1 . In Lincoln Elementary School, the students went wild with excitement on hearing the announcement of the upcoming science fair. Among the
Alex envisioned creating a volcano model for the fair, complete with a(n)
Their working together became a lively
On the science fair day, the school gym was full of scientific wonders. When Alex and Mia confidently introduced their project and skillfully
Alex’s decision to
A.daring | B.curious | C.hesitant | D.eager |
A.theory | B.biology | C.experiments | D.adventures |
A.burning | B.erupting | C.talent | D.gravity |
A.struggling | B.offering | C.demanding | D.managing |
A.well-intended | B.self-absorbed | C.hard-working | D.easy-going |
A.replace | B.accompany | C.join | D.instruct |
A.exchange | B.race | C.change | D.challenge |
A.sharing | B.checking | C.doubting | D.acquiring |
A.aimlessly | B.randomly | C.leisurely | D.tirelessly |
A.initiated | B.born | C.planned | D.located |
A.analyzed | B.designed | C.filmed | D.demonstrated |
A.contract | B.recognition | C.permit | D.degree |
A.reach out | B.get through | C.give in | D.look up |
A.competition | B.dignity | C.discipline | D.cooperation |
A.destination | B.subject | C.must | D.signal |
2 . Eric loses his dog, Nova, on a walk. She has pulled the leash (绳子) from his hand in
A week later, a beautiful woman named Vanessa shows up at Eric’s front door. She has Nova. After Nova and Eric reconnect in a chaotic,
A couple of months go by. While driving on his way to pick up Vanessa, Eric is T-boned at full speed by a distracted driver who
The next day, the doctor comes into Eric’s room and tells him they have found a tumor (肿瘤) in his brain. “
This
A.pursuit | B.memory | C.defense | D.control |
A.brings | B.notifies | C.alerts | D.encourages |
A.answer | B.luck | C.wonder | D.way |
A.easy-going | B.far-reaching | C.heart-warming | D.ever-lasting |
A.check it out | B.leave it behind | C.pick it up | D.hit it off |
A.approached | B.encountered | C.ran | D.spotted |
A.knocked | B.pushed | C.beaten | D.carried |
A.accuses | B.convinces | C.informs | D.relieves |
A.tumor | B.spin | C.shot | D.injury |
A.determine | B.react | C.compare | D.prevent |
A.Unexpectedly | B.Occasionally | C.Fortunately | D.Normally |
A.accident | B.scars | C.symptoms | D.disasters |
A.rare | B.original | C.deadly | D.harmless |
A.schedule | B.chain | C.type | D.circle |
A.chance | B.misfortune | C.checkup | D.belief |
3 . In one’s lifetime, especially during adolescence when mental maturity is yet to be achieved, everyone is likely to make some foolish mistakes that will be remembered for a lifetime. The way parents
When I was ten years old, I got really angry one day and ended up breaking my favorite pen. Instead of scolding me, my parents chose a different
In the beginning, I couldn’t understand why they didn’t yell at me or punish me
The silence from my parents
Time
A.put off | B.give in | C.lead to | D.deal with |
A.approach | B.career | C.punishment | D.expectation |
A.unique | B.expensive | C.damaged | D.magic |
A.practical | B.powerful | C.well-organized | D.challenging |
A.directly | B.gently | C.quietly | D.openly |
A.secretly-promoted | B.newly-invented | C.highly-recommended | D.ill-considered |
A.catch up with | B.in terms of | C.take control of | D.team up with |
A.whispered | B.spoke | C.shouted | D.remained |
A.essential | B.rough | C.average | D.satisfactory |
A.reflect | B.fight | C.scream | D.dream |
A.freezes | B.flies | C.talks | D.cures |
A.happiness | B.imagination | C.regret | D.creativeness |
A.planed | B.bought | C.set | D.taught |
A.drew | B.compared | C.terrified | D.shaped |
A.pens | B.consequences | C.parents | D.people |
4 . Miriam Glassman, a top image consultant, is standing in front of her client, Lucy. ‘Can you give me an idea of what you are looking for?’ she asks. ‘Something cool,’ says nine-year-old Lucy. Glassman gets some jackets and marches off to the changing room with Lucy. This is a growing trend and the
Some of those caring most about image are
Celebrities seek help from wardrobe, hair stylists, make-up artists and more just to manage their profile, and these professionals don’t come
It’s not just them that need an image boost. The cities, too, try to give themselves the marketing
So, perhaps we should step back from our
And going back to our image consultant, surely Glassman must have reservations about taking on such young clients? Apparently not. ‘I get so many calls from teens,’ she says. ‘School is a(n)
A.challenges | B.results | C.advantages | D.reasons |
A.consultant | B.goal | C.attitude | D.image |
A.stars | B.politicians | C.managers | D.designers |
A.therefore | B.otherwise | C.nevertheless | D.besides |
A.guide | B.winner | C.lecturer | D.officer |
A.left over | B.looked over | C.put off | D.taken on |
A.true | B.easy | C.cheap | D.plain |
A.instructions | B.budgets | C.comparisons | D.plans |
A.business | B.strategy | C.agency | D.equivalent |
A.rely on | B.approve of | C.complain of | D.work on |
A.blame | B.impose | C.congratulate | D.feed |
A.criticism | B.belief | C.suspicion | D.desire |
A.opinions | B.facts | C.advertisements | D.policies |
A.suitable | B.popular | C.realistic | D.appealing |
A.competitive | B.peaceful | C.inspiring | D.delightful |
Tomato Changed My Life
Doing things-without being planned was never my strength.
