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Girls are born to imagine, particularly those at the age of seventeen or eighteen.   16  , I was one of them and sometimes I would go to extremes. That was exactly what happened several days ago, causing me great embarrassment.
I was waiting for my train home at the station when a boy   17   at my side. His beautifully-curved face, his fashionable clothing and everything else about him, was so  18   that I just couldn’t help gazing (注视) at him. What was more   19   was that, he was also stealing some   20   at me, which made me blush (脸红) to the ends of my ears! Still, I tried to be calm and   21   that nothing had happened. However, once again when our eyes met, I could hear my heart   22   wildly, with an inner voice yelling, “Oh, my goodness, he is driving me   23  !” Shortly, I lowered my head to   24   his eyes, but my thoroughly red face had revealed (泄露) 25  .
To my pleasant surprise, my   26   came true this time, as the handsome guy was drawing
  27  ! “Oh, please! Don’t   28  . Look at me. I am so sweaty and sloppy (多情的). Please don’t   29   my telephone number. You know I will give it to you without   30  , and that is so unladylike!” I was still struggling and trembling when he   31   right in front of me. “Excuse me...” he said with a slight hesitation. His voice was so nice, but I wish I had not   32   it, for in the end, he said: “I am sorry, but could you please give me my   33   back? Yours is over there.” Oh, my God! Nothing could have been more   34   when I handed his bag back to him, as shame almost brought me to tears.
From that, I drew a big   35  : never imagine too much if someone gives you a few glances.

A.Generally B.Finally C.Undoubtedly D.Recently

A.made up B.grew up C.turned up D.rose up

A.attractive B.gentle C.ugly D.rude

A.inviting B.puzzling C.interesting D.exciting

A.words B.sounds C.smiles D.glances

A.thought B.pretended C.believed D.supposed

A.beating B.bleeding C.aching D.sinking

A.bad B.crazy C.lost D.confused

A.blind B.shut C.escape D.catch

A.nothing B.something C.anything D.everything

A.imagination B.dream C.wish D.hope

A.away B.near C.up D.down

A.touch B.hide C.approach D.leave

A.apply for B.ask for C.forget D.remember

A.hesitation B.action C.looking D.thinking

A.knelt B.lay C.stood D.sat

A.heard B.saw C.smelt D.known

A.luggage B.bag C.cup D.glasses

A.disappointing B.interesting C.joking D.embarrassing

A.picture B.lesson C.breath D.character

科目 英语   题型 完型填空   难度 中等
知识点: 故事类阅读
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第一节完形填空 (共10小题;每小题2分,满分20分)
阅读下面短文,掌握其大意,然后从21—30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。
Tales of the supernatural are common in all parts of Britain. In particular, there was (and perhaps still is) a belief in fairies(仙女). Not all of these 1 are the friendly, people-loving characters that appear in Disney films, and in some folktales they are 2 and cause much human suffering. This is true in the tales about the Changeling. These tell the story of a mother whose baby grows 3 and pale and has changed so much that it is almost 4 to the parents. It was then 5 that the fairies had come and stolen the baby away and 6 the human baby with a fairy Changeling. There were many ways to prevent this from happening: hanging a knife over the baby’s head while he slept or covering him with some of his father’s clothes were just two of the recommended 7 . However, hope was not lost even if the baby had been 8 . In those cases there was often a way to get the 9 baby back. You could 10
the Changeling on the fire--then it would rise up the chimney, and you would hear the sound of fairies’ laughter and soon after you would find your own child safe and sound nearby.

A.babies B.believers C.fairies D.supermen

A.powerful B.cruel C.frightened D.extraordinary

A.sick B.slim C.short D.small

A.uncomfortable B.unbelievable C.unacceptable D.unrecognizable

A.feared B.predicted C.heard D.reported

A.covered B.changed C.replaced D.terrified

A.cases B.tools C.steps D.methods

A.missed B.stolen C.found D.lost

A.1ittle B.pale C.sad D.real

A.seize B.burn C.place D.hold


If you walk through the streets of any big city at six or seven in the morning, the chances are that you will see women hurrying along, pushing prams (婴儿推车). You may see more than one woman 1 on the same door and, as it opens, quickly kiss the child, 2a package of nappies and hurry off down the street to clock on the early shift in an office, leaving their children to a child – minder – a woman who may be doing the job legally or illegally, well or badly. Brain Jackson, director of the Child – minding Researching Unit, and his colleagues have done a great deal of work in finding out 3 it means for a child to spend the first years of life in the care of a child – minder.
4 law, anyone who looks after a child for more than two hours a day and gets paid must be registered. 5 the punishment is a 6 pounds fine. Local authorities are responsible for the registration and supervision (监管) of minders. The regulations 6 adequate provision (保障) for fire, safety and health. Very few minders can 7 these. Yet, not many districts give financial assistance. “This means,” Brain Jackson says, “that when you have one registered minder tested and proved by the local authorities, you can be sure that you will get a dozen unregistered, illegal minders 8 .”
The researchers found themselves 9 into the role of private investigators when they conduct their 10 . Getting up early to do a “Dawn Watch” following mothers through cold, dark streets and nothing where they left their babies, Jackson says, was a long, slow process.



