This is my family 1 .These are 2 That is my 3 .His name is Jack. 4 are my uncle and my 5 .This boy is memy family. 查看更多

 

题目列表(包括答案和解析)

阅读下面短文,然后根据短文内容回答问题。

  “I have to live on because life is so beautiful.”These words of one of my patients who suffers from(遭受)SARS continue to ring in my ears.This patient's whole family has been infected(感染)with SARS-her mother and brother have already died and her father is still seriously ill.I was deeply moved by her courage(勇气)and understood for the first time in my life the weight of my duty.I have to help others live on.

  When I treated my first SARS patient on April 25, my only worry was that my knowledge in treating SARS patients was not enough.Many friends of mine keep asking why I'm not frightened.I think it takes no special courage to treat SARS.It is my duty to save other people's lives and I was trained to do this.When you see a family suffering from SARS and seriously ill patients worrying about their dying relatives, the only thing you want to do is to try to help them.

  I treat SARS patients as ordinary patients, never making them feel they are dangerous.I believe this mental support(精神支柱)is important to those suffering from loneliness and despair(绝望).After a day's work, when lying in bed at the hospital, the most beautiful sound I want to hear is my two-year-old son's voice.

1.What job does the writer do?

He is ________.

2.What made the writer feel worried when he first treated SARS patients?

His knowledge in treating SARS patients ________.

3.Where does the writer live during his special work in treating SARS patients?

He lives ________.

4.What does the writer think of his work?

It's his duty to ________.

5.What does the writer want to do after a day's hard work?

He wants to hear ________.

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My name’s Mary. This is my family tree. These are my parents. Their names are Bill and Grace Brown. Those are my grandparents. Their names are Henry and Linda Brown. This is my uncle. His name is John. That boy is my brother. His name is Tony. This is Susan. She is my uncle’s daughter.
【小题1】Mary’s brother is ____.

A.SusanB.JohnC.TonyD.Linda
【小题2】Bill is John’s ______.
A.fatherB.brotherC.uncleD.son
【小题3】Henry is Susan’s ____.
A.fatherB.grandfatherC.uncleD.grandmother
【小题4】Grace is Susan’s________.
A.sister B.motherC.auntD.grandmother
【小题5】Tony and Mary are Susan’s_______.
A.brothersB.sistersC.cousinsD.friends

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Look at the light and beautiful snowflakes(雪花) falling.Do you want to hold them in your hands? They are always lost when they meet your hands.

Well, this isn’t just a problem for you.It was a problem for Wilson Bentley, too.

In the 1870s, Wilson Bentley was just a teenager.His family lived in a small town in northeast America.Winters there were long and hard.Bentley’s mother was once a schoolteacher.She taught him at home.Bentley didn’t go to school until he was 14.He was a quiet boy, and loved reading his mother’s books.

But it was his mother’s microscope(显微镜) that interested him.When the other boys were playing with balls, little Bentley was studying the things like drops of water, flowers and snowflakes.Bentley loved watching snowflakes.For the next two years, young Bentley spent many winter days in a cold room watching these ice crystals(晶体) through the microscope.

The boy thought they were so beautiful that he started to draw pictures of them.But there were so many snowflakes that he couldn’t draw them all.

How could he keep their beauty forever? Bentley thought of buying a camera.

The boy and his mother asked his father to buy one.But his father didn’t agree.He thought the whole thing was a bad idea.He thought the only thing a farmer should do was farming.

But finally Bentley did get a camera.For more than a year he tried to take pictures of snowflakes.On January 15, 1885, during a snowstorm, Bentley took the first ever photo of an ice crystal with his camera.“It was the greatest moment of my life,” Bentley said later.

For 13 years, Bentley worked quietly and took thousands of photos of ice crystals.Later he became known as “Snowflake” Bentley.

1.The best title for this passage is “______”.

   A.Snowflake Photos                              B.“Snowflake” Bentley

   C.Long and Hard Winters                    D.Teenage Photographer

2.What kind of person do you think Wilson Bentley was?

   A.He was outgoing                                B.He was too serious

   C.He was interested in learning                D.He was very warm-hearted

3.The “ice crystals” in the fourth paragraph refers to “______”.

