关键词不能为空

当前您在: 主页 > 英语 >

名校高考模拟题专题08 完形填空之记叙文

作者:高考题库网
来源:https://www.bjmy2z.cn/gaokao
2021-02-13 14:55
tags:

-

2021年2月13日发(作者:tough是什么意思)



专题


08


完形填空之记叙文



1.



2020


届安徽省名校高考模拟)



A Game of Light and Shade


It was a sunny day. I had gone up and down the tower when, outside the door at the foot, a blind man came


toward me. In a moment, he disappeared up the stairs. I looked at the sign that said “To the Tower”, and decided to





21





him.


I caught up with him in the ticket office. There I was





22





to see the attendant (


工作人员


) selling him a


ticket as if he were any other visitor. Then, with the ticket in one hand and





23





the wall with the fingers of


the other, the blind man reached the stairs





24





to the hallway.


“That man is blind. What would a blind man climb up the tower for?” I said to the attendant, expecting him to


show some





25




, but he didn’t answer.



“Not the





26





certainly,”



I said. “Perhaps he wants to





27




.”



I bought a ticket and





28





up the stairs. The man hadn’t gone as far as I





29




. A third of the way


up the tower, I heard his





30




. I slowed down and followed him at a little





31




. He stopped from time to


time. When he got to the balcony, I was a dozen steps





32




. As I reached it, I saw him at the corner of the


tower.


At last, after ten minutes, I





33





him. “Excuse me,” I said as politely as I could, “but I am curious to


know





34





you came


up.”



He smiled. “Coming up the stairs, you will notice how not just light but sun





35





into the tower through


the narrow windows here and there, so that you can feel the





36






the cool stairs suddenly become quite


warm



and how up here behind the wall there is





37




, but as soon as going opposite a window you can find


the sun. There is no





38





so good as this for feeling the difference between light and shade. It is not the first


time I’ve come up.”



The blind man seemed quite





39





just like a child who was enjoying his favorite games. He told me the


truth that blind men can also find the beauty in life





40





they cannot enjoy the sights of the world.


21



A



accept


B



follow


C



control


C



surprised


C



hitting


C



contributing


D



visit


D



embarrassed


D



covering


D



leading


22



A


< br>frightened


B



disappointed


23



A



touching


B



climbing


24



A



pointing


B



attaching



25



A< /p>



respect


26



A



view

< p>
27



A



kick


B



doubt


B



test


B



jump


C



concern


C



prize


C



relax


C



wandered


C



imagined


C



secrets


C



expense


C



outside


B



surrounded


C



when


C



slides


C



change


C



mess


C



object


C



curious


C



once


D



sympathy


D



trick


D



escape


D



hurried


D



confirmed


D



cheers


D



intention


D



behind


C



approached


D



witnessed


D



whether


D



bursts


D



honor


D



shade


D



period


D



patient


D



although


28



A



struggled


B



explored


29



A



promised


B



examined


30



A



steps


B



words


31



A


.< /p>


standard


B



distance


32



A



ahead


B



around

< br>33



A


recognized


34



A



why


35



A



knocks


36



A



trend


37



A



light


38



A



place


B



how


B



pours


B



reaction


B



space


B



signal

< br>39



A


nervous


B



content


40



A


< br>unless


B



because


2.



2020


届福建省泉州 市高三第一次质检)



It was a little before 8a.m. when Mathias Schergen, also known as



“, ” walked down the hall


toward the office to sign was the same





21





he had had as an art teacher of Jenner Academy of the Arts


for nearly a quarter





22




.Word had gotten out about his





23





and today was his final day,


teachers, parents and past students





24





by Jenner to say goodbye.


