二、完形填空
Frederick William I, the King of Prussia, ____31____ that his great gift to the Russian people would have such a strange history. This was the Amber Room, ___32___was given this name because almost seven __33__tons of amber were used to make it. Amber has a beautiful yellow-brown colour. Although it __34__as hard as stone, it easily melt when __35__. Once it is heated, the amber can become any shape. The design for the __36___was __37__ the fancy style popular in those days. The Amber Room was also made with gold and jewels. It ___38__a team of the country’s best artists ten years to make it. Everyone agreed that it was the best and biggest __39___of amber art ever made. ___40___, in 1941 the Nazi German army stole it.
31. A. could never imagined B. imagined
C. could have imagined D. could never have imagined
32. A. which B. that C. / D. who
33. A. thousands of B. thousand of C. thousand D. thousands
34. A. feel B. feels C. felt D. has felt
35. A. heat B. heated C. it was heated D. it has heated
36. A. room B. house C. amber D. thing
37. A. of B. to C. for D. in
38. A. spent B. cost C. took D. costs
39. A .job B. work C. works D. gift
40. A. Therefore B. However C. but D. Moreover
Growing trees in the concrete jungle of Los Angels brings neighbors benefits beyond beauty.
As the 36 of TreePeople, a nonprofit organization he founded in 1973, Andy, now 54, has inspired hundreds of thousands of volunteers to 37 plant more than two million trees throughout Southern California.
Tree People 38 tools, blueprints, planting demonstrations, and tree-care supervisors free to all the participants, 39 me. “You will need their support,” Andy said, referring to my neighbors. “ 40
the community behind you, the trees you plant will die in five years.” So I started knocking on doors, hoping to share 41 I’d learnt in Tree People’s seminar(培训班) about the critical role of trees in removing smog from the 42 , cooling our homes and preventing water runoff.
Strange 43 it may seem, some people are afraid of trees. “The roots destroy sidewalks,” one neighbor said, “ 44 will ruin my pipes. And I don’t want leaves.”45 told me.
When I called Andy about the 46 I was getting from my neighbors, he encouraged me to keep trying. So my son and my wife delivered cookies while I went door to door. It 47 us half a year to sign permission forms from 16 neighbors for 21 trees.
When the big day arrived, I was excited and 48 . What if I threw a planting tree and 49 else came? But as I set out shovels(铁铲), my son and wife made cakes and doughnuts, 50 started to gather. Friends brought friends. Neighbors came with cousins and grandchildren. A local middle school even 51 with half the seventh grade. More than 300 people joined us.
Then Andy led us in a 52 : welcoming each tree into the world and 53 it name. After the ceremony, as I shook hands with volunteers and my neighbors, I 54 help but feel we’d accomplished 55 great. After all, trees need people, and people need trees.
A.friend B.interviewer C.president D.volunteer
A.bravely B.actively C.anxiously D.generously
A.supports B.affords C.shows D.provides
A.including B.considering C.containing D.reminding
A.For B.Without C.With D.Except
A.what B.which C.that D.how
A.cloud B.wind C.sky D.air
A.while B.if C.however D.as
A.You B.I C.They D.It
A.The other B.Another C.Other D.Others
A.resistance B.acceptance C.agreement D.praise
A.spent B.paid C.took D.covered
A.moved B.disappointed C.surprised D.nervous
A.everybody B.nobody C.somebody D.anybody
A.volunteers B.journalists C.friends D.neighbors
A.made up B.took up C.showed up D.cheered up
A.ceremony B.march C.activity D.celebration
A.calling B.leaving C.making D.giving
A.wouldn’t B.shouldn’t C.couldn’t D.needn’t
A.anything B.something C.nothing D.everything
When I was twelve, I suddenly developed a strong feeling for writing poetry. I gave up all my other hobbies, such as 36 stamps, and spent all my 37 time reading poetry and writing it. The 38 of writing poetry on every possible occasion (机会) soon 39 me into trouble at school. If a lesson did not 40 me. I would take out my notebook and start writing poems in class. Of course I did this very 41 , but it was not long before I got 42 . One day while I was busy writing a poem 43 a lesson, I looked up to find the teacher standing 44 me in 45 because I was not 46 attention. He tore the poem up, with a 47 not to waste time in his lesson. 48 I was sure that I had written a good poem, 49 that evening I wrote it out from memory again. Not long after, I 50 about a poetry competition I decided to send in my poem. Weeks later, long 51 I had given up hope, I got a letter informing me that I had won the first 52 . Everyone at school 53 for it except the geography teacher, who 54 me more carefully than ever. He was quite 55 that I was not going to write poetry in his lesson!
