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阅读理解(记叙文)真题演练](荔湾广雅月月考)9()A汰(例夕卜).You canprobably allride ab ewell.Tm anexceptionI startedriding a bike when I wasthree.It was a tinytoy bikewith fourwheels.I lovedit very much androde itevery day.When I was5,my cousingave mea pinkbike.It was a truebicycle withjust twowheels!At thetime,my parentsweretoo busyto teach me how to rideit.So I had tolearn to ride bymyself.I practicedhard onweekends andduring vacations,although Istill didntknow howto maketurns.One summervacation,I borrowedan oldbike androde itwith myfriends ona countryroad.We sangand practicedourriding skills.Suddenly,a small boy raninto theroad.I wasshocked andcouldnt controlthe bikeat all.My bikeran intotheboy and he fell.He didnt get veryseriously hurt,but hisgrandma was too angryto acceptmy apology.My cousinappearedfive minuteslater andsaved me from themess.But theexperience frightenedme:I no longer daredto ride a bike.Then,last year,free bikeswere offeredto children.My mothertried toteachmehowto ride.But thetraffic mademeso nervousthat Ihad to ride reallyslowly.But Imnot goingto giveup.One day,believe me;youd seeme ridinga bikeina bigstreet.
47.What kindof bikedid the writer havewhen hewas fiveA.An electricbicycle.B.A bicyclewith twowheels.C.A bicyclewith threewheels.D.A bicyclewith fourwheels.
48.Who taughtthe writertoridea bikewhen hewas fiveA.His fatherB.His motherC.His brotherD.No one.
49.Who did the writerhit on the roadA.A smallgirl.B.A smallboy.C.An oldman.D.An oldwoman.
50.Why didthe writersay—I nolonger daredtoridea bikeII A.Because hisparents didntallow himtorideabike.B.Because he didnt havebikes anylonger.C.Because hehit a smallboyand was very frightened.D.Because hewas afraidof thatsmall boysgrandma.
51.What is the besttitle of the passageA.My experienceof ridingbikes.B.The bikeI lovebest.C.How torideabike.D.An accident.BDBCAA.Understanding IsEverywhere B.Generous PresidentC.Sympathy ISNeeded D.An UnforgettableMemoryCDBAD(广州市执信中学四月月考一)()ADear Disney,Last weekend,the fourmembers ofmy familyspent anenjoyable holidayat the Magic Kingdom-Disneyland.Andone eventmade our visit seemtruly magical.We gotto the front of the lineat SpaceMountain,only tofind outthat ourlittledaughter Gloriacouldnt take her ice-cream onthe ride.We wereso excitedthat weall forgotice-cream was notallowed onthe ride.(员工)Gloria brokeinto tearsand weall hadno ideawhat to do.Then Murphy,one of the staffmembers,came over.She bentdown andtold Gloriathat shewould holdthe ice-cream forher andgive itto herwhen shefinished the ride.Gloriasaid,Promise Thenshe gaveMurphy herice-cream,and shecompletely enjoyedthe ride.Sure enough,as wewalked out the exit,there wasGlorias new friend withnherH ice-cream.Now youand Iboth knowwhathappened,because we know thatan ice-cream wontlast twentyminutes ona summerafternoon inFlorida.Murphyknew*what timewe wouldget offthe ride;she went to thenearest shopand bought a brand-new ice-cream thirtysecondsbefore wewalked outthe exit.Gloria said,nThank youJ butIm sureshe thoughtit wasthe sameice-cream.We knowthat someonetried hardto makeourvisitspecial.Thanks somuch forgoing aboveand beyond!Your fan,Carmen Rivera
36.The familysvisit to theMagicKingdom was.A.helpful B.awful C.frightening D.amazing
37.Before the ride,Gloria criedbecause.A.she couldntfind herparents in the line B.she wastoo littleto takethe rideC.she couldnttakeherice-cream ontheride D.she hadto waitfor twentyminutes
38.In orderto keepthe promise,Murphy.A.took Gloriato thenearest shopB.asked hernewfriendto helpGloriaD.helped Gloriaget offtherideD.bought anew ice-cream forGloria
39.The underlinedword“someone“in thelast paragraphrefers to.A.Murphy B.Disney C.Gloria D.Carmen
