Although I started learning English during my college years, when I entered the States, I only understood two English words “Yes” and “No”. We learned many grammar rules but we could not make the language connections to the real English world. Language frustration worries almost all first generation immigrants. For example, I got a letter from a Chinese-American who has lived in the States for a long time and has a good IT job saying “My 11-year-old girl writes quite well, but as her parents, we could not even read her article.”In addition, my Chinese-American professor friend has difficulty reading a novel. Improving our English skills has become a long journey for all of us. Honestly, if I have a chance, I really want to reach out to everyone in the world who has had a similar experience: learning a second language in adulthood. I wish I could encourage them to speak out about the culture shock, frustration they felt about the differences between West and East.
I have mainly focused on my English writing since 2008 after I found “Literacy Volunteers”, an organization that specially focuses on helping immigrants improve their English. I decided to challenge myself, writing a story like an American. I saw many wonderful Americans there. As soon as I met my teacher Alice, I asked her to be my private language tutor and have taken Tims English class. Every week Alice and I have worked on my English essays sentence by sentence.
To observe the culture differences between West and East, occasionally, I posted a few of my English essays online. I mentioned previously about American culture; when people read the same article or even face the same situation, American and Chinese act very differently. In my viewpoint, these differences make America the strongest country in the world. I know you have the right to express your own opinions, but accusing others without proof is not acceptable.
The underlined word “frustration” in the first paragraph means .
A.failure and setbacks | B.words and problems |
C.understanding and progress | D.slang and idioms |
In the passage, “Literacy Volunteers” is .
A.only intended to help the Chinese-Americans |
B.an organization which is set up to make a profit |
C.of great use to people like the author |
D.a school showing how to enjoy literature |
From the last paragraph we can learn that .
A.Americans and Chinese are of the same idea about something |
B.culture shock only exists between Chinese and Americans |
C.accusing others freely can be acceptable in America |
D.culture differences have great influence on the people |
The purpose of the passage is .
A.to show how hard a Chinese-American lives in America |
B.to share her experience of improving her English |
C.to imply grammar rules are not important |
D.to warn Chinese-Americans of English |
Dennis Sinar, 51, a doctor from New York, is quick to explain why he took a year-long break from his job. “I was pretty burned out after practicing medicine for 26 years. I needed a recharge.” So he took a “gap year”, from July 2011 to June 2012, to explore things like ancient buildings, and traditional Eastern medicine, in locations including Alaska, Nepal and Romania.
“Taking a break from work is an excellent way for adults to go into a new career or refresh an old one,” said Holly Bull, president of Princeton, N, J. “In recent years, mid-career breaks have been gaining more interest,” she said. A report on adult gap years published this year by a market research company also described the potential American market for gap years as a “sleeping giant.”
“A gap year is a challenge for the older individual to step out of a comfort zone and take a risk. I enjoyed that side most.” said Dr. Sinar, who kept a daily blog about his experience. His time studying Eastern medicine “assured the reasons I went into health care,” said Dr. Sinar, who returned to practice medicine at his old job, although he works fewer days. “I use those experiences to provide my patients with more care,” he added. “And I listen better than I did before.”
George Garritan, chairman of the Department of Leadership and Human Capital Management at New York University, certainly agrees with Dr. Sinar. He said a gap-year experience could be worthwhile for employees and companies. For employees, investing in themselves and improving skill sets is a move that will benefit throughout their career. He added that returning employees feel refreshed and have given more thought to their career. For companies, offering unpaid leaves makes good sense for attracting and keeping talented employees.
Dr. Sinar took a gap year because he ______.
A.had lost his old job |
B.wanted to refresh after 26 years’ work |
C.had a desire for travelling |
D.became interested in historical research |
The phrase “sleeping giant” (in 2nd paragraph) indicates that ______.
