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阅读下面材料,在空白处填入适当的内容(1个单词)或括号内单词的正确形式。 I w...

阅读下面材料,在空白处填入适当的内容(1个单词)或括号内单词的正确形式。

I was nine years old when I leant to ride a bike. The bike was a birthday present from my uncle. You can imagine how excited I was when I saw the bike, and I 1. (beg) my uncle to teach me how to ride it right away. However, before I got on the bike, I felt 2. (extreme) nervous and I was afraid that I would fall off and hurt myself. My uncle held onto the seat and helped me to get on the bike. While I was riding, he was running along beside me, holding the seat 3. I would not fall over. I was so grateful to him for his help.

As I was practicing, I became more and more confident. Then, I heard my uncle 4. (shout), “You are riding it by 5. (you) now!” I was both excited and scared. I was really riding by myself, but what if I fell off? Could I use the brakes 6. (stop)? As I was wondering about this, my uncle ran after me and got hold of the bike. I slowed down and came to 7. stop. My heart was still beating fast when I got off the bike. 8. (late) that day, having learnt how to get on the bike and get off it, I felt like I was walking on air! I am still 9. (thank) to my uncle for teaching me to ride a bike 10. my ninth birthday.

 

1.begged 2.extremely 3.so 4.shouting 5.yourself 6.to stop 7.a 8.Later 9.thankful 10.on 【解析】 本文是一篇记叙文,讲述了作者九岁生日那天叔叔教他骑自行车的故事。 1.考查时态。句意:我央求叔叔教我骑自行车。讲述的是过去的事情,应该用一般过去时,故填begged。 2.考查副词。句意:在上自行车之前,我感到非常紧张,怕会掉下来伤到自己。修饰形容词nervous用副词,故填extremely。 3.考查连词。句意:在我骑车的时候,他在我旁边跑着,扶着车座,所以我就不会摔倒。此处表示结果,故填so。 4.考查非谓语动词。句意:然后,我听到叔叔大喊“你现在正自己骑呢!”hear sb doing表示“听见某人正在……”,故填shouting。 5.考查固定搭配。句意参考上题解析,by oneself表示“独自”,故填yourself。 6.考查不定式。句意:我可以刹车么?use …to do…表示“用……做……”,故填to stop。 7.考查冠词。句意:我减速,停了下来。stop作名词“停止”时是可数名词,此处用不定冠词表泛指,故填a。 8.考查副词。句意:那天晚些时候,学会了如何上自行车和下自行车,我觉得自己像在空中漫步。later是副词,表示“晚些时候、后来”,故填Later。 9.考查形容词。句意:我仍然感激叔叔在我九岁生日时教我骑自行车,作表语用形容词,故填thankful。 10.考查介词。句意参考上题解析,on one’s birthday表示“在某人生日那天”,故填on。
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4.A. money B. confidence C. time D. courage

5.A. race B. illness C. doctor D. challenge

6.A. fix B. check C. reach D. explain

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10.A. nothing B. anyone C. anything D. someone

11.A. difference B. question C. trouble D. loss

12.A. appearance B. accent C. custom D. hair

13.A. picked B. called C. warmed D. woke

14.A. normally B. simply C. angrily D. regularly

15.A. tears B. anger C. smile D. surprise

16.A. respected B. praised C. thanked D. accepted

17.A. annoyed B. disappointed C. happy D. wet

18.A. eye B. brain C. kidney D. heart

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20.A. busiest B. luckiest C. happiest D. darkest

 

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    What attitude would you have to disappointments in life? 1. Find out how a chair, a pair of sunglasses and other items can hold unexpected promise for controlling your anger.

1. 2.

There’s a reason you’ve probably never gotten into an angry state of mind from a chair. W. Robert Nay, a clinical professor, says, “Our brains become conditioned to associate sitting and lying down with feeling relaxed.” That’s why it’s so easy to fall asleep on an airplane. Sitting down, Nay says, sends a message of safety and security to your brain.

2. Don’t get mad; get organized.

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3. Keep your cool with a pair of shades.

Research in the journal Cognition & Emotion (情绪) found that when people walk in direct sun without sunglasses, the light causes them to feel depressed. 4. Study co-author Daniele Marzoli suggests seeking shade during heated exchanges: “Compared outdoor, indoor conversations have more friendly interactions.”

