Our bedroom has no full-length mirror. There is one at the canteen entrance. I always cherish a secret desire to take a glance before it at myself in a beautiful new dress. However, each time when it comes to the fulfillment, I get seized with such an uneasiness that I literally stagger(踉蹌) away—backing out at the critical moment.
At the root of it is my lack of confidence by which I have been enslaved since childhood. It embarrasses me at the mildest praise, crushes my utmost efforts to say “No”, and prevents me from asking my parents for one cent more than necessary. Among other things, lack of confidence has wormed its way into my love of piano.
At the age of 14, one Sunday morning, I was woken up by a resounding hymn(洪亮的圣歌). Tracing that call of God into a neighboring church, I found myself deeply attracted by the melody of a piano—something beyond the means of my parents. To make it worse, people say a pianist is supposed to have music in the blood, but I believe I had none from my engineer father and technician mother. For days on end, I kept thinking of nothing else. I had a dream.
It wasn’t a dream after gold, which made some of my close friends to engage in business as self-employed traders or street peddlers. I was sometimes dazzled by their gold rings or elegant necklaces behind which, however, I seemed to catch sight of skeletons in their cupboards and was frightened away from the craze for fortunate. Out of despair, I kept it to myself, lack of confidence weighing heavy on me. I could do nothing but turn to my dream for comfort, for courage to aim high and wish for the impossible. I was convinced that before I could afford anything expensive (to me, it was a piano), I should climb up the academic ladder as high as possible.
For the next nine years, I carefully held back my desire for music to keep my search for learning, especially in English studies. My efforts were so rewarding that I went successfully through high school and college in my hometown. When I received the admission notice for a second degree course at a famous university in Beijing, the national capital, tears welled up in my eyes. I knew my command of English was my wealth, for I might make a deal with a pianist who would give me access to his piano in exchange for English lessons. And that has come true!
To this day, whenever I lay my fingers on the snow-white keyboard, ready for a melody, I still feel shy. I am quite aware of my limited music talent, but as a shy dreamer, I have found my way to success.
【小題1】According to the first two paragraphs, we can learn that the writer is __________.
A.helpless | B.shy | C.honest | D.considerate |
A.a(chǎn), b | B.c, d | C.a(chǎn), c | D.b, d |
A.She turned to her friends for financial aid. |
B.She taught English in exchange for piano lessons. |
C.She was admitted to a university for a second degree course in music. |
D.She earned money by doing a part-time job to pay for her piano lessons. |
A.Wealth always comes after a great effort. |
B.Confidence is a key factor in success. |
C.We should be academically successful before other achievements. |
D.We should make every effort to turn a dream into reality. |
【小題1】B
【小題2】C
【小題3】B
【小題4】D
解析試題分析:文章介紹作者是個(gè)害羞的孩子,但是對(duì)鋼琴的夢(mèng)想使她努力學(xué)習(xí),然后教英語(yǔ)做為鋼琴課的交換來(lái)實(shí)現(xiàn)鋼琴的夢(mèng)想,通過(guò)她的努力,最終有了回報(bào)。
【小題1】細(xì)節(jié)題:從第二段的描寫(xiě):At the root of it is my lack of confidence by which I have been enslaved since childhood. It embarrasses me at the mildest praise, crushes my utmost efforts to say “No”, and prevents me from asking my parents for one cent more than necessary.可知作者是很害羞的,選B
【小題2】細(xì)節(jié)題:從第三段的句子:something beyond the means of my parents. To make it worse, people say a pianist is supposed to have music in the blood, but I believe I had none from my engineer father and technician mother. 可知作者認(rèn)為她對(duì)鋼琴的渴望是個(gè)夢(mèng)想,選C
【小題3】細(xì)節(jié)題:從倒數(shù)第二段的句子:for I might make a deal with a pianist who would give me access to his piano in exchange for English lessons. 可知作者通過(guò)教英語(yǔ)做為鋼琴課的交換來(lái)實(shí)現(xiàn)鋼琴的夢(mèng)想,選B
【小題4】推理題:從最后一段的句子:I am quite aware of my limited music talent, but as a shy dreamer, I have found my way to success.可知通過(guò)作者的例子我們知道我們應(yīng)該努力把夢(mèng)想變成現(xiàn)實(shí)。選D
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Since I was a child, I called my father my Kong, after King Kong. I believed that he was just as strong as the giant ape(猿猴). As he faced death, I did my best to help release him to the next life.
