Jenny was the only child in her family. She had a quarrel (吵架) with her mother that afternoon and she ran out of the house angrily. She couldn’t help weeping sorrowfully when she thought of the scolding from her mother. Having wandered aimlessly in the street for hours, she felt a little hungry and wished for something to eat. She stood beside a stand (货摊) for a while, watching the middle-aged seller busy doing his business. However, with no money in hand, she gave a sigh and had to leave.
The seller behind the stand noticed the young girl and asked, “Hey, girl, you want to have the noodles?”
“Oh, yes, but I don’t have money on me.” she replied.
“That’s nothing. I’ll treat you today,” said the man, “Come in.”
The seller brought her a bowl of noodles, whose smell was so attractive. As she was eating, Jenny cried silently.
“What is it?” asked the man kindly.
“Nothing. Actually, I was just touched by your kindness!” said Jenny as she wiped her tears. “Even a stranger on the street will give me a bowl of noodles, while my mother drove me out of the house. She showed no care for me. She is so merciless compared to a stranger!”
Hearing the words, the seller smiled, “Girl, do you really think so? I only gave you a bowl of noodles and you thanked me a lot. But it is your mother who has raised you since you were a baby. Can you remember the times she cooked for you? Have you expressed your gratitude to her?”
Jenny sat there, speechless and numb with shock: she remembered her mother’s familiar face and weathered hands. “Why didn’t I think of that? A bowl of noodles from a stranger made me feel grateful. Why haven’t I thanked my mum for what she has done for me?”
On the way home. Jenny made up her mind to make an apology to her mother for her rudeness as soon as she arrived home.
注意:1. 所续写短文的词数应为150左右;
2. 续写部分分为两段,每段的开头语已为你写好。
Nearing the doorway, Jenny took a deep breath.
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________At that time, her mother came back and touched her hair gently, which called her mind back.
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________Grandma tried to straighten out her fingers.“You know, Ann, I think I am done knitting.” she said.“My fingers just won’t do what I tell them any more.”
I looked at her hands.When I was little, she had taught me how to sew dresses for my dolls and how to embroider (刺绣) the faces of my dolls on the dresses.
But now she can hardly bend her fingers.The doctor said she should keep her hands warm.I made her cups of tea to hold and moved her chair closer to the fire.But it didn’t work.
I wasn’t used to seeing her hands so still.When I came downstairs, her quiet hands made even her voice stay still.I missed her voice more than ever.
I tried to help her find her voice.“Grandma, tell me about when you were a little girl,” I begged, knowing she loved to tell stories.“Tell me about Peti and Zoe.” Peti and Zoe were her brother and sister.“That was so long ago, Ann,” whispered Grandma.“I can barely remember.” But I still remembered her story about Peti cutting off Zoe’s two beautiful long braids (辫子) and then hiding them in the closet.Were those words still moving silently in her head?
Mom was sorting through our clothes for spring.“Ann, take these out to the trash,” Mom said.“There’s no need to keep worn-out clothes.”
I looked sadly at the pile of sweaters and then picked it up.
“Wait,” Grandma said as I walked by her and put the pile downstairs.“Let me see those.”
“Ann, wind the yarn (纱线) of the old sweater into a ball, like this.Then you can use the yarn to knit something new.” Grandma wrapped yarn around and around her fingers, first in one direction and then the other to keep the ball round.
After dinner Grandma fell asleep in her chair.
Mom came downstairs with an old pair of gloves with small holes to add to the pile of sweaters.
注意:1.续写词数应为150左右;
2.请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答。
Suddenly, the pair of old gloves gave me an idea.
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________“Your family,” I said, handing the gloves with the faces of Peti and Zoe to Grandma.
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________增加:在缺词处加一个漏字符号(∧),并在其下面写上该加的词。
删除:把多余的词用斜线(\)划掉。
修改:在错词下划一横线,并在该词下面写出修改后的词。
注意:
1. 每处错误及其修改均仅限一词;
2. 只允许修改10处, 多者(从第11处起)不计分。
Do you often talk with your parents? A recently survey shows that nearly half of the high school students doesn’t like to talk with their parents. 43. 3% of them have trouble communicate with their parents. What was worse, 82. 8% of them don’t want to share their secrets their parents. Actually, it is important for us to communicate with our parents though they are the dearest people in our life, whom care for us all the time. By letting them know that what we think, we can get practical advice from them, which can help us to deal with many problem in life.