As a 14-year-old, I would refuse to go for walks around the block with my friends if I was the least bit behind in my schoolwork.
Unlike most teenagers, I lived not in my room, but in an unused kitchen upstairs where I spread my books and papers on a large round table. I spent considerable time there, working continuously for hours, and my mother worried. She would try to lure (引诱) me away. “Come and watch the parade!” she would call from downstairs. “All neighbors are out there!” She thought of all kinds of tricks-the swimming pool, ice cream, stray cats and turtles-to remove me from my -studies, but nothing ever worked.
Later, in college, the pattern continued. The library and my college dorm replaced the unused kitchen at home. When spring came along friends would stop by my dorm or peer into my library room to persuade me to play Frisbee on the lawn. “No, I would almost always say.” I have too much to do.
My college study days were gone, but not my need and love for schedules. My friends and sisters tried to keep me away from my plans, but they were hardly ever successful.
This summer, though, while house sitting for my parents, I was persuaded to change my plans in the most unexpected way. The sight of tomatoes growing in my mother’s garden lured me out of my tightly scheduled world. They drew me with the power of a lover’s gaze. Hundreds of them were turning ripe and red by the minute, decorating the garden like decorations on a Christmas tree.
“If I have time, I’ll make tomato sauce (番茄酱).” I told myself. But my long week in the house by myself was already filled with things to do: writing, and finishing a project that I brought home from the office.
Then, watching the fascinating tomatoes continuously falling to the ground in ever-greater numbers, again I mentally argued about all the things I had planned and needed to do.
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。
Finally, I gave in.
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A month later, my parents came back.
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6 . It was a winter after noon when I tripped over a high kerb (马路牙子). Suddenly, I was flying through the air. It was only the next morning when I tried to take a photo of some splendid sunlight
Soon I became impatient. I couldn’t travel much. Surfing online, I
Lyubomirsky’s instructions are
Taking a single photo was painful, but the
A.winding | B.streaming | C.sticking | D.knocking |
A.confirmed | B.removed | C.relieved | D.overcame |
A.broke into | B.made up | C.took down | D.came across |
A.dream | B.thought | C.mood | D.desire |
A.enthusiastic | B.confused | C.nervous | D.particular |
A.consulted | B.imagined | C.pioneered | D.observed |
A.lesson | B.skill | C.plan | D.practice |
A.complex | B.simple | C.normal | D.abstract |
A.occasionally | B.hardly | C.significantly | D.slightly |
A.interruption | B.loneliness | C.willingness | D.motivation |
A.struggle | B.excuse | C.opportunity | D.promise |
A.keep | B.balance | C.ruin | D.improve |
A.details | B.surprises | C.changes | D.achievements |
A.wonderful | B.meaningful | C.unfair | D.boring |
A.pain | B.anxiety | C.uniqueness | D.challenge |
7 . This wasn’t the way I wanted to see Rome. Sure, it felt
I was supposed to go to Rome with my mom back in 2012. However, life had different
My mom spent the final months of her life
I spent two weeks doing all the things we had wanted to do. Maybe she wasn’t physically there, but I
After my trip to Rome, I
A.surprising | B.strange | C.embarrassing | D.pleasant |
A.styles | B.plans | C.solutions | D.excuses |
A.research | B.training | C.treatment | D.waiting |
A.picked up | B.held back | C.heard | D.forced |
A.examining | B.fighting | C.studying | D.controlling |
A.battle | B.strategy | C.cause | D.contest |
A.missed | B.arranged | C.sponsored | D.rejected |
A.strangely | B.fortunately | C.honestly | D.interestingly |
A.guide | B.budget | C.destination | D.choice |
A.regretted | B.doubted | C.sensed | D.remembered |
A.warned | B.promised | C.informed | D.reminded |
A.memories | B.efforts | C.decisions | D.changes |
A.interrupt | B.leave | C.understand | D.desert |
A.positive | B.practical | C.flexible | D.normal |
A.hardly | B.probably | C.partly | D.eventually |
Many years ago, when I was working as a psychologist at a children’s institution in England, an adolescent boy showed up in the waiting room.I went out there where he was walking up and down restlessly.I showed him into my office and pointed to the chair on the other side of my desk.“Please sit down,” I said.
David wore a black rain coat that was buttoned all the way up to his neck.His face was pale, and he stared at his feet while crossing his hands nervously.He had lost his father as a baby, and had lived together with his mother and grandfather since.But the year before David turned 13, his grandfather died and his mother was killed in a car accident. Now he was 14.
