During my elementary school years, I used to compare my mom with my best friend Tiffany’s mom.
Tiffany’s mom always gave her lots of money to buy the most fashionable clothes and favorite food. Her mom allowed her to do anything she liked. I really admired Tiffany. My mom didn’t give me much pocket money and she always told me that I should behave myself. I was annoyed with her.
Whenever I didn’t get what I wanted, I would complain to my mom, Tiffany’s mom would give her that! I wish she were my mom. Every time, my mom would calmly say “Poor Tiffany”. I couldn’t understand her. “She shouldn’t be feeling sorry for Tiffany!” I thought. “She should be feeling sorry for me.”
One day, I couldn’t help saying to Mom, “Poor Tiffany? Lucky Tiffany! She gets everything she wants! Why do you feel sorry for her?” I burst out crying.
My mom sat down next to me and said softly. “Yes, I do feel sorry for her. I have been teaching you a lesson that she will never be taught.”
I looked up at her. “What are you talking about?”
Mom said with care, “One day she will really want something. Maybe she’ll find out that she can’t have it. Her mother won’t always be around to give her money, and what’s more, money can’t buy everything.”
It took some time, but I eventually understood my mom’s words. Now I am a happy and successful woman.
【小題1】During the author’s elementary school years, she __________.
A.wished that her mom were as good as Tiffany’s |
B.went to school with Tiffany every day |
C.usually compared her lesson with Tiffany’s |
D.sometimes gave lots of money to Tiffany |
A.She felt sorry for Tiffany because Tiffany was poor. |
B.She wanted to tell a lie to comfort the author. |
C.She thought that Tiffany was spoiled by her mother. |
D.She told the author this and wanted her to help Tiffany. |
A.She was strict and taught the author to be independent. |
B.She cared for other people’s children more than her own. |
C.She thought that life lessons were as important as money. |
D.She was so poor that she couldn’t give the author much money. |
A.The author was quite annoyed with her mother in the past. |
B.The author’s mother felt sorry for Tiffany. |
C.Tiffany’s mother took the author’s mother’s advice. |
D.The author is thankful to her mother now. |
【小題1】A
【小題2】C
【小題3】A
【小題4】D
解析試題分析:作者由反感母親對自己嚴(yán)格對待到慢慢接受并珍視的故事
【小題1】細節(jié)題:從文章第一段的句子:I used to compare my mom with my best friend Tiffany’s mom.
可知在作者小學(xué)的時候,她希望自己的媽媽能和Tiffany 的媽媽一樣好,選A
【小題2】細節(jié)題:從文章倒數(shù)第三段的句子; One day she will really want something. Maybe she’ll find out that she can’t have it. Her mother won’t always be around to give her money,可知作者的媽媽總是說“Poor Tiffany”,因為她認(rèn)為Tiffany被她媽媽寵壞了,選C
【小題3】推理題:從文章第二段的句子:My mom didn’t give me much pocket money and she always told me that I should behave myself. 和倒數(shù)第二段的句子;可知作者的媽媽很嚴(yán)格,教孩子要獨立,選A
【小題4】推理題:從文章最后一段的句子:It took some time, but I eventually understood my mom’s words. Now I am a happy and successful woman. 可知作者現(xiàn)在很感激媽媽,選D
考點:考查人生百味類短文
科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Recently I spoke to some of my students about what they wanted to do after they graduated, and what kind of job prospects they thought they had.
Given that I teach students who are training to be doctors, I was surprised to find that most thought that they would not be able to get the jobs they wanted without “outside help”. “What kind of help is that?” I asked, expecting them to tell me that they would need a relative or family friend to help them out.
“Surgery(外科手術(shù))”, one replied. I was pretty alarmed by that response. It seems that the graduates of today are increasingly willing to go under the knife to get ahead of others when it comes to getting a job. One girl told me that she was considering surgery to increase her height. “They break your legs, put in special extending screws, and slowly expand the gap between the two ends of the bone as it regrows, you can get at least 5cm taller!”
