题目列表(包括答案和解析)
Growing up, I remember my father as a silent, strict man—not the kind of person around whom one could laugh. As a teenager knowing little about life, I wanted a father who could 【小题1】 the mysteries of the human journey. In college, when friends called home for 【小题2】, I would become 【小题3】 for what I didn’t have.
Then one night after my move back home, I overheard my father on the telephone. There was some trouble. Later, he 【小题4】 the problem with me. Obviously my knowledge of law helped him a lot. I talked through the problem with him, 【小题5】 the motives of the people involved and offering several negotiation strategies.
He 【小题6】 patiently before finally admitting, “I can’t think like that. I’m a 【小题7】 man.”
My father is a 【小题8】 scientist who has a good knowledge of the building blocks of nature. 【小题9】, human nature is a mystery to him. That night I realized he was simply not skilled at 【小题10】 people. It’s not in his 【小题11】 to understand human desires.
It was no one’s 【小题12】 that my father showed no interest in human emotions while I placed great importance on them. We are sometimes born more sensitive, and dreamy than our 【小题13】 and become more curious, and idealistic than them. 【小题14】 I, who knew my father as an intelligent man, had never understood his intelligence didn’t cover all of my 【小题15】 feelings.
I believe that coming home has 【小题16】 me years of questions and confusion. I nowadays consider my parents as people who have other relationships than just being my parents, relationships that 【小题17】 and define them.
Best of all, I nowadays regard my parents as 【小题18】: people who ask me for advice; people who need my 【小题19】 and understanding. And I’ve come to see my past in a 【小题20】 view. Knowing them makes me feel safe in where I come from and where I’m going.
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I lost my sight when I was four years old by falling off a car and landing on my head. Now I am thirty-two. I can vaguely remember the brightness of _____ and what color red is. It would be _____ to see again, but a (n) ____ can do strange things to people. I don’t mean I would ____ to go without my eyes. I simply mean that the loss of them made me appreciate more what I had ____.
My parents and my teachers saw something in me ----- a ____ to live ---- which I didn’t see, and they made me want to fight in out with ___.
The ____ lesson I had to learn was to believe in myself. I am not talking about simply the kind of ____ that helps me down so unfamiliar staircase alone. I _____ something bigger than that: a confidence that I am, despite being ____, a real, positive person; that there is a special place where I can make myself fit.
It took me years to discover and strengthen this confidence. It had to start with the easy and simple things. _____ a man gave me an indoor baseball. I thought he was laughing at me and I was ____. “I can’t use this,” I said. “Take with you,” he urged me, “and roll it around.” The words _____ in my head. “Roll it around!” By rolling the ball I could ____ where it went. This gave me an idea how to achieve a goal I had thought ___ before; playing baseball. At Philadelphia’s Overbrook School for the Blind I ___ a successful variation of baseball. We called it ground ball.
I have set ahead of me a series of goals and then tried to reach them, one at a time. I had to be clear about my ___. It was no good crying for something that I knew at the start was ____ out of reach because that only invited bitterness of failure. I would fail something anyway, _____ on the average I made progress.
1.A. sky B. cloud C. sunshine D. mist
2.A. helpful B. wonderful C. hopeful D. successful
3.A. disaster B. environment C. incident D. wonder
4.A. manage B. try C. want D. prefer
5.A. lost B. left C. used D. cared
6.A. purpose B. potential C. pressure D. preparation
7.A. energy B. happiness C. luck D. blindness
8.A. hardest B. dullest C. simplest D. easiest
9.A. self-respect B. self-control C. self-confidence D. self-defence
10.A. think B. consider C. guess D. mean
11.A. imperfect B. perfect C. unfair D. fair
12.A. Later B. Soon C. Once D. Then
13.A. worried B. encouraged C. shocked D. hurt
14.A. stuck B. impressed C. occupied D. held
15.A. see B. hear C. notice D. observe
16.A. important B. unimportant C. possible D. impossible
17.A. invented B. discovered C. instructed D. directed
18.A. experience B. advantages C. knowledge D. limitation
19.A. hardly B. wildly C. highly D. deeply
20.A. so B. for C. but D. and
Clyde, a small-clawed otter, was moved from Auckland Zoo to Wellington Zoo two months ago. The zookeepers hoped he and the other otter Bonnie might start a family together.
But only two days after he arrived, Clyde went missing. He had dug his way under one of the walls and was nowhere to be seen.
The zookeepers set up cages inside the zoo, with plates of Clyde’s favorite fish in them, hoping to catch him.
Two days went by and still there was no sign of Clyde.
At last a couple saw Clyde at their house --- a whole kilometer away in Newtown. Clyde was hiding in an out-of-reach hole outside their laundry.
The zookeepers arrived and set up some more traps to try to catch him. But Clyde is a pretty smart otter. Twice he managed to get the fish out of a trap without being caught.
