题目列表(包括答案和解析)
| A.had a special garden for birds |
| B.wanted to see more birds flying in the garden |
| C.had too much bird food to feed the birds |
| D.wanted to catch some birds in the garden |
| A.4 | B.5 | C.6 | D.7 |
| A.found the windows very clean |
| B.fought for more food |
| C.thought there were more trees ahead |
| D.wanted to go into the room |
| A.鹰 | B.丛林 | C.山脉 | D.燕子 |
| A.why the birds died in the garden |
| B.the family were good at paper-cutting |
| C.the family had a very big new house |
| D.how the family saved the birds in the garden |
Claude and Louris are “giraffes”. So are police offices Hankins and Pearson. There men and women don’t look like giraffes; they look like you and me. Then, why do people call them “giraffes”?
A giraffe, they say, is an animal that sticks its neck out, can see places far away and has a large heart. It lives a quiet life and moves about in an easy and beautiful way. In the same way, a “giraffe” can be a person who likes to “stick his or her neck out” for other people, always watches for future happenings, has a warm heart for people around, and at the same time lives a quiet and beautiful life himself or herself.
“The Giraffe Project” is a 10-year-old group which finds and honors “giraffe” in the US and in the world. The group wants to teach people to do something to build a better world. The group members believe that a person shouldn’t draw his and her head back; instead, they tell people to “stick their neck out” and help others. Claude and Louris, Hankins and Pearson are only a few of the nearly 1,000 “giraffes” that the group found and honored.
Claude and Louris were getting old and they left their work with some money that they saved for future use. One day, however, they saw a homeless man looking for a palace to keep warm and they decided that should “stick their neck out” and give him some help. Today, they lived in Friends’House, where they invite twelve homeless people to stay every night.
Police offices Hankins and Parson work in a large city, They see crlmes every day and their work is sometimes dangerous. They work hard for their money. However, these two men put their savings together and even borrowed money to star an educational center to teach young people in a poor part of the city. Hankins and Pearson are certainly “giraffes”.
51. Which of the following is true?
A. Some of the people around us look like giraffes.
B. Giraffe are the most beautiful animal in the world.
C. “Giraffes” is a beautiful name for those who are ready to help other people.
D. A “giraffe” is someone who can stick his neck out and see the future.
52. “The Giraffe Project” is a group .
A. of police offices B. which appeared ten years ago
C. of ten-year-old children D. which takes care of children
53. People call Claude and Hankins “giraffes” because they .
A. do what is needed for a good world B. are not afraid of dangerous work
C. found a home for some homeless people D. made money only for other people
54. What does “The Giraffe Project” do?
A. It tells people how to live a quiet life.
B. It helps the homeless and teaches the young people.
C. It tries to find 1,000 warm-hearted people in the US
D. It shows people what their duty is for a better world
55. The passage mainly tries to tell us .
A. what giraffes are like
B. what the Giraffe Project is
C. why Claude, Louris, Hankins and Pearson are called “giraffe”
D. what we should do for a better world
Not many years ago, a wealthy and rather strange old man named Johnson lived a__1___ in a village in the south of England. He had m___2___a lot of money in trading with foreign countries. When he was seventy-five, he gave £ 12,000 to the village s____3___ to buy land and equipment for a children’s playground。
As a result of his kindness, many people came to visit him. A__4_____them was a newspaperman. During their talk, Johnson remarked that he was seventy-five and expected to live to be a h___5___. The newspaperman asked him how he managed to be healthy at seventy—five. Johnson had a sense of h__6___. He liked whisky and drank some each day. “I have an injection (注射) in my neck e___7__ evening.”he told the newspaperman, thinking of his evening glass of whisky.
The newspaperman did not understand what Johnson m__8___. In his newspaper he r____9___that Johnson was seventy-five and had a daily injection in his neck. Within a week Johnson received thousands of letters from all over Britain, asking him for the s__10___ of his daily injection.
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