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[主观题]

When her grandmother's health began to get worse in the fall, Mary would make the drive fr

om Washington, DC to Winchester, Virginia, every few days. To make the trip to the hospital, Mary had to get on highway 81. It was here that she discovered a surprising bit of beauty during one of her trips. Along the middle of the highway, there were a long stretch of wild flowers. They were beautiful and almost poetic(诗意的)in appearance. The first time she saw the flowers, Mary was seized by an urge(冲动)to pull over. She then stopped her car and picked a bunch from the soil. She carried them into her grandmother's room when she arrived at the hospital and placed them in a glass by her bed. For a moment her grandmother seemed better than usual. She thanked Mary for the flowers, commented on their beauty and asked where she had gotten them. Mary was filled with joy because of the flowers' seeming ability to wake something up inside her sick grandmother. Afterwards, Mary would pick a bunch of flowers on her way to visit grandma. Each time Mary placed the flowers in the glass, her grandmother's eyes would light up, and they would have a splendid conversation. One morning in late October, Mary got a call that her grandmother had taken a turn for the worse. Mary was in such a hurry to get to her grandmother that she drove past her flower spot. She decided to turn around. She headed several miles back and got a bunch. Mary arrived at the hospital to find her grandmother very weak and unresponsive(无应答的).She placed the flowers in the glass and sat down to hold her grandmother's hand. She felt a press on her fingers. It was the last conversation they had. Mary drove from Washington, DC to Winchester, Virginia to _____.A.see her doctor

B.pick some flowers

C.go on a business trip

D.see her sick grandma

The first time Mary carried the flowers to the hospital, she _____.A.handed them to her grandma

B.placed them on the bed

C.put them in a glass

D.left them on the table

Which of the following can be the best title from this text?A.The Planting of Flowers

B.The Power of Flowers

C.The Discovery of Flowers

D.The Beauty of Flowers

One morning, when she drove past the flower spot, Mary decided to _____.A.turn back for the flowers

B.bring no flowers with her

C.buy some flowers instead

D.head for another flower spot

When Mary's grandma saw the flowers, she asked Mary _____.A.where they were from

B.what flowers they were

C.to get her more next time

D.to send them to the doctor

请帮忙给出每个问题的正确答案和分析,谢谢!

答案

问题 1 答案解析:D
事实细节题,原文第一段说由于她祖母的身体状况变糟糕了,所以搬去了Winchester,选D。
问题 2 答案解析:C
事实细节题。原文第三段最后说她把采来的花放进了玻璃瓶里,选C。
问题 3 答案解析:B
归纳总结题。文章围绕着Mary采花去看望祖母来展开故事。其中提到了由于花的力量让祖母的身体好了起来。A选项文章没有提及,CD选项不足以表现主题,选B。
问题 4 答案解析:A
事实细节题。文中第六段最后说Mary在错过了花丛之后,为了采花又折返了回去,选A。
问题 5 答案解析:A
事实细节题。原文第四段第二句说,祖母在赞美了花的美丽之后,问Mary这些花是从哪弄来的,选A。

更多“When her grandmother's health began to get worse in the fall, Mary would make the drive fr”相关的问题

第1题

A.Kate made it by hand.B.Kate gave it to her grandmother.C.Kate's grandmother used to

A.Kate made it by hand.

B.Kate gave it to her grandmother.

C.Kate's grandmother used to wear it.

D.Kate's grandmother still owns it.

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第2题

听力原文:I am writing to thank you for the interesting reports which appeared in the July

听力原文: I am writing to thank you for the interesting reports which appeared in the July '94 edition of Saturday Evening Post. I am interested in your reports since B12 deficiency is an inherited disorder in my family. In the late 1950s and early 1960s, a research project was carried out on it by London medical school.

My grandmother was 49 when she started vitamin t312 injections in 1949, She was admitted to the hospital with a blood disease. My mother was 63 when she began vitamin B12 injections. After reading your article, I believe her treatment was started too late. At the time, she almost lost her eyesight and was told that she had another diseases.

Earlier this year, I visited my doctor and explained that 1 felt very tired and asked for a blood test to establish whether I was suffering from B12 deficiency. I was told I was much too young and that only people in their 80s suffered B12 deficiency. I told him he was wrong and that research was carried out on my family 30 years ago.

I have always believed that prevention is better than cure. I now know why I love Kellogg's Honey Nut Cornflakes. They contain vitamins, including B12! If foods contain added vitamins, as

you suggest in your article, then B12 deficiency and diseases associated with it should be left to the past.

(33)

A.It is a thank-you letter to a medical doctor.

B.It is an advertisement for vitamin B12.

C.It is a letter to the editor of a magazine.

D.It is a preface to a book on vitamins.

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第3题

She always ________ the smell of fresh bread with her grandmother, who loved baking.A.asso

She always ________ the smell of fresh bread with her grandmother, who loved baking.

A.associated

B.remembered

C.exemplified

D.attributed

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第4题

Recently my grandmother sadly ________, leaving me her whole collection of The Artis

A.passed away

B.stayed away

C.got away

D.came away

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第5题

My grandmother ___ a lot when she was young.