At that point, I was shocked. I am short, I can’t deny that, but I don’t think I would put myself through months of agony(痛苦) just to be a few centimeters taller. I don’t even bother to wear shoes with thick soles, as I’m not trying to hide the fact that I am just not tall!
It seems to me that there is a trend toward wanting “perfection”, and that is an ideal that just does not exist in reality.
No one is born perfect, yet magazines, TV shows and movies present images of thin, tall, beautiful people as being the norm. Advertisements for slimming aids, beauty treatments and cosmetic surgery clinics fill the pages of newspapers, further creating an idea that “perfection” is a requirement, and that it must be purchased, no matter what the cost. In my opinion, skills, rather than appearance, should determine how successful a person is in his chosen career.
【小題1】We can know from the passage that the author works as ______.
A.a(chǎn) doctor | B.a(chǎn) model | C.a(chǎn) teacher | D.a(chǎn) reporter |
A.marry a better man or woman |
B.become a model |
C.get an advantage over others in job-hunt |
D.a(chǎn)ttract more admirers |
A.everyone should pursue perfection, whatever the cost is |
B.it’s right for graduates to ask for others to help them out in hunting for jobs |
C.media are to blame for misleading young people in their seeking for surgery |
D.it is one’s appearance instead of skills that really matters in one’s career |
A.He hates to be called a short man. |
B.He tries to increase his height through surgery. |
C.He always wears shoes with thick soles to hide the fact. |
D.He just accepts it as it is |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
One of my fondest memories as a child is going by the river and sitting idly on the bank. There I would enjoy the peace and quiet, watch the water rush downstream and listen to the singing of birds and the rustling of leaves in the trees. I would also watch the bamboo trees bend under pressure from the wind and watch them return gracefully to their original position after the wind had died down.
When I think about the bamboo trees’ ability to bounce back or return to its original position, the word “resilience” comes to my mind. When used in reference to a person, this word means the ability to readily recover from shock, depression or any other negative situation that stretches the limits of a person’s emotions.
Have you ever felt like you are about to lose control of your emotions? Have you ever felt like you are at your breaking point? Thankfully, you have survived the experience to live to talk about it.
During the experience you probably felt a mix of emotions that threatened your health.You felt emotionally
tired, mentally exhausted and you most likely bored unpleasant physical symptoms.
Life is a mixture of good times and bad times, happy moments and unhappy moments. The next time you are experiencing one of those bad times or unhappy moments that take you close to your breaking point, bend, but don’t break. Try your best not to let the situation get the best of you.
A measure of hope will take you through the unpleasant moments. Will hope for a better tomorrow or a better situation, things may not be as bad as they seem to be. The unpleasant moment may be easier to deal with if the end result is worth having.
If the situation gets tough and you are at your breaking point, show resilience. Like the bamboo trees, bend, but don’t break!
【小題1】What does the underlined word “resilience” mean in Paragraph 2?
A.The ability to overcome any difficulty. |
B.The quality of hoping for a better tomorrow. |
C.The quality of being brave at the breaking point. |
D.The ability to recover easily and quickly from unpleasant or damaging events. |
A.Life is like a bamboo tree that never breaks. |
B.Whatever difficulties we may meet with in our life, we can bend, but can never break. |
C.Life is a mixture of good times and bad times, happy moments and unhappy moments. |
D.If you get over your breaking point, you can survive to live longer and more happily than others. |
A.The author was an idle child when he was living near the river. |
B.We should try our best not to let our bad times get the best of us. |
C.Our being likely to lose control of our emotions is common in our life. |
D.We should always believe things may not be as bad as they seem to be. |
A.Bend, but don’t break. | B. My wonderful childhood. |
C.The bamboo trees. | D. Love the bamboo trees and your life. |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
A person, like a commodity, needs packaging. But going too far is absolutely undesirable. A little exaggeration(夸張) will do no harm when it shows the person’s unique qualities to their advantages. To show personal attractiveness in a casual and natural way, it is important for one to have a clear knowledge of oneself. A skilled packager knows how to add art to nature without any signs of embellishment so that the person so packaged is not a commodity, but a human being, lively and lovely.
