Although I love my life ,it hasn't been a lot of fun as I've been ill for 28 years.
Music has always been a great love of mine and ,in my 20s,when my_ _was move manageable ,I _ _ ten years as a professional singer in restaurant .playing and singing folk songs. _ _ that was years ago and times have changed . _ _ I live with my mother on a country farm .
Two years ago, I decided that I would need to love some kind of extra work to __ __ my disability pension (残疾抚恤金). _ __ I needed to sleep in afternoons. I was limited in my _ __I decided that I would consider _ _ to singing in restaurants.
My family are all musicians ,so I was _ _when I went into our local music store .I explained that I waned to sing again but using recorded karaoke music I knew that discs were very expensive and I really didn't have a lot of _ _to get started ,And _ _ you find only three to four songs out of ten on a disc that you can __ __use.
When I told the owner of the shop about my_ _ ,he gave me a long use the gave me a long ,thoughtful __ _.
“This means a lot to you , doesn't it ?"be said . “Come with me.”
He led me_ _ the crowded shop and to a bench with a large professional karaoke box on it. He placed his large hand _ _on his treasure and said . “I have 800 karaoke songs in here. You can take your _ _ and I´ll record them for you .That should get you started.”
I _ _ . Thanking him, I made a time with him to listen to all the songs and choose _ _ that I could sing . I have come full circle with his help.
His _ _still warms my heart and makes me do just that bit extra , which I have the chance.
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I believe in miracles because I’ve seen so many of them.One day,a patient was referred to me who was one hundred and two years old.“There’s a 36 in my upper jaw,”she said.“I told my own dentist it’s nothing,but he 37 I come to see you.”
Her eighty-year-old son accompanied her.He would 38 to add something,but she stopped him.She wanted to tell everything hereslf.I found a large cancer that spread over much of the 39 of her mouth.A careful examination later 40 that it was a particularly bad sort of cancer.
During her next appointment,I explained to her the 41 of the problem.She clasped my hand in hers and said,“I know you’re worried about me,but I’m just 42 .”
I thought otherwise.After considerable 43 on my part,and kindness on her part because she wanted to 44 me,she agreed to have me refer her to a cancer surgeon.She saw him,but as I expected, 45 treatment.
About six months later she retarned to my office,still energetic and 46 .
“How are you?”I asked.
“I’m just fine,honey,”she responded 47 high spirits.“When can I get started on fixing my dentures(假牙)?”
Surprised to see her at all,I answered 48 ,“Let me take a look in your mouth and we’ll see about it.”
I couldn’t believe my eyes.The cancer that had 49 nearly the entire roof of her mouth was gone—only one small area of redness 50 .
I had read of such things happening,but had 51 seen them with my own eyes.That was my first miracle.Since then I’ve seen many others,because they keep getting 52 to see.In fact,miracles are daily events for me now.And people are a miracle, 53 through them we have a chance to know ourselves and to 54 the miracles of one another.
Since my first miracle,I’ve come to understand that the time and place for a miracle is 55 we choose to find it.
A.pain B.wound C.cut D.cancer
A.declared B.promised C.insisted D.suspected
A.manage B.continue C.keep D.attempt
A.corner B.roof C.bottom D.surface
A.considered B.convinced C.confirmed D.concluded
A.possibility B.seriousness C.importance D.resolution
A.old B.sick C.glad D.fine
A.permission B.effort C.approval D.support
A.persuade B.encourage C.please D.astonish
A.received B.provided C.refused D.required
A.to B.in C.with D.by
A.worriedly B.patiently C.confusedly D.confidently
A.reached B.covered C.spread D.grown
A.left B.faded C.expanded D.remained
A.ever B.also C.never D.already
A.easier B.rarer C.happier D.closer
A.for B.so C.yet D.or
A.read B.keep C.see D.make
A.whatever B.wherever C.whoever D.whichever
Doing community service work, I spent three or four hours handing out warm dinner to the homeless out in the streets. After that I went to a 16 shelter not far from the Bay Bridge.
I was in high school and at the time my sister was too young to 17 . She wanted to help, 18 she made four or five dozen chocolate chip cookies for me to 19 and hand out to people. When getting to the homeless shelter I passed out the remaining meals. I had the containers with my 20 cookies in them and began to 21 , offering them to anyone near me.
