I sat down to read under an old tree in the park. I felt my life was   36 , for my whole world was dark.
A young boy ran up to me, out of breath. He stood  37   before me with his head down and said   38 , ¡°Look what I found!¡± In his hand was a flower, and what a poor sight! The flower was dry and   39 . I gave him a small smile and then turned my eyes away so that he could take his dry flower and go off to play.
  40 , he sat next to my side and placed the flower to his   41  and said in surprise, ¡°It smells sweet and it¡¯s beautiful, too. That¡¯s   42  I picked it. Here, it¡¯s for you. ¡± The flower before me was dead. But I knew I must   43  it, or he might never leave. So I accepted the flower, and replied, ¡°This is just what I   44 . ¡± Just then, for the first time I noticed that the boy could not   45  ¡ªhe was blind.
Tears (ÑÛÀá) came down my face as I   46  him for picking the best one. ¡°You¡¯re welcome. ¡± he smiled, and then ran off to   47 . I sat there and wondered how he was able to learn about my pain (Í´¿à).
Through the eyes of a blind child,   48  I could see the problem was not with the world; the problem was me. And for all those years I myself had been   49 . I decided to see the beauty in life, and   50  every second of my life. And then I held that dry flower up to my nose and breathed in the smell of a beautiful rose.
СÌâ1:
A£®hopelessB£®colourfulC£®simple(¼òµ¥µÄ)D£®wonderful
СÌâ2:
A£®justB£®rightC£®straightD£®along
СÌâ3:
A£®deadB£®freshC£®aliveD£®heavy
СÌâ4:
A£®sadlyB£®strictlyC£®angrilyD£®excitedly
СÌâ5:
A£®deadB£®freshC£®aliveD£®heavy
СÌâ6:
A£®SoB£®OrC£®HoweverD£®And
СÌâ7:
A£®headB£®noseC£®earD£®neck
СÌâ8:
A£®howB£®whenC£®whereD£®why
СÌâ9:
A£®buyB£®sellC£®acceptD£®break
СÌâ10:
A£®admireB£®dislikeC£®wantD£®have
СÌâ11:cry               B. speak                C. smile            D. see
СÌâ12:
A£®forgaveB£®thankedC£®paidD£®hated
СÌâ13:
A£®at mostB£®at timesC£®at firstD£®at last
СÌâ14:
A£®cheerfulB£®usefulC£®blindD£®deaf
СÌâ15:A. waste          B. enjoy                C. lose         D. forget
СÌâ1:A
СÌâ2:B
СÌâ3:D
СÌâ4:A
СÌâ5:C
СÌâ6:B
СÌâ7:D
СÌâ8:C
СÌâ9:C
СÌâ10:D
СÌâ11:B
СÌâ12:D
СÌâ13:D
СÌâ14:C
СÌâ15:B

