题目
题型:江苏高考真题难度:来源:
with the Union armies could not down the spirits of Meg, Jo, Beth, Amy, and Merimee, as the March girls
called their mother.
The March sisters tried to be good but had their share of faults. Pretty Meg was often displeased with
the schoolchildren she taught; boyish Jo was easy to become angry; golden-haired schoolgirl Amy liked to
show up; but Beth, who kept the house, was loving and gentle always.
The happy days passed and darkness came when a telegram arrived for Mrs. March. "Your husband is
very ill," it said, "come at once." The girls tried to be brave when their mother left for the front. They waited
and prayed. Little Beth got scarlet fever (猩红热) when she was taking care of a sick neighbor. She became
very ill but began to recover by the time Merimee was back. When Father came home from the front and at
that joyful Christmas dinner they were once more all together.
Three years later the March girls had grown into young womanhood. Meg became Mrs. Brooke, and after
a few family troubles got used to her new state happily. Jo had found pleasure in her literary efforts. Amy
had grown into a young lady with a talent for design and an even greater one for society. But Beth had never
fully regained her health, and her family watched her with love and anxiety.
Amy was asked to go and stay in Europe with a relative of the Mareches". Jo went to New York and
became successful in her writing and had the satisfaction of seeing her work published there. But at home
the bitterest blow was yet to fall. Beth had known for some time that she couldn"t live much longer to be
with her family, and in the springtime she died.
News came from Europe that Amy and Laurie, the grandson of a wealthy neighbor, had planned to be
married soon. Now Jo became ever more successful in her writing and got married to Professor Bhaer, and
soon afterwards founded a school for boys.
And so the little women had grown up and lived happily with their children, enjoying the harvest of love
and goodness that they had devoted all their lives to.
B. five daughters
C. son and four daughters
D. son and five daughters
B. Beth.
C. Amy.
D. Meg.
B. The March Parents.
C. The March Girls.
D. The March Relatives.
B. wealthy neighbors
C. more girls than boys
D. a lot of rich relatives
答案
核心考点
试题【阅读理解。 The Marches were a happy family. Poverty, hard work, and even the fact】;主要考察你对题材分类等知识点的理解。[详细]
举一反三
or not I should attend the meet. But there I was, 3 for the 3,000-meter run.
" Ready … set …" The gun popped and we were off. The other girls rushed 4 me. I felt 5 as I fell
farther and farther behind.
" Hooray!" shouted the crowd. It was the loudest 6 I had ever heard at a meet. The first-place runner
was two laps (圈) ahead of me when she crossed the finish line.
" Maybe I should 7 ," I thought as I moved on. 8 , I decided to keep going. During the last two laps, I
ran 9 and decided not to 10 in track next year. It wouldn"t be worth it, 11 my foot did heal.
When I finished, I heard a cheer- 12 than the one I"d heard earlier. I turned around and 13 , the boys were
preparing for their race." They must be cheering for the boys." I was leaving 14 several girls came up to me.
" Wow, you"ve got courage!" one of them told me.
" Courage? I just 15 a race!" I thought. " I would have given up on the first lap," said another girl." We
were cheering for you. Did you hear us?"
Suddenly I regained 16 . I decided to 17 track next year. I realized strength and courage aren"t always 18
in medals and victories, but in the 19 we overcome (战胜). The strongest people are not always the people
who win, 20 the people who don"t give up when they lose.
