- Let Pete take the place. He’s older and should be more experienced. - I don’t think so. A man doesn’t necessarily grow wiser he grows older. A. because B. that C. than D. as 查看更多

 

题目列表(包括答案和解析)

Pete Richards was the loneliest man in town on the day that little Jean Grace opened the door of his shop.

         Pete's grandfather had owned the shop until his death. Then the shop became Pete's. The front window was full of beautiful old things: jewelry of a hundred years ago, gold and silver boxes, carved figures from China and Japan and other nations.

         On this winter afternoon, a child stood there, her face close to the window. With large and serious eyes, she studied each piece in the window. Then, looking pleased, she stepped back from the window and went into the shop. Pete himself stood behind the counter. His eyes were cold as he looked at the small girl. “Please,” she began, “would you let me look at the pretty string of blue beads in the window?” Pete took the string of blue beads from the window. The beads were beautiful against his hand as he held the necklace up for her to see.

         “They are just right,” said the child as though she were alone with the beads. “Will you wrap them up in pretty paper for me, please? I've been looking for a really wonderful Christmas present for my sister.”

         “How much money do you have?” asked Pete.

         She put a handful of pennies on the counter. “This is all I have,” she explained simply. “I've been saving the money for my sister's present.”

         Pete looked at her, his eyes thoughtful. Then he carefully closed his hand over the price mark on the necklace so that she could not see it. How could he tell her the price? The happy look in her big blue eyes struck him like the pain of an old wound.

         “Just a minute,” he said and went to the back of the shop. “What's your name?” he called out. He was very busy about something.

         “Jean Grace,” answered the child.

         When Pete returned to the front of the shop, he held a package in his hand. It was wrapped in pretty Christmas paper.

         “There you are,” he said. “Don't lose it on the way home.”

         She smiled happily at him as she ran out of the door. Through the window he watched her go. He felt more alone than ever.

         Something about Jean Grace and her string of beads had made him feel once more the pain of his old grief. The child's hair was as yellow as the sunlight; her eyes were as blue as the sea. Once upon a time, Pete had loved a girl with hair of that same yellow and with eyes just as blue. And the necklace of blue stones had been meant for her.

         But one rainy night, a car had gone off the road and struck the girl. After she died, Pete felt that he had nothing left in the world except his grief. The blue eyes of Jean Grace brought him out of that world of self-pity and made him remember again all that he had lost. The pain of remembering was so great that Pete wanted to run away from the happy Christmas shoppers who came to look at his beautiful old things during the next ten days.

         When the last shopper had gone, late on Christmas Eve, the door opened and a young woman came in. Pete could not understand it, but he felt that he had seen her before. Her hair was sunlight yellow and her eyes were sea-blue. Without speaking, she put on the counter a package wrapped in pretty Christmas paper. When Pete opened the package, the string of blue beads lay again before him.

         “Did this come from your shop?” she asked.

         Pete looked at her with eyes no longer cold. “Yes, it did,” he said.

         “Are the stones real?”

         “Yes. They aren't the best turquoise(绿松石), but they are real.”

         “Can you remember to whom you sold them?”

         “She was a small girl. Her name was Jean. She wanted them for her sister's Christmas present.”

         “How much were they?”

         “I can't tell you that,” he said. “The seller never tells anyone else what a buyer pays.”

         “But Jean has never had more than a few pennies. How could she pay for them?”

         “She paid the biggest price one can ever pay,” he said.

         For a moment there was no sound in the little shop. Then somewhere in the city, church bells began to ring. It was midnight and the beginning of another Christmas Day.

         “But why did you do it?” the girl asked.

         Pete put the package into her hands.

         “There is no one else to whom I can give a Christmas present,” he said. “It is already Christmas morning. Will you let me take you to your home? I would like to wish you a Merry Christmas at your door.”

         And so, to the sound of many bells, Pete Richards and a girl whose name he had not yet learned walked out into the hope and happiness of a new Christmas Day.

1.When Pete saw Jean Grace, he was ______.

A. very enthusiastic, hoping for some business to be done

B. cold but he still served the young customer

C. cold, unwilling to serve the young customer

D. very warm to the young customer though he did not want to sell anything to her

2.Pete did not say the price of the necklace because ______.

A. the seller never tells anyone else what a buyer pays

B. he priced the necklace too high

C. he knew it would disappoint the girl

D. he didn't want to sell the necklace

3.The eyes of Jean Grace brought Pete out of his world of self-pity and he ______.