So many stories of





25





-three years ago, when Mathias Schergen arrived


at Jenner to





26




, he wasn't



he was just wasn't





27





easy. For years, Schergen taught


in one of the city's most





28





neighborhoods, through good





29





and he first entered his


room he





30





there were bullet holes in the window, which made him





31





So he stuffed Beanie


Babies in the





32





to make it look were nights he couldn't sleep. The work





33






had trouble just getting his students to





34





Teaching the mart turned out to be





35





than anything he'd


ever he thought the





36





something identity-to





37





with his he


decided to call himself Mr. Spider, which kept the class





38





and fired up.



It was he who





39





his students to make art about their lives and turned an empty classroom into a


career





40





a bow of thanks.


21



A



routine


22



A



month


B



action


B



year


C



schedule


C



decade


C



ambition


B



supported


C



wiped out


C



inspect


C



still


C



harmonious


C



consequences


C



noticed


C



nervous


C



windows


C



tolerated


C



listen


C



freer


C



illustrated


C



connect


C



patient


C



reminded


B



deserved


D



task


D



century


D



immigration


C



stopped


D



kept back


D



sacrifice


D



probably


D



enthusiastic


D



times


D



predicted


D



humble


D



museums


D



consumed


D



interrupt


D



faster


D



needed


D



compare


D



practical


D



pushed


C



witnessed


D



sought


D



took


23



A



retirement


B



promotion

< p>
24



A



introduced


25


A



added to


B



called up

< p>
26



A



register


B



teach

27



A



always


B



hardly


28



A


.< /p>


crowded


B



dangerous

< p>
29



A



treatment


B



administration


30



A


.< /p>


ignored


B



suspected

< p>
31



A



regretful


B



merciful


32



A



holes


B



doors


33



A


.< /p>


motivated B



established


34< /p>



A



prev iew


B



instruct


35



A



tougher


B



safer

36



A



declared


B



emphasised


37



A


< p>
maintain


B



perform


38



A


< br>normal


B



fresh


39



A


.< /p>


prohibited


B



permitted

< p>
40



A



guaranteed


3.


2020


届广西桂林调研)



I was in France to visit my grandmother. To make her know how I





21





her, I cooked for her, and read


her stories. I gave her a foot massage,





22





was her first ever.


Before leaving, I was





23





a way to leave something meaningful. So I wrote her five different love


notes to let her know how much she





24





to me, and hid them in different places where I knew she would





25





find them. One was on her pillow. Another one was beside the lamp by which she reads in the





26




.


Another one was beside her toothbrush. One was in her





27





she eagerly checks every day. And the last one



was on her car’s steering wheel.



I left with joy,





28





that these cards would surely cheer her up after I left. She





29





me as I was


on my way to the airport and


said, “I found your three cars. By the time I





30





the third, I was laughing out


loud. They did me so much





31




. Thank you so much.” I smiled to





32




, knowing she still had two


more to go. It was Sunday, so my





33





was that she hadn’t





34





her mailbox and hadn’t yet driven her


car.


As I was sitting on the plane back to the United States, I





35





that one of my friends’ guiding principles


was to





36





everyone like our family member. So I was thinking about





37





to practise that in


different settings, including on a plane ride. I decided that on my next





38





I would bring and write five


appreciation cards for





39





people on the plane, including the pilot who probably doesn’t get





40





enough for taking us safely to our destination.


21



A



trust


22

< br>.


A



which


B



understand


B



that


C



love


C



what


C



calling for


C



devotes


C



finally


C



future


C



pocket


C



knowing


C



comforted


C



chose


C



value


C



you


C



truth


C



opened


C



realized


C



trust


C



work


C



flight


D



attend


D



how


D



charging for


D



turns


D



hardly


D



morning


D



mailbox


D



refusing


D



made


D



discovered


D



wrong


D



yourself


D



guess


D



checked


D



learned


D



give


D



experience


D



activity


23



A



caring for B



looking for


24



A


.< /p>


belongs


B



means

25



A



seldom


B



never < /p>


26



A



evening


B



present


27



A


< br>handbag


B



drawer

< br>28



A


taking


29



A



called


B



regretting


B



encouraged


30



A


< p>
finished


B



took


31



A



support


B



good


32



A



me


33



A



idea


34



A



fixed


B



myself


B



problem


B



closed

< br>35



A


expected


B



remembered


36



A


< p>
treat


37



A< /p>



plans


38


A



help


B



greet


B



ways


B



dream



39



A< /p>



happ




y


40



A



paid


B



eager


B



rewarded


C



free


C



admired


D



different


D



thanked


4.