I 22 an old gentleman and said, “Sir, would you like a cookie?” He stopped and turned around, looked at me 23in the eye and said, “What did you say? Did you call me sir?” I told him I had, and his eyes 24a little bit and he said, “No one has 25 called me sir.” He was completely taken aback.
It struck me.
I explained I had been raised that 26 color and social status, everyone deserved 27 . It made me 28 to think that just because he was homeless, no one 29 him the honor. It broke my 30 , and I couldn’t help 31 cry. I just didn’t understand 32 no one ever called him sir? I had never thought that anyone was below me because I wasn’t raised that way. Every 33 person deserves to be treated with dignity. Years later, I still carry that memory and the 34 it taught me. Sometimes, what we take for granted can 35 make a difference in someone’s life.
How have you made a difference to others? How have others made a difference to you?
A.useless B.careless C.homeless D.hopeless
A.participate B.involve C.choose D.go
A.however B.but C.yet D.so
A.bring B.fetch C.collect D.take
A.classmate’s B.schoolmate’s C.sister’s D.family’s
A.walk around B.knock around C.come around D.stand around
A.went B.came C.approached D.met
A.right B.even C.still D.just
A.watered B.cried C.tore D.dropped
A.already B.ever C.still D.yet
A.in spite B.regardless of C.concerned about D.for fear of
A.happiness B.truth C.respect D.help
A.strong-minded B.sad C.frightened D.pleased
A.handed B.afforded C.provided D.supplied
A.eyes B.mind C.opinions D.heart
A.but B.and C.until D.or
A.what B.when C.whether D.why
A.single B.poor C.ordinary D.normal
A.stories B.lessons C.experiences D.tears
A.equally B.hardly C.really D.finally
I believe that families are not only blood relatives, but sometimes people who show up and love you when no one else will.
In May 1977, I was living in a Howard Johnson’s motel off Interstate 10 in Houston. My dad and I 41 a room with two double beds and a bathroom was too 42 for a 15-year-old girl and her father. Dad’s second marriage was 43 and my stepmother had 44 us both out of the house the previous week. Dad had no45_ what to do with me. And that’s when my other family 46 .
Barbara and Roland Beach took me into their home 47 their only daughter, Su, my best friend, asked them to. I 48 with them for the next seven years.
Barb washed my skirts the same as Su’s. She 49 I had lunch money, doctors’ appointments, help with homework and nightly hugs. Barbara and Roland attended every football game where Su and I were being cheerleaders. 50 I could tell, for the Beaches there was no 51 between Su and me; I was their daughter, too.
When Su and I52 college they kept my room the same for the entire four years I attended school. Recently, Barb presented me with an insurance policy they bought when I first moved in with them and had continued to pay on for 23 years.
The Beaches knew 53 about me when they took me in – they had heard the whole story from Su. When I was seven, my mother died and from then on my father relied on other people to _54 his kids. Before I went to live with the Beaches I had believed that life was entirely 55__ and that love was shaky and untrustworthy. I had believed that the only person who would take care of me was me.
56 the Beaches, I would have become a bitter, cynical (愤世嫉俗的) woman. They gave me a(n) 57 that allowed me to grow and change. They kept me from being paralyzed by my _58 , and they gave me the confidence to open my heart.
I 59 family. For me, it wasn’t the family that was there on the day I was 60 , but the one that was there for me when I was living in a Howard Johnson’s on Interstate 10.
A.lived B.shared C.possessed D.bought
A.cheap B.noisy C.small D.limited
A.in trouble B.in sight C.in place D.in parts
A.struck B.removed C.kicked D.knocked
A.plan B.choice C.chance D.idea
A.looked after B.showed up C.turned over D.came across
A.so B.because C.until D.while
A.worked B.traveled C.lived D.learned
A.worked out B.called up C.watched out D.made sure
A.As long as B.As far as C.As soon as D.As many as
A.change B.problem C.conflict D.difference
A.set off B.left for C.entered into D.admitted into
A.all B.little C.something D.nothing
A.supply B.teach C.encourage D.raise
A.different B.unfair C.easy D.hopeful
A.Thanks to B.In spite of C.Except for D.But for
A.home B.house C.ability D.lesson
A.choice B.failure C.past D.present
A.doubt about B.call on C.center on D.believe in
A.born B.accepted C.educated D.deserted
Vincent van Gogh was not always an artist. In fact, he wanted to be a(n) __21 and was even sent to the Belgian __22 community of Borinage. He discovered that the miners there __23 deplorable(悲惨的) working conditions and poverty-level wages. Their families __24__ simply to survive. He felt concerned that the small amount of money he received from the church __25 him a moderate life-style, which, __26 , seemed to him unfair.
