1、A. that B. who C. from whom D. to whom4. I, _your good friend, will try my best to help you out.A. who is B. who am C. that is D. which am5. This is the very place _Im wishing to live in.A. where B. which C. that D. in which6. I was told that there were about 50 foreign students _ Chinese in the sch
2、ool,most _ from Germany.A. study; of whom B. study; of them C. studying; them D. studying; of whom7. You should understand the traffic rule by now. Youve had it _ often enough.A. explaining B. to explain C. explain D. explained8._ by the beauty of nature,the girl from London decided to spend another
3、 two days on the farm.A. Attracting B. Attracted C. To be attracted D. Having attracted9. The old man, _ abroad for twenty years,is on the way back to his motherland. A. to work B. working C. to have worked D. having worked10. When passing me he pretended _ me.A. to see B. not having seen C. to have
4、 not seen D. not to have seen11. Will $200 _ the cost of the damage? - I am afraid not. I need at least $ 100 more. A. do B. go C. afford D. cover 12. Internet shopping will really _ when people make sure that it is safe. A. take off B. take up C. set off D. set up 13. News reports say peace talks b
5、etween the two countries have _ with no agreement reached. A. broken up B. broken down C. broken in D. broken through14. He was _ the edge of success when the unexpected accident happened,A. at B on C. from D. in15. A new _ on commercial ads during TV dramas took into effect on January 1, 2012. From
6、 then on showing advertisements in the middle of TV dramas isnt allowed. A. law B. ban C. case D limit16. He made another wonderful discovery, _ of great importance. A. which I think is B. I think which is C. which I think it is D. which I think it17. Two quakes _ 5.7 and 5.6 hit a border area Yi Li
7、ang in Yunnan and Weining county in Guizhou at 11:19 am and 12:16 pm on Friday.A. measured B measuring C. having measured D. to be measured18. What do you think of the service in our hotel? - Oh, _. We couldnt have found a better place. A. it is really something B. it is far from satisfactoryC. it i
8、s just so-so. D. it is not a bit wonderful19. -$ 100, but that is my last offer! - _A. Good idea! B. What did you say? C. Its up to you D. OK, its a deal. 20. Recently CCTV station has taken great _ to make a program that reviews the important _ of the past 20 years.A. steps; affairs B. efforts; mat
9、ters C. pains; events D. efforts; incidents第二节 完形填空 (共20小题;每小题1.5分,满分30分)Annie Oakley was born on a farm in Ohio, USA in 1860. She was a sharp-shooting star of the Wild West and died in 1926, at the age of 66.As a child, she used to 21 her father and his friends shoot animals: she wanted to try, too
10、. They 22 her because they thought she was not 23 enough to hold a gun properly. But she 24 them all by learning to shoot and becoming very good at it. Annie 25 a marksman (神枪手) whom she met at a shooting competition. Together they started their own shooting show and they 26 in variety shows around
11、the country.When Annie Oakley was twenty-five, the legendary Buffalo Bill saw her perform and said her skills 27 a bigger, better-known show. That year, she and her husband 28 the famous Buffalo Bills Wild West Show. For seventeen years, Annie was part of the show and was the main 29 . She was such
12、a good shot that she could split a playing card from the side, 30 ten meters away. She could hit a coin 31 in the air and even shoot cigarettes held between her husbands 32 . When Annie was forty-one, she was seriously 33 in a train crash. Everyone thought that would be the end of her 34 . But she 3
13、5 quickly and soon she was well enough to continue to 36 her audiences.In 1946, twenty years after her 37 , a musical called Annie Get Your Gun was written about Annie Oakley. 38 , she was much quieter in real life than the 39 in the musical. Some of the stories about her shooting skills are almost
14、too 40 to be true. Annie Oakley has become a legendary figure of the Wild West.21. A. help B. see C. find D. watch22. A. shouted at B. looked at C. laughed at D. cried at23. A. strong B. young C. fat D. healthy24. A. frightened B. surprised C. disappointed D. defeated25. A. found B. taught C. became
15、 D. married26. A. trained B. performed C. practiced D. travelled27. A. caused B. arose C. deserved D. awarded28. A. joined B. discovered C. organized D. disclosed29. A. attraction B. business C. learner D. coach30. A. flying B. jumping C. standing D. waiting31. A. lost B. brought C. thrown D. carrie
