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提问人:网友budded 发布时间:2022-01-06
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An eleven-year-old boy in a small town wanted to be a driver. But he was born without arms

(手臂). His uncle taught him to usa his fuel as hands. He couldn't go to school so he spent all his time watching (看) trains coming and going because he lived near the slabon. How he wished he could be a train diver!

One day he saw an empty (空的) train and lie climbed (爬) in. It's lied no difficulty in starting it with his feet. goon the train was traveling at forty miles (英里) an hour. The railway officials (官员) could see tile boy in the wain and tried to stop the wain. The train arrived at a small station a little away from the town and then the boy drove it back. When he was near the town. a worker caught up with (追上) the train and stop it. At flint he was very angry (生气). hut he laughed when the boy said simply. "I like trains. "Well. I'm glad you don't like planes? the worker said.

An eleven-year-old boy wished lo he ______.

A.a plane driver

B.a train driver

C.a teacher

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更多“An eleven-year-old boy in a small town wanted to be a driver. But he was born without arms”相关的问题
第1题
Mr. Smith has an ___ son and his daughter is _____ this year.

A.eight-year-old,eleven years old

B.eight years old,eleven-year-old

C.eight-year-old,eleven- year- ol

D.eight years old,eleven years old

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第2题
Eleven-year-old Angela had something wrong with her nervous system. She was unable to【21】_

Eleven-year-old Angela had something wrong with her nervous system. She was unable to 【21】______ . In fact, she could hardly make any 【22】______ . Although she believed that she had a 【23】______ chance of recovering; the doctors said that 【24】______ , if any, could come hack to normal after getting this disease. Having heard this, the little girl was not 【25】______ . There, lying in her hospital bed, she 【26】______ that no matter what the doctors said, her going back to school was 【27】______ .

She was moved to a specialized health center, and whatever method could be tried was used. Still she would not 【28】______ . It seemed that she was 【29】______ . The doctors were all fond of her and taught her about 【30】______ that she could make it. Every day Angela would lie there, 【31】______ doing her mental exercise.

One day, 【32】______ she was imagining her legs moving again, it seemed as though a miracle happened: The bed began to 【33】______ ! "Look, what I'm doing! Look! I can do it! I moved! I moved!" she 【34】______ .

Of course, at this very moment everyone else in the hospital was 【35】______ . More importantly, they were running 【36】______ safety.

People were crying, and equipment was 【37】______ . You see, it was an earthquake. But don't 【38】______ that to Angela. She has 【39】______ that she did it, just as she had never doubted that she would recover. And now only a few years later, she's back in school. You see, to such a person who can 【40】______ the earth, such a disease is a small problem, isn't it?

【21】

A.see

B.hear

C.talk

D.walk

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第3题
Eleven-year-old Angela was stricken with a debilitating (衰弱的) disease involving her ner

Eleven-year-old Angela was stricken with a debilitating (衰弱的) disease involving her nervous system. She was unable to walk and her movement was【C1】______ in other ways as well. The doctors did not hold【C2】______ much hope of her ever recovering from this illness. They【C3】______ she'd spend the rest of her life in a wheelchair. They said that few, if【C4】______ , were able to come back to【C5】______ after contracting this disease. The little girl was fearless. There, lying in her hospital bed, she would【C6】______ to anyone who'd listen that she was【C7】______ going to be walking again someday.

She was【C8】______ to a specialized rehabilitation(复原) hospital in the San Francisco Bay area.【C9】______ therapies could be applied to her case were used. The doctors were charmed by her undefeatable【C10】______ . They taught her about imaging about seeing herself walking.【C11】______ it would do nothing else, it【C12】______ at least give her hope and something positive to do in the long waking hours【C13】______ her bed. Angela would work as hard as possible in physical therapy, in whirlpools (漩涡) and in exercise sessions. But she worked faithfully【C14】______ her imaging, visualizing herself moving, moving, moving !