A. tried to forget the memory of his sweetheart

B. began to look at the world optimistically

C. remembered his lost love

D. no longer felt the pain in him

4.A young woman came into the shop because ______.

A. she was afraid that there might be some mistake

B. she thought that the stones she had bought were not real

C. she was not sure if she could get more stones like those

D. she did not like what she had once bought

5.By saying “She paid the biggest price one can ever pay,” Pete meant that Jean Grace     .

A. gave the most money for the necklace

B. gave all she had with her for the necklace

C. appreciated the value of the necklace

D. wanted to have the best thing in the shop

6. At the end of the story we see that Pete _____.

A. found another girl that he could trust

B. met someone who truly loved him

C. found a place to go at last

D. regained his ability to love

 

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阅读下列短文,从每篇短文后所给各题的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项。

  Have you ever played the game “Telephone” ? You sit in a circle with a group of people and one person whispers a phrase to the person next to him or her.Then, each person keeps whispering the phrase around the circle until it reaches the last person, who repeats the whispered statement out loud.What started out as "Pizza tastes great" can end up as "Pete's a great ape! " It's funny to laugh at how twisted the sentence became as it got passed around.Gossip can work the same way, but it's not so funny.In fact, it can be very hurtful.

  When you say cruel things, tell stories that you're not sure are true, or let out information that you know is supposed to remain private, you're spreading gossip.What if you saw funny Jake go into the principal's office and you started wondering if he was in trouble.There's nothing wrong with wondering that, but what if you started telling other people you think Jake's in big trouble.You really don't know why he was in the principal's office, right?

  But before you know it, everyone is talking about how Jake is in trouble and imagining why.Maybe he put his rubber snake in the teacher's desk, someone says.Maybe he hit a kid who didn't laugh at one of his jokes, another person suggests.Jake doesn't come back to class for a long time, but when he does, everyone wants to know what happened in the principal's office.Jake might be a little angry or confused about all the questions, especially when he explains, "I went to the principal's office because my mom was there to take me to a doctor appointment."

  That's how rumors work.They start small and often blow up into something different from the truth.

(1)

The first paragraph is written to ________.

[  ]

A.

give an example of gossiping

B.

show how the game Telephone is played

C.

discuss the difference between a game and gossip

D.

show how gossip works

(2)

Jake's example is to show that gossip can start when you ________.

[  ]

A.

say bad things about somebody

B.

tell something you are not sure about

C.

are curious about what somebody is doing

D.

let out private information about somebody

(3)

We can infer from the third paragraph that ________.

[  ]

A.

gossip can hurt one deeply

B.

gossip can hurt no one if everyone knows the truth finally

C.

gossip is always started by several causes together

D.

gossip can turn into reality finally

(4)

The underlined word “twisted” in the first paragraph probably means ________.

[  ]

A.

being passed from one to another

B.

being changed in a wrong way

C.

being repeated several times

D.

being corrected at last

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阅读理解

  Mr. Anderson lives in a big city in America. Last year he came to England to visit the small town which his father had come from.

  There was a big, square garden in this town. One day, while Mr. Anderson was walking past, he stopped outside and looked in. There was beautiful grass in the middle of the garden. It was green and short and soft.

  A gardener was watering it, and Mr. Anderson said to him, “Good morning. Is this your garden?”

  “No”, answered the gardener, “It isn't mine, but I work here. ”

  “How do people get such beautiful lawns?” Mr. Anderson asked, “Ours are never as good as this. ”

  The gardener stopped his work and looked at Mr. Anderson. Then he said, “you come from America, don't you?”

  Mr. Anderson answered, “Yes, but my father came from this town. ”

  “Well,” the gardener said, “It's easy to grow lawns like this. ” He asked Mr. Anderson to come in , and said , “Let me tell you about it. ”

  Mr. Anderson went into the garden. “My name's Anderson , ” he said to the gardener , “Joe Anderson. What's yours?”

  “My name's Gray. ” the gardener answered. “Pete Gray. Now about the lawns. First we sow (plant) our seeds; then when the grass appears, we pull all the weeds out; after that, we cut the grass every week, we water it every day when the weather is very dry during the summer season, and we sometimes roll it (press it down with a special roller). ”

  “Oh,” Mr. Anderson answered, “That's very interesting, Pete. And how long does it take before the lawn becomes like this?”

  The gardener thought for a few moments and then answered, “Oh, about 400 years.”

1.Mr. Anderson left ________ for ________ last year.