A.it’s too early for people to accept the concept of gap year |
B.the effect of gap year policy remains to be seen |
C.it’s difficult to foresee the gap year market |
D.more American people will accept the gap year policy |
What’s George Garritan’s attitude toward the “gap year”?
A.Positive. | B.Doubtful |
C.Uninterested. | D.Uncertain. |
What’s the passage mainly about?
A.How an adult plans a mid-career gap year. |
B.Why a gap year is worthwhile for adults. |
C.Whether a gap year is popular with adults. |
D.Why a gap year is challenging for individuals. |
I was a dance teacher when I first began working with people who have disabilities. I had thirty students. These were teens and adults up to the age of 40. We learned new steps together. We laughed together and we shared a love of music and fellowship.
I had one pupil, Dan, who didn’t appear to get much out of the class. I never had eye contact with him. When I left the class to travel down the stairs to reach the main floor of the building, he moved worriedly as a blind person might do in unfamiliar condition.
One day his parents met me shopping downtown and told me that they were so grateful that I was teaching the class. They said that my class was the high point of their son’s week. Were they just being polite?
A week later, a snowstorm held me up and I was later than usual pulling into the school parking lot. Ahead of me by one row of cars, and over to one side, was my student, Dan and his worker. I could see his face as he moved toward the building. He was excited. I watched Dan run toward the building in anticipation of(期待着)his weekly treat, my class. I cried as it hit me that though I could not see in class all that Dan got from the class, it surely meant a lot to him. Dan did indeed love the class. He was getting enjoyment out of it.
Today when I teach courses at the College to students, I remind them that children can stand on the sidelines and seem to be uninterested and yet they can be learning at the same pace as those who are in the middle of the activity. When I teach this, I think, yes and this is true for those with disabilities too!
Teach with the wonderful enthusiasm and you are bound to reach your students. Do your job with a love for others and you will be successful no matter what your job involves.
The writer found her working with disabilities _______.
A.boring | B.confusing |
C.satisfying | D.challenging |
The writer has learned from Dan that ______.
A.a teacher is sure to reach his students |
B.kids with disabilities need more love |
C.students learn in different ways |
D.a students make achievements out of a class |
What can we learn from the passage?
A.The writer was doubtful when hearing what Dan’s parents said. |
B.Dan didn’t get much out of the dancing class. |
C.Dan received more attention in the writer’s class. |
D.The writer was impatient with Dan at first. |
What may be the best title for the passage?
A.A student with disability |
B.Learning with Dan |
C.Enjoying a lesson with children |
D.Sharing love with students |
At the beginning of the World Series of 1947, I experienced a completely new emotion, when the National Anthem was played.This time, I thought, it is being played for me, as much as for anyone else.This is organized major league baseball, and I am standing here with all the others; and everything that takes place includes me.
About a year later, I went to Atlanta, Georgia, to play in an exhibition game.On the field, for the first time in Atlanta, there were Negroes and whites.Other Negroes besides me.And I thought: What I have always believed has come to be.
And what is it that I have always believed? First, that imperfections are human.But that wherever human beings were given room to breathe and time to think, those imperfections would disappear, no matter how slowly.I do not believe that we have found or even approached perfection.That is not necessarily in the scheme of human events.Handicaps, stumbling blocks, prejudices — all of these are imperfect.Yet, they have to be dealt with because they are in the scheme of human events.
Whatever obstacles I found made me fight all the harder.But it would have been impossible for me to fight at all, except that I was sustained by the personal and deep-rooted belief that my fight had a chance.It had a chance because it took place in a free society.Not once was I forced to face and fight an immovable object.Not once was the situation so cast-iron rigid that I had no chance at all.Free minds and human hearts were at work all around me; and so there was the probability of improvement.I look at my children now, and know that I must still prepare them to meet obstacles and prejudices.