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C. Well begun is half done.

D. You’re suddenly a crazy angry person.

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F. When attention is transferred, blind emotion will be controlled.

G. Those who walked unshaded against the rays had increased aggressiveness scores.

 

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In Michigan, forward-thinking policies have the potential to unlock other hidden benefits of autonomous vehicles, especially for those with physical disability. The Michigan Disability Rights Coalition has strongly advocated for the development of this technology, saying that it could give people with disabilities greater opportunities in the workforce and enable them to lead more fulfilling (满意的), independent lives.

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1.What’s the attitude of most American people to the future of autonomous vehicles?

A. uncertain B. optimistic

C. indifferent D. doubtful

2.What is the modified Ford Fusion?

A. A kind of autonomous vehicle. B. The name of a retirement community.

C. The collection of social activities. D. A two-mile road for self-driving cars.

3.Examples are given in the third and fourth paragraphs to prove ________.

A. how driverless technology benefits the aged and disabled

B. why driverless cars are restricted in many states in America

C. what are preventing the development of the technology

D. when driverless cars can enter people’s life eventually

4.What does the author attempt to inform us in the last paragraph?

A. The concept of autonomous vehicles has been widely recognized.

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C. The benefits of driverless cars have been fully unlocked.

D. The weak groups are often overlooked despite technology advances.

 

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    As a little girl growing up in the early 1960s in a suburb of Pittsburgh, it was not always easy to find role models, But I was lucky. In my childhood, I knew smart, strong women who had accomplished much, one of whom invented the world’s first computer compiler (编译器).

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Growing up, I knew she had worked as a secretary before I was born. I knew that she had joined the WAVES—the Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service branch of the U.S. Naval Reserve (海军预备队)—during World War Ⅱ. And I knew she’d worked in an office that was involved with codes (编码). But when she talked about it—rare, because she had been sworn to secrecy—she described her duties as ordinary, routine. I never questioned it. After all, the woman I knew was a reserved suburban mom.

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Inspired, I began a journey to explore the mystery of my mother’s service that continues to this day. I got some of her working records about her unit, OP19. In two years, she was promoted three times. She was no secretary, and her duties were hardly ordinary.

My mother always encouraged my interest in science and insisted to my father that I go to college. “You’re going to grow up to be another Madame Curie,” she told me. She was always pointing at other women. She did not see herself as someone to model on. Neither did I. Now I see her differently.

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A. She was afraid of being fired by her company.

B. She thought her job was just unremarkable.

C. She thought secretary was better than her real job.

D. She knew well what to be expected of her career.

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C. Cooperative and sincere. D. Hardworking and skeptical.

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A. The author doubted her mother’s job when she was a child.

B. The author’s mother saw herself as an example to follow.

C. Code Girls’ job is more important than that of the soldiers.

D. Code Girls inspired the author to learn more of her mother.

4.Which of the following can be the best title for the text?

A. Code Girls, My Favourite Book.

B. Mom, My Real Role Model.

C. The OP19, A Buried Secret.

D. WAVES, A Mysterious Organization.

 

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Pradam thinks her smell loss also may have affected her memory. Pradhan may be on to something, according to biologist Paul Moore. “When smell signals come in, you feel about them first. And then you think about it and then the memory is laid down. So without the feel part, the thinking about its part doesn’t come And that means no new smell memory gets created.”

1.What is true about Pradhan?

A. She has had no sense of smell since she was born.

B. She suffers from loss of appetite through lack of smell sense.

C. She has something wrong with her stomach.

D. She is looking for a roommate to share the cost.

2.What can we infer from what Beverly Cowart said?

A. People with a smell problem have no food tastes.

B. Different food tastes the same for people of smell loss.

C. Lack of smell sense makes eating a dull experience.

D. People feel hungry easily for lack of smell sense.

3.When eating out, Pradhan ________.

A. feels left out sometimes B. often has a good appetite

C. pretends to have good smell sense D. has a sense of being full quickly

4.What does the underlined sentence mean?

A. Pradhan may be right. B. Pradhan may be foolish.

C. Pradhan may be crazy. D. Pradhan may be forgettable.

 

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