One cold February evening, while he watched the miners trudging(步履艰难)home, he __27 an old man staggering(蹒跚)toward him across the fields, __28 in a burlap sack for warmth. Van Gogh laid his own clothing out on the bed, __29 enough for one change, and decided to give__30 away. He gave the old man a suit of clothes and gave his overcoat to a pregnant woman whose __31 had been killed in a cave-in.
He lived on starvation rations and spent his money on __32 for the miners. When children in one family had fever, though __33 himself, he packed up his bed and took it to them.
A (an) __34 family in the community offered him free room and board. Van Gogh __35__ the offer, stating that it was the final temptation he must reject if he was to __36 serve his community of poor miners.
He believed that if he wanted them to __37 him, he must become one of them. And if they were to learn of love through him, he must love them enough to __38 with them.
He was aware of the wide chasm(鸿沟)between words and actions. He knew that our lives always __39 louder and clearer than words.
Others are “ __40 ” carefully to your actions. What are you saying to them?
A.office clerk B.coal miner C.factory worker D.church minister
A.mining B.religion C.poverty D.working
A.shared B.suffered C.complained D.enjoyed
A.tried B.managed C.struggled D.worked
A.allowed B.awarded C.protected D.provided
A.in contrast B.in return C.in brief D.as a result
A.grasped B.spotted C.felt D.met
A.enclosed B.surrounded C.wrapped D.packed
A.put on B.gave up C.brought out D.set aside
A.the other B.the rest C.the unwanted D.the unused
A.husband B.brother C.sister D.father
A.toys B.food C.medicine D.things
A.poor B.lonely C.loveless D.feverish
A.wealthy B.affected C.well-known D.nearby
A.accepted B.praised C.refused D.evaluated
A.carefully B.preparedly C.faithfully D.regrettably
A.love B.trust C.praise D.help
A.share B.connect C.fight D.live
A.strike B.talk C.speak D.cry
A.leading B.pointing C.moving D.listening
A year ago, I paid no attention to English idioms, ____36___ my teacher said again and again that it was important.
One day, I ____37____ to meet an Englishman on the road, and soon we began to talk. As I was talking about ___38_____ I was studying English, the foreigner shook his head, saying, ‘You don’t say! You don’t say!’ I was ___39___. I thought, perhaps this was not a ___40__ topic. Well, I’d ___41___ change the topic. So I said to him, “Well, shall we talk about the Great Wall? ___42___ the way, have you ever ____43___ there?’
‘Certainly. Everyone back home will ____44____ me if I leave China without seeing it. It is great!’
I said, ‘The Great Wall is one of the wonders in the world. It is a place of ____45___.’ But soon I was ___46___ again by his words, ‘___47_____!’ I couldn’t help but __48____, ‘Why did you ask me not to talk about it?’
‘Well, I ___49____ ask you to do so,’ he answered, gently surprised.
I said, ‘Didn’t you say “You don’t say”?’
Hearing this, the Englishman ___50_____ to tears. He began to ___51______, “‘You don’t say!” actually means ‘really?’ It is an ___52_____ of surprise. Perhaps you don’t pay attention to English _____53______.’
Then I knew I had made a fool of ___54___. Since then I have been more __55____ with idioms
A.though B.when C.despite D.because
A.decided B.longed C.looked forward D.happened
A.what B.when C.how D.where
A.pleased B.angry C.scared D.surprised
A.proper B.interesting C.ideal D.polite
A.to B.better C.not D.like
A.On B.In C.With D.By
A.gone B.visited C.seen D.been
A.look up to B.think highly of C.be proud of D.laugh at
A.fun B.interest C.hard work D.China
A.encouraged B.shouted C.interrupted D.disturbed
A.Really B.It was great C.You don’t say D.You are right
A.ask B.to ask C.asking D.asked
A.won’t B.don’t C.couldn’t D.didn’t
A.laughed B.cried C.moved D.came
A.explain B.shout C.prove D.say
A.experience B.expression C.explanation D.example
A.learning B.idioms C.language D.phrases
A.me B.myself C.him D.himself
A.curious B.anxious C.careful D.worried