16、d32. A. hands B. eyes C. arms D. lips33. A. treated B. injured C. rescued D. cured34. A. life B. husband C. career D. trip35. A. worsened B. improved C. fled D. recovered36. A. amaze B. move C. play D. shoot37. A. treatment B. death C. performance D. marriage38. A. Luckily B. Besides C. However D. F
17、inally39. A. character B. singer C. hero D. director40. A. realistic B. limited C. extraordinary D. practical第三节 阅读理解 (共25小题;每小题2分,满分50分)A Half a century later, Mrs Cooper became a beloved volunteer at the San Diego Food Bank, where she devoted herself to helping others. She organized and ran a dist
18、ribution center from a church, helping it become the organizations largest emergency food distribution center in San Diego. She was one of 25 outstanding senior volunteers in the nation selected and invited Washington D.C. to receive the award. “She was the main person who helped us make that progra
19、m grow,” said Mike Doody, former director of the Food Bank. “She had a way of getting people to work together and to work hard. She was determined and stubborn, but in a good way. She had a good heart.” People knew her as “Grandma” because of her selflessness and her devotion to helping hungry child
20、ren and families. “She reminded people of their Grandma.” Doody said. As a widow with a young child in 1979, Mrs. Cooper was helped through a difficult financial time when the Food Bank provided her with groceries. “She dedicated her life to giving back,” said her daughter, Monica Cooper. It wasnt u
21、nusual for a local church to call Mrs Cooper to ask her to aid a needy family. “She would give people food out of her cupboard. Sometimes we would cook a meal for a family living out of their car,” Cooper said. Although Mrs Cooper was honored to receive the national award for her volunteer work, she
22、 said being able to help others was her reward. She died of liver disease and kidney failure, aged 93.41The underlined word “charity” in Paragraph 1 refers to . Aoffering help Bdonating money Cproviding services Dshowing sympathy42The San Diego Food Bank is meant to . Adistribute food in case of eme
23、rgency Bhelp hungry children and families Cgive basic first-aid treatment Dtrain some senior volunteers43Which of the following is true of Mrs Cooper? AShe died at an early age. BShe refused the national award. CShe was kind and devoted. DShe was not easy to get along with.44From what Monica Cooper
24、said, we know that . Ashe is in financial trouble Bshe was finally rewarded Cshe once misunderstood her mother Dshe thinks highly of her mother45 Mrs Coopers story suggests that . A everyone needs a Grandma nearby Bchildren are what their parents are Ca sound mind is in a sound body Da mothers love
25、never changesBMost American students go to traditional public schools. There are about 88,000 public schools all over the US. Some students attend about 3000 independent public schools called charter schools. Charter schools are self-governing. Private companies operate some charter schools. They ar
26、e similar in some ways to traditional public schools. They receive tax money just as other public schools do. Charter schools must prove to local or state governments that their students are learning. These governments provide the schools with the agreement called a charter that permits them to oper
27、ate. Charter schools are different because they do not have to obey most laws governing traditional public schools. Local, state or federal governments cannot tell them what to teach. Each school can choose its own goals and decide the ways it wants to reach them. Class size is usually smaller than
28、in traditional public schools. The Bush Administration strongly supports charter schools as a way to re-organize public schools that are failing to educate students. But some education agencies and unions oppose charter schools. One teachers union has just made public the results of the first nation
29、al study comparing the progress of students in traditional schools and charter schools. The American Federation of Teachers criticized the governments delay in releasing the results of the study, which is called the National Assessment of Educational Progress. Union education experts say the study s
30、hows that charter school students performed worse on math and reading tests than students in regular public schools. Some experts say the study is not a fair look at charter schools because students in those schools have more problems than students in traditional schools. Other education experts say the study results should make charter school
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