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It was Thanksgiving morning. In the crowded kitchen of my small home I was busy preparing the traditional Thanksgiving turkey when the doorbell rang. I opened the front door and saw two small children in rags huddling together inside the storm door on the top step.
"Any old papers, lady?" asked one of them.
I was busy. I wanted to say “no” __  __looked down at their feet. They were wearing thin scandals (凉鞋),wet with heavy snow.   
“Come in and I'11          you a cup of hot cocoa.”
They walked over and sat down at the table. Their wet shoes left        on the floor.I     __   them cocoa and toast with jam         the cold outside. Then I went back to the kitchen and started again on my household budget. The silence in the front door __  __me. I looked in. The girl__    the empty cup in her hands, looking at it. The boy asked in a flat        ," Lady ... are you rich?"
"Am I rich? Mercy,         !"  I looked at my shabby slipcover(家具套).The girl put her cup back in its saucer(茶碟)       .
“Your cups match your saucers.”
Her voice was ___  __with a need that no amount of food could supply.They left after that, holding their        against the wind.They hadn't said thank you.
They didn’t          to. They had done more than that. Plain blue china cups and saucers were only worth five pence. But they  __  __.
I tasted the potatoes and stirred(搅动)the meat soup. Potatoes and brown meat soup, a     __  over our heads, my man with a good steady job—these things matched, too.
I moved the chairs back from the fire and       the living room.The muddy prints of small scandals were still          on my floor. “       them be for a while,” I thought. Just         I should begin to forget how          I am.

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

A.make B.provide C.do D.cook

A.signs B.signals C.marks D.symbols

A.showed B.served C.carried D.supplied

A.against B.from C.on D.in

A.beat B.struck C.got D.noticed

A.watched B.lifted C.held D.put

A.word B.method C.state D.voice

A.yes B.sure C.no D.always

A.suddenly B.carefully C.quickly D.anxiously

A.hungry B.satisfied C.pleased D.curious

A.books B.papers C.dishes D.drinks

A.dare B.plan C.want D.need

A.shone B.matched C.broke D.equaled

A.house B.ceiling C.roof D.curtain

A.washed B.rubbed C.wiped D.tidied

A.dry B.gone C.wet D.new

A.Made B.Let C.Got D.Kept

A.in case B.as if C.if only D.only if

A.nice B.free C.busy D.rich

科目 英语   题型 完型填空   难度 中等
知识点: 对话/访谈阅读
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After 21 years of marriage, I discovered a new way of keeping the spark (火花) of love alive. I started to go out with another woman. It was really my wife’s 26 .
The other woman that my 27 wanted me to visit was my mother, who has been a widow (寡妇) for 19 years, but the 28 of my work and my three children had made it possible to visit her only 29 . That night I called to invite her to go out for 30 and a movie. “What’s wrong, are you 31 ?” she asked. My mother is the type of woman who 32 that a late night call or a surprise invitation is a sign of bad news. “I thought that it would be 33 to pass some time with you,” I responded. “Just the 34 of us.” She thought about it for a moment, then said, “I would like that very much.” 
We went to a restaurant that, although not elegant, was very nice and 35 . My mother took my arm 36 she were the First Lady. During the dinner we had an agreeable 37 — nothing extraordinary — but 38 recent events of each other’s life. We talked so much that we 39 the movie. As we arrived at her house later, she said, “I’ll 40 with you again, but only if you let me invite you.” I agreed. “How was your dinner 41 ?” asked my wife when I got home. “Very nice. Much more so than I could have imagined,” I answered.
A few days later my mother 42a massive heart attack. It happened so suddenly that I didn’t have a chance to do 43 for her. At that moment I 44 the importance of saying in time “I LOVE YOU” and giving our loved ones the time that they 45 .