2020

届广西玉林市高三第一次适应性考试)



When I was little, I showed great interest in the TV show


Bob the Builder


. I was





21





by how Bob


helped people by designing and constructing everything they needed. It was all I would





22




.


However, as I got a little older and understood the show more, I





23





that Bob wasn’t actually that good


at fixing things,





24





Wendy, Bob’s co


-worker, was always the one to fix his





25




. Bob would be


nothing without her wisdom and talents. I sensed an





26




: Why was Bob getting all the credit? Why didn’t


Wendy have her own





27




? I really admired Wendy and decided I would





28





anything it took to be


like her when I grew up.


Now, I’m a senior in high school takin


g three science





29




, including engineering. Not much has





30






I still have a strong desire to be like Wendy. The best part of Wendy’s





31





is that she meets and talks to


the people she is working for. She builds





32





and produces a positive effect on the lives of those she is


helping. My interest in





33





others led to my decision to study engineering, which





34





my love of


math and science with my love of helping and working with others.


Recently, I was talking to my parents about my childhood and they





35





Bob the Builder


. I thought that


I should give Bob a





36





chance to win back my heart, so I watched an episode


. I admit Bob might be a


(集)


little





37





than I remembered, but I stand by my opinion that Wendy





38





significantly more credit. I


will always think of her as the





39





of


Bob the Builder


. She has made me feel more than





40





to be a


female on a construction site of males.


21



A



amused


B



shocked


22



A


< br>watch


23



A



agreed


24



A



though


B



buy


B



declared


B



while


C



attracted


C



receive


C



suggested


C



unless


C



manners


C



injustice


C



speech


C



offer


B



departments


D



relaxed


D



read


D



realized


D



once


D



fears


D



excuse


D



business


D



do


C



sections


D



courses


25



A


< br>attention


B



mistakes


26



A



appeal


27



A



show


28



A



record


B



enquiry


B



role


B



attach

< br>29



A


performances



30



A



changed


B



improved


31



A



idea


B



aim


C



occurred


C



job


C



theories


C



teaching


C



compares


B



referred to


C



second


C



older


C



obtains


C



guide


C



ready


D



remained


D



game


D



strength


D



saving


D



combines


C



held on


D



different


D



happier


D



prefers


D



star


D



curious


D



looked up

< p>
32



A



leadership


B



relationships < /p>


33



A



helping


B



observing

< p>
34



A



identifies


B



separates

< p>
35



A



carried out


36


< br>A



true


37

< p>


A



nicer


B



last


B



busier

< br>38



A


requests


B



deserves


39



A



character


B



director


40



A



modest


B



careful


5.



2020


届河南省焦作 市高三三模)



One dark morning during my walk, I fell and had my arm broken. I received several





21





over two


years. It was no





22





for a busy mother! More unfortunately, I was left with certain physical





23




. My


doctor told me to live life to the





24




, but not to do things that would be too much for my arm. As I recovered


from the last surgery, I fell in





25





over all the things I would never get to do that I had wanted to try, like


boating. However, I





26





so much on what I


couldn’t do that I didn’t





27





what I could do was right in


front of me all along.


My fourteen-year-old son, Matthew, was fond of archery


. I loved watching him shoot arrows and I had


(射箭)


learned quite a bit about the





28




. I had never





29





his bow. I was sure my arm would never allow for


such





30





equipment, anyway. Then during one of my son’s





31




, the coaches had a “fun day” and





32





encouraged the typically sedentary


(久坐的)


parents to





33





a bow. Before I





34





what I was


doing, I shot my first arrow. And it hit the





35





6 points!


