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Today I am known for my voice. But it  31  a long time to believe I could read well. When I was young I stuttered (结巴)  32  badly that I was completely  33  to speak in public.
34  , when I was 14, Professor Donald Crouch came to our school. He was a retired college professor. He held a book of poems  35   it were a diamond necklace. When he heard our school was  36  Shakespeare, he could no longer   37  not being a part of our school.
When he  38  that I not only loved poetry but was  39  it, we became closer. There was, however, one  40   between us—Professor Crouch could not stand the  41  that I refused to read my poems to the class.
“Jim, poetry is 42 to be read aloud,” he said. “You should be able to speak those beautiful words.” I shook my head and  43  .
Then he tricked me. After handing in a poem, I waited for his  44 . It didn’t come. Instead, one day as the students gathered together, he said to me, “Jim, I don’t think you wrote this.” I  45 him in disbelief. “Why”, I started, “of course I  46 !” “Well, then,” he said, “you’ve got to prove it by getting up and reciting it  47  memory.”
With knees shaking, I walked up. For a moment I stood  48 . Then I began, and kept going. I recited my poem all the way through!
Afterwards, Professor Crouch congratulated me, and  49  me to read other writers’ poems before the public.
Before long, I discovered I did have a (n) 50  and found my fellow students actually looked forward to hearing me recite.

A.lasted B.took C.was D.wasted

A.so B.fairly C.such D.rather

A.uncertain B.unlikely C.unbelievable D.unable

A.But B.Besides C.Then D.However

A.even if B.so that C.as if D.like

A.acting B.teaching C.liking D.choosing

A.prevent B.help C.keep D.stand

A.learn B.knew C.decided D.proved

A.writing B.reading C.reciting D.saving

A.difference B.difficulty C.promise D.friendship

A.question B.idea C.fact D.mind

A.said B.meant C.caused D.prepared

A.answered back B.showed up C.turned away D.stuck to

A.poem B.praise C.return D.opinion

A.replied to B.laughed at C.pointed to D.stared at

A.could B.did C.should D.had

A.with B.of C.from D.in

A.changeless B.hopeless C.helpless D.breathless

A.enabled B.persuaded C.encouraged D.supported

A.voice B.sound C.appearance D.interest

科目 英语   题型 完型填空   难度 较易
知识点: 对话/访谈阅读
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A year ago, August, Dave Fuss lost his job driving a truck for a small company in west Michigan. His wife, Gerrie, was still working in the local school cafeteria, but it was for Dave to find work, and the price of everything was rising. The Fusses were at the risk of joining the millions of Americans who have their homes in recent years. Then Dave and Gerrie received a timely —$7,000, a legacy(遗产) from their neighbors Ish and Arlene Hatch, who died in an accident. “It really made a difference when we were meeting difficulty.” says Dave.
But the Fusses weren’t the only folks in Alto and the neighboring town of Lowell to unexpected legacy from the Hatches. Dozens of other families were by what the Hatches had done. In some cases, it was a few thousand dollars; in , it was more than $100,000.
It nearly everyone that the Hatches had so much money, more than $3 million—they were an elderly couple who lived in an old house on what was left of the family farm.
Children of the Great Depression, Ish and Arlene were known for their habit of . They preferred comparison shopping and would go from store to store, checking prices before making a new purchase.
Through the years, the Hatches paid for local children to attend summer camps when their parents couldn’t it. “Ish and Arlene never asked if you anything,” says their friend Sandy Van Weelden, “They could see things they could do to make you happier, and they would do them.”
Even more extraordinary was that the Hatches their farmland. It was the Hatches’ wish that their legacy—a legacy of kindness as much as one of dollars and cents—should the whole community and last for generations to come.
Neighbors helping neighbors—that was Ish and Arlene Hatch’s story.

