Henry Edwards Huntington
Henry Edwards Huntington was born in 1850 in Oneonta,New York.In 1872 he went to work for his uncle,one of the owners of the Central Pacific Railroad.Twenty years later, Huntington moved to San Francisco at his uncle's request to share management of the Southern Pacific Railroad.On the way to San Francisco,he visited San Marino,and later bought it,which is home to his collections today.
In 1902,Huntington moved his business operations to Los Angeles,where he developed the street railway system that created the structure of the Los Angeles area.He greatly expanded the existing electric railway lines,creating an extensive inter-urban system providing the transportation necessary.Huntington’s business interests continued to grow particularly in the areas of water,power,and land development;at one time he served on as many as 60 corporate boards throughout the United States.
At the age of 60,he announced his decision to retire in order to devote time to his book and art collections and the landscaping of the 600一acre farm.In 1911 the large Beaux Arts building,in the charge of the architect Myron Hunt,was completed.
In 1913,Huntington married Arabella Duval Huntington.She shared his interests in collecting.As one of the most important art collectors of her generation,she was highly influential in the development of the art collection now shown in the former building.
In 1919,Henry and Arabella Huntington signed the agreement that conveyed their San Marino property and collections to a nonprofit educational trust,creating the Huntington,one of the world’s great cultural,research,and educational centers.
Henry E.Huntington died in 1927,leaving his great treasures the Huntington,including the world—famous H untington Library,Art Gallery,and Botanical Gardens in San Marino,California to the public,which hosts more than 500,000 visitors each year.
小題1:What can you learn about Huntington from the first two paragraphs?
A.He worked in many fields before he came to Los Angeles.
B.He built a house to store his art collection in San Marino.
C.H e did a lot to the USA railway development.
D.He founded the Central Pacific Railroad.
小題2:What did Huntington do after his retirement?
A.He devoted himself to his personal interests.
B.He worked part time for non—profit business.
C.H e was in charge of an educational center.
D.H e shared his wife’s interests with her.
小題3:Which of the following can best describe Huntington?
A.An excellent artist.B.A talented architect.
C.An ambitious educator.D.A successful businessman.
小題4:This passage is most probably taken from
A.a(chǎn) science fictionB.a(chǎn) newspaper report
C.a(chǎn) novelD.a(chǎn) biography

小題1:C
小題2:A
小題3:D
小題4:D

試題分析:本文屬于人物傳記類短文,主要介紹了美國著名的商人Henry Edwards Huntington傳奇的一生經(jīng)歷。
小題1:C 推理題。根據(jù)第2段前3行In 1902,Huntington moved his business operations to Los Angeles,where he developed the street railway system that created the structure of the Los Angeles area.He greatly expanded the existing electric railway lines,creating an extensive inter-urban system providing the transportation necessary.可知他對(duì)于美國的鐵路的發(fā)展做出了巨大的貢獻(xiàn)。故C正確。
小題2:A 推理題。根據(jù)文章第3段At the age of 60,he announced his decision to retire in order to devote time to his book and art collections and the landscaping of the 600一acre farm.In 1911 the large Beaux Arts building,in the charge of the architect Myron Hunt,was completed.可知在退休之后,他把精力主要之間的興趣愛好上,進(jìn)行藝術(shù)創(chuàng)作等。故A正確。
小題3:D 推理題。根據(jù)文章第2段最后3行Huntington’s business interests continued to grow particularly in the areas of water,power,and land development;at one time he served on as many as 60 corporate boards throughout the United States可知他的生意做得很好,范圍很廣,是一名很成功的商人。故D正確。
小題4:D 推理題。本文屬于人物傳記類短文,主要介紹了美國著名的商人Henry Edwards Huntington傳奇的一生經(jīng)歷。所以應(yīng)該是從自傳中摘錄出來的。故D項(xiàng)正確。
練習(xí)冊(cè)系列答案
相關(guān)習(xí)題