But I can tell them, too, that they will never face some of these prejudices because other people have gone before them.And to myself I can say that, because progress is unalterable, many of today's dogmas (教条)will have vanished by the time they grow into adults.I can say to my children: There is a chance for you.No guarantee, but a chance.And this chance has come to be, because there is nothing static with free people.There is no Middle Ages logic so strong that it can stop the human tide from flowing forward.I do not believe that every person, in every walk of life, can succeed in spite of any handicap.That would be perfection.But I do believe — and with every fiber in me — that what I was able to attain came to be because we put behind us (no matter how slowly) the dogmas of the past: to discover the truth of today; and perhaps find the greatness of tomorrow.
I believe in the human race.I believe in the warm heart.I believe in man's honesty.I believe in the goodness of a free society.And I believe that the society can remain good only as long as we are willing to fight for it — and to fight against whatever imperfections may exist.My fight was against the barriers that kept Negroes out of baseball.This was the area where I found imperfection, and where I was best able to fight.And I fought because I knew it was not doomed to be a losing fight.It couldn't be a losing fight-not when it took place in a free society.And in the largest sense, I believe that what I did was done for me — that it was my faith in God that sustained me in my fight.And that what was done for me must and will be done for others.
Why did the author say he had experienced a completely new emotion?
A.Because he won game. |
B.Because he was an American. |
C.Because he could compete in the game and won the game. |
D.Because the National Game was played for him. |
From the passage, we know that the author is ___________.
A.an African. | B.a Chinese |
C.a white man | D.a black man |
The author firmly believed that____________.
A.humans are imperfect if they all unite together to overcome the difficulties. |
B.humans needn’t approach perfect even if they can. |
C.humans should face the obstacles and fight for it bravely. |
D.humans are becoming kind and honest if they have freedom. |
We can infer from the passage that_________.
A.the fight between Negroes and Whites never ends |
B.the civil war broke out because the Negroes fought for their freedom |
C.In the past Negroes were kept out of baseball. |
D.the fight ended up with a game. |
The underlined word ‘vanished’ most probably means __________
A.disappear | B.increase |
C.appear | D.happen |
The best title of this passage may be_________.
A.Nothing matters except fighting |
B.Success lies in hard work |
C.freedom is everything |
D.Free Minds and Hearts makes a difference |
No one was left in the museum now, and John was walking round to see if everything was all right. Suddenly he saw a beautiful painting lying on the floor. John picked it up and gave it to the director of the museum.
The director called several museums to check and see if it was a stolen painting, but no one claimed(认领) it. So the director decided to hang it in the museum. All the experts came to look at the painting. Each one said it was beautiful and had very deep meaning. The director was proud to have such a painting in his museum and congratulated John on his discovery.
Some weeks later a woman and her little son came to the museum. While they were looking at the new painting, the little boy began to cry. The director went over and asked him.
“Why are you crying?”
The child pointed to the painting and said, “That’s my painting on the wall and I want it back.”
“Yes,” said his mother. “He left it on the floor a few weeks ago. If you look carefully, you can see his name on the painting.”
John was perhaps .
A.a painter |
B.an expert on painting |
C.a visitor to the museum |
D.a man working in the museum |
John found the painting .
A.before the museum opened |
B.during his visit to the museum |
C.after the museum was closed |
D.while he was enjoying his walk |
After the director heard what the woman and the boy said, he must be very .
A.angry | B.surprised | C.afraid | D.proud |
All the experts thought the painting good because .
A.it was a stolen famous painting |
B.none of them looked carefully enough |
C.it was drawn by a famous painter though he was a child |
D.they found it really beautiful and it had very deep meaning |
On January 11, 2007, as students sat and listened, a very important guest speaker named Richard, spoke to the students in the lecture hall. He not only showed the potential(潜能)within young adults, but encouraged them to work hard at their lessons.
Richard was a young child when his mother died and his father walked out. He was forced into many different foster homes(寄养家庭)where he felt unhappy. He did not know that his life was taking a turn for the worst.