A.happy B.hard C.easy D.nice

A.lost B.bought C.left D.wanted

A.gift B.money C.encouragement D.package

A.accept B.defeat C.win D.receive

A.amazed B.excited C.upset D.touched

A.the other B.another C.other D.others

A.surprised B.frightened C.pleased D.encouraged

A.kind B.generous C.living D.saving

A.afford B.buy C.offer D.keep

A.suffered B.enjoyed C.needed D.did

A.put away B.put up C.gave up D.gave away

A.enrich B.bless C.brighten D.expand

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,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。
When I worked in a large city, passing by someone experiencing homelessness wasn’t an uncommon sight. The difficult situation of those I saw touched me , and I often felt, “I would be one of them the kindness of God.”
I felt forced to do something, and as a single mom and newcomer to my field, I decided to __ a plan that fit my limited budget. I began by five to ten dollar bills each payday, and during the week, passing out to those I met on the street.
Though a dollar felt like a small , I realized how _ it was to give the gift of being seen: for me to recognize that those I passed by were people just like me. we would joke a bit and smile together. On some occasions, I was able to more. I’ll never know how and if the dollars , but I know that the connections we made did.
One day after I had started this weekly practice, I had enough to buy myself a new winter coat. With my recent purchase wrapped around my shoulders, I that my old coat could still be put to use by someone who had little or nothing to them from the cold. However, at that moment, I felt inspired to pass on this opportunity for . I turned to the salesman who had helped me, and asked if he would feel taking my old coat, walking to the corner, and offering it to someone . Slightly taken aback, he smiled. “I will as soon as I get a break,” he said. “Thanks for your .”
I can’t help but feel that my with kindness have moved me to pass it on, and in this way, I feel I’ve helped more than just those I by on the street. Kindness touches many hearts, and I am grateful for the way it has mine.

A.surprisingly B.happily C.seriously D.deeply

A.but for B.together with C.apart from D.because of

A.put up with B.keep up with C.come up with D.link up with

A.setting off B.setting aside C.setting out D.setting about

A.it B.him C.them D.that

A.amount B.tip C.quality D.guard

A.careful B.successful C.thankful D.powerful

A.Sometimes B.Never C.Hardly D.Seldom

A.accept B.receive C.refuse D.give

A.attended B.helped C.made D.afforded

A.put up B.saved up C.picked up D.held up

A.realized B.explained C.admitted D.agreed

A.prevent B.stop C.pull D.protect

A.connection B.communication C.kindness D.relationship

A.disappointed B.comfortable C.depressed D.wise

A.in need B.in doubt C.in detail D.in anger

A.compromise B.comprehension C.consideration D.ambition

A.hobbies B.experiences C.habits D.favorites

A.judge B.go C.stand D.pass

A.interested B.excited C.touched D.entertained

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,并在答题卡上将该选项涂黑。
I still remember my first job in the city center. The was large, dark and old the physics lecture room was on the second floor. , it wasn’t a lecture room at all, it was an ordinary room, but it had “LECTURE ROOM’ on the . The students were sixteen or seventeen years old, several years younger than me. , some of them looked and acted older than me sometimes.
The room was directly the street, and had the window looking out over the street and many houses. One day, I was some words on the blackboard when I heard a sudden change in the noise behind me. There was a man standing in the room with an apple in his hand. He looked .
“Who threw this?” he asked, looking round the class.
“I beg your pardon? What is the matter?” I said. “ threw this apple out of the window,” he said. “It on my car.”
“Who threw an apple out of the window?” I to the class. There was no answer.
“I the fellow who threw this.” said the man. “I will be outside for you.” And then he left, closing the door behind him.
was silence and I continued with the lesson. At the end of every lesson, usually the class were all before the bell finished ringing, leaving me saying “That’s all for today” to an empty . This time, when the bell went for the end of the lesson, no one . “That’s all for today,” I said. “You go first, sir,” said one of the boys. It made a nice change, I being out first.