СÌâ1:¸ù¾ÝºóÎĵÄÄÚÈÝfor my whole world was dark.¿ÉÖª´ð°¸ÎªA
СÌâ2:´Ë´¦µÄright ±íʾÕýºÃµÄÒâ˼£¬·ûºÏÌâÒ⣬¹ÊÑ¡B
СÌâ3:¸ù¾ÝÉÏÏÂÎÄÄÚÈÝ¿ÉÖª´ð°¸ÎªD
СÌâ4:¸ù¾ÝÎÄÕÂÄÚÈÝIn his hand was a flower, and what a poor sight! The flower was dry¿ÉÖª´ð°¸ÎªA
СÌâ5:ÉÏÎÄ×÷ÕßÏ£ÍûËû×ߣ¬Õâ»á¶ù£¬ÓÖhe sat next to my side and£¬¹ÊÉÏÏÂÎĵĹØϵΪתÕÛ£¬¹ÊÑ¡C
СÌâ6:¸ù¾ÝÎÄÕÂÄÚÈÝIt smells sweet and it¡¯s beautiful, too¿ÉÖª´ð°¸ÎªB
СÌâ7:¸ù¾ÝÎÄÕÂÄÚÈÝ´óÒ⣬¿ÉÖª´ð°¸ÎªD£¬±íʾwhyÒýµ¼µÄÌØÊâÒÉÎʾä×÷±öÓï´Ó¾ä£¬¹ÊÑ¡D
СÌâ8:¸ù¾ÝÉÏÏÂÎĵÄÒâ˼¿ÉÖª´ð°¸ÎªC£¬±íʾ½ÓÊܵÄÒâ˼
СÌâ9:¸ù¾ÝÎÄÕÂÄÚÈÝ¿ÉÖª´ð°¸ÎªC£¬ÊÇ×÷Õß˵Á˻ѻ°¡£
СÌâ10:¸ù¾ÝºóÎĵÄÄÚÈÝ¡ªhe was blind.¿ÉÖª´ð°¸ÎªD
СÌâ11:thank sb for sth£¬ÒâΪΪ¡­¶ø¸ÐлijÈË£¬Îª¹Ì¶¨´Ê×é´îÅ䣬¹ÊÑ¡B
СÌâ12:¸ù¾ÝÎÄÕÂÄÚÈÝ´óÒâ¿ÉÖª´ð°¸ÎªD£¬±íʾȥÍæ¡£
СÌâ13:at last ±íʾ×îºó£¬ÖÕÓÚ¡­.£¬¹ÊÑ¡D
СÌâ14:¸ù¾ÝºóÎÄÄÚÈÝI decided to see the beauty in life,¿ÉÖª´ð°¸ÎªC
СÌâ15:50.enjoy ΪÏíÊܵÄÒâ˼£¬¹ÊÑ¡B
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We were standing at the top of a church not far from my home. I didn¡¯t know why.
¡°Look down,¡± Father said. I tried and saw the square in the center of the village. And I saw the streets to the square. ¡°See, Elsa,¡± Father said. ¡°There is more than one way to the square. If you can¡¯t get where you want to go by one road, try another.¡±
Earlier that day, I asked Mother to do something about what we had for lunch at school. But she didn¡¯t think the food was as bad as I said. When I turned to Father for help, he brought me to the church.
At school the next day, I filled a bottle with the soup for our lunch and took it home. I told the cook to pour the soup in a plate and bring it to Mother. She drank it and cried out, ¡°What¡¯s the matter with the soup today?¡± I at once told her what I had done , and Mother said that she would take up the matter of lunches at school the next day .
Now I really understood why Father had taken me to the church. I began to work as a fashion designer two years ago. I wouldn¡¯t stop working until I tried every way to my goal.
СÌâ1:The writer¡¯s father took her to the church to.
A£®play some games B£®see the squareC£®show her the wayD£®give her a lesson
СÌâ2:Elsa really wanted her mother to.
A£®cook something better for her lunch
B£®have lunch with her at school
C£®take up the matter over with the teachers
D£®tell the cook to work harder
СÌâ3:Why did Elsa¡¯s mother agree to do something about the matter?
A£®Because the writer tried a better way to her goal.
B£®Because the girl brought something home.
C£®Because she thought what the cook said was true.
D£®Because Elsa¡¯s father gave her some help.
СÌâ4:What Elsa¡¯s father said means?
A£®one can reach the square in many ways
B£®never stop trying to get to your goal
C£®it¡¯s difficult to talk to Elsa¡¯s mother
D£®you can¡¯t get what you want easily
СÌâ5:When the writer really understood what his father had said.
A£®she saw the streets to the square
B£®she had the idea of bringing the soup home
C£®she tried every way to her goal
D£®she began her own life as a fashion designer

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¿ÆÄ¿£º³õÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º²»Ïê ÌâÐÍ£ºÔĶÁÀí½â

