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My family moved from Taiwan to a small town in central Georgia, where my dad got a visa for his family and a job. I had just learned English, and from what little I could gather from my classmates, Santa Claus would come down one’s chimney and put toys in one’s stocking on Christmas Eve! What a great country, I thought. After I looked up “stocking” in my Chinese-English dictionary, I knew what I had to do.
On that fateful night, after everyone went to bed, I took my longest, cleanest knee sock and attached it to a nail already on the mantel(壁炉). Obviously, the previous owners of this house were no strangers to this Santa character.
I woke up before everyone else on Christmas Day and ran to the fireplace. To make a sob story short, I was hit with the reality of an empty sock and the biggest lie ever told. I burst into tears, quickly took down the sock, and stuffed it in the back of a drawer. Santa was dead.
Every December since then, the topic of Christmas memories would unavoidably come up, and I would amuse my friends with my poor-little-me story. I had to make it as funny as possible, or else I would cry.
How could I know that Santa was just late? Nine years ago, on Christmas Eve, an older man with a white beard and a red cap knocked on my front door. He said, “I’ve been looking for you for twenty-five years.” He handed me a bulging red stocking, winked, and left. On top of the stocking was a card. It read: “For Becky—I may have missed you in the second grade, but you’ve always lived in my heart. Santa.”
Through tear-blurred eyes, I recognized the handwriting of Jill, a friend I had met just two months before. I later discovered that the older man was her father. Jill had seen the hurt little girl underneath the thirty-something woman and decided to do something about it.
So now I believe that Santa is real. I don’t mean the twinkle-eyed character of children’s mythology or the creation of American holiday marketers. Those Santas annoy and sadden me. I believe in the Santa Claus that live inside good and thoughtful people. This Santa does not return to the North Pole after a crazy delivery but lives each day purposefully, really listens to friends, and then plans deliberate acts of kindness.
What does the underlined part “what I had to do” in Paragraph 1 refer to?

A.Waiting for Santa Claus.
B.Putting a stocking on the mantel.
C.Asking for gifts from her parents.
D.Looking up “stocking” in the dictionary

It can be inferred from the passage that the author’s parents ________.

A.didn’t love their child at all
B.didn’t know the previous owners of the house
C.didn’t know much about Christmas tradition
D.didn’t have enough money to buy the author Christmas presents

When the author told her friends about the story, she felt ________ in her heart.

A.proud B.amusing C.hate D.regret

The author of the passage is probably ________.

A.a teenager B.a primary school student
C.a middle-aged woman D.a native American
科目 英语   题型 阅读理解   难度 中等
知识点: 日常生活类阅读
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Jane Austen, a famous English writer, was born at Steventon, Hampshire, on December 16,1775, and died on July 18, 1817. She began writing early in life, although the prejudices of her times forced her to have her books published anonymously ( 匿名 ).
But Jane Austen is perhaps the best known and best loved of Bath's many famous local people and visitors. She paid two long visits here during the last five years of the eighteenth century and from 1801 to 1806, Bath was her home. Her deep knowledge of the city is fully seen in two of her novels, Northanger Abbey and Persuasion, which are largely set in Bath. The city is still very much as Jane Austen knew it, keeping in its streets and public buildings the well-ordered world that she described so well in her novels. Now the pleasure of learning Jane Austen's Bath can be enhanced (增强)by visiting the Jane Austen Centre in Gay Street. Here, in a Georgian town house in the heart of the city, you can find out more about Bath in Jane Austen's time and the importance of Bath in her life and work.
The Centre has been set up with the help and guidance of members of the Jane Austen Society. After your visit to the Centre, you can look round the attractive shop, which offers a huge collection of Jane Austen related books, cards and many specially designed gifts. Jane Austen quizzes are offered to keep the children busy.
You can also have walking tours of Jane Austen's Bath, which is a great way to find out more about Jane Austen and discover the wonderful Georgian city of Bath. The tour lasts about one and a half hours. The experienced guides will take you to the places where Jane lived, walked and shopped.
Jane Austen paid two long visits to Bath________.

A.in her early twenties B.in her early teens
C.in her late twenties D.in her late teens

What can we learn about Bath from the passage?

A.Bath has greatly changed since Jane Austen's death.
B.The city has changed as much as Jane Austen knew it.
C.Bath remains almost the same as in Jane Austen's time.
D.No changes have taken place in Bath since Jane Austen's time.

The author writes this passage in order to________.