40.Carmen Riverawrote theletter to.A.order ice-cream B.promise to visit againC.express herthanks D.give somesuggestionsDCDAC(六中珠江月月考)3()AThe firstStarbucks coffeeshop opened in1971in downtownSeattle,Washington,in theUnited States.lt was a smallcoffeeshop thatroasted itsown coffee beans.The coffee shops businessdid well,and by1981there werethree moreStarbucks stores inSeattle.(经营)Things reallybegan tochange for the companyin
1981.That year,Howard Schultzmet thethree menwho ranStarbucks.Schultz workedin New York for a companythat madekitchen equipment.He noticedthat Starbucksordered alargenumber ofspecial coffeemakers,and hewas curious about the company.Schultz went to Seattleto seewhat(原先的)Starbucks did,andheliked whathe saw.He wanted to becomepart of the company.In1982,the originalStarbucksowners hiredSchultz asthe companyshead ofmarketing.In1983,Schultz travelledto Italy.The uniqueatmosphere of the coffeebars therecaught hiseye.To Schultz,it seemedthat Italians spenttheir dailylives inthree places:home,work,and coffeebars.His experiencein Italygave Schultza newideafor Starbucksback inSeattle.Schultz createdan atmospherefor Starbuckscoffeeshopsthat wascomfortable,and customerseverywhere seemedto一like it.Between1987and1992,Starbucks opened150new storesand thatwas onlythe beginning.In fact,by the year2000,three new Starbucksstoresopened somewherearound the world everyday!Today,Starbucks hasthousands ofstores,including stores in twenty-six countries.One thingthat helpsmakeStarbucks succeedin citiesoutside theUnited Statesis theway Starbucksworks withlocal storesand restaurants.Byworking togetherwith astore alreadyin the city,Starbucks getsan understandingof customersin thecity.Thisunderstanding helpsStarbucks openstoresin the rightlocations for their customers.
31.What is the mainidea ofthis passageA.How Starbuckshas grownB.What Starbucksmakes.C・Starbucks customers.D.How Starbucksmakes itscoffee.
32.Which istrue aboutStarbucks9first tenyears ofbusinessA.It grewvery quickly.B・It wasrun byHoward Schultz.C.It madespecial coffeemakers.D.It wasasmallcompany.
33.Who isHoward SchultzA.A coffeeseller inNewYork.B・An Italiancoffee makerC・The man who changedthe company.D.One ofthe originalowners ofthecompany.
34.How manynewStarbucksstores probablyopenedin theyear2000around theworldA.Three B.About1095C.Two thousandD.Thirty-six
35.What helpsStarbucks succeedin placesoutside theUnited StatesA.Opening restaurantsin justa fewlocations eachyear.B.Only sellinglocally producedcoffeebeans.C.working withother majorcoffee-making companies.D.Learning aboutlocal customers.ADCBD(天河省实中段质量检测)()A(把手)I stopwhenIget toa garage-like placeand walkto themetal doorwith brownpaint.I turnthe knoband walkin.A thousandeyes lookat meas Itake myplace at the end ofthelong line.When Ifinally getup to the window,I hand theofficer myID.Im heretovisitMr C.Yes,Fm hisdaughter.”The officerhanded mea pieceof paperwith myname asthe visitorand my fathers asthe prisoner.It toldme whichfloorto go to.As Iget onthe lift,a rushof excitementran throughme.Then Iwenttothe eighthfloor,looked around andsaw thefaces Isaw hereevery Sunday and Thursday.(脚尖)There hewas.I stoodon tiptoeto geta betterview sinceI couldhardly seehim.He didntlook likemyfather.(胡子)Hed gota beardnow andhe lookedweaker.He wasthe dadthat Isaw througha window.My dadwas separatedfrom theworld.The onlyplace henow knewwas hisroom in the prison.When Ilooked deepinto his eyes,I seeemptinessand pain.It wasdifficult to hear himthrough thethick glassand overeveryone elsewho wastrying to talk.We tried to carryona normalconversation aboutsimple thingsincluding myday andwhat Iwas doingin school,but wemostly talkedabouthow wecouldnt waituntil hegot out.My favorite place waswhere myfather was—prison.I know,how couldit be anyones favoriteplace Butit wasbecausemy father was there.It wouldnolongerbe myfavoriteplaceonce hegot out,though——home willbe.
