That year, in the local school, there was a new math teacher, as well as some new pupils. One of the new kids was the stupidest child that anyone had ever seen. It made no difference how quickly or how slowly they tried explaining numbers to him; he would always end up saying something enormously stupid. Like two plus two was five, seven times three was twenty-seven, or a triangle had thirty corners...
Before this boy arrived, math lessons had been the most boring of all. Now they were great fun. Encouraged by the new teacher, the children would listen to the pieces of nonsense spouted by the new kid, and they would have to correct his mistakes.
Whenever the new teacher asked questions, the stupid kid would stand up but made the wrong answers, the other students all wanted to be the first to find his mistakes, and then think up the most original ways to explain them. To do this they used all kinds of stuff: sweets, playing cards, oranges, paper planes, etc. It didn't seem like any of this bothered the new kid.
However,little Lewis was sure that it was bound to make him feel sad inside. Lewis was sure he would see him crying. So,one day, he decided to follow the new kid home after school. On leaving school, the new kid walked a few minutes to a local park, and there he waited for a while, until someone came along to meet him...
It was the new teacher!
The teacher gave the new kid a hug, and off they went, hand in hand. Following from a distance, Lewis could hear they were talking about math.
【小題1】The math lessons became interesting because of the new teacher's ______.
A.creativity | B.imagination | C.responsibility | D.curiosity |
A.was in great need of the math teacher's help after class |
B.was by no means slow in math |
C.had no gift for math and was slow to learn it |
D.disliked both the new math teacher and his lessons |
A.learn about where he lived | B.find out if he felt upset |
C.say something to comfort him | D.make friends with him |
A.To find the new kid's mistakes. |
B.To think up the most original ways to explain. |
C.To use all kinds of stuff. |
D.To follow him home after school. |
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源: 題型:閱讀理解
Once there was a man who liked to eat mangoes(芒果). One day he decided to get the sweetest mango from the very top of the tree. Mangoes which are exposed to the sun the most are the sweetest.
So he climbed up to the top, where the branches were thin. He managed to pick up a few sweet reddish fruits, but, in an attempt to climb down, he slipped and started falling towards the ground. Fortunately, he caught the branch as he was falling and remained helplessly hanging on the tree. Then he started to call nearby villagers for help. They immediately came with a ladder and sticks, but could do little to help him.
Then after some time one calm and thoughtful person arrived - a well-known sage who lived in a simple hut nearby. People were very curious to see what he would do, as he was famous in solving many people’s problems in the area and sometimes very complicated ones.
He was silent for a minute and then picked up a stone and threw it at the hanging man. Everybody was surprised. The hanging mango lover started to shout: What are you doing?! Are you crazy? Do you want me to break my neck?” The sage was silent. Then he took another stone and threw it at the man. The man was very angry: “If I could just come down, I would show you!”
That’s what everybody wanted - that he came down. But how? Now everybody was tense(緊張), as to what would happen next! Some wanted to punish the sage, but they didn’t. The sage picked another stone and threw it again at the man, even more forcefully. Now the man on the tree was enraged and developed a great determination to come down and take revenge(報(bào)仇).
He then used all his skill and strength and somehow reached the branches which were safe to start going down. And he made it! Everybody was amazed.
However, the rescued man found the sage gone. He stood there, realizing that the man really helped him because he induced him to try his best and save himself.
“I should be thankful and not angry.”
【小題1】What happened after he had picked a few sweet reddish mangoes?
A.He remained hanging helplessly on the tree. |
B.He slipped and fell to the ground suddenly. |
C.He was climbing down quickly but carefully. |
D.He shouted loudly for help but no one helped. |
A.He was nervous. | B.He kept silent. | C.He was angry. | D.He felt surprised. |
A.Courage. | B.Assistance. | C.Carefulness. | D.Revenge. |
A.on the tree for the longest time | B.hidden in the middle of a tree |
C.on the very top of the a tree | D.exposed to sunlight less often |
A.Anger saves one’s life. | B.Wisdom does count. |
C.Skill and strength count. | D.Anger is the biggest enemy. |
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源: 題型:閱讀理解
One day a lawyer’s wife fell ill, and he went to get a doctor. The doctor willingly came to see the woman and to do what he could for her, but before he went into the house, he made a short stop. He knew that the lawyer was famous for not paying his bills, even if they were due(正當(dāng)?shù)?.He therefore said to the man.“But if I save your wife, I am afraid you may not pay me.”
