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  • 1. 完形填空

        As a child, a fall left a big scar on one of my eyes. So my scarred, 1 and gray eye lived on with me.

        I walked with my face looking at 2 so people wouldn't see ugly me. Sometimes people laughed at me. I grew up imagining everyone 3 me.

        Yet mother would say, "Hold your head up high and 4 the world." She started when I was young. "If you do so, people will see your 5 soul." She continued this message 6 I wanted to hide.

        Those words have meant 7 things to me over the years. As a 8, I thought mama meant, "Be careful or you will 9 or bump into something because you are not looking." As a youth, though I tried to look down to 10 my shame, I found sometimes when I held head up high and let people know me, they 11 me. Mama's words helped me realize by letting people look at my face. I let them recognize the intelligence and 12 behind both eyes even if they couldn't see it on the 13.

        In high school I did well, 14 on the inside I still felt like a disable person. All I really wanted was to 15 everyone else. When things got really bad, I would cry to mama and she would look at me with 16 eyes and say, "Hold your head up high. Let them 17 the beauty inside."

        My mother's love and encouragement helped me overcome my own 18. I learnt to face the fact and appreciate 19.

        "Hold your head up high" has been heard many times in my home. The gift my mother gave me 20 in another generation. Because each of my children has felt its invitation.

    (1)
    A . sightless B . handsome C . bright D . attractive
    (2)
    A . the sky B . the floor C . the others D . my hands
    (3)
    A . liked B . looked down upon C . respected D . looked up to
    (4)
    A . face B . ignore C . avoid D . forget
    (5)
    A . sad B . happy C . beautiful D . ugly
    (6)
    A . wherever B . however C . whenever D . whatever
    (7)
    A . same B . different C . wonderful D . bad
    (8)
    A . baby B . student C . child D . youth
    (9)
    A . fall down B . roll over C . fail D . cry
    (10)
    A . show B . praise C . hide D . blame
    (11)
    A . liked B . made fun of C . looked at D . disliked
    (12)
    A . beauty B . sadness C . surprise D . disappointment
    (13)
    A . inside B . surface C . face D . eyes
    (14)
    A . but B . if C . even if D . in case
    (15)
    A . look like B . think like C . act as D . do like
    (16)
    A . puzzling B . exciting C . loving D . interesting
    (17)
    A . guess B . see C . find D . think
    (18)
    A . fault B . doubt C . eyes D . mind
    (19)
    A . myself B . itself C . herself D . himself
    (20)
    A . lives on B . lives by C . passes by D . passes away
  • 1. 阅读理解

        Of the several films Hirokazu has made about childhood and children, this one is the most modest, but no less pleasing for its delicate style and small setting. I Wish was originally called Miracle, and the change is for the better. The two-word title makes you want to know who's wishing for what, while the single word sounds plain and self-praising. This wise and funny film works small miracles in describing such a moment when kids turn from the wishfulness of childhood into shaping the world for themselves.

        The sweetly reflective hero, a sixth-grader named Koichi, starts out by wishing for a volcano to erupt. Not just any volcano, but the one that towers above his town, smoking heavily and giving off ash. An eruption would lead to a withdrawing, which would lead, at least in his mind, to a reunion with his father and kid brother, who've been living in Hakata while Koichi lives with his mother and retired grandparents in Kagoshima. The volcano, knowing nothing of this, refuses to erupt, but Koichi hears of another approach to realizing the desired miracle.

        One of the pleasures of I Wish is watching how kids behave—how Koichi attacks his dinner, for example. Another pleasure is rediscovering how kids think. These kids can be logical and ever so tricky. But children's thought processes can also be fancy. A boy wishes he could play baseball like one of baseball stars, who eats curry for breakfast; so he, too, starts eating curry for breakfast, instead of practicing on the field. Another boy tries to wish his dead dog, Marble, back to life. And what does Koichi finally wish for? I wish you'd see this delightful film to find out.

