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高考英语复习自选训练 完形填空18

作者:  时间: 2017-05-30

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高考英语复习自选训练 完形填空18

(一)

A Strange Greeting, a True Feeling Last week I was invited to a doctor’s meeting at the Ruth hospital for incurables. In one of the wards a patient, an old man, got up shakily from his bed and moved towards me. I could see that he hadn't long to   1   , but he came up to me and placed his right foot close mine on the floor.

 “Frank” I cried in astonishment. He couldn’t   2  , as I knew, but all the time     his foot against mine.

My     raced back more than thirty years to the     days of 1941, when I was a student in London. The     was an air-raid shelter, in which I and about hundred other people slept every night. Two of the regulars were Mrs. West and her son Frank.

        wartime problems, we shelter-dwellers got to     each other very well. Frank West     me because he wasn’t   10  , not even at birth. His mother told me he was 37 then, but he had   11   of a mind than a baby has. His “  12  consisted of rough sounds——sounds of pleasure or anger and   13   more. Mrs. West, then about 75, was a strong, capable woman, as she had to be, of course, because Frank   14   on her entirely. He needed all the   15   of a baby.

One night a policeman came and told Mrs. West that her house had been flattened by a 500-pounder. She   16   nearly everything she owned.

When that sort of thing happened, the rest of us helped the   17   ones. So before we   18   that morning, I stood beside Frank and   19   my right foot against his. They were about the same size. That night, then, I took a pair of shoes to the shelter for frank. But as soon as he saw me he came running and placed his right foot against mine. After that, his   20   to me was always the same.

1Awork        Bstay         Clive            Dexpect

2Aanswer      Bspeak         Csmile         Dlaugh

3Acovering       Bmoving     Cfighting      Dpressing

4Aminds       Bmemories       Cthoughts          Dbrains

5Abetter        Bdark        Cyounger       Dold

6Acave         Bplace          Csight            Dscene

7ADiscussing    BSolving    CSharing         DSuffering

8Alearn from    Btalk to       Chelp            Dknow

9Aneeded         Brecognized  Cinterested         Dencouraged

10Anormal       Bcommon         Cunusual         Dquick

11Amore            Bworse    Cfewer          Dless

12Aword          Bspeech     Csentence        Dlanguage

13Anot             Bno        Csomething           Dnothing

14Afed                  Bkept        Clived        Ddepended

15Aattention            Bcontrol    Ctreatment      Dmanagement

16Alost                 Bneeded          Cdestroyed            Dleft

17Atroublesome       Bunlucky   Cangry         Dunpopular

18Aseparated          Bwent       Creunited        Dreturned

19Apushed            Btried       Cshowed         Dmeasured

20Anodding            Bgreeting      Cmeeting        Dacting

参考答案及解析   

1—5  CADBB  6—10 DCDCA  11—15 DBBDA  16—20 ABADB

1上文的“incurables"表明这位老人是不治之症患者,存活的时间不会太长。

2A  我叫他名字, 他不会回答。

3由下文暗示可知,37岁的Frank不如一个婴儿的智力。他不能用语言回答别人的问话,但内心有一定的反应,因此一见到我便将右脚靠着我的右脚以示问候。

4B  Frank的这一举动使我的记忆一下子回到了30年前。

5下文交待30年前作者的生活,二战期间他只能住在防空洞中,生活很苦,只能用“dark”来形容当年的岁月。

6作者回忆30年前的生活,头脑中出现了防空洞的情景。

7C 8在战争问题上由于拥有共同的话题,我们这些防空洞居住者逐渐了解了对方。

9C 10一个37岁的人智力却不正常,这一现象逐渐吸引了我的注意。

11尽管Frank已经37岁,但智力还不如一个婴儿。

12B13他的讲话仅体现了内心的快乐和愤怒,没有更多实在的内容。

14D15A  West夫人不得不强壮而又有能力,因为Frank完全依靠于她,他需要婴儿似的全部照料。

16她几乎失去了一切。

17 B  West夫人遭受这么大的损失,大家尽力帮助这不幸的一家人。

18 A   

19 D

20那天早上临走前,我站在Frank身边,将我的右脚靠着Frank 的右脚以便量出他脚的大小,目的是为他买一双鞋子。Frank将我的这一动作看成是问候的表现,从此他就用这一动作来问候我,这就有了本文开头的那种情景。

****************************************************结束

 

完形填空

When Andra Rush started her trucking company, all she had was an old vantwo used pick-up trucks and the simple certainty of a 23-year-old girl. But she planned to make her fortune in about four years to    36   her true goal: dealing with poverty on Native American reservations across North America. "I thought I could retire by the time I was 27," says Rush, "At that age, you don't know  37  you don't know."

Rush is 49 now and  38  working hard. Her tiny start-up just outside Detroit has  39   to a $400 million North American business. Today Rush is a(an)  40  not only for Native Americans but also for women in the male-controlled world of trucking.