Ellen Parker was worried about her health. She could not walk very quickly and it was difficult for her to climb stars. She was soon out of breath (Æø´­ÓõÓõ).
¡°I suppose I had better go to the doctor,¡± she thought.
She went to the doctor and told him her problem.
¡°I¡¯m not surprised at all,¡± he said. ¡°It¡¯s obvious what your problem is.¡±
He looked her over then gave her some advice.
¡°If you don¡¯t do what I say, Mrs. Parker,¡± he said, ¡°you will have a heart attack. It could kill you.¡±
Ellen Parker was very worried as she left the doctor¡¯s. She knew that she had to take his advice but it would not be easy and it would take time.
The next day she went shopping. The first shop she went into was a butcher¡¯s shop (ÈâÆÌ).
¡°I¡¯d like ten pounds of steak (Å£ÅÅ), please,¡± she said.
¡°Certainly, madam,¡± the butcher replied and went into the cold room and found a large piece of steak. He brought the huge piece of meat back into the shop and put it on the scale (Ììƽ).
¡°That¡¯s just under ten pounds,¡± he said.
¡°That big enough,¡± Mrs. Parker said.
The butcher worked out the price.
¡°At $4.99 a pound that will be $49.50, please. Would you like me to cut it up into smaller pieces for you?¡±
¡°Oh, I don¡¯t want to buy the meat,¡± Mrs. Parker said.
¡°If you don¡¯t want to buy it,¡± the butcher replied angrily, ¡°why did you ask me to get it for you?¡±
¡°My doctor told me that I am over-weight and I have to lose ten pounds. I wanted to see what ten pounds of meat looked like.¡±
СÌâ1:Why did Ellen Parker visit the doctor?
A£®She had had a heart attack.
B£®She had a problem with her health.
C£®She was unhappy about her weight.
D£®She could not sleep well.
СÌâ2:What did the doctor advise her to do?
A£®To lose weight. B£®To eat more meat.
C£®To come and see him again. D£®To look after her heart.
СÌâ3:Why did Ellen Parker ask for ten pounds of steak?
A£®She wanted to buy some for dinner.
B£®She wanted to lose weight.
C£®Her doctor had told her to eat steak.
D£®She wanted to see what ten pounds of meat looked like.
СÌâ4:What was Ellen Parker¡¯s real problem?
A£®She ate too much steak.
B£®She weighed too much.
C£®The doctor did not know.
D£®She could not walk very quickly.

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¿ÆÄ¿£º³õÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º²»Ïê ÌâÐÍ£ºÍêÐÎÌî¿Õ

Bill, a thirteen-year-old boy, thought he had grown up to be a man. But his parents told him, ¡° You won¡¯t be a real man until you begin to_1_____  helping others.¡±
One morning, his parents gave him some money to 2____ some milk for them. Outside a shop he saw a homeless old man who looked very 3____. Bill went to him and asked, ¡° What¡¯s wrong with you?¡±
The old man answered, ¡° I¡¯m hungry. I haven¡¯t had any food for two days.¡±
All the thought of his parents¡¯ words, Bill said to the old man, ¡°Let¡¯s go to the 4_______.¡±
When they got there, Bill asked the waiter to bring out bread and coffee to the old man. The old man finished the meal quickly. After the waiter 5_____the plate and the cup, the old man said, ¡°Sorry for give you too much6_____. I¡¯m fine now. I¡¯ll 7____ forget your kindness! You are a very good young man¡±
Bill was 8______ when he heard this. Just when he wanted to pay for the meal, the waiter came. Bill and the old man learned 9______ that he food was free 10___ it was the birthday of the boss, and they were the first customer(¹Ë¿Í) that day.
СÌâ1:
A£®think aboutB£®depend onC£®give upD£®go on
СÌâ2:
A£®lendB£®buyC£®drinkD£®borrow
СÌâ3:
A£®afraidB£®gladC£®sickD£®angry
СÌâ4:
A£®bankB£®libraryC£®hospitalD£®restaurant
СÌâ5:
A£®sent outB£®got downC£®gave backD£®took away
СÌâ6:
A£®excuseB£®adviceC£®troubleD£®difficulty
СÌâ7:
A£®neverB£®alwaysC£®usuallyD£®sometimes
СÌâ8:
A£®nervousB£®pleasedC£®sorryD£®shy
СÌâ9:
A£®in surpriseB£®as usualC£®once againD£®at first
СÌâ10:
A£®whenB£®untilC£®unlessD£®because

