落堕市安心阳光实验学校能 力 训 练( 六 )
( 限时40分钟 )
21.【A】【B】【C】【D】 ( A ) 41.【A】【B】【C】【D】 ( C ) 57.【A】【B】【C】【D】 22.【A】【B】【C】【D】 关于教育的英语作文 42.【A】【B】【C】【D】 58.【A】【B】【C】【D】 23.【A】【B】【C】【D】 43.【A】【B】【C】【D】 59.【A】【B】【C】【D】 24.【A】【B】【C】【D】 44.【A】【B】【C】【D】 60.【A】【B】【C】【D】 25.【A】【B】【C】【D】 45.【A】【B】【C】【D】 26.【A】【B】【C】【D】 ( B ) 41.【A】【B】【C】【D】 27.【A】【B】【C】【D】 42.【A】【B】【C】【D】 28.【A】【B】【C】【D】 43.【A】【B】【C】【D】 29.【A】【B】【C】【D】 44.【A】【B】【C】【D】 30.【A】【B】【C】【D】 |
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一、完形填空(共10小题;每小题2分,满分20分)
Many of us hold on to little rentment(怨恨)that may come from an argument, a misunderstanding or some other painful events. Stubbornly, we wait for someone el to reach out to us— 21 this is the only way we can forgive or repo 22 a friendship or family relationship.
An acquaintance of mine, who health isn’t very good, recently told me that she hadn’t spoken to her son in almost three years. “Why not?” I asked. She said that she and her son had had a(n) 23 about his wife and that she wouldn’t speak to him again 24 he called first. When I suggested that she be the one to reach out, she 25 at the beginning and said, “I can’t do that. He’s the one who should apologize. ” She was truly 26 to die before reaching out to her only son first. After a little gentle 27 , however, she did decide to be the first one to reach out. To her amazement, her son was grateful for her willingness to call and 28 an apology of his own.
As is usually the ca, when someone takes the chance and reaches out, everyone wins. Whenever we hold on to our anger, we turn “small stuff” into really “big stuff” in our minds. We start to believe that our 29 are more important than our happiness. However, if you want to be a more peaceful person, you must understand that being right is almost never more important than 30 yourlf to be happy. The way to be happy is to let go and reach out. Let other people be right. This doesn’t mean that you’re wrong. Everything will be fine. You’ll experience the peace of letting go, as well as the joy of letting others be right. You’ll also notice that, as you reach out and let others be “right”, they will become less defensive and more loving toward you.
21. A. believing B. doubting C. questioning D. wondering
22. A. make B. correct C. keep D. decide
23. A. discussion B. agreement C. disagreement D. fight
24. A. when B. if only C. after D. unless
25. A. accepted B. agreed C. apologized D. refud
26. A. willing B. hurrying C. unwilling D. glad
拉脱维亚语
27. A. sleep B. encouragement C. movement D. satisfaction
28. A. accepted B. offered C. refud D. lent
29. A. decisions B. friends C. positions D. relatives
30. A. letting B. permitting C. enjoying D. allowing
二、语法填空:
A professor gave his graduates students this assignment: Go to the slums (贫民窟). Take 200 boys,, ( 31 ) ____________结合滤波器 the ages of 12 and 16, investigate their background and environment, and then predict their chances for the future. The students, after consulting social statistics, talking to the boys, and compiling much data,( 32 ) ___________________ (conclude) that 90 percent of the boys would spend some time in
jail. Twenty years later another group of students整句翻译工具 ( 33 ) _____________ (give) the job of objective是什么意思testing the prediction. They went back to the ( 34 ) _______________ area. The boys were now men. Some still lived there, many had died, the others hadplt moved away, ( 35 ) ______________the rearchers finally contacted 180 of the original 200. Their findings showed that only four of the group had ever been nt to jail. Why was it ( 36 ) _____________the men, who had lived in arl breeding place of crime, had such a ( 37 ) ______________(surpri) good record? The rearchers were told: “There was a teacher…” They finally found that in 75 percent of the cas it was the same women. The rearchers went to her, now( 38 ) _______________ (live) in a hou for retired teachers. How had 我爱我的祖国演讲稿she exerted this remarkable influence on that group of children? Could she give them any reason ( 39 ) _______________the boys still remembered her? “No,” she said, “no, I really couldn’t.” And then, thinking back over the years, she said musing (沉思) ( 40 ) ______________to herlf than to her questioners, “I loved tho boys…”
三、阅读理解:
A ctcs( 2009广东,A )
Lisa was running late. Lisa, 25, had a lot to do at work, plus visitors on the way: her parents were coming in for Thanksgiving from her hometown. But as she hurried down the subway stairs, she started to feel uncomfortably warm. By the time she got to the platform, Lisa felt weak and tired—maybe it hadn’t been a good idea to give blood the night before, she thought. She rested herlf against a post clo to the tracks.
Several yards away, Frank, 43, and his girlfriend, Jennifer, found a spot clo to where the front of the train would stop. They were deep in discussion about a hou they were thinking of buying.
But when he heard the scream, followed by someone yelling, “Oh, my God, she fell in!” Frank didn’t hesitate. He jumped down to the tracks and ran some 40 feet toward the body lying on the rails. “No! Not you! ”his girlfriend screamed after him.
She was right to be alarmed. By the time Frank reached Lisa, he could feel the tracks shaking and e the light coming. The train was about 20 conds from the station.
It was hard to lift her. She was just out. But he managed to rai her the four feet to the platform so that bystanders could hold her by the grins and drag her away from the edge. That was where Lisa briefly regained consciousness, felt herlf being pulled along the ground, and saw someone el holding her pur.
Lisa thought she’d been robbed. A woman held her hand and a man gave his shirt to help stop the blood pouring from her head. And she tried to talk but she couldn’t, and that was when she realized how much pain she was in.
Police and fire officials soon arrived, and Frank told the story to an officer. Jennifer said her boyfriend was calm on their 40一minute train ride downtown—just as he had been conds after the rescue, which made her think about her reaction at the time. “I saw the train coming and I was thinking he was going to die,” she explained.