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26. I would _____ it if you come to my grandma’s birthday party and say “Hello” to her.

A. associate    B. appreciate       C. impress    D. congratulate

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科目:高中英语 来源:皇冠优化名题 高中英语 题型:050

阅读下列短文,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项。

  That cold January night,I was growing sick of my life in San Francisco.There I was,walking home at one in the morning after a tiring practice at the theater.With opening night only a week away,I was still learning my lines.I was having trouble dealing with my part-time job at the bank and my acting at night at the same time.As I walked,I thought seriously about giving up both acting and San Francisco.City life had become too much for me.

  As I walked down empty streets under tall buildings,I felt very small and cold.I began running,both to keep warm and to keep away from any possible robbers(抢劫犯).Very few people were still out except a few sad-looking homeless people under blankets.

  About a block from my apartment(公寓房间),I heard a sound behind me I turned quickly,half expecting to see someone with a knife or a gun.The street was empty.All I saw was a shining streetlight.Still,the noise had made me nervous,so I started to run faster.Not until I reached my apartment building and unlocked the door did I realize what the noise had been.It had been my wallet falling to the sidewalk.

  Suddenly I wasn't cold or tired anymore.I ran out of the door and back to where I'd heard the noise.Although I searched the sidewalk anxiously for fifteen minutes,my wallet was nowhere to be found.

  Just as I was about to give up the search,I heard the garbage truck(垃圾车)pull up to the sidewalk next to me.When a voice called from the inside,“Alisa Camacho?”I thought I was dreaming.How could this man know my name?The door opened,and out jumped a small red-haired man withan amused look in his eyes.“Is this what you're looking for?”he asked,holding up a small square shape.

  It was nearly 3 A.M.by the time I got into bed.I wouldn't get much sleep that night,but I had gotten my wallet back.I also had gotten back some enjoyment of city life.I realized that the city couldn't be a bad place as long as people were willing to help each other.

(1)

How did the writer feel when she was walking home after work?

[  ]

A.

Cold and sick.

B.

Fortunate and hopeful.

C.

Satisfied and cheerful.

D.

Disappointed and helpless.

(2)

From the first paragraph,we learn that the writer was busy ________

[  ]

A.

solving her problem at the bank

B.

taking part in various city activities

C.

learning acting in an evening school

D.

preparing for the first night show

(3)

On her way home the writer ________

[  ]

A.

lost her wallet unknowingly

B.

was stopped by a garbage truck driver

C.

was robbed of her wallet by an armed man

D.

found some homeless people following her

(4)

In the fifth paragraph,why did the writer say she was dreaming?

[  ]

A.

Someone offered to take her back home.

B.

A red-haired man came to see her.

C.

She heard someone call her name.

D.

Her wallet was found in a garbage truck.

(5)

From the text,we can infer that the writer ________

[  ]

A.

would stop working at night

B.

would stay on in San Francisco

C.

would make friends with cleaners

D.

would give up her job at the bank

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科目:高中英语 来源:2012-2013学年浙江省绍兴市第一中学高二下学期阶段性考试英语试卷(带解析) 题型:阅读理解