One day, as she was staining with all her【C15】______ to imagine her legs moving again, it seemed as though a miracle【C16】______ :The bed moved! It began to move around the room! She screamed out, "Look what I'm doing! Look! Look! I can do it! I moved, I moved !"

Of course, at this【C17】______ moment everyone else in the hospital was screaming, too ,and running for【C18】______ . People were screaming, equipment was falling and glass was breaking. You see, it was the recent San Francisco earthquake. But don't tell that to Angela. She's【C19】______ that she did it. And now only a few years later, she's back in school. You see, anyone who can【C20】______ the earth between San Francisco and Oakland can conquer a piddling (微不足道的) little disease, can't they?

【C1】

A.restrained

B.limited

C.confined

D.restricted

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第4题
根据材料请回答 46~50 Seeing HandsIn the Soviet Union several cases have been reported

根据材料请回答 46~50

Seeing Hands

In the Soviet Union several cases have been reported recently Of people who can read and detect colors with their fingers,46 . One case concerns an eleven-year-old school girl, Vera Petrova, who has normal vision but who can also perceive things with different parts of her skin, and through solid walls.47 .One day she came into his office and hap- pened to put her hands on the door of a locked safe.Suddenly she asked her father why he kept so many old newspapers locked away there,48 .

Vera's curious talent was brought to the notice of a scientific research institute in the town of Ulyanovsk, near where she lives, and in April she was given a series of tests by a special commission of the Ministry of Health of the Russian Federal Republic.During these tests she was able to read a newspaper through an opaque screen and, stranger still, by moving her elbow over a child's game of Lotto she was able to describe the figures and colors printed on it; and, in another instance, wearing stockings and slippers, to make out with her foot the outlines and colors of a picture hidden under a carpet.49 . During all these tests Vera was blindfold; and, indeed, except when blindfold she lacked the ability to perceive things with her skin.It was also found that although she could perceive things with her fingers50 .

A.and even described the way they were done up in bundles.

B.Other experiments showed that her knees and shoulders had a similar sensitivity.

C.and even see through solid doors and walls.

D. Another Russian girl, Rosa Kuleshova, could read blindfold.

E.this ability ceased the moment her hands were wet.

F.This ability was first noticed by her father.

第 46 题 请选择(46)处的最佳答案

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第5题
Section BDirections: In this section, you will hear 3 short passages. At the end of each p

Section B

Directions: In this section, you will hear 3 short passages. At the end of each passage, you will hear some questions. Both the passage and the questions will be spoken only once. After you hear a question, you must choose the best answer from the four choices marked A, B, C and D.

听力原文: The lawyers representing two eleven-year-old boys accused of killing a young child have been making their final submissions. Speaking at Preston Crown Court, the lawyer for one of the boys blamed the other for the murder of two-year-old James Bulger. The Court was told there could be no doubt that the two boys were with James when he met his death on a railway track. Emma Patterson has the story:

The trial entered its third and final week, the court room as packed as ever, with journalists from around the world and members of the public who'd queued for a seat. The two eleven-year-olds who can't be named for legal reasons have been identified throughout as Child A and Child B. The lawyer acting on behalf of Child A told the court that the terrible and terrifying assault on the toddler had been initiated and carried out by Child B; Child B's lawyer described his co-defendant as an arrogant little liar. He said his own client may have played a part in causing the death of James Bulger, but had not intended to have played a part in causing the death of James Bulger, and had not intended to do so. The other lawyer said causing serious injury or killing was the last thing either defendant had in mind. To find them guilty of murder, the jury must decide that the boys were well aware of the consequences of their actions. The prosecution must also prove that both boys were capable of distinguishing right from wrong and could therefore be held criminally responsible for their deeds.

(27)

A.It's about the decision the jury has made.

B.It's about the trial of two young boys.

C.It's about the response of the public.

D.It's about the prosecution of a toddler.

