原创(三)
Once there lived a rich merchant(商人) and a poor shoemaker in the same house. The merchant occupied the second floor, 36 the shoemaker lived and worked in a small room on the first floor. The shoemaker was one of the 37 persons on earth. He worked from morning till night, singing merrily. His heart was filled with 38 , whenever he saw the boots and shoes 39 . Now the merchant upstairs was so rich that he 40 knew how much wealth he had. He was always 41 over his gold and silver coins far into the night. Even in bed his uneasiness(不安) about his riches kept him 42 . When at last he had been asleep for an hour or two, up came the song of the happy shoemaker, who was an 43 riser. It continued all day and was a (n) 44 to the merchant. Day by day the merchant grew more and more tired through want of 45 . He asked a wise friend of his how he could put an 46 to the shoemaker’s song. “Well, if I were you, I would give the shoemaker a hundred pounds,” answered his friend. “You are rich enough to do that, I suppose. Ask for nothing in 47 . Simply give the money.” The merchant 48 the advice.
When the shoemaker 49 the bag that had been sent by the merchant, he was 50 to find shining coins. “I must hide this from the eyes of my neighbors. If they see it, they will think that I have stolen it,” he thought. “I will 51 it away even from my wife.” So he hid the bag of money under the floor. From then on he 52 his neighbors as much as he could. His wife who had been the best 53 to him, became troublesome. Now his mind was too much set on the money bag to 54 to his work with diligence(勤劳). He could not sing merrily now. 55 he thought of the money bag, he became uneasy and unhappy.
36.A.for B.therefore C.but D.however
37.A.poorest B.happiest C.richest D.shortest
38.A.smile B.sorrow C.sadness D.joy
39.A.being repaired B.repair C.to repair D.to be repaired
40.A.always B.completely C.hardly D.entirely
41.A.hiding B.counting C.calculating D.figuring
42.A.awake B.nervous C.frightened D.asleep
43.A.early B.happy C.noisy D.late
44.A.threat B.matter C.trouble D.alarm
45.A.sympathy B.understanding C.sleep D.treatment
46.A.end B.notice C.information D.stop
47.A.trouble B.need C.turn D.return
48.A.refused B.agreed C.asked D.followed
49.A.stole B.opened C.received D.closed/carried
50.A.excited B.amazed C.ashamed D.disappointed
51.A.throw B.keep C.give D.put
52.A.avoided B.thanked C.helped D.attract
53.A.companion B.fellow C.shoemaker D.merchant
54.A.tend B.turn C.attend D.come
55.A.Wherever B.Whatever C.Whenever D.However
完形填空(共20小题;每小题1.5分,满分30分)
阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项。
The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams. ------ Eleanor Roosevelt
My home is a place of great beauty and agricultural richness, as well as of war and natural disasters. When I was only fourteen years old, I was filled with __36__ in spite of the terrible surroundings. The families living here, who tried to make their living from the land, __37__ great losses.
For the __38__ I felt sorry especially, but I __39__ to be hopeless. I decided that where I was, I could do __40__ to help them. I began knocking on every door and saying to each person who __41__ my knock, “I know that you are __42__ and give the birds that come to your yard a little __43__. Please consider me your bird. Give me only a handful of rice each week when I come to your __44__. I will take it to the temple where it can be given to the __45__ children.”
No one seemed to __46__ giving me a handful of rice, even __47__ they had little themselves. On Sunday, I would go to the __48__ and give my handfuls of rice to the monks to __49__ to the children.
One day, I came to a house that had __50__ to give. I told my story and asked if I could be their bird. The woman called her daughters, and __51__ gave me fifty cents, as well as the handful of rice! I began to ask for __52__ and rice from the other “bird feeders”, and they gave them to me. Everyone was happy to be helping those who were suffering, even __53__ only this small way. The temple was soon able to help everyone who came to it for food and clothing.
“Consider me your bird.” My __54__ idea had not stopped the war, but anyway, it was __55__ some peace.
A.sorrow B.hope C.comfort D.happiness
A.suffered B.survived C.covered D.made
A.farmers B.citizens C.villagers D.children
A.wanted B.failed C.refused D.stopped
A.something B.everything C.anything D.nothing
A.said B.replied C.answered D.spoke
A.glad B.kind C.rich D.friendly
A.water B.money C.nest D.rice
A.kitchen B.room C.door D.garden
A.brave B.hungry C.promising D.nervous
A.mind B.escape C.practice D.enjoy
A.so B.that C.as D.when
A.village B.hometown C.temple D.house
A.give in B.give up C.give away D.give over
A.much B.little C.many D.few
A.every B.each C.neither D.none
A.help B.advice C.food D.change
A.by B.with C.on D.in
A.clever B.childish C.foolish D.effective
A.creating B.mending C.developing D.managing
完形填空(共20小题;每小题1分,满分20分)
请认真阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的A、B、C、D四个选项中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
When I was in seventh grade, I was a candy striper(志愿做护士助手的小姑娘) at a local hospital in my town. Most of the 41 I spent there was with Mr Gillespie. He never had any 42 , and nobody seemed to care about his 43 .