[  ]

A.his home town, a garden
B.a small city, a big town
C.America, London
D.London, America

2.One day, Mr. Anderson stopped outside the garden because ________ .

[  ]

A.it was green and soft
B.it was square
C.he saw a gardener in it
D.there was beautiful grass in it

3.Mr. Anderson came into the garden because ________ .

[  ]

A.he found the beautiful lawns in it

B.his father had come from there

C.how to plant lawns was very interesting

D.the gardener asked him in

4.The gardeners water the grass ________ .

[  ]

A.every week
B.every day
C.when the grass appears
D.in very dry weather

5.Which is true?

[  ]

A.Both grass and weeds come up when they plant seeds.

B.Mr. Anderson thought it was hard to make such a beautiful garden.

C.Mr. Anderson told the gardener where he had come from, so he knew it.

D.It took a few years to make such beautiful lawns

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Pete Richards was the loneliest man in town on the day that little Jean Grace opened the door of his shop.
Pete's grandfather had owned the shop until his death. Then the shop became Pete's. The front window was full of beautiful old things: jewelry of a hundred years ago, gold and silver boxes, carved figures from China and Japan and other nations.
On this winter afternoon, a child stood there, her face close to the window. With large and serious eyes, she studied each piece in the window. Then, looking pleased, she stepped back from the window and went into the shop. Pete himself stood behind the counter. His eyes were cold as he looked at the small girl. “Please,” she began, “would you let me look at the pretty string of blue beads in the window?” Pete took the string of blue beads from the window. The beads were beautiful against his hand as he held the necklace up for her to see.
“They are just right,” said the child as though she were alone with the beads. “Will you wrap them up in pretty paper for me, please? I've been looking for a really wonderful Christmas present for my sister.”
“How much money do you have?” asked Pete.
She put a handful of pennies on the counter. “This is all I have,” she explained simply. “I've been saving the money for my sister's present.”
Pete looked at her, his eyes thoughtful. Then he carefully closed his hand over the price mark on the necklace so that she could not see it. How could he tell her the price? The happy look in her big blue eyes struck him like the pain of an old wound.
“Just a minute,” he said and went to the back of the shop. “What's your name?” he called out. He was very busy about something.
“Jean Grace,” answered the child.
When Pete returned to the front of the shop, he held a package in his hand. It was wrapped in pretty Christmas paper.
“There you are,” he said. “Don't lose it on the way home.”
She smiled happily at him as she ran out of the door. Through the window he watched her go. He felt more alone than ever.
Something about Jean Grace and her string of beads had made him feel once more the pain of his old grief. The child's hair was as yellow as the sunlight; her eyes were as blue as the sea. Once upon a time, Pete had loved a girl with hair of that same yellow and with eyes just as blue. And the necklace of blue stones had been meant for her.
But one rainy night, a car had gone off the road and struck the girl. After she died, Pete felt that he had nothing left in the world except his grief. The blue eyes of Jean Grace brought him out of that world of self-pity and made him remember again all that he had lost. The pain of remembering was so great that Pete wanted to run away from the happy Christmas shoppers who came to look at his beautiful old things during the next ten days.
When the last shopper had gone, late on Christmas Eve, the door opened and a young woman came in. Pete could not understand it, but he felt that he had seen her before. Her hair was sunlight yellow and her eyes were sea-blue. Without speaking, she put on the counter a package wrapped in pretty Christmas paper. When Pete opened the package, the string of blue beads lay again before him.
“Did this come from your shop?” she asked.
Pete looked at her with eyes no longer cold. “Yes, it did,” he said.
“Are the stones real?”
“Yes. They aren't the best turquoise(绿松石), but they are real.”
“Can you remember to whom you sold them?”
“She was a small girl. Her name was Jean. She wanted them for her sister's Christmas present.”
“How much were they?”
“I can't tell you that,” he said. “The seller never tells anyone else what a buyer pays.”
“But Jean has never had more than a few pennies. How could she pay for them?”
She paid the biggest price one can ever pay,” he said.
For a moment there was no sound in the little shop. Then somewhere in the city, church bells began to ring. It was midnight and the beginning of another Christmas Day.
“But why did you do it?” the girl asked.
Pete put the package into her hands.
“There is no one else to whom I can give a Christmas present,” he said. “It is already Christmas morning. Will you let me take you to your home? I would like to wish you a Merry Christmas at your door.”
And so, to the sound of many bells, Pete Richards and a girl whose name he had not yet learned walked out into the hope and happiness of a new Christmas Day

  1. 1.