In this way, we can feel more confident about us and live happily.
My mom only had one eye. I hated her. She was such an embarrassment.
She ran a small shop at a flea market, and collected old clothes and some other things to sell for the money we needed. Once during elementary school, it was field day, and my mom came. I was so embarrassed and wondered how could she do this to me? I threw her a hateful look and ignored her. The next day at school, my schoolmates asked me, “your mom only has one eye?” and taunted me.
I was so angry with my mom and wished that she would just disappear from this world. So l said to my mom, “Why don’t you have the other eye?! If you’re only gonna make me a laughing stock!” My mom did not respond, I guess I felt a little bad, but at the same time, I felt so good to have had said what I wanted to say. Maybe it was because I was full of anger then and there, I didn’t think that I had hurt her feelings very badly.
For the words I had said to her earlier, there was something pinching at me in the corner of my heart. Even so, I hated my one-eyed mom and our desperate poverty. I told myself that I would become successful in the near future and get out of that house for good, so I studied very hard. Later I got accepted by the Seoul University, I left my mother and came to Seoul to study. Then I got married there.
I bought a house of my own. Then I had kids, too. Now I am living happily as a successful man. I enjoy the life in Seoul because it’s a place that doesn’t remind me of my mom past. This kind of happiness was getting bigger and bigger, until one day someone knocked at my door. It was my mom! And still with her one eye! It felt as if the whole sky was falling apart on me. My little girl ran away, scared of my mom’s eye.
注意:1. 续写词数应为150左右;
2. 请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答。
Para 1:
I screamed at her, “Who are you? I don’t know you!”
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________Para 2:
After the funeral (葬礼), the neighbor gave me a letter saying, “My dearest son...
_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________5 . It is difficult for parents of nearly every family to teach their children to be responsible (负责的) for housework, but with one of the following suggestions, you really can get your children to help at home.
If you give your children the impression (印象) that they can never do anything quite right, then they will regard themselves as unfit or unable persons. Unless children believe they can succeed, they will never become totally (完全地) independent.
My daughter Mary’s fifthgrade teacher made every child in her class feel special. When students received less than a perfect test score, she would point out what they had mastered (掌握) and declared (宣称) firmly they could learn what they had missed.
You can use the same technique when you evaluate (评价) your child’s work at home. Don’t always scold (责骂) them and you should give lots of praise instead. Talk about what he has done right, not about what he hasn’t done. If your child completes a difficult task, promise him a Sunday trip or a ball game with Dad.
Learning is a process of trying and failing and trying and succeeding. If you teach your children not to fear a mistake of failure, they will learn faster and achieve success at last.
1. The whole passage deals with ______.A.social education | B.family education |
C.school education | D.preschool education |
A.there is no way to get children to help at home |
B.children can be forced to help with housework |
C.it is very difficult to make children responsible for housework |
D.the more encouragement and praise you give, the more responsible and helpful children will become |
A.give him a punishment | B.promise him a trip |
C.praise his success | D.promise him a ball game |
A.do as what Mary’s teacher did in educating children |
B.take pride in Mary’s fifthgrade teacher |
C.learn from himself, for he has a good way of teaching |
D.follow Mary’s example because she never fails in the test |
注意:1.词数100左右;
2.开头和结尾已给出,但不计入总词数。
Hello everyone ,
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
That’s all ! Thank you for listening !
7 . “I'll be back in three hours, ”Dad said as he hurried out for a meeting that late afternoon. “Three hours, ”I told myself. “You can do this. ”I took a
I
“Mom, you're safe. You're here at home. ”
“Help me!” She grabbed
“I won't
Maybe words weren't the
As the minutes
A.deep | B.sudden | C.short | D.light |
A.puzzle | B.unwillingness | C.excitement | D.worry |
A.carefully | B.safely | C.alone | D.quickly |
A.forced | B.guided | C.waved | D.encouraged |
A.warm | B.secure | C.comfortable | D.silent |
A.rest | B.talk | C.remember | D.smile |
A.sorrowfully | B.peacefully | C.slowly | D.eagerly |
A.Wish | B.Dream | C.Care | D.Panic |
A.gently | B.bravely | C.lovingly | D.tightly |
A.scare | B.leave | C.judge | D.disappoint |
A.hope | B.love | C.shake | D.doubt |
A.answer | B.objective | C.command | D.permission |
A.calmed | B.surprised | C.touched | D.pleased |
A.sped by | B.ran out | C.counted down | D.wore on |
A.weakest | B.loudest | C.sweetest | D.clearest |
8 . My 83-year-old mother came to live with me a year ago last November. She was very ill and I had to put my life on hold to care for her.