I spent many days there holding his hand and talking to him,__44__anything that needed to be done. He became a close friend of mine, 45 he responded with only an occasional squeeze(捏) of my hand. Mr Gillespie was in a coma(昏迷).
I left for a week to vacation with my parents, and when I came back, Mr Gillespie was 46 . I didn’t have the 47 to ask any of the nurses where he was, for fear they might 48 me he had died.
Several 49 later, when I was a junior in high school, I was at the gas station when I noticed a familiar face. When I 50 who it was, my eyes filled with tears. He was 51 ! I built up the courage to ask him if his name was Mr Gillespie. With a(n) 52 look on his face, he replied yes. I 53 how I knew him, and that I had spent many hours talking with him in the hospital. His eyes welled up with tears, and he gave me the warmest hug I had ever 54 .
He began to tell me how, 55 he lay there comatose, he could hear me talking to him and could 56 me holding his hand the whole time. Mr Gillespie 57 believed that it was my voice and 58 that had kept him alive.
Although I haven’t 59 him since, he fills my heart with 60 every day. I know that I made a difference between his life and his death.
A.money B.energy C.time D.effort
A.visitors B.relatives C.patients D.problems
A.interest B.requirement C.condition D.thought
A.talking about B.looking for C.pointing out D.helping out
A.so B.even though C.yet D.as if
A.dead B.mad C.gone D.excited
A.right B.chance C.courage D.time
A.cheat B.tell C.remind D.warn
A.days B.weeks C.months D.years
A.realized B.wondered C.heard D.asked
A.great B.alive C.successful D.lucky
A.happy B.uncertain C.nervous D.proud
A.apologized B.remembered C.explained D.told
A.dreamed B.shown C.wanted D.received
A.because B.if C.unless D.as
A.notice B.feel C.imagine D.appreciate
A.hardly B.rightly C.firmly D.wrongly
A.humour B.worry C.touch D.treatment
A.forgotten B.called C.missed D.seen
A.joy B.regret C.respect D.honour
完形填空(共20小題;每小題I. 5分,满分30分)
阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出可以填入空内处的最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
When Dunstan Cass left the cottage, Silas Marner was only a hundred meters away. He was walking home from the village, where he had 21 to buy what he needed 22 his next day’s work. His legs were tired, but he felt almost happy. He was looking forward to 23 ,when he would bring out his gold. Tonight he had an extra reason to hurry home. He was going to eat hot meat, which was 24 for him. And it would25 him nothing, because someone had given him a piece of meat as a present. He left it 26 over the fire. The door key was needed to hold it safe in place, but Cass was not at all 27 about leaving his gold in the cottage with the door 28 . He could not imagine that a thief would 29 his way through the mist, rain and darkness to the little cottage by the quarry (釆石场).
When he reached his cottage and opened the door, he did not notice 30 anything was different. He 31 his wet coat, and pushed the meat 32 the fire. 33 he was warm again, he began to think about his gold. It seemed a long time to wait until after super, when he usually brought out coins to look at. 34 he decided to bring out his gold immediately, while the meat was still cooking.
But when he 35 the floorboards near the loom (织布机),and saw the36 hole ,he did not understand 37 . His heart beat violently as his trembling hands felt all round the hole. There was 38 ! He put his hands to his head and tried to think. Had he put his gold in a different place, and forgotten about it? He39 every corner of this small cottage, until he could not pretend to himself any more. He had to accept the truth 一 his gold had been 40 !