A.keeping B.collecting C.gathering D.getting
A.other B.rest C.spare D.more
A.habit B.kind C.means D.type
A.came B.entered C.arrived D.got
A.interest B.surprise C.understand D.develop
A.silently B.carelessly C.carefully D.quickly
A.held B.caught C.taken D.improved
A.before B.after C.on D.during
A.over B.on C.below D.after
A.pride B.anger C.care D.satisfaction
A.calling B.making C.noticing D.paying
A.warning B.smiling C.suggestion D.demand
A.As usual B.In other words C.By the way D.All the same
A.however B.so C.thus D.even
A.read B.got C.noticed D.looked
A.before B.after C.ago D.until
A.position B.reward C.victory D.prize
A.praised B.thanked C.surprised D.puzzled
A.saw B.watched C.looked at D.cared about
A.afraid B.angry C.sure D.sorry
I will never forget the year I was about twelve years old.My mother told us that we would not be 26 Christmas gifts because there was not enough money.I felt sad and thought, "What would I say when the other kids asked what I’d 27?" Just when I started to28 that there would not be a Christmas that year, three women 29 at our house with gifts for all of us.For me they brought a doll.I felt such a sense of30 that I would no longer have to be embarrassed when I returned to school.I wasn’t 31 .Somebody had thought32 of me to bring me a gift.
Years later, when I stood in the kitchen of my new house, thinking how I wanted to make my33 Christmas there special and memorable, I34 remembered the women’s visit.I decided that I wanted to create that same feeling of35 for as many children as I could possibly reach.
So I 36 a plan and gathered forty people from my company to help.We gathered about 125 orphans (孤儿) at the Christmas party.For every child, we wrapped colorful packages filled with toys, clothes, and school supplies, 37 with a child’s name.We wanted all of them to know they were 38.Before I called out their names and handed them their gifts, I 39 them that they couldn’t open their presents 40 every child had come forward.Finally the 41 they had been waiting for came as I called out, "One, two, three.Open your presents!" As the children opened their packages, their faces beamed and their bright smiles 42 up the room.The 43in the room was obvious, and 44 wasn’t just about toys.It was a feeling — the feeling I knew 45 that Christmas so long ago when the women came to visit.I wasn’t forgotten.Somebody thought of me.I matter.
A.sending B.receiving C.making D.exchanging
A.found B.prepared C.got D.expected
A.doubt B.hope C.suggest D.accept
A.broke in B.settled down C.turned up D.showed off
A.relief B.loss C.achievement D.justice
A.blamed B.loved C.forgotten D.affected
A.highly B.little C.poorly D.enough
A.present B.first C.recent D.previous
A.hardly B.instantly C.regularly D.occasionally
A.strength B.independence C.importance D.safety
A.kept up with B.caught up with C.came up with D.put up with
A.none B.few C.some D.each
A.fine B.special C.helpful D.normal
A.reminded B.guaranteed C.convinced D.promised
A.after B.until C.when D.since
A.chance B.gift C.moment D.reward
A.lit B.took C.burned D.cheered
A.atmosphere B.sympathy C.calmness D.joy
A.it B.such C.something D.everybody
A.by B.till C.for D.from
I was sure that I was to be killed. I became terribly nervous. I fumbled (searched) in my pockets to see if there were any cigarettes, which 41 their search. I found 42 and because of my shaking hands, I could 43 get it to my lips. But I had no matches, they had taken those. I looked 44 the bars at my jailer(看守监狱的人). He did not make eye contact with me. I 45 to him “Have you got a light?” He looked at me, shrugged and came over to light my cigarette.46 he came close and lit the match, his eyes inadvertently(无意中)locked with mine. At that moment, I 47 . I don't know why I did that. Perhaps it was 48 , perhaps it was because, when you get very close, one to another, it is very 49 not to smile. In any case, I smiled. In that instant, it was 50a spark jumped across the gap between our two hearts, our two human souls. I know he didn't want to, but my smile leaped through the bars and generated smile on his lips, too. He lit my cigarette but 51 , looking at me directly in the eyes and continuing to smile.
