When I stepped out the plane from Miami into Charlotte, North Carolina, airport for a connecting flight home, I immediately knew something was wrong. Lots of desperate people crowded the terminal. I quickly learned that flights headed to the Northeast were called off because of a storm. The earliest they could get us out of Charlotte was Tuesday. It was Friday. A gate agent stood on the counter and shouted, “Don’t ask us for help! We cannot help you!”
I joined a crowd that ran from terminal to terminal in search of a flight out. Eventually, I found six strangers willing to rent a van with me. We drove through the night to Washington, where I took a train the rest of the way to Providence.
The real problem, of course, is that incidents like this happen every day, to everyone who flies, more and more often. It really gets to me, though, because for eight years I was on the other side, as a flight attendant for Trans-World Airlines(TWA).
I know the days are gone when attendants could be written up if we did not put the lines napkins with the TWA logo in the lower right-hand corner of the first-class diners’ trays. As are the days when there were three dinner options on flights from Boston to Los Angeles in economy class. When, once, stuck on a tarmac (机场停机坪) in Newark for four hours, a planeload of passengers got McDonald’s hamburgers and fries by thoughtfulness of the airline.
I have experienced the decline of service along with the rest of the flying public. But I believe everything will change little by little, because I remember the days when to fly was to soar (翱翔). The airlines, and their employees, took pride in how their passengers were treated. And I think the days are sure to come back one day in the near future. Many people crowded the terminal because ________.
A.they were ready to board on the planes |
B.something was wrong with the terminal |
C.the flights to the Northeast were canceled |
D.the gate agent wouldn’t help the passengers |
The writer got to Providence ________ at last.
A.by air | B.by van | C.by train | D.by underground |
Which of the following is not true according to the passage?
A.Incidents happened to those who fly quite often. |
B.The writer used to be a flight attendant for Trans-World Airlines. |
C.Even a small mistake might cause complaints from passengers in the past. |
D.McDonald’s hamburgers and fries were among regular dinner options. |
What can be implied from the passage?
A.The writer lived in Charlotte, North![]() |
B.The writer thought the service was not as good as it used to be. |
C.The writer with other passengers waited to be picked up patiently. |
D.Passengers would feel proud of how they were treated on the plane. |
I am a good mother to three children. I have tried never to let my profession stand in the way of being a good parent.
I no longer consider myself the center of the universe. I show up. I listen. I try to laugh. I am a good friend to my husband. I have tried to make marriage vows(誓约)mean what they say. I am a good friend to my friends, and they to me. Without them, there would be nothing to say to you today.
So here’s what I wanted to tell you today: Get a life. A real life, not a desire of the next promotion(提升), the bigger paycheck, the larger house.
Get a life in which you are not alone. Find people you love, and who love you. And remember that love is not leisure(空闲), it is work. Pick up the phone. Send an e-mail. Write a letter. And realize that life is the best thing and that you have no business taking it for granted.
It is so easy to waste our lives, our days, our hours, our minutes. It is so easy to exist instead of to live. I learned to live many years ago. Something really, really bad happened to me, something that changed my life in ways that, if I had my choice, it would never have been changed at all. And what I learned from it is what, today, seems to be the hardest lesson of all.
I learned to love the journey, not the destination. I learned to look at all the good in the world and try to give some of it back because I believed in it, completely and totally. And I tried to do that, in part, by telling others what I had learned.
By telling them this: Read in the backyard with the sun on your face. Learn to be happy. And think of life as a deadly illness, because if you do, you will live it with joy and passion as it ought to be lived.The best title of this passage probably is _______.
A.Love your friends | B.Live a real life |
C.Don’t waste time | D.Be a good mother and wife |
How did the author form her view of life?
A.By working and social experience. |
B.Learning from her friends. |
C.Through an unfortunate experience. |
D.Because of her children and husband. |
The underlined sentence “It is so easy to exist instead of to live” in the fifth paragraph probably has the same meaning as ______.
A.it is so easy to keep alive but not to live a real life. |
B.it is very hard to live a real life |
C.it is so easy to make a living. |
D.it is more difficult to exist than to live a happy life. |
What’s the author’s attitude towards work?
A.Try our best to serve others. |
B.To earn enough money to make life better. |
C.Try our best to get higher position and pay. |
D.Don’t let it affect your real life. |
It can be inferred from the passage that _______.
