Some time ago I discovered that one of my chairs had a broken leg. I didn’t think there would be any difficulty in getting it ____, as there are a whole lot of antique(古董的) shops near my home. ____ I left home one morning carrying the chair with me. I went into the first ____ expecting a friendly reception. I was quite ____ . The man wouldn’t even look at my chair.
The second shop, though slightly more __ _, was just the same, and the third and the fourth, so I decided that my____must be wrong.
I entered the fifth shop with a(n)_ __ in my mind. I placed the chair on the floor and said to the shopkeeper, “Would you like to__ __ a chair?”
He looked it over ____ and said, “Yes, not a bad chair. How much do you want for it, sir?” “20 pounds,” I said.
“OK,” he said, “I’ll give you 20 pounds.”
“It’s got a slightly broken leg,” I said.
“Yes, I saw that, it’s ____ .”
Everything was going according to plan and I was getting ____ . “What will you do with it?” I asked.
“Oh, it will be easy to sell ____ the repair is done.”
“I’ll buy it,” I said.
“What do you mean? You’ve just ____ it to me,” he said.
“Yes, I know but I’ve ____ my mind. I am sorry. I’ll give you 27 pounds for it.”
“You must be ____ ,” he said. Then, ____ the penny dropped. “I know what you want. You want me to repair your chair.”
“You’re ____ ,” I said. “And what would you have done if I had walked in and said, ‘Would you mend this chair for me?’
“I wouldn’t have ____ to do it,” he said. “We don’t do repairs, not enough money in it and too much ____ . But I’ll mend this for you, shall we say for five pounds?”
He was a very nice man and was greatly ____ by the whole thing.
A.sold B.returned C.cleaned D.repaired
A.And B.Yet C.Still D.So
A.club B.shop C.restaurant D.station
A.confident B.polite C.careless D.wrong
A.eager B.different C.polite D.strange
A.approach B.appearance C.decision D.manners
A.question B.plan C.belief D.excuse
A.check B.buy C.repair D.see
A.carefully B.hurriedly C.unhappily D.excitedly
A.nothing B.everything C.anything D.something
A.worried B.patient C.confused D.excited
A.since B.once C.unless D.while
A.lent B.sent C.sold D.returned
A.spoken B.changed C.settled D.lost
A.anxious B.disappointed C.sick D.crazy
A.constantly B.eventually C.suddenly D.naturally
A.lucky B.wrong C.right D.wise
A.expected B.agreed C.managed D.refused
A.loss B.damage C.trouble D.pressure
A.amused B.disturbed C.inspired D.warne
My name is Jane Eyre and my parents died when I was a baby. For ten years I lived a ___1___ life with my aunt and cousins who treated me unfairly. My cousins teased me and my aunt never showed me any ___2___. The only person who cared about me was the maid, Bessie. One day my cousin John 3me: “You should go and beg, not live with rich folks like us!” After fighting with him I was locked in a room, where I ___4___ for hours crying.
Things ___5___ the same until a tall gentleman called Mr Brockehurst came to visit. My aunt told me that I was going to a school ___6___ by the gentleman. “Train her to be useful and humble,” said Aunt. Two days later I ___7___ my home.
At first my ___8___ at Lowood School was easy. The food was bad and I was often cold but I made ___9___ and enjoyed studying. But after an illness killed several students, new owners ___10___ the school and life improved. Six years later I ___11___ a teacher and was very happy. But eventually(最后) I felt that I should explore more of the world and found a job as a private teacher in a ___12___.
Before I left Lowood, I was ___13___ by Bessie, who told me that seven years ago my father’s brother had come ___14___ me but left again to go abroad. “He looked like quite a gentleman,” said Bessie. I wondered if he would ever look for me again.
My new life ___15___ at Thornfield Hall, a large country house, ___16___ a little girl called Adele. She was the adopted(被收养的) daughter of the owner of the house, Mr Rochester. He ___17___ stayed at Thornfield and ___18___ my time was mainly spent with Adele and the servants. My life was quite happy now although there was something ___19___ about my new home. Often I heard odd(奇怪的) sounds ___20___ from the top floor of the house.
1. A. happy B. longC. sadD. comfortable
2. A. food B. love C. methodD. schooling
3. A. shouted atB. cried overC. found out D. talked with
4. A. lived B. stayedC. studied D. beat
5. A. appeared B. worked C. seemedD. remained
6. A. built B. designedC. ownedD. opened
7. A. builtB. reachedC. left D. sold
8. A. food B. life C. bookD. study
9. A. noise B. friendsC. mistakesD. faces
10. A. took over B. took upC. took offD. took away
11. A. turned B. met C. becameD. found
12. A. school B. homeC. libraryD. country
13. A. taught B. visitedC. broughtD. required
14. A. looking forB. looking afterC. looking intoD. looking at
15. A. stopped B. continuedC. startedD. remained
16. A. showing B. teachingC. searchingD. wanting
17. A. often B. hardlyC. happilyD. quietly
18. A. yet B. so C. stillD. though
19. A. interestingB. goodC. instructiveD. strange
20. A. come B. dropC. fallD. Go
Dorothy Brown was very happy as she sat in the theatre listening to the music. Today her little daughter Lauren was giving her ___1___ concert. She had been waiting for this ___2___ for years and years. “Now it is here at last,” she thought. “How beautiful her ___3___ is.”
