After nearly 50 years of separation,an elderly woman has been reunited with the family that she feared was lost to her forever.
Celestine Thompson left Mississippi when she was 14 years old and eventually settled in New York,where she spent more than 30 years of her life,according to WLOX 13News. After surviving a fire in 1992,Thompson was in a coma(昏迷)for two years and has since experienced memory loss. The 90-year-old found it difficult to recall details about her family.
But later she remembered the name of her nephew Clarence Woodway. Then another woman who knows Thompson in Mississippi was able to track Woodway down and help reunite Thompson with her large family.
“In our minds,my brother and I were talking that she wasn’t here anymore,because we hadn’t heard from her for a very long time,”Donald Davis,another one of Thompson’s nephews,told the media.“You know,we were overjoyed when we found out that we had gotten in contact with her.”
A few of Thompson’s relatives visited her in New York,and then arranged a larger reunion which was held this past Saturday in Gulfport,Mississippi,the Associated Press reported.
Thompson now lives in Greensboro,Alabama,with a caretaker,and,although she is yet to meet them all,she has regained quite a sizeable family of 23 nieces and nephews,64 grand nieces and nephews,66 great-grand nieces and nephews and 34 great-great-grand nieces and nephews,according to the Associated Press.
1.What can we know about Thompson?
A. She suffered memory loss and forgot everything about herself.
B. She lives with a caretaker and her relatives in Alabama at present.
C. She’s lost contact with her family since she left her hometown
D. She had a larger reunion with her family members in Mississippi.
2.Who helped Thompson get contact with her family?
A. A woman who knows her.
B. People from WLOX 13 News.
C. The Associated Press.
D. The caretaker she's living with.
3. How many generations are there in Thompson’s large family?
A. "Three. B. Four. C. Five. D. Six.
4.What can we learn from Thompson’s story?
A. Great hopes make a great woman.
B. Time and tide wait for no man.
C. Life wonders can really take place.
D. Misfortune will tell what fortune is.
Americans are proud of their variety and individuality, yet they love and respect few things more than a uniform. Why are uniforms so in the United States?
Among the arguments for uniforms, one is that in most people’s eyes they look more professional than civilian clothes. A television repairman who appears in a uniform inspires more trust than one who doesn’t. Faith in the skill of a mechanic is by a uniform. What easier way is there for a nurse, a policeman, or a barber to lose professional than stepping out of uniform?
Uniforms also have many practical . They save on other clothes and laundry bills. They are often more durable than civilian clothes.
Primary among the arguments uniforms is their lack of individuality. While there are many types of uniforms, the wearer of any particular type is generally stuck with it, without change, until retirement. When people look alike, they tend to think, speak, and act , on the job at least.
Uniforms also practical problems. Though they are long-lasting, often their initial cost is greater. Some uniforms are also to maintain, requiring professional dry cleaning rather than the home laundering possible with many types of civilian clothes.
1.A. special B. fashionable C. popular D. common
2.A. increased B. created C. reduced D. presented
3.A. popularity B. ability C. stability D. identity
4.A. benefits B. characters C. functions D. purposes
5.A. about B. with C. against D. over
6.A. honestly B. similarly C. confidently D. differently
7.A. bring up B. come up withC. result from D. give rise to
8.A. expensive B. easy C. complex D. cheap
It was New Year’s Night. An aged man was standing at a window. He had already sixty of the stages leading to it, and he had brought from his journey nothing but errors and remorse.
The days of his appeared like dreams before him, and he recalled the moment when his father placed him at the entrance of the two roads.—one leading to a peaceful, sunny place, with flowers, fruits and resounding with soft, sweet songs ; the other leading to a deep, dark cave, which was endless.
He looked towards the sky and cried , “ Oh, my youth, return! Oh ,my , place me once more at the entrance to life, and I ’ll the better way!” But both his father and the days of his youth had passed away.
The clock in the high church tower struck and the sound made him remember his early love for him. They had taught him and prayed to God for his good. But he chose the wrong way. His darkened eyes were full of , and with a despairing effort , he burst out a cry, “Come back, my early days! Come back!”
And his youth did return, for all this was only a which he had on New Year’s Night.
Those who still linger on the of life, hesitating to choose the bright road, remember that when years pass away and your stumble on the dark mountains, you will cry bitterly, but in vain, “Oh , my youth, return! Oh , give me back my early days! ”
1. A. brought B. passed C. paid D. took
2.A. youth B. age C. work D. future
3.A .happy B. serious C. dangerous D. terrible
4.A. placed B. smiled C. covered D. put
5.A. painfully B. carefully C. faithfully D. terribly
6.A. mother B. father C. sister D. brother
7.A.talk B. write C. advise D. choose
8.A.sisters’ B. parents’ C.teachers’ D. brothers’
9.A. jobs B. talks C. tears D. clothes
10.A. story B. dream C. chance D. joke
11.A. entrance B. building C. street D. way
12.A. teeth B. hands C. heads D.feet
-----I’d like a wake-up call at 7:a.m.,please!
----- OK, _____.
A. help yourself
B. you’ll certainly make it
C. just do what you like
D. I’ll make sure you get one
I won’t tell the student the answer to the math problem until he on it for more than an hour.
A. has been working B. will have worked
C. will have been working D. had worked
The issue of protecting cultural heritage was of _______ importance _______ we could not afford to ignore it.
A. such, that B. so, that
C. such, as D. so, as