Two months after he passed away, my sister called to ask if I would like to go see Lisa Williams, a well-known witch(巫婆). I was familiar with Lisa from her show on Lifetime, and since I was eager to get a sign from my father, I agreed to go.
I took my father’s gold watch and listened as Lisa helped audience members communicate with their loved ones. “I have a grandfather-like figure with me and he is speaking about his granddaughter Jilly,” she announced. The audience was quiet; no one raised a hand. I nudged(用肘輕推) my sister and whispered to her that this was Dad ,for my third child and my father had a deep bond(關(guān)系,紐帶) and he called her Jilly.
Although I sensed his presence, I wasn’t confident enough to raise my hand. I needed something a bit more concrete, something undoubted.
“This man is letting me know he had cancer,” she continued. I nudged my sister harder and assured her this was our father. Lisa went on to say that this person died in June (my father had died June 8th). There was swelling of the legs.
“Important information,” she called out. My heart beat fast . I jumped up when she asked, “Who is holding his watch?” I waved the watch in the air.
“He wishes you congratulations.” My fourth child was born three weeks after my father died. I was in shock and could not believe I was getting a chance to hear from him, yet I knew our bond was strong enough that he could come to the world. She banged on her chest like an ape and apologized, saying, “I don’t know why but he wants me to do this like Tarzan.” It didn’t resonate(共鳴) with me until my sister called out “King Kong!” I was convinced. No way could this woman have ever known a detail unless Dad was communicating through her.
Each bit of information she gave us was just as meaningful. She ended our session by informing us that he would send us coins. The very next day I found six coins in various places; they seemed to have come out of nowhere. Even in death he is my Kong, and he remains important in my life.
【小題1】What’s the best title of the passage?
A.Information from Lisa Williams |
B.Miraculous Messages from Heaven |
C.Strange Things in the Party. |
D.Unforgettable memories |
A.I tried my best to make my father feel relieved in another world . |
B.I wanted to help my father live a better life in future. |
C.I tried to set my father free next time. |
D.I wanted to help my father in everything. |
A.She may be a learned teacher. |
B.She may be a woman knowing witchcraft |
C.She may be is a scientist researching Lifetime. |
D.She may be a fairy. |
A.cared little about our life |
B.withdrew from the society and lived alone |
C.liked to live with giant ape |
D.was still concerned about my family after his death . |
A.Narration | B.Illustration | C.Discussion | D.Description |
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源: 題型:閱讀理解
My daughter Alisa was born blind in her right eye and was bullied (欺侮) pretty severely in school. So I quitted my job as a babysitter and then schooled my daughter heart and soul at home.
A year ago a boy of 14 befriended my daughter on Facebook after reading something Alisa wrote about bullying. Today he messaged her and asked if she would like six tickets to a Colorado Rockies baseball game. They have never met in person but she said, “Sure! That would be great.”
Then I received a call from his mother explaining why her son had chosen my daughter. She said he thought my daughter deserved them because of all the good she does in the community. Her son, she explained, had experienced a similar situation and was also home schooled.
What she said is true. Now my daughter Alisa continues to teach groups of girls in trouble in our community how to look within themselves for the positive and how to be their own person.
Everything taken into consideration, we decided to meet the mother and the boy at a local bike shop. After meeting, the boy approached my car and my daughter gave him a hug and thanked him for his generosity. She told him that she had never been to a baseball game and that she was going to take her entire family, including myself, her dad, little sister, her cousin and an aunt who has brain cancer.
We all thanked one another, got in our car, and went our way. As we drove home my daughter opened the envelope. Inside it were the tickets and $100 each to buy hot dogs, pay for parking and not have any worries but a great time.
My daughter has always been the giver and now she and our family are the receivers and I can not tell you how incredibly honored we feel to be on the other end. What an incredible young man to have such a kind idea.
【小題1】What did the author once do according to the passage?
