Oranges can be eaten in many 35 . Some people eat them 36 sugar. Others put salt on them. Lots of people eat them 37 . some people 38 an orange in their hands to eat it. Some people use 39 to help them peel (剥皮) and eat an orange. Many people use a spoon. Some people made a 40 hole in one end of an orange and suck out the juice. Oranges are often squeezed (挤榨) to make orange juice to drink.
Not all oranges end up as food or drink. There is one country where people cut orange in half and use them to scrub(擦洗) the floor.
31. A. the color B. colors C. coloring D. color
32. 33.
A. ripe A. the one
B. big B. one
C. heavy C. all
D. soft D. each
34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40.
A. cool A. colors A. using A. whole A. hold A. knife and fork A. big
B. cold B. parts B. for B. full B. seize B. deep III.
C. hot C. ways C. by C. all C. grasp C. small
Reading Comprehension
D. warm D. sides D. with D. plain D. catch
D. knife and a fork D. thorough
B. a knife and fork C. knife or fork
Directions: There are five reading passages in this part. Each passage is followed by five questions. For each question there are four suggested answers marked A, B, C and D. Choose one best answer and blacken the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet.
Passage One
It must have been about two in the morning when I returned home. I tried to wake up my wife by ringing the door-bell, but she was fast asleep, so I got a ladder from the shed in the garden, put it against the wall, and began climbing towards the bedroom window. I was almost there when a sarcastic voice below said, “I don’t think the windows need cleaning at this time of the night.” I looked down and nearly fell off the ladder when I saw a policeman. I immediately regretted acting in the way I did, but I said, “I enjoy cleaning windows at night.” “So do I,” answered the policeman in the same tone. “Excuse my interrupting you. I hate to interrupt a man when he’s busy working, but would you mind coming with me to the station?” “Well, I’d prefer to stay here,” I said. “You see, I’ve forgotten my key.” “Your what?” he called. “My key,” I shouted.
Fortunately, the shouting woke up my wife who opened the window just as the policeman had started to climb towards me.
41. The policeman _______.
A B C D 42. A B C D 43. A B C D 44. A B C
believed the writer was going to clean the windows suspected that the writer was a thief arrested the writer
interrupted the writer when he was busy working The story would not have happened if the writer________. hadn’t been rude
hadn’t fallen off the ladder had remembered his key hadn’t shouted at the policeman
What does the policeman mean when he says “I don’t think the windows need cleaning at this time of the night?” He is joking with the writer. He is giving advice to the writer. He is laughing at the writer. He is warning the writer.
What kind of person do you think the policeman is? He is a humorous man. He is an irresponsible man. He is a sarcastic man.
D 45. A B C D
He is a handsome man.
What do you think will happen in the end? The writer is taken to the police office.
The writer’s wife will explain the situation to the policeman. The man will be angry at his wife.
The writer’s wife will be angry at the policeman.
Passage Two
Pablo Ruiz Picasso was the favorite child of his family. He was the only boy among great many girl cousins. That was enough to make him important, but his father loved him especially, because he knew his son was going to be an artist. Pablo knew the word for pencil even before he could say Mamma and Papa. When he was small he spent hours by himself making delightful little drawings of animals and people. If his mother sent him out to play in the square, he went on drawing in the dust under the trees. One of his favorite models was his younger sister, Lola.
Don Jose Ruiz, Pablo’s father, was director of the museum at Malaga in southern Spain. He earned only a small salary, but there was not much work to do and he was able to practice his hobby, which was painting pigeons. Don Jose loved pigeons very much. He painted them dead or alive in ones and twos and in dozens. Sometimes he painted them on paper, cut them out and stuck them on to canvas; sometimes he stuck real feathers on to his pictures. He knew a great deal about the technique of painting and he taught it all to Pablo.
46. Picasso’s father loved him particularly, because ______.
A B C D 47. A B C D 48. A B C D 49. A B C D 50. A B C D
he was their only child he was a boy
he was going to be important he was going to be a painter
When Pablo was a little boy, he ______. used to play in the square
would spend hours drawing pictures was fond of playing with pigeons often enjoyed taking a walk with his sister What did little Pablo draw most? The square he was playing in. Trees. Pigeons.
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