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“Just a couple of hours, ” said Dad, “and we’ll be at our campsite !” The year was 1950 and we were on our family 21 ,doing what we usually did together― camping. I 22 in my corner of the back seat to take a nap. The rhythm of the 23 car soothed(哄) me into a 24 sleep.
Wham ! I 25 with a start, my face on the floorboard of the back seat. Dad had 26 the car suddenly. “ What happened ? ” I asked. “Where are we ?” “ Half an hour from our 27 ,” he answered, “and I don't know what the problem is, 28 all the cars have stopped . I’ll go to see what’s going on.” Dad 29 out of the car. Mom ,my little brother David and I 30 . “ I bet there has been an accident !” David was excited. Mom 31 her head. She said, “ There is
Dad came running back to the car. “ Come on !” he said very 35 . “Come on, kids ! You’ve got to see this!” I jumped out of the car and ran to catch up with him. “What is it, Daddy?” I asked. He smiled and 36 my hand. “Come and see, Carolyn,” he said. I knew that, 37 it was, it was good, because my father was
38 about it . I grabbed his hand and skipped excitedly along beside him. We walked past a dozen parked cars. 39 ,a group of people stood talking and laughing.
Looking in the same direction as everyone else, we saw a mother duck, sleek and proud, walking up the middle of the road, nine little ducklings waddling 40 her. The babies were marching single file behind their mother, totally ignoring the people and the automobiles.
21. | A. party | B. vacation | C. way | D. rest |
22. | A. settled down | B. worked out | C. fell asleep | D. got across |
23. | A. sleeping | B. racing | C. starting | D. moving |
24. | A. quiet | B. cool | C. deep | D. calm |
25. | A. thought | B. jumped | C. cried | D. woke |
26. | A. driven | B. pulled | C. stopped | D. pushed |
27. | A. campsite | B. house | C. starting | D. station |
28. | A. until | B. but | C. then | D. so |
29. | A. stepped | B. looked | C. pulled | D. slipped |
30. | A. followed | B. slept | C. continued | D. waited |
31. | A. shook | B. nodded | C. moved | D. dropped |
32. | A. suddenly | B. probably | C. predictably | D. surely |
33. | A. car | B. position | C. seat | D. chair |
34. | A. accident | B. play | C. toy | D. race |
35. | A. worriedly | B. hurriedly | C. excitedly | D. sadly |
36. | A. reached for | B. went for | C. cared for | D. looked for |
37. | A. whichever | B. wherever | C. whatever | D. whenever |
38. | A. happy | B. eager | C. upset | D. worried |
39. | A. Backward | B. Besides | C. Along | D. Ahead |
40. | A. after | B. in | C. before | D. at |
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“Just a couple of hours,” said Dad, “and we’ll be at our campsite !” The year was 1950 and we were on our family 1 ,doing what we usually did together— camping. I 2 in my corner of the back seat to take a nap. The rhythm of the 3 car soothed(哄) me into a 4 sleep.
Wham ! I 5 with a start, my face on the floorboard of the back seat. Dad had 6 the car suddenly. “ What happened ? ” I asked. “Where are we ?” “ Half an hour from our 7 ,” he answered, “and I don't know what the problem is, 8 all the cars have stopped . I’ll go to see what’s going on.” Dad 9 out of the car. Mom, my little brother David and I 10 . “ I bet there has been an accident !” David was excited. Mom 11 her head. She said, “ There is 12 a bear crossing the road.” David bounced up and down in his 13 . That was even better than a(n) 14 !
Dad came running back to the car. “ Come on !” he said very 15 . “Come on, kids ! You’ve got to see this!” I jumped out of the car and ran to catch up with him. “What is it, Daddy?” I asked. He smiled and 16 my hand. “Come and see, Carolyn,” he said. I knew that, 17 it was, it was good, because my father was 18 about it . I grabbed his hand and skipped excitedly along beside him. We walked past a dozen parked cars. 19 ,a group of people stood talking and laughing.