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¿ÆÄ¿£º³õÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º²»Ïê ÌâÐÍ£ºÍêÐÎÌî¿Õ

At least thirty times Bobby had tried to climb the snowy mountain, but he had never   46   the top. His friend old Peeper, who knew a lot about his failures,  47  Bobby to try again. He gave Bobby a pair of sunglasses and said, ¡°If it starts clouding over, put on the glasses, or if your feet start hurting, put them on too. The glasses are very 48 . They¡¯ll help you.¡± Bobby received the gift without much thought.
The day came when he was to have another   49 . About two hours after he started, he felt his feet hurting. Then he  50 what Peeper had said, and put on the glasses. The pain was pretty bad, but   51  the sunglasses he could clearly see the snow-covered mountain top, so he went on.
  52 , clouds were gathering. But this time Bobby could still see the  53 through the clouds. He kept climbing , leaving the clouds behind, forgetting his pain, and finally arriving at the top. It was certainly worth it. His feeling of   54  was extremely good, almost as great as that  55 view. The mountain below was surrounded (°üΧ) by a sea of clouds. He couldn¡¯t believe that the clouds were as thick as that, so he looked more closely at the sunglasses, and discovered the  56  . Peeper had engraved (ïÔ¿Ì) the snow-covered mountain top on the sunglasses,  57  Bobby could see it when he was looking upwards!
Bobby __58  that the only difficulty to reaching the top had been losing   59  when he couldn¡¯t see the mountain top. He was thankful that Peeper had used that little trick to help him see that his   60   was never impossible, and that it was still there, where it had always been.
СÌâ1:
A£®leftB£®reachedC£®jumpedD£®ran
СÌâ2:
A£®encouragedB£®orderedC£®allowedD£®warned
СÌâ3:
A£®realB£®safeC£®specialD£®expensive
СÌâ4:
A£®tryB£®startC£®testD£®training
СÌâ5:
A£®rememberedB£®expressedC£®shoutedD£®regretted
СÌâ6:
A£®underB£®withC£®forD£®about
СÌâ7:
A£®HappilyB£®HopefullyC£®Unfortunately D£®Luckily
СÌâ8:
A£®friendB£®topC£®climberD£®village
СÌâ9:
A£®successB£®decisionC£®freedomD£®friendship
СÌâ10:
A£®strongB£®popularC£®badD£®wonderful
СÌâ11:
A£®way B£®wordsC£®bookD£®secret
СÌâ12:
A£®andB£®orC£®ifD£®though
СÌâ13:
A£®suggestedB£®realizedC£®expectedD£®hoped
СÌâ14:
A£®loveB£®helpC£®faceD£®heart
СÌâ15:
A£®placeB£®lessonC£®aimD£®story

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¿ÆÄ¿£º³õÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º²»Ïê ÌâÐÍ£ºÔĶÁÀí½â