His uncle, after getting out of prison, got him into drugs and alcohol. His uncle taught him that his place in life was either to be in prison or die trying to be “a man.” His uncle’s teaching almost started affecting him until a very important person came into his life: a teacher. This teacher taught him there is a place in the world for everyone and it isn’t related to drugs.
Richard is now a Harvard University graduate and has a great and loving family. Why? He was taught to have respect not only for others, but for himself.
After the meeting, it was hoped that the students realized within them there is a potential, and within everyone around them, is knowledge. As Richard reminded them, “Knowledge is power.”
On January 11, 2007, students listened to a speech made by Richard, who graduated from ________.
A.Harvard University | B.a foster school |
C.his teacher’s school | D.his uncle’s university |
Richard encouraged the students ______.
A.to love life | B.to be a man |
C.to study hard | D.to leave drugs |
When he was young, Richard lived a(an)_______ life in foster homes.
A.rich | B.unhappy | C.relaxing | D.interesting |
Who played an important role in Richard’s successful life?
A.His uncle. | B.His teacher. |
C.His friends. | D.His parents. |
O. Henry was a pen name used by an American writer of short stories. His real name was William Sydney Porter. He was born on September 11, 1862, in Greensboro, North Carolina.
As a young boy he lived an exciting life. He did not go to school for very long, but he managed to teach himself everything he needed to know. When he was about 20 years old, O. Henry went to Texas, where he tried different jobs. He first worked on a newspaper, and then had a job in a bank, when some money went missing from the bank, O. Henry was believed to have stolen it. Because of that, he was sent to prison. During the three years in prison, he learned to write short stories.
After he got out of prison, he went to New York in 1902 when Porter's most prolific(多产的)writing period started. While there, he wrote 381 short stories. He wrote a story a week for over a year for the New York World Sunday Magazine. He wrote mostly about New York and the life of the poor there. People liked his stories, because simple as the tales were, they would finish with a sudden change at the end, to the reader’s surprise.
Porter traveled with Richard to Austin in 1884, where he met Athol Estes, then seventeen years old and from a wealthy family. On July 1, 1887, Porter married Athol. Athol Estes Porter died on July 25, 1897, from tuberculosis. Porter married again in 1907, to childhood sweetheart Sarah (Sallie) Lindsey Coleman, whom he met again after revisiting his native state of North Carolina.
Porter was a heavy drinker, and his health deteriorated(恶化) markedly in 1908, which affected his writing. In 1909, Sarah left him, and he died on June 5, 1910, of cirrhosis of the liver, complications of diabetes, and an enlarged heart. After funeral services in New York City, he was buried in the Riverside Cemetery in Asheville, North Carolina.
In which order did O. Henry do the following things?
a. Lived in New York. b. Worked in a bank.
c. Travelled to Texas. d. Was put in prison.
e. Had a newspaper Job. f. Learned to write stories.
A.e. c. f. b. d. a | B.c. e. b. d. f. a |
C.e. b. d. c. a. f. | D.c. b. e. d. a f. |
People enjoyed reading O. Henry’s stories because .
A.they had surprise endings. |
B.they were easy to understand. |
C.they showed his love for the poor. |
D.they were about New York City. |
O. Henry went to prison because .
A.people thought he had stolen money from the newspaper. |
B.he broke the law by not using his own name. |
C.he wanted to write stories about prisoners. |
D.people thought he had taken money that was not his. |
What do we know about O. Henry before he began writing?
A.He was well-educated. |
B.He was not serious about his work. |
C.He was devoted to the poor. |
D.He was very good at learning. |
A farmer grew some vegetables in his garden. One day his wife was ill and he had no money. He had to sell some cabbages and carrots in the market. The next morning he took two baskets of vegetables to town. But it was raining hard that afternoon and there were few people in the street. When his vegetables were sold out, it was dark. He bought some medicine and hurried to his village.