科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

Last spring, I was fortunate to be chosen to participate in an exchange study program. In my application letter, I was careful to ____ how much I wanted to see France; evidently, my excitement really came through in my words. Once I ____ that I was going, all I could think about was the fun of foreign travel and making all sorts of new and ____ friends. While traveling was inspiring and meeting people was ____, nothing about my term in France was what I ____.
The moment I arrived in Paris, I was ____ by a nice French couple who would become my host parents. My entire experience was joyous and exciting ____ I received some shocking news from my program coordinator(協(xié)調(diào)人): there had been a death in my host parents' extended family. They had to travel outside France for several weeks. That afternoon, I had to ____ out of one family's house and into another. The exchange coordinator told me I'd have a ____ this time and asked whether I could share a bedroom with an English speaker. To avoid the temptation(誘惑) to ____ my native language, I asked not to be ____ with an English­speaking roommate. When I got to my new room, I ____ myself to my new roommate Paolo, a Brazilian(巴西人) the same age as I, whom I was surprised to find playing one of my favorite CDs! In just a few hours, we knew we'd be good friends for the rest of the ____.
I left France with many ____, so when people ask me what my favorite part of the trip was, they are always ____ to hear me talk about my Brazilian friend Paolo and the scores of weekdays in class, weeknights on the town, and weekends ____ France we enjoyed together. I love how people ____ seem so different, but end up being so ____. The most valuable lesson I gained from studying in France wasn't just to respect the French people ____ to respect all people,for your next best friend could be just a continent away. I would recommend an exchange program to anyone who wants to experience foreign cultures and gain meaningful ____.
小題1:
A.discussB.expressC.a(chǎn)nnounceD.a(chǎn)rgue
小題2:
A.a(chǎn)pprovedB.knewC.warnedD.denied
小題3:
A.stubbornB.a(chǎn)nxiousC.universalD.interesting
小題4:
A.boringB.upsettingC.excitingD.promising
小題5:
A.expectedB.likedC.doubtedD.feared
小題6:
A.sponsoredB.witnessedC.greetedD.supported
小題7:
A.untilB.whenC.sinceD.while
小題8:
A.moveB.travelC.walkD.rush
小題9:
A.housekeeperB.leader
C.roommateD.colleague
小題10:
A.learnB.a(chǎn)ppreciateC.speakD.master
小題11:
A.combinedB.fittedC.involvedD.placed
小題12:
A.a(chǎn)ddedB.introducedC.devotedD.a(chǎn)dapted
小題13:
A.termB.weekC.monthD.vacation
小題14:
A.presentsB.suitcasesC.storiesD.dreams
小題15:
A.surprisedB.disturbed
C.embarrassedD.concerned
小題16:
A.a(chǎn)nalyzingB.exploring
C.describingD.investigating
小題17:
A.needB.shallC.mustD.can
小題18:
A.generousB.independent
C.similarD.distant
小題19:
A.a(chǎn)ndB.butC.orD.so
小題20:
A.instructionsB.friendships
C.factsD.data