    When Pete saw Jean Grace, he was ______

    1. A.
      very enthusiastic, hoping for some business to be done
    2. B.
      cold but he still served the young customer
    3. C.
      cold, unwilling to serve the young customer
    4. D.
      very warm to the young customer though he did not want to sell anything to her
  2. 2.

    Pete did not say the price of the necklace because ______

    1. A.
      the seller never tells anyone else what a buyer pays
    2. B.
      he priced the necklace too high
    3. C.
      he knew it would disappoint the girl
    4. D.
      he didn't want to sell the necklace
  3. 3.

    The eyes of Jean Grace brought Pete out of his world of self-pity and he ______

    1. A.
      tried to forget the memory of his sweetheart
    2. B.
      began to look at the world optimistically
    3. C.
      remembered his lost love
    4. D.
      no longer felt the pain in him
  4. 4.

    A young woman came into the shop because ______

    1. A.
      she was afraid that there might be some mistake
    2. B.
      she thought that the stones she had bought were not real
    3. C.
      she was not sure if she could get more stones like those
    4. D.
      she did not like what she had once bought
  5. 5.

    By saying “She paid the biggest price one can ever pay,” Pete meant that Jean Grace    

    1. A.
      gave the most money for the necklace
    2. B.
      gave all she had with her for the necklace
    3. C.
      appreciated the value of the necklace
    4. D.
      wanted to have the best thing in the shop
  6. 6.

    At the end of the story we see that Pete _____

    1. A.
      found another girl that he could trust
    2. B.
      met someone who truly loved him
    3. C.
      found a place to go at last
    4. D.
      regained his ability to love

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A heartless thief is believed to have crashed a fund-raiser and made off with a bag of cash meant to help a New York City firefighter pay for life-changing surgery for his 9-year-old son. But little Aidan Sullivan -- who was born with a facial defect and no right ear -- yesterday put up a brave front, with a message for the crook(thief): "I'm going to kick your butt!"
"I want to look normal," said Aidan, whose father, Tim, is a firefighter in the Bronx. The third-grader has hemi facial micro soma, in which one half of the face doesn't develop correctly.
Last weekend, family friend Peter Drake, a Ridgefield, Conn., firefighter, hosted a fund-raiser, collecting between 数学公式9,000. But when the party at a Danbury, Conn., Irish cultural center was over, the money had disappeared.
"At the end of the night, all the money that was donated was put in a zippered bag," said Tim Sullivan. "A bartender gave the bag to Pete... He had it in his hands. He put it down to go do something, and when he came back, he saw that it was missing."
Sullivan said his longtime friend -- who has had fund-raisers to pay for Aidan's 10 previous surgeries -- is "devastated."
"Pete was so upset. He kept saying, 'I let Aidan down, I let Aidan down,” Colleen Sullivan, 40, recalled.
"We even went Dumpster diving, in case it was thrown out."
The Sullivans plan to go ahead with the March 1 surgery led by specialists at NYU's Langone Medical Center in Manhattan. The money would have offset the 数学公式15,000 that insurance doesn't cover. Yesterday, Aidan said he's not a fan of hospitals and doesn't like to be away from his sister, Kaylee, 4. But he's willing to do it. "I'm excited," he said. "Finally, an ear."

  1. 1.

    Where do you probably read this text from?

    1. A.
      A magazine
    2. B.
      A newspaper
    3. C.
      A book
    4. D.
      An advertisement
  2. 2.

    How did little Aidan Sullivan feel when he knew the money was missing

    1. A.
      He felt excited
    2. B.
      He felt surprised
    3. C.
      He felt upset
    4. D.
      He felt annoyed
  3. 3.

    What is the money used for according to this text?

    1. A.
      To help Aidan Sullivan to have another operation
    2. B.
      To help pay for Aidan Sullivan’s life insurance
    3. C.
      To return the money the Sullivans owed to the hospital
    4. D.
      To help a firefighter who got hurt in the ear
  4. 4.

    What is true of little Aidan Sullivan?

    1. A.
      He hates going to hospital
    2. B.
      He will go to New York for the surgery
    3. C.
      He didn’t care too much about the lost money
    4. D.
      He has received 10 surgeries before
  5. 5.

    What can we infer about Pete from the text?

    1. A.
      He was heartless
    2. B.
      He was kind
    3. C.
      He was caress
    4. D.
      He was a firefighter

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