A young person, especially a female, shining with beauty and full of life, has all the favor granted. Youth however, comes and goes in a flash. Packaging for the middle-aged is primarily to hide the marks made by years. If you still enjoy life enough to keep self-confidence and work at pioneering work, you are unique in your natural qualities, and your attractiveness and grace will remain. Elderly people are beautiful if their river of life has been, through plains, mountains and jungles, running its course as it should. You have really lived your life, which now arrives at a self - satisfied stage of quietness and calmness with no interest in fame or wealth. There is no need to make use of hair dyeing. The snow-capped mountain itself is a beautiful scene of fairyland. Let your looks change from young to old in step with the natural ageing process so as to keep in harmony with nature, for harmony itself is beauty, while the other way round will only end in unpleasantness. To be in the company of the elderly is like reading a thick book of good edition, which attracts one so much that one is unwilling to part with it. As long as one finds where one stands, one knows how to package oneself, just as a commodity sets up its brand by the right packaging.
【小題1】The underlined word in the first paragraph is closest to the word ______ in meaning.
A.decoration | B.clarification | C.movement | D.identification |
A.people should be packaged at all ages |
B.people should be packaged in a special way |
C.elderly people also care about packaging |
D.proper packaging makes people attractive |
A.hardly exists | B.is the strongest |
C.comes from the inside | D.comes from the appearance |
A.dye your hair | B.make up at a young age |
C.follow the ageing process | D.give up fame and wealth |
A.a(chǎn)re usually packaged like a finely-made book |
B.experience a lot and have rich knowledge of life |
C.do a lot of traveling and can give you much information |
D.enjoy reading thick books about beautiful nature and fairyland |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
A driver stopped his car on a street side to have a rest. As he lay down in the seat and closed his eyes, a person came up and knocked at the window to ask the time. The driver opened his eyes and looked at his watch: “It’s 8:05,” he said. Then he went to sleep again. But soon he was waken up again because a second person was knocking at the window. “Sir, do you know the time?” he asked. The driver looked at his watch again, and told him it was half past eight.
In this way, the driver thought he could not have a good rest, so he wrote a short note and stuck it on the window for all to see. It said, “I don’t know the time.”
Again, he lay down in the seat for his sleep. A few minutes later, a third person came and began to knock at the window, “Hey, sir,” he said, “It’s a quarter to nine.”
【小題1】Where did the driver sleep?
A.At the window | B.In the street road |
C.In his car | D.In his room. |
A.40 minutes | B.25 minutes |
C.50 minutes | D.70 minutes |
A.Because he didn’t know the time |
B.Because he didn’t want anybody to trouble him |
C.Because he needed somebody to wake him up. |
D.Because he wanted somebody to tell him the time |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
When Joan gave birth to the first boy in her family in three generations, she and her husband were overjoyed. So were her parents. Joan expected her elder sister, Sally, to be just as delighted as them. Joan had always admired Sally--the beauty and the star of the family--and felt happy about her achievements.
But since the baby's arrival, the sisters have become distant. Joan feels hurt for Sally seems completely uninterested in her baby. Sally, who has no children, claims that her younger sister "acts as if no one ever had a baby before."
Neither Sally nor Joan understands that the real cause of the current coldness is that their family roles have suddenly changed to the opposite. Finally Joan seems to be better than her elder sister--and Sally doesn't like it! Their distance may be temporary, but it shows that childhood competition don't fade easily as ages grow. It can remain powerful in relationships throughout life.
In a study of the University of Cincinnati, 65 men and women between ages 25 and 93 were asked how they felt about their brothers and sisters. Nearly 75 percent admitted having hidden competitive feelings. In a few cases, these emotions were so strong as to have affected their entire lives.