On his way home he saw a person lying on the snow. He placed his baskets on the ground and was going to help the person to get up. At that time he found it was a dead man and there was much blood on his body. He was so afraid that he ran away quickly, without taking the baskets with him.
The next afternoon the farmer was sent to the police station. Having shown the baskets, an officer asked, “Are these yours?” “Yes, sir.” the farmer answered timidly(胆怯地). “Have you killed the man?” “No, no, sir.” the farmer said in a hurry. “When did you see the dead man?” “About seven last evening.” “Did you see who killed the man?” “No, sir.” The officer brought out a knife and asked, “Have you seen it yet?” “No, sir.” The officer became angry and told the policemen to beat him up and sent him into prison.
That evening the officer went on trying. Pointing to the knife, he asked again, “Have you seen it yet?” “Yes, sir.” The officer was happy and asked, “When and where?” “I saw it here this afternoon, sir.”
The farmer decided to sell the vegetables to _______.
A.buy some food for his family |
B.buy some medicine for his wife |
C.go to see a doctor |
D.go to the cinema |
The farmer didn’t sell out his vegetables until the evening because _______.
A.they were too bad |
B.they were very expensive |
C.it rained hard that morning |
D.people wouldn’t go out on such a bad day |
As _______, the farmer decided to help the person to stand up.
A.he was ready to help others |
B.the person was one of his friends |
C.he thought the person would thank him |
D.he thought the person had drunk too much |
The farmer ran away quickly because _______.
A.the policemen were coming towards him |
B.his wife was waiting for him at home |
C.he was afraid to see a dead man |
D.it was so late that he couldn’t stay there any longer |
Samuel de Champlain was a French explorer, navigator (航海家), and mapmaker. He explored much of eastern Canada and became known as the “Father of New France”.
Born into a family of sailors, Champlain, while still a young man, began exploring North America. In 1603, he sailed up the Saguenay River and the St. Lawrence River. From 1604 to 1607 Champlain joined in the exploration and settlement of the first permanent (永久的) European settlement north of Florida. Then, in 1608, he established the French settlement that is now Quebec City. He also made the first accurate (精确的) map of the Canadian coast.
Champlain spent most of the rest of his life going between France and Canada. His goals were to map North America and find a quicker way to get to the Pacific Ocean.
In 1629 Quebec was controlled by the English and Champlain was taken to England as a prisoner. When Canada was returned to France in 1633 Champlain returned to Canada as governor of Quebec and remained in Quebec until his death on Christmas Day in 1635.
Champlain was the first European to explore and describe the Great Lakes, and published maps of his journeys and reports of what he learned from the natives and the French living among the natives. Champlain was memorialized as the “Father of New France”, and many places and streets in North America use his name. The most famous of these is Lake Champlain, which lies between northern New York and Vermont.
Which is the correct order of the events about Champlain?
a. established the settlement in Canada
b. travelled up the St. Lawrence River
c. returned to Canada as governor of Quebec
d. was taken to England
A.b-a-c-d | B.b-a-d-c |
C.a-d-b-c | D.a-b-d-c |
We can learn from the text that Champlain _____.
A.was important to Canadian history |
B.was famous for the lake named for him |
C.was the first person to explore North America |
D.was the first family member to work on a ship |
The underlined word “memorialized” in the last paragraph probably means “_____”.
A.described | B.chosen |
C.remembered | D.trusted |
What's the best title for the text?
A.Exploration of North America |
B.Origin of Lake Champlain |
C.Foundation of Quebec |
D.Father of New France |
Robert Owen was born in Wales in 1771. At the age of ten he went to work. His employer had a large private library so Owen was able to educate himself. He read a lot in his spare time and at nineteen he was given the job of superintendent(监工) at a Manchester cotton mill. He was so successful there that he persuaded his employer to buy the New Lanark mill in Scotland.