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第6题
"It's like being bitten to death by ducks." That's how one mother described her constant s
quabbles with her eleven-year-old daughter. And she's hardly alone in the experience. The arguments almost always involve mundane matters—taking out the garbage, coming home on time, cleaning up the bedroom. But despite its banality, this relentless bickering takes its adolescents—particularly mothers—report lower levels of life satisfaction, less marital happiness, and more general distress than parents of younger children. Is this continual arguing necessary?

For the past two years, my students and I have been examining the day-to-day relation-ships of parents and young teenagers to learn how and why family ties change during the transition from childhood into adolescence. Repeatedly, I am struck by the fact that, despite considerable love between most teens and their parents, they can't help sparring. Even in the closest of families, parents and teenagers squabble and bicker surprisingly often—so often, in fact, that we hear impassioned recountings of these arguments in virtually every discussion we have with parents or teenagers. One of the most frequently heard phrases on our interview tapes is, "We usually get along but..."

As psychologist Anne Petersen notes, the subject of parent-adolescent conflict has generated considerable controversy among researchers and clinicians. Until about twenty years ago, our views of such conflict were shaped by psychoanalytic clinicians and theorists, who argued that spite and revenge, passive aggressiveness and rebelliousness toward parents are all normal, even healthy, aspects of adolescence. But studies conducted during the 1970s on samples of average teenagers and their parents (rather than those who spent Wednesday afternoons on analysts' couches) challenged the view that family storm and stress was inevitable or pervasive. These surveys consistently showed that three-fourths of all teenagers and parents, here and abroad, feel quite close to each other and report getting along very well. Family relations appeared far more pacific than professionals and the public had believed.

According to the passage, parents and teenagers are always at loggerheads with each other over ______.

A.the careless attitude of teenagers toward their parents' work pressure

B.who should take the lion's share of the housework

C.the finger-pointing attitude of the parents toward their children

D.disagreements on each other's behavioral patterns

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第7题
Aaliyah was born Aaliyah Dana Haughton on Jan. 16, 1979, in Brooklyn, New York. She made h
er stage debut as an orphan in a production of "Annie" at the age of six. Her uncle was married to singer Gladys Knight, who invited eleven-year-old Aaliyah to perform. with her during a five-night stint in Las Vegas. Aaliyah was a talented young singer. She was featured on the talent search television program "Star Search".

Aaliyah received her first licensing deal as a teenager, after her uncle, Barry Hankerson, formed Blackground Records. Aaliyah's first album, "Age Ain't Nothing But A Number", went gold in 1994, when she was 15. Aaliyah's music benefited from her close collaboration with hip-hop artist R. Kelly. After rumors that the two had married, they stopped working together. Aaliyah went on to make two more albums in a fruitful collaboration with prodncers Timbaland and Missy Elliot. Her third and last CD, "Aaliyah" was released in July 2001.

Aaliyah's song "Try Again" earned her a Grammy nomination for best female R&B vocalist. She was nominated in the same category in 1999 for "Are You That Somebody". In 1996, she released her second album; the single, "If Your Girl Only Knew", went double platinum.

In addition to being a talented musician, Aaliyah was building a reputation as an actress. She made her first feature film appearance in the movie "Romeo Must Die" with Jet Li. She also starred in "The Queen of the Damned", based on the novel by Anne Rice. She was also scheduled to act in the sequel to "The Matrix".

On August 26, 2001, Aaliyah was on her way to shoot a music video for her most recent album on Abaco Island, about 170 miles east of south Florida. Soon after takeoff for Florida, the plane she was traveling on crashed, just 200 feet beyond the end of the runway at Marsh Harbor International Airport on Abaco Island. The plane, a Cessna 402B, apparently suffered engine failure upon liftoff. Aaliyah was only 22 years old.

Which of the following is true of Aaliyah?

A.Her full name was Dana Haughton.

B.Her parents died when she was six.

C.She began her acting at 11.

D.The first role she played is an orphan.

