题目列表(包括答案和解析)
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根据短文内容及首字母提示,填写所缺单词,使短文意思完整。每空限一词。
Nogoba was a cavegirl.She lived in a cave with about 40 other people.Cavepeople lived in big groups to help each other.Their l 1 were very dangerous.There were many w 2
animals near the caves-lions, tigers, bears and elephants.
The cavemen hunted.They k 3 the animals for food.The children's jobs were dangerous, too.Nogoba and her friends went to the river every day to get w 4 .Sometimes, the river was very deep.S 5 , there were animals near the river.
For many months of the y 6 , Nogoba was cold.There was ice and snow everywhere.It was difficult to be w 7 .The children sometimes went to sleep by the fire.Sometimes they were too n 8 the fire.
Sometimes Nogoba and her friends went to f 9 fruit and nuts to eat.Sometimes the fruit and nuts were poisonous and everyone became i 10 .There weren't any cave doctors or cave hospitals!
阅读理解:先阅读短文,然后根据短文内容从文后每小题的四个选项中,选出一个能完成所给句子或回答所提问题的正确答案。
President (总统) George W Bush is visiting an elementary school today and visits one of the 4th grade classes. They are in the middle of a discussion(讨论) of words and their meanings.
The teacher asks the President if he would like to lead the class in the discussion of the word“tragedy”. So the President asks the class for an example of a“tragedy”.
One little boy stands up and says,“If my best friend, who lives next door, is playing in the street and a car comes along and runs him over, that would be a tragedy.”
“No,”says Bush,“that would be an accident.”
A little girl puts up her hand,“If a school bus carrying 50 children drove off a cliff(悬崖), killing everyone in the bus, that would be a tragedy.”
“I am afraid not,”explains the President.“That is what we would call a GREAT LOSS(损失).”
The room goes quiet. No other children answer. President Bush looks around the mom.“Is not there someone here who can give me an example of a tragedy?”
At last, in the back of the room, a boy named Johnny puts up his hand. In a quiet voice he says,“If Air Force One, carrying you and Mrs Bush, was hit by a missile(导弹) and blown up to pieces, that would be a tragedy.”
“Right,”exclaims(大叫)Bush,“that is right, and can you tell me why that would be a tragedy?”
“Well,”little Johnny says,“because, as you just told us, it would not be an accident, and it sure as well would not be a great loss.”
1.President Bush tells the students ________.
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A.to welcome him
B.to give an example
C.to make a sentence
D.to ask some questions
2.Johnny is ________.
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A.in the front of the classroom
B.in the back of the classroom
C.in the middle of the room
D.on the left
3.Air Force One is ________.
[ ]
4.“Tragedy”means ________.
[ ]
5.What does the sentence“…and it sure as well would not be a great loss”mean?
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A.Of course, it's not a great loss, either.
B.It's OK that it would not be a great loss.
C.It's sure if it is not a great loss.
D.I'm sure that it would be a great loss, too.
“Sorry” is a word that people in Britain often say in their daily life.
One day while I was w 1 on the street, a young man ran by hurriedly, brushing(轻擦)against my handbag. He continued his way, but turned b 2 and said “sorry” to me. Even in a rush, he didn’t f 3 to say “sorry”. One day, after I bought some bananas, the shopkeeper was passing me the change, but I wasn’t ready for it and a coin dropped onto the ground. “Sorry, Madam,” he said w 4 bending to pick it up. I was s 5 why he said “sorry” to me. Another time, I stepped on a man’s f 6 at the entrance to a cinema. At the same time, we b 7 said “sorry”.
Slowly, I got to know that when something unpleasant happens in daily life, the British don’t
c 8 much about who is wrong. If someone is in trouble, a “sorry” is always n 9 . Perhaps that is w 10 I seldom see people quarrel on the buses or streets in Britain.
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