Edward Sims was born in 1892. He was the fifth child and only son of Herbert and Dora Sims. Herbert was a blacksmith(鐵匠), and had a thriving trade making horseshoes. He was determined that his first-born son would follow him into the blacksmith. For this reason, Edward had to leave school at the age of 12,and worked with his father.
However, Edward was not cut out to be a blacksmith. Although he has an athletic body, he didn't have strong arms like his father, and he felt dizzy in the heat of the smithy. When he tried to find alternative employment, he found it difficult because he had never learnt to read or write.
One day, he went for an interview at a solictior’s office. The job was a runner, taking documents from the office to other offices in the city. The solicitor was pleased to see that Edward was physically fit, but when he discovered that the young man couldn't read or write, he decided against employing him. "How can you deliver documents to other offices," he asked, "if you can't read the addresses on them?"
Bitterly disappointed, Edward left the building and went to wait for a tram to take him back to the suburb where his father’s smithy was. Next to the bus stop, a man was selling newspapers from a stand .
"Excuse me, son?" he said. "Would you look after my stand for a moment?"
For the next 20 minutes, Edward sold newspapers, lots of them. When the man came back, he was so delighted with his new assistant's honesty, that he offered him a job. Edward took it immediately.
In the next few months, the two men progressed from working on newspaper stands to selling newspapers, tobacco,confectionery(糖果點(diǎn)心)and other goods in a shop. Then they opened a second shop, and a third. Eventually, they had a chain of 25 shops in three cities.
Edward became very rich, so he employed a tutor to teach him to read and write. The tutor was amazed at what Edward had achieved. "Imagine what you could do if you’d been able to read and write when you were younger!" he said.
“Yes!” said Edward. “I could have run myself to exhaustion delivering documents for a solicitor!”
【小題1】What would be the best title for the text?
A.Success of illiterate newsboy |
B.Local blacksmith becomes famous |
C.The thriving trade of the blacksmith |
D.Reading and writing-the road to success |
A.Edward Sims did not like being a blacksmith. |
B.Edward Sims did not like working with his father. |
C.Edward Sims was not strong enough and it made him feel ill. |
D.Edward Sims was good at it but wanted to do another job. |
A.the solicitor turned him down because he wasn’t intelligent enough |
B.the solicitor offered him the job because he was so fit |
C.the solicitor gave him the job but told him he had to learn to read |
D.the solicitor didn’t offer him the job because he couldn’t read |
A.He was such a good salesman that he went on to own 25 newsagent shops with another man. |
B.The newspaperman liked him so much he gave him a job. |
C.He ran himself into exhaustion delivering papers. |
D.He learnt to read and write. |
【小題1】A
【小題2】C
【小題3】D
【小題4】C
解析試題分析:本文敘述了美國(guó)人名叫Edward是一個(gè)文盲,他一開(kāi)始他想當(dāng)一名鐵匠,后來(lái)發(fā)現(xiàn)自己的臂力不好,也就不能當(dāng)鐵匠了,于是又去找工作,結(jié)果在律師事務(wù)所因?yàn)樗粫?huì)讀寫(xiě),結(jié)果他被拒絕了。后來(lái)他和另一個(gè)人一起開(kāi)了一個(gè)店鋪,賣報(bào)紙,煙及糖果等,結(jié)果發(fā)了財(cái),在許多城市開(kāi)了25家連鎖店。
【小題1】標(biāo)題歸納題。根據(jù)文中主要說(shuō)的是Edward,他是一個(gè)文盲,但是在一生中做的生意非常興隆,故選 A。
【小題2】推理判斷題。根據(jù)Although he has an athletic body, he didn't have strong arms like his father, and he felt dizzy in the heat of the smithy. 可以推知他不是很強(qiáng)壯,這使他生病了,故選C。
【小題3】細(xì)節(jié)理解題。根據(jù)when he discovered that the young man couldn't read or write, he decided against employing him. 因?yàn)樗蛔R(shí)字,所以沒(méi)有雇傭他,故選D。
【小題4】細(xì)節(jié)理解題。根據(jù)I could have run myself to exhaustion delivering documents for a solicitor!”這里是虛擬,故選C。
考點(diǎn):故事類短文閱讀。
點(diǎn)評(píng):推理判斷題需要考生正確的閱讀短文對(duì)語(yǔ)篇有個(gè)整體的把握。會(huì)根據(jù)語(yǔ)句之間的邏輯關(guān)系、段內(nèi)的語(yǔ)義關(guān)系及篇章的語(yǔ)義關(guān)系,從段落、篇章的角度理解文章的主旨、作者的觀點(diǎn)和態(tài)度。做此類試題要善于抓住某一段話中的關(guān)鍵信息,即某些關(guān)鍵詞或短語(yǔ)去分析、推理、判斷,利用逆向思維或正面推理,從而推斷出這句話所隱含的深層含義。
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Edward Sims was born in 1892. He was the fifth child and only son of Herbert and Dora Sims. Herbert was a blacksmith(鐵匠), and had a thriving trade making horseshoes. He was determined that his first-born son would follow him into the blacksmith. For this reason, Edward had to leave school at the age of 12,and worked with his father.
However, Edward was not cut out to be a blacksmith. Although he has an athletic body, he didn't have strong arms like his father, and he felt dizzy in the heat of the smithy. When he tried to find alternative employment, he found it difficult because he had never learnt to read or write.
One day, he went for an interview at a solictior’s office. The job was a runner, taking documents from the office to other offices in the city. The solicitor was pleased to see that Edward was physically fit, but when he discovered that the young man couldn't read or write, he decided against employing him. "How can you deliver documents to other offices," he asked, "if you can't read the addresses on them?"
Bitterly disappointed, Edward left the building and went to wait for a tram to take him back to the suburb where his father’s smithy was. Next to the bus stop, a man was selling newspapers from a stand .
"Excuse me, son?" he said. "Would you look after my stand for a moment?"
For the next 20 minutes, Edward sold newspapers, lots of them. When the man came back, he was so delighted with his new assistant's honesty, that he offered him a job. Edward took it immediately.
In the next few months, the two men progressed from working on newspaper stands to selling newspapers, tobacco,confectionery(糖果點(diǎn)心)and other goods in a shop. Then they opened a second shop, and a third. Eventually, they had a chain of 25 shops in three cities.
Edward became very rich, so he employed a tutor to teach him to read and write. The tutor was amazed at what Edward had achieved. "Imagine what you could do if you’d been able to read and write when you were younger!" he said.
“Yes!” said Edward. “I could have run myself to exhaustion delivering documents for a solicitor!”
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A.Success of illiterate newsboy
B.Local blacksmith becomes famous
C.The thriving trade of the blacksmith
D.Reading and writing-the road to success
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A.the solicitor turned him down because he wasn’t intelligent enough
B.the solicitor offered him the job because he was so fit
C.the solicitor gave him the job but told him he had to learn to read
D.the solicitor didn’t offer him the job because he couldn’t read
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B.The newspaperman liked him so much he gave him a job.
C.He ran himself into exhaustion delivering papers.
D.He learnt to read and write.
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