From then on, I often practiced. The more I did it, the more I knew I could do it. I realize that not only will my


body not





36





this new adventure, but neither will my family



my husband has taken up archery and my


other son has tried it as well! I think the sport has made my family





37





in some way. I never





38





something like archery would be possible for me. I guess being faced with the concept of “limitations” pushed me


forward. No more





39





and no more fears, I just had to take





40





and shoot



and find my way.

< p>
21



A



operations


B



occupations


C



qualifications


D



certifications



22



A< /p>



fun


B



use


C



wonder


B



tendencies


C



cheapest


C



embarrassment


C



insisted


C



see


C



job


C



brought


B



frightening


B



vacations

< p>
B



enthusiastically


C



break down


C



replied


C



air


B



benefit from


C



closer


C



concluded

< p>
B



responsibilities


C



care


D



doubt


C



limitations


D



activities


D



easiest


D



desperation


D



focused


D



describe


D



injury


D



watched


C



challenging


D



deserving


C



practices


D



performances


C



honestly


D



sort out


D



realized


D



dirt


C



adapt to


D



richer


D



imagined


C



permissions


D



defeat


D



excuses


D



take to


D



violently

< p>
23



A



examinations


24



A



fairest


25< /p>



A



love


B



fullest


B



sympathy


26



A



depended B



figured

< p>
27



A



appreciate


B



confirm


28



A


< br>club


29



A

< p>


tried


B



sport


B



repaired


30



A



interesting


31


A



competitions


32



A



e nergetically


33



A



take away B



pick up


34

< p>


A



admitted


B



refused


35



A


< br>target


B



enemy


36



A


.< /p>


suffer from


37



A



busier


B



clearer


38



A


< br>suspected B



insisted


39



A


< p>
motivations


40



A



action


B



aim


6.



2020


届河南省六市第一次模 拟)



Jeremy Locke, 25, has his own roofing company in Bridgeport, Nova Scotia. For a couple of years before he





41





his own business, he often drove past the home of Jeanette MacDonald, noticing the





42





state of her


roof. He was





43





- not just for the elderly woman, but the lovely children living with her. So Locke decided


to lend a helping hand. The young man knocked on Mac-


Donald’s door and





44





to fix her roof for nothing.


“I didn’t





45





who the woman wa


s, but I wanted to take care of this for her and her grandchildren.” he


explained. However, despite his kind





46




, the grandma said she would apply for a grant(


补助金


)and





47





refused. MacDonald and her difficulty left an impression on Locke. He saw similarities between the woman and his


own grandmother, and couldn’t stand





48





her in this situation. He had also grown up





49





and felt


that he could use his





50





to help. A year after Locke set up his own roofing company, knowing that the roof



was





51





in a state of disrepair, Locke





52





to MacDonald’s home and asked her if she wanted to enter


a raffle(


抽奖


)his company was doing for a free roof. The 70-year-old





53





the chance, but little did she know


that there was no





54




. As a


matter of fact, Locke’s





55





gave MacDonald a great relief. She said,


“Even winning $$1 million wouldn’t make me as





56





as knowing I’m getting a





57





roof. Jeremy is


a(n)





58





sent from God.” The job





59





about $$ 9,000 in terms of materials and manpower. However,


the only thing Locke wants in return is a home-made meal for his staff from the woman who





60





him of his


grandma.