The song made her ___4___ to the days when she was Lauren’s ___5___. As a young ___6___, Dorothy wanted to be a concert singer. She studied ___7___ in France, Italy and in the United States. “You can become a fine ___8___ in the future,” her teachers told her. “But you must be ___9___ to study hard and work for many years. There will be ___10___ time for anything but music in your life.”
Dorothy was ___11___ at that time and she was ___12___ that music was all she wanted or needed to ___13___ her life. For almost a year Dorothy ___14___ of nothing else. Then she ___15___ David, a young engineer travelling Europe. They soon fell in ___16___. David asked her to be his ___17___. Dorothy also wanted to marry David. But she loved ___18___, too. She didn’t know what to do. David was against her being a singer. He said, “If you want to be a singer, you must forget about getting married. You can’t ___19___ do both.” Thus her days were gone and would never return.
Now Lauren became a singer instead of her, which was her ___20___.
1. A. sorry B. successful C. firstD. wonderful
2. A. dance B. moment C. showD. party
3. A. voice B. face C. dressD. life
4. A. think of B. bring back C. go back D. come back
5. A. ageB. friend C. mother D. teacher
6. A. musician B. pop star C. lady D. girl
7. A. French B. music C. piano D. dance
8. A. actress B. student C. singerD. dancer
9. A. prepared B. learning C. drivenD. waiting
10. A. some B. any C. noD. enough
11. A. eight B. eighteen C. eightyD. eighty-eight
12. A. lucky B. sure C. afraidD. fond
13. A. fill B. live C. leadD. take
14. A. heardB. knew C. talkedD. thought
15. A. saw off B. learned fromC. heard ofD. met with
16. A. love B. feeling C. musicD. touch
17. A. assistantB. teacher C. wifeD. student
18. A. him B. engineeringC. herselfD. music
19. A. certainly B. possibly C. onlyD. mainly
20. A. thoughtB. hope C. purpose D. will
How to Release Anger the Right Way
Anger is a feeling that many of us know all too well. Some of us experience it daily, 1 others hold on to it for years at a time. As you likely know, angry is not a healthy 2 . Over time it can become self-destructive, 3 relationships and even your health.
This is not to say that anger is always a 4 thing—anger is a natural part of living;it is a5 that something is wrong. If anger is not a 6 normal and natural human emotion, it is 7 important to learn and understand how to 8 anger the right way.
You can release anger the right or the wrong way. 9whether you have an anger problem yourself or not, it is 10 for everyone to understand what the right 11 of releasing anger are. Transforming anger is a powerful 12 to take that will create positive changes in our relationships. One of the best ways to 13 anger is to give yourself the 14to express anger. In fact, it is quite 15 to express your anger as long as you do it 16 .
Remember that anger management 17both on mental and physical effort. Although mental therapy alone will help you 18 for releasing your anger, it can only take you so far. The same 19 for exercise too. However, if you 20both mental therapy and exercising, you will then have 21 to an unbelievable positive solution. Do a particular physical activity 22the mental intention of releasing your anger.
It might be 23but the most important things of all to 24 is to never hurt others when you release your anger. Make sure you give yourself the 25 to express safely your anger, without hurting anyone else .
1.A.when B.while C.but D.However
2.A.life B.feeling C.happiness D.emotion
3.A.reflecting B.ruining C.limiting D.satisfying
4.A.bad B.good C.ordinary D.especial
5.A.appearance B.mark C.signal D.gesture
6.A.unbelievable B.completely C.incompletely D.carefully
7.A.whatever B.how C.much D.however
8.A.release B.relax C.obsorb D.influence
9.A.Instead of B.Except for C.Regardless of D.As a consequence of
10.A.important B.common C.hard D.easy
11.A.answers B.messages C.ways D.actions
12.A.step B.right C.attitude D.chance
13.A.shift B.change C.transfer D.transform
14.A.permission B.application C.affection D.admission
15.A.painful B.happy C.healthy D.successful
16.A.confidently B.correctly C.gradually D.separately
17.A.requires B.relies C.lacks D.decline
18.A.attentively B.specially C.absolutely D.tremendously
19.A.arranges B.reaches C.prepares D.applies
20.A.control B.join C.separate D.combine
21.A.access B.approach C.admission D.contact
22.A.in conflict with B.rather than C.along with D.in place of
23.A.simple B.obvious C.unrealistic D.appropriate
24.A.answer B.remember C.repeat D.listen
25.A.opportunity B.necessity C.probability D.reality
In modern society there is a great deal of argument about competition. Some 36 it highly, believing that it is 37 for social progress and prosperity. Others say that 38is bad, that it sets one person against another; that it 39 unfriendly relationship between people.
