( ) 1. A. / ( ) 2. A. to home ( ) 3. A. box ( ) 4. A. under ( ) 5. A. reading ( ) 6. A. look for ( ) 7. A. in the ( ) 8. A. newer ( ) 9. A. speak ( ) 10.A. Thanks you | B. the B. home B. them B. behind B. read B. look after B. for the B. newest B. say B. Thanks a lot | C. a C. the home C. its C. on C. reads C. look like C. to the C. new C. talk C. Thank | D. an D. at home D. it D. in D. to read D. look D. out the D. old D . ask D. Thank you | 完形填空。 | It was the yearbook day and we were given an hour to sign each other"s year-books in the cafeteria. I was president of the class and I played sports. When I sat down at a table, people started to come over to get their yearbooks signed and to sign 1 . Among them,a weak boy with ugly teeth and thick glasses kept shaking. I had seen him around, and I knew he was always laughed at. He seemed 2 of himself, and was so pale that it 3 us to look at him. . He came up and asked me nervously," Can you sign this?" I took his yearbook but I didn"t know 4 to write. I saw that there was the name " Ricky Sanders" written on the front of it. So I wrote:
I put down the yearbook and tumed around to get some signatures from some of my friends when I 5 my yearbook was gone. I saw that Ricky had sat down with my yearbook. "What are you doing?" I asked him. He looked up calmly (平静地) and 6 said "Sign!" My friends broke into a loud laugh, and I saw that he was carefully trying to put a signature in my yearbook. He hadn"t even finished the "R" yet. I thought for awhile and 7 to let him sign. It took him nearly five minutes to sign and when I got my yearbook back, there was a very shaky "RICKY". He hugged (紧抱) his yearbook and 8 . I couldn"thelp but smile back at him. In that moment, my 9 changed completely. I gave him a high five and suddenly everyone at my table wanted his signature. He was asked politely to write in their yearbooks and the signature 10 of his yearbook were filled up. He was smiling so big that it lit up the whole room. I changed schools the next year,and I never saw Ricky again. However, I will never forget the day that he became the most 11 guy in school. Whenever I"m 12 , I still look back at that yearbook. | ( )1. A. mine ( )2. A. unafraid ( )3. A. worried ( )4. A. how ( )5. A. saw ( )6. A. still ( )7. A. decided ( )8. A. smiled ( )9. A. sense ( )10.A. lists ( )11.A. different ( )12.A. away | B. his B. unsure B. surprised B. which B. noticed B. ever B. meant B. waited B. value B. pages B. patient B. out | C. ours C. proud C. taught C. where C. thought" C. even C. began C. left C. attitude C. boxes C. popular C. behind | D. theirs D. tired D. hurt D. what D. believed D. just D. prepared D. rose D. idea D. tables D. important D. down | 阅读短文,根据短文后的五个选项选出能填入空中的选项。选项有一项为多余选项。 | A funny thing happened to my sister Tina last month. She lives in Japan and teaches English. In Japan, people don"t usually wear their outdoor shoes in the house or in school, and a lot of buildings have places for shoes. So her school has a special place for shoes. 1 Tina teaches English in the evening. One Friday, she went to school, and she put her shoes in the shoe box as usual. Then she had an interesting spoken English class with her students. 2 But to her surprise, her shoes weren"t in the box. There was only one pair of shoes there, and they weren"t her shoes! She had to get home in a hurry. 3 On Monday, at her next English class, her shoes were in a shopping bag on her desk! There was a note that said, "I"m so sorry. I took your shoes by mistake!" 4 Somebody felt a lot of shame ! | A. It"s a shoe box. B. Tina is my sister. C. So she put on the shoes and left. D. After class she got ready to leave. E. But there was no name on the note | 完形填空。 | One night I was driving from Harrisburg to Lewisburg, a distance of eighty miles. I was late so I drove very 1 . Several times I got stuck behind a slow-moving truck on a narrow road, and I was shouting and 2 the steering wheel(方向盘)with impatience. At one point along an open highway , I came to a crossroads with a traffic light. I was alone on the road, but as I got 3 the light, it turned red and I stopped. I looked left, right and behind me. Nothing. Not a car, no 4 of headlights, but there I sat, waiting for the light to change, the only human being for at least a mile in any 5 . I started wondering why I refused to run the red light. There was obviously no policeman around, and it certainly would not have been 6 in going through it. Later that night, after I had climbed into bed, the question of why I stopped for that light 7 back to me. I did so because it"s part of a contract (协议) we all have with each other. It"s not only the law, but an agreement we have, and we trust each other to 8 it. It"s 9 that we ever trust each other to do the right things. It"s a good thing because the whole structure of our society depends on trust. This whole thing we have going for us would fall apart if we didn"t trust each other most of the time. We do 10 we say we"ll do; and we pay when we say we"ll pay. We trust each other in these matters, and when we don"t do what we"ve 11 , others will be angry or disappointed with us because we violate(亵渎) the 12 they have in us. I was so proud of myself for stopping for the red light that night! | ( )1. A.fast ( )2. A.pulling ( )3. A.along with ( )4. A.condition ( )5. A.way ( )6. A.safe ( )7. A.came ( )8. A.honor ( )9. A.surprising ( )10. A.which ( )11. A.accepted ( )12. A.truth | B.well B.playing B.down to B.suggestion B.situation B.easy B.went B.make B.amazing B.what B.told B.pride | C.carefully C.fixing C.close to C.instruction C.road C.dangerous C.rushed C.protect C.interesting C.whether C.promised C.worth | D.quietly D.hitting D.out of D.relation D.direction D.wrong D.flew D.believe D.frustrating D.that D.known D.trust | 完形填空。 | The train shook back and forth, its wheels making a loud noise. Outside the windows the freezing cold of winter ruled. The train was filled with cold, tired passengers. Suddenly a little boy 1 his way through the grown-up"s legs and sat down by the window. He was all alone among the unfriendly grown-ups. What a brave child, I thought. His father 2 to stay by the door behind us. The train began to move slowly into a tunnel (隧道). Then something very 3 happened suddenly. The serious little boy slid (滑) down from the seat and leaned (斜靠)his hand on my knee. For a moment, I thought that he wanted to 4 me and returned to his father, so I helped him to stand up. But instead he leaned forward and held his head 5 towards mine. He wanted to say something to me, I thought.1 lowered my head to receive the 6 . Wrong again! What I received was a loud kiss on the face. The boy quietly retumed to his seat, leaned back and continued looking out of the window. I was so surprised. What just happened? A child kissed an 7 grown-up on the train. How could anybody want to kiss such a man that had so much beard (胡子)? Nervous and a little surprised, we smiled at the father. 8 he saw our questioning looks as he got ready for his stop, he offered a clue (some information). "He"s so happy to be alive," the father said, "He has been very sick."Father and son 9 into the crowd moving toward the exit. Then doors closed and the train went on. On my face I could still 10 the child"s kiss a kiss that has started some soul-search (深思) inside me. How many grown-ups go around kissing each other 11 the joy of being alive? How many even give much thought to the special right of 12 ? The little kisser has taught us a sweet but serious lesson-You don"t let yourself die before your heart stops! | ( )1. A. lost ( )2. A. preferred ( )3. A. interesting ( )4. A. kiss ( )5. A. up ( )6. A. news ( )7. A. unsafe ( )8. A. Before ( )9. A. disappeared ( )10. A. touch ( )11. A. in ( )12. A. hope | B. moved B. chose B. strange B. beat B. on B. idea B. unimportant B. When B. ran . B. smell B. about B. kiss | C. fought C. agreed C. funny C. pass C. back C. message C. unfamiliar C. Unless C. looked C. have C. for C. death | D. pushed D. hoped D. exciting D. ask D. out D. thought D. unfriendly D. Since D. came D. feel D. after D. life |
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