Each morning, I got her up and dressed her and made her breakfast and sat with her. I rushed for a bowl when she felt sick, and lit fires to keep her warm. I cooked and talked her into eating some. It’s a hard job caring for a sick or dying parent, whoever you are. But it was especially hard for me, I feel, because I am a doctor myself. I couldn’t help looking at her in two different ways. The medical professional saw a body and checked it with the cold heart that medicine requires. But the daughter saw the woman who had given birth to me, sent me off to college and had been an important role for a long time in my life for over half a century.
Also, my mother didn’t appreciate how hard it was for me to care for her. I remember an exchange between her and the nurse who came to see her once a week.
“You could get some more help with care.” “Oh, I don’t think I need that,” Mom said.
Mom didn’t understand that the help would have taken some of the hard work off me. None of the treatments her doctors gave her worked, and finally her life became about free of pain. She refused painkillers (止痛药) for a long time, but finally the pain beat her. And when she accepted painkillers she accepted the fact that she would die.
Illness and needs took us across personal boundaries (边界) I’d never considered before. And yet, while living and being and dying with Mom I saw something valuable coming. We became closer. We shared so many stories from our past that it was as if our memories had become one.
In the past our relationship had been difficult. We had often argued. But when the end came, both of us simply accepted that we looked at the world in different ways. We were daughter and mother and we loved each other. That was all that mattered.
1. Why was taking care of her mom especially hard for the writer?A.She was too busy living her own life. |
B.She and her mom had a difficult relationship. |
C.She was too old to look after her mom carefully. |
D.She regarded her mom both as a patient and a loved one. |
A.she felt very upset. | B.she was surprised. |
C.she showed her thanks to the nurse. | D.she thought she needed a more helpful nurse. |
A.the writer’s mom was a kind and gentle woman. |
B.it was easier for the writer to take care of her mom as a doctor. |
C.the writer was getting on better with her mom while taking care of her. |
D.the writer’s mom had difficulty understanding what the nurse said. |
A.Love was more important than differences. | B.Being alive was the most important thing. |
C.We should learn to understand other people. | D.It was better for family members to live their own. |
9 . My memories of those nights I spent with my great-grandmother are still vivid. I
My great-grandmother didn’t have a china-and-jewelry kind of
A few years ago, my life took a
A.remember | B.restore | C.receive | D.remark |
A.apparently | B.curiously | C.proudly | D.enviously |
A.career | B.life | C.future | D.education |
A.pressure | B.carriers | C.covers | D.hardship |
A.annoyance | B.pain | C.confusion | D.message |
A.imagined | B.resisted | C.declared | D.caught |
A.son | B.daughter | C.mother | D.husband |
A.hopelessness | B.purpose | C.competence | D.effectiveness |
A.pay off | B.get through | C.hang on | D.survive on |
A.escaped | B.related | C.transformed | D.assumed |
A.weaken | B.lose | C.understand | D.complain |
A.favorable | B.careful | C.stressful | D.preventable |
A.unless | B.when | C.since | D.while |
A.dream | B.caution | C.criterion | D.strength |
A.object | B.will | C.cash | D.identification |
10 . I am the “Laundry Goddess”. Well, that’s what my kids call me anyway because I have the talent for finding the right
The laundry room was Mom’s territory. It was
I don’t remember Mom teaching me the ways of the laundry room. I learned to
My washer and dryer seem to have more
A.place | B.reason | C.cover | D.solution |
A.provides for | B.aims at | C.throws at | D.makes for |
A.meant | B.hated | C.loved | D.bothered |
A.neat | B.quiet | C.messy | D.secure |
A.count | B.put | C.lay | D.head |
A.load | B.item | C.burden | D.work |
A.display | B.edge | C.make | D.fold |
A.washing | B.ironing | C.weaving | D.tidying |
A.to | B.across | C.within | D.over |
A.approval | B.control | C.appeal | D.removal |
A.issues | B.appliances | C.settings | D.commands |
A.model | B.knob | C.cycle | D.switch |
A.fighters | B.partners | C.producers | D.keepers |
A.find | B.thank | C.mourn | D.ask |
A.troubling | B.calming | C.amusing | D.conflicting |