2005-2014年全国高考英语试题分类汇编完形填空 下载本文

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36.A.hope 37.A.polite 38.A.played 39.A.after 40.A.sure 41.A.perhaps 42.A.start 43.A.note 44.A.disturbed 45.A.give 46.A.reason 47.A.present 48.A.neighbor 49.A.exchanged 50.A.tear 51.A.purely 52.A.realized 53.A.only 54.A.works 55.A.send

B.advice B.similar B.studied B.before B.fond B.really B.cook B.notice B.confused B.take B.request B.afford B.building B.experienced B.open B.basically B.remembered B.still B.exists B.publish

C.support C.special C.traveled C.unless C.proud C.almost C.set C.word C.astonished C.draw C.comment C.find C.home C.expected C.check C.obviously C.imagined C.ever C.matters C.share

D.courage D.private D.worked D.until D.confident D.hardly D.serve D.sign D.inspired D.teach D.response D.order D.house D.exhibited D.receive D.exactly D.supposed D.even D.counts D.write

答案 36.A 37.C 38.D 39.D 40.C 41.D 42.A 43.A 44.C 45.B 46.D 47.B 48.D 49.A 50.B 51.D 52.A 53.C 54.B 55.C

Passage 18

(05·天津)

Having left the town, the girl stopped the car at the landing near the entrance of the bay (海湾)She stepped into the 16 and rowed out silently. The tide was rushing to the entrance and

17 to the wild open sea. She had to row across the bay to reach 18 side. The waves struck against the side of the boat, 19 and uneven; it became 20 difficult to row. If she 21 for a moment, the tide would push the boat back towards the 22 .

She wasn' t even halfway, 23 she was already tired and her hands 24 from pulling on the rough wooden oars (船桨). \never going to 25 it”, she thought. She rested the oars on

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her knees and 26 her head helplessly, then looked up as she 27 the boat shift(晃动) against the tide.

The east wind , which had swung(旋转) around from the south-west, 28 her help and pushed the boat towards the mountains. It was going to be 29 . Her hands weren't so painful. Her chest didn’t feel as if it was about to burst 30 .

The lights of the town became 31 . one of the oars banged against the side of the boat and she 32 it with a start. Had she been asleep, or just 33 ? She looked over her shoulder. She was almost on the beach. The girl gave one last 34 on the oars to ground the boat, and then lay back against the seat. She listened to the waves 35 and knew she had come home. Far across the moonlit bay the lights were no more than a sparkling chain.

16. A. car B. boat C. ship D. mail

17. A. beside B. before C. behind D. beyond 18.A. another B. other C. either D. the other 19. A. deep B. calm C. gentle D. rough 20. A. more B. less C. as D. least

21. A. slept B. continued C. rested D.rowed 22. A. home B. mountains C. south-west D. entrance 23. A. if B. so C. but D. since 24. A. hurt B. ruined C. troubled D. broke 25. A. get B. make C. keep D. take

26. A. mined B. dropped C. cocked D. raised 27. A. saw B. made C. heard D. felt

28. A. got to B. came to C. sent for D. reached for

29. A. difficult B. serious C. all right D. certain enough 30. A. any more B. still more C. no more D. once more

31. A. brighter B. bigger C. closer D. smaller 32. A. destroyed B. threw C. repaired D. seized 33. A. dreaming B. guessing C. inventing D. expecting 34. A. blow B. hit C. pull D. strike

35. A. anxiously B. happily C. sadly D. carefully

答案 16.B 17.D 18.D 19.D 20.A 21.C 22.D 23.C 24.A 25.B 26.B 27.D 28.B 29.C 30.A 31.D 32.D 33.A 34.C 35.B

(06·北京)

Learning to Accept

I learned how to accept life as it is from my father. 36 , he did not teach me acceptance when he was strong and healthy, but rather when he was 37 and ill.

My father was 38 a strong man who loved being active, but a terrible illness 39 all that away. Now he can no longer walk, and he must sit quietly in a chair all day. Even talking is 40 . One night, I went to visit him with my sisters. We started 41 about life, and I told them about one of my 42 . I said that we must

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very often give things up 43 we grow --- our youth, our beauty, our friends --- but it always 44 that after we give something up, we gain something new in its place. Then suddenly my father 45 up. He said, “But, Peter, I gave up 46 ! What did I gain?” I thought and thought, but I couldn’t think of anything to say. 47 , he answered his own question: “I 48 the love of my family,” I looked at my sisters and saw tears in their eyes, along with hope and thankfulness.

I was also 49 by his words. After that, when I began to feel irritated (愤怒的) at someone, I 50 remember his words and become 51 . If he could replace his great pain with a feeling of love for others, then I should be 52 to give up my small irritations. In this 53 , I learned the power of acceptance from my father.

Sometimes I 54 what other things I could have learned from him if I had listened more carefully when I was a boy. For now, though, I am grateful for this one 55 .