“Sir,”replied the lawyer. “Here I have$500,,whether you cure my wife or you kill her. I'll give you all this.”
The doctor was reassured(使安心) and went into the house. When he reached the woman's bedside, it soon became clear to him that he could do little. She was seriously ill, and though he prescribed(開(kāi)藥方) her medicine, she soon died.
He told the lawyer he was very sorry, and then asked for the money which he had promised. “Did you kill my wife?”asked the lawyer. “Of course I didn't,” said the doctor. “Well! Did you cure my wife?” asked the man. “I'm afraid that was impossible,” replied the doctor.“Well, then since you neither killed my wife nor cured her, I have nothing to pay you.”
【小題1】One day a lawyer’s wife fell ill, and the lawyer_____ .
A.cured his wife |
B.got a doctor for her |
C.got some medicine for her illness |
D.promised to pay$500 to the doctor |
A.the doctor wanted to ask something about his wife's illness |
B.the doctor thought it impossible to save the woman |
C.the doctor was afraid that the lawyer would refuse to pay him |
D. the lawyer was too poor to pay his bills |
A.couldn’ t do much and didn't save her life |
B.tried his best and saved her at last |
C.had to do everything he could for her |
D.had to spend a lot of time to cure her |
A.the lawyer was very clever |
B.how the lawyer's wife died |
C.the doctor was stupid enough to be fooled |
D.the lawyer was dishonest and that he fooled the doctor |
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源: 題型:閱讀理解
My parents have certainly had their troubles, and as their child I’ll never know how they made it to 38 years of marriage. They loved each other, but they didn’t seem to like each other very much. Dad was too fond of his beer, and he talked down to Mom a lot. When she tried to stand up to him, a fight would unavoidably follow.
It was my dad’s disease that began to change things. The year 1998 was the beginning of a remarkable transformation for my family. My father, Jim Dineen, the always healthy, weightlifting, never-missed-a-day-of-work kind of dad, discovered he had kidney (腎)disease.
The decision to go ahead with a transplant for my father was a long and tough one, mostly because he had liver damage too. One physician’s assistant told him, “According to your file, you’re supposed to be dead.” And for a while, doctors mistakenly thought that he would need not just a kidney transplant, but a liver transplant too. Dad’s future hung in midpoint.
When the donor testing process finally began in the spring of 2003, numerous people, including me, my uncle Tom, and my mom, came back as matches of varying degree. But Mom was the one who insisted on going further. She decided to donate a kidney to my father. She said she was not scared, and it was the right thing to do. We all stepped back in amazement.
At last a date was chosen – November 11, 2003. All of a sudden, the only thing that seemed to matter Dad was telling the world what a wonderful thing Mom was doing for him. A month before the surgery, he sent her birthday flowers with a note that read, “I love you and I love your kidney! Thank you!”
Financially, the disease was upsetting to them. So my sister and I were humbled and surprised when, shortly before his surgery day, Dad handed us a diamond jewelry that we were to give to Mom after the operation. He’d accumulated his spare dollars to buy it.
At the hospital on the day of the transplant, all our relatives and friends gathered in the waiting room and became involved in a mean euchre (尤克牌游戲) tournament. My family has always handled things with a lot of laughter, and even though we were all tense, everybody was taking bets on how long this “change of conduct” would last in my parents.
We would inform Dad that if he chose to act like a real pain on any particular day after the operation, he wasn’t allowed to blame it on PMS just because he’d now have a female kidney.
The surgeries went well, and not long afterward, my sister and I were allowed to go in to visit. Dad was in a great deal of pain but again, all he could talk about was Mom. Was she okay? How was she feeling? Then the nurses let us do something unconventional. As they were wheeling Mom out of recovery room, they rolled her into a separate position to visit Dad. It was strange to see both my parents hooked up to IVs and machines and trying to talk to each other through tears. The nurses allowed us to present the diamond jewelry to Mom so that Dad could watch her open it. Everyone was crying, even the nurses.
As I stood with digital camera in hand, I tried to keep the presence of mind to document the moment. My dad was having a hard time fighting back emotion, and suddenly my parents unexpectedly reached out to hold each other’s hands.
In my nearly 35 years of existence, I’d never seen my parents do that, and I was spellbound. I snapped a picture and later rushed home to make sure I’d captured that enormous, life-defining moment. After so many years of disagreement, it was apparent to me that they finally understood how much each loved the other. 65—70
【小題1】From the first paragraph we can learn that ____________.