A.the author is a success in personal life. |
B.the author didn’t try her best to work well. |
C.the author spent all her time caring for her children. |
D.the author doesn’t travel much |
Florence Nightingale(南丁格尔) was born in a rich family. When she was young she took lessons in music and drawing, and read great books. She also traveled a great deal with her mother and father.
As a child she felt that visiting sick people was both a duty and a pleasure. She enjoyed helping them.
At last mind was made up. “I’m going to be a nurse,” she decided.
“Nursing isn’t the right work for a lady,” her father told her.
“Then I will make it so ”, she smiled. And she went to learn nursing in Germany and France.
When she returned to England, Florence started a nursing home . During the Crimean War in 1854 she went with a group of thirty eight nurses to the front hospitals. What they saw there was terrible. Dirt and death were everywhere to be seen — and smelled. The officer there did not want any woman to tell him how to run a hospital, either. But the brave nurse went to work.
Florence used her own money and some from friends to buy clothes, beds, medicine and food for the men. Her only pay was in smiles from the lips of dying soldiers. But they were more than enough for this kind woman.
After she returned to England, she was honored for her services by Queen Victoria. But Florence said that her work had just begun. She raised money to build the Nightingale Home for Nurses in London. She also wrote a book on public health, which was printed in several countries.
Florence Nightingale died at the age of ninety, still trying to serve others through her work as a nurse. Indeed, it is because of her that we honor nurses today.When she was a child, Florence ________.
A.loved to travel very much |
B.knew what her duty in life was |
C.loved to help the sick people |
D.want to learn music and drawing in the future |
What made Florence make up her mind to become a nurse?
A.Her father’s support. |
B.Her desire to help the sick. |
C.Her education in Germany and France. |
D.Her knowledge from reading great books. |
During the Crimean War in 1854, Florence served in the front hospital where ____.
A.she earned a little money |
B.work was very difficult |
C.few soldiers died because of her work |
D.she didn’t have enough food or clothes |
Why was Florence honored by Queen Victoria?
A.She built the Nightingale Home for Nurses. |
B.She wrote a book on public health. |
C.She worked as a nurse all her life. |
D.She did a great deal of work during the Crimean War. |
The passage can best be described as ____.
A.the life story of a famous woman |
B.a description of the nursing work |
C.an example of successful education |
D.the history of nursing in England |
阅读理解(共20小题;每小题2分,满分40分)
In most languages, a greeting is usually followed by “small talk”. Small talk means the little things we talk about at the start of a conversation. In English-speaking countries people often make small talk about the weather. “Nice day, isn’t it?” “Terrible weather, isn’t it?” But there is something special about small talk. It must be about something which both people have the same opinion about. The purpose of small talk is to let both people agree on something. This makes meeting people easier and more comfortable. People usually agree about the weather, so it is a safe topic for small talk. But people often disagree about religion(宗教) or politics(政治) so these are not suitable topics for small talk. The topics for small talk also depend on where the conversation is taking place. At football matches, people make small talk about the game they are watching. “Great game, isn’t it?” At bus-stops, people may comment on the transport system. “The bus service is terrible, isn’t it?”Small talk is ________.
A.a kind of conversation with short words |
B.a greeting used when people meet each other |
C.to let people disagree about something |
D.something we talk about to start a conversation |
The favorite topic of small talk for English people is _________.
A.the weather | B.politics |
C.games | D.languages |
The passage suggests that when we learn a language _________.
A.we should learn about the transport system of the country |
B.we should only master the grammar and the vocabulary |
C.we should learn the culture of the country |
D.we should understand the importance of the language |
When we say “Great game, isn’t it?”, we are in fact __________.
A.asking a question | B.having a conversation |
C.make a comment | D.making small talk |
What we learn from the passage is that _________.
A.different languages have different grammar |
B.small talk is an important part of a language |
C.small talk depends on the purpose of the conversation |
D.in English-speaking countries we should talk about the weather |
I have a neighbor we call “Happy”. I have never seen her angry at anything and never heard her say a harsh (苛刻) word to anyone or about anyone.
Happy and her husband Ben, 70, have a huge garden. They spent many happy hours together working on it. Most of the neighbors watched interestingly as Ben doubled the size of their garden. As the cost of food climbed faster than Ben’s beans, we all wished we also had such a large garden. As the rest of us spent our dollars at the market, Happy could be seen picking beans in her back yard.