36. A. Afterwards B. Therefore C. However D. Meanwhile 37. A. tired B. weak C. poor D. slow 38. A. already B. still C. only D. once 39. A. took B. threw C. sent D. put 40. A. impossible B. difficult C. stressful D. Hopeless 41. A. worrying B. caring C. talking D. asking 42. A. decisions B. experiences C. ambitions D. beliefs 43. A. as B. since C. before D. till 44. A. suggests B. promises C. seems D. requires 45. A. spoke B. turned C. summed D. opened 46. A. something B. anything C. nothing D. everything 47. A. Surprisingly B. Immediately C. Naturally D. Certainly 48. A. had B. accepted C. gained D. enjoyed 49. A. touched B. astonished C. attracted D. warned 50. A. should B. could C. would D. might 51. A. quiet B. calm C. Relaxed D. happy 52. A. ready B. likely C. free D. able 53. A. case B. form C. method D. way 54. A. doubt B. wonder C. know D. guess 55. A. award B. gift C. lesson D. word 答案 36.C 37.B 38.D 39.A 40.B 41.C 42.D 43.A 44.C 45.A 46.D 47.A 48.C 49.A 50.C 51.B 52.D 53.D 54.B 55.B

Passage 13

(06·重庆)

Eleven-year-old Angela had something wrong with her nervous system(神经系统).She was

unable to 36 .In fact, she could hardly make any 37 .Although she believed

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that she had a 38 chance of recovering, the doctors said that 39 ,if any, could come back to normal after getting this disease. Having heard this, the little girl was not 40 .There, lying in her hospital bed, she 41 that no matter what the doctors said, her going back to school was 42 .

She was moved to a specialized health center, and whatever method could be tried was used. Still she would not 43 . It seemed that she was 44 .The doctors were all fond of her and

taught her about 45 that she could make it . Every day Angela would lie there,

46 doing her mental exercise.

One day, 47 she was imagining her legs moving again, it seemed as though a miracle(奇迹)happened: The bed began to 48 ! “Look what I’m doing! Look! I can do it! I moved! I moved! ”she 49 .

Of course, at this very moment everyone else in the hospital was 50 .More importantly, they were running 51 safely.

People were crying, and equipment was 52 .You see, it was an earthquake. But don’t

53 that to Angela. She has 54 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 55 the earth, such a disease is a small problem, isn’t it? 36.A.see 37.A.progress 38.A.poor 39.A.few 40.A.satisfied 41.A.insisted 42.A.true 43.A.get up 44.A.disappointed 45.A.thinking 46.A.sadly 47.A.as 48.A.fly

B.hear B.difference B.good B.all B.delighted B.sighed B.doubtful B.give up B.proud B.expecting B.madly B.since B.move

C.talk C.movement C.little C.some C.surprised C.feared C.certain C.turn up C.troubled C.pretending C.carefully C.after C.roll

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D.walk D.achievement D.special D.most D.discouraged D.promised D.impossible D.stand up D.undefeatable D.imagining D.faithfully D.before D.speak

49.A.jumped 50.A.frightened 51.A.in 52.A.rising 53.A.tell 54.A.noticed 55.A.push

B.wondered B.pleased B.by B.falling B.do B.supposed B.shock

C.screamed C.touched C.for C.missing C.give C.believed C.shake

D.recovered D.encouraged D.with D.gathering D.show D.discovered D.save

43.B 44.D 45.D

答案 36.D 37.C 38.B 39.A 40.D 41.A 42.C 46.D

47.A 48.B 49.C 50.A 51.C 52.B 53.A 54.C 55.C

Passage 14

(06·山东)

One summer day my father sent me to buy wire for our farm. At 16, I liked 36 better

than driving our truck, 37 this time I was not happy. My father had told me I’d have to ask for credit(赊账) at the store.

Sixteen is a 38 age, when a young man wants respect, not charity. It was 1976, and

the ugly 39 of racial discrimination was 40 a fact of life. I’d seen my friends ask for credit and then stand, head down, while the store owner 41 whether they were “good for it.” I knew black youths just like me who were 42 like thieves by the store clerk each time they went into a grocery.

My family was 43 . We paid our debts. But before harvest, cash was short. Would the

store owner 44 us ?

At Davis’s store, Buck Davis stood behind the cash desk, talking to a farmer. I

nodded 45 I passed him on my way to the hardware shelves. When I brought my 46 to the caskh desk, I said 47 , “I need to put this on credit.”

The farmer gave me and amused, distrustful 48 . But Buck’s face didn’t change.

“Sure,” he said 49 . “Your daddy is 50 good for it.” He 51 to the other man. “This here is one of James Williams’s sons.”

The farmer nodded in a neighborly 52 . I was filled with pride. James William’s

son. Those three words had opened a door to an adult’s respect and trust. That day I discovered that the good name my parents had 53 brought our whole family

the respect of our neighbors. Everyone knew what to 54 from a Williams: a decent person who kept his word and respected himself 55 much to do wrong.

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