   A.water drops      B.rain drops       C.flowers                D.snowflakes

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阅读理解

  Parents and kids today dress alike, listen to the same music, and are friends.Is this a good thing? Sometimes, when Mr.Ballmer and his 16-year-old daughter, Elizabeth, listen to rock music together and talk about interests they both enjoy, such as pop culture, he remembers his more distant relationship with his parents when he was a teenager.

  “I would never have said to my mom, ‘Hey, the latest film is really great.How do you like it?'” says Ballmer.“There was just a complete gap in taste.”

  Film was not the only gulf.From clothing and hairstyles to activities and expectations, earlier generations of parents and children often appeared to move in their own circles.

  Today, the generation gap(代沟)has not disappeared, but it is getting smaller in many families.Conversations on subjects such as sex and drugs would not have taken place a generation ago.Now they are common.And parent-child activities, from shopping to sports, involve a feeling of trust and friendship that can continue into adulthood.

  No wonder greeting cards today carry the message, “To my mother, my best friend.”

  But family experts warn that the new equality(平等)between parents and kids may also result in less respect for parents.“There's still a lot of strictness and power on the part of parents out there, but there is a change happening,” says Kerrie, a psychology professor at Lebanon Valley College.“In the middle of that change, there is a lot of confusion(困惑)among parents.”

  Family researchers offer a variety of reasons for these changing roles and attitudes.They see the 1960s as a turning point.Great cultural changes led to more open communication that encourages everyone to have a say.

  “My parents were on the ‘before' side of that change, but today's parents, the 40-year-olds, were on the ‘after' side,” explains Mr.Ballmer.“It's not something easily carried through by parents these days, because life is more difficult to understand or deal with, but sharing interests does make it more fun to be a parent now.”

(1)

What does the underlined word “gulf” in Paragraph 3 probably mean?

[  ]

A.

Interest.

B.

Distance.

C.

Different.

D.

Connection.

(2)

Which of the following shows that the generation gap is getting smaller?

[  ]

A.

Parents share more interests with their children.

B.

Parents show less strictness to their young children.

C.

Parents help their children find interests in activities.

D.

Parents share more cultural changes with their children.

(3)

The change in today's parent-child relationship is ________.

[  ]

A.

more confusion among parents

B.

less respect for parents from children

C.

new equality between parents and children

D.

more strictness and power on the part of parents

(4)

The writer writes the passage to ________.

[  ]

A.

describe the difficulties today's parents have met with

B.

discuss the development of the parent-child relationship

C.

suggest the ways to deal with the parent-child relationship

D.

compare today's parent-child relationship with that in the past

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阅读理解

  When I was a kid, my dad worked in a shop in the center of our town.Sometimes, I went to the shop with him and I made a little pocket money by buying things for his workmates.But I never paid attention to all the things and people around me.

  One day, as my dad and I were driving to the shop, I looked out of the window of the car and I saw an old man standing at the street corner.There was a rose in his hand, he was smelling the rose.For some reason, our eyes met and we looked at each other for about twenty seconds.There was nothing unusual about this man but the meet was unusual to me.Up to that moment in my life, I had given no thought to anyone on the street, in shops or anywhere else.I had no interest out of my family.

  But I was interested in that old man.For the first time I had interest in a stranger.What kind of life had he lived? Where had he been in his time?

  Once a great man encouraged us to “stop and smell the rose”.Now I want to tell these words to you.Stop what you are busy with and try to fully understand things and people in your eyesight.If you don't care about others on your road of life, then you are missing your life itself.

(1)

How did the writer make a little pocket money?

[  ]

A.

By asking his father to give him.

B.

By stealing other's money.

C.

By buying things for his father's workmates.

D.

By asking in the street.

(2)

What was the old man doing when I saw him?

[  ]

A.

He was selling roses.

B.

He was walking in the street.

C.

He was talking to the writer.

D.

He was smelling a rose.

(3)

When did the writer have interest out of his family?

[  ]

A.

When he was a kid.

B.

When he met the old man with rose.

C.

When he went to school.

D.

When he went to work.

(4)

What is the main idea of this passage?

[  ]

A.

If you care about others on your road of life, then you are having your life itself.

B.

If you care about others on your road of life, then you are missing your life itself.

C.

If you meet an old man with a rose in the street, then you'll have interest in your life.

D.

If you have interest in others, then you are having your life itself.

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