科目: 來(lái)源:江蘇同步題 題型:完形填空
完形填空 | ||||
I was tired and hungry after a long day of work. When I walked into the livingroom, my 12yearold son looked up at me and said, "I__1__you." I did not__2__what to say, and I just stood there, looking __3__at him. My first__4__was that he__5__need help with his homework. Then I asked, "What was that all__6__?" "Nothing," he said, "My teacher said we should tell our parents we love them and__7__what they say." The next day I called his teacher to__8__more about what my son said and how the other parents had reacted( 反應(yīng)). "Most of the fathers had the__9__response as you did," the teacher said, "When I first__10__that we try this, I asked the children__11 _they thought their parents__12__say. Some of them thought their parents would have heart trouble." Then the teacher__13__, " I want my students to know that feeling love is an important part of __14__. I'm trying to tell them it's too bad that we don't express our feelings. A boy__15__tell his father or mother he loves him or her." The teacher understands that sometimes it is__16 _for some of us to say something that is good for us to say. That evening when my son__17__to me, I took him in my arms and held on for an__18 _moment, saying, "Hey, I love you,__19__." I don't know if saying that made__20__of us healthier, but it did feel pretty good. | ||||
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科目: 來(lái)源:江蘇同步題 題型:完形填空
完形填空 | ||||
A serious car crash leads one woman to rediscover her faith in human kindness. In March last year, the car I was driving was__1__in a serious crash with another car on a country road. I soon__2__myself at the centre of a frenzy of activity, surrounded by paramedics, police, rescuers and members of the local community. An enormous can opener was used to__3__me out of my wrecked car and__4__an ambulance. Over the next eight hours, I was transported to hospital, dragged up, Xrayed and diagnosed (診斷) with a broken neck. Knowing that I'd__5__death by a fraction of a second sustained me throughout the long wait in the emergency ward and__6 _me to deal with the visible distress of my hospital visitors. Only after I'd convinced the last friend to__7__could I direct my energies inwards. Flitting in and out of my line of vision during my hospital__8__was the Red Cross lady, a gentle__9__in white who, from time to time, popped her head in to__10__cups of tea. After the visitors had gone, she ventured further into my cubicle to__11__if I was all right. I found myself__12__her everything: about the shock of the__13__, my feats for my family as a result of my injuries-about my whole life. While I__14__for an ambulance to transport me to another hospital, she stood by my trolley and_15_my hand as I offloaded all the emotion I'd stoically withheld (強(qiáng)忍著的) from my family. She__16__, quiet and nonjudgmental. Even now, the__17__that I have her contact details provides me with great__18__. I look forward to a day in the nottoodistant future when my guardian angel and I can meet again, in__19__ circumstances. In times of crisis, faith can sustain us: for me, my faith in human nature, reawakened by the__20 _ of a stranger, has helped ease my journey back to recovery. | ||||
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科目: 來(lái)源:四川省同步題 題型:完形填空
完形填空 | ||||
Tears clouded my eyes as I stood in our washing room, holding Brett's jeans and shirt full of burn holes. Tired and defeated, I __1__ to the floor. The clothes were just one more thing Brett had __2__. He often got almost everything in the house out of __3__. Many windows in our house needed repair due to his breaking __4__ to steal money when he chose to live on the street. Yet none of this could compare to the emotional __5__ Brett had done to our once quiet home. Brett came to live with us when he was 12 years old. During the next few years I had dealt with Brett as __6__ as possible, but inside I was shouting, "I don't want him in my house another day, Lord! I just can't __7__ him!" Having wiped my tears, I continued __8__ him as before. When Brett was nearly 18, he landed again in Juvenile Hall(少管所). After that, my husband and I had to send Brett to a boarding school for helping__9___teens. At the __10__ ceremony, each graduate held a white rose to give to the person who had __11__ the most to him or her. Brett spoke __12__ to his parents and then spoke to me, "You did so much. You were always there, no matter __13__. My mom and dad, I am their kid. But you, __14__ troubled enough by me, always __15__ me such love. And I want you to know I love you for it." __16__, I stood as Brett placed the white rose in my hand and hugged me__17__. At that moment, tears__18__in my eyes again, this time not for disappointment but for__19__. Although I had struggled with silent__20__toward my stepson, Brett had seen only my actions. Love is action. We may not always have positive feelings about certain people in our lives, but we can love them. | ||||