A.Dad was fond of drinking | B.My parents got along well |
C.Dad often beat Mom | D.Mom never obeyed Dad |
A.Dad was bound to die |
B.Dad came to a serious moment in his life |
C.Dad’s future was decided by doctors |
D.Dad faced a tough decision in his life |
A.Worried and negative. | B.Anxious and helpless. |
C.Nervous but optimistic. | D.Relaxed and positive. |
A.Dad bought a diamond jewelry to Mom for their wedding anniversary. |
B.Dad asked the nurse to visit Mom soon after the operation. |
C.Despite a lot of pain, Dad was eager to know Mom’s condition soon after the operation. |
D.On the day of the transplant, the families involved in a euchre tournament to relax themselves. |
A.Everyone was crying, even the nurses. |
B.His parents were trying to talk to each other. |
C.Dad watched Mom opening the gift. |
D.His parents were holding each other’s hands. |
A.Dad’s disease | B.Mom’s decision | C.The Gift of Life | D.The photo of hands |
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源: 題型:閱讀理解
Three Boys and a Dad
Brad closed the door slowly as Sue left home to visit her mother. Expecting a whole day to relax, he was thinking whether to read the newspaper or watch his favourite TV talk show on his first day off in months. “This will be like a walk in the park,” he’d told his wife. “I’ll look after the kids, and you can go visit your mom.”
Things started well, but just after eight o’clock, his three little “good kids”—Mike, Randy, and Alex—came down the stairs in their night clothes and shouted “breakfast, daddy.” Brad realized his newspaper would have to wait for a few seconds.
Life became worse after breakfast. Mike wore Randy’s underwear on his head. Randy locked himself in the bathroom, while Alex shouted again because he was going to wet his pants. Nobody could find clean socks, although they were before their very eyes. Someone named “Not Me” had spilled a whole glass of orange juice into the basket of clean clothes. Brad knew the talk show had already started.
By ten o’clock, things were out of control. Alex was wondering why the fish in the jar refused his bread and butter. Mike was trying to show off his talent by decorating the kitchen wall with his colour pencils. Randy, thankfully, appeared to be reading quietly in the family room, but closer examination showed that he was eating apple jam straight from the bottle with his hands. Brad realized that the talk show was over and reading would be impossible.
At exactly11:17, Brad called the daycare centre (日托所). “I suddenly have to go into work and my wife’s away. Can I bring the boys over in a few minutes? ” The answer was obviously “yes” because Brad was smiling.
【小題1】When his wife left home, Brad expected to __________.
A.go out for a walk in the park |
B.watch TV talk show with his children |
C.read the newspaper to his children |
D.enjoy his first day off work |
A.Drew on the wall. | B.Read in a room . | C.Fed the fish. | D.Ate apple jam. |
A.One of the family’s neighbor |
B.One of the three kids |
C.The father |
D.The text doesn’t mention |
A.by space | B.by comparison | C.by time | D.by process |
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源: 題型:閱讀理解
Nearly a quarter-century after a German boy threw a message in a bottle off a ship in the Baltic Sea, he’s received an answer.
A 13-year-old Russian, Daniil Korotkikh, was walking with his parents on a beach when he saw something lying in the sand.
“I saw that bottle and it looked interesting,” Korotkikh told The Associated Press on Tuesday. “it looked like a German beer bottle and there was a message inside. ”
It said, “My name is Frank, and I’m five years old. My dad and I are traveling on a ship to Denmark. If you find this letter, please write back to me, and I will write back to you.” The letter, dated 1987, included an address in the town of Coesfeld.
The boy in the letter, Frank Uesbeck, is now 29. His parents still live at the letter’s address.
The Russian boy and the German man met each other earlier this month through an internet video link. The Russian boy said he did not believe that the bottle actually spent 24 years in the sea. He believed it had been hidden under the sand where he found it for a long time.
Uesbeck was especially happy that he was able to have a positive effect on a life of a young person far away from Germany. “It‘s really a wonderful story,” he said. “And who knows? Perhaps one day we will actually be able to arrange a meeting in person. ”
【小題1】What is this passage mainly about?