I cheated on a unit test in math class this morning during second period with Mr. Burke. Afterward, I was too sick to eat lunch just thinking about it.
I came straight home from school, went to my room, and lay on the floor trying to decide whether it would be better to run away from home now or after supper. Mostly I wished I was dead. It wasn't even an accident that I cheated.
Yesterday Mr. Burke announced there'd be a unit test and anyone who didn't pass would have to come to school on Saturday, most particularly me, since I didn't pass the last unit test. I did plan to study just to prove to him that I'm plenty smart—which I am mostly—except in math.
Anyway, I got my desk ready to study on . Just when I was ready to work, Nicho came into my room with our new rabbit and it jumped on my desk and knocked the flashcards all over the floor. What a mess! Nicho and I finally took the rabbit outside but then Philip came to my room and also Marty from next door and before long it was dinner.
After dinner my father said I could watch a special on television if I'd done all my homework. Of course I said I had. That was the beginning. I felt terrible telling my father a lie about the homework.
It was nine o'clock when I got up to my room and that was too late to study for the unit test so I lay in my bed with the light off and decided what I would do the next day when I was in Mr. Burke's math class not knowing the 8- and 9-times tables. So, you see, the cheating was planned after all.
The next day, I'd go into class as usual, acting like things were going just great. I'd sit down next to Stanley Plummer—he is so smart in math it makes you sick—and from time to time, I'd glance over at his paper to copy the answers.
Lying on the floor of my room, I begin to think that probably I've been bad all along. It just took this math test to clinch it. I'll probably never tell the truth again. I tell my mother I'm sick when she calls me to come down for dinner. She doesn't believe me, but puts me to bed anyhow. I lie there in the early winter darkness wondering what terrible thing I'll be doing next when my father comes in and sits down on my bed.
"What's the matter?" he asks. "I've got a stomachache," I say. Luckily, it's too dark to see his face. "Is that all?" "Yeah." "Mommy says you've been in your room since school." "I was sick there too," I say. "She thinks something happened today and you're upset." That's the thing that really drives me crazy about my mother. She knows things sitting inside my head the same as if I was turned inside out.
"Well," my father says. I can tell he doesn't believe me. "My stomach is feeling sort of upset." I hedge. "Okay," he says and he pats my leg and gets up.
Just as he shuts the door to my room I call out to him in a voice I don't even recognize as my own. "How come?" he calls back not surprised or anything. So I tell him I cheated on this math test. To tell the truth, I'm pretty much surprised at myself. I didn't plan to tell him anything.
He doesn't say anything at first and that just about kills me. I'd be fine if he'd spank me or something. And then he says I'll have to call Mr. Burke. It's not what I had in mind. "Now?" I ask surprised. "Now," he says. He turns on the light and pulls off my covers. "I'm not going to," I say.
But I do it. I call Mr. Burke, and I tell him exactly what happened, even that I decided to cheat the night before the test. He says I'll come on Saturday to take another test, which is okay with me, and I thank him a whole lot for being understanding and all.
"Today I thought I was turning into a criminal," I tell my father when he turns out my light. Sometimes my father kisses me good night and sometimes he doesn't. I never know. But tonight he does.
【小题1】After the author cheated on the math test, he felt ____________.

A.frightened because he might be caught
B.excited that he had succeeded
C.pleased that nobody knew it
D.unhappy because he had done something wrong
【小题2】By “It wasn't even an accident that I cheated”, the author means that ________.
A.he had planned not to study before the test
B.he decided to cheat when he knew there was going to be a test
C.he decided to cheat after he had wasted the whole evening
D.he had planned to cheat with Plummer before the test
【小题3】The author’ mother often drives him crazy because _____-.
A.She really knows what he is thinking
B.she was very strict with him
C.she doesn’t believe him
D.she asks him to come down for dinner
【小题4】After he was informed of what he had done, the father _______.
A.scolded the author severely
B.didn’t say anything and left
C.called Mr. Burke immediately
D.let the author make a call to Mr. Burke
【小题5】The author’s father kissed the author good night because ________-.
A.he had done something unusual
B.he promised to study math harder
C.he was willing to take a make-up test
D.he realized his mistake and had the courage to admit it

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科目:高中英语 来源:2013-2014学年浙江省高三第六次月考英语试卷(解析版) 题型:阅读理解

I have only once been in trouble with the law. The whole process of being arrested and taken to court was a rather unpleasant experience at the time, but it makes a good story now. What makes it rather disturbing was the arbitrary circumstances both of my arrest and my subsequent? fate in court.

It happened in February about twelve years ago. I had left school a couple of months before that and was not due to go to university until the following October. I was still living at home at the time.

One morning I was in Richmond, a suburb of London near where I lived. I was looking for a temporary job so that I could save up some money to go traveling. As it was a fine day and I was in no hurry, I was taking my time, looking in shop windows, strolling in the park, and sometimes just stopping and looking around me. It must have been this obvious aimlessness that led to my downfall.

It was about half past eleven when it happened. I was just walking out of the local library, having unsuccessfully sought employment there, when I saw a man walking across the road with the obvious intention of talking to me. I thought he was going to ask me the time. Instead, he said he was a police officer and he was arresting me. At first I thought it was some kind of joke.

But then another policeman appeared, this time in uniform, and I was left in no doubt.

“But what for?” I asked.

“Wandering with intent to commit an arrestable offence.” he said.

