I was about to get off the taxi when I found that I had no money to the driver. A. pay back B. pay off C. pay D. pay for 47. Having stayed in China for 4 years, he here. A. is used to living B. used to live C. is used to live D. used to living 48. Ben is one of the many boys who in this school, but he is the only one of the students who long hair. A. study; wear B. studies; wears C. study; wears D. studies; wear 49. There are many recipes for simple and healthy snacks that and keep us . A. are tasted good; going B. taste good; going C. taste well; to go D. are tasted well; to go 50. He a ticket as he could enter free. A. shouldn’t have bought B. must have bought C. needn’t have bought D. might have bought 查看更多

 

题目列表(包括答案和解析)

Bobby Moresco grew up in New York's Hell's Kitchen, a tough working-class neighborhood on Manhattan's West Side. But Hell's Kitchen lies right next door to Broadway, and the bright lights attracted Bobby from the time he was a teen. Being stage-struck was hardly what a street kid could admit to his partners. Fearing their ridicule, he told no one, not even his girlfriend, when he started taking acting lessons at age 17. If you were a kid from the neighborhood, you became a cop, construction worker, longshoreman or criminal. Not an actor.

   Moresco struggled to make that long walk a few blocks east. He studied acting, turned out for all the cattle calls -- and during the decade of the 1970s made a total of $2,000. "I wasn't a good actor, but I had a driving need to do something different with my life," he says.

He moved to Hollywood, where he drove a cab and worked as a bartender. "My father said, 'Stop this craziness and get a job; you have a wife and daughter.' “But Moresco kept working at his chosen craft.

   Then in 1983 his younger brother Thomas was murdered in a mob-linked killing. Moresco moved back to his old neighborhood and started writing as a way to explore the pain and the patrimony of Hell's Kitchen. Half-Deserted Streets, based on his brother's killing, opened at a small Off-Broadway theater in 1988. A Hollywood producer saw it and asked him to work on a screenplay.

    His reputation grew, and he got enough assignments to move back to Hollywood. By 2003, he was again out of work and out of cash when he got a call from Paul Haggis, a director who had befriended him. Haggis wanted help writing a film about the country after September 11. The two worked on the writing, but every studio in town turned it down. They kept pitching it. Studio executives, however, thought no one wanted to see a severe, honest vision of race and fear and lives in collision in modern America.

Moresco believed so strongly in the script that he borrowed money, sold his house. He and Haggis kept pushing. At last the writers found an independent film producer who would take a chance, but the upfront money was too little, Moresco delayed his salary.

Crash slipped into the theaters in May 2005, and quietly became both a hit and a critical success. It was nominated for six Academy Awards and won three -- Best Picture, Best Film Editing and Best Writing (Original Screenplay) by Paul Haggis and the kid from Hell's Kitchen.

   At age 54, Bobby Moresco became an overnight success. "If you have something you want to do in life, don't think about the problems," he says, "think about other ways to get it done."

1. Rearrange the following statements in terms of time order:

a. His work Half-Deserted Streets drew attention as it opened at a small Off-Broadway theater

b. Unexpectedly Crash became both a hit and a huge success.

c. He moved to Hollywood to be a taxi driver and a waiter.

d. He started learn acting in spite of hardness with the belief of doing something diiferent.

e. His younger brother Thomas was killed in conflict among bullies.

A. d; c; e; a; b      B. d; e; c; b; a    C. c; d; e; a; b    D. c; e; d; b; a 

2.Why Bobby Moresco did not tell anyone that he started taking lessons at age 17?

A. He wnted to give his girlfriend a surprise.   

B. His girlfriend did not allow him to do this.

C. He was afraid of being laughed at.

D. He had no talent for acting.

3.Which of the following sentences is NOT true?

A. His father did not support his work as a bartender.

B. Before he became an overnight success, his life experienced ups and downs.

C. His brother’s death inspired his writing Half-Deserted Streets.

D. Moresco grew up in New York's Hell's Kitchen which is a few blocks east of Broadway.

4.The Studio executives turned the script Crash down because ______________.

A. they thought the script would not be popular.

B. the script was not well written.

C. they had no money to make the film based on the script.

D. they thought Moresco was not famous.

5.What’s the best title of the article?

A. The Road to Success              B. Try It a Different Way

C. A Talented man—Moresco          D. Moresco’s Perseverance

6.Which of the following can best describe Bobby Moresco?