Rush was  41 30 miles outside Detroit. When the teenage Rush visited the reservation for the first time, she was  42  by the poverty and lack of hope. "I really wanted to  43  " she says.

She graduated from the University of Michigan in 1982. She took a nursing job with a 44 pay and then practiced at an air goods company, 45 the speed of package pickups and deliveries made a little more a little more profits. "I thought I could do that 46 ," Rush says.

Within six months, Rush had ten employees, and clients(客户)  47  Ford and GM were paying her to 48 small packages from the airport. Ford was the first to offer her a job trucking parts between its plants and supplier.

By 2001, many of Rush's 1,000 employees were Native Americans, working alongside people of every    49   But she felt she hadn't done enough. 50  she joined forces with a Canadian parts maker to design and gather auto components.

She located the plants near reservations, 51 opportunities where they were needed most. By 2009, her auto parts business was earning $370 million   52   .

She's come a long way from the  53    23-year-old who thought "the cash would just roll in." But Rush wouldn't change a thing: "I love my job," she says. "I 54  the fact that you can start to get some motivation and keep   55   yourself—and then suddenly you lift your head and it's been 25 years"

 

36. Amake                   B. accomplish                C.  receive             Darrive

37. Awhat                    Bwhich                      Cwhy                  Dwho

38. Aso                       Bsomehow                 Cstill                   Danyhow

39. A.  grown                Bbecome                    Cgot                    Dgone

40. Aable housewife     Bordinary woman       Crole model         Dtruck driver

41. Abrought               Blived                       Crisen                 Draised

42. Amoved                 Binterested                 Cstruck                Dencouraged

43. A have an influence    Bmake a difference     Cset an example    Dmake a decision

44. Alow                     Bhigh                        Ccheap                Dexpensive

45.Awhich                   Bthat                         Cwhen                 Dwhere

46.Awell                     Bbadly                       Cworse                Dbetter

47.Alike                      Bbesides                    Cfor                    Dexcept

48.Atake                      Bfetch                       Cbring                 Dlift

49.Aeducation              Bfamily                     Cbackground        Dcity

50.ABecause                BFor                         CBut                   DSo

51.Aseizing                  Bcreating                   Cgrasping            Dlosing

52.Ain case                  Bin turn                     Cin return            Din need

53.Ainexperienced        Bexperienced              Cexpert                Dskilled

54.Aenjoy                    Bhate                         Cdoubt                Drefuse

55.Afighting     Bforcing        Cchallenging Damusing

 

36-55 BACAC   DCBAD   DABCD    BCAAC

*************************************************************结束

 

 

 

 

2013高考英语二轮完形填空(吉林市)训练(3)及答案

(一)

A Strange Greeting, a True Feeling Last week I was invited to a doctor’s meeting at the Ruth hospital for incurables. In one of the wards a patient, an old man, got up shakily from his bed and moved towards me. I could see that he hadn't long to   1   , but he came up to me and placed his right foot close mine on the floor.

 “Frank” I cried in astonishment. He couldn’t   2  , as I knew, but all the time     his foot against mine.

My     raced back more than thirty years to the     days of 1941, when I was a student in London. The     was an air-raid shelter, in which I and about hundred other people slept every night. Two of the regulars were Mrs. West and her son Frank.

        wartime problems, we shelter-dwellers got to     each other very well. Frank West     me because he wasn’t   10  , not even at birth. His mother told me he was 37 then, but he had   11   of a mind than a baby has. His “  12  consisted of rough sounds——sounds of pleasure or anger and   13   more. Mrs. West, then about 75, was a strong, capable woman, as she had to be, of course, because Frank   14   on her entirely. He needed all the   15   of a baby.

One night a policeman came and told Mrs. West that her house had been flattened by a 500-pounder. She   16   nearly everything she owned.

When that sort of thing happened, the rest of us helped the   17   ones. So before we   18   that morning, I stood beside Frank and   19   my right foot against his. They were about the same size. That night, then, I took a pair of shoes to the shelter for frank. But as soon as he saw me he came running and placed his right foot against mine. After that, his   20   to me was always the same.

