office friend shout believe for |
1.friends 2.believe 3.office 4.shouted 5.for |
核心考点
试题【 根据短文内容,用方框中所给的单词的适当形式填空,每词限用一次。office friend shout believe】;主要考察你对 人物故事类等知识点的理解。 [详细]
举一反三
完形填空。 | Spend time in a bookshop can be enjoyable. If you go to a good shop, no __1__ will come near to you and say, "Can I help you?" You __2__ buy anything you don"t want. You may try to find out __3__ the book you want is. But if you fail, the assistant will lead (引导) you there and then he will go away. It seems that he is not __4__ in selling any books at all. There is a story which tells us about a good shop. A medical student __5__ a very useful book in the shop, __6__ it was too expensive for him to buy. He couldn"t get it from the library, either. So every afternoon, he went there to read __7__ at a time. One day, however, he couldn"t find the __8__ from its usual place and was leaving when he saw an assistant signing to him. To his surprise, the assistant __9__ to the book in a corner, "I put it there so as not to be __10__ out." said the assistant. Then he left the student go on with his reading. | ( ) 1. A. assistant ( ) 2. A. won"t ( ) 3. A. what ( ) 4. A. surprised ( ) 5. A. bought ( ) 6. A. but ( ) 7. A. little ( ) 8. A. book ( ) 9. A. went ( ) 10. A. sold | B. waiter B. needn"t B. which B. surprising B. found B. and B. a little B. shop B. used B. taken | C. police C. mustn"t C. where C. interesting C. read C. so C. few C. assistant C. pointed C. found | D. teacher D. can"t D. when D. interested D. took D. or D. a few D. shopkeeper D. left D. watched | 完形填空。 阅读下面短文,从短文后所给的四个选项中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。 A few minutes before six o"clock, Mr. Smith left the house. He just wanted to 1 the car when a gunman (持枪者) jumped up from the back seat. He 2 a gun to Mr. Smith"s head. "Drive me to Paris!" he shouted. "All right," Mr. Smith answered. He started the engine (发动机), pulled away (开走) from the side of the street and 3 down. Being 81 years old, he knew he could not fight with the gunman. He knew he needed 4 . Where were the police? As he drove 5 each crossing, he looked up and down the side streets, hoping to find a police car, but he could see 6 . "Just my luck," he thought. "If I were driving too 7 , there would be a police car on every corner." Suddenly he pushed his 8 down on the accelerator (加速器), and the car went 9 faster. "What are you doing?" shouted the gunman. "To 10 the police," Mr. Smith answered. "I thought I saw a police car near there." He ran red lights, drove wrong on one-way streets. On the two-way streets, he drove on the wrong 11 of the road. Not one of the policemen saw him. Again, Mr. Smith"s plan was not working. He had to try a 12 plan. He turned at a corner and saw the 13 in front. Then he drove his car as fast as he could towards the police gate. The car knocked a police motorbike over and stopped. Mr. Smith shouted, "Help! Help!" Then he 14 back to grab (抓住) the man"s gun. At the same time the policemen heard the 15 and quickly caught the gunman. | ( )1. A. stop ( )2. A. brought ( )3. A. drove ( )4. A. money ( )5. A. past ( )6. A. somebody ( )7. A. fast ( )8. A. hand ( )9. A. more ( )10. A. look for ( )11. A. street ( )12. A. new ( )13. A. train station ( )14. A. got ( )15. A. laugh | B. begin B. pointed B. left B. cry B. over B. anybody B. slowly B. foot B. much B. keep away from B. way B. safe B. police station B. looked B. sound | C. leave C. held C. took C. help C. through C. everybody C. generally C. leg C. very C. look at C. side C. successful C. hospital C. turned C. voice | D. start D. carried D. pushed D. car D. towards D. nobody D. commonly D. arm D. quite D. care about D. corner D. difficult D. bank D. came D. noise | 阅读理解 | One terribly cold day, a snowstorm hit our area. Needing firewood, I quickly set out with my best friend, Bruce, to look for a tree to cut down. Cutting down a tree in a snowstorm can be dangerous. So it was important to have a friend who could warn me of dangers. When I chose a big 23-meter-tall tree and prepared to cut it down, Bruce suddenly warned me, "Don"t cut down that tree! It"s too close to the power line!" I wasn"t sure about it. So I decided to disregard his warning. I couldn"t wait to finish the job and go back home. I began cutting down the tree. When the tree fell, there was no longer any doubt whether my friend was right. The tree caught the power line, bringing it to the ground. I considered cutting the tree off the line. After all, electricity can"t travel through wood. As I reached out my finger to touch the tree, pain ran up my arm and through my head. I had been shocked! After I returned home and told my mother what happened, she quickly called the power company. Workers from the power company soon arrived. One of them asked if I had touched the tree, and when I told him I had, his face turned pale. "You should have been killed," he said. It was my