26.What didthe writergo tothe prison forA.To talkwith the officer B.To visither fatherC.To geta pieceof paperD.To paya visitto herfavourite place
27.It can be inferredfrom the passage that the writersfatherwas.A.working therefor along timeB.just inprisonfora shorttimeC.still healthyand strongD.seldom keepingin touchwith peopleoutside
28.What doesthewritermainly talkof with her fatherA.Her behaviorin schoolB.Simple thingsin everydaylifeC.Difficulty andtrouble inher lifeD.The feelingof expectinghim home
29.The underlinedword itin Paragraph5refers to.A.prison Bfloor C.room D.home
30.What canwe knowfromthe passageA.The writersfather would never gohomeB.The writersfavourite placewouldneverchangeC.The writermet her father twicea week.D.The writerhated herfather.BDDAC(二中九年级上学期期中卷)A脑瘫,Amy Hagadornhad cerebral palsy soshe wasalways laughed at byher classmatesbecause of her differentwayof talkand walk.Sometimes,even in a classroomfull ofother students,she feltall alone.One day,Amy wasquiet at the dinnertable.Her motherknew thatthings werenot goingwell at school.Thafs whyPattiHagadorn washappy tohave someexciting newsto sharewith herdaughter.“Theres a Christmas WishContest onthe radio station JAmys momsaid.Write a letter toSanta andyou mightwin aprize.I thinksomeone atthis tablewith blondcurly hairshould have a try.”Amy smiled.The contestsounded fun.She startedthinking about what she wanted most for Christmas.After dinner,she wentto workon herletter.And therest ofthe familytriedtoguess whatshe mightask fromSanta.Amys sister,Jamie,and Amysmom boththought a3-fbot BarbieDoll wouldtop Amyswish list.Amys dadguessed apicturebook.But Amywasnt readyto makea wishlike those.When Amysletter arrivedat theradiostation,manager LeeTobin readit carefully.Dear SantaClaus,My nameis Amy,I am9years old.I havea problematschool.Can youhelp me,Santa Kidslaugh atme because of thewayI walkand runand talk.I havecerebralpalsy.I justwant oneday whenno onelaughs atme ormakes fun of me.Love,AmyHe thoughtit wouldbe goodfor thepeople inFort Waynetohearabout thisspecial thirdgrader and her unusual wish.The nextday,a pictureof Amyand herletter toSanta madethefrontpage ofthe NewsSentinel.All across the country,newspapers andradio andtelevision stationsreported the story ofthe little girl inFort Wayne,Indiana.During thatunforgettable Christmasseason,over twothousand peoplefrom allover theworld sentAmy lettersoffriendship andsupport.Some ofthe writerswere disabled;some hadbeen bulliedas children.Through the cards andlettersfrom strangers,Amy felta worldfull ofpeople whotruly caredabout eachother.She realizedthat beinglaughed atwouldno longermake herfeel lonelyagain.Many peoplethanked Amyfor beingbrave enoughto speakup.That year,that FortWayne mayorofficially namedDecember21st asAmy HagadomDay throughoutthecity.The majorexplained thatby beingbrave tomake sucha simplebutunusualwish,Amy taughtusalesson.
26.Why wasAmy quietwhen having dinnerA.Because shewas thinkingaboutwhatshe wantedmostforChristmas.B.Because shewas upsetabout beinglaughedatby othersagain atschool.C.Because she felt veryalone whenhavingdinnerat home.D.Because shefelt uncomfortablebecauseofthe cerebralpalsy.
27.How manypeople arethere inAmys familyA.Four B.ThreeC.Two D.One
28.From Amysletter toSanta,we caninfer that.A.Amy wantsto geta3-foot BarbieDoll asChristmas present.B.All thekids atschool laughat Amy.C.Amy wouldlike to be treatedasacommon person.D.Amy hatesher classmatesverymuch.