Five days after he’d escaped, Clyde’s days on the run came to an end when he was finally caught in one of the traps.
It was no good putting Clyde back in his old home---he’d only dig his way out again. So he and Bonnie were put into the zoo hospital. There was no chance of their escaping from there.
Meanwhile, the zookeepers were working hard to make Clyde’s old home safer. They put an iron barrier underground to stop him digging their way out. Then Bonnie and Clyde went home again.
But a month after his first escape, Clyde was out again. Once more the zookeepers came
hurrying to catch Clyde. They found him by following the bubbles he made in the river nearby.
Nobody knew how Clyde had escaped. But this time he was only out for an hour. So---back he went to the hospital again.
Poor Clyde. It seemed that he wasn’t happy at Wellington Zoo, even though he and Bonnie were getting on well together. The keepers didn’t like seeing him unhappy, so they planned to look for a home for him somewhere else.
【小题1】Where was Clyde found after his first escape?
A.Back in Auckland Zoo. | B.In a river nearby. |
C.At a house a kilometer away. | D.In the zoo hospital. |
A.They set up cages in the zoo. |
B.They attracted Clyde with fish. |
C.They dug a hole outside his home. |
D.They followed the bubbles in the water. |
A.He often gets ill. |
B.He is good at digging. |
C.He likes hiding in a hole. |
D.He escaped to meet Bonnie. |
A.A news report. | B.An advertisement. |
C.A book review. | D.A research paper. |
I woke up late and had breakfast in a hurry. I had never been late and didn’t want my boss to be unsatisfied.
However, it seemed that day wasn’t a lucky one for me from the very second I left my flat. The moment I wanted to rush downstairs one of my stiletto heels(细高跟) broke. I had to return to change my red shoes. I also had to change my purse and other little things that I had tried to match the red shoes. I was sure I would be late for work.
On my way to work I had to wait for over half an hour because of an accident. I had no choice but to wait. I phoned my boss and he told me that it was no problem, but he needed me for the meeting with the Japanese clients(客户) that morning.
Finally, I arrived at the office one hour later. I had to keep calm and be fresh for the meeting to make the clients sure that our plan was the best for their future commercial(商业的) project. However, when I was going to present(介绍) it to the clients, I found that I left the plan I had made the night before at home. I was about to get angry when I realized that I had a draft(草稿) of it in my office.
At last, the presentation came to an end and it proved to be a success. But I had to say that I had a terrible day, full of incidents.
【小题1】Which of the following is NOT the reason for the writer’s being late for her work?
A.Dull. | B.Just so-so. | C.Excellent. | D.Terrible. |
Mary Buendia once spent a day in an airplane, looking for a cat.She didn't find it that day.The plane flew around all over the world for three weeks with the cat on board. She finally found it in the cargo hold and sent it home first-class.Another time, she found two suitcases full of birds from Turkey.But her strangest experience was when she pulled a snake out of a man's pants.
Mary Buendia is an animal health inspector at JFK Airport in New York.She takes care of all the animals that pass through the airport and checks that they are healthy.In the Animal Health Center, there are areas for dogs, cats, reptiles, birds, and fish. There is also an area for very big animals.The biggest they ever had was a black rhino."It was no problem," she says.
At the center, they receive all types of animals—monkeys, wild cats, poisonous spiders.It's impossible for one person to know about all of these, but there are 20 people working with Mary.Between them, they understand how to take care of the animals.She recently had to feed a group of toucans, which are rare birds."Luckily," she says, "there is a supermarket nearby which is open 24 hours.I had to go at 2 a.m.to buy bananas."
Mary often works at night. "It's quiet between 1 a.m. and 4 a.m.," she says, "because we don't have night flights. We try to give the animals a quiet night." Mary clearly loves her job. "You never know what the day will bring," she says, and goes off to feed the birds.
71.The best title of the passage will probably be ____________.
A.JKF Airport in New York. B.Airport Health Inspector.
C.Mary Buendia D.Animal Health Center.
72.From the first paragraph, we can know that ___________.
A.Working as an Airport Health Inspector, Mary Buendia has various experiences.
B.After the cat was found, it was sent home to New York.
C.Mary got frightened when she pulled a snake out of a man’s pants.
D.Mary was tired of dealing with animals at the airport.
73.We can infer from the passage that ______.
A.Mary often works at night during flights.
B.It took Mary a whole day to find a lost cat in an airplane
C.Only healthy animals can be permitted to go aboard the airplane.
D.Mary knows everything about the animals by working with 20 other people.
74.An Airport Health Inspector should do the following Except ___________.
A.inspect whether the animals are healthy.
B.go shopping at night
C.take care of animals
D.work with colleagues and learn from each other
75.What kind of animals is "reptile" (in Para2) _________
A.a kind of large animals B.a kind of wild spiders
C.a kind of rare birds D.The passage doesn't mention
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