There once lived in China a very foolish king and queen. One day the queen had a baby daughter. When they saw their baby, they both cried out, ¡°My goodness! How small it is! It¡¯s hairless and toothless! It¡¯s a monster!¡± They sent for all the doctors in the country and ordered them to prepare some medicine for her.
¡°When she drinks your medicine, she must grow to the right size and have hair and teeth,¡± the king said, ¡°If you don¡¯t do this, you¡¯ll have a beating.¡±
The doctors thought it impossible, but they dared not say anything against the king¡¯s order. Just then and old doctor stepped forward. ¡°Oh, we shall certainly obey your order,¡± he said, ¡°but it takes time. We have to dig a mineral from the KunLun Mountains when the snow melts for the second time. The snow melts on those mountains only once in six years. So we need twelve years.¡±
At last the king agreed and the doctors took away the little princess. On her twelfth birthday, they brought her back to her parents with long black hair and beautiful teeth. The king and queen were very happy and gave the doctors expensive presents.
СÌâ1:Which of the following words makes the sentence untrue? The baby was ______.
A£®ToothlessB£®hairlessC£®unusualD£®small
СÌâ2:The doctors would be beaten if ______.
A£®the baby daughter didn¡¯t drink their medicine
B£®they refused to obey the king¡¯s order
C£®the baby daughter grew to the right size
D£®the baby daughter became a monster
СÌâ3:The old doctor wanted to keep the king¡¯s daughter for twelve years because ______.
A£®they needed a lot of different plants
B£®they need a lot of different minerals
C£®this would give the baby time to grow up
D£®they had to dig a mineral the snow melted for the second time
СÌâ4:The doctors thought it impossible ______.
A£®for them to change the king¡¯s order
B£®for them the prepare the medicine in twelve years
C£®for the small baby to drink the medicine
D£®for them to make the baby have teeth and hair or grow teeth at once
СÌâ5:______ the king wouldn¡¯t have given them expensive presents.
A£®Had the doctors not brought back a beautiful girl
B£®If the doctors hadn¡¯t found the minerals
C£®Had the doctors not been able to prepare the magic medicine
D£®If the daughter were still a monster twelve years later

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¿ÆÄ¿£º³õÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º²»Ïê ÌâÐÍ£ºÔĶÁÀí½â

Once there was a little girl in a village. She spent summers on her grandfather¡¯s farm. The year she was four, she knew some ducks. The ducks were white with orange feet. They lived in a little wooden house near the road. The little girl liked these ducks very much. Every day they walked down the road to the pond£¨³ØÌÁ£©. Then the ducks went into the water and the little girl sat on the bank£¨°¶£© and saw them swimming in the pond. The little girl talked to the ducks and they quacked£¨¸Â¸Â½Ð£©back. Then one day the ducks were gone. No one would say anything about them. The little girl was afraid to ask where they were. One night everyone sat down for dinner. The food looked a little like chicken. The girl didn¡¯t want to eat. Can you guess why?
A. eating chicken   B. sitting by the pond
C. living on a farm   D. ducks and a little girl
СÌâ1:The ducks were __________.
A£®yellow and orangeB£®yellow and white
C£®white with orange feet D£®white and black
СÌâ2:When the little girl ________ , the ducks quacked back.
A£®saw them swimming B£®sat on the bank
C£®walked to the pondD£®talked to them
СÌâ3:At the end of the story, the ducks were probably _______.
A£®under the waterB£®on the plate (ÅÌ×Ó)
C£®in the wooden house D£®swimming in the pond
СÌâ4:The little girl didn¡¯t eat because _____________.
A£®she wanted nice cakesB£®the food was ducks
C£®the food was too hotD£®the plate was empty

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¿ÆÄ¿£º³õÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º²»Ïê ÌâÐÍ£ºÍêÐÎÌî¿Õ