A.attract readers to visit the city of Bath
B.ask readers to buy Austen's books
C.tell readers about Jane Austen's experience
D.give a brief introduction to the Jane Austen Society

It takes you about one and a half hours________.

A.to get to the Jane Austen Centre in Gay Street
B.to buy Jane Austen related books, cards and gifts
C.to find a guide to take you to the Centre
D.to look around the city of Bath on foot

Every year more people recognize that it is wrong to kill wildlife for “sport.” Progress in this direction is slow because shooting is not a sport for watching, and only those few who take part realize the cruelty and destruction.
The number of gunners, however, grows rapidly. Children too young to develop proper judgments through independent thought are led along way away by their gunning parents. They are subjected to advertisements of gun producers who describe shooting as good for their health and guncarrying as a way of putting redder blood in the veins (血管). They are persuaded by gunner magazines with stories honoring the chase and the kill. In school they view motion pictures which are supposedly meant to teach them how to deal with arms safely but which are actually designed to stimulate (刺激) a desire to own a gun. Wildlife is disappearing because of shooting and because of the loss of wildland habitat (栖息地). Habitat loss will continue with our increasing population, but can we slow the loss of wildlife caused by shooting? There doesn't seem to be any chance if the serious condition of our birds is not improved.
Wildlife belongs to everyone and not to the gunners alone. Although most people do not shoot, they seem to forgive shooting for sport because they know little or nothing about it. The only answer, then, is to bring the truth about sport shooting to the great majority of people.
Now, it is time to realize that animals have the same right to life as we do and that there is nothing fair or right about a person with a gun shooting the harmless and beautiful creatures. The gunners like to describe what they do as character-building, but we know that to wound an animal and watch it go through the agony of dying can make nobody happy. If, as they would have you believe, gun-carrying and killing improve human-character, then perhaps we should encourage war.
According to the text, most people do not seem to be against hunting because___________.

A.they have little knowledge of it B.it helps to build human character
C.it is too costly to stop killing wildlife D.they want to keep wildlife under control

The underlined word "agony" in the last paragraph probably means______________.

A.form B.Condition C.pain D.sadness

According to the text, the films children watch at school actually__________.

A.teach them how to deal with guns safely B.praise hunting as character-building
C.describe hunting as an exercise D.encourage them to have guns of their own

It can be inferred from the text that the author seems to_____________.

A.blame the majority of people B.worry about the existence of wildlife
C.be in favour of war D.be in support of character-building

Whoever has made a voyage up the Hudson River must remember the Catskill Mountains. They are a branch of the great Appalachian family, and can be seen to the west rising up to a noble height and towering over the surrounding country. When the weather is fair and settled, they are clothed in blue and purple, and print their beautiful shapes on the clear evening sky, but sometimes when it is cloudless, gray steam gathers around the top of the mountains which, in the last rays of the setting sun, will shine and light up like a crown of glory (华丽的皇冠).
At the foot of these mountains, a traveler may see light smoke going up from a village.
In that village, and in one of the houses (which, to tell the exact truth, was sadly time-worn and weather-beaten), there lived many years ago, a simple, good-natured fellow by the name of Rip Van Winkle.
Rip's great weakness was a natural dislike of all kinds of money-making labor. It could not be from lack of diligence (勤劳), for he could sit all day on a wet rock and fish without saying a word, even though he was not encouraged by a single bite. He would carry a gun on his shoulder for hours, walking through woods and fields to shoot a few birds or squirrels. He would never refuse to help a neighbor, even in the roughest work. The women of the village, too, used to employ him to do such little jobs as their less helpful husbands would not do for them. In a word, Rip was ready to attend to everybody's business but his own.
If left to himself, he would have whistled ( 吹口哨) life away in perfect satisfaction; but his wife was always mad at him for his idleness (懒散). Morning, noon, and night, her tongue was endlessly going, so that he was forced to escape to the outside of the house -- the only side which, in truth, belongs to a henpecked husband.
Which of the following best describes the Catskill Mountains?

A.They are on the west of the Hudson River.
B.They are very high and beautiful in this area.
C.They can be seen from the Appalachian family.
D.They gather beautiful clouds in blue and purple.

The hero of the story is probably_____________.

A.hard-working and likes all kinds of work
B.idle and hates all kinds of jobs
C.simple, idle but very dutiful
D.gentle, helpful but a little idle

The underlined words "henpecked husband" in the last paragraph probably means a man who

A.likes hunting B.is afraid of hens
C.loves his wife D.is afraid of his wife

What would be the best title for the text?