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第8题
Of all the dreary demystification of female experience advanced by feminists, surely one o
f the silliest is the claim that the heroines of girls' classics helped turn generations of admiring readers into milksops. Yet that is the thesis of Deborah O'Keefe's Good Girl Messages: How Young Women Were Misled by Their Favorite Books.

A former professor of English at Vassar and Manhattanville, O'Keefe would persuade us that "many girls were damaged by characters, plots, and themes in the books they read and loved," because in these books "female virtue" is invariably bound up with "sit-still, look-good messages." Arguing from supposedly stereotypical literary scenes depictions of mothers making their daughters feel safe and loved, for example-- along with ominous anecdotes attempting to show how the women of her own generation are passive and pliant, O'Keefe insists that until about 1950, a vast literary conspiracy was trying to suck the brains and spirit out of little girls.

What is impressive about this contention is the boldness of its inversion of reality. Indeed, O'Keefe does her readers a favor by sending us scurrying to our shelves to pore through half-forgotten, well-loved stories and confirm that, sure enough, the exact opposite is tree: The great girls' books of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries (many of them further popularized in film, television, and stage versions) are filled with active, vibrant young women notable for their moral strength. These novels celebrate character in girls and women in a way that their contemporary counterparts, filled with characters brooding over nasty boys and weight problems, seldom do.

To revisit the girls' classics of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, actually, is to enter a heroines' hall of fame. This doesn't stop O'Keefe from disparaging characters like "brave but passive" Sara Crewe. The central figure in A Little Princes (1950) by the English-born American writer Frances Hodgson Burnett, best, known for The Secret Garden (1911), Sara endures hardship, including her beloved father's death and her resulting poverty, in a way that ahs inspired girls for a century. "You have to bear things," Sara explains to a friend early in the story, when her father has left her at boarding school. "Think what soldiers bear! Papa is a soldier. If there was a war he would have to bear marching and thirstiness and, perhaps, deep wounds. And he would never say a word -- not one word."

This kind of stoicism is bad, O'Keefe explains, because eleven-year-old Sara doesn't escape her awful situation on her own, but merely suffers until a heroic male, her father's old friend, rescues her. Besides, isn't there something sinister, O'Keefe insinuates, about this "father-worship" ? Yet it would be hard for parents to provide their daughters a better model of generosity and resourcefulness than Sara Crewe. With the help of a few friends and a vivid imagination, she creates an inner life as a "princess" that helps her endure the worst circumstances with dignity. In the books' most moving scene, Sara uses a coin she has found to buy six buns, then gives five of them to a beggar girl who is even hungrier than she is.

Sara was talking to herself, though she was sick at heart. "If I'm a princess," she was saying, "If I'm a princess -- when they were poor and driven from their thrones -- they always shared -- with the populace -- if they met one poorer and hungrier than themselves."

Sara's imaginary royalty gives definition to her private sense of who she is: one held to a very high standard. He notion about princesses (whether or not Burnett intended it) reflects the Biblical concept, second nature to nineteenth century readers, that the greatest of all is the person who serves others. It makes Sara so attractive that her story has never gone out of print.

Deborah O'Keefe notwithstanding, yo

A.feminists support the values of girls' classics

B.feminists mystify the roles of girls' classics

C.Deborah O'Keefe echoes the feminists' claim

D.Deborah O'Keefe is a staunch feminist

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第9题
设A{a,b},则P(A)×A = ()

A、A

B、P(A)

C、{ <φ,a> , <φ,b> ,<{a},a>,<{a},b>,<{b},a>,<{b},b>, <a,a> , <a,b> }

D、{ <a,φ> , <b,φ> , <a,{a}> , <b,{a}> , <a,{b}> , <b,{b}> , <a,a> , <b,a> }

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第10题
证明:AΔB=(A∪B)\(A∩B);AΔB=(A∩Bc)∪(B∩Ac)。...

证明:AΔB=(A∪B)\(A∩B);AΔB=(A∩Bc)∪(B∩Ac)。

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