A.She was a ticket seller. | B.She was a school teacher. |
C.She was a babysitter. | D.She was a social worker. |
A.They met when buying tickets to a baseball game. |
B.They got in touch via the Internet. |
C.They became familiar when talking face to face. |
D.They went to the same school and met each other. |
A.Because Alisa is a disabled girl. |
B.Because he has a lot money to share. |
C.Because Alisa often helps those in trouble. |
D.Because he has a similar situation with Alisa. |
A.He is afraid of meeting strangers. |
B.He always bullies smaller children. |
C.He is addicted to the internet. |
D.He receives education at home. |
A.Good is rewarded with good. |
B.A friend in need is a friend indeed. |
C.Two heads are better than one. |
D.Where there is a will, there is a way. |
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When Marilynne Robinson published her first novel, Housekeeping, in 1980, she was unknown in the literary world. But an early review in The New York Times ensured that the book would be noticed. “It’s as if, in writing it, she broke through the ordinary human condition with all its dissatisfactions, and achieved a kind of transfiguration(美化),” wrote Anatole Broyard, with an enthusiasm and amazement that was shared by many critics and readers. The book became a classic, and Robinson was recognized as one of the outstanding American writers of our time. Yet it would be more than twenty years before she wrote another novel.
During the period, Robinson devoted herself to writing nonfiction. Her essays and book reviews appeared in Harper’s and The New York Times Book Review, and in 1989 she published Mother Country: Britain, the Welfare State, and Nuclear Pollution, criticizing severely the environmental and public health dangers caused by the Sellafield nuclear reprocessing plant in England—and the political and moral corruption(腐敗). In 1998, Robinson published a collection of her critical and theological writings, The Death of Adam: Essays on Modern Thought, which featured reassessments of such figures as Charles Darwin, John Calvin, and Friedrich Nietzsche. Aside from a single short story—“Connie Bronson,” published in The Paris Review in 1986—it wasn’t until 2004 that she returned to fiction with the novel Gilead, which won the National Book Critics Circle Award and the Pulitzer Prize. Her third novel, Home, came out this fall.
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【小題1】Robinson’s second novel came out ____.
A.in 1980 | B.in 1986 | C.in 1998 | D.in 2004 |
A.Robinson’s achievements in fiction. |
B.Robinson’s achievements in nonfiction. |
C.Robinson’s influence on the literary world. |
D.Robinson’s contributions to the environment. |
A.He is Robinson’s close friend. |
B.He is a character in Gilead. |
C.He is a figure in The Death of Adam. |
D.He is a historian writing family stories. |
A.Career. | B.Lifestyle. | C.Music. | D.Culture. |
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My favorite English teacher could draw humor out of the driest material. It wasn’t forced on us either. He took Samuel Johnson’s dictionary, Addison’s essays, and many other literary wonders from the eighteenth century and made them hilarious, even at eight o’clock in the morning. The thing that amazed me most was that the first time I read these works on my own, some of them seemed dead, but the second time, after his explanation, I couldn’t believe that I hadn’t seen the humor. The stories and poems and plays were suddenly filled with allusions(典故) and irony and hilarious moments. I learned more from him than from any other teacher.
My least favorite English teacher also made people laugh. Some students found him to be wonderfully funny. Many others did not. He assigned journals over a six-week period, to be written every day. At the end of the six weeks I had a notebook full of bits and pieces about my ideas, short stories, reactions to what we had read, and so on. Our teacher announced that we would be grading each other’s journals. Mine was passed to Joe, that class clown, who always behaved in a funny or silly way. He saw it fit to make a joke of and said, “This writing isn’t fit to line the bottom of a birdcage.” Our teacher laughed at that funny remark. It hurt me so much that the anger from it has driven my writing and teaching ever since.
So what makes the difference? Humor is one of the most powerful tools teachers or writers have. It can build up students and classes and make them excited about literature and writing, or it can tear them apart. It is true that humor is either productive or counter-productive and self-defeating.
【小題1】The passage mainly discusses ________.
