题目列表(包括答案和解析)
20 years ago, I drove a cab for a living. One time I arrived in the middle of the night for a ___1__ up at a building that was dark ___2___ a single light in a ground floor window. After a long pause, a small woman in her 80’s stood before me.
“Would you carry my bag out to the car?” she said. I took her small suitcase to the cab, and then returned to ___3____ the woman. She kept thanking me for my kindness. “ It’s nothing.” I told her. “I just try to treat my passengers the ___4___ I would want my mother treated.”
“Riverside Street, please. But could you drive through downtown?”
“ It’s not the shortest way,” I answered quickly.
“Oh, I don’t mind,” She said.“ I’m in no ____5__. I am on my way to a hospice.” I looked in the back view mirror. Her eyes were full of ___6___. “ I don’t have any family __7___.” She continued. “The __8___ says I don’t have very long.” While we were driving through the city, she showed me the building where she had once worked. Sometimes she asked me to slow in front of a particular building or corner and would ___9___into the darkness, saying ___10___. Not until the first ray of the sun ___11___up the sky did we get to the address she had given me.
“How much do I ___12___you?’ she asked.
“Nothing,” I said. Almost without thinking, I bent and gave her a hug. She ___13____ onto me tightly, saying “You gave an old woman a little moment of joy.” Then she walked into the hospice.
Behind me, a door shut. It was the sound of the ___14__ of a life. I don’t pick up any more passengers for the rest of the day. I drove ___15____, lost in thought. ___16___ I had refused to take the run? On a quick ___17___, I don’t think I have done anything more __18___ in my life. We are conditioned to think that our lives ___19__ on great moments. But great moments often catch us _20___ ----beautifully hidden in what others may consider a small one.
1.A.visit B.pick C.business D.appointment
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3.A.take B.bring C.accompany D.assist
4.A.attitude B.manner C.way D.means
5.A.trouble B.hurry C.time D.danger
6. A.puzzlement B.excitement C.eagerness D.sadness
7.A.gone B.stayed C.left D.remained
8.A.lawyer B.doctor C.neighbor D.relative
9.A.stare B.wander C.disappeared D.step
10.A.much B.nothing C.anything D.none
11.A came B.appeared C.showed D.lit
12.A.charge B.owe C.give D.cost
13.A.kept B.held C.caught D.seized
14.A.beginning B.symbol C.sign D.closing
15.A.aimlessly B.deliberately C.intentionally D.carefully
16.A.How come B.So what C.What if D.How about
17.A.review B.pause C.rest D.memory
18.A.troublesome B.important C.enthusiastic D.worthless
19.A.depend B.rely C.look D.center
20.A.sudden B.unaware C.conscious D.expected
The 16 picked up the thermos and poured some hot water into the tea-cup and placed it on the small table in front of his 17 , who were a father and daughter, and put the lid on the cup with a clink.Apparently 18 of something, he hurried into the inner room, leaving the 19 on the table.His two guests heard a chest of drawers opening and a rustling (飒飒响声).
They 20 sitting in the living-room, the 10-year-old daughter, looking at the flowers outside the window.The father was just about to take his cup when the 21 came, right there in the living-room.Something was hopelessly broken.
It was the thermos, which had fallen to the floor.The girl looked 22 her shoulder at once, startled (吓一跳), 23 .It was 24 neither of them had touched it, not even a little bit.
The sound caused the host to rush back from the inner room.He looked at the 25 floor and blurted out, “It doesn’t matter, it doesn’t matter!”
The father started to say something.Then he muttered, “Sorry, I 26 it and it fell.”
“ It doesn’t matter,” the host said.
Later, when they left the house, the daughter said, “ Daddy, I saw your 27 in the windowpane (窗玻璃).You were sitting perfectly 28 .Why did you say….”
The father 29 , “What then would you 30 as the cause of its fall?”
“ It fell by itself.The floor is uneven (不平).It wasn’t steady when Mr.Li put it there.”