A.was used to dance

B. used to dance

C.used to dancing

D.had danced

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第6题

根据以上内容,回答下列各题。 At age 17, as a senior in high school, Kavita Shukla filed for
her second patent: a piece of paper that would transform. how food is stored and kept fresh. Ten years later, her product is being used in 35 countries, has been called "the 36 paper" and was recently launched in Whole Foods. Fresh Paper is infused with organic spices that inhibit 37 and fungal growth; when stored with produce, it can keep food fresh two to four times longer than normal--like refrigeration without electricity. The spice mixture comes from an old family recipe passed along by Shuklas grandmother, who once gave it to her after she 38 drank tap water on a visit to India. "Drink this and you wont get sick," she was told. On Friday, Shukla was joined onstage at the Women in the World Summit in New York by Rula Jebreal, a 39 and foreign-policy expert at MSNBC (微软全国有线广播电视公司). Jebreal lamented the fact that while the worlds farmers actually produce enough food to feed the worlds hungry, 13 billion tons of food are lost annually to spoilage. Whats more, some 1.6 billion people currently living without 40 to refrigeration struggle to keep their diets healthy. Shuklas company, Fenugreen, which she started in 2010, 41 these people, along with food banks and small-scale farmers. "For so many people, this was about so much more than a piece of paper," she said. "It was about empowerment. " Jebreal praised a low-tech solution in an era when many 42 are relying on high-tech innovation."What if I had 43 it as too simple?" Shukla asked. "Simple ideas are the ones that have the power to change things.., and they have the power to 44 " For Fresh Paper, simplicity meant accessibility, which was key to 45 the product reached anyone who could benefit from it. As the discussion drew to a close, Shukla reminded inventors everywhere that complicated isnt always better: "Dont ever discount your own simple idea. "请回答(36)题__________.

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第7题

A.Young people usually think that old ways are not acceptable.B.The American girl can'

A.Young people usually think that old ways are not acceptable.

B.The American girl can't accept wearing a red dress at her wedding.

C.The American girl likes the Chinese customs except wearing a red dress at her wedding.

D.Her daughter will agree to wear the red wedding dress if her grandmother comes to persuade her.

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第8题

Which one of the statements is true()?
A、His grandmother died because she couldn't bear the weight of age.

B、His grandmother was not free of earthly worries even when she died.

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第9题

When ___________ the childhood, I can’t help thinking of my grandmother, who had given

A.looking towards

B.looking back on

C.playing back

D.reminding of

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第10题

根据下面资料,回答下列各题。 Terry Wolfisch Cole may seem like an ordinary 40-year-old mom,
but her neighbors know the truth: Shes one of the "Pod People." At the supermarket she wanders the aisles in a self-contained bubble, thanks to her iPod digital music player. Through those little white ear buds, Wolfisch Cole listens to a playlist mixed by her favorite disc presenter-herself. At home, when the kids are tucked away, Wolfisch Cole often escapes to another solo media pod- but in this one, shes transmitting instead of just receiving. On her computer web log, or "blog", she types an online journal chronicling daily news of her life, then shares it all with the Web. Wolfisch Cole-who also gets her daily news customized off the Internet and whose digital video recorder (DVR)scans through the television wasteland to find and record shows that suit her tastes-is part of a new breed of people who are filtering, shaping and even creating media for themselves. They are increasingly turning their backs on the established system of mass media that has provided news and entertainment for the past half-century. Theyve joined the exploding "iMedia" revolution, putting the power of media in the hands of ordinary people. The tools of the movement consist of a bubbling stew of new technologies that include iPods, blogs, podcasts, DVRs, customized online newspapers, and satellite radio. Devotees of iMedia run the gamut (范围)from the 89-year-old New York grandmother, known as Bubby, who has taken up blogging to share herworldly advice, to 11-year-old Dylan Verdi of Texas, who has started broadcasting her own homemade TV show or "vlog, for video web log. In between are countless iMedia enthusiasts like Rogier van Bakel, 44, of Maine, who blogs at night, reads a Web- customized news page in the morning, travels with his fully loaded iPod and comes home to watch whatever the DVR has chosen for him. If the old media model was broadcasting, this new phenomenon might" be called ego-casting, says Christine Rosen, a fellow with the Ethics and Public Policy Center. The term fits, she says, because the trend is all about me-me-media -" the idea is to get exactly what you want, when and where you want it." Rosen and others trace the beginnings of the iMedia revolution to the invention of the TV remote, which marked the first subtle shift of media control away from broadcasters and into the hands of the average couch potato. It enabled viewers to vote with their thumbs-making it easier to abandon dull programs and avoid commercials. With the proliferation (激增)of cable TV channels in the late 1980s followed by the mid-1990s arrival of the Internet, controlling media input wasnt just a luxury. "Control has become a necessity," says Bill Rose, "Without it, theres no way to sort through all the options that are becoming available." Who is Terry Wolfisch Cole probably according to the passage?

A.A middle-aged housewife.

B.A saleswoman in the supermarket.

C.A disc presenter.

D.An online news writer.

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第11题

听力原文:America is growing older. Fifty years ago, only 4 out of every 100 people in the

听力原文: America is growing older. Fifty years ago, only 4 out of every 100 people in the United States were 65 or older. Today, 10 out of every 100 Americans are over 65. The aging of the population will affect American society in many ways — education, medicine and business.

Quietly, the graying of America has made us a very different society — one in which people have a quite different idea of what kind of behavior. is suitable at various ages. A person's age no longer tells you anything about his / her social position, marriage or health. There's no longer a particular year in which one goes to school or goes to work or gets married or starts a family. The social clock that kept us on time and told us when to go to school, get a job, or stop working isn't as strong as it used to be. It doesn't surprise us to hear of a 29-year-old university president or a 35-year-old grandmother, or a 70-year-old man who has become a father for the first time.

Public ideas are changing. Many people say, "I am much younger than my mother or my father was at my age". No one says "Act your age" anymore. We've stopped looking with surprise at older people who act in youthful ways.

Questions 29 to 31 are based on the passage you have just heard.

29. What is the percentage of people above 65 in America today?

30. What can we know from the passage?

31. What does the passage imply?

(30)

A.4%.

B.10%.

C.14%.

D.25%.

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