A.thought B.belief C.idea D.opinion

A.father B.children C.mother D.wife

A.demands B.pleasures C.anxieties D.commands

A.unusually B.frequently C.occasionally D.immediately

A.dinner B.a walk C.some fresh air D.a while

A.well B.good C.safe D.bad

A.guesses B.imagines C.supposes D.suspects

A.necessary B.pleasant C.proper D.possible

A.two B.three C.four D.five

A.cheap B.comfortable C.cool D.tasty

A.in case B.now that C.as if D.so that

A.trouble B.conversation C.silence D.experiment

A.catching up on B.finding out C.making sure D.working out

A.missed B.enjoyed C.remembered D.watched

A.eat out B.go out C.run out D.keep out

A.party B.dance C.hour D.date

A.heard of B.suffered from C.died of D.recovered from

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

A.accepted B.doubted C.considered D.understood

A.win B.deserve C.spend D.waste

I have always been an independent person, but I have come to know that being independent does not mean refusing help. I may still be 16 with asking for help, but I try to accept. Furthermore, I will even 17 help and when my offers are refused, I am 18 willing to walk away. And all these changes came from a disaster on an island.
Sometimes a person’s independence is a 19 of pride, daring, stubbornness and luck. I used to be too 20 since I was little. I was once a traveler who never asked for 21 , choosing instead to struggle with maps and signs until I found my way.
Then one day on the island of Koh Phangan, in Thailand, everything 22 . I was swimming in the ocean with Sean, my fiancé, when he was 23 by a box jellyfish(箱型水母). He 24 within three minutes, 25 years old. Yet when onlookers and travelers asked if I wanted 25 , stubborn pride and force of habit 26 me accepting. But two young Israeli women stayed. 27 my protest(反对), they were with me even when the police tried to cover up the 28 of Sean’s death. It was listed as drunk drowning to avoid hurting the 29 industry. The Israeli women 30 have walked away. 31 , without even telling me, they 32 their schedule rather than leave me behind.
33 I didn’t realize it at that time, I would not have 34 the disaster without these great women. Actually, the person who needs help the most is usually the last person to ask for it. I have learned 35 is better than refusing because it not only helps you walk out of trouble, but also helps you know the real meaning of life.

A.struggling B.dealing C.confused D.satisfied

A.offer B.accept C.seek D.desire

A.occasionally B.frequently C.usually D.seldom

A.range B.symbol C.way D.mix

A.money B.equipment C.directions D.suggestions

A.happened B.messed C.changed D.disappeared

A.attacked B.caught C.followed D.impressed

A.sunk B.died C.failed D.recovered

A.company B.advice C.comfort D.evidence

A.kept B.prevented C.denied D.suggested

A.In spite of B.In case of C.In terms of D.As a result

A.proof B.news C.fact D.cause

A.medicine B.entertainment C.fishing D.tourism

A.could B.need C.should D.must

A.Therefore B.Otherwise C.Instead D.Besides

A.delayed B.made C.considered D.threw

A.When B.While C.Because D.If

A.survived B.experienced C.avoided D.suffered

A.refusing B.accepting C.giving D.begging

阅读下面短文,从短文后各题所给的四个选项(A,B,C,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。
For centuries, magicians have used various ways to shock the audience. We all have seen how a 36 performer carefully steps 37 a bed of burning coals -- barefoot. Then he walks across 38 a single burn on his feet. Is it mind over matter, or is it just physics? As it turns __39 , walking on burning coals isn’t that hot as 40 . “The coals are hot enough to 41__ you, but if you walk quickly across them you 42 being burned.” says Jonathan Hall, a physician at Penn State University in Eric Pennsylvania.
That’s because some coals are made 43 burning wood chips. Wood has two 44__ properties(特性)for fire-walking, explains Hall. First, wood is an insulator(绝缘体)--it doesn’t __45 heat very well. “It 46 _ time for heat to travel 47 the wood to your feet.” Hall says. If the performer walked across red-hot metal 48 , that would truly be 49 , because metal conducts, or transmits, heat very well. The metal would 50 burn a performer’s feet.
Second, wood has a low specific heat-- it doesn’t take much heat to 51 its temperature. Heat is a form of 52 . Temperature is a 53 of heat, in units of degrees. So 54 the coals are hot, the value(数值)of heat energy they contain is low. Thus, a well-trained performer can 55 such an amazing result.
Still, you don’t want to walk on burning coals, do you?

