24.A.morning B.noon C.dark D.dawn 查看更多

 

题目列表(包括答案和解析)

It was an unforgettable experience. By the time we made it to the 36  , my hands were wet. I 37   he would remember everything I had taught him over and over again. 38 he stopped and asked, “So, Mom, how do you like my 39 ?”

I must admit that his performance was 40 . He had both hands on the wheel. His eyes never left the highway and his handling was far better than I’d ever imagined it would be, 41 it still needed improving.

Several 42 ago, I was teaching him to ride his bike. We started 43 . The third grade primary school student was 44 that his training wheels were taken off. Of course it was a long evening. He 45 several times but always got up quickly and kept 46 until he mastered riding.

Viewing the 47 , I guess it really wasn’t about him driving. It was about him 48 ---gaining more and more independence; not 49 me so much anymore.

He will be a(n) 50 in high school this fall. This will truly be a 51 year for both of us. He’s ready to have one of the best years of his young life and I will have (a) complete mental 52 . For this is probably the last year that my baby will be at home on a(n) 53 basis.

After this school year, he’ll go to college and then into the real world. Things all happen so 54  .

Now I see the time has just arrived for him to perform what he’s learned.

So, I guess you could say his driving lessons are lessons for me too. Yes, I’m being 55  that it’s his time to drive through life’s green lights and move towards his future as smoothly and skillfully as possible.

1.

A.club

B.park

C.pool

D.road

 

2.

A.knew

B.hoped

C.guessed

D.thought

 

3.

A.Eventually

B.Suddenly

C.Mysteriously

D.Curiously

 

4.

A.riding

B.driving

C.shooting

D.swimming

 

5.

A.terrible

B.just so so

C.good

D.perfect

 

6.

A.as

B.for

C.and

D.though

 

7.

A.years

B.months

C.weeks

D.days

 

8.

A.at dawn

B.in the morning

C.at noon

D.before dark

 

9.

A.worried

B.scared

C.excited

D.surprised

 

10.

A.fell

B.quitted

C.hesitated

D.escaped

 

11.

A.moving

B.trying

C.struggling

D.weeping

 

12.

A.past

B.progress

C.situation

D.success

 

13.

A.thinking

B.learning

C.insisting

D.growing

 

14.

A.disobeying

B.embarrassing

C.needing

D.depending

 

15.

A.junior

B.senior

C.athlete

D.journalist

 

16.

A.hard

B.short

C.fruitful

D.memorable

 

17.

A.blank

B.relaxation

C.breakdown

D.disability

 

18.

A.annual

B.regular

C.voluntary

D.unpredictable

 

19.

A.similarly

B.unfavorably

C.quickly

D.unforgettably

 

20.

A.taught

B.reminded

C.rewarded

D.comforted

 

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Across the street from our home was a school and I would often watch the kids as they played basketball during the break. I often noticed a small    1    playing with boys. I watched in

   2    as she ran circles around the other kids. She    3    to shoot jump shots just over their heads and into the net. The boys always tried to stop her but no one could. At other times I saw her playing alone, sometimes until    4    .

       One day I asked her why she   5    so much. She looked    6    in my eyes and without a moment of hesitation(犹豫)she said “The only way I can go to   7     is to get a scholarship(奖学金). I believe that I would get it if I were good enough at   8    . My Daddy told me if the dream is big enough, the facts don’t   9   .” Then with a determined smile she ran towards the court. I watched her   10    those junior high years and into high school. Every week, she led her team to victory.

       One day in her senior year, I saw her sitting in the grass, head   11    in her arms. The coach(教练)told her that at 5 feet 5 inches she would   12    never get to play for a top ranked team—much less offered a scholarship—so she should   13    dreaming about college. I asked her if she had talked to her dad about it yet. She   14    her head from her hands and told me that her father said those coaches just did not understand the  15    of a dream. He told her that if she truly wanted a scholarship,   16    could stop her except one thing—her own attitude.

       The next year,   17    she and her team went to the Northern California Championship game, she was seen by a college coach. She was indeed   18    a scholarship, a full one. She was going to get the college education that she had    19    and worked toward for all those years. It’s   20   : If the dream is big enough, the facts don’t count

1.A.boy                      B.girl                      C.student                D.teacher

2.A.wonder                 B.shock                  C.doubt                  D.delight

3.A.attempted              B.tried                    C.failed                  D.managed

4.A.morning                B.noon                   C.dark                    D.dawn

5.A.practised               B.suffered              C.performed           D.drilled

6.A.slowly                  B.quickly                C.directly               D.quietly

7.A.work                    B.court                   C.school                 D.college

8.A.football                 B.basketball            C.my lessons          D.the exams

9.A.count                    B.delay                   C.damage               D.fail