Many adult brothers and sisters are close, supportive--yet still tend to compete. Two brothers I know turn into killers when on opposite sides of a tennis net. Off the court, they are the best of friends. My own younger sister can't wait to tell me when I've put on weight. However, she's a terrible cook and that pleases me; I tease her when she comes to dinner. Happily, despite these small failings, we have been an important resource for each other.
In between the very competitive and the generally supportive children lie those who say that no friendship should survive. Some brothers and sisters stay at arm's length, but never give up competition completely. Why do these puzzling, unproductive, often painful relationships continue to exist?
【小題1】When Joan's son was born, Sally .
A.felt very happy | B.felt not delighted | C.moved away | D.a(chǎn)dmired her a lot |
A.It sometimes will disappear when they grow up. |
B.It will never disappear throughout life. |
C.It will improve their relationships when they grow up. |
D.It will never harm their relationships when they grow up. |
A.Because she wants the author to go on a diet. |
B.Because she wants the author to stop calling her a bad cook. |
C.Because she wants to make fun of the author's weight. |
D.Because she wants to be honest with the author. |
A.live near each other, they still have competitions |
B.live away from each other, they stop their competitions |
C.live together, they often think of ending their competitions |
D.live within a big family, they often try to end their competitions |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
I live in Hollywood. You may think people in such an attractive, fun-filled place are happier than others. If so, you have some mistaken ideas about the nature of happiness.
Many intelligent people still equate happiness with fun. The truth is that fun and happiness have little or nothing in common. Fun is what we experience during an act. Happiness is what we experience after an act. It is a deeper, more long-lasting emotion. Going to an amusement park or ball game, watching a movie or television, are fun activities that help us relax, temporarily forget our problems and maybe even laugh. But they do not bring happiness, because their positive effects end when the fun ends.
I have often thought that if Hollywood stars have a role to play, it is to teach us that happiness has nothing to do with fun. These rich, beautiful individuals have constant access to exciting parties, fancy cars, expensive homes, everything that spells “happiness”. But in memoir(回憶錄) after memoir, celebrities reveal the unhappiness hidden beneath all their fun: depression, alcoholism, drug addiction, broken marriages, troubled children, and long-time loneliness.
The way people hold on to the belief that a fun-filled, pain-free life equates happiness actually decreases their chances of ever attaining real happiness. If fun and pleasure are equated with happiness, then pain must be equated with unhappiness. But, in fact, the opposite is true: More times than not, things that lead to happiness involve some pain.
As a result, many people avoid the very efforts that are the source of true happiness. They fear the pain inevitably brought by such things as marriage, raising children, professional achievement, religious commitment, charitable work and self-improvement.
【小題1】According to the passage, “fun activities” ____________.
A.a(chǎn)re the things we do before we find happiness |
B.may help us relax and forget our problems sometimes |
C.will lead us to the true happiness |
D.could provide long-last positive effects |
A.possess happiness because they are rich and famous |
B.experience almost all kinds of happy things |
C.tell us happiness isn’t equal to fun using their own stories |
D.have to suffer a lot before they become successful |
A.they believe happiness is the fun life without pain |
B.they find pain equals unhappiness |
C.they fear to lose what they already have in life |
D.They are afraid all their efforts were in vain |
A.describe the difference between happiness and fun |
B.show the true meaning of happiness |
C.encourage people to pursue fun activities |
D.a(chǎn)dvise people to find their real life |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
A few months ago as I wandered through my parents’ house, the same house I grew up in, I had a sudden, scary realization. When my parents bought the house, in 1982, they were only two years older than I am now. I tried to imagine myself in two years, ready to settle down and buy the house I’d still be living in almost 30 years later.
It seemed ridiculous. On a practical level, there’s no way I could afford to buy a house anytime soon. More importantly, I wouldn’t want to. I’m not sure where I’ll be living in two years, or what kind of job I’ll have. And I don’t think I’ll be ready to settle down and stay in one place.
So this is probably the generation gap that divides my friends and me from our parents. When our parents were our age, they’d gotten their education, chosen a career, and were starting to settle into responsible adult lives.