A. initiative (主动) and persistent        B. shy but hardworking  

C. caring and brave                   D. aggressive and modest

 

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Bobby Moresco grew up in New York's Hell's Kitchen, a tough working-class neighborhood on Manhattan's West Side. But Hell's Kitchen lies right next door to Broadway, and the bright lights attracted Bobby from the time he was a teen. Being stage-struck was hardly what a street kid could admit to his partners. Fearing their ridicule, he told no one, not even his girlfriend, when he started taking acting lessons at age 17. If you were a kid from the neighborhood, you became a cop, construction worker, longshoreman or criminal. Not an actor.

   Moresco struggled to make that long walk a few blocks east. He studied acting, turned out for all the cattle calls -- and during the decade of the 1970s made a total of $2,000. "I wasn't a good actor, but I had a driving need to do something different with my life," he says.

He moved to Hollywood, where he drove a cab and worked as a bartender. "My father said, 'Stop this craziness and get a job; you have a wife and daughter.' “But Moresco kept working at his chosen craft.

   Then in 1983 his younger brother Thomas was murdered in a mob-linked killing. Moresco moved back to his old neighborhood and started writing as a way to explore the pain and the patrimony of Hell's Kitchen. Half-Deserted Streets, based on his brother's killing, opened at a small Off-Broadway theater in 1988. A Hollywood producer saw it and asked him to work on a screenplay.

    His reputation grew, and he got enough assignments to move back to Hollywood. By 2003, he was again out of work and out of cash when he got a call from Paul Haggis, a director who had befriended him. Haggis wanted help writing a film about the country after September 11. The two worked on the writing, but every studio in town turned it down. They kept pitching it. Studio executives, however, thought no one wanted to see a severe, honest vision of race and fear and lives in collision in modern America.

Moresco believed so strongly in the script that he borrowed money, sold his house. He and Haggis kept pushing. At last the writers found an independent film producer who would take a chance, but the upfront money was too little, Moresco delayed his salary.

Crash slipped into the theaters in May 2005, and quietly became both a hit and a critical success. It was nominated for six Academy Awards and won three -- Best Picture, Best Film Editing and Best Writing (Original Screenplay) by Paul Haggis and the kid from Hell's Kitchen.

   At age 54, Bobby Moresco became an overnight success. "If you have something you want to do in life, don't think about the problems," he says, "think about other ways to get it done."

1. Rearrange the following statements in term of time order:

a. His work Half-Deserted Streets drew attention as it opened at a small Off-Broadway theater

b. Unexpectedly Crash became both a hit and a huge success.

c. He moved to Hollywood to be a taxi driver and a waiter.

d. He started learn acting in spite of hardness with the belief of doing something diiferent.

e. His younger brother Thomas was killed in conflict among bullies.

A. d; c; e; a; b      B. d; e; c; b; a    C. c; d; e; a; b    D. c; e; d; b; a 

2. Why Bobby Moresco did not tell anyone that he started taking lessons at age 17?

A. He wnted to give his girlfriend a surprise.

B. His girlfriend did not allow him to do this.

C. He was afraid of being laughed at.

D. He had no talent for acting.

3. Which of the following sentences is NOT true?

A. His father did not support his work as a bartender.

B. Before he became an overnight success, his life experienced ups and downs.

C. His brother’s death inspired his writing Half-Deserted Streets.

D. Moresco grew up in New York's Hell's Kitchen which is a few blocks east of Broadway.

4.The Studio executives turned the script Crash down because ______________.

A. they thought the script would not be popular.

B. the script was not well written.

C. they had no money to make the film based on the script.

D. they thought Moresco was not famous.

5.What’s the best title of the article?

A. The Road to Success              B. Try It a Different Way

C. A Talented man—Moresco          D. Moresco’s Perseverance

6. Which of the following can best describe Bobby Moresco?

A. initiative and persistent             B. shy but hardworking  

C. caring and brave                  D. aggressive and modest

 

 

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完形填空

  As the train approached① the seaside town where I was going to spend my holiday, I went into the corridor to   1   my legs.I stayed there for a short while, breathing in the fresh sea air and   2   a few words with one of the passengers, whom I had met earlier on the   3  .When I turned to go back to   4  , I happened to glance into the compartment(车厢)next to mine.Sitting there was a man who many years before had been my neighbor.He was a great   5  , I remembered; it used to take hours to   6   him once he began a conversation.I was not at all   7   when he went to live in another part of London.We had not met since then,   8   did I wish to meet him now, when   9   was about to begin.Luckily at that moment he was   10   busy talking to the man opposite him to catch sight of me.I slipped back into my compartment, took down my two suitcases and carried them to the far end of the corridor so as to be ready to   11   the train as soon as it stopped.The moment the train came to a halt②, I called a porter, who in no time at all had carried my luggage out of the station and   12   me a taxi.As I drove towards my small hotel on the outskirts of the town, I breathed a deep sigh of relief at my   13  .There was little chance that I should   14   my boring former again.