A.Traveling on a ship. | B.A beautiful beer bottle. |
C.Message in a bottle. | D.Meeting an old friend. |
A.he was going back home. |
B.he was traveling to Denmark by ship with his dad. |
C.he was walking with his parents on a beach. |
D.he was already 29 years old. |
A.Korotkikh’s parents still live in the town of Coesfeld. |
B.The German boy did not believe that the bottle actually spent 24 years in the sea. |
C.Frank Uesbeck and Daniil Korotkikh have met each other in person. |
D.Daniil Korotkikh and Frank Uesbeck have got in touch with each other. |
A.Because he could have a new friend. |
B.Because the two boys could surf the internet together. |
C.Because he could have a positive influence on a life of a young person. |
D.Because he finally got what he had lost. |
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源: 題型:閱讀理解
Every year, I tell my sons what I'd like for Mother's Day: a letter. Something written from the heart and offered freely rather than bought from a store and wrapped neatly. I don't always get my wish, nor do I always take the time to write to my own mother.
This year, my boys will be in two different states on Mother's Day. My mom and dad will be away together, and I'11 be driving home from a writer's workshop in Massachusetts. Thinking of the fact that many friends have already lost their mothers and that a few have lost children, I am deeply grateful that what separates us, for now at least, is merely distance. It won't always be so, and there is no way to prepare for that fact other than to appreciate the moment that is. My sons know that they can please me on Sunday with a phone call or an e-mail, and that is enough as I love their words. The very best gift they can possibly give me is their own happiness, the very fact of their busy. full and well-lived lives.
Still, knowing that my years of staying with my sons are over, I do Feel doleful. The truth is, I miss being the center of the universe to two little boys. And this holiday can be a bit painful.
I wonder if my own mother ever felt nostalgic ('VTIH WJ) for the passing of my childhood. I wonder if she realizes that she is still at the center of my universe and always has been. I don't often pause to think about it. but of course she is the one who has been right there, at my side from the moment I drew my very first breath. How to ever fully appreciate the woman whose presence and 1ove and example have shaped me into the adult I am? How to describe even a small part of the sharing. sacrificing. and support she has given me over the years?
【小題1】The author mainly wants to tell us through the first paragraph that _____.
A.she hopes to get her son's letters very much |
B.her sons don't often write to her on Mother's Day |
C.Mother's Day is the very date that she longs for most |
D.she is very sorry not to write to her mother often |
A.her sons don't live far away from her home |
B.her parents and children are still alive |
C.her parents are coming to her house to spend Mother's Day |
D.her sons can please her on Sunday with a phone call |
A.young people nowadays tend to ignore their parents |
B.parents should not give their children too much freedom |
C.children's happiness and success are the biggest comfort to parents |
D.parents are not the center of their children's universe when children grow up |
A.sad | B.excited | C.guilty | D.proud |
A.She'll tell the reader about her mother's present situation. |
B.She'll recall how her mother educated and cared for her. |
C.She'll describe the reunion of her family on Mother's Day. |
D.She'll tell the reader about her mother's achievements in her career. |
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源: 題型:閱讀理解
As I was busy working on my work plan in my bedroom, I could hear my four children playing upstairs. Suddenly, I heard the children running down the stairs and shouting, “Freddie, Freddie.” I heard the word “window” and rushed outside, heart in mouth. My three-year old son Freddie was lying on his side on the ground. I cried for my husband Simon to dial 999 and within minutes the air ambulance arrived. They quickly took him in the helicopter. During the flight, Freddie was looking at me and I remember thinking was a good sign, but then his eyes began to roll. As the doctors tried to stabilize(穩(wěn)定) him, I couldn’t believe what was happening.
When we arrived at the hospital in Portsmouth, there were some doctors and nurses waiting for us and they immediately set to work on Freddie. I was hopelessly wishing everything would be alright, but Freddie had broken his skull in two places and blood clots were forming in his brain. He needed surgery(外科手術(shù)), and only a surgeon at another hospital in Bristol could do it. This meant another helicopter ride, but we couldn’t go with Freddie because there was no enough space. Simon and I drove the long 130 miles from our home in north Devon in silence. Neither of us dared say what we were thinking, “What if we get there and he’s dead?” “Is he going to be brain-damaged?”
Freddie was just coming out of surgery when we arrived. The surgeon said it had gone well. When I finally saw him, I hardly recognize my child—he was covered in tubes and there were wires coming out of his head.
On the third day, Simon went home to see our three girls and to pick up some clean clothes for us. While he was gone, the pressure in Freddie’s brain suddenly increased. He was taken into theater again and this time I fell apart. Luckily, the surgery managed to stabilize Freddie. After almost a week, Freddie was finally woken up. When he opened his eyes, he looked at me. He didn’t say anything, but I knew straight away that it was my old Freddie, and that he was going to be alright. Over the next two weeks, his recovery went well. After help with learning to swallow again and encouragement with speaking, he was soon playing with his Gruffalo cards and eating meals by himself.