A.room B.building C.floor D.city

A.and B.as C.so D.but

A.Happily B.Luckily C.Properly D.Actually

A.floor B.ground C.door D.window

A.over B.only C.up D.almost

A.In fact B.In the end C.After all D.As a result

A.more B.less C.very D.even

A.on B.above C.below D.in

A.getting B.making C.taking D.putting

A.hardly B.almost C.half D.such

A.angry B.kind C.sorry D.happy

A.Anyone B.One C.Who D.Someone

A.hit B.defeated C.landed D.arrived

A.asked B.said C.talked D.told

A.hate B.find C.get D.want

A.waiting B.looking C.finding D.seeing

A.It B.There C.This D.That

A.walked B.left C.gone D.ended

A.lesson B.class C.room D.lecture

A.heard B.finished C.spoke D.moved

In 1970, at the age of 35, my father was diagnosed with Parkinson’s disease. There was not much done at that time and my father had to rely on the medication and treatment that were at that time. But one thing was , my father was not a quitter. He was a teacher who children with special educational needs in Chicago Public High School. Every day we would hear about “his kids”. These “kids” did not usually my sister and I.
One day, my father arrived at his school and walked up the for his first period. He was having a very day because the disease was really taking everything out of him. He once and bruised (擦伤) his knee but he still kept going. did he know that someone was watching.
As the day his steps began to get a little lighter. At the end of the day, he was about to leave a young girl entered his office. He had met her in the hallway but she was not one of his . He asked what he could do for her and she said, “I just wanted to thank you for my life.”
He looked at her and couldn’t what he had done. She then went on . “When I got up this morning, I felt as if I was at the end of my and ready to kill myself. But when I saw you trying to go up the stairs and then you fell, I felt and the feeling of sadness just kept getting . And now you are walking as as ever. It’s really true that everything will get better as the days go on.”

A.information B.research C.knowledge D.experience

A.favorable B.believable C.reasonable D.available

A.obvious B.special C.natural D.strange

A.abandoned B.followed C.taught D.attended

A.stories B.jokes C.songs D.humors

A.connect B.change C.mean D.defeat

A.mountains B.stairs C.ladders D.streets

A.normal B.pleasant C.simple D.difficult

A.fell B.stood C.happened D.appeared

A.Few B.Little C.Seldom D.Never

A.arrived B.progressed C.broke D.stopped

A.until B.before C.when D.while

A.students B.friends C.teachers D.workers

A.losing B.giving C.passing D.saving

A.write down B.figure out C.cut off D.put up

A.responding B.admitting C.explaining D.complaining

A.rope B.wall C.road D.work

A.sorry B.bad C.lucky D.proud

A.lower B.weaker C.higher D.stronger

A.carefully B.quickly C.lightly D.slowly

One Sunday, a picture in the newspaper touched me. A young woman stood in front of a totally destroyed home. A little boy stood beside her with his head . Holding her skirt tightly was a tiny girl, eyes wide with and fear.
With growing I noticed that their sizes of each family member closely ours. This would be a good opportunity to my children, so I explained their difficult to my seven-year-old twins and three-year-old Meghan.
“We have so much, but these poor people now have nothing,” I said, “we’ll what we have with them.”
I brought three large boxes and placed them on the living room floor. Meghan watched seriously the boys and I filled one box with canned food.
While I our clothes, I encouraged the boys to go through their toys and some of their less favorite things. Meghan watched as the boys piled up useless toys in the box.
“I’ll help you find something for the little girl,” I said to her.
The boys placed the toys they had to donate into one of the boxes while I filled the third box with clothes. Meghan walked up with Lucy, her worn, faded, much-loved doll tightly to her chest. She in front of the box, pressed her little face into Lucy’s face, gave her a kiss, then, laid her gently on top of the other toys.
“Oh, honey,” I said. “You to give away Lucy. You love her so much.”
Meghan nodded, eyes shining with tears. “Lucy makes me happy, Mommy. she’ll make that little girl happy, too.”
I stared at Meghan for a long moment, how I could teach the boys the lesson she had just taught me.
It’s easy to give what we don’t want any more, but to let go of things we cherish, isn’ t it? , the true spirit of giving is to give with your heart.

A.off B.up C.down D.round

A.smile B.confusion C.joy D.anger

A.happiness B.friendship C.puzzle D.interest

A.matched B.equaled C.compared D.suited

A.help B.complain C.change D.teach

A.experience B.problem C.situation D.process

A.give B.share C.send D.spare

A.as B.since C.though D.because

A.came through B.broke through C.sorted through D.got through

A.donate B.leave C.keep D.sell

A.hopefully B.anxiously C.depressingly D.quietly

A.separated B.chosen C.bought D.confirmed

A.hugged B.tied C.grasped D.caught

A.settled B.regretted C.paused D.cried

A.precious B.final C.hearty D.lovely

A.wouldn’t like B.ought not C.had better not D.don’t have

A.Also B.Yet C.Maybe D.Though

A.knowing B.wondering C.realizing D.expecting

A.available B.necessary C.important D.hard

A.However B.Therefore C.Otherwise D.Moreover

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