10.A.past                    B.over                    C.through               D.beyond

11.A.buried                 B.placed                 C.hidden                 D.dropped

12.A.firmly                 B.probably              C.nearly                 D.sadly

13.A.begin                  B.stop                    C.continue              D.start

14.A.lowered               B.turned                 C.lifted                   D.moved

15.A.effect                  B.advantage            C.aim                     D.power

16.A.something           B.anything              C.nobody               D.nothing

17.A.after                   B.before                 C.as                       D.once

18.A.offered                B.handed                C.brought               D.sent

19.A.thought of           B.asked for             C.dreamed of          D.referred to

20.A.possible          B.true               C.proper            D.perfect

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Twenty years ago I drove a taxi for a living. One night I went to pick up a passenger at 2:30 AM. When I­­­­­­­­­­­­   21  -,I found the building was dark except for a single light in a ground floor    22 

I walked to the door and knocked “Just a minute” answered a weak elderly      23

After a long pause the door opened. A small woman in her eighties stood    24    me by her side was a small suitcase. I took the suitcase to the car and then  25to help the woman. She took my arm and we walked   26 toward the car.

She kept thanking me for my kindness. “It’s nothing” I told her. “I just try to   27  my passengers the way I would want my mother treated.” “Oh you’re such a good man.” She said. When we got into the taxi she gave me an address and then asked“Could you drive   28 downtown”

“It’s not the shortest way” I answered quickly.

“Oh I’m   29 ” she said. “I’m on my way to a hospice临终医院. I don’t have any   30  left. The doctor says I don’t have very long.”

I quietly reached over and   31  the meter计价器.

For the next two hours we drove through the city. She   32  me the building where she had once worked the neighborhood where she had lived and the furniture shop that had once been a ballroom where she had gone  33  as a girl.

Sometimes she’d ask me to slow down in front of a   34 building and would sit staring into the darkness saying nothing.

At  35  she suddenly said” I’m tired. Let’s go now.”

We drove in silence to the   36 she had given me. “How much do I   37 you” she asked. “Nothing.” I said. “You have to make a living” she answered. “Oh there are other   38 ” I answered. Almost without thinking I   39  and gave her a hug. She held onto me tightly. Our hug ended with her remark“You gave an old woman a little moment of joy.”

I walked into the  40 morning light. Behind me, a door shut. It was the sound of the closing of a life.

1.

A.waited

B.stopped

C.arrived

D.wandered

 

2.

A.window

B.house

C.door

D.glass

 

3.

A.sound

B.whisper

C.sign

D.voice

 

4.

A.beneath

B.before

C.behind

D.over

 

5.

A.walked

B.left

C.returned

D.stepped

 

6.

A.calmly

B.hurriedly

C.quietly

D.slowly

 

7.

A.receive

B.collect

C.treat

D.drive

 

8.

A.through

B.from

C.to

D.towards

 

9.

A.out of work

B.in no hurry

C.on no purpose

D.out of danger

 

10.

A.hope

B.money

C.time

D.family

 

11.

A.turned on

B.shut off

C.switched over

D.covered up

 

12.

A.showed

B.pointed

C.indicated

D.forgot

 

13.

A.working

B.growing

C.playing

D.dancing

 

14.

A.memorial

B.significant

C.particular

D.similar

 

15.

A.dawn

B.sunset

C.noon

D.night

 

16.

A.house

B.address

C.direction

D.destination

 

17.

A.pay

B.owe

C.promise

D.save

 

18.

A.cars

B.buildings

C.passengers

D.chances

 

19.

A.nodded

B.landed

C.swung

D.bent

 

20.

A.dim

B.colorful

C.bright

D.black

 

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For eighty four days old Santiago had not caught a single fish. At first a young boy, Manolin, had shared his bad fortune, but after the fortieth luck less day the boy’s father told his son to go in another boat. From that time on, Santigao worked alone. The boy loved the old fisherman and always helped him with money and food. Usually, they would talk about the fish they had taken in luckier times or about American baseball after supper, while at night, alone in his cottage, Santiago dreamed of lions on the beaches of Africa, where he had gone years before. He no longer dreamed of his dead wife.

On the eighty-fifth day, Santiago set off to fish before dawn. Two of his baits (饵) were fresh tunas (金枪鱼) the boy had given him, as well as sardines (沙丁鱼) to cover his hooks. Then he set his lines which went straight down into deep dark water.

As the sun rose he saw other boats in toward shore. A bird showed him where dolphin were chasing some flying fish. This time Santiago saw tuna jumping in the sunlight. A small one took the hook on his line. Pulling the fish aboard, the old man thought it a good fortune.