boots that saved my life. Within two hours, the workers removed the tree. Soon the snowstorm calmed down--but not my mother. Even though she was glad that I wasn"t hurt, my mother was still serious with me. After all(毕竟), I shouldn"t have brushed off my friend"s warning. | 1. Although Bruce warned him, the writer still cut the tree down because __________. | A. he was sure there would be nothing to happen B. he wasn"t sure if Bruce was right and expected to go home earlier C. he didn"t hear his friend"s warning at all because of the blowing wind D. he knew electricity can"t travel through wood | 2. The underlined phrase "brushed off" in the last paragraph may mean "__________". | A. pay no attention to B. give up C. think over D. give in | 3. Which of the following statements is NOT true according to the passage? | A. Without his boots, the writer would have been killed by electricity. B. The writer"s mother was angry with what he had done. C. When the tree was cut down, the writer realized his friend was right. D. When the tree caught the power line, Bruce called the power company. | 4. In the passage, the writer mainly wanted to tell us __________. | A. one of his terrible experiences when cutting down a tree B. not to cut trees down any more to prevent dangers from happening C. it"s important to listen to other people"s opinions D. to be careful while we"re working with friends | 完形填空。 | Dean Bluey is a 14-year-old boy from the USA. He became a hero after he saved the life of a girl in another country. One day, he 1 an email to a friend on the Internet. To his surprise, he received a message, saying “Help! Pain! Help!” The 2 was from Finland(芬兰), thousands of kilometers away from America. Later Dean said to a reporter, “I didn’t know 3 I should do. It was really difficult to tell if the message was real.” So Dean did nothing at first. 4 The message kept coming. Now it was easy to see that someone was in trouble. He 5 and found that the sender was a student called Tarja. 6 was ill, alone in a university library. What was 7, there was no phone around her. Her only way of communicating with the world was by email. Dean telephoned the 8 immediately. And they realized that the situation was quit serious. They called the police in Finland. Then an ambulance(救护车)rushed to the library. 9 , she was still alive and was sent to the hospital quickly. “I’m glad she’s OK,” Dean said. “It’s hard to believe, but 10 saved her life.” | 阅读理解 。 | Perhaps the only test score that I remembered is the 55 when I was in high school. The test was the final for a course. I remembered waiting anxiously as my teacher Mr. Right passed out our papers one by one. It was a rather difficult test. I heard my classmates groaning, and I could tell by the groans that the scores weren’t looking good. Mr. Right put my paper on my desk. There in big red numbers, circled to draw attention, was my score, 55! I lowered my head, and covered the score up quickly. A 55 is not something that you wanted your classmates to see. “The scores were not very good, none of you passed,” Mr. Right said. “The highest score in the class was a 55.” A 55. That’s me! Suddenly my sad look didn’t look so bad. I had the highest score. I felt a lot better. I walked home alone that day with the low but high score. My father knew that I had a big test that day and asked me as soon as I got home, “How did you do in your test?” “I made a 55,” I said. A frown(皱眉) now stood on my father’s face. I knew I had to explain immediately. “But Dad, I had the highest score in the class, ” I proudly stated. I thought that explanation would make a difference. “You failed!” my father replied. “But it’s the highest!” I insisted. “I don’t care what scores others had, but you failed. What matters is what you do!” my father firmly said. For years, my father was always that way. It didn’t matter what others did, it only mattered what I did and that I did it excellently. We often don’t understand the wisdom(智慧)of good parents until we ourselves stand in the parents’ shoes. My father’s words have carried me throughout life. | 1. The word “groaning” is the closest in meaning to . | A. singing B. laughing C. complaining D. quarreling | 2. In class, to hide my score from my classmates, I . | A. lowered my head B. covered my score up C. walked home alone D. explained immediately | 3. A frown stood on my father’s face because he thought . | A. I did a bad job in the test B. I gave a good excuse C. I became the worst student D. I stood in his shoes | 4. We can infer from the passage that . | A. the father was strict with his child B. the writer was always poor in tests C. Mr. Right was worried about the writer D. the writer was always happy with his scores | 5. Which is the best title of the passage? | A. The Final Test B. That’s Me! C. My Strict Teacher D. Scores, Important? |
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