3£®The crowd fled in all directions________when they saw the monster. A£®in hurry B£®in panic C£®without doubt D£®beyond wonder
4£®The little boy£¬________two attempts to climb over the fence of the garden£¬decided to have another try.
A£®having made B£®making C£®made D£®has made
5£®It is all agreed that a good education doesn¡¯t________a good job. A£®guarantee B£®result C£®depend D£®swear
6£®The research project has only been under way for three months£¬so it¡¯s too early to________its success.
A£®conclude B£®evaluate C£®indicate D£®reveal
7£®(2009ÄêÐìÖݶþÄ£)Hillary Clinton arrived in Beijing yesterday£¬________the start of her short visit to China.
A£®marked B£®having marked C£®marking D£®to mark
8£®If you want to________in the world£¬you must learn to work hard while you are still young.
A£®make much of yourself B£®make the way out C£®make you out D£®make your way
9£®Before the final examination£¬many students have shown________of tension.Some have trouble in sleeping while others have lost their appetite.
A£®signs B£®marks C£®anxiety D£®remarks 10£®Father together with his good friends was________to go out for a camp________it began to rain.
A£®hardly£»than B£®around£»as C£®about£»when D£®nearly£»while
11£®He¡¯s been________as judge in the State Supreme Court in California. A£®determined B£®appointed C£®admitted D£®assumed
12£®________by the rising price of gas£¬many car owners use their cars less frequently. A£®Driven B£®Being driven C£®To drive D£®Having driven 13£®¡ªI wonder if she will show up at the concert.
¡ªShe will.She is only too________to watch the famous conductor. A£®anxious B£®proud C£®interested D£®satisfied
14£®To our great________£¬Geoffrey¡¯s illness proved not to be as serious as we had feared. A£®anxiety B£®relief C£®view D£®judgment
15£®As I waited for Mike to arrive£¬I________the clock and saw that he was late. A£®glanced at B£®stared at C£®watched D£®noticed ¢ò.ÍêÐÎÌî¿Õ
(2009½ìÓ¢ÓïÖܱ¨Ä£ÄâËÄ)
For 52 years my father got up every morning at 5¡Ã30 a£®m.£¬except Sunday£¬and went to work.I__1__saw my father home from work ill.He had no hobbies£¬__2__taking care of his family. For 22 years£¬__3__I left home for college£¬my father__4__me every Sunday at 9¡Ã00 a£®m..He was always interested in my__5__£¬or how my family was doing£¬and I never once heard him__6__about his lot (Éú»î×´¿ö) in life.The calls even came when he and my mother were in
other states.
Nine years ago when I__7__my first house£¬my father,67 years old£¬spent three days__8__my house.He would not__9__me to pay someone to have it done.All he __10__was a cup of tea£¬a paint brush and to talk to him.But I was too__11__.I had a law practice to run£¬and I could not take__12__to hold the brush£¬or talk to my father.__13__things happened several times later. The morning on Sunday.January 16,1996£¬my father telephoned me__14__£¬this time from my sister¡¯s home in Florida.But the__15__came again at 4¡Ã40 p£®m.that day.My father was in the__16__in Florida with an aneurysm (¶¯ÂöÁö)£®I got on an airplane__17__£¬and on the way£¬I__18__of all the times I had not taken the time to talk to my father.I determined that when I arrived£¬I would__19__for the lost time£¬and have a nice long talk with him.
