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一、语法选择(每题1分,满分15分)阅读以下短文,依照句子结构的语法性
和上下文连续的要求,从1-15各题所给的A、B、C和D中选出最正确选项,并在
答题卡大将该项涂黑.
1.(15分)"I'mgoingshoppinginthevillage
,"George'smothersaidto
GeorgeonSaturdaymorning."Sobeagoodboyanddon'tgetintotrouble
.And
don'tforget
(1)
goodcareofGrandma
."Thenshewentout
.
Grandma(2)
inthechair
bythewindowwhensheopenedone
littleeyeandsaid
,"Now
youheard
(3)
yourmothersaid
,George."
"Yes,Grandma,"Georgesaid.
George
wasboredto
't
haveabrother
orasister
.His
fatherwasafarmer
,and(4)
farmtheylivedonwasmilesaway
fromanywhere,(5)
therewereneveranychildren
ofstaring
at(6)
pigs,hens,cowsand
(7)
wayto
spendaSaturdaymorning
.
"Goandmakemeacupofteaforastart
,(8)
sugar
andmilk."Grandma
said.
Most
grandmothers
arelovely,kind,helpful
oldladies,butnotthis
'sgrandmawasawoman(9)
wasalwayscomplaining
about
somethingorother
.Shespentallday
(10)
onherchairbythe
(11)
that
Grandmausedtobeagentle
lady,but
asshegrewolder,she
wasnotable
to
lookafter
herself
andevenworse,
shewaseasytogetangry
.
"We(12)
benice
totheold,George,"Hismotheralwaystold
him.
Thinkingofthis
,George(13)
intothekitchenandmade
...
Grandmaacupofteawithateabag
.Heputonespoonofsugarand(14)
(15)
.
1
2
3
4
D./
5
6
7
ng
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
二、完形填空.
16.(15分)Morethan700yearsago,Scotland(苏格兰)wasfighting
(16)
astrongarmysoitwas(17)
manytimes,KingRobertofScotlandhadtorunfromtheEnglisharmy.
Onerainyday,
(18)thathedidn'teven
seeaspider(蜘蛛)(19)whenhe
...
thehousebutitfelldown
.
"Howsad"thoughtKingRobert
."Thespiderislikeme
.It'snot
(20)
enough."Hewatchedwhile
thespider
climbed
downasecond
time.
"Becareful
,littlespider
,oryoumightdie
,"hesaid
."Lifeisso
'll
nevergetbacktoyourweb."But
thespider(21)
again
(22)
climbedbackto
its
,thespidergotdotheweb
.
"Youaresuchagreat
(23)
,"he
said."If
youcankeeptrying
.I
won'tlettheEnglishwin."His(24)
grewstrongandthey
(25)
theEnglisharmy
.Scotlandwasfree
.
Nobodyknowsifthis
is
atrue
totheir
childrenbecausethewantthemtokeeptrying
.
ry
三、阅读第一节:阅读理解(满分40分)
26.(10分)
hasmanagedtoreturnthefavor.
...
walkinghisdog,Jack,inthepark
."AsIwaswalking
,IjustsawJack
runningontotheicetowardstheducksinthemiddle
,andthenhefell
intothewaterandcouldn'tclimbout
,"
nochoicebutto
tryandsavehisdog."someoneelsetold
methelake
was
onlyone﹣meterdeep,butitwasatleasttwicethat
.Ihadtobreakmy
waythroughthe6
﹣
,IgotJackbytheneck
,andpulled
'tthinkIhaveeverfeltsocoldbythetimewegotback
there,everyonewasaskingifJackwasokay
﹣﹣﹣﹣﹣﹣noonewasparticularlyworried
,aboutme!"
Aneighbor
,JulieBrown
,sawitallhappen
."Thedogwentontoan
,itstartedtogounder
.Therewerecrowdsof
peoplearound,andtheywereallshoutingandscreaming
.BeforeIknew
it,theownerSmithwasinthewaterforcinghiswaythroughtheice
.I
can'tbegintoimaginehowcolditwas
.Everyonewasverynervous,but
hewasascoolasacucumber
﹣﹣﹣﹣﹣hejustcrawledbackout
,putthe
dogonitslead,andwenthome."
Manyregardhimasahero
,
﹣backabout
it."
didwithout
asecondthought
.Butin
thefuture
,I'mgoingtomake
surehe'son
lead
nearanyiceponds,Petsaremembersof
ourfamily
.Wouldyoudothe
same
forthem?
.
.
.
.
?
.
...
.
.
.
"ascoolasacucumber"inParagraph3means"
"
,thewriterasksaquestionto.