Looking in the same direction as everyone else, we saw a mother duck, sleek and proud, walking up the middle of the road, nine little ducklings waddling 20 her. The babies were marching single file behind their mother, totally ignoring the people and the automobiles.
1. A. party B. vacation C. way D. rest
2. A. settled down B. worked out C. fell asleep D. got across
3. A. sleeping B. racing C. starting D. moving
4. A. quiet B. cool C. deep D. calm
5. A. thought B. jumped C. cried D. woke
6. A. driven B. pulled C. stopped D. pushed
7. A. campsite B. house C. starting D. station
8. A. until B. but C. then D. so
9. A. stepped B. looked C. pulled D. slipped
10. A. followed B. slept C. continued D. waited
11. A. shook B. nodded C. moved D. dropped
12. A. suddenly B. probably C. predictably D. surely
13. A. car B. position C. seat D. chair
14. A. accident B. play C. toy D. race
15. A. worriedly B. hurriedly C. excitedly D. sadly
16. A. reached for B. went for C. cared for D. looked for
17. A. whichever B. wherever C. whatever D. whenever
18. A. happy B. eager C. upset D. worried
19. A. Backward B. Besides C. Along D. Ahead
20. A. after B. in C. before D. at
查看习题详情和答案>>B. Someone is breaking into her house.
C. Someone is making big noise in her garden.
B. They don't get on well with her.
C. They will come to help her soon.
B. 9382699.
C. 9382629.
B. Open the door and see what's going on.
C. Wait for the policemen to arrive.
historical events, Philip Roth offers something bolder: a reconstruction of imagined events, a "what if...?"
that reads like a "what really happened".
Just suppose...that the air hero Charles Lindbergh, the man who made the first solo transatlantic flight
in 1927, who earned huge sympathy when his baby son was kidnapped and murdered five years later,
who called Hitler "a great man", just suppose that he'd run for president in November 1940, and took
advantage of the feelings that undoubtedly existed then (No more war! Never again will young Americans die on foreign soil!), and that instead of Roosevelt being elected for a third term and taking America into
Europe to fight the Nazis, Lindbergh won a landslide victory. And then he signed non-aggression treaties
with Germany and Japan, and introduced a set of anti-semitic(反犹太人的) measures which were a
betrayal of the rights and liberties in the constitution(宪法) and yet they were accepted by the mass of
ordinary citizens and even by some Jews.
The narrator is Philip Roth, aged seven, and the family at the book's centre are his family-father
Herman, mother Bess and brother Sandy. The Roths understand the threat posed by Lindbergh, but
each member of the family responds differently. Early on, there's a trip to see the sights of Washington,
where the Roths find their pre-booked hotel room has become mysteriously unavailable. An obvious
case of anti-semitism, Herman shouts, and a violation of the principle that "All men are created equal".
But his loudmouth protests embarrass Bess. Already there's a pressure to pretend not to see what's
going on. Further disagreements arise when Sandy disappears for the summer for an "apprenticeship"(学徒期) with a Kentucky tobacco farmer. Worse, after he successfully encourages other Jewish city boys
to follow his example, he's invited to a reception at the White House through his aunt, Bess's sister
Evelyn. While Herman refuses Sandy permission to attend, Evelyn defends Lindbergh as a freely elected
democrat.
B.Lindbergh was elected president of America in 1940.
C.There were antiwar feelings in America during the 1940s.
D.America didn’t fight the Nazis during the World War Two.
B. his antiwar policy was welcome
C. Hitler supported his measures against Jews
D. he was a great air hero in America
B. Herman is a strong supporter to Lindbergh.
C. Sandy dislikes his experience in Kentucky.
D. Jewish boys are encouraged to go to the war.
B. All men were equally treated in America at that time.
C. The Roths had a happy time when touring Washington.
D. Jews suffered from unfair treatment due to anti-semitism.
B. Travel journal
C. National news
D. Family life