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5. (2024无锡江阴期中)Don’t believe ____ you see on the internet. Seeing is not believing sometimes.
A.nothing
B.something
C.anything
D.everything
D
A.nothing
B.something
C.anything
D.everything
答案:
D
—Shall we watch 30,000 miles in Chang’an in the theatre?
—
A.Good news
B.I dislike it
C.I don’t have time
D.That sounds good
—
D
. It brings some famous poets in Chinese history to life.A.Good news
B.I dislike it
C.I don’t have time
D.That sounds good
答案:
D
1. DIY
2. What are you
3. Millie often
4. First
5.
is very popular among
young people.2. What are you
going to do
tomorrow afternoon?3. Millie often
uses
somecoloured paper
,glue
anda pair of
scissorsto make
somepaper roses
.4. First
fold
the paperlike this
. Then cutthe flower shapes
. Finallyglue
the piecestogether
.5.
When
our job iscomplete
, wewill see
some lovely roses.
答案:
1. is very popular among 2. going to do 3. uses;coloured paper;glue;a pair of; to make;paper roses 4. fold;like this;the flower shapes;glue; together 5. When;complete;will see
五、完形填空
(2025无锡宜兴期末)In my teen years, my dad taught me things I’d need to know to survive in the real world. This was our relationship. I asked him questions and he told me the 1.
When I moved out on my own, I called him at least once a week, usually when something broke in my flat and I needed to know how to 2.
But then, day after day, I needed him less. I got married, and my husband had lots of 3.
I didn’t know when it happened, but when I 4.
And he said, “Hi, sweet, here’s Mum.”
I loved my dad, of course, but sometimes I was not sure if he had already shared everything I needed to know. Maybe I’d heard all his stories. Maybe, after knowing him for 40 years, there was nothing left to say.
Then, this past summer, my husband, our four kids, and I moved in with my parents for three weeks 5.
It was 6.
“I spent a summer in college building them on the Jersey Shore.”
“You did?” I thought I knew everything about my dad—all his part-time jobs. I knew about the apple orchard where he worked, the restaurant where he learned how to make the best pancake, but I 8.
“Yep. Now come up here and let me teach you how to use this circular saw.”
As he explained the reason for not setting the blade(刀片) too deep, I realized that maybe it was not that there was nothing left to 9.
A few weeks later, after my family and I moved back into our own house, I called my parents. Dad answered. “Hi, sweet,” he said, “here’s Mum.”
“Wait, Dad,” I said. “How are you?” We ended up talking about the consulting things he was working on, a new battery he’d bought for his boat. Nothing life-changing, nothing earth-shattering. To 10.
(2025无锡宜兴期末)In my teen years, my dad taught me things I’d need to know to survive in the real world. This was our relationship. I asked him questions and he told me the 1.
C
When I moved out on my own, I called him at least once a week, usually when something broke in my flat and I needed to know how to 2.
A
it.But then, day after day, I needed him less. I got married, and my husband had lots of 3.
B
about everything.I didn’t know when it happened, but when I 4.
C
back, our conversations went like that. “Hi, Dad,” I said.And he said, “Hi, sweet, here’s Mum.”
I loved my dad, of course, but sometimes I was not sure if he had already shared everything I needed to know. Maybe I’d heard all his stories. Maybe, after knowing him for 40 years, there was nothing left to say.
Then, this past summer, my husband, our four kids, and I moved in with my parents for three weeks 5.
D
our house was being repaired. They own a lake house, and Dad asked me to help him rebuild the bulkhead(隔板) at their dock.It was 6.
D
work. We got wet and sandy. As we put the new bulkhead together piece by piece, my dad knew exactly 7.B
went where. I looked at him and said, “How do you know how to build the bulkhead?”“I spent a summer in college building them on the Jersey Shore.”
“You did?” I thought I knew everything about my dad—all his part-time jobs. I knew about the apple orchard where he worked, the restaurant where he learned how to make the best pancake, but I 8.
C
knew this.“Yep. Now come up here and let me teach you how to use this circular saw.”
As he explained the reason for not setting the blade(刀片) too deep, I realized that maybe it was not that there was nothing left to 9.
A
. Maybe it was just that I’d spent my life asking him the wrong questions.A few weeks later, after my family and I moved back into our own house, I called my parents. Dad answered. “Hi, sweet,” he said, “here’s Mum.”
“Wait, Dad,” I said. “How are you?” We ended up talking about the consulting things he was working on, a new battery he’d bought for his boat. Nothing life-changing, nothing earth-shattering. To 10.
B
else, it would sound like a normal conversation between a dad and his daughter. But to me, it was a new beginning. I spent the first part of my life needing to talk to my dad. Now I talk to him because I want to.
答案:
1. C 2. A 3. B 4. C 5. D 6. D 7. B 8. C 9. A 10. B
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