Last month, Happy and Ben invited most of the neighborhood over for an “all-day food feast”. We were told to bring gloves and arrive very early in the morning. We didn’t know what was about to take place.
By 9:00 am, there were nine of us in the garden picking tomatoes, beans, okra, and squash. By 10:00 am, there was lots of laughter. We shared a lot of stories. By five o’clock, everyone was a little drunk from the wine and beer. After dinner, we played games. As we were leaving, Happy and Ben handed each of us a shopping bag filled with the bounty(收成)of the day, already packaged and frozen. What a delightful gift!
Well, the point wasn’t so much about the food. The true gift was a day of friends enjoying one another’s company(陪伴). None of it would have happened if it had been for Happy and Ben’s garden. Now they have a blog about gardening in case we decided to plant a garden. And I am so proud of my tomato plants!We can infer that Happy and her husband Ben_______.
A.don’t like spending time with others |
B.sometimes quarrel with each other |
C.live on the food they grow in their garden |
D.are a generous and warm-hearted couple |
According to paragraph 2, people wish they also had a garden so that_______.
A.they didn’t have to spend so much money on food |
B.they could grow vegetables and sell at the market |
C.they could invite their neighbors and hold parties in it |
D.they could spend happy times together with their family in it |
What did the writer most probably think of the time he spent in the garden?
A.It was too long |
B.It was wonderful. |
C.It was not as good as he thought. |
D.It was too terrible. |
“BANG!” the door caused a reverberation (回声). It was just standing there, with father standing on one side, and I on the other side.
We were both in great anger. “Never set foot in this house again!” stormed father. With tears welling up in my eyes, I rushed out of the flat and ran along the street.
The street lights were shining, causing rather sad-feeling. I wandered aimlessly.
A young father who held a child in his arms walked past me. I felt as if I saw my childhood from another space: happy and carefree.
But now … I don’t know whether it is because I have grown up or because dad is getting old. We differ in our ways of thinking. He always put his opinions and codes of behavior on me. Whenever I do something wrong, he never admits it. We are just like two people coming from two different worlds. It feels like there is an iron door between us that can never be opened.
I wandered the streets, without a destination in mind. My heart was frozen on this hot summer night. As I walked on there were fewer and fewer people on th e streets, until I had only the street lights to keep me company. When I finally reached the high-rise apartment block in which I lived , I saw that the light was still on.
I thought to myself: “Is father waiting for me, or is he still angry with me?”
In fact, it was nothing. Perhaps, dad was throwing away some of his old stamps. Perhaps he thought they were useless. I never had the courage to tell him that I liked collecting stamps. I can’t stand his outrageous(蛮横的)words: “I can’t throw you away, let alone these old papers?”
All the lights were off except father’s.
Dad was always like this. Maybe he didn’t know how to express himself. After shouting at me, he never showed any mercy or any moments of regret. After an argument he has the habit of creeping up in my sleep and then tucking me underneath the covers.
This was how he always was. He has been a leader for so long that telling everyone else what to do has become his second nature.
The light was still on. “Am I wrong?” I whispered, maybe… With the key in hand, I was as nervous as I had ever been. At last, I decided to open the door. As soon as I opened the door tears ran down my cheeks. I suddenly realized that the iron door that I had imagined between us did not exist(存在) at all. Love—it second to none.Decide which is the best order of the following according to what happened in the passage.
a. I opened the door and entered the house.
b. Sadly I ran out into the street.
c. I reached the place where I lived and saw my house still brightly lit.
d. I thought of my father’s kindness towards me.
e. I walked about in the street without any aim.
A.b, e, d, c, a | B.b, e, c, d, a |
C.b, e, a, c, d | D.b, e, c, a, d |
What made the writer think of his childhood?
A.The sight of the street lights. |
B.The sight of the empty street. |
C.The sight of a father with a child in his arms. |
D.The sight of light in his own house. |
Why do you think the father often shouts at his son?
A.perhaps the father is getting older and older. |
B.perhaps the son has already grown up. |
C.perhaps they never agree with each other. |
D.perhaps the father has got used to doing that. |
What conclusion(结论)can you come to after reading the passage?
A.The father treats his son in an unfair way. |
B.The father is actually kind to his son. |
C.The father is neither kind nor cruel to his son. |
D.The father is always finding fault with his son. |