I 52 smiling at him, now aware of him as a(n) 53 and not just a jailer. And his looking at me seemed to have a new 54 too. “Do you have kids?” he asked. “Yes, here, here.” I took out my wallet and nervously fumbled for the 55 of my family. He, too, took out the pictures of his family and began to talk about his plans and hopes for them. My eyes filled with tears. I said that I feared that I'd never see my family again, never have the chance to see them grow up. Tears came to his eyes, too. 56 without another word, he 57 my cell (牢房) and silently led me out.Out of the jail,quietly and by back routes,out of the town. There, at the edge of town, he released me. And without another word, he turned back toward the town.
“My life was 58 by a smile.” Yes, the smile—the unaffected, unplanned, 59 connection between people. I really believe that if that part of you and that part of me could 60 each other, we wouldn't be enemies. We couldn't have hate or envy or fear.
A.had lost B.had given D.had reached
A.them B.it C.that D.one
A.barely B.quickly C.possibly D.1ikely
A.on B.through C.at D.up
A.gave out B.let out C.called out D.screamed out
A.As B.before C.after D.until
A.cried B.shook C.refused D.smiled
A.anger B.nervousness C.bitterness D.sympathy
A.easy B.hard C.glad D.embarrassed
A.even though B.as well as C.as though D.as long as
A.went away B.dropped out C.stayed far D.stayed near
A.kept B.stopped C.began D.forgot
A.stranger B.enemy C.opponent D.person
A.dimension B.suggestion C.impression D.concept
A.cigarettes B.bags C.pictures D.wallet
A.Intentionally B.Unconsciously C.Unwillingly D.Suddenly
A.unfolded B.unlocked C.uncontrolled D.undefended
B.destroyed C.saved D.ignored
A.surprising B.natural C.different D.frequent
A.like B.expect C.notice D.recognize
Children find meanings in their old family tales.
When Stephen Guyer’s three children were growing up, he told them stories about how his grandfather, a banker, 36 all in the 1930s, but did not lose sight of what he valued most. In one of the darkest times 37 his strong-minded grandfather was nearly 38 , he loaded his family into the car and 39 them to see family members in Canada with a 40 , “there are more important things in life than money. ”
The 41 took on a new meaning recently when Mr. Guyer downsized to a 42 house from a more expensive and comfortable one. He was 43 that his children ,a daughter, 15, and twins, 22, would be upset. To his surprise, they weren’t. 44 , their reaction echoed (共鸣) their great-grandfather’s. What they 45 was how warm the people were in the house and how 46 of their heart was accessible.
Many parents are finding family stories have surprising power to help children 47 hard times. Storytelling experts say the phenomenon reflects a growing 48 in telling tales, evidenced by a rise in a storytelling events and festivals.
A university 49 of 65 families with children aged from 14 to 16 found kids’ ability to 50 parents’ stories was linked to a lower rate of anger and anxiety.
The 51 is telling the stories in a way children can 52 . We’re not talking here about the kind of story that 53 , “ When I was a kid, I walked to school every day uphill both ways, barefoot in the snow. ” Instead, we should choose a story suited to the child’s 54 , and make eye contact (接触) to create “a personal experience”. We don’t have to tell children 55 they should take from the story and what the moral is . ”
A.missed B.lost C.forgot D.ignored
A.when B.while C.how D.why
A.friendless B.worthless C.penniless D.homeless
A.hope B.promise C.suggestion D.belief
A.tale B.agreement C.arrangement D.report
A.large B.small C.new D.grand
A.surprised B.annoyed C.disappointed D.worried
A.Therefore B.Besides C.Instead D.Otherwise
A.talked about B.cared about C.wrote about D.heard about
A.much B.many C.little D.few
A.beyond B.over C.behind D.through
A.argument B.skill C.interest D.anxiety
A.study B.design C.committee D.staff
A.provide B.retell C.support D.refuse
A.trouble B.gift C.fact D.trick
A.perform B.write C.hear D.question
A.means B.ends C.begins D.proves
A.needs B.activities C.judgments D.habits
A.that B.what C.which D.whom