Toward noon a marlin, a common fish in the sea, started eating the bait which was one hundred meters down. Gently the old man played the fish, a big one, as he knew from the weight on the line. At last he struck to settle the hook. The fish did not come out of she surface. Instead, it began to pull the boat to the northwest. The old man followed it. Although he was alone and no longer strong, he had his skill and knew many tricks. He waited patiently for the fish to be tired.

It was cold after the sunset. When something took one of his remaining baits, he cut the line with his knife. Once the marlin leaned suddenly, pulling Santiago forward on his face and cutting his cheek. By dawn his left hand was cramped (抽筋的). The fish had headed northward; there was no land in sight. Hungry, he cut pieces from the tuna and chewed them slowly.

That morning the fist jumped. Seeing it, Santiago knew he had hooked the biggest marlin he had ever seen. Then the fish went down and turned toward the east. Santiago drank a little water from the bottle during the hot afternoon.

Close to nightfall a dolphin took the small hook he had rebated. He lifted it aboard, careful. After he had rested, he cut meat from the dolphin and kept also the two flying fish he hound in its stomach. That night he slept. He awoke to feel the line running through his fingers as the fish jumped. Feeding line slowly, he tried to tire the marlin. After the fish slowed its run, he washed his cut hands in sea water and ate one of the flying fish. At sunrise the marlin began to circle. Faint, he worked to bring the big fish nearer with each turn. Almost exhausted, he finally drew his big fish alongside and drove in the harpoon(鱼叉). The fish was two feet longer than the boat. No fish like it had ever been seen in Havana harbor.

An hour later, he sighted the fist shark, a fierce Mako, and it came in fast to chase after the dead marlin. The old man struck the shark with his harpoon. The Mako rolled and sank, carrying the harpoon with it and leaving the marlin bloody. He knew the smell would spread. Watching, he saw two sharks closing in. he stuck at one with his knife and watched it sliding down into deep water. The other he killed while it tore at the flesh of the marlin. When the third appeared, he thrust (刺) it with the knife. The other sharks came at sunset. At fist he tried to beat them with the tiller (舵柄) from the boat, but his hands were bleeding and there were too many in the sea. In the darkness, as he steered toward the harbor of Havana, he head them hitting the boat again and again. But the old man though only of his steering and his great tiredness. He had gone out too far and the sharks had beaten him. He knew they would leave him nothing but the stripped skeleton of the big marlin.

All lights were out when he sailed into the little harbor and beached his boat. He could just make out the white backbone and the upstanding tail of the fish. Once he fell under their weight and lay patiently until he could gather his strength to go on. In his cottage he fell on his bed and went to sleep.

The above story is adapted from         .

    A.Treasure Island      B.The Adventures Of Tom Sawyer

    C.The Old Man And The Sea  D.The Son Of The Sea

Why did the man feel that he could be lucky this time?

    A.Because a small tuna took the hoot on his line.

    B.Because he dreamed about the American lions.

    C.Because he saw many flying fish were chased by the dolphins.

    D.Because a lot of sharks followed his boat.

According to the text, which statement is NOT true about Manolin?

    A.The boy had mercy on Santiago.

    B.The boy often shared his stories with Santiago.

    C.The boy showed his great concerns to Santiago.

    D.The boy was Santiago’s adopted son.

Why does Santiago let the marlin lead his boat instead of pulling the big fish up?

    A.He wanted to kill the marlin first before he pulled it up to the boat.

    B.He was too tried and hungry to pull the big fish up.

    C.His experience told him not to do so before the fish was tired out.

    D.He wanted to use the marlin as a bait to catch the sharks.

Which sentence below can be used to best describe Santiago’s character?

    A.“He no longer dreamed of his dead wife.” (Para 1)

    B.“Although he was alone and no longer strong, he had his skill and knew many tricks.” (Para 4)

    C.“Almost exhausted, he finally drew his big fish alongside and drove in the harpoon.” (Para 7)

    D.“Once he fell under their weight and lay patiently until he could gather his strength to go on.” (Para 9)

.According to the text, what will be talked about in the next paragraph?

    A.the man’s action to realize his dream about the lions.

    B.people’s reflection when they saw the giant marlin outside.

    C.people’s discussion about how they ate the giant marlin.

    D.a funeral held by the boy and the local people after his death.

