was very fat, and was wearing a cheap blue plastic raincoat and rubber boots. I could not see his face - he was bending forward over the phone with his back pressed against the glass and didn’t even raise his head at the sound of my coming nearer and nearer. Carefully and surprisedly, I remained standing a few feet away and lit a cigarette to wait my turn. It was when I threw the dead match on the ground that I noticed something bright red trickling from under the call box door.
【小题1】The author was walking through the small seaside town__________.
| A.late morning | B.early morning |
| C.before midnight | D.late evening |
| A.windy, cold and cloudy | B.stormy, damp and clear |
| C.rainy, cold and clear | D.rainy, windy and cold |
| A.the man inside was still wearing a raincoat |
| B.he didn’t expect it to be taken up |
| C.the man had his back with him |
| D.the man did not seem to be moving |
| A.it was not safe to be close to the box |
| B.the man didn’t notice his coming |
| C.he wanted to have a cigarette to calm himself down |
| D.it was bad manners to overhear other’s phone calls |
| A.He slept. |
| B.He had most probably been killed. |
| C.He was lost in his important phone call. |
| D.He was too fat to move around. |
Michael was a farmer in Texas.His parents moved to the USA from Ireland in the 1940’s, and they became very rich.Michael decided to go back to Ireland to meet his old grandfather, who was still living on the same farm.
Michael booked his ticket,flew to Shannon airport,hired a car and drove to the small village where his parents had been born.He asked for directions to the Ohagan farm,and in the end he drove up a bumpy path.He was shocked by what he saw:a small field,and in the middle of it was an old house,which looked as if it was falling down.Animals were wandering in and out of the front door,and on the porch an old man was smoking a pipe.
“Are you Mr. Ohagan?”asked Michael。
“Yes,”replied the old mall.
“I'm your grandson,Michael,”said Michael.
“A--ha,”replied the old man.
“Is this your farm?”asked Michael.
“Yes,all the way to the wall over there,”said the old man.
Michael was astonished.“Grandfather,”he said,“I have a farm in Texas.I can get into my car and drive all day and I still haven’t reached the end of the farm.”
“Yes,”said his grandfather.“I used to have a car like that.”
【小题1】Michael’s parents _______.
| A.still lived in Ireland alone | B.owned a small farm in Texas |
| C.returned to their birthplace | D.were Irish immigrants(移民)in America |
| A.The farm was small | B.The old house looked like his own. |
| C.Living conditions were poor in the fields. | D.Animals were free in the fields. |
| A.owned a small farm, which extended only to the wall not far away |
| B.had so large a farm that he couldn’t cover it in a day |
| C.hadn’t his modern car any longer |
| D.used to have as good a car as his grandson’s |
| A.Michael owned a large farm in Ireland. |
| B.Michael’s car was in such poor condition that it couldn’t reach the end of the farm within a day. |
| C.Michael’s farm was too large for a car to reach its end in a day. |
| D.Michael didn’t know what to say to his grandfather |
| A.the old man really had a car like that |
| B.the old man knew his son’s farm in the US was quite large |
| C.the old man misunderstood what Michael said |
| D.the old man wanted to buy a car like that |
When I was about 12, I had an enemy, a girl who liked to point out my shortcomings.
Week by week her list grew: I was very thin, I wasn’t a good student, I talked too much, I was too proud, and so on. I tried to hear all this as long as I could. At last, I became very angry. I ran to my father with tears in my eyes.
He listened to me quietly, then he asked. “Are the things she says true or not? Janet, didn’t you ever wonder what you’re really like ? Well, you now have that girl’s opinion. Go and make a list of everything she said and mark the points that are true. Pay no attention to the other things she said.”
I did as he told me. To my great surprise, I discovered that about half the things were true. Some of them I couldn’t change (like being very thin), but a good number I could—and suddenly I wanted to change. For the first time I go to fairly clear picture of myself.
I brought the list back to Daddy. He refused to take it.“That’s just for you,” he said.“You know better than anyone else the truth about yourself. But you have to learn to listen, not just close your ears in anger and feeling hurt. When something said about you is true, you’ll find it will be of help to you. Our world is full of people who think they know your duty. Don’t shut your ears. Listen to them all, but hear the truth and do what you know is
the right thing to do.”
Daddy’s advice has returned to me at many important moments. In my life, I’ve never had a better piece of advice.