A.teaching | B.literature | C.humor | D.knowledge |
A.funny | B.tiring | C.inspiring | D.brilliant |
A.was not able to make students laugh |
B.hurt his student’s feelings |
C.didn’t let his students do the grading |
D.had no sense of humor |
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On a Friday night, a poor young artist stood at the gate of a New York subway station, playing his violin. Many of passers-by slowed down their paces and put some money into the hat of the young man.
The next day, at the same place, he put his hat on the ground gracefully. Different than the day before, he took out a large piece of paper and laid it on the ground and put some stones on it. Then he adjusted the violin and began playing. It seemed more pleasant to listen to.
The words read, “Last night, a gentleman named George Sang put an important thing into my hat mistakenly. Please come to claim it soon.”
Seeing this, people wondered what it could be. After about half an hour, a middle-aged man ran there hurriedly and rushed through the crowd to the violinist and grabbed his shoulders and said, “Yes, it’s you. You did come here. I knew that you’re an honest man and would certainly come here.”
“Are you Mr. George Sang”? asked the young violinist.
The man nodded. “Did you lose something?” “Lottery. It’s lottery.” “Is it?” The violinist took out a lottery ticket and asked.
George nodded promptly and seized the lottery ticket and kissed it, then he danced with the violinist.
The story turned out to be this: George Sang bought a lottery ticket, winning a prize of $500,000. After work, he passed the station and felt the music was so wonderful that he took out 50 dollars and put it in the hat. However, the lottery ticket was also thrown in. The violinist was a student at an Arts College and had planned to attend further study in Vienna. He had booked the ticket and would fly that morning. However when he was cleaning up he found the lottery ticket. Thinking that the owner would return to look for it, he cancelled the flight and came back to where he was given the lottery ticket.
When asked why he didn’t take the lottery ticket for himself, the violinist said, “Although I don’t have much money, I live happily; but if I lose honesty I won’t be happy forever.”
【小題1】 What is the sequence(順序) of the story?
a. The violinist tried to look for the ticket-owner
b. George Sang won a lottery
c. George Sang threw $50 and his ticket in the hat of a violinist’s
d. The violinist found the owner of the lottery ticket
e. A young student played the violinist near a subway station.
A.c, d, e, a, e | B.b, c, e, d, a | C.b, e, c, a, d | D.c, a, d, b, e |
A.moved | B.disappointed | C.mad | D.pleased |
A.getting rich overnight is important |
B.showing sympathy for others is important |
C.being honest is of great importance |
D.school fees are high at the present time |
A.The Arts College the young violinist was going to attend is not in New York. |
B.Many people usually put their money in their hat in the distant past. |
C.George Sang may give some money to the young violinist as a reward. |
D.a(chǎn)ll the people who win lotteries are generous and easy-going. |
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源: 題型:閱讀理解
In 1978, I was 18 and was working as a nurse in a small town about 270 km away from Sydney, Australia. I was looking forward to having five fays off from duty. Unfortunately, the only one train a day back to my home in Sydney had already left. So I thought I’d hitch a ride (搭便車).
I waited by the side of the highway for three hours but no one stopped for me. Finally, a man walked over and introduced himself as Gordon. He said that although he couldn’t give me a lift, I should come back to his house for lunch. He noticed me standing for hours in the November heat and thought I must be hungry. I was doubtful as a young girl but he assured (使…放心)me I was safe, and he also offered to help me find a lift home afterwards. When we arrived at his house, he made us sandwiches. After lunch, he helped me find a lift home.
Twenty-five years later, in 2003, while I was driving to a nearby town one day, I saw an elderly man standing in the glaring heat, trying to hitch a ride. I thought it was another chance to repay someone for the favour I’d been given decades earlier. I pulled over and picked him up. I made him comfortable on the back seat and offered him some water.
After a few moments of small talk, the man said to me, “You haven’t changed a bit, even your red hair is still the same.” I couldn’t remember where I’d met him. He then told me he was the man who had given me lunch and helped me find a lift all those years ago. It was Gordon.
【小題1】The author had to hitch a ride one day in 1978 because_______.