When he arrived at New Lanark it was a dirty little town with a population of 2,000 people. Nobody paid any attention to the workers’ houses or their children’s education. The conditions in the factories were very bad. There was a lot of crime and the men spent most of their wages on alcoholic drinks.
Owen improved the houses. He encouraged people to be clean and save money. He opened a shop and sold the workers cheap, well-made goods to help them. He limited the sale of alcoholic drinks. Above all, he fixed his mind on the children's education. In 1816 he opened the first free primary school in Britain.
People came from all over the country to visit Owen’s factory. They saw that the workers were healthier and more efficient than in other towns. Their children were better fed and better educated. Owen tried the same experiment in the United States. He bought some land there in 1825, but the community was too far away. He could not keep it under control and lost most of his money.
Owen never stopped fighting for his idea. Above all he believed that people are not born good or bad. He was a practical man and his ideas were practical. “If you give people good working conditions”, he thought, “they will work well and, the most important thing of all, if you give them the chance to learn, they will be better people.”
For Owen, his greatest achievement in New Lanark was _____________.
A.improving worker’s houses |
B.helping people to save money |
C.preventing men from getting drunk |
D.providing the children with a good education |
From the passage we may infer that Owen was born ___________.
A.into a rich family | B.into a noble family |
C.into a poor family | D.into a middle class family |
We may infer form the passage that no children in Britain could enjoy free education until ___.
A.1771 | B.1816 | C.1825 | D.1860 |
Every month, Julia and her cousins would go to visit their grandparents. They would be excited because their grandfather would give them a few coins. Then they would buy toys or sweets. The grandparents commented that, behaving like this, the children would never learn to manage their money. So they planned a special test, in which the children would have to show, over the course of a year, just what they could manage to get with those few coins.
Some thought that they would save their money, but Ruben and Nico continued spending it all on sweets. So they give up saving.
Monty decided to manage his money by exchanging it: buying and selling things, or betting (打赌) it with others. Soon he surprised the whole family. He had accumulated (积聚) lots of money. However, Monty was not very careful, and he got involved in more and more risky deals. A few months later he became penniless after a losing bet. Alex, had a will of iron. He saved the money and at the end of the year he had collected more money than anyone. Even better, with so much money, he managed to buy sweets at a reduced price, so that on the day of the competition he was presented with enough sweets for much more than a year. And even then, he still had enough left over for a toy. He was the clear winner, and other children learned the advantages of knowing how to save and how to wait.
There was also Julia. Poor Julia didn’t enjoy the competition, because even though she had had a wonderful secret plan, she had spent her money without giving her plan enough time to work. However, she was so sure that her plan was a good one, that she decided to carry on with it, and maybe change the expressions on her relatives’ faces, who had seemed to be saying “What a poor girl shel is. She couldn’t manage to save anything”.
When she was about to complete the second year of her plan, Julia surprised everyone by turning up at the grandparents’ house with a violin and a lot of money. She did it really well.
Who saved nothing at the end of the first year?
A.Ruben, Julia and Alex | B.Ruben, Nico and Monty |
C.Ruben, Monty and Julia | D.Ruben, Nico and Alex |
Why did the grandparents plan a test on the children?
A.Because they wanted the children to learn to spend money. |
B.Because they wanted the children to learn to save money. |
C.Because they wanted the children to learn to manage money. |
D.Because they didn’t want the children to buy toys and sweets any more. |
From Monty’s story, the children learned ______________________.
A.to save and to wait. |
B.to buy and to sell things |
C.to set a achievable goal. |
D.to be careful and self-disciplined |
The underlined sentence in the fourth paragraph means ______________.
A.Julia will bring disasters to herself and her family. |
B.Julia is not good at managing money. |
C.Julia is too stupid to do anything well. |
D.Julia has so many secrets that nobody likes her. |
I vividly remember walking back to my house after collecting the afternoon mails. I saw a credit card statement, another credit card statement and our bank statements. It was in that moment that I felt a deep tension.