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

Mark Twain has been called the inventor of the American novel.And he surely deserves additional praise:the man who popularized the clever literary attack on racism.
I say clever because anti­slavery fiction had been the important part of the literature in the years before the Civil War.H.B.Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin is only the most famous example.These early stories dealt directly with slavery.With minor exceptions,Twain planted his attacks on slavery and prejudice into tales that were on the surface about something else entirely.He drew his readers into the argument by drawing them into the story.
Again and again,in the postwar years,Twain seemed forced to deal with the challenge of race.Consider the most controversial,at least today,of Twain’s novels,Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.Only a few books have been kicked off the shelves as often as Huckleberry Finn,Twain’s most widely read tale.Once upon a time,people hated the book because it struck them as rude.Twain himself wrote that those who banned the book considered the novel“trash and suitable only for the slums(貧民窟).”More recently the book has been attacked because of the character Jim,the escaped slave,and many occurrences of the word nigger.(The term Nigger Jim,for which the novel is often severely criticized,never appears in it.)
But the attacks were and are silly—and miss the point.The novel is strongly anti­slavery.Jim’s search through the slave states for the family from whom he has been forcibly parted is heroic.As J.Chadwick has pointed out,the character of Jim was a first in American fiction—a recognition that the slave had two personalities,“the voice of survival within a white slave culture and the voice of the individual:Jim,the father and the man.”
There is much more.Twain’s mystery novel Pudd’nhead Wilson stood as a challenge to the racial beliefs of even many of the liberals of his day.Written at a time when the accepted wisdom held Negroes to be inferior (低等的) to whites,especially in intelligence,Twain’s tale centered in part around two babies switched at birth.A slave gave birth to her master’s baby and,for fear that the child should be sold South,switched him for the master’s baby by his wife.The slave’s light­skinned child was taken to be white and grew up with both the attitudes and the education of the slave­holding class.The master’s wife’s baby was taken for black and grew up with the attitudes and intonations of the slave.
The point was difficult to miss:nurture (養(yǎng)育),not nature,was the key to social status.The features of the black man that provided the stuff of prejudice—manner of speech,for example—were,to Twain,indicative of nothing other than the conditioning that slavery forced on its victims.
Twain’s racial tone was not perfect.One is left uneasy,for example,by the lengthy passage in his autobiography (自傳) about how much he loved what were called“nigger shows”in his youth—mostly with white men performing in black­face—and his delight in getting his mother to laugh at them.Yet there is no reason to think Twain saw the shows as representing reality.His frequent attacks on slavery and prejudice suggest his keen awareness that they did not.
Was Twain a racist? Asking the questioning the 21st century is as wise as asking the same of Lincoln.If we read the words and attitudes of the past through the“wisdom”of the considered moral judgments of the present,we will find nothing but error.Lincoln,who believed the black man the inferior of the white,fought and won a war to free him.And Twain,raised in a slave state,briefly a soldier,and inventor of Jim,may have done more to anger the nation over racial injustice and awaken its collective conscience than any other novelist in the past century.
小題1:How do Twain’s novels on slavery differ from Stowe’s?
A.Twain was more willing to deal with racism.
B.Twain’s attack on racism was much less open.
C.Twain’s themes seemed to agree with plots.
D.Twain was openly concerned with racism.
小題2:Recent criticism of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn arose partly from its________.
A.target readers at the bottom
B.a(chǎn)nti­slavery attitude
C.rather impolite language
D.frequent use of“nigger”
小題3:What best proves Twain’s anti­slavery stand according to the author?
A.Jim’s search for his family was described in detail.
B.The slave’s voice was first heard in American novels.
C.Jim grew up into a man and a father in the white culture.
D.Twain suspected that the slaves were less intelligent.
小題4:The story of two babies switched mainly indicates that________.
A.slaves were forced to give up their babies to their masters
B.slaves’ babies could pick up slave­holders’ way of speaking
C.blacks’social position was shaped by how they were brought up
D.blacks were born with certain features of prejudice
小題5:What does the underlined word “they” in Paragraph 7 refer to?
A.The attacks.
B.Slavery and prejudice.
C.White men.
D.The shows.
小題6:What does the author mainly argue for?
A.Twain had done more than his contemporary writers to attack racism.
B.Twain was an admirable figure comparable to Abraham Lincoln.
C.Twain’s works had been banned on unreasonable grounds.
D.Twain’s works should be read from a historical point of view.