41


< p>
A



minded


B



expanded


42



A



terrible


B



natural


C



started


C



perfect


C



happy


C



refused


C



know


C



response


B



secretly


C



imagining


C



in person


C



experiences


C



just


C



ran


C



jumped at


B



competition


C



change


C



joyful


C



clean


C



killer


C



charged


C



warns


D



abandoned


D



previous


D



concerned


D



failed


D



care


D



promise


C



politely


D



hurting


D



in poverty


D



money


D



still


D



escaped


D



looked at


C



answer


D



kindness


D



strong


D



special


D



messenger


D



earned


D



reminds


D



cheat


D



angrily


43



A


< br>frightened


B



grateful


44



A



agreed


45



A



tell


B



offered


B



recognize

< p>
46



A



attitude


B



gesture


47



A


< br>unwillingly


48



A



seeing


B



helping


49



A


< br>in sorrow B



in advance


50



A



influence


B



skills

< br>51



A


already


B



even


52



A


.< /p>


returned


B



drove

53



A



aimed at


B



laughed at


54



A


< p>
opportunity


55



A



adventure B



decision


56



A



rich


57



A



new


58



A< /p>



doctor


59

< br>.


A



cost


B



relaxed


B



pretty


B



angel


B



wasted

< br>60



A


informs


B



convinces

< p>
7.



2020


届河南省 新乡市高三第二次模拟)



George Edwin Mueller was born in 1918. As a child, he loved to see how things worked. Inspired by his



father’s work, he often





21





parts of radios and model planes. When he completed his university





22




,


he worked for a few years, and then went on to





23





his doctor’s degree. In 1963, Dr. Mueller was





24





to manage the Apollo program.


By 1961, Russia had already





25





the first man-made satellite, and had also sent the first





26





into space. Shortly after that, the US President John F. Kennedy suggested that the US





27





a goal of landing


a man on the Moon and returning him to the Earth.


Dr. Mueller accepted the





28





and also made sure he himself would organize the efforts of 3





29





NASA centers directly involved in the launch. It was his





30





to bring in senior experienced officers of the


US Air Force to help manage the





31




. He also pushed for a new way






32





the satellite launch


vehicle after it was fixed, rather than testing individual parts. After months of hard work, the team





33





launched the famous Apollo 11 spacecraft that landed on the Moon and two of the astronauts. Neil Armstrong and


Buzz Aldrin took their





34





steps as well. President Kennedy’s





35





had been achieved within ten


years!


Although Dr. Mueller





36





to the private industry soon afterwards, he had also





37





the


foundation for Skylab



the first US space station and for the development of a reusable space transport, which


later became the spaceship. He





38





several awards over the rest of his life. He will always be remembered


for his huge





39





to space travel.


On October12, 2015, Dr. Mueller died at home in California. However, his work and ideas continue to be a(an)





40





to us all.


21



A



went off


B



ran into


22



A



uniforms


B



studies


23



A


< br>distribute


B



adapt

24



A



invited


B



drove


C



fitted together


C



databases


C



purchase


C



cheated


C



decorated


C



teenager


C



find


B



risk


C



antique


C



theory


D



held out


D



questionnaires


D



obtain


D



forced


D



exhibited


D



human


D



abandon


C



mission


D



legal


D



annoyance


D



treasure


25



A



showed


B



launched


26



A



animal


27



A



set


B



robot


B



steal

28



A



encouragement


29



A



passive


B



individual


30



A


< p>
idea


B



regret



31



A< /p>



microscope


32



A



repairi ng


B



testing


33



A


< p>
curiously


B



ridiculously


34



A



useless


35


A



target


B



reliable


B



base


B



panic


C



choosing


C



abnormally


C



famous


C



concern


C



objected


C



laid


C



suffered


C



admissions


B



recognition


C



program


D



equipping


D



successfully


D



regretful


D



limit


D



returned


D



destroyed


D



seized


D



damage


C



expectation


D



inspiration


D



threat

< br>36



A


adjusted


B



pointed


37



A


< br>shaken


B



corrected

< p>
38



A



received


B



organized

< p>
39



A



access


B



contributions < /p>


40



A



imagination


8.



2020


届湖南湖北四校高三调研联考)



I still remember an old lady, a customer on the paper route in my hometown when I was 12 years old. She


taught me a lesson in




41




that I shall never forget.