I realized that even though I had married a man who I absolutely loved and adored, I really didn’t have a clear sense of how he handled money and how the two of us were going to combine our different approaches to handling money in our marriage. I was more organized and detailed, but he was more of a laid-back type. I knew that getting on the same financial page was a key factor in creating a successful marriage and financial future.
I asked my husband if he would be willing to set up a time each week to talk about our finances and develop a plan for getting rid of our credit card debt. My husband said he would be willing to do this. Admittedly, he was skeptical — but willing.
We came to refer to our weekly meetings as our Financial Dates. We didn’t really have a clue as to what we were doing. All we knew was that we needed to give our finances serious attention. Some Dates were filled with tense conversations. Other Dates were filled with laughter, joy and creativity. However, we kept showing up for our Dates and we never gave up. What started out as a means for survival became a powerful connecting thread in our relationship. Something shifted within us.
Instead of our finances becoming a source of divisive tension that pulled us apart, they became
the glue that held us together as we became a unified team.
I still recall the day that we excitedly crossed off our last credit card payment on the chart we had created. We had finally arrived. We were free. We had been given wings to fly.
Now, whenever I feel huge stress I ask myself, “How am I contributing to what is happening right now?” This gives me the ultimate power to take action. Even though my husband and I don’t have any guarantee against future challenges, I am left with something deep within that is unshakable and that can never be taken away — the memory of our past successes and the power to integrate (整合) these lessons in my day-to-day life.
Why did the author feel nervous when collecting the afternoon mails? _______
A.She was not sure about her marriage. |
B.She didn’t know how to handle money. |
C.She could feel the pressure of the huge debt. |
D.She was reminded of the quarrels in the family. |
Which word can replace the underlined word “laid-back” in the second paragraph?_____
A.relaxed. | B.skeptical. |
C.lazy. | D.confident. |
What can we learn from the Financial Dates? ______
A.They showed the couple clear direction at first. |
B.They left the couple nothing but deep sadness. |
C.They were once interrupted but quickly continued. |
D.They strengthened the couple’s relationship at last. |
We can infer that when faced with stress the author will _______.
A.try to change the situation |
B.focus on what contributes to it |
C.get power from the memory |
D.feel free to do what she likes |
Ben lived in the same house as I did, on the same floor, his door facing mine; we often saw each other, and I knew how he lived when he was at home. And at home it was the same story: dressing-gown, nightcap, closed windows, locked doors, and –‘Oh, I hope nothing bad will happen!’ Vegetarian food is not good for him, yet he could not eat meat, so he ate freshwater fish with butter—not a vegetarian dish, yet one could not say that it was meat. He did not keep a female servant for fear people might think evil of him, but had as cook an old man of sixty, called Alan, who had once been an officer’s servant and could cook after a fashion. This Alan was usually standing at the door with his arms folded; with a deep sigh, he would mutter always the same thing: “there are plenty of them about nowadays!”
What is the relationship between Ben and Alan?
A.Teacher and student. | B.Friends. |
C.Family. | D.Employer and employee |
Why didn’t Ben keep a female servant?
A.Because he was afraid of other people’s opinion about him. |
B.Because he couldn’t afford one. |
C.Because Alan used to work for an officer. |
D.Because he could not eat meat. |
What does the underlined word “mutter” probably mean?
A.To cook after a fashion. | B.To speak very quietly. |
C.To fold one’s arms. | D.To sigh deeply. |
One evening I went out and left my 17-year-old son and his girlfriend in charge of his 8-year-old brother and 4-year-old sister. I left with complete confidence that the older children would do a wonderful job of babysitting the younger children and the younger children would do a wonderful job of accompanying(陪伴)the older ones. Later, I discovered that I was completely wrong.
I had decided to return home earlier than planned so that my son and his girlfriend could go out. I called home with this happy news.But instead of hearing his cheerful, grateful voice on the other end of the line, all I heard was the sound of a telephone ringing.