A.Catskill Mountains. B.A Mountain Village.
C.Rip Van Winkle. D.A Dutiful Husband.

THE BEST SHOPPING IN SYDNEY
Sydney is one of the world's biggest cities
and has something for everyone when it
comes to shopping. You will find excellent
Australian products alongside the best that
the world has to offer. At the bottom of
Sydney Tower, you can shop in 160 of
Sydney's favorite stores including 16
jewellery stores and many gift and fashion
shops. It's all at Westfield Centrepoint.
Tel: 9231 9300.
SOVEREIGN HILL
This prize-winning living museum is where Australia's history comes alive! Visit daily
or stay for the night and experience life of
the Gold Rush days. A wonderful nightly
sound and light show, " Blood on the
Southern Cross" tells the story of the
famous Eureka Uprising. Enjoy shopping
along with real life character and
entertainment. 4-star hotel and breakfast.
Tel: 5331 1944
ANCHORAGE RESTAURANT
Come and enjoy our delicious Cantonese
seafood right on the water's edge in the
historic fishing port of Williamstown with
views of the city centre across Port Phillip
Bay.
Open 7 days a week
Lunch: Sunday to Friday
11:00 am--2:00 pm
Dinner: Monday to Saturday
5:00pm.--10: 30pm.
Tel: 9397 6270 or 9397 7799
COOK'S COTTAGE
Built by James and Grace Cook, parents of
Captain James Cook, Cook's Cottage
stands proud in the Fitzroy Gardens as a
reminder of life in the eighteenth century,
and as a celebration and commemoration of
the life and travels of Captain James
Cook.
Open 9:00 am —5:00 pm daily, and until
5,: 30 pm during the summer.
Information: 9419 4677.

Where can you spend the night in a tour?

A.Cook's Cottage. B.Westfield Centrepoint.
C.Sydney Tower: D.Sovereign Hill.

What is the time that Cook's Cottage is open on Saturday in the summer?

A.11:00 am--2:00 pm. B.5:00 pm--10:30 pm.
C.9:00 am--5:30 pm. D.9:00 am--5:00 pm.

The Anchorage Restaurant is_______________________.

A.in Williamstown B.in the centre of the city
C.in Anchorage D.in a Cantonese fishing port

If you want to buy the best products in Australia, you may call_____________.

A.9397 6270 B.9231 9300 C. 5331 1944 D. 9419 4677

Deserts are found where there is little rainfall or where rain for a whole year falls in only a few weeks' time. Ten inches of rain may be enough for many plants to survive (存活)if the rain is
spread throughout the year, If it falls, within one or two months and the rest of the year is dry, those plants may die and a desert may form.
Sand begins as tiny pieces of rock that get smaller and smaller as wind and weather wear them down. Sand dunes (沙丘) are formed as winds move the sand across the desert. Bit by bit, the
dunes grow over the years, always moving with the winds and changing the shape. Most of them are only a few feet tall, but they can grow to be several hundred feet high.
There is, however, much more to a desert than sand. In the deserts of the southwestern United States, cliffs (悬崖) and deep valleys were formed from thick mud that once lay beneath a sea more than millions of years ago. Over the centuries, the water dried up. Wind, sand , rain, heat and cold all wore away at the remaining rocks. The faces of the desert mountains are always changing –-very, very slowly ---as these forces of nature continue to work on the rock.
Most deserts have a surprising variety of life. There are plants, animals and insects that :have adapted to life in the desert. During the heat of the day, a visitor may see very few signs of living things, but as the air begins to cool in the evening, the desert comes to life. As the sun begins to rise again in the sky, the desert once again becomes quiet and lonely.
Many plants may survive in deserts when__________________.

A.the rain is spread out in a year B.the rain falls only in a few weeks
C.there is little rain in a year D.it is dry all the year round

Sand dunes are formed when___________________.

A.sand piles up gradually B.there is plenty of rain in a year
C.the sea has dried up over the years D.pieces of rock get smaller

The underlined sentence in the third paragraph probably means that in a desert there is____________.

A.too much sand B.more sand than before
C.nothing except sand D.something else besides sand

It can be learned from the text that in a desert____________.

A.there is no rainfall throughout the year B.life exists in rough conditions
C.all sand dunes are a few feet high D.rocks are worn away only by wind and heat

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