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:完形填空

閱讀下列短文,掌握其大意,然后從各題所給的四個(gè)選項(xiàng)中,選出最佳選項(xiàng)。
I believe in miracles(奇跡)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    in my upper jaw,”she said.“I told my own dentist it's nothing,but he      I come to see you”
Her eighty-year-old son accompanied her.He would     to add something,but she stopped him.She wanted to tell everything herself.I found a large cancer that spread over much of the    of her mouth.A careful examination later      that it was a particularly bad sort of cancer.
During her next appointment,I explained to her the      of the problem. She clasped (緊握)my hand in hers and said,“I know you’re worried about me,but I’m just    .”
I thought otherwise.After considerable      on my part,and kindness on her part because she wanted to      me,she agreed to have me refer her to a cancer surgeon.She saw him,but as I expected,    treatment.
About six months later she returned to my office,still energetic and      
“How are you?” I asked.
“I’m just fine,honey,”she responded    high spirits.“When can I get started on fixing my dentures(假牙)?”
Surprised to see her at all,I answered      ,“Let me take a look in your mouth and we’ll see about it. ”
I couldn’t believe my eyes.The cancer that had       nearly the entire roof of her mouth was gone—only one small area of redness      
I had read of such things happening,but had      seen them with my own eyes.That was my first miracle.Since then I've seen many others,because they keep getting      to see.In fact,miracles are daily events for me now.And people are a miracle,    through them we have a chance to know ourselves and to    the miracles of one another.
Since my first miracle,I've come to understand that the time and place for a miracle is    we choose to find it.
小題1:
A.cutB.painC.woundD.cancer
小題2:
A.declaredB.suspectedC.promised D.insisted
小題3:
A.refuseB.continueC.a(chǎn)ttemptD.manage
小題4:
A.roofB.cornerC.bottomD.surface
小題5:
A.confirmedB.convincedC.consideredD.concluded
小題6:
A.possibilityB.importanceC.seriousnessD.resolution
小題7:
A.oldB.sickC.fine D.glad
小題8:
A.permissionB.supportC.a(chǎn)pprovalD.effort
小題9:
A.persuadeB.pleaseC.encourageD.a(chǎn)stonish
小題10:
A.declinedB.providedC.receivedD.required
小題11:
A.healthyB.elegantC.optimisticD.humorous
小題12:
A.toB.inC.onD.by
小題13:
A.worriedlyB.confusedlyC.patiently D.confidently
小題14:
A.coveredB.reachedC.spreadD.grown
小題15:
A.curedB.fadedC.expanded D.remained
小題16:
A.everB.a(chǎn)lsoC.never D.a(chǎn)lready
小題17:
A.easierB.rarerC.happierD.closer
小題18:
A.orB.soC.yetD.for
小題19:
A.readB.makeC.keepD.see
小題20:
A.whateverB.whereverC.whoever D.whichever

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

Brenda Bongos was a happy, artistic girl. She had one big dream—to play the drums in a band. But one big problem lay in her way. To be good enough to play in a band, Brenda had to practice a lot, but she lived next-door to a lot of old people. Many of them are sick. She knew that the sound of beating drums would really get on their nerves. So, she had tried playing in the strangest places: a basement, a kitchen, and even in a shower. But there was always someone it would annoy.
One day, while watching a science documentary on TV, she heard that sound cannot travel in space, because there's no air. At that moment, Brenda Bongos decided to become a sort of musical astronaut.
With the help of a lot of time, books and work, Brenda built a space bubble. This was a big glass ball connected to a machine which sucked out all the air inside. All that would be left inside was a drum kit(成套設(shè)備) and a chair. Brenda got into the space suit she had made, entered the bubble, turned on the machine, and played those drums like a wild child.
It wasn't long before Brenda Bongos came very famous. Many people came to see her play in her space bubble. Shortly afterwards she came out of the bubble and started giving concerts. Her fame spread so much that the government suggested that she be part of a unique space journey. Finally, Brenda was a real musical astronaut, and had gone far beyond her first ambition of playing drums in a band.
Years later, when asked how she had achieved all this, she thought for a moment, and said: ''If those old people next–door hadn't mattered so much to me, I wouldn't have found a solution, and none of this would have ever happened.''
小題1:Why did Brenda try to play in the strangest places?
A.Because she didn't want others to hear her play
B.Because she didn't mean to disturb others.
C.Because she didn't have her own room
D.Because she didn’t like her neighbors.
小題2:Brenda started to give concerts _______.
A.a(chǎn)fter she practiced in her space bubble
B.when she became part of the unique space journey
C.a(chǎn)fter she became a real musical astronaut
D.when people came to see her in the space bubble
小題3:Brenda became famous because _______.
A.she was good at music and science
B.she became a real musical astronaut
C.she invented a special way of practice
D.she played well and had a talent
小題4:It can be inferred from the text that: " _______".
A.He laughs best who laughs lastB.It's never too old to learn
C.Two heads are better than oneD.One good turn deserves another