( )1. A. slighter ( )2. A. expected ( )3. A. late ( )4. A. from behind ( )5. A. ashamed ( )6. A. cheer ( )7. A. slow down ( )8. A. Therefore ( )9. A. with delight ( )10. A. play ( )11. A. even if ( )12. A. weaker ( )13. A. well enough ( )14. A. while ( )15. A. finished ( )16. A. cheer ( )17. A. hold on ( )18. A. measured ( )19. A. sadness ( )20. A. or | B. worse B. supposed B. eager B. ahead of B. astonished B. shout B. drop out B. Otherwise B. with fear B. arrive B. only if B. longer B. sure enough B. when B. won B. hope B. turn to B. praised B. struggles B. nor | C. earlier C. imagined C. ready C. next to C. excited C. cry C. go on C. Besides C. in pain C. race C. unless C. lower C. surprisingly enough C. as C. passed C. interest C. begin with C. tested C. diseases C. and | D. heavier D. doubted D. thirsty D. close to D. frightened D. noise D. speed up D. However D. in advance D. attend D. until D. louder D. strangely enough D. since D. lost D. experience D. stick with D. increased D. tiredness D. but | ||||||||||||
阅读理解诶。 | |||||||||||||||
My first reaction was annoyance. It was Friday afternoon, and I was within an hour of finishing my work for the week. As I was leaving, a nurse brought me one more patient message. The statement read:"Mm. Jones called to say that she has had blurred vision (视觉模糊) ever since her medical test this morning." I smiled. Suddenly our tests were causing eye problems. This week my patients had questioned everything. My patient with high blood pressure had stopped coming to her treatment on the advice of an Internet chat room. A woman who had a mental problem was substituting ( 用......代替) St. John"s word for her medication. Now Mrs. Jones was imagining problems. I rolled my eyes. My second reaction was worry. As I looked through her record, I tried to figure out why she would have blurred vision, but nothing in her record explained the new problem. She" s probably just anxious, I thought. Still, she wouldn"t have called if she had been all right. I picked up the phone. What I next felt can only be described as delight. Before I made the call, the nurse ran in: Mrs. Jones called. Her vision is fine. Turns out she picked up the wrong glasses when she left the office. The X-ray technician has been having the same problem. I let out a laugh. Mrs. Jones had been right. Her vision had been blurred. Now we know why. Finally I felt shame. I came to realize what Mrs. Jones had taught me. I had first known she was wrong, that her anxiety had clouded her judgment. Instead, my medical training had clouded mine. Now I feel thankful that Mrs. Jones figured it out before I made a mistake about our relationship. Patients come to me for my help. They pay me to listen, diagnose (诊断), treat and talk. That suggests trust; I must remember that, and trust them too. | |||||||||||||||
1. The writer smiled while reading the patient message because he knew _____. | |||||||||||||||
A. Mrs. Jones would ask for more tests B. the patient was being unreasonable C. the nurse was joking with him D. Mrs. Jones would call him | |||||||||||||||
2. What has caused Mrs. Jones" eye problem? | |||||||||||||||
A. Wrong glasses. B. Medical checkup. C. Her own imagination. D. Chatting on the Internet. | |||||||||||||||
3. The underlined words "clouded her judgment" in the last paragraph probably mean _____. | |||||||||||||||
A. made her less trustful toward the doctor B. put her in control of her own feelings C. made her less able to think clearly D. put her in a dangerous situation | |||||||||||||||
完形填空。 | |||||||||||||||
My sister and I grew up in a little village in England. Our father was a struggling 1 , but I always knew he was 2 . He never criticized us, but used 3 to bring out our best. He"d say," If you pout water on flowers, they flourish. If you don"t give them water, they die." I 4 as a child I said something 5 about somebody, and my father said, " 6 time you say something unpleasant about somebody else, it"s a reflection of you." He explained that if I looked for the best 7 people, I would get the best 8 . From then on I"ve always tried to 9 the principle in my life and later in running my company. Dad"s also always been very 10 . At 15, I started a magazine. It was 11 a great deal of my time, and the headmaster of my school gave me a 12 : stay in school or leave to work on my magazine. I decided to leave, and Dad tried to sway me from my decision, 13 any good father would. When he realized I Had made up my mind, he said, "Richard, when I was 23, my dad 14 me to go into law. And I"ve 15 regretted it. I wanted to be a biologist, 16 I didn"t pursue my 17 . You know what you want. Go fulfill it." As 18 turned out, my little publication went on to become Student, a national 19 for young people in the U.K. My wife and I have two children, and I" d like to think we are bringing them up in the same way Dad 20 me. | |||||||||||||||
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