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科目: 來(lái)源:浙江省期末題 題型:完形填空
"Everything happens for the best," my mother said whenever I faced disappointment. "If you can 1 | ||||
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科目: 來(lái)源:0115 月考題 題型:閱讀理解
閱讀理解。 | ||
I was 9 years old when I found out my father was ill. It was 1944, but I can remember my mother's words as if it were yesterday:" Kerrel, I don't want you to take food from your father, because he has AIDS. Be very careful when you are around him." AIDS wasn't something we talked about in my country when I was growing up. From then on, I knew that this would be a family secret. My parents were not together anymore, and my dad lived alone. For a while, he could take care of himself. But when I was 12, his condition worsened. My father's other children lived far away, so it fell to me to look after him. We couldn't afford all the necessary medication for him, and because Dad was unable to work, I had no money for school supplies and often couldn't even buy food for dinner. I would sit in class feeling completely lost, the teacher's words muffled as I tried to figure out how I was going to manage. I did not share my burden (負(fù)擔(dān)) with anyone. I had seen how people reacted to AIDS. Kids laughed at classmates who had parents with the disease. And even adults could be cruel. When my father was moved to the hospital, the nurses would leave his food on the bedside table even though he was too weak to feed himself. I had known that he was going to die, but after so many years of keeping his condition a secret. I was completely unprepared when he reached his final days. Sad and hopeless. I called a woman at the nonprofit
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1. What does Kerrel tell us about her father? | ||
A. He had stayed in the hospital since he fell ill. B. He depended on the nurses in his final days. C. He worked hard to pay for his medication. D. He told no one about his disease. | ||
2. What can we learn from the underlined sentence? | ||
A. Kerrel couldn't understand her teacher. B. Kerrel had special difficulty in hearing. C. Kerrel was too troubled to focus on the lesson. D. Kerrel was too tired to hear her teacher's words. | ||
3. Why did Kerrel keep her father's disease a secret? | ||
A. She was afraid of being looked down upon. B. She thought it was shameful to have AIDS. C. She found no one willing to listen to her. D. She wanted to obey her mother. | ||
4. Why did Kerrel write the passage? | ||
A. To tell people about the sufferings of her father. B. To show how little people knew about AIDS. C. To draw people's attention to AIDS. D. To remember her father. |
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科目: 來(lái)源:0113 期中題 題型:閱讀理解
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科目: 來(lái)源:河南省模擬題 題型:閱讀理解
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科目: 來(lái)源:廣東省期末題 題型:閱讀理解
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科目: 來(lái)源:0125 月考題 題型:完形填空
完形填空。 | ||||
The school was across the street from our home and I would often watch the kids as they played during the break. She seemed so small as she pushed her way 1 the crowd of boys on the playground. She 2 from them all. I began to notice her at other times, basketball in hand, playing 3 . She would practice dribbling (運(yùn)球) and shooting over and over again, sometimes until 4 . One day I asked her 5 she practiced so much. She looked 6 in my eyes and without a moment of hesitation she said, "I want to go to college. The only way I can 7 is if I get a scholarship. I am going to play college basketball. I want to be 8 . My Daddy told me if the dream is big enough, the facts don't count." Well, I had to give it in to her-she was 9 . One day, I saw her sitting in the grass, head 10 in her arms. I walked toward her and quietly asked what was 11 . "Oh, nothing," came a soft reply. "I am just too short." The coach told her that at her height she would probably 12 get to play for a top ranked team, 13 offered a scholarship. So she 14 stop dreaming about college. She was 15 and I sensed her disappointment. I asked her if she had talked to her dad about it yet. She told me that her father said those coaches were wrong. They just did not 16 the power of a dream. He told her 17 she really wanted to play for a good college, if she truly wanted a scholarship, 18 could stop her except one thing-her own attitude. He told her again, "If the dream is big enough,the facts don@^@^@t count." The next year, as she and her team went to the Northern California Championship game, she was seen by a college recruiter (招聘人員). She was indeed offered a 19 . She was going to get the college education that she had 20 and worked toward it for all those years. | ||||
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科目: 來(lái)源:江蘇同步題 題型:閱讀理解
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