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

Perfect Disaster
All around us buildings shook. We decided to leave the town. We stopped once we had left the buildings behind us. The carts were moving in opposite directions, though the ground was perfectly flat, and they wouldn't stay in place even with their wheels blocked by stones.
In addition, it seemed as though the sea was being sucked(吸) backwards, as if it were being pushed back by the shaking of the land. Certainly the shoreline moved outwards, and many sea animals were left on dry sand.
Behind us were frightening dark clouds that opened up to show fire—like lightning, but bigger. Not long after that the clouds reached down to the ground and covered the sea. Now came the dust, though still thin. I looked back. A dense cloud appeared behind us, following us like a flood pouring across the land. Then a darkness came that was not like a moonless or cloudy night, but more like being in a closed and unlighted room. You could hear women and children crying, men shouting. Some were calling for parents, others for children; they could only recognize them by their voices.
Darkness and ashes came again, a great weight of them. We stood up and shook the ash off again and again; otherwise we would have been covered with it and crushed by the weight.
At last the cloud became thinner and thinner until it was no more than smoke or fog. Soon there was real daylight. The sight that met our still terrified eyes was a changed world, buried in ash like snow.
―from Pliny's letter to a friend
小題1:Pliny left the town after _____.  
A.the eruptionB.the sky became dark
C.the buildings began shakingD.the sea went back
小題2:The carts wouldn't stay still because _____.
A.the earth was shaking
B.the sea sucked them backwards
C.the wheels had stones under them
D.the lightening frightened the horses
小題3:The reason why it was dark is that _____.
A.it was very late at nightB.clouds of ash covered the sun
C.there was a very bad stormD.there was no moon that night
小題4:People tried to find their relations by calling out their names and      .
A.listening to their voicesB.running about looking for them
C.shaking the ash off peopleD.watching people as they ran past