29.According tothe passage,what doesthe underlinedphrase alesson^^meanA.Its rudeto laughat others.B.We shouldrespect otherswishes.C.Everyone wantsto andshould betreated withrespect.D.How tomake the best useof yourwish tohelp others.
30.Which is the besttitle ofthe storyA.Amy HagadornB.Amys ChristmasWishC.Amys LessonD.Amys LetterBACCB(天河省实上学期第一次月考)One daya studentwas takinga walkwith histeacher.As theywent along,they sawa pairof oldshoes lyingin thepath.They werea poorfarmer^,who wasworking in the nearbyfield.The studentturned tothe teacher,saying:we willhide hisshoes,and hide ourselves behindthose trees,and waittosee whathe willdo.”“My youngfriend Janswered the teacher,we shouldnever makefunofthe poor.Why notput acoin ineach shoe,and thenwe willhideourselvesand watch”The studentdid soand theyboth hidthemselves behindthe trees.The poormansoon finishedhis work,and cameacrossthefield tothe pathwhere hehad lefthis coatand shoes.(弯”要)After puttingon hiscoat,he puthis footinto oneof hisshoes,and feltsomething hard.Then hebent downtofeel whatit was,and foundthe coin.Surprised,he looked at thecoin,turned itaroundandlooked atit again.He thenlookedaround,but noperson wasseen.He putthe moneyinto hispocket,and continuedto putontheother shoe.Hissurprise wasdoubled onfinding theother coin.He couldntcontrol hisfeelings andfell to his knees,looked uptothesky andexpressed histhanks.Then hespoke ofhiswife,sick andhelpless,and hischildren withoutbread.He said the helpwould savethem fromdying.The studentstood theredeeply moved,and hiseyes filledwith tears.“Now Jsaidtheteacher,are younot muchhappierthan ifyou hadhidden the shoes^^
26.When the student sawtheshoes,he wanted to.A.steal themB.find theirownerC.play ajoke onthe ownerD.give theowner somemoney
27.According tothe passage,theteacheris.A.quiet andhonest B.kind and friendlyC.patient andclever D.strict andcareful
28.At theend ofthestory,thestudent.A.was veryproud ofhimselfB.was verypleased withhis lifeC.felt verysorry abouthis firstideaD.felt sadfor nottaking histeachers adviceCBC黄埔区初中毕业班综合测试ASixteen is the agein theUS whenteenagers can begin todrive.Ifs a special age.There9s oftenaspecialcelebration fora girls16th birthday---a bigparty calledSweet-
16.It islike adultsweddingparty.Last monthwas Carolines16th birthday.About amonth beforeher Sweet-16,the girlsfamily sentout invitationstothe guests.Her parentsboughtaspecial andwonderful present forthebirthday girl andthegirl guestsfind gooddresses towear.A sweet-16present usuallycosts$40to$
60.This isabout$20more thanthe usual-cost ofa birthdaypresent.All thegirlguests worebeautiful dressesto attendthe party.The partywas notheld atCarolines ownhouse.The hostessrented abeautiful andgrand hallfortheevent.Theyprepared deliciousfood,different tastesof cakesand afamous DJ.The partystarted ataround6oclock in the evening.Theguests cameand hadsome greetingswith thehostess.Then thegirlandherfatherhad aspecial father-daughter dance.Afterthat,guests dancefor about30to45minutes.Then therecame themost importantpart ofthe Sweet-16party,named thecandle-lighting ceremony.Caroline stoodbehind16unlit candlesand gaveeach candleto herfriends,family,and anyonethat shefelt wasimportant inher life.A lotofcrying andhugging wenton at that time.Everybody wasso movedatthatmoment.Afterwards,people satand atewith joy.Most guestsleft ataround11oclock thatnight.Caroline lovedthe partyand feltvery excited.She could not believethat shesan adultnow.
26.Why issixteen aspecial agefor anAmerican girlA.Because shecan drive.B.Because shecan getmarried.C.Because shecan attenda wedding.D.Because shewill geta bigSweet-16party.
27.How muchdoes ausual birthdaypresentforteenagers costintheUSAA.More than40dollars.B.About20dollars.C.About20-40dollars.D.Less than20dollars.
