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Travis laughed as he tore at the wrapping paper on his birthday present.He was so    16  ! Finally, he would have the coolest pair of name-brand basketball shoes.
All the guys on his team were wearing the name-brand shoes of a popular basketball   17   , Chuck Hart.    18    Hart was criticized for his poor sportsmanship(运动员风范) and infamous(臭名远扬的)   19  , he was a great player.In fact, Travis wasn't thinking about Hart' s behavior; he had only expected to see Hart' s  20   on the side of the box.The first indication that something was   21   came as he tore away the last piece of paper.Not Hart' s.The new shoes were the name-brand of another player, Robert Ryann, who was   22    for his amazing work in the community.
Travis's hands   23   ; his heart stopped.It wasn't that the Ryann shoes weren't nice, but what would his friends think ?
They were the wrong shoes and Travis would be   24   by the other players. When he looked up into his dad' s eyes, however, Travis knew  he  25   tell him. "'Thanks, Dad.I was really hoping for shoes," Travis said as he pulled the shoes out of the box.
Next morning his dad drove him to school.When they   26   in front of his destination, Travis slowly opened the car door.Just then, his dad stopped him.
"Hey, Travis, wait a minute, look"…" his dad said  27    "Travis, I know those aren' t the shoes you had hoped for, but I saw the names of the two guys and made a(n)   28    The guy whose name is on those shoes," he said, pointing down at Travis’s feet, "is someone I   29    .Do you know how often Ryann has found himself in   30 ?"
"No," Travis said.
" Never.He' s never talked back to his coach or started a fight, and he' s a team player.You could have acted like a   31   when you didn't get the shoes you wanted, Travis,   32   you were polite and made the best of it.You have    33  , like the guy whose name is on these shoes.I' m hoping that someday, your name will be on the coolest pair of shoes I' 11 ever see."
When Travis looked down at his feet, he saw the shoes   34   . His dad had used his mind and heart to give the son a thoughtful   35   .



A.surprised B.ashamed C.excited D.worried


A.team B.player C.coach D.game


A.Unless B.If C.Because D.Although


A.skill B.performance C.behavior D.action


A.name B.photo C.sign D.model


A.strange B.wrong C.true D.funny


A.known B.encouraged C.adopted D.influenced


A.fell B.froze C.shook D.folded


A.questioned B.noticed C.teased D.attacked


A.mustn't B.needn't C.wouldn't D.couldn't


A.pulled up B.put up C.took up D.turned up


A.peacefully B.hesitantly C.delightedly D.naturally


A.choice B.effort C.comment D.mistake


A.believe B.miss C.admire D.remember


A.danger B.anger C.sorrow D.trouble


A.teammate B.adult C.kid D.student


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


A.honor B.courage C.dream D.belief


A.clearly B.carefully C.patiently D.differently


A.gift B.look C.hope D.lesson
科目 英语   题型 阅读理解   难度 中等
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A hobby can be almost anything a person likes to do in his spare time. Hobbyists raise pets, build model ships, weave baskets, watch birds, hunt animals, climb mountains, raise flowers, fish, ski, skate, and swim. Hobbyists also paint pictures, attend concerts and plays, and perform on musical instruments. They collect everything from books to butterflies, and from shells to stamps.
People take up hobbies because these activities offer enjoyment, friendship, knowledge, and relaxation. Sometimes they even produce financial profit(利润). Hobbies help people balance between work and play. Hobbies also offer interesting activities for persons who have retired. Anyone, rich or poor, old or young, sick or well, can follow a satisfying hobby, regardless of (不论)his age, position, or income.
Hobbies can help a person’s mental and physical health. Doctors have found that hobbies are valuable in helping patients recover from physical or mental illness. Hobbies give bedridden or wheel-chair patients something to do, and provide interests that keep them from thinking about themselves. Many hospitals treat patients by having them take up interesting hobbies or pastimes.
In early times, most people were too engaged in making a living to have many hobbies. But some persons who had leisure(休闲)did enjoy hobbies. The ancient Egyptians played games with balls made of wood or pottery.
People today have more time than ever before for hobbies. Machines have reduced the amount of time they must spent on their jobs. Hobbies provide variety for workers who do the same monotonous(单调的) tasks all day long. More people are retiring than ever before, and at an earlier age. Those who have developed hobbies never need to worry about what to do with their newly found leisure hours.
Sir William Osier, a famous Canadian doctor, expressed the value of hobbies by saying, “No man is really happy or safe without a hobby.”
It seems that people whomay spend more time enjoying their hobbies.

A.have little money B.have much money
C.have retired from their work D.have left school

The underlined phrase “recover from” in the third paragraph means.

A.get back B.become healthy again
C.become calm D.supply with a new cover

In early times, most people spent less time on their hobbies, because.

A.they were busy in making a living
B.they suffered from illnesses.
C.they were brave and hard-working
D.they were not interested in them.

What’s the writer’s opinion about hobbies?