A.arrived B.been C.left D.gone
A.to B.in C.for D.with
A.holiday B.home C.supper-time D.meat
A.ordinary B.unusuall C.normal D.common
A.boiling B.cooking C.smoking D.making
A.interesting B.worried C.interested D.worrying
A.unlocked B.uncovered C.discovered D.locked
A.go B.lead C.find D.lose
A.whether B.that C.because D.as
A.turned off B.threw into C.threw off D.got off
A.away from B.farther on C.on to D.closer to
A.As soon as B.As well as C.As far as D.As long as
A.But B.As C.So D.For
A.took down B.took off C.took over D.took up
A.dark B.empty C.small D.deep
A.at last B.at once C.at most D.at least
A.everything B.something C.nothing D.anything
A.searched B.gathered C.researched D.found
A.Gone B.missing C.lost D.stolen
完形填空(共15小题;每小题1.5分,满分22.5分)
阅读下面短文,掌握其大意,然后从21—35各题所给的A、B、C和D项中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
One spring afternoon five years ago, Jimmy Liao was crying in the hall of Taipei’s Sherwood Hotel. Life seemed ___21___. The people who laughed as they walked past were taking their ____22___ for granted, just as he used to himself. Now, however, he felt ____23____ —and he couldn’t even show his disappointment in his ___24___.
Seeking more personally satisfying ___25___, he had just left a successful job as a commercial artist when it seemed that fate(命运)played a cruel ___26__ on him. It was at this time that he developed cancer and was __27___ to work. But that moment in the hotel was a turning point for Jimmy. He began to ___28____ the fact that there is no such a thing as fate, only __29___. Since then, he has published several imaginative, illustrated(带插图的)books.
According to Jimmy, you are what you choose to be. You can give up or you can work to be a happier person. Jimmy realized that, while the world sometimes seems unfair, your choice can change your life.
This idea can be __30___ in Jimmy’s books, where his characters show the powerlessness they feel before making their choices. The message that goes with Jimmy’s drawings, however, is ___31___.
Though the world may make us feel small, we must be __32___. Everything will be all right for us—as it is for the “small people” in Jimmy’s books—if we make choices that are __33___ for us.
In spite of his new ___34___ and wealth, Jimmy prefers working __35__ at home with his wife and daughter. He spends his mornings drawing. To Jimmy, living a life as he chooses means much more than money and fame could offer.
A.unhappy B.unusual C.unfair D.uneasy
A.health B.wealth C.happiness D.illnesses
A.ashamed B.disappointed C.helpless D.endless
A.crying B.painting C.imagination D.consideration
A.home B.condition C.situation D.work
A.game B.trick C.role D.part
A.unable B.impossible C.uncomfortable D.difficult
A.understand B.face C.refuse D.recognize
A.failures B.efforts C.choices D.interests
A.found B.drawn C.written D.accepted
A.powerful B.hopeful C.useful D.successful
A.great B.strong C.brave D.equal
A.scientific B.basic C.right D.simple
A.product B.fame C.name D.job
A.rapidly B.separately C.slowly D.quietly
完形填空 (共20小题;每小题1分,满分20分)
阅读下面短文,掌握其大意,然后从36-55各题所给四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项。
Mrs. Jones was over eighty, but she still drove her old car like a woman half her age. She loved driving very fast, and was proud of the fact 36she had never, in her thirty-five years of driving, been punished 37a driving offence (犯规,犯法).
Then one day she nearly 38her record. A police car 39her, and the policemen in it saw her 40a red light without stopping. Of course, she was stopped. It seemed 41that she would be punished.
42Mrs. Jones came up to the judge, he looked at her seriously and said that she was 43old to drive a car, and that the 44why she had not stopped at the red 45was most probably that her eyes had become weak 46old age, so that she had simply not seen it.
When the judge had finished what he was 47 , Mrs. Jones opened the big handbag she was 48and took out her sewing. Without saying a word, she 49a needle(针) with a very small eye, and threaded it at her first attempt.
When she had 50done this, she took the thread(n.线) out of the needle again and handed 51the needle and the thread to the judge, saying, “Now it is your 52 . I suppose you drive a car, and that you are quite sure about your own eyesight.”
The judge took the 53and tried to thread it. After half a dozen tries, he had still not succeeded. The case (案例) against Mrs. Jones was 54 , and her record 55unbroken.
A.which B.when C.that D.this
A.about B.on C.to D.for
A.kept B.won C.missed D.lost
A.watched B.after C.followed D.ran after
A.pass B.go C.run D.rush
A.sure B.indeed C.certain D.perhaps
A.Before B.While C.Until D.When
A.so B.very C.too D.quite
A.cause B.reason C.matter D.trouble
A.light B.lamp C.sign D.one
A.with B.because C.for D.of
A.speaking B.saying C.talking D.telling
A.holding B.getting C.carrying D.bringing
A.took B.brought C.picked D.chose
A.almost B.hardly C.successfully D.successful
A.both B.all C.neither D.either
A.time B.turn C.chance D.job
A.thread B.glasses C.needles D.needle
A.dismissed B.passed C.settled D.studied
A.was B.kept C.seemed D.remained