28.How longdidtheparty lastA.16hours B.30minutes C.45minutes D.5hours
29.Why didCaroline giveoutthe candlesA.Because shewanted toeat thecake.B.Because shewanted tolight thecandled.C.Because shecouldnotcatch all thecandles.D.Because sheneeded toshow loveto herfamily andfriends.
30.What canwe knowfrom this passageA.Candle-lighting ceremonyisthemost importantpart ofSweet-16party.B.A father-daughter danceisthemost importantpart ofSweet-16party.C.There werelots ofcrying andhugging atthe beginningoftheparty.D.Caroline doesntwant to beanadult atall.DCDDA广东实验中学毕业班综合测试AHaving returnedfrom herround trip,the angrywoman stoodoutside theticket ofthe station.The shippingdepartmentshould payme back£12,so youowe methe money,“she saidto HarryJenks,the youngman workingattheoffice.“Yousold mea ticket for May22nd,but therewasnoship forJersey thatnight.So mydaughter andIhadto stayin ahotel.It costme£
12.^^Harry wasworried.He rememberedselling the woman areturn ticket.Come intotheoffice,Madam/9he saidpolitely.Til justcheck theJersey timetablefor May22nd.”The womanandherlittle girlfollowed himinside.She wasquite right,as Harrysoon discovered.There wasno sailingonMay22nd.How couldhe havemade sucha carelessmistake Heshouldnt havesold hera ticketfor thatday.Confusedand embarrassed,he smiledatthe child.You looksun burnt,he saidto her.Did youhaveanice holidayin Jersey”“Yes,she answered,shyly.“The beachwas lovely.And Ican swim,too!”“Thats fine/9said Harry.“My littlegirl canswim abit yet.Of course,shes onlythree../9Im four/9the childsaid proudly.Ill befour anda half.^^Harry turnedtothemother.I rememberyour ticket,Madam,“he said.“But youdidntgetone for your daughter,didyou”Er,thewomanlooked atthechild.“I mean...she hasntstarted schoolyet.Shes onlyfour.”“A four-year-old childmust havea ticket,Madam.A childsreturn ticketto Jerseycosts...let mesee...£
13.
50.So iftherailway paysforyouhotel,you willowe£
1.
50.The lawisthelaw,but sincethe faultwas mine...”
26.What happenedtothe womanA.She hadto buythe returnticket inJersey.B.She hadto returnhome aday earlier.C.She hadto stayinthehotel forone night.D.She couldntuse theticketforthe roundtrip.
27.Which ofthe followingis trueA.Harrys daughtercould swimvery well.B.The Jerseytimetable wastotally wrong.C.Actually,the littlegirl didntneed aticket.D.The littlegirl wassatisfied withthe holiday.
28.Harry startedtalking tothe littlegirl becausehe.A.did notknow whatto doB.wanted tobe friendlyto herC.had alittlegirlabout thesame ageD.wantedtofind away outfrom her
29.According tothepassage,we knowthat Harrywas.A.careful B.hard-working C.serious D.smart
30.What wouldbe theendofthe storyA.The womanwould askthe policefor help.B.The womanwould seethe headofthestation.C.The womanwould insiston gettingback£
12.D.The womanwould stoparguing andleave.CDADD(七中毕业班综合测试)()CTwo good friends,Sam and Jason,met with a car accident ontheir wayhome onenight.The nextmorning,Sam wokeupblind.His legswere broken.The doctor,Mr.Lee wasstanding byhis bed,looking athim thoughtfully.When hesawSam awake,he asked,How areyou feeling,Sam”Sam smiledand said,“Not bad,Doctor.Thank youfor doingthe(手术)operation Mr.Lee wasmoved bySam.When hewas leaving,Sam said,“Please donttell Jasonabout it.…OK.Mr.Lee replied.(伤口)Months laterwhen Jasonswounds healed,Sam wasstill verysick.Neither couldhe seenor walk.Whathe coulddo wasjust stayingin hiswheelchair allday long.At first,Jason stayedwith himforafew days.But days later,(尴尬的)Jason feltvery discouragedand embarrassedto spendtime stayingwithadisabled manlike Samallthetime.So hewentto see Samless andless.He madenew friends.From thenon,hedidntgotovisit Samany more.Sam didnthaveany familyor friendsother thanJason.He feltvery sad.Things wentfrom badto worse.Sam dieda yearlater.When Jasoncame,Mr.Lee gavealetterto him.It wasfromSam.In theletter Samsaid,Dear Jason,I amdisabled.But Iwant youtobea healthy man.So Igave myeyes toyou sothatyou canenjoy lifeasahealthyman.Now youhave new friends.Tm gladyou livea happylife.You arealways mybestfriend...Sam”.After heread theletter,Mr.Lee saidJThave promisedthatIwill keepthis asecret untilSam isgone.Nowyou knowit“Jason stoodthere.Tears randown hisface.