A.People all over the world have the same hobby.
B.Machines also have their hobbies.
C.Hobbies are popular among people in Egypt.
D.People should have hobbies in their spare time.

Full face transplants are no longer science fiction fantasy, a leading surgeon has said, adding that they are technically practical but ethically(道德地)complex.
Peter Butler from London’s Royal Free Hospital called for a debate on the ethics of such an operation made possible by new drugs which stop the body’s immune (免疫)system rejecting a transplanted face. “It is not ‘can you do it?’ but ‘should we do it?’” he told the BBC. “The technical part is not complex, but I don’t think that’s going to be the very great difficulty. The ethical and moral debate is obviously going to have to take place before the first facial transplantation.”
The British Association of Plastic Surgeons will discuss the microsurgical procedure (微型外科技术), which could give new skin, bone, nose, chin, lips and ears from deceased donors to patients disfigured(毁容的)by accidents, burns or cancer. But surgeons could have trouble finding enough willing donors. Butler said his survey of doctors, nurses and members of the public showed most would accept a face transplant but few were willing to donate their own after dying.
Despite a number of ethical concerns, Christine Piff, who founded the charity Let’s Face It after suffering a rare facial cancer 25 years ago, welcomed the possibility of face transplants. She rejected the idea that the procedure would mean people would end up living with a dead person’s face. “There are so many people without faces, I have half a face… but we are all so much more than just a face… you don’t take on their personality. You are still you,” she told reporters. “If we can donate other organs of the body then why not the face. I can’t see anything wrong with it.”
The underlined word “deceased” in the third paragraph probably means _________.

A.living B.dead C.diseased D.dying

When Christine Piff says “There are so many people without faces…”, she refers to the people _________.

A.who are dishonorable and shameless
B.who disagree with the full face transplant
C.who are seriously injured by an accident
D.who are disfigured by accidents, burns and cancer

According to the passage, what makes it likely to carry out a facial transplantation?

A.Drugs are available to stop the body’s immune system rejecting a transplanted face.
B.There are some people who are willing to donate their faces after dying.
C.Most people accept the idea of face transplants.
D.It’s morally practical, though technically complex.

What is implied but not stated in the passage?

A.Christine Piff has been the first lucky patient to receive a face transplant.
B.Surgeons have difficulty finding enough willing donors.
C.The main difficulty with the operation lies in the matter of ethics and morality.
D.Nobody other than Christine Piff is quite in favor of the donation of organs.

What would be the best title for the text?

A.First Facial Transplantation
B.Debate on the Ethics of Transplant
C.Face Transplant No Longer Science Fantasy
D.Let’s Face It

The evidence for harmony may not be obvious in some families. But it seems that four out of five young people now get on with their parents, which is the opposite of the popularly-held image of unhappy teenagers locked in their room after endless family quarrels.
An important new study into teenage attitudes surprisingly shows that their family life is more harmonious than it has ever been in the past. “We were surprised by just how positive today’s young people seem to be about their families,” said one member of the research team. “They’re expected to be rebellious (叛逆的) and selfish but actually they have other things on their minds; they want a car and material goods, and they worry about whether school is serving them well. There’s more negotiation and discussion between parents and children, and children expect to take part in the family decision-making process. They don’t want to rock the boat.”
So it seems that this generation of parents is much more likely than parents of 30 years ago to treat their children as friends. “My parents are happy to discuss things with me and willing to listen to me,” says 17-year-old Daniel Lazall, “I always tell them when I’m going out clubbing. As long as they know what I’m doing, they’re fine with it.” Susan Crome, who is now 21, agrees. “Looking back on the last 10 years, there was a lot of what you could call negotiation. For example, as long as I’d done all my homework, I could go out on a Saturday night. But I think my grandparents were a lot stricter with my parents than that.”
Maybe this positive view of family life should not be unexpected. It is possible that the idea of teenage rebellion is not rooted in real facts. A researcher comments, “Our surprise that teenagers say they get along well with their parents comes because of a brief period in our social history when teenagers were regarded as different beings. But that idea of rebelling and breaking away from their parents really only happened during that one time in the 1960s when everyone rebelled. The normal situation throughout history has been a smooth change from helping out with the family business to taking it over.”
What is the popularly- held image of teenagers?

A.They worry about their school life.
B.They live in harmony with their parents.
C.They have to be locked in to avoid making troubles.
D.They quarrel a lot with their parents.

The study shows that teenagers don’t want to ______.

A.share family responsibility B.cause trouble in their families
C.go boating with their family D.make family decisions

Compared with parents of 30 years ago, today’s parents______.

A.go to clubs more often with their children
B.are much stricter with their children
C.care less about their children’s life
D.give their children more freedom

According to the author, teenage rebellion _______.

A.may be a false belief B.is common nowadays
C.is based on real facts D.resulted from changes in families

What is the passage mainly about?

A.Negotiation in family. B.Education in family.
C.Harmony in family. D.Teenage trouble in family.