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:閱讀理解

My heart sank when the man at the immigration counter gestured to the back room. I was born and raised in America, and this was Miami, where I live, but they weren’t quite ready to let me in yet.
  “Please wait in here, Ms. Abujaber,” the immigration officer said. My husband, with his very American last name, accompanied me. He was getting used to this. The same thing had happened recently in Canada when I’d flown to Montreal to speak at a book event. That time they held me for 45 minutes. Today we were returning from a literary festival in Jamaica, and I was shocked that I was being sent “in back” once again.
  The officer behind the counter called me up and said, “Miss, your name looks like the name of someone who’s on our wanted list. We’re going to have to check you out with Washington.”
  “How long will it take?”
  “Hard to say…a few minutes,” he said, “We’ll call you when we’re ready for you.” After an hour, Washington still hadn’t decided anything about me.
“Isn’t this computerized?” I asked at the counter, “Can’t you just look me up?”
“Just a few more minutes,” they assured me.
  After an hour and a half, I pulled my cell phone out to call the friends I was supposed to meet that evening. An officer rushed over. “No phones!” he said, “For all we know you could be calling a terrorist cell and giving them information.”
  “I’m just a university professor,” I said. My voice came out in a squeak.
  “Of course you are. And we take people like you out of here in leg irons every day.”
  I put my phone away.
  My husband and I were getting hungry and tired. Whole families had been brought into the waiting room, and the place was packed with excitable children, exhausted parents, and even a flight attendant.
  I wanted to scream, to jump on a chair and shout: “I’m an American citizen; a novelist; I probably teach English literature to your children.”
After two hours in detention (扣押), I was approached by one of the officers. “You’re free to go,” he said. No explanation or apologies. For a moment, neither of us moved. We were still in shock. Then we leaped to our feet.
  “Oh, one more thing,” he handed me a tattered photocopy with an address on it, “If you aren’t happy with your treatment, you can write to this agency.”
  “Will they respond?” I asked.
  “I don’t know—I don’t know of anyone who’s ever written to them before.” Then he added,” By the way, this will probably keep happening each time you travel internationally.”
  “What can I do to keep it from happening again?”
  He smiled the empty smile we’d seen all day, “Absolutely nothing.”
  After telling several friends about our ordeal, probably the most frequent advice I’ve heard in response is to change my name. Twenty years ago, my own graduate school writing professor advised me to write under a pen name so that publishers wouldn’t stick me in what he called “the ethnic ghetto”—a separate, secondary shelf in the bookstore. But a name is an integral part of anyone’s personal and professional identity—just like the town you’re born in and the place where you’re raised.
  Like my father, I’ll keep the name, but my airport experience has given me a whole new perspective on what diversity and tolerance are supposed to mean. I had no idea that being an American would ever be this hard.
小題1:The author was held at the airport because ______.
A.she and her husband returned from Jamaica
B.her name was similar to a terrorist’s
C.she had been held in Montreal
D.she had spoken at a book event
小題2:She was not allowed to call her friends because ______.
A.her identity hadn’t been confirmed yet
B.she had been held for only one hour and a half
C.there were other families in the waiting room
D.she couldn’t use her own cell phone
小題3:We learn from the passage that the author would ______ to prevent similar experience from happening again.
A.write to the agencyB.change her name
C.a(chǎn)void traveling abroadD.do nothing
小題4:Her experiences indicate that there still exists ______ in the US.
A.hatredB.discrimination
C.toleranceD.diversity
小題5:The author sounds ______ in the last paragraph.
A.impatientB.bitterC.worriedD.ironic (具有諷刺意味的)

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:完形填空

An acrobatic(雜技的) master performed a tightrope(繃緊的鋼絲) walk between two mountains, which attracted thousands of people.
When the ____ started, he went to one end of the tightrope, ____ straight at the goal ahead, with open arms, walking slowly step by step to the opposite side of the mountain. Immediately, the audience ____ loud applause.
“If my hands dare tied, do you believe I can ____?” he asked the audience.
____, some people didn't believe, but in order to know the ___, they said, “We believe you!”
Then, he had his hands tied with a rope and walked past ____.
He looked around and said, “If I'm blindfolded(蒙著眼睛的) with my hands tied, do you ____ believe I can go past?”
This time, the people said without ____, “We believe you!”
In this way, his eyes were ____ with a black cloth. He moved slowly to the tightrope and walked along it inch by inch. This time, he went past once again. The audience burst into ____.
Then, he ____ a child and asked all the people, “If I put him on my shoulders ___ I'm blindfolded with my hands tied as well, do you still believe I can make it?”
All the people replied before ____, “We believe you!”
“I ask you again. Do you really believe me?”
“Yes, we believe you completely!”
Then, he said, “Well then, since you believe me, ____ my child with yours. Who will?”
All of a sudden, the audience fell ____. The silence lasted for nearly ten minutes.
After ten minutes, the acrobatic master said nothing, just put the child on his shoulders and walked past along the tightrope. Sure enough, this time he ____ once more.
Faced with things far from their own ____, people can often make judgments easily and quickly, but once involved in(牽涉) it, most of people “cannot ____ it clearly”. Only those who are really confident, like the master in the tightrope walk, can stay ____ at any time.
小題1:
A.talentB.play
C.programD.show
小題2:
A.steppingB.staring
C.wanderingD.pointing
小題3:
A.broke intoB.came into
C.gave offD.sent off
小題4:
A.get throughB.walk down
C.go acrossD.pass around
小題5:
A.FinallyB.ActuallyC.HopefullyD.Especially
小題6:
A.resultB.experienceC.challengeD.trick
小題7:
A.slightlyB.luckilyC.smoothlyD.nervously
小題8:
A.evenB.justC.a(chǎn)lwaysD.still
小題9:
A.difficultyB.hesitationC.concernD.mercy
小題10:
A.blockedB.hiddenC.coveredD.equipped
小題11:
A.cheersB.joyC.tearsD.laughter
小題12:
A.choseB.supportedC.pushedD.held
小題13:
A.tillB.beforeC.whileD.since
小題14:
A.a(chǎn)rguingB.thinkingC.refusingD.wondering
小題15:
A.exchangeB.compareC.takeD.treat
小題16:
A.silentB.noisyC.doubtfulD.a(chǎn)nxious
小題17:
A.wonB.walkedC.a(chǎn)ctedD.succeeded
小題18:
A.childrenB.fears
C.interestsD.performances
小題19:
A.senseB.see
C.understandD.realize
小題20:
A.a(chǎn)wakeB.encouraged
C.patientD.focused