  When I reached the hotel, I went   15   to my room and rested there until it was time for dinner.Then I went down to the dining room and   16   a drink.I had barely raised the glass to my lips   17   an all too familiar voice greeted me.I had not escaped from the tiresome neighbor   18  !He grasped me warmly by the hand and insisted that we   19   a table in the dinning-room.“This is a pleasant   20  ,”I never expected to see you again after all these years.

(1)

[  ]

A.

reach

B.

extend

C.

stretch

D.

loosen

(2)

[  ]

A.

exchanging

B.

changing

C.

talking through

D.

talking about

(3)

[  ]

A.

fruit stand

B.

department store

C.

bus stop

D.

station platform

(4)

[  ]

A.

the station

B.

my seat

C.

the waiting room

D.

the office

(5)

[  ]

A.

talker

B.

poet

C.

speaker

D.

hero

(6)

[  ]

A.

get rid of

B.

take care of

C.

get away from

D.

pay attention to

(7)

[  ]

A.

happy

B.

afraid

C.

sorry

D.

content

(8)

[  ]

A.

so

B.

no

C.

not

D.

nor

(9)

[  ]

A.

holiday

B.

school day

C.

work day

D.

conversation

(10)

[  ]

A.

very

B.

too

C.

so

D.

much

(11)

[  ]

A.

get on

B.

stay

C.

catch

D.

get off

(12)

[  ]

A.

found

B.

gave

C.

offered

D.

stopped

(13)

[  ]

A.

good luck

B.

nice choice

C.

narrow escape

D.

bad fortune

(14)

[  ]

A.

keep in touch with

B.

run into

C.

knock down

D.

catch up with

(15)

[  ]

A.

carelessly

B.

aimlessly

C.

idly

D.

straight

(16)

[  ]

A.

ordered

B.

requested

C.

fetched

D.

asked

(17)

[  ]

A.

while

B.

before

C.

when

D.

after

(18)

[  ]

A.

above all

B.

after all

C.

first of all

D.

in all

(19)

[  ]

A.

spare

B.

rent

C.

reserve

D.

share

(20)

[  ]

A.

surprise

B.

interview

C.

appointment

D.