“It won’t 31 , girl.It sounds more 32 when I say I knocked it down.There are things people accept less the more you 33 them.The truer your story is, the less true it sounds.”
The daughter was 34 in silence for a while.Then she said, “ Can you 35 it only this way?”
“Only this way,” the father said.
16.A.owner B.host C.guest D.master
17.A.friends B.neighbours C.children D.guests
18.A.knowing B.remembering C.hearing D.thinking
19.A.thermos B.cup C.lid D.tea
20.A.enjoyed B.remained C.imagined D.hated
21.A.stranger B.host C.crash D.noise
22.A.around B.at C.behind D.over
23.A.staring B.watching C.shouting D.crying
24.A.helpless B.exciting C.strange D.terrible
25.A.broken B.steaming C.dirty D.flooded
26.A.touched B.used C.hit D.moved
27.A.face B.shadow C.reflection D.action
28.A.calm B.still C.silent D.straight
29.A.shouted B.whispered C.laughed D.repeated
30.A.tell B.make C.accept D.give
31.A.do B.suit C.go D.fit
32.A.comfortable B.friendly C.acceptable D.agreeable
33.A.defend B.support C.discuss D.argue
34.A.kept B.shut C.worried D.lost
35.A.do B.explain C.make D.manage
A 16 thing happened 17 me last Sunday. It was such a beautiful day 18 I drove to go for a look in the country.
On the way back home, my 19 stopped. It was out of gas on a 20 road far from a town! I decided to walk 21 I found someone who could sell some gas. I had walked almost a mile 22 I finally found a house near the 23 . I was glad to see it because it was getting dark.
I knocked at the door and a little old lady with long white hair 24 She said, “I’ve been 25 for you here for a long time. Come in. 26 is almost ready.”
“But I only came for some gas,” I answered. I couldn’t 27 what she was talking about.
“Oh, Alfred! Gas? You 28 tea,” said she.
I quickly 29 that my car was out of 30 , but she didn’t seem to listen to me. She just kept 31 me Alfred and talking about how long it had been 32 she had seen me. She was acting very strangely and I was 33 to leave. As soon as she went to get tea, I went out of the house as fast as I could.
Fortunately, there was another house down the road and I was able to buy the gas I needed. When I told the man about my 34 , he said, “Oh, that’s Miss Emily. She lives by herself in that big house. She’s strange, but she wouldn’t 35 anybody. She is still waiting for the man she was going to marry thirty years ago. The day before their wedding he left home and never came back because of the war.”
A. happy B. strange C. common D. bad
A. on B. in C. upon D. to
A. and B. so C. but D. that
A. car B. bus C. bike D. truck
A. narrow B. lonely C. crowded D. busy
A. when B. so that C. until D. because
A. before B. after C. while D. as
A. street B. path C. way D. road
A. came B. answered C. opened D. appeared
A. asking B. looking C. calling D. waiting
A. Gas B. Coffee C. Tea D. Lunch
A. consider B. understand C. accept D. think
A. like B. liked C. used to like D. liking
A. answered B. explained C. refused D. promised
A. gas B. tea C. strength D. energy
A. calling B. call C. to call D. called
A. until B. before C. since D. when
A. anxious B. interested C. glad D. ready
A. accident B. incident C. experience D. surprise
A. wound B. injury C. hurt D. frighten
When 16-year-old Ella Fitzgerald stepped onto the stage to perform at Harlem’s Apollo Theater in 1934, she had no idea that her life was about to change. Her childhood had been 36 . After the death of her parents, Fitzgerald had been placed in a boarding school. 37 , the teachers at the school mistreated her, 38 she ran away. Homeless and orphaned, Fitzgerald was trying her best to 39 on the streets of New York City when she won a contest to perform during an amateur night at the Apollo. She had 40 planned to dance, but at the last second, she decided to sing her mother’s favorite song 41 . Her performance earned her 42 from several well-known musicians. Ella Fitzgerald went on to become a 43 jazz singer.