A.daring B.dare C.rough D.fearful

A.at B.over C.on D.above

A.with B.within C.without D.over

A.out B.on C.off D.in

A.imagine B.imagined C.imagining D.to imagine

A.fire B.burn C.light D.flame

A.prevent B.keep C.ignore D.avoid

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

A.ideal B.classic C.favorite D.standard

A.transmit B.communicate C.bring D.send

A.gathers B.takes C.gains D.stands

A.through B.into C.over D.pass

A.unhappy B.unharmed C.unhealthy D.unprepared

A.charming B.magical C.tricky D.fashionable

A.instantly B.constantly C.frequently D.lately

A.produce B.raise C.construct D.create

A.power B.source C.energy D.strength

A.measure B.rank C.estimate D.rate

A.what if B.however C.as if D.even though

A.achieve B.arrive C.draw D.take

A wise man was visiting the Ganges, a river which flows through northern India to take a bath. He found a group of family members on the 26 , shouting angrily at each other. He___27 his disciples(弟子), smiled and asked, “Why do people shout in 28 at each other ?” The disciples 29 for a while and one of them said, “ Because we 30__ our calm平静 we shout.” “But, why should you shout 31 the other person is just next to you ? You can as well tell him what you have to say in a(n) 32 manner,” asked the wise man. Some disciples gave some other answers, but none 33 the other disciples. Finally the wise man explained, “When two people are angry at each other, there is a distance between their___34 . To cover that distance they must shout to be able to 35 each other. The angrier they are, the louder they will have to shout to __36 that great distance. What 37_ when two people fall in love ? They don’t shout at each other but talk softly, because their hearts are very 38 . The distance between them is either nonexistent不存在的or very small.”
The wise man 39 , “When they love each other even more, they do not_40 loudly , but only whisper私语and they get even closer to each other. Finally they 41 need not whisper. They only look at each other and that’s 42 . That’s how close people are when they love each other.”
He looked at his disciples and said, “So, when you 43 , do not let your hearts get distant. Do not say words that distance疏远each other more. 44 there will come a day when the distance is so great that you will not 45 the path toreturn. You may end up becoming enemies, for instance.”

A.roof屋顶 B.platform站台 C.bank岸 D.street

A.referred to B.attended to C.shouted to D.turned to

A.anger B.excitement C.disappointment D.surprise

A.thought B.relaxed C.listened D.waited

A.control B.disturb打扰 C.lose D.enjoy

A.as long as B.in case C.when D.unless

A.soft B.impressive C.weak D.hard

A.encouraged B.satisfied C.entertained D.bothered

A.directions B.bodies C.goals D.hearts

A.hurt B.attack C.understand D.hear

A.keep B.measure C.cover D.shorten

A.matters B.happens C.works D.succeeds

A.close B.huge C.special D.open

A.doubted B.continued C.replied D.promised

A.pass B.cry C.care D.speak

A.sometimes B.still C.even D.ever

A.nothing B.all C.one D.something

A.argue B.apologize C.criticize D.explain

A.Worse still B.Therefore C.Or else D.Besides

A.beat B.follow C.walk D.find

One weekend afternoon I toured an art museum while waiting for my husband to finish a business meeting.I was looking forward to a quiet 36 of the splendid artwork.
A young 37 viewing the paintings ahead of me 38 nonstop between themselves.I watched them a moment and decided the lady was doing all the talking.I admired the man's 39 for putting up with her 40 stream of words. 41 by their noise, I moved on.
I met them several times as I moved 42 the various rooms of art.Each time I heard her continuous flow of words, I moved away 43 .
I was standing at the counter of the museum gift shop making a 44 when the couple approached the 45 .Before they left, the man 46 into his pocket and pulled out a white object.He 47 it into a long stick and then 48 his way into the coatroom to get his wife's jacket.
"He's a 49 man, " the clerk at the counter said." Most of us would give up if we were blinded at such a young age.During his recovery, he made a promise his life wouldn't change.So, as before, he and his wife come in 50 there is a new art show."
"But what does he get out of the art?" I asked."He can't see."
"Can't see! You're 51 .He sees a lot.More than you and I do," the clerk said."His wife 52 each painting so he can see it in his head."
I learned something about patience, 53 and love that day.I saw the patience of a young wife describing paintings to a person without 54 and the courage of a'' husband who would not 55 blindness to change his life.And I saw the love shared by two people as I watched this couple walk away, their arms intertwined.

A.view B.touch C.wander D.stare

A.lady B.couple C.man D.clerk

A.yelled B.argued C.screamed D.chatted

A.attempt B.independence C.patience D.wisdom

A.constant B.vivid C.casual D.vague

A.Adopted B.Adapted C.Disturbed D.Conducted

A.from B.to C.towards D.through

A.anxiously B.quickly C.urgently D.sensibly

A.comment B.purchase C.decision D.profit

A.exit B.entrance C.front D.queue

A.plugged B.reached C.held D.bent

A.lengthened B.made C.brought D.broadened

A.led B.found C.tapped D.forced

A.generous B.rough C.smart D.brave

A.wherever B.whatever C.whenever D.whichever

A.unique B.silly C.equal D.wrong

A.decorates B.draws C.shoves D.describes

A.kindness B.pride C.courage D.enthusiasm

A.sight B.support C.expectation D.confidence

A.get B.allow C.hope D.cause

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