On a(n)





42




afternoon, a friend and I were throwing stones onto the




43




of the old lady's house.


The stone that I found was too smooth,





44




it slipped from my hand as I let it go and




45




straight not for


the covering on top of the house but for a small window on the house's back porch. At the sound of broken glass,


we knew we were




46




.We turned and





47




.


I was too





48




about getting caught that first night to be concerned about the old lady with the broken


window in the freezing weather. However, a few days later, when I was sure that I hadn't been




49




, I started to


feel guilty about her




50




.She still greeted me with a smile each day




51




I gave her the paper , but I was


no longer able to act comfortably in her





52




.


I




53




my mind that I would save my money delivering paper. And after three weeks I had seven dollars


that I calculated would pay for her window . I put the money in an envelope with a note




54




that I was sorry


for breaking her window and




55




that the seven dollars would cover the cost of repairing it.


I waited until it was dark , moved




56




to the old lady ' s house and put the letter I didn ' t sign through the


letter slot in her door . I felt





57




and could have the freedom of , once again , looking straight into the old


lady's kind eyes .


The next day, I handed the old lady her paper and was able to





58




the warm smile that I was receiving


from her. She thanked me for the paper and gave me a bag of cookies she had made herself. I thanked her and



started to eat the cookies as I continued my




59




.


After several cookies . I felt an envelope and pulled it out of the bag. When I opened the envelope , I was





60




. Inside were the se


ven dollars and a short note that said ,



41



A



selflessness

< br>42



A


winter


B



summer


B



talent


C



spring


C



roof


C



for


C



dragged


C



in danger


B



sit around


B



scared


B



scolded


B



misbehavior


C



since


B



presence


C



meet with


C



convincing


C



hoped


C



patiently


C



relieved


C



understand


C



journey


C



annoyed


C



bravery


D



autumn


D



access


D



or


D



headed


D



in charge


C



ran away


D



hung out


C



disappointed


D



ashamed


D



forgiveness


43



A



window


B



basement


44



A



but


45



A

< p>


landed


B



so


B



left


46



A



in trouble B



in many ways


47



A



got around


48



A



embarrassed

49



A



discovered


50



A< /p>



misunderstanding


51



A



u ntil


B



unless


C



punished


D



involved


C



misfortune D



mistake


D



when


C



company


D



comfort


D



picked up


D



explaining


D



witnessed


D



firmly


D



frustrated


D



respect


D



route


D



amused

< br>52



A


encouragement


53


A



made up


B



took up


54



A


< br>proving


B



showing


55



A


< br>predicted


B



declared


56



A



hurriedly


B



quietly


57



A


< br>confused


B



concerned

< p>
58



A



abandon


B



return

< br>59



A


effort


B



study


60



A


.< /p>


shocked


B



satisfied

< p>
9.



2020


届湖南省 怀化市高三第一次模拟)




Last summer, Katie pulled off the road on her way to work. She





21





at a traffic light, where a man


was sitting with a sign for help. She





22





her window.


“Hey!” she shouted. “I’m driving around giving free





23




. If I fetch my




24




, do you want one right


now?” The man look


ed to be in his 60s. He was heavyset, balding and missing a few teeth. He paused, but then





25




. “Actually,” he said, “I have a funeral to go to this week. I was





26





hoping to get a haircut.”




“I’ll be right back,” Katie said. She drove off, went t


o the





27





she owns, and





28





one of her


hairdressers to help her load a red chair into her car. Then the two of them drove back. The man took a seat, and


they





29





his curly graying hair. He told them about growing up in Mississippi, about moving to Texas to


live





30





to his adult children in order to help look after his grandchildren, and how he still phoned his mom


every day.


After Katie was done, Edward looked in a mirror. “I look





31




!” he said happily. “I’ll have to remember


to put my





32





in next time.”