During a musical career that spanned six decades, Fitzgerald 44 more than 200 albums. She won 13 Grammy Awards, the last of which she received in 1990. She worked with some of the greatest American singers of the twentieth century, including Frank Sinatra, Louis Armstrong, Count Basie, and Dizzy Gillespie. Her talent and charm 45 a wide range of listeners around the world. The worldwide 46 of Ella Fitzgerald helped make jazz a more popular genre.
Until the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s, the United States 47 African American citizens the same treatment 48 white citizens received. Fitzgerald’s manager and her band 49 to perform at places where discrimination was practiced. They also decided not to perform unless they were paid the same 50 as white singers and musicians. Ella’s fight for 51 received support from numerous celebrity admirers, including Marilyn Monroe. Fitzgerald never took her good fortune for granted. She gave money to charities and organizations that contributed to 52 disadvantages children. For her many civic contributions, in 1992 President George Bush 53 her the Presidential Medal of Honor, one of the highest honors 54 to civilians.
In 1991, Fitzgerald gave her 55 performance in New York’s Carnegie Hall. Although Ella Fitzgerald died in 1996, the American “First Lady of Song” continues to live in the hearts and ears of music lovers worldwide.
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When 16-year-old Ella Fitzgerald stepped onto the stage to perform at Harlem’s Apollo Theater in 1934, she had no idea that her life was about to change. Her childhood had been 36 . After the death of her parents, Fitzgerald had been placed in a boarding school. 37 , the teachers at the school mistreated her, 38 she ran away. Homeless and orphaned, Fitzgerald was trying her best to 39 on the streets of New York City when she won a contest to perform during an amateur night at the Apollo. She had 40 planned to dance, but at the last second, she decided to sing her mother’s favorite song 41 . Her performance earned her 42 from several well-known musicians. Ella Fitzgerald went on to become a 43 jazz singer.
During a musical career that spanned six decades, Fitzgerald 44 more than 200 albums. She won 13 Grammy Awards, the last of which she received in 1990. She worked with some of the greatest American singers of the twentieth century, including Frank Sinatra, Louis Armstrong, Count Basie, and Dizzy Gillespie. Her talent and charm 45 a wide range of listeners around the world. The worldwide 46 of Ella Fitzgerald helped make jazz a more popular genre.
Until the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s, the United States 47 African American citizens the same treatment 48 white citizens received. Fitzgerald’s manager and her band 49 to perform at places where discrimination was practiced. They also decided not to perform unless they were paid the same 50 as white singers and musicians. Ella’s fight for 51 received support from numerous celebrity admirers, including Marilyn Monroe. Fitzgerald never took her good fortune for granted. She gave money to charities and organizations that contributed to 52 disadvantages children. For her many civic contributions, in 1992 President George Bush 53 her the Presidential Medal of Honor, one of the highest honors 54 to civilians.
In 1991, Fitzgerald gave her 55 performance in New York’s Carnegie Hall. Although Ella Fitzgerald died in 1996, the American “First Lady of Song” continues to live in the hearts and ears of music lovers worldwide.
1.A. rich B. rough C. tiresome D. happy
2.A. Importantly B. Unforgettably C. Naturally D. Unfortunately
3.A. therefore B. but C. so D. then
4.A. survive B. experience C. learn D. stand
5.A. strangely B. blindly C. originally D. probably
6.A. in spite B. instead C. in place D. though
7.A. jealousy B. recognition C. reputation D. gratitude
8.A. creative B. dependent C. undiscovered D. distinguished
9.A. released B. sold C. copied D. showed
10.A. compared with B. appealed to C. composed of D. depended on
11.A. celebration B. admiration C. relaxation D. indication
12.A. denied B. supported C. offered D. hated
13.A. which B. what C. that D. like
14.A. decided B. refused C. started D. afforded
15.A. number B. quantity C. amount D. lots
16.A. wealth B. future C. equality D. agreement
17.A. caring for B. playing with C. preferring to D. taking after
18.A. rewarded B. awarded C. paid D. presented
19.A. accessible B. inadequate C. available D. official
20.A. best B. vivid C. open D. final
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