36.The reasonwhy Samthanked Mr.Lee isthat.A.Mr.Lee wasvery kindandfriendlyto himB.Mr.Lee came toseehim earlyinthemorningC.Mr.Lee didthe operationaccording tohis wishD.Mr.Lee savedboth hisand Jasonslife
37.The underlinedword“healed“inthesecond paragraphmay mean.A.opened againB.became healthyagainC.felt hurtand painfulD.became worse
38.Which ofthe followingisthecorrect orderof eventsinthestorya.Jason madenewfriends.b.Sam gavehiseyesto Jason.c.Sam andJason werecaught ina caraccident.d.Sam becamedisabled andneeded friends.e.Sam diedandJason knew whatSam haddone forhim.A.d-a—c—b-eB.d-c—b-e-aC.c-b-d—a—eD.c-d—b—e-a
39.We caninfer fromthepassagethat.A.Sam drovetoo badlyand causedthe caraccidentB.the unsuccessfuloperation ledto SamsblindnessC.Jasonknewhow Samhelped himbefore SamdiedD.It wasJason thatwas madeblind inthecaraccident
40.From thestory,weknowthat Samwasamanwho.A.thought friendshipwasveryimportantB.depended onhis friendstoo muchC.felt hopelessafter thecaraccidenthappenedD.always listenedtohisfriends CBCDA(广大附中初三一模试卷)()AI wasworking asa consultantina beer company,helping the president andsenior vice-presidents formand carryouttheir newplanning projects.It wasreally agreat challenge.At thesame time,my motherwas inthe finalstages ofcancer.I workedduring the dayanddrove40miles hometobewithherevery night.It wastiring andstressful,but itwas whatIwantedtodo.My commitmentwastocontinue todo excellentconsulting duringtheday,even thoughmy eveningswerevery hard.I didntwant tobother the president withmy situation,yet Ifelt someoneatthecompany neededto knowwhatwas goingon.So Itold the vice-president ofHuman Resources,asking himnot toshare theinformation withanyone.A fewdayslater,thepresidentcalled meinto hisoffice.I figuredhewantedtotalkto meabout oneofthemany issueswe wereworking on.When Ientered,he askedmetositdown.He facedmefromacross hislarge desk,looked meintheeye andsaid,“I hearyour motheris veryill/(平息),Iwastotally caughtby surpriseand burstinto tears.He justlookedatme,let mycrying subsideand thengentlysaid asentence Iwill neverforget:Whatever youneed.That wasit.His understandingand hiswillingness bothto letme bein mypain andto offerme everythingwerequalities ofsympathy thatI carrywith meto thisday.
26.When theauthor wasworking inabeercompany,his mother.A.was concernedabout himB.drew thepresident9attentionC.was seriouslyill D.was proudofherson
27.Although hefelt tiredand stressed,hefeltit hisduty.A.to carryout theirnew strategicvisionB.to avoidbothering thepresidentC.to tellthe vice-president hisdifficult situationD.todohis jobwell andlook afterhis mother
28.Most probably,thepresidentgot theinformation from.A.a relativeofthe authors B.thevice-presidentC.the authorsgoodfriendsD.theauthorscolleagues
29.Which ofthe followingcanbeused tobest describethe presidentA.Considerate B.Intelligent C.Honest D.Consultative
30.Which ofthe followingcanbethebesttitle ofthispassage。
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