In 1978, I was 18 and was working as a nurse in a small town about 270 km away from Sydney, Australia. I was looking forward to having five fays off from duty. Unfortunately, the only one train a day back to my home in Sydney had already left. So I thought I’d hitch a ride (搭便車).
I waited by the side of the highway for three hours but no one stopped for me. Finally, a man walked over and introduced himself as Gordon. He said that although he couldn’t give me a lift, I should come back to his house for lunch. He noticed me standing for hours in the November heat and thought I must be hungry. I was doubtful as a young girl but he assured (使…放心)me I was safe, and he also offered to help me find a lift home afterwards. When we arrived at his house, he made us sandwiches. After lunch, he helped me find a lift home.
Twenty-five years later, in 2003, while I was driving to a nearby town one day, I saw an elderly man standing in the glaring heat, trying to hitch a ride. I thought it was another chance to repay someone for the favour I’d been given decades earlier. I pulled over and picked him up. I made him comfortable on the back seat and offered him some water.
After a few moments of small talk, the man said to me, “You haven’t changed a bit, even your red hair is still the same.” I couldn’t remember where I’d met him. He then told me he was the man who had given me lunch and helped me find a lift all those years ago. It was Gordon.
【小題1】The author had to hitch a ride one day in 1978 because_______.
A.she missed the only train back home |
B.she was going home for her holidays |
C.the town was far away from Sydney |
D.her work delayed her trip to Sydney |
A.He gave the girl a ride back home. |
B.He helped the girl find a ride. |
C.He bought sandwiches for the girl. |
D.He watched the girl for three hours. |
A.she realized he was Gordon |
B.she had known him for decades |
C.she wanted to repay the favour she once got |
D.she was going to the nearby town |
A.Those who give rides will be rapid. |
B.Good manners bring about happiness. |
C.People should offer free rides to others. |
D.Giving sometimes produces nice results. |
【小題1】A
【小題2】B
【小題3】C
【小題4】D
解析試題分析 本文是記敘文,作者在數(shù)十年前曾經(jīng)錯過回家的唯一的火車 但碰到路人Gordon幫助了他,數(shù)十年后作者碰到了一個要搭車的人,想不到是當(dāng)年那個給他提供幫助的人。
【小題1】A細(xì)節(jié)題。根據(jù)第一段Unfortunately, the only one train a day back to my home in Sydney had already left. So I thought I’d hitch a ride,作者錯過唯一的一趟火車,因此不得有搭個便車回去。故選A項。
【小題2】B 細(xì)節(jié)題。根據(jù)第二段一個叫Gordonr的人走過來,他不能給我提供便車,但建議我回他們吃個飯,并且他認(rèn)為我站了如此久肯定餓了,他讓我放心,并且承諾幫我找個回家的順風(fēng)車,回到他家給我提供了吃的,幫我找回家的順風(fēng)車。故選 B 項。
【小題3】C細(xì)節(jié)題。根據(jù)第三段I thought it was another chance to repay someone for the favour I’d been given decades earlier作者認(rèn)為這是回報數(shù)十年前恩的時候,所以讓這個人搭車。故選 C項。
【小題4】D 主旨大意。作者數(shù)十年前受別人的恩惠,當(dāng)看到別人遇到困難時伸手援助,想不到是當(dāng)初給他提供幫助的那個人Gorden.想告訴人們盡可能的幫助別人,會有好的回報的,故選D項。
考點 故事類閱讀。
科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
“A good book for children should simply be a good book in its own right” says Mollie Hunter. Born and brought up near Edinburgh,Mollie has devoted her talents to writing primarily for young people. She firmly believes that there is and should always be a wider audience for any good book whatever its main market is. In Mollie’s opinion it is necessary to make full use of language and she enjoys telling a story,which is what every writer should be doing. “If you aren’t telling a story, you’re a very dead writer indeed.” She says. With the chief function of a writer being to entertain,Mollie is indeed an entertainer. “I have this great love of not only the meaning of language but of the music of language,” she says. “This love goes back to early childhood. I had a school teacher who used to ask us what we would like to be when we grew up and,because my family always had dogs,and I was very good at handling them,I said I wanted to work with dogs,and the teacher always said ‘Nonsense,Mollie;dear,you’ll be a writer.’ So finally I thought that this woman must have something,since she was a good teacher and I decided when I was nine that I would be a writer.”