I arrived in Florida at 11¡Ã30 p£®m.£¬my father had__20__at 9¡Ã12 p£®m..This time it was he who did not have time to talk£¬or to wait for me. 1.A.ever B£®never C£®always D£®often 2£®A.other than B£®rather than C£®more than D£®or rather 3£® A.because B£®before C£®although D£®since 4£®A.visited B£®praised C£®telephoned D£®met 5£®A.work B£®life C£®study D£®plan 6£®A.worry B£®care C£®talk D£®look 7£®A.built B£®found C£®purchased D£®sold 8£®A.repairing B£®painting C£®cleaning D£®decorating 9£®A.teach B£®advise C£®force D£®allow 10£®A.asked B£®kept C£®ordered D£®served 11.A.smart B£®upset C£®busy D£®tired 12£®A.practice B£®task C£®tea D£®time 13£®A.Different B£®Similar C£®Funny D£®Strange 14£®A.as usual B£®in pain C£®casually D£®finally 15£®A.call B£®moment C£®situation D£®scene 16£®A.church B£®school C£®home D£®hospital 17£®A.immediately B£®happily C£®gradually D£®carefully 18£®A.heard B£®spoke C£®thought D£®demanded 19£®A.take up B£®make up C£®turn up D£®put up 20£®A.started out B£®given in C£®passed away D£®come back
¢ó.ÔĶÁÀí½â
(2009Äê¶«±±ÈýУµÚÒ»´ÎÁª¿¼£¬E)
Madame de Stael says that only the people who can play with children are able to educate them.For success in training children£¬the first condition is to become a child oneself.It means to treat the child as really one¡¯s equal£¬that is£¬to show him the same consideration£¬the same kind of confidence one shows to an adult.It means not to affect the child to be what we ourselves want him to become£¬but to be affected by the impression of what the child himself is£»not to treat the child with cheating£¬or by force£¬but with the seriousness and true love suitable to his own character.
Not leaving the child in peace is the greatest problem of present methods of training children.Parents do not see that during the whole life£¬the need of peace is never greater than in the years of childhood£¬an inner peace under all outside liveliness.
But what does a child experience£¿Corrections£¬orders£¬interference (¸ÉÉæ)£¬the whole livelong day.The child is always required to leave something alone£¬or to do something different£¬to find something different£¬or to want something different from what he does£¬or finds£¬or wants.He is always guided in another direction from the true inner will that is leading him.All of this is caused by our so-called enthusiasm in directing£¬advising£¬and helping the child to become
the same model produced in one assembly line (Á÷Ë®Ïß)£®Understanding£¬the deepest characteristic of love£¬is almost always absent.
To bring up a child means carrying one¡¯s soul in one¡¯s hand£»it means never placing ourselves in danger of meeting the cold look on the face of the child.It means the truth that the ways of injuring the child are limitless while the ways of being useful to him are few.How seldom does the educator remember that the child£¬even at four or five years of age£¬has already had a sharp feeling£¡The smallest mistrust and unkindness£¬the least act of injustice£¬leave wounds that last for life in the heart of the child.While£¬on the other hand£¬unexpected friendliness and kindness make quite as deep an impression on those soft senses.
1£®The passage mainly talks about________.
A£®misleading zones and right ways in educating children B£®current problems in training children C£®what should be taught to children D£®the importance of educating children
2£®Children£¬according to the passage£¬are experiencing________. A£®corrections£¬orders and peace B£®orders£¬interference and peace
C£®interference£¬orders and corrections D£®peace£¬guide and praise
3£®If you were a parent£¬which of the following methods is TRUE according to the text? A£®You could treat your children not so seriously for they don¡¯t understand many things. B£®You could train your children as you wish them to be.