So far, Katie has given 30 or so such haircuts to people around the city. These





33





are all living in


poverty, and she is keenly





34





of the power of her clean-


up job. “It’s more than a haircut,” she says. “I want


it to be a (an)





35




, to show value and respect, but also to get to know people. I want to build





36





with


them.”



Katie knows that a haircut can





37





one’s life. One changed hers: As a teen, she





38




from a


severe disease called ulcerative colitis and her hair





39





gradually. Seeing this, her mother arranged for


Katie’s first professional haircut. “To sit down and have somebody look at me and talk to me like a person and not


just an illness, it





40





me to feel cared about and less alone,”


she says.


21



A



stared


B



yelled


C



pointed


C



rolled down


C



lecture


C



chair


C



whispered


C



hardly


C



bookshop


C



asked


C



washed


C



better


C



funny


C



car


C



teachers


C



uncertain


D



stopped


D



looked at


D



book


D



basin


D



screamed


D



really


D



grocery


D



permitted


D



dried


D



properly


D



good


D



teeth


D



customers


D



sceptical

< p>
22



A



turned off B



put away < /p>


23



A



haircut


24


< br>A



towel


25



A



cried < /p>


26



A



rarely


B



lunch


B



uniform


B



laughed


B



barely

< br>27



A


restaurant B



salon


28



A


< br>forced


29



A



shook


30



A



closer


31



A


< br>absurd


32



A



chair


B



showed


B



cut


B



farther


B



terrible


B



hands

33



A



patients


B



students


34



A



aware


B



afraid



35



A< /p>



exit


36



A



bonds


37



A


< br>ruin


B



gateway


B



strength


B



transform


C



trick


C



confidence


C



save


C



suffered


C



increased


C



helped


D



joke


D



houses


D



kill


D



escaped


D



improved


D



prevented

< p>
38



A



recovered B



separated < /p>


39



A



thinned


B



thickened

< p>
40



A



taught


B



scared



10.



2 020


届湖南省永州市高三第三次模拟)




At stations in London goes a tradition that warm and inspirational words are written on White Boards for


emotional support. It’s been 14 years since customer


services manager Anthony Gentles was inspired to





21





the “blank faces” of commuters (


往返上班者


) with a daily dose (


剂量


) of





22





from his favorite book, Tao


Te Ching, the key text in the ancient Chinese philosophical tradition of Taoism. This





23





of writing a


meaningful sentence on the board is named Thought of the Day. At the beginning of 2018, on the board is “A


journey of a thousand must begin with a single




24




.”



“If it’s





25





for me, perhaps when passengers see it, it will allow them to





26





for a moment and


could distract them from whatever was




27




their mind.” Mr. Gentles said. Offering up pearls of wisdom from


China was his way of





28





to make people feel more





29





as they used the underground.


Mr. Gentles





30





how one man wandered about on the platform for 20 minutes before heading back to


the atrium (


中厅


) to pronounce that he’d





31





“what the thought was





32




to me.”



In the year 2007, Gentles





33





the job over to his colleague Glen Sutherland and ever since then Mr.


Sutherland has written over 3,000 sentences on the





34




. He has taught himself calligraphy so as to





35





clear handwriting on it.


Thought of the Day at Oval station of the London subway has won world-wide attention and Sutherland




36




a story on the Twitter account of the station. Mr. Sutherland





37




a quote by Mirtha Legrand, a famous actress


and television presenter in the South American country at the request of an Argentine family. But he hadn’t





38





it was spoken highly of by the presenter in her program. He told BBC



“If it’s helping people, and giving people





39




feelings, then it’s good. But I’m really





40




about 20,000 followers on Twitter for Thought of the Day




I can’t get my head around it.”