This childhood intention is described in her novel,A Sound of Chariots,which although written in the third person is clearly autobiographical (自傳體的) and gives a picture both of Mollie’s ambition and her struggle towards its achievement. Thoughts of her childhood inevitably (不可避免地) brought thoughts of the time when her home was still a village with buttercup meadows and strawberry fields—sadly now covered with modern houses. “I was once taken back to see it and I felt that somebody had lain dirty hands all over my childhood. I’ll never go back,”she said “Never. When I set one of my books in Scotland” she said “I can recall my romantic feelings as a child playing in those fields,or watching the village blacksmith at work. And that’s important because children now know so much so early that romance can’t exist for them, as it did for us.”
【小題1】What does Mollie Hunter feel about the nature of a good book?
A.It should not aim at a narrow audience. |
B.It should be attractive to young readers. |
C.It should be based on original ideas. |
D.It should not include too much conversation. |
A.Being poor in life experience. |
B.Being short of writing skills. |
C.The weakness of description. |
D.The absence of a story. |
A.She didn’t expect to become a writer. |
B.She didn’t enjoy writing stories. |
C.She didn’t have any particular ambitions. |
D.She didn’t respect her teacher’s views. |
A.To share her enjoyment of Mollie Hunter’s books. |
B.To introduce Mollie Hunter’s work to a wider audience. |
C.To provide information for Mollie Hunter’s existing readers. |
D.To describe Mollie Hunter’s most successful books. |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Theodor Seuss Geisel was born in Springfield, Massachusetts in 1904. He was famous because of the books he wrote for children. They combine funny words, pictures, and social opinion.
Dr Seuss wrote his first book for children in 1937. It is called And to Think I Saw It on Mulberry Street. A number of publishers refused to publish it. They said it was too different , and it’s not worth publishing. A friend finally published it. Soon other successful books followed. Over the years, he wrote more than forty children’s books. They were fun to read. Yet his books sometimes dealt with serious subjects.
By the middle 1940s, Dr Seuss had become one of the best-loved and most successful writers of children’s books. He had a strong desire to help children. In 1954, Life magazine published a report about school children who could not read. The report said many children’s books weren’t interesting. Dr Seuss decided to write books that were interesting and easy to read.
In 1957, Dr Seuss wrote The Cat in the Hat. He used less than 225 words to write the book. This was about the number of words a six-year-old should be able to read.
The story is about a cat who tries to entertain two children on a rainy day while their mother is away from home. The cat is not like normal cats. It talks. The book was an immediate success. It was an interesting story and was easy to read. Children loved it. Their parents loved it, too. Today many adults say it is still one of the stories they like best.
【小題1】What’s the best title for this passage?
A.Some of Dr Seuss’ books for children. |
B.What are Dr Seuss’s books mainly about? |
C.Dr Seuss — a famous writer of children’s books. |
D.Why are Dr Seuss’ books different? |
A.It was Dr Seuss’ worst book. |
B.It dealt with a very serious subject. |
C.Neither children nor adults like it. |
D.Many publishers didn’t take it seriously at first. |
A.30 | B.31 | C.32 | D.33 |
A.By asking others to help them in magazines. |
B.By writing interesting and simple books. |
C.By changing his old books into simpler ones. |
D.By giving them books for free. |
A.interesting | B.serious | C.difficult | D.boring |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Our bedroom has no full-length mirror. There is one at the canteen entrance. I always cherish a secret desire to take a glance before it at myself in a beautiful new dress. However, each time when it comes to the fulfillment, I get seized with such an uneasiness that I literally stagger(踉蹌) away—backing out at the critical moment.
At the root of it is my lack of confidence by which I have been enslaved since childhood. It embarrasses me at the mildest praise, crushes my utmost efforts to say “No”, and prevents me from asking my parents for one cent more than necessary. Among other things, lack of confidence has wormed its way into my love of piano.
At the age of 14, one Sunday morning, I was woken up by a resounding hymn(洪亮的圣歌). Tracing that call of God into a neighboring church, I found myself deeply attracted by the melody of a piano—something beyond the means of my parents. To make it worse, people say a pianist is supposed to have music in the blood, but I believe I had none from my engineer father and technician mother. For days on end, I kept thinking of nothing else. I had a dream.