.
.
.
.
'sPetDog
'sBestFriend
'Owners.
31.(10分)
TimBerners﹣,
hisinventionhaschangedourlives.
HewasborninLondon,,
attheageof21.
,theyweremuch
interestedintwothings,
...
thebrainconnectsomanyfactssoquickly
?Hehadtoworkwithpeople
allover
about
tomanagealltheinformation
.Heansweredthesamequestionsagainand
tookalotoftime
.It
wasevendifficultforcomputersinthe
sameofficeinSwitzerlandtoshareinformation
.Timalsoforgotthings
work
like
abrain
?Could
it"talk"to
other
computers?
There
wasanInternet
already
but
itwas
difficult
,
TimBerners﹣Leeinvented
theWorldWideWeb(WWW)all
hadaspeciallanguagethathelpedcomputerstalktoeachotheronthe
Internet
.Whenpeoplewantedtoshareinformation
with
others,they
used
.
Tim
Berners﹣Leedoesn'tthink
hedid
anything
alloftheideasabouttheInternetwerealreadythere
.Allhedidwas
maketheInternetwhatitistoday
.
Most
mostimportantbutleastfamousinventorintheworldtoday!
﹣Leeinterestedin?
.
.
.
.
"It"inParagraph3refersto"".
...
﹣Leeoneofthemostimportantmenintheworld?
.
.
.
.
?
firstcomputer.
University.
﹣e﹣d﹣a﹣b
﹣b﹣a﹣c﹣d
﹣d﹣a﹣e﹣b
﹣c﹣a﹣b﹣d
﹣Lee?
.
.
.
.
36.(10分)
Libraries
Publiclibraries
alargeselectionofbooksandotherresources,whichlibrarymembers
canuseandborrowforfree.
Britain'sFirstPublicLibrary
ThefirstpubliclibraryinBritainopenedinManchester
...
'sfirstlibrarianwasamancalledEdwardEdwards,Edwards
attendedthelibrary'sopeningceremonyandtwofamouswriterscalled
CharlesDickensandWilliamThackerayweretheretoo.
HowtoJoinaLibrary
Tojoinalibrary,'ll
receivealibrarycardwhichisneededwhenusinglibraryservices.
MobileLibraries
,thesepeople
canstillborrowbooks.
Unlikemostlibraries,whichstorebooksinbuildings,mobile
librariesusuallykeeptheirbooksinamini﹣
bushasshelvesforthebooks,anditisbigenoughforborrowersto
stepinsideandlook
takes
themini
﹣bustoacertain
placeatacertaintime
,sopeopleknowwhentoexpectit
.
Theycanthenreturntheirbooksandborrowsomemore
.
AllAboardtheLibrary
AschoolinLondondidn'thavespaceforalibraryinsidethe
,everybodyagreedthatit
wasstillimportant
to
haveaschoollibrary
.Sothe
headof
theschool,
GrahamBlakedecidedtoparkanoldbusontheschoolcarparkand
changeditintoalibrary
.Pupilshelpedtopaintthebus
,andafter
eightmonths,thenewlibrarywasready
.
librarianofthe
first
public
library
inBritain?
.
.
.
.
...
?
.
.
.
.
?
.
.
.
.
?
.
.
'thaveenoughmoneytobuybooks
.
'thaveenoughspaceinsidethebuilding
.
?
.
.
'tuselibraries
.
.
41.(10分)
Peoplecan'tseeyouwhenyou'respeakingonthephone
,butthey
,thewayyouspeakisespeciallyimportant
.Infact
,
researchershavecalculatedthat80%ofcommunicationoverthephoneis
through
yourtone
ofvoice;andonly20%is
fromthe
areourtoptipsonhowtospeakoverthephone
.
Your
facial
expression
caninfluence
,if
you
smile,yourvoice
will
soundwarmandfriendly
,just
theopposite,if
you
...
haveanangrylookonyourfaceitcanmakeyousoundunpleasant
2Volume
IfyouspeaktooloudlyyoucouldsoundangryAndifyouspeaktoo
softlyit'llbedifficulttohearyouSospeakloudlyenoughtobeheard
clearlybutnotsoloudthatyou'reshouting
3Pace
ThepaceofyourvoiceishowquicklyyouspeakAndthiscanshow
howyoufeelForexampleanangrypersonmightspeakfasterthannormalOr
adownheartedpersonmightspeakveryslowlyTryspeakingalittlemore
slowlythannormalThiswillmakeyousoundconfidentandit'llmake
iteasierfortheotherpersontounderstandyou
4Gestu