21


A



turn down


B



drive away


22



A


< p>
comfort


B



optimism


C



light up


C



happiness


D



bring about


D



wisdom



23



A< /p>



practice


B



skill

24



A



experience


25



A< /p>



comfortable


26



A



stand


B



wonder


C



hobby


B



action


B



inspirational


C



stop


B



going through


C



requiring


C



anxious


C



explains


C



worked out


C



exhibiting


C



brought


C



board


C



imitate


C



updated


B



put up


C



doubted


C



awkward


C



concerned


D



behavior


C



step


D



thought


C



ambiguous D



relevant


D



relax


C



getting across


D



running for


D



desiring


D



welcome


D



analyses


D



kept off


D



promising


D



sent


D



wall


D



provide


D



shared


C



gave up


D



declared


D



pleasant


D



skeptical


D



turned down


27



A



passing by


28



A



trying


29



A



guilt y


30



A



recalls


B



asking


B



enthusiastic


B



understands


31



A



taken in


B



made up


32



A


< br>saying


33



A



took


34



A



train

35



A



admire


B



emphasizing


B



passed


B



post


B



appreciate


36



A


< p>
invented


B



downloaded


37



A


< p>
showed off


38


< br>A



expected


B



believed


39



A



disturbing


B



amusing


40



A


< br>certain


B



confused


11.



2020


届江西省 新余市高考二模)



Madagascar was not the paradise I expected. A reporter and I were





21





there to find out who was


helping with drought relief and the prevention of famine(


饥荒


).


After a three-hour ride in a van, we





22





in the small town of immediately headed


over to the hospital to speak with a local





23





on our topics of interest. Since I didn't need to photograph the


background





24





with the doctor, I wandered out to the road.


I raised my





25





to get some images before the sun went down. I've





26





been to Madagascar


before, and until you've actually photographed in a place, you don't know how people will





27





to the


camera.


I





28





a handsome man who was leaning against a wall in the golden light of dusk. No reaction. I took a


breath. After a while, everyone within a 20-yard radius had





29





me. Some called out to each other, playfully

-


-


-


-


-


-


-


-



本文更新与2021-02-13 14:55,由作者提供,不代表本网站立场,转载请注明出处:https://www.bjmy2z.cn/gaokao/650822.html

名校高考模拟题专题08 完形填空之记叙文的相关文章

  • 爱心与尊严的高中作文题库

    1.关于爱心和尊严的作文八百字 我们不必怀疑富翁的捐助,毕竟普施爱心,善莫大焉,它是一 种美;我们也不必指责苛求受捐者的冷漠的拒绝,因为人总是有尊 严的,这也是一种美。

    小学作文
  • 爱心与尊严高中作文题库

    1.关于爱心和尊严的作文八百字 我们不必怀疑富翁的捐助,毕竟普施爱心,善莫大焉,它是一 种美;我们也不必指责苛求受捐者的冷漠的拒绝,因为人总是有尊 严的,这也是一种美。

    小学作文
  • 爱心与尊重的作文题库

    1.作文关爱与尊重议论文 如果说没有爱就没有教育的话,那么离开了尊重同样也谈不上教育。 因为每一位孩子都渴望得到他人的尊重,尤其是教师的尊重。可是在现实生活中,不时会有

    小学作文
  • 爱心责任100字作文题库

    1.有关爱心,坚持,责任的作文题库各三个 一则150字左右 (要事例) “胜不骄,败不馁”这句话我常听外婆说起。 这句名言的意思是说胜利了抄不骄傲,失败了不气馁。我真正体会到它

    小学作文
  • 爱心责任心的作文题库

    1.有关爱心,坚持,责任的作文题库各三个 一则150字左右 (要事例) “胜不骄,败不馁”这句话我常听外婆说起。 这句名言的意思是说胜利了抄不骄傲,失败了不气馁。我真正体会到它

    小学作文
  • 爱心责任作文题库

    1.有关爱心,坚持,责任的作文题库各三个 一则150字左右 (要事例) “胜不骄,败不馁”这句话我常听外婆说起。 这句名言的意思是说胜利了抄不骄傲,失败了不气馁。我真正体会到它

    小学作文