I have taught many children who held the 40 that their self-worth relied on how well they 41 at tennis and other skills. For them, playing well and winning are often life-and –death affairs. In their single-minded 42of success, the development of many other human qualities is 43 forgotten.
44 , while some seem to be lost in the desire to succeed, others take a(n) 45attitude. In a culture valuing only the winner and 46 to the ordinary players, they strongly 47 competition. They seem to seek failure by not trying to win or 48success. By not trying, they always have a(n) 49:“I may have lost, but it doesn’t matter 50 I really didn’t try.” 51 , this belief is the same as 52of the true competitors trying to prove themselves. Both are based on the 53 belief that one’s self-respect relies on how well one performs in 54 with others. Both are afraid of not being valued. Only as this basic and often troublesome fear begins to dissolve(缓解) 55 a new meaning in competition.
36.A.benefit B.influences C.value D.impress
37.A.cheerful B.meaningful C.comfortable D.responsible
38.A.competition B.ability C.knowledge D.challenge
39.A.runs into B.leads to C.comes from D.begins with
40.A.promise B.belief C.dream D.task
41.A.planned B.performed C.delivered D.practiced
42.A.pursuit B.memory C.behalf D.search
43.A.shyly B.cheerfully C.sadly D.faithfully
44.A.Therefore B.Meanwhile C.However D.Afterwards
45.A.proper B.suitable C.confident D.opposite
46.A.paying no attention B.pays less attention C.paid more attention D.pays no attention
47.A.excuse B.blame C.charge D.trust
48.A.enjoy B.apply C.receive D.achieve
49.A.opinion B.explanation C.excuse D.reason
50.A.unless B.so C.while D.because
51.A.Firmly B.Naturally C.Unfortunately D.Clearly
52.A.that B.one C.it D.this
53.A.mistaken B.different C.single D.common
54.A.consequence B.comparison C.connection D.common
55.A.we can discover B.can we discover C.can discover D.we discover
Once there lived a rich merchant(商人) and a poor shoemaker in the same house. The merchant occupied the second floor, 36the shoemaker lived and worked in a small room on the first floor. The shoemaker was one of the 37 persons on earth. He worked from morning till night, singing merrily. His heart was filled with 38 , whenever he saw the boots and shoes 39. Now the merchant upstairs was so rich that he 40 knew how much wealth he had. He was always 41 over his gold and silver coins far into the night. Even in bed his uneasiness(不安) about his riches kept him 42. When at last he had been asleep for an hour or two, up came the song of the happy shoemaker, who was an 43 riser. It continued all day and was a (n) 44 to the merchant. Day by day the merchant grew more and more tired through want of 45. He asked a wise friend of his how he could put an 46 to the shoemaker’s song. “Well, if I were you, I would give the shoemaker a hundred pounds,” answered his friend. “You are rich enough to do that, I suppose. Ask for nothing in 47 . Simply give the money.” The merchant 48the advice.
When the shoemaker 49the bag that had been sent by the merchant, he was 50 to find shining coins. “I must hide this from the eyes of my neighbors. If they see it, they will think that I have stolen it,” he thought. “I will 51 it away even from my wife.” So he hid the bag of money under the floor. From then on he 52his neighbors as much as he could. His wife who had been the best 53 to him, became troublesome. Now his mind was too much set on the money bag to 54 to his work with diligence(勤劳). He could not sing merrily now. 55he thought of the money bag, he became uneasy and unhappy.
36.A.for B.therefore C.but D.however
37.A.poorest B.happiest C.richest D.shortest
38.A.smile B.sorrow C.sadness D.joy
39.A.being repaired B.repair C.to repair D.to be repaired
40.A.always B.completely C.hardly D.entirely
41.A.hiding B.counting C.calculating D.figuring
42.A.awake B.nervous C.frightened D.asleep
43.A.early B.happy C.noisy D.late
44.A.threat B.matter C.trouble D.alarm
45.A.sympathy B.understanding C.sleep D.treatment
46.A.end B.notice C.information D.stop
47.A.trouble B.need C.turn D.return
48.A.refused B.agreed C.asked D.followed
49.A.stole B.opened C.received D.closed/carried
50.A.excited B.amazed C.ashamedD.disappointed
51.A.throw B.keep C.give D.put
52.A.avoided B.thanked C.helped D.attract
53.A.companion B.fellow C.shoemaker D.merchant
54.A.tend B.turn C.attend D.come
55.A.Wherever B.Whatever C.Whenever D.However