party

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阅读理解。
     Bobby Moresco grew up in New York's Hell's Kitchen, a tough working-class neighborhood on
Manhattan's West Side. But Hell's Kitchen lies right next door to Broadway, and the bright lights
attracted Bobby from the time he was a teen. Being stage-struck was hardly what a street kid could
admit to his partners. Fearing their ridicule, he told no one, not even his girlfriend, when he started taking
acting lessons at age 17. If you were a kid from the neighborhood, you became a cop, construction
worker, longshoreman or criminal. Not an actor.
      Moresco struggled to make that long walk a few blocks east. He studied acting, turned out for all the
cattle calls-and during the decade of the 1970s made a total of $2,000. "I wasn't a good actor, but I had
a driving need to do something different with my life," he says.
He moved to Hollywood, where he drove a cab and worked as a bartender(酒吧服务员). "My father
said, 'Stop this craziness and get a job; you have a wife and daughter.' "But Moresco kept working at his
chosen craft.
      Then in 1983 his younger brother Thomas was murdered in a mob-linked killing. Moresco moved
back to his old neighborhood and started writing as a way to explore the pain and the patrimony of
Hell's Kitchen. Half-Deserted Streets, based on his brother's killing, opened at a small Off-Broadway
theater in 1988. A Hollywood producer saw it and asked him to work on a screenplay.
       His reputation grew, and he got enough assignments to move back to Hollywood. By 2003, he was
again out of work and out of cash when he got a call from Paul Haggis, a director who had befriended him. Haggis wanted help writing a film about the country after September 11. The two worked on the writing, but every studio in town turned it down. They kept pitching it. Studio executives, however, thought no one wanted to see a severe, honest vision of race and fear and lives in collision in modern America.
     Moresco believed so strongly in the script that he borrowed money, sold his house. He and Haggis
kept pushing. At last the writers found an independent film producer who would take a chance, but the
upfront money was too little, Moresco delayed his salary.
     Crash slipped into the theaters in May 2005, and quietly became both a hit and a critical success. It
was nominated for six Academy Awards and won three-Best Picture, Best Film Editing and Best Writing (Original Screenplay) by Paul Haggis and the kid from Hell's Kitchen.
      At age 54, Bobby Moresco became an overnight success. "If you have something you want to do in
life, don't think about the problems," he says, "think about other ways to get it done."
1. Rearrange the following statements in terms of time order:
a. His work Half-Deserted Streets drew attention as it opened at a small Off-Broadway theater
b. Unexpectedly Crash became both a hit and a huge success.
c. He moved to Hollywood to be a taxi driver and a waiter.
d. He started learn acting in spite of hardness with the belief of doing something different.
e. His younger brother Thomas was killed in conflict among bullies.
A. d; c; e; a; b      
B. d; e; c; b; a    
C. c; d; e; a; b    
D. c; e; d; b; a  
2. Why Bobby Moresco did not tell anyone that he started taking lessons at age 17?
A. He wanted to give his girlfriend a surprise.    
B. His girlfriend did not allow him to do this.
C. He was afraid of being laughed at.
D. He had no talent for acting.
3. Which of the following sentences is NOT true?
A. His father did not support his work as a bartender.
B. Before he became an overnight success, his life experienced ups and downs.
C. His brother's death inspired his writing Half-Deserted Streets.
D. Moresco grew up in New York's Hell's Kitchen which is a few blocks east of Broadway.
4. The Studio executives turned the script Crash down because ______________.
A. they thought the script would not be popular.
B. the script was not well written.
C. they had no money to make the film based on the script.
D. they thought Moresco was not famous.
5. What's the best title of the article?
A. The Road to Success
B. Try It a Different Way
C. A Talented man-Moresco
D. Moresco's Perseverance
6. Which of the following can best describe Bobby Moresco?
A. initiative (主动) and persistent        
B. shy but hardworking  
C. caring and brave                  
D. aggressive and modest

查看答案和解析>>

When I was eight years old, I had a big accident. I get scared even now when I think about that time. There were many people skating near my house, and seeing them skate so wonderfully, I couldn’t wait to have a try, just a piece of cake, I thought .
I went with a friend who was very skillful. He spent a long time teaching me how to skate , but I still didn’t learn much , which made him very angry. Finally , he left me and skated all around. I skated alone and soon got bored because I kept falling down so I took off my skates and just walked around on the ice in my shoes. It was cold and my feet were frozen.
Suddenly, I stepped on something that was not hard. What was it ? It was a weak place in the ice . When I stepped there, I sank under the ice. I thought that I was going to die, but I did my best to grab something to get out from under the ice. I would have climbed out myself by grabbing the edge of the ice, but at that time I was only a child of eight . I cried out.
Fortunately, someone helped me. He grabbed my arms and pulled me up. Those several minutes seemed a year to me. I thanked him. At that time, my friend came back. I was annoyed at him because he was supposed to take care of me, but he didn’t. He was embarrassed. When I took a taxi home, the taxi driver was surprised and asked what had happened. I didn’t want to say anything because I was tired and scared. Since then, I have never touched skating.
【小题1】At first the writer thought that skating _________________.

A.was hard to learn
B.was only suitable to watch
C.was easy to learn
D.can only be done with support
【小题2】 Why did the writer’s friend leave and skate alone? ___________
A.He wanted to show off his skating skill before the writer.
B.He was disappointed at the writer’s performance.
C.He was too tired to go on teaching the writer.
D.He found he had no gift for teaching others to skate.
【小题3】 According to the writer, if an adult sank under the ice, he would _____________.
A.grab the edge of the ice and get out.
B.have courage to call for help
C.wait until people came to help
D.not like to accept others’ help
【小题4】What effect did the accident have on the writer?
A.He broke away from his irresponsible friend.
B.He didn’t dare to skate any longer
C.He fell ill because of staying under ice too longer.
D.He lost interest in all kinds of sports.

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