It wasn’t a dream after gold, which made some of my close friends to engage in business as self-employed traders or street peddlers. I was sometimes dazzled by their gold rings or elegant necklaces behind which, however, I seemed to catch sight of skeletons in their cupboards and was frightened away from the craze for fortunate. Out of despair, I kept it to myself, lack of confidence weighing heavy on me. I could do nothing but turn to my dream for comfort, for courage to aim high and wish for the impossible. I was convinced that before I could afford anything expensive (to me, it was a piano), I should climb up the academic ladder as high as possible.
For the next nine years, I carefully held back my desire for music to keep my search for learning, especially in English studies. My efforts were so rewarding that I went successfully through high school and college in my hometown. When I received the admission notice for a second degree course at a famous university in Beijing, the national capital, tears welled up in my eyes. I knew my command of English was my wealth, for I might make a deal with a pianist who would give me access to his piano in exchange for English lessons. And that has come true!
To this day, whenever I lay my fingers on the snow-white keyboard, ready for a melody, I still feel shy. I am quite aware of my limited music talent, but as a shy dreamer, I have found my way to success.
【小題1】According to the first two paragraphs, we can learn that the writer is __________.
A.helpless | B.shy | C.honest | D.considerate |
A.a(chǎn), b | B.c, d | C.a(chǎn), c | D.b, d |
A.She turned to her friends for financial aid. |
B.She taught English in exchange for piano lessons. |
C.She was admitted to a university for a second degree course in music. |
D.She earned money by doing a part-time job to pay for her piano lessons. |
A.Wealth always comes after a great effort. |
B.Confidence is a key factor in success. |
C.We should be academically successful before other achievements. |
D.We should make every effort to turn a dream into reality. |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Once there was a man who liked to eat mangoes(芒果). One day he decided to get the sweetest mango from the very top of the tree. Mangoes which are exposed to the sun the most are the sweetest.
So he climbed up to the top, where the branches were thin. He managed to pick up a few sweet reddish fruits, but, in an attempt to climb down, he slipped and started falling towards the ground. Fortunately, he caught the branch as he was falling and remained helplessly hanging on the tree. Then he started to call nearby villagers for help. They immediately came with a ladder and sticks, but could do little to help him.
Then after some time one calm and thoughtful person arrived - a well-known sage who lived in a simple hut nearby. People were very curious to see what he would do, as he was famous in solving many people’s problems in the area and sometimes very complicated ones.
He was silent for a minute and then picked up a stone and threw it at the hanging man. Everybody was surprised. The hanging mango lover started to shout: What are you doing?! Are you crazy? Do you want me to break my neck?” The sage was silent. Then he took another stone and threw it at the man. The man was very angry: “If I could just come down, I would show you!”
That’s what everybody wanted - that he came down. But how? Now everybody was tense(緊張), as to what would happen next! Some wanted to punish the sage, but they didn’t. The sage picked another stone and threw it again at the man, even more forcefully. Now the man on the tree was enraged and developed a great determination to come down and take revenge(報仇).
He then used all his skill and strength and somehow reached the branches which were safe to start going down. And he made it! Everybody was amazed.
However, the rescued man found the sage gone. He stood there, realizing that the man really helped him because he induced him to try his best and save himself.
“I should be thankful and not angry.”
【小題1】What happened after he had picked a few sweet reddish mangoes?
A.He remained hanging helplessly on the tree. |
B.He slipped and fell to the ground suddenly. |
C.He was climbing down quickly but carefully. |
D.He shouted loudly for help but no one helped. |
A.He was nervous. | B.He kept silent. | C.He was angry. | D.He felt surprised. |
A.Courage. | B.Assistance. | C.Carefulness. | D.Revenge. |
A.on the tree for the longest time | B.hidden in the middle of a tree |
C.on the very top of the a tree | D.exposed to sunlight less often |
A.Anger saves one’s life. | B.Wisdom does count. |
C.Skill and strength count. | D.Anger is the biggest enemy. |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
George Gershwin, born in 1998, was one of America’s greatest composers. He published his first song when he was eighteen years old. During the next twenty years he wrote more than five hundred songs.