【小题1】Which do you think would be the best title for this passage?
| A.Not an Enemy, but the Best Friend | B.The Best Advice I’ve Ever Had |
| C.My Father | D.My Childhood |
| A.Week by week she discovered more shortcomings of mine and pointed them out to me. |
| B.She had made a |
| C.I was having more and more shortcomings as time went on. |
| D.Week by week, my shortcomings grew more serious. |
| A.Because he believed that what her daughter’s “enemy” said was mostly true. |
| B.Because he had been so angry with his daughter’s shortcomings that he wanted to show this by keeping silent for a while. |
| C.Because he knew that his daughter would not listen to him at that moment. |
| D.Because he wasn’t quite sure which girl was telling the truth. |
| A.He told her not to pay any attention to what her“enemy” had said. |
| B.He criticized (批评) her and told her to overcome her shortcomings. |
| C.He told her to write down all that her“enemy” had said about her and pay attention only to the things that were true. |
| D.He refused to take the list and have a look at it. |
Looking back on my childhood, I am convinced that naturalists are born and not made. Although we were all brought up in the same way, my brothers and sisters soon left their pressed flowers and insects. Unlike them, I had no ear for music and languages. I was not an early reader and I could not do mental arithmetic.
Before World War I we spent our summer holidays in Hungary. I have only the dim(模糊的) memory of the house we lived in, of my room and my toys. Nor do I recall clearly the large family of grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins who gathered next door. But I do have a clear memory of the dogs, the farm animals, the local birds, and above all, the insects.
I am a naturalist, not a scientist. I have a strong love of the natural world and my enthusiasm had led me into varied investigations(调查研究). I love discussing my favorite topics and enjoy burning the midnight oil reading about other people’s observations and discoveries. Then something happens that brings these observations together in my conscious(清醒的) mind. Suddenly you fancy you see the answer to the riddle, because it all seems to fit together. This has resulted in my publishing 300 papers and books, which some might honor with the title of scientific research.
But curiosity, keen(敏锐的) eyes, a good memory and enjoyment of the animal and plant world do not make a scientist: one of the excellent and essential qualities required is self-discipline, a quality I lack. A scientist, up to a certain point, can be made. A naturalist is born. If you can combine the two, you get the best of both worlds.
【小题1】The first paragraph tells us the author ______.
| A.was interested in flowers and insects in his childhood |
| B.lost his hearing when he was a child |
| C.didn’t like his brothers and sisters |
| D.was born into a naturalist’s family |
| A.he didn’t live very long with them |
| B.the family was extremely large |
| C.he was too young when he lived with them |
| D.he was fully occupied with observing nature |
| A.a scientist as well as a naturalist | B.a naturalist but not a scientist |
| C.no more than a born naturalist | D.first of all a scientist |
| A.has a great deal of trouble doing mental arithmetic |
| B.lacks some of the qualities required of a scientist |
| C.just reads about other people’s observations and discoveries |
| D.comes up with solutions in a most natural way |
It was several years since Adolf Hitler came into power in Germany. And now his army was marching into some parts of Europe. He must be in the prime(顶峰) of his career.
One day Hitler went to an exhibition where the works of school children were on show. He seemed to have great interest in the exhibits—inventions as well as carvings, drawings. After having walked around the hall and examined everything, he said he was re
ady to meet the young artists. And soon a group of children came into the room to salute(向-----敬礼) him.
“Well, well. You did very good work.” nodded Hitler in satisfaction. “I promise on my honor I’d satisfy you with whatever you want. What’d you wish to be if I were your father?”
“A sailor sailing the sea” one of the boys answered.
“Good. I’ll have you join my navy and some day you will rule the oceans.”(海洋)
“Ask for anything? What’d you wish to be if I were your father?” he asked a second boy.
“A painter as great as Rembruant.”
“Good. You are to be sent to the Fine Art School and surely you will make an even greater painter.”
When Hitler caught sight of a sad-looking boy be frowned(皱眉), then quickly forced a smile, “The
re my boy, in spite of my point of view towards the Jews(犹太人), I’d do you a favor and your dream will come true. What’d you wish to be if I were your father?”
The boy looked straight at the man.
“An orphan(the child who has no parents).” he murmured.(嘟哝)
【小题1】 Hitler promised to satisfy(满足) the children with whatever they want because .
| A.he wanted all the children to live a happy life | B.he wanted to make a good impression on the children |
| C.he liked paintings very much | D.he liked all the children |
| A.the boy was recognized to be a Jew | B.the boy didn’t come to the front to salute him |
| C.the boy didn’t want to ask for anything | D.the boy was sad-looking |
| A.the boy’s parents had died | B.the boy had no brothers or sisters |
| C.the boy hated Hitler very much | D.the boy wanted himself to be an orphan |
| A.Hitler wanted to be the father of the children. | B.The boy was both clever and courageous(勇敢的). |
| C.Rembruant was a great painter. | D.Hitler did not like Jews. |