查看答案和解析>>

科目:高中英語 來源:不詳 題型:完形填空

It was a normal Monday morning at an assembly(集會(huì)).The headmaster was          the students on important things in life and about      ourselves to what is important to us.This is       the story went: An old man lived in a certain part of London.He would wake up every morning and go to the        and would get the train right to Central London,and then sit at the street corner and beg.
He did this every single      for almost 20 years.His house was dirty and a stench(惡臭) came out of the house and it smelled horribly.The neighbors could not stand the      any-more,so they asked the police officers to clear the place.The officers       the door and cleaned the house.There were small bags of      all over the house that he had collected over the years.The police         the money,and soon realized that the old man was a(n)       .They waited outside,expecting to share the good news with him.
When he arrived home that evening,he was      by one of the officers who told him that
there was no need for him to beg any more         he was a rich man now. He said       ,went into his house and locked the door.The next morning he woke up         ,went to the subway, got into the train,and sat at the street comer and       to beg.
        , this old man had no great plans,dreams or anything       for his life.We learn nothing from this story       staying focused on the things we enjoy doing,commitment. We should remain         to our course. Just keep it in mind that commitment         wealth
小題1:
A.scoldingB.consultingC.a(chǎn)ddressingD.a(chǎn)dvising
小題2:
A.exposingB.committingC.comparingD.connecting
小題3:
A.howB.whyC.whereD.when
小題4:
A.marketB.officeC.subwayD.shelter
小題5:
A.hourB.dayC.weekD.month
小題6:
A.smellB.houseC.manD.police
小題7:
A.knocked atB.knocked overC.broke upD.broke into
小題8:
A.moneyB.wasteC.foodD.fish
小題9:
A.keptB.tookC.countedD.presented
小題10:
A.beggarB.thiefC.officerD.millionaire
小題11:
A.caughtB.metC.warnedD.questioned
小題12:
A.thoughB.unlessC.untilD.a(chǎn)s
小題13:
A.nothingB.a(chǎn)nythingC.somethingD.everything
小題14:
A.a(chǎn)s wellB.a(chǎn)s earlyC.a(chǎn)s usualD.a(chǎn)s much
小題15:
A.determinedB.continuedC.managedD.hesitated
小題16:
A.EventuallyB.FortunatelyC.GenerallyD.Obviously
小題17:
A.preciousB.complex C.a(chǎn)vailableD.significant
小題18:
A.rather thanB.other thanC.more thanD.less than
小題19:
A.honestB.openC.trueD.equal
小題20:
A.a(chǎn)ttractsB.keepsC.losesD.possesses

查看答案和解析>>

同步練習(xí)冊(cè)答案