题目列表(包括答案和解析)
“Hurry, Mommy! Let’s go trick-or-treating!” My daughter waited by the door in her pink princess skirt while I prayed in the living room. Usually I liked taking her out on Halloween, but this year I was sad. I was worried about my mother, who was in China on vacation. I got a call that afternoon that she had slipped and fallen on the hard floor of her hotel and broken her leg. She was taken to a hospital in Beijing. Mom was nervous because she couldn’t understand any of the doctors. If only I could do something to help her!
I knew I couldn’t let my worries spoil my daughter’s fun. There was nothing I could do for Mom except pray, I thought. We left the house and went down the block. I was so upset that I hardly took notice of the kids around me. There came the man to whose son I’d once given piano lessons. “Hello there,” I said, greeting him and the boy at his side.
“Hello,” the father answered. “Having fun?”“I’m trying,” I said. “Why, what’s wrong?” he asked. I told him the whole story. “My mother, in China, broke her leg and didn’t understand any of the doctors. And I’m too far away to do anything!” I said.
He raised his eyebrows. “Beijing, you said?” he asked. I nodded. He smiled. “Believe it or not, my sister is a doctor at an English-speaking hospital there. If you want, I’ll make a call right away and we’ll try and get your mom transferred (转移).”
A few days later I sat in the living room with my daughter as she finished the last of the candy. “Mommy, how far away is China?” she asked. “Not as far as I thought,” I said.
【小题1】What did the author’s daughter want to do?
A.Pray with the author. | B.Enjoy herself outside. |
C.Play a trick on her mom. | D.Go to the theatre to see a play. |
A.She couldn’t get used to the life in Beijing. |
B.She was hurt in the leg badly while travelling. |
C.She was too old and weak to pray for her daughter. |
D.She couldn’t make herself understood by the doctor. |
A.she was calling her mother | B.she felt very sad at that time |
C.she was about to give a lesson | D.she couldn’t find her daughter |
A.the man’s sister would help the author’s mother |
B.the author would come to China to see her mother |
C.the author was a famous music teacher in the town |
D.the author’s daughter wanted to travel in China |
I met him first in 1936. I rushed into his ugly little shop to have the heels of my shoes repaired. I waited when he did it. He greeted me with a cheerful smile. “You’re new in this neighborbood, aren’t you?”
I said I was. I had moved into a house at the end of the street only a week before.
“This is a fine neighborhood,” he said. “You’ll be happy here.” He looked at the leather covering the heel sadly. It was worn through because I had failed to have the repair done a month before. I grew impatient, for I was rushing to meet a friend. “Please hurry,” I begged.
He looked at me over his spectacles. “Now, lady, we won’t be long. I want to do a good job. You see, I have a tradition to live up to.”
A tradition? In this ugly little shop that was no different from so many other shoe repair shops on the side streets of New York?
He must have felt my surprise, for he smiled as he went on. “Yes, lady, I inherited a tradition. My father and my grandfather were shoemakers in Italy, and they were the best. My father always told me, ‘Son, do the best job on every shoe that comes into the shop, and be proud of your fine work. Do that always, and you’ll have both happiness and money enough to live on.’”
As he handed me the finished shoes, he said: “These will last a long time. I’ve used good leather.”
I left in a hurry. But I had a warm and grateful feeling. On my way home I passed the little shop again. There he was, still working. He saw me, and to my surprise he waved and smiled. This was the beginning of our friendship. It was a friendship that came to mean more and more to me as time passed.
Every day I passed his shop, we waved to each other in friendly greeting. At first I went in only when I had repair work to be done. Then I found myself going in every few days just to talk with him.
He was the happiest man I’ve ever known. Often, as he stood in his shopwindow, working at a pair of shoes, he sang in a high, clear Italian voice. The Italians in our neighborhood called him la luce alla finestra—“the light in the window”.
One day I was disappointed and angry because of poor jobs some painters had done for me. I went into his shop for comfort. He let me go on talking angrily about the poor work and carelessness of present-day workmen. “They had no pride in their work,” I said. “They just wanted to collect their money for doing nothing.”
He agreed. “There’s a lot of that kind around, but maybe we should not blame them. Maybe their fathers had no pride in their work. That’s hard on a boy. It keeps him from learning something important.” He waited a minute and said “Every man or woman who hasn’t inherited a prideful tradition must start building one.”