C£®You should sometimes leave your children in peace as they wish in their childhood. D£®You should correct your children immediately if their behavior is not what you want. 4£®We may conclude that the author believes people should________. A£®play with the children with enthusiasm all day long just to please them B£®try to give an order£¬advice and suggestions to their children at any time C£®treat their children just as the way they treat an adult in their daily life
D£®regard their children as an equal to them and have understanding of the inner peace of them
¿Îʱ×÷Òµ?ÈýÊ®? ¢ñ.µ¥ÏîÌî¿Õ
1£®D when²¢ÁÐÁ¬´Ê£¬³£ÓÃÓÚ¡°...be about to do sth.when...¡±¾äÐÍÖУ¬±íʾ¡°ÕýÒª¡¡Õâʱ¡¡¡±¡£attract/draw one¡¯s attentionÎüÒýijÈ˵Ä×¢ÒâÁ¦£»pay attention to×¢Òâ¡¡¡£
2£®D make every effort to doÒâΪ¡°²»ÒÅÓàÁ¦µØ¸É¡¡¡±¡£
3£®B ¼ûµ½¹ÖÎïÈËȺӦ¡°¾ª»ÅµØ¡±ËÄ´¦ÌÓ´Ü¡£in a hurry±íʾ¡°´ÒæµØ¡±£¬ÆäÖÐhurry
ǰµÄa²»¿ÉÊ¡ÂÔ¡£
4£®A v£®-ingÐÎʽÏÈÓÚdecide·¢Éú£¬¹ÊÓÃAÏî¡£
5£®A ¾äÒâΪ£º´ó¼Ò¶¼Ò»ÖÂÈÏΪÊܹýÁ¼ºÃµÄ½ÌÓý²»Äܱ£Ö¤ÓÐÒ»·ÝºÃ¹¤×÷¡£guarantee±£Ö¤¡£BÏ½á¹û£¬µ¼Ö£»CÏÒÀ¿¿£¬ÒÀÀµ£»DÏ·¢ÊÄ£¬ÕâÈýÏî¶¼²»·ûºÏ¾äÒâ¡£
6£®B ¹À¼ÆÓÃevaluate¡£
7£®C ¿¼²é·ÇνÓﶯ´Ê¡£¸ù¾Ý¾äÒ⣬Hillary Clintonµ½´ï±±¾©Õâ¼þÊÂÇé±êÖ¾×ÅËý¶ÌÆÚ·ÃÎÊÖйúµÄ¿ªÊ¼¡£¸ù¾Ý¾äÒâÓ¦ÓÃmarking¡£
8£®D ¸ù¾ÝÓï¾³Ó¦ÊÇ¡°Èç¹ûÄãÏë³É¹¦¡±£¬¹ÊÑ¡D¡£make one¡¯s way³ýÁ˿ɱíʾ¡°µ½(ijµØ)£¬(ÏòijµØ)×ßÈ¥¡±Ö®Í⣬»¹¿É±íʾ¡°³É¹¦£»ÓгöÏ¢¡±¡£make much of sb.ÖØÊÓ£»make sth.out¿´Ç壻±æÈÏÇå³þ£»make sb.out¿´Í¸£»Åª¶®Ä³ÈË¡£
9£®A ¿¼²é´ÊÒ屿Îö¡£¾äÒâΪ£ºÔÚÆÚÄ©¿¼ÊÔ֮ǰ£¬Ðí¶àѧÉúÒѾ±íÏÖ³ö½ôÕŵļ£Ïó¡£signÒâΪ¡°Õ÷Õ×£¬¼£Ï󣬲¡Ö¢¡±£»markÒâΪ¡°¼ÇºÅ¡±£»anxietyÒâΪ¡°ÓÇÂÇ£¬µ£ÐÄ¡±£»remarkÒâΪ¡°ÆÀÂÛ¡±£¬¾ù²»·ûºÏÌâÒâ¡£