Many of Gershwin’s songs were first written for musical plays performed in theatres in New York City. These plays were a popular form of entertainment in the 1920s and 1930s. Many of his songs have remained popular as ever. Over the years they have been sung and played in every possible way — from jazz to country.
In the 1920s there was a debate in the United States about jazz music. Could jazz, some people asked, be considered serious music? In 1924 jazz musician and orchestra leader Paul Whiteman decided to organize a special concert to show that jazz was serious music. Gershwin agreed to compose something for the concert before he realized he had just a few weeks to do it. And in that short time, he composed a piece for piano and orchestra which he called Rhapsody in Blue. Gershwin himself played the piano at the concert. The audience were thrilled when they heard his music. It made him world-famous and showed that jazz music could be both serious and popular.
In 1928, Gershwin went to Paris. He applied to study composition (作曲)with the well-known musician Nadia Boulanger, but she rejected him. She was afraid that classical study would ruin his jazz-influenced style. While there, Gershwin wrote An American in Paris. When it was first performed, critics (評論家)were divided over the music. Some called it happy and full of life, to others it was silly and boring. But it quickly became popular in Europe and the United States. It still remains one of his most famous works.
George Gershwin died in 1937, just days after doctors learned he had brain cancer. He was only thirty-nine years old. Newspapers all over the world reported his death on their front pages. People mourned the loss of the man and all the music he might have still written.
【小題1】Many of Gershwin’s musical works were ________.
A.written about New Yorkers |
B.Composed for Paul Whiteman |
C.played mainly in the countryside |
D.performed in various ways |
A.It attracted more people to theatres. |
B.It proved jazz could be serious music. |
C.It made Gershwin leader of the orchestra. |
D.It caused a debate among jazz musicians. |
A.He created one of his best works | B.He studied with Nadia Boulanger |
C.He argued with French critics | D.He changed his music style |
A.Many of Gershwin’s works were lost. |
B.The death of Gershwin was widely reported. |
C.A concert was held in memory of Gershwin. |
D.Brain cancer research started after Gershwin’s death. |
A.Talented and productive | B.Serious and boring |
C.popular and unhappy | D.Friendly and honest |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Many people believe Henry Ford invented the automobile (汽車). But Henry Ford did not start to build his first car until 1896. That was eleven years after two Germans developed the world's first automobile. Many people believe Henry Ford invented the production line that moved a car's parts to the worker, instead of making the worker move to the parts. That is not true, either. Many factory owners used methods of this kind before Ford. What Henry Ford did was to use other people's ideas and make them better. And he made the whole factory a moving production line.
In the early days of the automobile, almost every car maker raced his cars. It was the best way of gaining public notice. Henry Ford decided to build a racing car. Ford's most famous race was his first one. It was also the last race in which he drove the car himself.
The race was in 1901, at a field near Detroit. All of the most famous cars had entered, but only two were left: the Winton and Ford's. The Winton was famous for its speed. Most people thought the race was over before it began.
The Winton took an early lead. But halfway through the race, it began to lose power. Ford started to gain. And near the end of the race, he took the lead. Ford won the race and defeated the Winton. His name appeared in newspapers and he became wellknown all over the United States.Within weeks of the race, Henry Ford formed a new automobile company. In 1903, a doctor in Detroit bought the first car from the company. That sale was the beginning of Henry Ford's dream. Ford said: “I will build a motor car for a great number of people. It will be large enough for the family, but small enough for one person to operate and care for. It will be built of the best materials. It will be built by the best men to be employed. And it will be built with the simplest plans that modern engineering can produce. It will be so low in price that no man making good money will be unable to own one.”
The Model T was a car of that kind. It only cost $850. It was a simple machine that drivers could depend on. Doctors bought the Model T. So did farmers. Even criminals. They considered it the fastest and surest form of transportation. Americans loved the Model T. They wrote stories and songs about it. Thousands of Model T's were built in the first few years.
【小題1】What do we know about Henry Ford from Paragraph 1 ?