My friends and I – “Generation Y” – still aren’t sure what we want to do with our lives. Whatever we end up doing, we want to make sure we’re happy doing it. We’d rather take risks first, try out different jobs, and move from one city to another until we find our favorite place. We’d rather spend our money on travel than put it in a savings account.
This casual attitude towards responsibility has caused some critics to call my generation “arrogant”, “impatient”, and “overprotected”. Some of these complaints have a point. As children we were encouraged to succeed in school, but also to have fun. We grew up in a world full of technological innovation: cellphones, the Internet, instant messaging, and video games.
Our parents looked to rise vertically(垂直的)– starting at the bottom of the ladder and slowly making their way to the top, on the same track, often for the same company. That doesn’t apply to my generation.
Because of that, it may take us longer than our parents to arrive at responsible, stable adulthood. But that’s not necessarily a bad thing. In our desire to find satisfaction, we will work harder, struggle for ways to keep life interesting, and gain a broader set of experiences and knowledge than our parents’ generation did.
【小題1】What is the main “generation gap” between the author and her friends and their parents according to the article?
A.Their ways of gaining experience. |
B.Their attitude towards responsibility. |
C.Their attitude toward high technology. |
D.Their ways of making their way to the top. |
A.It involves too much effort to rise vertically. |
B.It’s better to take adult responsibility earlier. |
C.It’s all right to try more before settling down. |
D.It’s ridiculous to call her generation “arrogant”. |
A.The author is envious of her parents enjoying a big house at her age. |
B.“Generation Y” people don’t want to grow up and rush into adulthood. |
C.Growing up in a hi-tech world makes “Generation Y” feel insecure about relationships. |
D.The author wrote this article so that others would be able to understand her generation better. |
A.Criticisms of the young generation. |
B.The sudden realization of growing up. |
C.A comparison between lifestyles of generations. |
D.The factors that have changed the young generation. |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
You’ve just come home, after living abroad for a few years. Since you’ve been away, has this country changed for the better—or for the worse?
If you’ve just arrived back in the UK after a fortnight’s holiday, small changes have probably surprised you—anything from a local greengrocer suddenly being replaced by a mobile-phone shop to someone in your street moving house.
So how have things changed to people coming back to Britain after seven, ten or even 15 years living abroad? What changes in society can they see that the rest of us have hardly noticed—or now take for granted? To find out, we asked some people who recently returned.
Debi: When we left, Cheltenham, my home town, was a town of white, middle-class families—all very conservative (保守的). The town is now home to many eastern Europeans and lots of Australians, who come here mainly to work in hotels and tourism. There are even several shops only for foreigners.
Having been an immigrant (移民) myself, I admire people who go overseas to find a job. Maybe if I lived in an inner city where unemployment was high, I’d think differently, but I believe foreign settlers have improved this country because they’re more open-minded and often work harder than the natives.
Christine: As we flew home over Britain, both of us remarked how green everything looked. But the differences between the place we’d left behind and the one we returned to were brought sharply into focus as soon as we landed.
To see policemen with guns in the airport for the first time was frightening—in Cyprus, they’re very relaxed—and I got pulled over by customs officers just for taking a woolen sweater with some metal-made buttons out of my case in the arrivals hall. Everyone seemed to be on guard. Even the airport car-hire firm wanted a credit card rather than cash because they said their vehicles had been used by bank robbers.
But anyway, this is still a green, beautiful country. I just wish more people would appreciate what they’ve got.
【小題1】After a short overseas holiday, people tend to _______.
A.notice small changes |
B.expect small changes |
C.welcome small changes |
D.exaggerate small changes |
A.Cautiously. |
B.Positively. |
C.Sceptically. |
D.Critically. |
A.the relaxed policemen |
B.the messy arrivals hall |
C.the tight security |
D.the bank robbers |
A.Life in Britain. |
B.Back in Britain. |
C.Britain in Future. |
D.Britain in Memory. |
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