It was, I should point out, after 10 p.m., when the two younger children should have been in bed, and when the two older children should have been answering the phone. “I’ll give him a lesson, ” I said.I decided they must be outside.Why they might be outside at 10:30 on a winter night I had no idea, but it was the only explanation I could come up with.
Finally, in desperation(绝望), I called his girlfriend’s house. His girlfriend answered.“Yes,” she said brightly, “He’s right here.”
He came on the phone.I was not my usual calm, patient.After all, one of the rules of survival for modern parents is that you can’t trust modern teenagers.“Where are the children?” I said.He said they were with him.They had done nothing wrong.My son had taken the younger children over to his girlfriend’s house just for ice cream and cake. Well, it turns out that I shouldn’t have believed it.It was only part of the truth.
The following Saturday evening we were at my parents’ home, celebrating my birthday.My oldest son gave me the children’s gifts-- a series of lovely color photographs of my children, dressed in their best clothes, and wearing their most wonderful expressions. They are pictures to treasure a lifetime, all taken by the father of my son’s girlfriend.
The author went out and left her eldest son in charge of the younger children because .
A.she knew that his girlfriend was a good baby-sitter |
B.she believed he could take good care of the younger ones with the help of his girlfriend |
C.the older children have always loved the younger ones |
D.she could not find a baby-sitter on that winter night |
Shortly after the author left home one evening, she discovered that .
A.her son had brought his girlfriend home |
B.her son had left home with his girlfriend |
C.she shouldn’t have completely trusted her son |
D.she should have taken the children along with her |
“It was only part of the truth.” implies that the children not only enjoyed ice-cream but also .
A.had their pictures taken | B.received some gifts |
C.had a birthday party | D.showed off their best clothes |
Which is the best title of this passage?
A.An Evening Out | B.Modern Teenagers |
C.Mother and Children | D.A Precious Birthday Gift |
The cars were honking (鸣叫) on the road one morning as I was walking to the park. I walked on and soon found the cause — a little taxi that had got stuck in the middle of the road. There was sweat on the driver's face as he tried to start the engine again and again — nothing happened. "No petrol,"
I said to myself and then found myself getting angry. "Why doesn't the fool move his taxi to the side?" I thought, so did all the others who honked and shouted.
He got up tiredly, and the passenger in the taxi got out. He was a young man in a white shirt, who watched the driver try to push it to the side. "Stupid guy!" I said. "Can't he lend a helping hand? "
I watched as the poor driver pushed it to the side. Cars, buses and trucks went past cursing (咒骂 ) the poor man. The young man took another taxi and went off.
The taxi driver began mending his taxi. "Stupid passenger!" I said to him. "He didn't help you!" The taxi driver slowly got up. "Sir!" he asked, "Did you?" I looked at him guiltily, then looked away, and walked away fast, asking myself, "Did I help the poor man push his taxi?"
What had I been doing as the traffic jam took place? How had I helped deal with the problem? Did I help the poor man push his taxi? I’d done my bit, with my mouth. But never had I moved to solve the problem. I was shocked with guilt as I heard him asking, "Sir! Did you?"
Why did a traffic jam happen on the road when the author was walking to the park?
A.There was too much traffic in the street. |
B.Truck drivers attempted to go ahead of others. |
C.A taxi driver couldn't start his engine. |
D.A young man wasn't good at driving. |
The author's attitude toward the passenger is that of __________.
A.anger | B.respect | C.sympathy | D.guilt |
Why did the author feel guilty?
A.Because he blamed the driver wrongly. |
B.Because he didn't help the driver, either. |
C.Because he tried to help but failed in the end. |
D.Because he didn't persuade the passenger to help. |
From the incident, the author learnt a lesson that we should _________.
A.criticize those who don't help |
B.hurt the self-respect of others no more |
C.think more of those who are in need |
D.stop talking and start to help |
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