I looked at David.How could I help him? There are human tragedies that psychology doesn’t have the answer to, and which no words can describe.Sometimes the best thing one can do is to listen openly and sympathetically.
The first two times we met, David didn’t say a word.He sat in the chair and only looked up to look at the children’s drawings on the wall behind me.As he was about to leave after the second visit, I put my hand on his shoulder, but he didn’t look at me either.“Come back next week, if you like,” I said, I hesitated a bit.Then I said, “I know it hurts.”
He came, and I suggested we play a game of chess.He nodded.After that we played chess every Wednesday afternoon- in complete silence and without making any eye con-tact.It seemed as if he enjoyed my company.But why did he never look at me?
Some months later, I sat starring at David’s head, while he bent over the chessboard.I thought about how little we know about therapy(治疗)—about the mysterious process associated with healing.Suddenly, he looked up at me.“It’s your turn,” he said.
注意:1.续写的词数应为150左右;
2.请按如下格式在答题卡的相应位置作答。
After that day, David started talking.
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Finally, he needn’t come to me for therapy.
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9 . These days, many young people wonder if they would be better served by striking out on their own than pursuing a college education. In this rapidly evolving digital era, narratives of overnight success and entrepreneurial glory have flooded our social media feeds, fascinating the digital natives of Gen Z into questioning the worth of an expensive traditional college degree.
Contrary to popular belief, successful entrepreneurship is rarely seen among the young. Recent research suggests that the average age in the U. S. of founders when they launched their companies is 42, rising to 45 for those within the top 0.1% of earnings based on growth in their first five years. That’s even the case for high-tech startups. Indeed, successful entrepreneurship is frequently the result of years of learning, experimenting and risk-taking—traits cultivated over time.
Campuses create environments rich in intellectual diversity and foster cooperation among their inhabitants, promoting an entrepreneurial mindset. They encourage students to challenge established norms and develop their unique thinking patterns to create value — practices that are also key to entrepreneurial success. Thus, higher education is not just about attaining a degree; it’s more importantly about acquiring the skills and experiences that inspire and enable the entrepreneurs of tomorrow.
But some may doubt since formal entrepreneurship itself isn’t typically a course of study, are all college majors capable of instilling entrepreneurial skills? Let’s examine the arts majors, which are often subjected to the most suspicion concerning their career paths. Consider a theater major. That curriculum often includes entrepreneurship-focused capabilities beyond stage direction, lighting, sound systems and performance. Students learn to mobilize resources, lead creative teams and navigate the uncertainties of a theatrical production — skills that are readily transferable to launching any entrepreneurial business.
Like a compass for the future, entrepreneurship guides us toward a society that prizes critical thinking, nurtures intellectual curiosity and champions innovation. Let’s not get swept away by short-lived trends or misleading narratives. Instead, we should appreciate the enduring value of college education.
1. What do the figures in paragraph 2 indicate?A.The chance of success multiplies with age. | B.Young people dominate high-tech startups. |
C.Quite a number of enterprises are in the red. | D.Successful entrepreneurship isn’t built in a day. |
A.Sticking to one’s own principles. | B.Acquiring knowledge from textbooks. |
C.Developing a startup mentality. | D.Following established norms and traditions. |
A.To illustrate it is complex and demanding. |
B.To prove people’s suspicion is reasonable. |
C.To show entrepreneurial skills can be integrated into all majors. |
D.To stress it is the launchpad for successful entrepreneurship. |
A.Arts. | B.Insights. | C.Entertainment. | D.News. |
It was time for the ice cream event that my small youth group had waited for many months. The group consisted of five boys; one of them was Scott.
Scott always had a positive attitude. He looked on the bright side of things and never criticized anyone. But Scott was different from the rest of us because he was disabled, suffering from a disease which caused hands shaking constantly. Therefore, he was unable to participate in activities in most cases. No one ever made fun of him to his face, but at times, people would laugh or stare in his presence. But Scott never worried; he just kept his head up high and ignored them.
Finally, the night of the ice cream event descended. My friends and I rushed to the church basement and waited with scoops (冰淇淋勺) in hand for the guests to arrive. One by one, people filed in, all hoping to get a creamy and tasty scoop of ice cream. But what they ended up getting was a hard and frozen mass. We waited for a while for the ice cream to melt, and eventually it did.
Once the ice cream melted, we had another problem. It had turned into three pools of coconut, chocolate, and strawberry. But we persisted in serving it. We had our chance to serve, except for Scott. So, being as kind as possible, I gave Scott a chance to scoop and serve. As soon as Scott gripped the scoop, our ice cream troubles grew beyond control. Milky ice cream was flung in every direction and made a mess on people, but there was no sign for him to come to a stop on account of his terrible control of trembling hands. At that moment, a stir of unrest and dissatisfaction rippled through the crowd.
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。
Abruptly, a woman stormed forward and grabbed the scoop.
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Tears blurred his eyes as Scott got hold of the scoop again.
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