As darkness fell, hundreds of people in the Swiss village left their houses. They were staring£¨×¢ÊÓ£©forward at the mountain top in the distance. It was covered with ice and snow£­beautiful and dangerous.
The huge mountain is called Matterhorn. Mountain climbers had  40 the top through the southem route£¨Â·Ïߣ©. But no one had ever dared to try a winter climbing up the northern side. But now one man was daring to try the  41 route. He was Walter Bonatti, a great mountain climber  42 Italy.
For two days he had climbed. The village people had watched him anxiously£¨½¹ÂÇ£©. Now they were waiting to see his signal. If he planned to  43 the next day, he would light£¨µãȼ£©a green signal£¨Ðźţ©. A red light would mean that he was turning back.
A tiny green light  44 high on the mountain side. Bonatti was not giving up! The people  45 . The next day he continued his way upward. He was so lonely and so  46 ! But he would not give up. Again that night he lit the green light. In the morning, Bonatti  47 . He could not see the top£»he knew he was  48 there. Though the climb was painful, he moved up.
Bonatti had spent months  49 for the climb. Was the training enough? Did he have the strength and skill to climb to the top?
He was finally at the top! News about his.   50 was radioed to the world.
The trip down the southern route was easy. He was warmly welcomed in the village. He had done the ¡°  51 ¡± and would be well remembered as a climber of all time.
СÌâ1:
A£®reachedB£®passedC£®watchedD£®followed
СÌâ2:
A£®comfortable B£®importantC£®difficultD£®nervous
СÌâ3:
A£®withB£®fromC£®inD£®at
СÌâ4:
A£®turn backB£®come down C£®go onD£®get back
СÌâ5:
A£®placedB£®appearedC£®pulled D£®found
СÌâ6:
A£®criedB£®laughedC£®jumped D£®cheered
СÌâ7:
A£®sleepyB£®excitedC£®tired D£®happy
СÌâ8:
A£®woke upB£®turned upC£®got up D£®looked up
СÌâ9:
A£®alreadyB£®almostC£®hardly D£®surely
СÌâ10:
A£®trainingB£®practisingC£®planning D£®asking
СÌâ11:
A£®importance B£®successC£®climb D£®courage
СÌâ12:
A£®necessaryB£®dangerousC£®perfect D£®impossible

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¿ÆÄ¿£º³õÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º²»Ïê ÌâÐÍ£ºÔĶÁÀí½â


Mum went to Peter¡¯s bed and said, ¡°I want to borrow Tim¡¯s radio for you?¡± Peter touched the letter in his pocket (¿Ú´ü) and said, ¡°Thanks, Mum!¡± ¡°Today I want to send you a special gift on the radio. It¡¯ll surprise you. I will come back soon,¡± she said and quickly left in the heavy snow.
Peter took out the letter. He got it this afternoon. Mum didn¡¯t know about it. Mum wrote in the letter: The 26th of this month is my son Peter¡¯s birthday. Could you bless£¨×£¸££©him? He has been ill for one month. The radio station wrote in the top: I¡¯m sorry that we have cancelled£¨È¡Ïû£© this program.
Mum came back with a radio. There was lots of snow on her clothes. And the program began quickly. Next, Peter got very surprised. ¡°At first, we planned to cancel this program, but lots of people like it very much. Now, let¡¯s bless the following£¨ÏÂÁеģ© people together. Kate, Martin, Linda©©¡± The list was very long. Mum was too tired and she fell asleep. Peter didn¡¯t hear his name to the end. But he was quite moved. He woke up Mum, ¡°Mum, I heard my name just now. Thank you for your gift, Mum!¡± Mum smiled with tears. Peter also smiled with tears. He believed it was his best gift.
СÌâ1:It was ____________ in Peter¡¯s birthday.
A. rainy              B. snowy                  C. windy
СÌâ2: What was Mum¡¯s special gift to Peter?
A. She wrote a letter to him.           B. She blessed him in the radio.
C. She asked the radio station to bless him.
СÌâ3:Why didn¡¯t Peter give the letter to his mother?   Because _________________.
A. he was ill for a month             B. his mother was very tired
C. his mother would be disappointed
СÌâ4:How did Peter¡¯s mother feel after the program?
A. Moved              B. Tired              C. Surprised
СÌâ5: What do you think of Peter?
A. He is a brave boy.     B. He likes telling lies.       C. He loves his mother.

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