The poor old man passed away on a cold winter night.A.went awayB.diedC.left homeD.got sick
The poor old man passed away on a cold winter night.
A.went away
B.died
C.left home
D.got sick
The poor old man passed away on a cold winter night.
A.went away
B.died
C.left home
D.got sick
第1题
The listener was ______.
A.from a poor family
B.rich
C.an old man
第2题
"My money has finished and my friends have gone," said the young man. "What will ___3___ to me now?"
"Don't ___4___, young man," answered Nasreddin. "Everything will soon be all right again. Wait, and you will soon feel much happier."
The young man was very glad. "Am I going to get rich again then?"
"No, I ___5___ mean that," said the old man. "I meant that you would soon get used to being poor and having no friends."
1)、A.happen
B.didn't
C.nothing
D.all the
E.worry
2)、A.happen
B.didn't
C.nothing
D.all the
E.worry
3)、A.happen
B.didn't
C.nothing
D.all the
E.worry
4)、A.happen
B.didn't
C.nothing
D.all the
E.worry
5)、A.happen
B.didn't
C.nothing
D.all the
E.worry
第3题
In the center of the main road into the town he placed a very large stone. Then he hid behind a tree end waited. Soon en old man came along with his cow.
"Who put this stone in the center of the road?" said the old man, but he did not try to remove the stone. Instead, with sane difficulty he passed around the stone and continued tm his way. Another man came along and did the same thing, then another came, and another. All of them complained about the stone in the center of the road but not one of them tried to remove it. Late in the afternoon a young man came along. He saw the stone and said. "The night will be very dark. Sane neighbor will come along later in the dark and will fall against the stone."
The young man then began to move the stone. He pushed and pulled with all his strength to remove it. How great was his surprise at last when, under the stone, he found a bag of money and a piece of paper with these words: "This money is for the first honest man who removes this stone from the road."
(23)
A.How many people there were in the town.
B.Whether the poor people really needed his help.
C.If the roads of the village were in need of repair.
D.If the people of the town were worthy of his help.
第4题
She Was Poor (贫穷的)
Robert doesn't like to use his head. so he isn't good at his lessons. His Teachers tell his Father. Mr. Turner about it. The man worried about it.
It was Saturday yesterday. Mr. Turner didn't go to work. After lunch he began to talk with his son.
"You're nine years old now. " said Mr. Tumer. 'When I was nine. Histened to the tmchem carefully (认真地) at school and did all my homework on lime. So I could answer all my teacher's questions. I was tile best at all only lessons in class. And Miss Yang. our English teacher. liked me very much. I was her pet (宠儿). "
"Your teacher was poor. I think" said Robert.
"How do you know about it?
"She didn't have enough money to keep a dog. "
Robert isn't good at His lessons. so his father worried about it.
A.True.
B.False.
第5题
A.Because her eyesight was too poor with old age.
B.Because she was too old.
C.Because she wanted to make a new record.
D.Because she had a terrible physical condition.
第6题
A.influenced
B.related
C.suffered
D.concerned
第7题
I don't remember my reply, but I do remember a sudden heavy feeling inside me.I had always been delighted at how much my daughter noticed in her world, whether it was birds in flight or children playing.But now she was noticing suffering and poverty.She wasn't even four.
A few days later, I saw an article in the newspaper about volunteers who delivered meals to elderly people.The volunteers went to a nearby school on a Sunday morning, picked up a food package, and delivered it to an elderly person.I signed us up.Nora was excited about it.She could understand the importance of food, so she could easily see how valuable our job was.When Sunday came, we picked up the package and phoned the elderly person we'd been assigned.She invited us right over.
The building was depressing.When the door opened, facing us was a silver-haired woman in an old dress.She took the package and asked if we would like to come in.Nora ran inside.I reluctantly followed.Our hostess showed us some photos of her family.Nora played and laughed.I accepted a second cup of tea.When it came time to say good-bye, we three stood in the doorway and hugged.I walked home in tears.
Where else but as volunteers do you have the opportunity to do something enjoyable that's good for yourself as well as for others? Indeed, the poverty my daughter and I helped lessen that Sunday afternoon was not the woman's alone — it was in our lives, too.Now Nora and I regularly serve meals to needy people and collect clothes for the homeless.Yet, as I've watched her grow over these past four years, I still wonder — which of us has benefited more?
26.The man Nora noticed on that evening was probably ______.
A.asking for food
B.one of those homeless
C.taken home by the author
D.buying a newspaper
27.The author had a sudden heavy feeling (Para.2), because ______.
A.his daughter had noticed the dark side of life
B.he did not want to take the guy home
C.he felt a deep sympathy for the guy
D.his daughter was afraid of what she saw
28.Their volunteer job was to ______.
A.visit poor homes
B.serve meals at a nearby school
C.pick up packages for poor, elderly people
D.deliver food to needy, elderly people
29.The word “us” in the last paragraph refers to ______ .
A.the author and the old woman
B.the giver and receiver of the help
C.the author and his daughter
D.the author and the guy in the box
30.The best title for this passage might be “______.”
A.A Loving Kid
B.A Lesson in Caring
C.Volunteers at Work
D.How to Help the Needy
第8题
And all this praise is just because the poor man has died—doesn't strike you as______ (sincere)
第9题
______ made the old woman not answer the telephone.
A.The doctor's advice
B.Her husband's suggestion
C.Her poor health
D.The two pieces of bad news
第10题
A. A rich man who has a college degree.
B. A rich man who does not have a college degree.
C. A poor man who has a college degree.
D. A poor man who does not have a college degree.