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Successful athletes today are able to ea...

Successful athletes today are able to earn enormous salaries and many of them choose to share the wealth they have by donating to charities.

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Perhaps the generosity displayed by these athletes will inspire others to join them in helping the less fortunate.

1.What do we know from the passage?

A. Donating to charities is common among famous athletes.

B. All the athletes mentioned in this passage are famous basketball players.

C. Some athletes mentioned in this passage will donate all their money in future.

D. Successful athletes will be scolded if they dont donate their money to people in need.

2.Who has a foundation that is named after him/ her?

A. Ron Artest.B. Steve Nash.

C. Tiger Woods.D. Hannah Teter.

3.How many athletes mentioned by the author mainly help the school children?

A. Two.B. Three.C. Four.D. Five.

4.This passage was written in order to___________.

A. tell us the successful athletes are generous

B. tell us there are a lot of charities in the US

C. inspire more and more people to help the needy

D. praise the successful athletes for their good deeds

 

1.A 2.B 3.C 4.C 【解析】 试题分析:文章大意:本文主要介绍了体育届的冠军们捐助善款,帮助学校的孩子,设立基金,帮助那些因病致困的人们,鼓励人们向这些冠军们学习。 1.donating to charities.判断A正确。 2.Steve Nash部分的第一句话The Phoenix Suns player has a foundation bearing his name判断B正确。 3.Ron Artest和 Hannah Teter中有关键词:school和children,Steve Nash提到education和Hannah Teter提到children,故选C。 4.Perhaps the generosity displayed by these athletes will inspire others to join them in helping the less fortunate.进行判断选C。 考点:考查说明类短文阅读
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“Tell me again how you learned to ride a horse,” I would ask my father when I was a little girl in Denmark. I was no more than four years old—too little to learn to ride a horse by myself. But I liked to hear my father tell his story. And then he would begin.

When I was a little boy, as little as you are now,” he would say, “I wanted to ride the horses. But I was too small to mount a horse. So I would slip into my father’s stables to be with the horses and admire them. Such big, powerful animals they were!

The gentle workhorses stood quietly in their stalls, eating their hay. I would climb up the side of one of the stalls and slide over onto the horse’s back.

Then I would hold its mane and imagine us running quickly over the grasslands, down to the shore, and even into the sea.

When I grew tall enough to mount a horse,” he said, “my wish came true.”

You swim with the horses now,” I said. “You even swim with Fiery. And he has spirit!”

Everybody knew about Fiery, the great black male horse with the fierce temper, and how he behaved when he first came to the stables. He raised itself on its back legs with the front legs in the air. He snorted and kicked. He rolled his eyes. And everyone was afraid of him. Everyone, except my father.

I wanted to hear more. “Now tell me how you made Fiery your friend,” I begged. This was my favorite story.

Well, little Else,” my father went on, “I just talked to him. I talked as a friend. You must talk to a horse like Fiery.

I’d say, ‘No, little horse. No, my friend. You can’t run free. You must learn to let me ride you.’

And soon Fiery began to listen. He knew from my voice that I would be his friend.”

So Fiery let my father teach him to carry a rider. Then Fiery would take my father across the soft green grasslands or even into the lively waters of the northern sea. I loved to see Father riding Fiery without a saddle(马鞍) into the sea. There they swam, Father and Fiery, out in the cold, clear water.

Often I would watch them from the shore, holding tight to my mother’s hand. They swam so bravely. I was so proud of them!

Then Father and Fiery would come splashing out of the water and run along the shore toward us. They made a fine stop—just in time!

Fiery towered over us. He tossed his head and shook sea water from his shining black coat.

Father was laughing and patting Fiery’s neck.

And I was making a wish.

I wished that someday I could have a horse, too . . . but a smaller one!

1.What is Fiery like when he first comes to the stables?

A. He is quiet and lazy.

B. He is wild and full of spirit.

C. He makes friends with everyone.

D. He only lets Else’s father ride him.

2.Where does Else most like to watch her father ride Fiery?

A. At the seashore. B. On the farm.

C. In the grasslands. D. In the stables.

3.In the passage, the underlined word “mount” means___________.

A. feed withB. talk about C. fasten to D. climb onto

4.How does Else feel about horses after watching her father ride Fiery?

A. She wants a horse just like Fiery.

B. She has no interest in riding horses.

C. She would like to have a smaller horse.

D. She thinks horses should not go into the sea.

5.What does Else learn from her father’s story?

A. How to train a workhorse.

B. How to swim with a horse.

C. How to make friends with a horse.

D. How to ride a horse without a saddle.

 

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In 1972, I returned to Miami Beach High School to speak to the drama class. Afterward I asked the drama teacher     any of my English teachers are still there. Irene Roberts, he tells me, is in the class       down the hall.

  I was no one special in Miss Roberts’ class — just another student who did okay work. I don’t recall any one special bit of wisdom she passed on. Yet I cannot forget her       for language, for ideas and for her students. I       now, many years later, that she is the perfect example of a       teacher. I’d like to say something to her, I say, but I don’t want to       her from a class. Nonsense, he says, she’ll be       to see you.

  The drama teacher     Miss Roberts into the hallway where stands this 32-year-old man she last saw at 18. “I’m Mark Medoff,” I tell her. “You were my 12th-grade English teacher in 1958.” She     her head to one side and looks at me, as if this angle might remember me in her       . And then, though armed with a message I want to       in many words, I can’t think up anything more memorable than this: “I want you to know,” I say, “you were       to me.”

  And there in the hallway, this lovely woman, now nearing       age, this teacher who doesn’t remember me, begins to weep; and she encircles me in her arms.

         this moment, I begin to sense that everything I will ever know, everything I will ever pass to my students, is an inseparable part of a legacy(遗产) of our ancestors.

  Irene Roberts holds me       in her arms and through her tears whispers       my cheek, “Thank you.” And then, with the briefest of looks into my forgotten face, she         back into her classroom,       to what she has done thousands of days through all the years of my       .

On reflection, maybe those were,       , just the right words to say to Irene Roberts. Maybe they are the very words I would like to speak to all those teachers through my life, the very words I would like spoken to me one day by some returning student: “I want you to know you were important to me.”

1.A. thatB. ifC. asD. when

2.A. justB. almostC. nearlyD. about

3.A. kindnessB. respectC. friendshipD. love

4.A. knowB. learnC. realizeD. believe

5.A. selfishB. self-confidentC. self-consciousD. selfless

6.A. callB. dragC. pushD. pull

7.A. upsetB. delightedC. interestedD. annoyed

8.A. bringsB. takesC. fetchesD. introduces

9.A. bowsB. raisesC. risesD. puts

10.A. thoughtB. brainC. attentionD. memory

11.A. announceB. speakC. deliverD. tell

12.A. usefulB. importantC. hopefulD. beneficial

13.A. retirementB. enjoymentC. employmentD. happiness

14.A. RemindingB. ExplainingC. RememberingD. Forgetting

15.A. happilyB. straightC. calmly D. briefly

16.A. againstB. withC. offD. beyond

17.A. escapesB. gathersC. disappearsD. fails

18.A. longsB. continuesC. goesD. returns

19.A. absenceB. classC. workD. task

20.A. or ratherB. in additionC. as usualD. after all

 

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