    1. (1) Why has the name of the film been changed from Miracle to I Wish?
    2. (2) Koichi wishes the volcano to erupt so that he can                 .
    3. (3) Which of the following statements is TRUE according to the passage?
    4. (4) What does the writer intend to do in this text?
  • 1. 阅读理解

        All of America's popular music—jazz, country, rock and roll, and hip hop—develops from the Delta blues. Its words gave voice to the lives of workers in the fields of the Deep South. The blues may have something to do with sadness, but singing it is an act of defiance, not despair(绝望). The blues reminds us of our weak points while encouraging us to see how far we can actually go.

        We can still almost touch the origin of this art form. Looking back on the journey the blues took north up the Mississippi River-when African Americans left the South in search of new jobs-photographer Gail Mooney travelled from Chicago clubs down to the Delta to get the stories of blues men and blues women. They are still here today to link us to the music's early days.

        "In our conversations, we talked so much more about other things than their music," says Mooney, whose exhibition of the blues has just begun a US tour this spring. "We talked about their childhoods, their cultural origin, and a time in America when people moved to live in large cities. I would listen, and sometimes I would get a feeling."

        These photos show some of the musicians who worked and studied with blues pioneers—drummer Sam Carr was the son of Robert Nighthawk, while Pinetop Perkins and Willie "Big Eyes" Smith played together with Muddy Waters.

        Already, this generation is leaving us: Little Milton, guitarist and vocalist, and Robert "Junior" Lockwood (who learned from Robert Johnson, the greatest blues man of all) have passed away since Mooney began her project. However, they left many valuable things to us. Turn on your radio and some little piece of the Delta gets passed down again.

    1. (1) From the passage we know that the blues                 .
    2. (2) The underlined word "defiance" in Paragraph 1 probably means                 .
    3. (3) Why did Mooney travel from Chicago clubs down to the Delta?
  • 1. 阅读理解

        Reading poems is not exactly an everyday activity for most people. In fact, many people never read a poem once they get out of high school.

        It is worth reminding ourselves that this has not always been the case in America. In the nineteenth century, a usual American activity was to sit around the fireside in the evening and read poems aloud. It is true that there was no television at the time, nor movie theaters, nor World Wide Web, to provide diversion. However, poems were a source of pleasure, of self-education, of connection to other people or to the world beyond one's own community. Reading them was a social act as well as an individual one, and perhaps even more social than individual. Writing poems to share with friends and relations was, like reading poems by the fireside, another way in which poetry has a place in everyday life.

        How did things change? Why are most Americans no longer comfortable with poetry, and why do most people today think that a poem has nothing to tell them and that they can do well without poems?

        There are, I believe, three culprits(肇事者): poets, teachers, and we ourselves. Of these, the least important is the third: the world surrounding the poem has betrayed us more than we have betrayed the poem. Early in the twentieth century, poetry in English headed into directions unfavorable to the reading of poetry. Readers decided that poems were not for the fireside or the easy chair at night, that they belonged where other difficult-to-read things belonged.

        Poets failed the reader, so did teachers. They want their students to know something about the skills of a poem, they want their students to see that poems mean something. Yet what usually occurs when teachers push these concerns on their high school students is that young people decide poems are unpleasant crossword puzzles.

    1. (1) Reading poems is thought to be a social act in the nineteenth century because                 .
    2. (2) The underlined word "diversion" (in Paragraph 2) most probably means "                ".
    3. (3) According to the passage, what is the main cause of the great gap between readers and poetry?
    4. (4) In the last paragraph, the writer questions                 .
  • 1. When I passed my school I (经常看看) my teachers who taught me 5 years ago. (词数不限)
  • 1. 他不能不记得旧日的中国。

    He cannot but remember China as it .

  • 1. The agreement ensured a (平稳的) supply of oil.
  • 1. Life in the ocean (范围) from the tiniest plankton all the way up to giants like sharks and whales.
  • 1. I want to (伴随) her on the trip.
  • 1. If you promise to help me with my maths every weekend, I will t you to a big dinner.
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