10£®C be about to do sth.when...ÒâΪ¡°ÕýÒª×öijÊ£¬Õâʱ/¾ÍÔÚÄÇʱ¡¡¡±£¬whenÏ൱ÓÚat that time¡£
11£®B ¾äÒâΪ£ºËû±»ÈÎÃüΪ¼ÓÀû¸£ÄáÑÇÖÝ×î¸ß·¨ÔºµÄ·¨¹Ù¡£determine¾ö¶¨£¬È·¶¨£»appointÔ¼¶¨£¬ÈÎÃü£»admit³ÐÈÏ£»assume¼Ù¶¨¡£
12£®A ¿¼²é·ÇνÓﶯ´ÊµÄÓ÷¨¡£²¹È«Îª£ºmany car owners are driven by the rising...£¬Ò²¾ÍÊÇ˵£¬driveºÍÆäÂß¼Ö÷ÓïÊDZ»¶¯¹ØÏµ£¬¹ÊÓùýÈ¥·Ö´Ê×÷×´Ó±íʾÔÒò¡£¾äÒâΪ£ºÊÜÈÕÒæ¸ßÕǵÄÓͼ۵ÄÓ°Ï죬ºÜ¶à³µÖ÷ÓóµµÄ´ÎÊý´ó´ó¼õÉÙ¡£
13£®A be anxious to do sth.¿ÊÍû×öijÊ£¬·ûºÏÓï¾³¡£
14£®B anxiety½¹ÂÇ£»relief·ÅËÉ£¬·ÅÐÄ£»view¹Ûµã£»judgmentÅжϡ£ÓÉÌâ¸Éºó°ë¾ä¿É֪ѡBÏî¡£to one¡¯s relief ÁîÈËÈçÊÍÖØ¸ºµÄÊÇ£¬Êǹ̶¨¶ÌÓï¡£
15£®A glance atÒâΪ¡°´Ò´ÒÒ»¿´¡±£¬·ûºÏÌâÒâ¡£stare atÒâΪ¡°¶¢×Å¿´¡±£»watchÒâΪ¡°×¢ÊÓ¡±£»noticeÒâΪ¡°×¢Òâµ½¡±¡£ ¢ò.ÍêÐÎÌî¿Õ
¡¾ÓïÆª½â¶Á¡¿ ±¾ÎÄÊÇһƪ¼ÇÐðÎÄ¡£¸¸Ç×¼´½«À뿪ÈËÊÀµÄʱºò£¬×÷ÕßͻȻ¸Ðµ½Ó¦¸ÃºÍ¸¸Ç×¶à˵˵»°£¬¿ÉÉúÃü»áÔÊÐíÂð£¿
1£®B ÁªÏµÊ×¾äFor 52 years my father got up every morning at 5¡Ã30 a£®m.£¬except Sunday£¬and went to work¿ÉÖª£¬×÷Õß¡°´ÓÀ´Ã»ÓÐ(never) ¡±¼û¸¸Ç×ÒòΪÉú²¡¶ø´ôÔÚ¼ÒÀï¡£
2£®A other thanÒâΪ¡°³ýÁË¡±£¬´Ë´¦Ö¸³ýÁËÕչ˼ÒÍ¥ËûûÓа®ºÃ¡£ 3£®D ×÷ÕßÊÇÖ¸¡°×Ô´Ó(since)¡±ËûÀë¼ÒºóµÄ22ÄêÀï¡£
4£®C ¸ù¾ÝÏÂÎÄÖеÄThe calls even came...¿ÉÖª£¬¸¸Ç×ÿ¸öÐÇÆÚÌì¶¼¸ø×÷Õß¡°´òµç»°(telephoned)¡±¡£
5£®B ½áºÏºóÃæµÄhow my family was doing...about his lot in life¿ÉÖª£¬´Ë´¦Ö¸µÄÊÇ×÷Õߵġ°Éú»î(life)¡±¡£
6£®C ¸¸Ç׺ܹØÐÄ×÷ÕßµÄÉú»îºÍ¼ÒÍ¥£¬È´´ÓÀ´Ã»¡°Ì¸(talk)¡±µ½¹ýËû×Ô¼ºµÄÉú»î¡£ 7£®C ¸ù¾ÝÉÏÏÂÎĵÄÓï¾³£¬ÕâÀïÖ¸×÷Õß¡°ÂòÁË(purchased)¡±·¿×Ó¡£ 8£®B ÁªÏµÏÂÎÄÖеÄa paint brush¿ÉÖª£¬´Ë´¦ÊÇÖ¸¡°·ÛË¢(painting)¡±·¿×Ó¡£