Jiang Nan, a full-time mother in Beijing, keeps a dozen or so cloth bags at home, carefully selecting one or two before heading out to get groceries. "Most of them were giveaways from advertising marketing campaigns, but others had been handed out in the street by various environmental protection organizations," she explained.
  Since June 2008 China has forbidden the production, sale and usage of plastic bags thinner than 0.025 millimeter (毫米), and retailers (零售商) are not allowed to provide free plastic bags to their customers, no matter how thick they are.
  Many Chinese consumers like Jiang have learned to refuse plastic bags whenever possible in their shopping. "A plastic bag may only cost a few jiao, but it's more about how bad they are for the environment," Jiang said.
  The plastic ban is for the most part well carried out in big cities, and has been obviously effective in reducing white waste. On the first anniversary of the plastic ban Global Village of Beijing, an NGO environmental organization, shows that during the year of the ban the consumption of plastic bags fell by about 40 billion pieces in chain supermarkets alone, saving more than 1.2 million tons of petrol.
  However, enforcement (实施) shows rather less muscle in smaller cities, towns and countryside. In a remote town like Lichuan, the awareness of environmental protection is not as strong as that in big cities. Street vendors (街头小贩) worry that they are likely to lose customers if they charge them for plastic bags. Seeing no significance in the issue, local government often turn a blind eye to banned bag trade in the market.
  There are still those who don't have an interest in living green. Cui Lin, another Beijinger, often forgets to bring a cloth bag when shopping, and has to buy plastic bags. "Anyway I think plastic bags are neater and cleaner, and I don't mind paying a couple more jiao," he shrugged.
  Mrs Yu, a vegetable vendor in Lichuan County, Jiangxi Province, recalled that before plastic bags became popular in the early 1990s, Chinese people always carried a bamboo basket when they visited the market. "Plastic bags are more convenient," she comments, and her view might be that of the tens of millions of people in the nation who still cling to plastic bags, paid or free. This is suggested by her trade where piles of plastic bags are still passed out every day.
In Paragraph 1, the writer uses Jiang Nan's case to __________.

A.introduce a topic B.tell a story
C.describe a person D.offer an argument

How did Jiang Nan get her cloth bags?

A.She bought them at a low price.
B.She borrowed them from her relatives.
C.She got them for free.
D.She made them herself.

Which is NOT the reason why some people still use plastic bags when shopping?

A.Cloth bags are difficult to get and heavy to carry.
B.People's awareness of environmental protection is not strong enough.
C.People don't mind paying a couple more jiao for plastic bags.
D.Street vendors worry that they are likely to lose customers if they charge them.

What does the underlined phrase “cling to” in the last paragraph mean?

A.stop using B.continue to use C.stay close to D.hold tightly

What message does the writer mostly convey in the passage?

A.To reduce white waste is urgent.
B.The plastic bag ban has achieved great success.
C.There is still a long way to go for the plastic bag ban.
D.People's awareness of environmental protection should be stressed.

Moving can bring out the best and the worst in people, I’m finding. And I’ve discovered where a very generous spirit lives: Defiance, Ohio.
After suffering through many months of unemployment, my wife and I had to move this week from Colorado to Ohio, where she would work as a sales assistant. Not knowing a person there, we were pretty concerned about all the work, including how we’d get all the things unloaded without killing ourselves.
We decided to pay a couple of college students to help with all the heavy lifting once we got there. But one neighbor after another stopped by and joined in. “What? Have we moved to some other country? Maybe we’ve died and gone to heaven!” I thought.
Unloading actually became fun as we connected with so many wonderful new friends as we worked. The more people that helped, the easier the work became. A job we were afraid might take days for the two of us alone was done in just a few hours. Many total strangers would either walk by or drive by to ask us if we were moving in. Many were delighted that this fine old house that had sat empty for so long was coming to life again. We were invited to an outdoor meal yesterday by neighbors on the same street.
All the while, my brain was on this new sense of hope that people could be outgoing and kind to strangers. Among all the conversations were lots of offers to be of help to one another in a variety of ways. It’s wonderful to live in such a kind little town. I feel so grateful to be here, and wish the rest of the world could see how an entire society can be a model for what it’s like to look out for one another. I used to stay away from friendships with strangers, but now I live in Defiance!
The author and his wife moved to Defiance because ________.

A.they thought moving often brought out the best
B.a couple of students had promised to help them
C.they liked this little town
D.his wife had found a job

When offered help, the author at first felt________.

A.grateful B.surprised C.embarrassed D.excited

The neighbors did all of the following EXCEPT________.

A.help them unload B.invite them to a dinner
C.offer to drive them around D.welcome their coming

What can we know about the author’s past life?

A.He hated to live in a little town.
B.He liked to make friends with strangers.
C.He usually offered some help to others.
D.He refused to make friends with strangers.

The author mainly wants to tell us ________.

A.we don’t know what is good until we have lost it
B.kindness is the sunshine of social life
C.where there is a will, there is a way
D.there is no place like home

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