“What offence?” I asked.

“Theft.” he said.

“Theft of what?” I asked.

“Milk bottles,” he said, and with a perfectly straight face too!

“Oh,” I said.

It turned out there had been a lot of petty thefts in the area, particularly that of stealing milk bottles from doorsteps.

Then I made my big mistake. At the time I was nineteen, had long untidy hair, and regarded myself as part of the sixties’ “youth counterculture”. As a result, I wanted to appear cool and unconcerned with the incident, so I said, “How long have you been following me?” in the most casual and conversational tone I could manage. I thus appeared to them to be quite familiar with this sort of situation, and it confirmed them in their belief that I was a thoroughly disreputable (品行不端的)character.

????????????? A few minutes later a police car arrived.

????????????? “Get in the back,” they said. “Put your hands on the back of the front seat and don’t move them.”

????????????? They got in on either side of me. It wasn’t funny any more.

????????????? At the police station they questioned me for several hours. I continued to try to look worldly and familiar with the situation. When they asked me what I had been doing, I told them I’d been looking for a job. “Aha,” I could see them thinking, “unemployed”.

Eventually, I was officially charged and told to report to Richmond Magistrates’ Court the following Monday. Then they let me go.

I wanted to conduct my own defense in court, but as soon as my father found out what had happened, he hired a very good lawyer. We went along that Monday armed with all kinds of witnesses, including my English teacher from school as a character witness. But he was never called on to give evidence. My “trial” didn’t get that far. The magistrate (法官) dismissed the case after fifteen minutes. I was free. The poor police had never stood a chance. The lawyer even succeeded in getting costs awarded against the police.

And so I do not have a criminal record. But what was most shocking at the time was the things my release from the charge so clearly depended on. I had the “right” accent, respectable middle-class parents in court, reliable witnesses, and I could obviously afford a very good lawyer. Given the obscure nature of the charge, I feel sure that if I had come from a different background, and had really been unemployed, there is every chance that I would have been found guilty. While asking for costs to be awarded, my lawyer’s case quite obviously revolved (回转) around the fact that I had a “brilliant academic record”.

Meanwhile, just outside the courtroom, one of the policemen who had arrested me was gloomily complaining to my mother that another youngster had been turned against the police. “You could have been a bit more helpful when we arrested you,” he said to me reproachfully (责备地).

What did he mean? Probably that I should have looked outraged and said something like, “Look here, do you know who you’re talking to? I am a highly successful student with a brilliant academic record. How dare you arrest me!” Then they, probably, would have apologized perhaps even taken off their caps, and let me on my way.

1.Judging from the first paragraph, the writer’s attitude towards his story is _______.

A. angry????? ????????????? ????????????? ????????????? ????????????? B. sad?????? ?????????????

C. amused?????? ????????????? ????????????? ????????????? ????????????? D. more than just one of the above

2.The first man who came up to him was ______.

A. a uniformed policeman???????????????? ????????????? B. a policeman in plainclothes

C. not a policeman?????????????????????? ????????????? D. a good joker

3.The court never asked the author’s English teacher to give evidence because _______.

A. the time for the trial was limited to fifteen minutes only

B. the author wanted to conduct his own defense in court

C. the case was dismissed before the trial reached that stage

D. he was found to be unqualified as a character witness

4.The author believes that he would most probably have been declared guilty if _______.

A. the magistrate had been less gentle?????? ?????????????

B. he had really been out of work

C. he had been born in a lower— class family ?????????????

D. both B and C

5. In the opinion of one of the policeman who had arrested the author, the whole thing might not have occurred if ______.

A. he had protested strongly at the time???? ?????????????

B. he had begged to be allowed to go home

C. he hadn’t wandered aimlessly?????????? ?????????????

D. he had tried to look cool

6.We can see from the passage that the author ______.