A.He made good use of ideas from others. |
B.He produced the first car in the world. |
C.He knew how to improve auto parts. |
D.He invented the production line. |
A.To show off his driving skills. |
B.To draw public attention. |
C.To learn about new technology. |
D.To raise money for his new company. |
A.the selling of Ford cars at reduced prices |
B.the sale of Model T to the mass of people |
C.the selling of a car to a Detroit doctor |
D.the sales target for the Ford Company |
A.Producing cars for average customers. |
B.Building racing cars of simple design. |
C.Designing more car models. |
D.Starting more companies. |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
The American local food movement has been all about buying seasonal food from nearby farmers. Now, thanks to the Web, it is expanding to include far-away farmers too. A new start-up, Foodzie, is an online farmers market where small food producers and growers can sell their products.
Foodzie was started by Mr LaFave and two of his friends, who met during college at Virginia Tech, where they would pay frequent visits to farmers markets. Last year, while living in North Carolina, one of them, Emily Olson, now 24, came up with one idea. She was working as a brand manager for a gourmet grocery chain and realized that people who enjoyed fine food but didn’t work in the business had no way to discover handmade foods outside their local farmers markets. Small farmers had no way of finding or selling to faraway customers, either.
Mr LaFAve and the third co-founder, Nik Bauman, both 25, worked in corporate sales and software development. “With business, food and computer science backgrounds, we figured we had everything we needed.” Mr LaFAve said.
The three quit their jobs, and opened this site to the public in December and the site has had 43,000 visitors in the past month. So far, 29 sellers have opened shops and 41 are in the process of opening them. The founders recently hired a fourth employee to help Ms Olson recruit(吸收) new food producers at farmers markets and food shows. Mr LaFAve is convinced that the recession(經(jīng)濟(jì)衰退) will not reduce people’s interest in buying locally grown and handmade food. “There is misunderstanding that all these foods are more expensive than mass-produced alternatives,” he said. “People are pouring their heart and soul into these products, and they are of the highest quality.”
【小題1】The passage is mainly about_______.
A.how an online farmers’ market works |
B.the American local food movement |
C.three youths starting an online farmers’ market |
D.the reasons why people are interested in local food |
A.Because it met the need of the market. |
B.Because the founders were interested in seasonal food. |
C.Because some people wanted to buy locally grown food. |
D.Because farmers wanted to sell their foods. |
A.food of high quality | B.terrible food | C.food of low fat | D.fried food |
A.they are of the same age |
B.they gave up their work to start the website |
C.they used to be colleague |
D.they majored in farming at college |
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科目:高中英語 來源: 題型:閱讀理解
Nearly a quarter-century after a German boy threw a message in a bottle off a ship in the Baltic Sea, he’s received an answer.
A 13-year-old Russian, Daniil Korotkikh, was walking with his parents on a beach when he saw something lying in the sand.
“I saw that bottle and it looked interesting,” Korotkikh told The Associated Press on Tuesday. “it looked like a German beer bottle and there was a message inside. ”
It said, “My name is Frank, and I’m five years old. My dad and I are traveling on a ship to Denmark. If you find this letter, please write back to me, and I will write back to you.” The letter, dated 1987, included an address in the town of Coesfeld.
The boy in the letter, Frank Uesbeck, is now 29. His parents still live at the letter’s address.
The Russian boy and the German man met each other earlier this month through an internet video link. The Russian boy said he did not believe that the bottle actually spent 24 years in the sea. He believed it had been hidden under the sand where he found it for a long time.
Uesbeck was especially happy that he was able to have a positive effect on a life of a young person far away from Germany. “It‘s really a wonderful story,” he said. “And who knows? Perhaps one day we will actually be able to arrange a meeting in person. ”
【小題1】What is this passage mainly about?
A.Traveling on a ship. | B.A beautiful beer bottle. |
C.Message in a bottle. | D.Meeting an old friend. |
A.he was going back home. |
B.he was traveling to Denmark by ship with his dad. |
C.he was walking with his parents on a beach. |
D.he was already 29 years old. |
A.Korotkikh’s parents still live in the town of Coesfeld. |
B.The German boy did not believe that the bottle actually spent 24 years in the sea. |
C.Frank Uesbeck and Daniil Korotkikh have met each other in person. |
D.Daniil Korotkikh and Frank Uesbeck have got in touch with each other. |
A.Because he could have a new friend. |
B.Because the two boys could surf the internet together. |
C.Because he could have a positive influence on a life of a young person. |
D.Because he finally got what he had lost. |
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