第32页
- 第1页
- 第2页
- 第3页
- 第4页
- 第5页
- 第6页
- 第7页
- 第8页
- 第9页
- 第10页
- 第11页
- 第12页
- 第13页
- 第14页
- 第15页
- 第16页
- 第17页
- 第18页
- 第19页
- 第20页
- 第21页
- 第22页
- 第23页
- 第24页
- 第25页
- 第26页
- 第27页
- 第28页
- 第29页
- 第30页
- 第31页
- 第32页
- 第33页
- 第34页
- 第35页
- 第36页
- 第37页
- 第38页
- 第39页
- 第40页
- 第41页
- 第42页
- 第43页
- 第44页
- 第45页
- 第46页
- 第47页
- 第48页
- 第49页
- 第50页
- 第51页
- 第52页
- 第53页
- 第54页
- 第55页
- 第56页
- 第57页
- 第58页
- 第59页
- 第60页
- 第61页
- 第62页
- 第63页
A
Little George lived in a poor village. One summer day George's mother sent him to the field to pick up some dried wood for the fire.
George looked very hard. By the time the sun was high, he was very hot and wished for a cool place to rest and have some food. As he walked along, he found some shade, and by it were some fine, wild strawberries. “How good these will be with my bread and butter,” thought George.
He picked up all of the strawberries. As he was lifting the first strawberry to his mouth, he remembered his sick mother, alone in her dark and cold room in the village.
With this in mind, he put the strawberry back. “Shall I save them for her?” he asked himself.
He thought how refreshing they would be for her, yet was still looking at them with a longing eye.
“I will eat half and take the other half to her,” he said. He divided them into two heaps(堆), but each heap looked so small. He put them together again.
“I will only eat one,” he thought.
But, as he again lifted it to his mouth, he saw that he had taken the finest, and he put it back.
When the sun was beginning to sink, George set out for home. How happy he felt, then, that he had all his strawberries for his sick mother.
He heard his mother's faint voice calling him. “Is that you, George? I am glad you have come back. I am thirsty, and I am longing for some tea.”
George ran to her and joyfully offered his wild strawberries.
“And you saved them for your sick mother, didn't you?” said she, laying her hand fondly on his head, with tears in her eyes.
Could eating the strawberries have given George half the happiness he felt at this moment?
( )1.Why did George go to the field?
[A]To eat his bread and butter.
[B]To dry the plants in their field.
[C]To look for some wood for the fire.
( )2.What does the underlined phrase “with a longing eye” show about George?
[A]He wanted to find more strawberries.
[B]He wanted to eat the strawberries very much.
[C]He thought the strawberries were good for his mom.
( )3.Why did George put down the strawberry the second time he lifted it to his mouth?
[A]Because it looked so small.
[B]Because it was the best one.
[C]Because he wanted to eat another one.
( )4.How did George's mom feel after seeing the strawberries?
[A]She was moved by her son's care and love.
[B]She was too hungry to think about anything.
[C]She got so angry that she couldn't calm down.
( )5.What can we learn from the last sentence?
[A]George regretted not eating the strawberries himself.
[B]If George ate the strawberries, he would get half
happiness.
[C]George felt very happy to save all strawberries for
his mom.
Little George lived in a poor village. One summer day George's mother sent him to the field to pick up some dried wood for the fire.
George looked very hard. By the time the sun was high, he was very hot and wished for a cool place to rest and have some food. As he walked along, he found some shade, and by it were some fine, wild strawberries. “How good these will be with my bread and butter,” thought George.
He picked up all of the strawberries. As he was lifting the first strawberry to his mouth, he remembered his sick mother, alone in her dark and cold room in the village.
With this in mind, he put the strawberry back. “Shall I save them for her?” he asked himself.
He thought how refreshing they would be for her, yet was still looking at them with a longing eye.
“I will eat half and take the other half to her,” he said. He divided them into two heaps(堆), but each heap looked so small. He put them together again.
“I will only eat one,” he thought.
But, as he again lifted it to his mouth, he saw that he had taken the finest, and he put it back.
When the sun was beginning to sink, George set out for home. How happy he felt, then, that he had all his strawberries for his sick mother.
He heard his mother's faint voice calling him. “Is that you, George? I am glad you have come back. I am thirsty, and I am longing for some tea.”
George ran to her and joyfully offered his wild strawberries.
“And you saved them for your sick mother, didn't you?” said she, laying her hand fondly on his head, with tears in her eyes.
Could eating the strawberries have given George half the happiness he felt at this moment?
( )1.Why did George go to the field?
[A]To eat his bread and butter.
[B]To dry the plants in their field.
[C]To look for some wood for the fire.
( )2.What does the underlined phrase “with a longing eye” show about George?
[A]He wanted to find more strawberries.
[B]He wanted to eat the strawberries very much.
[C]He thought the strawberries were good for his mom.
( )3.Why did George put down the strawberry the second time he lifted it to his mouth?
[A]Because it looked so small.
[B]Because it was the best one.
[C]Because he wanted to eat another one.
( )4.How did George's mom feel after seeing the strawberries?
[A]She was moved by her son's care and love.
[B]She was too hungry to think about anything.
[C]She got so angry that she couldn't calm down.
( )5.What can we learn from the last sentence?
[A]George regretted not eating the strawberries himself.
[B]If George ate the strawberries, he would get half
happiness.
[C]George felt very happy to save all strawberries for
his mom.
答案:
1 - 5 CBBAC
查看更多完整答案,请扫码查看