1Awork        Bstay         Clive            Dexpect

2Aanswer      Bspeak         Csmile         Dlaugh

3Acovering       Bmoving     Cfighting      Dpressing

4Aminds       Bmemories       Cthoughts          Dbrains

5Abetter        Bdark        Cyounger       Dold

6Acave         Bplace          Csight            Dscene

7ADiscussing    BSolving    CSharing         DSuffering

8Alearn from    Btalk to       Chelp            Dknow

9Aneeded         Brecognized  Cinterested         Dencouraged

10Anormal       Bcommon         Cunusual         Dquick

11Amore            Bworse    Cfewer          Dless

12Aword          Bspeech     Csentence        Dlanguage

13Anot             Bno        Csomething           Dnothing

14Afed                  Bkept        Clived        Ddepended

15Aattention            Bcontrol    Ctreatment      Dmanagement

16Alost                 Bneeded          Cdestroyed            Dleft

17Atroublesome       Bunlucky   Cangry         Dunpopular

18Aseparated          Bwent       Creunited        Dreturned

19Apushed            Btried       Cshowed         Dmeasured

20Anodding            Bgreeting      Cmeeting        Dacting

参考答案及解析   

1—5  CADBB  6—10 DCDCA  11—15 DBBDA  16—20 ABADB

1上文的“incurables"表明这位老人是不治之症患者,存活的时间不会太长。

2A  我叫他名字, 他不会回答。

3由下文暗示可知,37岁的Frank不如一个婴儿的智力。他不能用语言回答别人的问话,但内心有一定的反应,因此一见到我便将右脚靠着我的右脚以示问候。

4B  Frank的这一举动使我的记忆一下子回到了30年前。

5下文交待30年前作者的生活,二战期间他只能住在防空洞中,生活很苦,只能用“dark”来形容当年的岁月。

6作者回忆30年前的生活,头脑中出现了防空洞的情景。

7C 8在战争问题上由于拥有共同的话题,我们这些防空洞居住者逐渐了解了对方。

9C 10一个37岁的人智力却不正常,这一现象逐渐吸引了我的注意。

11尽管Frank已经37岁,但智力还不如一个婴儿。

12B13他的讲话仅体现了内心的快乐和愤怒,没有更多实在的内容。

14D15A  West夫人不得不强壮而又有能力,因为Frank完全依靠于她,他需要婴儿似的全部照料。

16她几乎失去了一切。

17 B  West夫人遭受这么大的损失,大家尽力帮助这不幸的一家人。

18 A   

19 D

20那天早上临走前,我站在Frank身边,将我的右脚靠着Frank 的右脚以便量出他脚的大小,目的是为他买一双鞋子。Frank将我的这一动作看成是问候的表现,从此他就用这一动作来问候我,这就有了本文开头的那种情景。

****************************************************结束

 

完形填空

When Andra Rush started her trucking company, all she had was an old vantwo used pick-up trucks and the simple certainty of a 23-year-old girl. But she planned to make her fortune in about four years to    36   her true goal: dealing with poverty on Native American reservations across North America. "I thought I could retire by the time I was 27," says Rush, "At that age, you don't know  37  you don't know."

Rush is 49 now and  38  working hard. Her tiny start-up just outside Detroit has  39   to a $400 million North American business. Today Rush is a(an)  40  not only for Native Americans but also for women in the male-controlled world of trucking.

Rush was  41 30 miles outside Detroit. When the teenage Rush visited the reservation for the first time, she was  42  by the poverty and lack of hope. "I really wanted to  43  " she says.

She graduated from the University of Michigan in 1982. She took a nursing job with a 44 pay and then practiced at an air goods company, 45 the speed of package pickups and deliveries made a little more a little more profits. "I thought I could do that 46 ," Rush says.

Within six months, Rush had ten employees, and clients(客户)  47  Ford and GM were paying her to 48 small packages from the airport. Ford was the first to offer her a job trucking parts between its plants and supplier.

By 2001, many of Rush's 1,000 employees were Native Americans, working alongside people of every    49   But she felt she hadn't done enough. 50  she joined forces with a Canadian parts maker to design and gather auto components.

She located the plants near reservations, 51 opportunities where they were needed most. By 2009, her auto parts business was earning $370 million   52   .

She's come a long way from the  53    23-year-old who thought "the cash would just roll in." But Rush wouldn't change a thing: "I love my job," she says. "I 54  the fact that you can start to get some motivation and keep   55   yourself—and then suddenly you lift your head and it's been 25 years"

 

36. Amake                   B. accomplish                C.  receive             Darrive

37. Awhat                    Bwhich                      Cwhy                  Dwho

38. Aso                       Bsomehow                 Cstill                   Danyhow

39. A.  grown                Bbecome                    Cgot                    Dgone

40. Aable housewife     Bordinary woman       Crole model         Dtruck driver

41. Abrought               Blived                       Crisen                 Draised

42. Amoved                 Binterested                 Cstruck                Dencouraged

43. A have an influence    Bmake a difference     Cset an example    Dmake a decision

44. Alow                     Bhigh                        Ccheap                Dexpensive

45.Awhich                   Bthat                         Cwhen                 Dwhere

46.Awell                     Bbadly                       Cworse                Dbetter

47.Alike                      Bbesides                    Cfor                    Dexcept

48.Atake                      Bfetch                       Cbring                 Dlift

49.Aeducation              Bfamily                     Cbackground        Dcity

50.ABecause                BFor                         CBut                   DSo

51.Aseizing                  Bcreating                   Cgrasping            Dlosing

52.Ain case                  Bin turn                     Cin return            Din need

53.Ainexperienced        Bexperienced              Cexpert                Dskilled

54.Aenjoy                    Bhate                         Cdoubt                Drefuse

55.Afighting     Bforcing        Cchallenging Damusing

 

36-55 BACAC   DCBAD   DABCD    BCAAC

*************************************************************结束

 

 

 

 

 

           

 

 


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