1、36. A. deer B.dogC. lady D. man37.A. imagineB.considerC. exploreD. present38, A. smartB.sweetC. slowD. shy39.A. turnB.kickC. jumpD. speak40.A. drivewayB.pathC. crossroadD. highway41.A. knewB.sawC. showedD. made42.A, mysteriousB.ridiculousC. fascinatingD. apparent43.A. houseB.forestC. fieldD. cottage
2、44.A. unconcernedB.unconsciousC. undecidedD. uncomfortable45.A. left forB.went offC. came toD. drove toward46.A. punctuallyB.frequentlyC. formallyD. shortly47.A. regrettedB.rememberedC. concludedD. confirmed( 10 山东)It was a cool October evening. Excitement and family members _36_ the hall. I was onl
3、y a 7-year-old girl, but I was the center of _37_. Finally, after weeks of preparation, I would _38_ all my hard work in a dance of performance.Everything would be _39_ so I thought. I waited baskstage all _40_ in my black tights with a golden belt. In a loud and clear voice, the master of ceremonie
4、s _41_ that my class was next.My dance class was doing a routine onwooden boxes two feet by two feet, facing the_42_. All I had to do in the next move was put one foot on the box next to mine and keep myother foot on my box. I really was an _43_move. I was concentrating so much _44_ the huge smile o
5、n my face and holding my head upthat I did not look _45_ I was going. I missedmy partner s box altogether and _46_. There I was standing on the stage floor when my classmates were on top of their boxes. I couldhear giggles( 咯咯笑 ) coming from the audience, and I felt the _47_ rush to my face. I remem
6、bered my dance teacher had told us,you make a mistake, keep smiling so the audiencewill not _48_. ” I did my best to follow her_49_ as I continued with the routine.When the curtain dropped, so did my _50_ for the evening. I _51_ bitterly, tasting the salt from the tears that streamed down my face. I
7、 ran backstage, but no one could _52_ me down.Recently I realized I had been a _53_that night. I was _54_, but I fought the urge to run off the stage. _55_, I finished the routine with a smile on my face. Now when friends and family laugh about the time I slipped during a dance performance, I can la
8、ugh too.36.A. filledB. visitedC. attendedD. decoratedA. pressureB. impressionC. debateD. attention38.A. take overB. show offC . look afterD. give upA. reasonableB. suitableC . obviousD . perfectA. dressed upB. folded upC. covered upD. mixed upA. suggestedB. explainedC. announcedD. predictedA. musicB
9、 . audienceC . curtainD . stageA. easyB . activeC . adventurousD. extraA. containingB . hidingC . sharingD . keepingA. whyB . whetherC . whereD . whatA. wanderedB. slippedC . wavedD . skippedA. bloodB . pleasureC . prideD . tear48.A. leaveB . cheerC . believeD . notice49. A. gesture B . exampleC . a
10、dviceD . plan“50If. A. doubtsB . hopesC . voiceD . patience51.A. arguedB . shoutedC . beggedD . sobbed52.B . calmC . letD . put53.A. starB . pioneerC . loser D . fool54.A. satisfied B . movedC . embarrassedD. confused55.A. HoweverB . InsteadC . In totalD . in return( 10 上海)Directions: For each blank
11、 in the following passage there are four words or phrases marked A, B, C and D. Fill in each blank with the word or phrase that best fits the context.The first attempt of even the most talented artists, musicians, and writers is seldom a masterpiece, If you consider your drafts as dress rehearsals (
12、彩排 ), or tryouts, revising will seem a natural part of the writing _50_.What is the purpose of the dress rehearsals and the out-of-town previews that many Broadway shows go through? The answer is adding, deleting, replacing, reordering, _51_revising. Andrew Lloyd Webbers musical Phantom of the Opera
13、 underwent such a process.When Lloyd Webber began writing in 1984, he had in mind a funny, exciting production. However, when Phantom opened in London in 1986, the audience saw a moving psychological love story set to music. The musical had._52_ several revisions due, in part, to problems with costu
14、ming and makeup (戏服和化妆 ). For instance, Lloyd Webber _53_ someof the music because the Phantoms makeup prevented the actor from singing certain sounds.When you revise, you change aspects of your work in _54_ to your evolving purpose, or to include _55_ ideas or newly discovered information.Revision
15、is not just an afterthought that getsC . audienceD . visitoronly as much time as you have at the end of an60. A. personalB . valuableassignment. _56_, it is a major stage of theC . basicD . delicatewriting process, and writers revise every step of61. A. mixingB . weakeningthe way. Even your decision
16、 to _57_. topicsC . maintaining D . assessingwhile prewriting is a type of revising. However.62. A. amazingB . brightdont make the mistake of skipping the revisionC . uniqueD . clearstage that follows _58_. Always make time63. A. anglesB . evidenceto become your own _59_and view yourC . information
17、D . hintsdress rehearsal, so to speak. Reviewing your work64. A. unnecessaryB . uninterestingin this way can give you _60_ new ideas.C . concreteD . finalRevising involves _61_ theeffectiveness and appropriateness of all aspects of( 10福建)your writing, making your purpose more clearly,Born in America
18、, I spoke English, notand refocusing or developing the facts and ideasChinese, the language of my ancestors. When Iyou present. When you revise, ask yourself thewas three, my parents flashed cards with Chinesefollowing questions, keeping in mind the audience36 at my face, but I pushed them 37 . My m
19、omfor whom you are writing: Is my main idea orbelieved I would learn 38 I was ready.purpose _62_ throughout my draft? Do I everBut the39 never came. On alose sight of my purpose? Have I given myChinese New Year s Eve, my unclereaders all of the _63_ that is, facts, opinions,spoke to me in Chinese, b
20、ut all I couldinferences - that they need in order todo was40at him, confused,understand my main idea? Finally, have Iscratching my head.“ Still canincluded too many _64_ details that mayChinese? ” He41me,“ You can tconfuse readers?even buy a fish in Chinatown.”“ Hey,50.A. techniqueB . stylethis is
21、America, not China. I ll 42get someC . processD . careerwith or without Chinese.” I replied and turned toA. in particularB . as a resultmy mom for43.“ Remember to ask for freshC . for exampleD . in other wordsfish, Xin Xian Yu,” sheandingsaid,hover a $20A. undergoneB . skippedbill. I44the words, run
22、ning downstairs intoC . rejectedD . replacedthe streets of Chinatown.I found the fishA. rewroteB . releasedsurrounded in a sea of customers.“ I d like to buyC . recordedD . reservedsome fresh fish,” I shouted to the fishman. But heA. additionB . response46 my English words and turned to serve theC .
23、 oppositionD . contrastnext customer. The laugh of the people behindA. fixedB . ambitiousincreased47 their impatience. With everyC . familiarD . fresh48, the breath of the dragons (龙) on my back56.B . Moreovergrew stronger-my blood boiling-49me toC . InsteadD . Thereforecry out,“ Xian Sheng,Yuplease. ” “ Very Xian57.A. discussB . switchSheng, ” I repeated. The crowd erupted intoC . exhaustD . coverlaughter. My face turned50 and I ran back58.A. draftingB . rearranginghome51,expect for the $20 bill I held tightly
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