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For eighty four days old Santiago had not caught a single fish. At first a young boy, Manolin, had shared his bad fortune, but after the fortieth luckless day the boy’s father told his son to go in another boat. From that time on, Santiago worked alone. The boy loved the old fisherman and  always helped him with money and food. Usually, they would talk about the fish they had taken in luckier times or about American baseball after supper, while at night, alone in his cottage, Santiago dreamed of lions on the beaches of Africa, where he had gone years before. He no longer dreamed of his dead wife.
On the eighty-fifth day, Santiago set off to fish before dawn. Two of his baits(饵) were fresh tunas(金枪鱼) the boy had given him, as well as sardines(沙丁鱼) to cover his hooks. Then he set his lines which went straight down into deep dark water.
As the sun rose he saw other boats in toward shore. A bird showed him where dolphin were chasing some flying fish. This time Santiago saw tuna jumping in the sunlight. A small one took the hook on his line. Pulling the fish aboard, the old man thought it a good fortune.
Toward noon a marlin, a common fish in the sea, started eating the bait which was one hundred meters down. Gently the old man played the fish, a big one, as he knew from the weight on the line. At last he struck to settle the hook. The fish did not come out of the surface. Instead, it began to pull the boat to the northwest. The old man followed it. Although he was alone and no longer strong, he had his skill and knew many tricks. He waited patiently for the fish to be tired .
It was cold after the sunset. When something took one of his remaining baits, he cut the line with his knife. Once the marlin leaned suddenly, pulling Santiago forward on his face and cutting his cheek. By dawn his left hand was cramped(抽筋的). The fish had headed northward; there was no land in sight. Hungry, he cut pieces from the tuna and chewed them slowly.
That morning the fish jumped. Seeing it, Santiago knew he had hooked the biggest marlin he had ever seen. Then the fish went down and turned toward the east. Santiago drank a little water from the bottle during the hot afternoon.
Close to nightfall a dolphin took the small hook he had rebaited. He lifted it aboard, careful. After he had rested, he cut meat from the dolphin and kept also the two flying fish he found in its stomach. That night he slept. He awoke to feel the line running through his fingers as the fish jumped. Feeding line slowly, he tried to tire the marlin. After the fish slowed its run, he washed his cut hands in sea water and ate one of the flying fish. At sunrise the marlin began to circle. Faint, he worked to bring the big fish nearer with each turn. Almost exhausted, he finally drew his big fish alongside and drove in the harpoon(鱼叉). The fish was two feet longer than the boat. No fish like it had ever been seen in Havana harbor.
An hour later, he sighted the first shark, a fierce Mako, and it came in fast to chase after the dead marlin. The old man struck the shark with his harpoon. The Mako rolled and sank, carrying the harpoon with it and leaving the marlin bloody. He knew the smell would spread. Watching, he saw two sharks closing in. He struck at one with his knife and watched it sliding down into deep water. The other he killed while it tore at the flesh of the marlin. When the third appeared, he thrust(刺) it with the knife. The other sharks came at sunset. At first he tried to beat them with the tiller(舵柄) from the boat, but his hands were bleeding and there were too many in the sea. In the darkness, as he steered toward the harbor of Havana, he heard them hitting the boat again and again. But the old man thought only of his steering and his great tiredness. He had gone out too far and the sharks had beaten him. He knew they would leave him nothing but the stripped skeleton of the big marlin.
All lights were out when he sailed into the little harbor and beached his boat. He could just make out the white backbone and the upstanding tail of the fish. Once he fell under their weight and lay patiently until he could gather his strength to go on. In his cottage he fell on his bed and went to sleep.
【小题1】The above story is adapted from __________.

A.Treasure Island B.The Adventures Of Tom Sawyer
C.The Old Man And The Sea D.The Son Of The Sea
【小题2】Why did the man feel that he could be lucky this time?
A.Because a small tuna took the hook on his line.
B.Because he dreamed about the American lions.
C.Because he saw many flying fish were chased by the dolphins.
D.Because a lot of sharks followed his boat.
【小题3】According to the text, which statement is NOT true about Manolin?
A.The boy had mercy on Santiago.
B.The boy often shared his stories with Santiago.
C.The boy showed his great concerns to Santiago.
D.The boy was Santiago’s adopted son.
【小题4】Why does Santiago let the marlin lead his boat instead of pulling the big fish up?
A.He wanted to kill the marlin first before he pulled it up to the boat.
B.He was too tired and hungry to pull the big fish up.
C.His experience told him not to do so before the fish was tired out.
D.He wanted to use the marlin as a bait to catch the sharks.
【小题5】 Which sentence below can be used to best describe Santiago’s character?
A.“He no longer dreamed of his dead wife.”(Para 1)
B.“Although he was alone and no longer strong, he had his skill and knew many tricks.”(Para4)
C.“Almost exhausted, he finally drew his big fish alongside and drove in the harpoon.”(Para7)
D.“Once he fell under their weight and lay patiently until he could gather his strength to go on .”(Para 9)
【小题6】 According to the text, what will be talked about in the next paragraph?
A.the man’s action to realize his dream about the lions.
B.people’s reflection when they saw the giant marlin outside.
C.people’s discussion about how they ate the giant marlin.
D.a funeral held by the boy and the local people after his death.

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