A.knock B.stop C.stick D.stay


A.hand out B.hand in C.hand down D.hand over



2,4,6

A.which B.what C.how D.that



A.For B.Through C.By D.With


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


A.require B.demand C.insist D.acquire


A.pay B.offer C.afford D.do


A.at work B.in public C.in vain D.at present


A.run B.looked C.forced D.dropped


A.experiment B.survey C.view D.project

Michelle is blind, but she makes such good use of her other senses that guests rarely realize that she is blind.
When my daughter Kayla came back from her home, she was very 1 about her day. She told me that she had baked cookies, played games and done art projects. But she was especially excited about her finger-painting project. “I learned how to 2 colors today! Blue and red make purple, and yellow and blue make green! Michelle 3 with us too. She said she liked how the paint feels through her fingers,” said Kayla.
Something about my child’s excitement caught my 4 . this made me sit down and take a look at my child and at myself.
Then Kayla said, “Michelle told me my picture showed joy, 5 and a sense of accomplishment. She 6 saw what I was doing!” Kayla said she had never felt how good finger-painting felt until Michelle showed her how to paint without looking at her paper.
This is when I realized Kayla didn’t know that Michelle was blind. It had just never 7 in conversation. When I told her, she was quiet for a moment. At first, she didn’t 8 me. “ But mommy, Michelle understood exactly what was in my picture!” Kayla insisted. I knew my child was 9 because Michelle had listened to Kayla when she 10 her artwork. Michelle had listened to Kayla’s pride in her work, and her wonder at her discovery of the way colors blend.
1.

A.satisfied B.moved C.excited D.affected

A.mix B.combine C.connect D.join

A.wrote B.dealt C.contacted D.painted

A.attention B.sight C.note D.observation

A.discovery B.understanding C.pride D.achievement

A.apparently B.really C.obviously D.carefully

A.come around B.com across C.come through D.come up

A.doubt B.refuse C.believe D.approve

A.right B.polite C.real D.wrong

A.described B.created C.designed D.invented

One topic is rarely mentioned in all the talk of improving standards in our schools: the almost complete failure of foreign-language teaching. As a French graduate who has taught for more than twenty-five years, I have some ___1_____ of why the failure is so total. 2 the faults already found out in the education system as a whole, there have been several serious 3 which have a direct effect on language teaching.
The first is the removal from the curriculum (课程) of the thorough teaching of English 4. Pupils now do not know a verb from a noun or the subject of a sentence from its object.
Another important error is mixed-ability teaching, or teaching in ability groups so 5 that the most able groups are 6 and are bored while the least able are lost and 7 bored.
Progress depends on memory, and pupils start to forget immediately they stop having 8 lessons. This is why many people who attended French lessons at school have forgotten it a few years later.
Most American schools have accepted what is necessary and 9 modern languages, even Spanish, from the curriculum. Perhaps it is time for Britain to do the same, and stop 10 resources on a subject which few pupils want or need.

A.questions B.evidences C.ideas D.knowledges

A.Due to B.In addition to C.Instead of D.In spite of

A.errors B.situations C.systems D.methods

A.vocabulary B.culture C.grammar D.sentences

A.wide B.similar C.separate D.unique

A.kept out B.turned down C.held back D.left behind

A.surprisingl B.individually C.equally D.hardly

A.extra B.traditional C.basic D.regular

A.restored B.absorbed C.prohibited D.remove

A.wasting B.focusing C.exploiting D.sharing

Many cancer patients are finding new hope in an unusual approach to cancer treatment. The common method has been developed by Carl Simonton, a specialist in the science of tumors. 1 can sometimes be "truly amazing," he says, when a cancer 2 lets his mind take part in the treatment.
Simonton remembers that his first patient might have been thought to be a " 3” case by some. "He was a sixty-one-year-old man with very severe throat cancer. He had lost a great deal of weight. He could 4 swallow his own saliva and could eat no food.
"I taught him to 5 and mentally see his disease," Simonton says. "Then I had him 6 an army of white blood cells coming, attacking and 7 the cancer cells. The results of the treatment were both exciting and frightening. Within two weeks his cancer had noticeably become smaller and he was quickly gaining weight. I say it was ' 8 ' because I had never seen such a change. I wasn't sure what was going on. I also didn't know what I would do if things went wrong. But 9 didn't go wrong.
"We may believe that we have the power in our own bodies to fight cancer as well as the power to 10 the disease in the first place. With those patients who are willing to stay with us and try, we always find that the cancer has filled some emotional need."
1.

A.Results B.Researches C.Records D.Replies

A.specialist B.author C.patient D.agent

A.hopeful B.hopeless C.valuable D.worthless

A.easily B.mostly C.carefully D.barely

A.worry B.be nervous C.relax D.get angry

A.suppose B.observe C.pretend D.picture

A.overcoming B.managing C.treating D.threatening

A.frightening B.interesting C.amusing D.relaxing

A.I B.we C.they D.it

A.carry B.take C.produce D.find

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