A. has broken the law only once

B. has never broken the law

C. has broken the law on more than one occasion

D. once broke the law without knowing it

 

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科目:高中英语 来源: 题型:完形填空

When I smoked with my family, I would feel so1and good that nothing else in the world seemed so2. I thought that smoking weed (烟草) was okay since many of my family members and people at my school smoked.3ever happened to them.4I started smoking weed a lot more during lunch and after school. I never thought5of it. At that time I just wanted to smoke. Then I began to 6lin school. I would 7classes, come home late and spend all my money. I would spend88 to 18 dollars a day. I never thought9that marijuana (大麻) had a bad effect on those things. Maybe my coming to class high (神智恍惚) was the reason why I was failing or coming home late. As I continued to smoke marijuana, I began to notice that I would always have the strong desire to smoke and that I would get10cigarettes if I smoked those, but I don’t.11I have learned more about marijuana, I have12the amount of marijuana that I use. I don’t want marijuana to be the most important in my life. I’m not smoking every day, and not spending as much money. Since I have13on my habit, I am14more money. I’m ready to go back to school and do good, so that I can make myself15. Everyone is always saying how weed16your mind and how it solves problems. I think it only brings more17. Marijuana is not good for your body or your brain. I’m not trying to tell you not to smoke, I’m just letting you know that marijuana can be18to your health, and19it may cause some long term negative (负面的) effects. Help yourself now, before it is too late. I don’t want to lecture anyone, just20my experience with you.

  1. 1.
    1. A.
      worried
    2. B.
      relaxed
    3. C.
      disappointed
    4. D.
      moved
  2. 2.
    1. A.
      important
    2. B.
      common
    3. C.
      interesting
    4. D.
      funny
  3. 3.
    1. A.
      something
    2. B.
      Everything
    3. C.
      Nothing
    4. D.
      Anything
  4. 4.
    1. A.
      By the way
    2. B.
      Now and then
    3. C.
      In my opinion
    4. D.
      For a time
  5. 5.
    1. A.
      too much
    2. B.
      a little
    3. C.
      too often
    4. D.
      any more
  6. 6.
    1. A.
      get ahead
    2. B.
      fall behind
    3. C.
      come across
    4. D.
      make up
  7. 7.
    1. A.
      give
    2. B.
      have
    3. C.
      attend
    4. D.
      cut
  8. 8.
    1. A.
      at least
    2. B.
      at most
    3. C.
      no more than
    4. D.
      as little as
  9. 9.
    1. A.
      once
    2. B.
      twice
    3. C.
      again
    4. D.
      further
  10. 10.
    1. A.
      used to
    2. B.
      paid for
    3. C.
      lost in
    4. D.
      ready for
  11. 11.
    1. A.
      as if
    2. B.
      Even if
    3. C.
      Now that
    4. D.
      As long as
  12. 12.
    1. A.
      reduced
    2. B.
      increased
    3. C.
      bought
    4. D.
      continued
  13. 13.
    1. A.
      broken down
    2. B.
      cut down
    3. C.
      turned off
    4. D.
      cut off
  14. 14.
    1. A.
      wasting
    2. B.
      spending
    3. C.
      making
    4. D.
      saving
  15. 15.
    1. A.
      less
    2. B.
      more
    3. C.
      better
    4. D.
      worse
  16. 16.
    1. A.
      excites
    2. B.
      fills
    3. C.
      repairs
    4. D.
      destroys
  17. 17.
    1. A.
      problems
    2. B.
      pleasure
    3. C.
      convenience
    4. D.
      excitements
  18. 18.
    1. A.
      helpful
    2. B.
      useful
    3. C.
      dangerous
    4. D.
      strange
  19. 19.
    1. A.
      in the beginning
    2. B.
      in the distance
    3. C.
      in the long run
    4. D.
      in the past
  20. 20.
    1. A.
      tell
    2. B.
      explain
    3. C.
      regret
    4. D.
      share