“In this country, our freedom lets each of us make his own contribution. We must make it a good contribution. No matter what sort of work a man does, if he gives it his best each day, he’s starting a tradition for his children to live up to. And he is making lots of happiness for himself.”
I went to Europe for a few months. When I returned, there was no “light in the window”. The door was closed. There was a little sign: “Call for shoes at shop next door.” I learned the old man had suddenly got sick and died two weeks before
I went away with a heavy heart. I would miss him. But he had left me something—an important piece of wisdom I shall always remember: “If you inherited a prideful tradition, you must carry it on; if you haven’t, start building one now.”
1.The shoemaker looked sadly at the shoes because __________
A. they were of poor quality.
B. he didn’t have the right kind of leather
C. he thought they were too worn to be repaired
D. the author hadn’t taken good care of them.
2.The author was surprised when she heard that the shop had a tradition because the shop ________.
A. looked no different from other shoe repair shops
B. had a light in the window
C. was at the end of a street
D. was quite an ugly and dirty one
3.What does the underlined word “inherit” mean in paragraph 6 mean?
A. develop B. receive C. learn D. appreciate
4.The author later frequently went into the little shop __________.
A. to repair her worn shoes
B. only to chat with the shoemaker
C. to look at the new shoes there
D. only to get comfort from the shoemaker
5.Why was the shoemaker called “the light in the window” by his neighbors?
A. Because he always worked late at night.
B. Because he always put a light in the window.
C. Because he was always guiding the others.
D. Because he was always happy and cheerful.
6.What’s the best title of this passage?
A. A Proud Shoemaker B. A Prideful Tradition
C. The Light in the Window D. Treasure Your Shoes
“Father, I don’t like to go to school,” said Harry Williams one morning.“I wish you 1 let me stay at home. Charles Parker’s father doesn’t make him go to school.”
Mr. Williams took his little boy 2 the hand, and said kindly to him, “Come, my son. I want to 3 you something in the garden.”
Harry walked into the garden with his father, who led him along 4 they came to a bed in which peas(豌豆) were growing.Not a weed(杂草) was to be 5 about their roots.
“See how beautifully these peas are 6 , my son,” said Mr. Williams. “How clean and healthy the vines(藤) look.We shall have a good 7 .Now let me show you the vines in Mr. Parker’s garden.”
Mr. Williams then 8 Harry to look at Mr. Parker’s pea vines.
After a few moments, Mr. Williams asked, “Well, my son, what do you 9 Mr. Parker’s pea vines?”
“Oh, Father!” replied the little boy.“I never saw such 10 looking peas in my life! The weeds are nearly as 11 as the peas themselves.There won’t be half a crop!” “ 12 are they so much worse than ours, Harry?”
“Because they have been left to grow as they 13 .I suppose Mr. Parker just planted them, and never took any care of them 14 ”
“Yes.A garden will soon be overrun with weeds 15 it is not taken good care of,” Mr. Williams 16 , “and so it is with the human garden. Children’s minds are like garden beds.They must be 17 cared for.I send you to school in order that the garden of your 18 may have good seeds and 19 plentifully.Now which would you 20 , to stay at home or go to school?”
“I would rather go to school,” said Harry.
1.A.could B.should C.might D.would
2.A.in B.with C.by D.of
3.A.offer B.show C.give D.remind
4.A.when B.where C.before D.until
5.A.made B.changed C.seen D.planted
6.A.growing B.moving C.shaking D.dancing
7.A.result B.harvest C.match D.present
8.A.forced B.ordered C.followed D.led
9.A.think of B.look at C.hear of D.deal with
10.A.ugly B.fine C.dirty D.poor
11.A.deep B.long C.high D.wide
12.A.When B.Why C.Where D.How
13.A.pleased B.stayed C.left D.belonged
14.A.ahead B.outside C.forward D.afterward
15.A.as B.or C.if D.so
16.A.required B.answered C.explained D.announced
17.A.carefully B.correctly C.gently D.slightly
18.A.school B.mind C.family D.dream
19.A.produce B.develop C.decrease D.drop
20.A.find B.support C.know D.prefer
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