A.she missed the only train back home |
B.she was going home for her holidays |
C.the town was far away from Sydney |
D.her work delayed her trip to Sydney |
A.He gave the girl a ride back home. |
B.He helped the girl find a ride. |
C.He bought sandwiches for the girl. |
D.He watched the girl for three hours. |
A.she realized he was Gordon |
B.she had known him for decades |
C.she wanted to repay the favour she once got |
D.she was going to the nearby town |
A.Those who give rides will be rapid. |
B.Good manners bring about happiness. |
C.People should offer free rides to others. |
D.Giving sometimes produces nice results. |
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源: 題型:閱讀理解
The sun was just coming up when I headed out to work last May at 6 a.m. Not quite dark but dark enough to need my headlights. I turned onto one of the lonely rural country roads.
Maybe it was because I was listening to the radio, maybe it was because I was already thinking about some projects at work, that I didn’t spot the dark object on the road until I was too late. I ran over it and felt the back left tire pull, and then sink. I stopped and got out of the car.
No mystery here---- my back left tyre was cut like a loaf of bread. Back 50 yards was a piece of sharp iron I had run over. I had never changed a tyre. I looked up the road. Not a car in either direction. The nearest service station was miles away. I threw up my hands. Then I remembered---- my cell phone! I powered it up before realizing, I didn’t know who to call.
Wouldn’t you know it, I spotted a car coming from the opposite direction. The driver slowed as he approached. I guessed he could see I was in trouble. He stopped his car, got out and immediately saw the trouble. “Madam, would you like me to change that tyre for you?” he asked. The man couldn’t have been more friendly. I was frightened out there and he put me completely at ease. “There,” he said, after putting on the spare, “you are all set to go.”
“Good thing for me that you were driving this way,” I told him, as I climbed back into my car.
“Funny you should say that,” he said. “Just like you, I was heading to work, but my job is in the opposite direction. I made a wrong turn at some point. I don’t know what I was thinking.”
【小題1】The writer didn’t notice the object on the road because ______.
A.it was rather dark then | B.she didn’t use her headlights |
C.there was much traffic | D.she was careless when driving |
A.the writer felt quite anxious |
B.no one would like to help the writer |
C.the writer was a new driver |
D.the cell phone should be powered up |
A.He stopped and laughed at her. |
B.He walked over to frighten her. |
C.He helped her without hesitation. |
D.He drove away in the opposite direction. |
A.went a wrong way | B.felt the writer funny |
C.didn’t know what he was doing | D.come specially to help the writer |
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科目:高中英語(yǔ) 來(lái)源: 題型:閱讀理解
In early autumn I applied for admission to college. I wanted to go nowhere but to Cornell University, but my mother fought strongly against it. When she saw me studying a photograph of my father on the sports ground of Cornell, she tore it up.
“You can’t say it’s not a great university, just because Papa went there.”
“That’s not it at all. And it is a top university.” She was still holding the pieces in her hand. “But we can’t afford to send you to college.”
“I wouldn’t dream of asking you for money. Do you want m e to get a job to help support you and Papa? Things aren’t that bad, are they?”
“No,” she said. “I don’t expect you to help support us.”
Father borrowed money form his rich cousins to start a small jewellery shop, His chief customers were his old college friends. To get new customers, my mother had to help. She picked up a long-forgotten membership in the local league of women, so that she could get to know more people. Whether those people would turn into customers was another question. I knew that my Parents had to wait for quite a long time before their small investment (投資) could show returns. What’s more ,they had not wanted enough to be rich and successful ;otherwise they could not possibly have managed their lives so badly.
I was torn between the desire to help them and change their lives, and the determination not to repeat their mistakes. I had a strong belief in my power to go what I wanted. After months of hard study I won a full college scholarship.(獎(jiǎng)學(xué)金)My father could hardly contain his pride in me, and my mother eventually gave in before my success.
【小題1】The author was not allowed to go to Cornell University mainly because .
A.his father graduated from the university |
B.his mother did not think it a great university |
C.his parents needed him to help support the family |
D.his parents did not have enough money for him |
A.a(chǎn) local league | B.his university | C.his relatives | D.his college friends |
A.To help with her husband’s business |
B.To raise money for her sonaris. |
C.To meet her long-forgotten friends |
D.To better manage her life |
A.To get a well-paid job for himself |
B.To improve relations with his mother |
C.To go to his dream university |
D.To carry on with his father,s business. |
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