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科目:高中英语 来源:浙江省月考题 题型:阅读理解

阅读理解。
     On Saturday, February 12 two thousand, two things happened that changed everything in my life. The
 first was that on this day my baby sister was married. She was twenty-six this day, and yet to me she 
was still my baby sister. I suppose that I pictured her as a little girl, and treated her like one in order to 
hold onto and preserve my own youth. Until I saw her in her wedding dress I still had a vision of her with
 chubby little cheeks and long, dark-brown pigtails (马尾辫子) blowing in the wind, perhaps even a 
permanent smudge of chocolate around her pink lips. I guess it's true that you see only what you want to
 see. Where did this beautiful woman with the glowing complexion (皮肤) and gentle curves (身体曲线)
 come from?
      I was happy that day, and also sad. Gone were the days of me bossing her around and telling her 
what she should do with her life. My bossy behavior had earned me the nickname Lucy. If you are a 
Peanuts fan then you can clearly imagine my behavior as an older sister. To me it wasn't an insult; I rather
 like the nickname Lucy. I happen to think that Lucy is strong and has incredible self-confidence, although 
she is a little overbearing (专横的) at times. I did my best to live up to the standards set forth by this 
dynamic cartoon character.
     I left the reception to get some air because suddenly I was overcome with grief at the realization 
that I was no longer a child. I went outside and walked to a nearby playground where there were
 children playing on the slide, the swings and digging in the dirt. There was a little girl twirling around on a
 bar, one knee wrapped tightly around the bar and fashioned behind her knee. It was all I could do to sit
 there and just watch, for I too wanted to get on that bar with her and see if I could still hold the all-time 
twirling record (ninety-nine times in fifth grade). Somewhere inside I knew that I would break my neck, 
and I was wearing a bridesmaid dress. Not exactly playground material. And so I sat watching the
 children play. I'm not sure how long I sat there before my sister came and joined me. We talked about 
how we are grown up now and shed a few tears for our childhood days gone by. As she wiped a tear
 from my eye she lovingly said, "you'll always be Lucy to me." We hugged.
     My cousin Mike walked over and told my sister that it was time to cut the cake. And then he
 dropped bomb number two on me. "Hey, did you guys hear that Charles Schultz died today?" He said it
 like it was no big deal. He took my sister's arm and turned to head back for the reception hall. 
"Coming?" They asked. "In a minute." I replied, and sat back down on the bench, dizzy from what he had 
just told me.
     Dead? How could Charles Schultz be dead? He was my creator! And though I have never met the
 man personally, he has always been like an invisible father to me. He did, after all, fashion a famous
 character after me. I lost so many things on this day. Innocence slipped away from me like a thief in the 
night: come and gone before I could do anything about it, taking with it all the treasures that I held most 
valuable in my heart. I felt myself grow up, all in one moment. Reality rushed in around me like a hurricane
 tide. There was nowhere to run to. All I could do was sit there and watch it destroy and reshape what 
had existed only a moment before. I was no longer a child. I was no longer Lucy who knew what was 
best for everyone else. I saw, for the first time, what I really was—a thirty-year old woman with a
 husband of my own, and soon, a child of my own.
     I allowed the tide to carry my sadness out with it. Take it out to sea, for it serves no purpose in my
 life. I stood up from the bench; a little taller than I was when I sat down. I turned and headed back to
 the hall, hoping I didn't miss the cutting of the cake. It was the day my sister grew wings of her own and 
left the nest. It was the day that Lucy died, and I was born.
1. Why did the author treat her sister as a little girl?   
A. Because the author was older than her sister.
B. Because the author didn't want to grow up.   
C. Because her sister always wore pigtails and liked eating chocolate.   
D. Because the author didn't want her sister to get married.
2. The author liked the nickname Lucy for the reason that ________.   
A. Lucy was lively and confident           
. Lucy was bossy and overbearing   
C. Lucy was her favorite cartoon character    
D. She wanted to imitate Lucy's behavior.
3. Which of the following statements is TRUE according to paragraph 3?  
A. The author joined the little girl twirling around on a bar.   
B. The author could still hold the all-time twirling record of ninety-nine times.   
C. The author didn't want to face the fact that she was no longer a child.   
D. The author's sister didn't like her bossy behavior.
4. What can you infer from the passage?  
A. The author's cousin Tom was sad about the death of Charles Schultz.   
B. The author lost many things on that day.   
C. The author had a husband and a child of her own.   
D. Charles Schultz had a great influence on the author's life.
5. What is implied in the underlined sentence "It was the day that Lucy died, and I was born."?
A. The author didn't like the nickname Lucy any more and wanted to start a new life.
B. Lucy would no longer influence the author and she wanted to be herself.
C. The author would no longer be sad about the lost innocence and face the fact that she was an adult  D. The author would not be bossy towards her sister any longer.
6. Which of the following can be the best title of the passage?  
A. Two Things That Changed My Life       
B. Letting Go of Yesterday   
C. My Sister And Charles Schultz           
D. My Sister's Wedding

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