I still don’t know how the accident happened, but we got some idea from our girls. Clearly Freddie and Minnie had been sitting on the window ledge, and Freddie must have opened it to look out and fallen 20 feet onto the ground below.
The guilt I feel is awful— for weeks I was full of “ if onlys”, and we put window locks everywhere. Six months later, although the accident seems a lifetime ago, it has changed me. I feel differently about life now. I’ve left my job to put my children first. I want to spend every minute with them.
【小題1】The underlined sentence in paragraph 1 shows the author was ______________.
A.hopeless | B.worried | C.curious | D.puzzled |
A.Because no surgeons were on duty in the first hospital that day. |
B.Because the author wanted his son to stay in a hospital nearer her home. |
C.Because no surgeons in the first hospital knew the injuries to the author’s son. |
D.Because no surgeons in the first hospital could do surgery on the author’s son. |
A.was seriously injured |
B.was filled with small pipes |
C.was too pale to be recognized |
D.was covered by a piece of cloth |
A.the author’s son finally opened his eyes. |
B.the situation of the author’s son suddenly worsened |
C.the author’s son was finally out of danger |
D.the author’s son did not need any more surgery |
A.Life is full of “if onlys”. |
B.Being a single mother is not easy. |
C.Children are more important than work. |
D.Accidents can happen to every kid. |
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源: 題型:閱讀理解
When Sally Ride was ten years old, she had no idea that she would some day grow up to be one of America’s first woman astronauts. In fact, if you had asked her then what wanted to be, she would have said, “ I want to play shortstop for the Los Angeles Dodgers.” Sally collected baseball cards by the boxful, and she knew the name and batting average (擊球率)of every player in the National League.
But major league baseball didn’t seem much of a possibility for a girl, even an athletic one like Sally, so her father and mother talked her into taking tennis lessons when she was twelve. At first she hated to trade in her baseball bat for a tennis racket, but it wasn’t long before she started to win tournaments in her new sport. “ Tennis became much more fun when I started winning,” Sally remembers. Soon a row of trophies (獎(jiǎng)牌)replaced her box of baseball cards, and tennis star Billie Jean King replaced Dodger shortstop Maury Wills as her sports idol.
Sally first became interested in the space program in 1962 when astronaut John Glenn orbited the earth in his Mercury space capsule. Sally was ten years old at the time, but she remembers the launch and the splashdown (掉落) as if they happened yesterday. The girl who used to memorize batting averages became a space fan. She quickly learned the name of every NASA astronaut(there were only eight of them in 1962), the date of every launch, and the name and number of every spacecraft from Freedom 7 to Skylab 3. She could tell you the speed of light (186,300 miles per second), the distance to the moon (238,860 miles), and the names of the three nearest stars( the Sun, Alpha Centauri, and Barnard’s Star).
By the time she was sixteen, Sally had decided to become an astrophysicist, a scientist who studies space. She had also become a nationally ranked tennis player. She remembers yawning(打哈欠) through an important tennis match on June 20, 1969, after staying up all night to watch Neil Armstrong’s first steps on the moon. Sally lost the match.
As Sally got older, many of her friends started playing professional tennis. Some of them tried to talk her into quitting school to join them on the professional tennis circuit. But Sally said no. “ Black holes are more interesting to me than backhands,” she told them. Now she knows that she made the right choice, but in 1970 Sally had no way of knowing that NASA would open the space program to women.
【小題1】At the age of twelve, Sally Ride ________.
A.was interested in playing tennis |
B.was persuaded into taking tennis training |
C.began to become interested in space |
D.decided to become an astrophysicist |
A.she was tired |
B.she couldn’t decide whether to be an astrophysicist |
C.she couldn’t decide whether to take part in a professional tennis circuit |
D.she wasn’t interested in tennis |
A.had been a professional baseball player |
B.had never been a professional player |
C.had never been a woman astrophysicist |
D.wasn’t interested in space program |
A.the name of the neareast star |
B.a(chǎn) place where the American astronauts and the crew work |
C.a(chǎn) place where astronauts and the crew are trained |
D.a(chǎn) container of the crew and astronauts detached(分離) from a rocket |
A.According to the story, Sally Ride is a woman astrophysicist. |
B.The ambition of becoming a woman astronaut was made in Sally’s childhood. |
C.Freedom 7 and Skylab 3 are the names of the nearest stars. |
D.Sally didn’t quit her schooling at the time as she knew sooner or later NASA would hire woman astronaut. |
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