單項填空,從下面各題所給的A、B、C、D四個選項中,選擇可以填入空白處的最佳選項。

My knife is broken.  May I use _____?

A. my    B. mine    C. your     D. yours

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科目:初中英語 來源: 題型:


閱讀短文,根據(jù)短文內(nèi)容,從短文后的五個選項中選出能填入空白處的最佳選項。選項中有一項為多余選項。

When you get up in the morning, do you find it hard to choose what clothes to wear? If so,     1     , like what to do when you’re older.

Brave New Girls, written by an American author Jeannette Gadeberg, will help you make such choices. To make them, it says, you must be a “brave new girl”. A brave new girl is one who’s confident, healthy and happy. A brave new girl can realize her dreams.

     2     . Other people may tell you what to do, you can listen to them or not, it’s your business. You should only do what you would like.

If you always wear clothes like those of your favorite TV stars, for example, you should stop doing this. Instead,      3     .

The book also says that girls must start becoming more confident. If you’re confident, you’ll succeed in life. A good way to become confident is to realize that you are as clever as boys or you’re much cleverer than boys. Just look at their grades!

Today’s brave new girls will become tomorrow’s brave new women.

      4    

A. To be brave, you need to make decisions by yourself

B. If you want to become “brave”, you should look pretty and healthy

C. Only in this way can you achieve your dreams and become who you want to be

D. you should become your own star and wear the clothes you like

E. you probably need to help making the bigger choices in your life

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科目:初中英語 來源: 題型:


Before I started school, people felt that I was not going to be successful.At the age of four I started speech lessons because I could not speak well enough for anyone to understand me.

     The first grade was a struggle (掙扎).I had difficulty speaking, I also couldn’t learn to read.The second grade was not much better.I still struggled with the inability to read.In the third grade a new school was built. It was near my home. I went there with my parents and helped to get the school ready so that we could move to the new one. However, things didn’t get better for the next two years.

       It was in the fifth grade.Mrs.Wakefield was my teacher, and she was a good teacher.She did not make me feel unconfident. Instead, she did her best to let me know that I could be whatever I wanted to be.And that is just what I did.

       For the past 22 years, I have been a fifth grade teacher.Because of Mrs.Wakefield's influence on my life, I am now encouraging students who have had difficulties in their lives to believe that they can deal with any difficulty successfully and become someone.I have won many awards(獎項) up to now, such as Teacher of the Year.I think I should thank my fifth grade teacher. She believed in me and helped me to be all that I could be.

1.  The writer started speech lessons at the age of four because_________.

A. he could not speak well              B. he could not read

    C. he wanted to be a good teacher        D. he wanted to go to a new school

2. The writer ______ when he was in the third grade.

    A. did better in reading                    B. met a good teacher

    C. received a high award               D. went to a new school            

3. We can know that the writer ______.

    A. has taught speech lessons         

 B. thinks teaching is a good job

    C. is a very successful teacher now  

 D. works in the same school with Mrs. Wakefield

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科目:初中英語 來源: 題型:


Mike __________ TV when his mother came back home yesterday.

       A. watched            B. is watching        C. was watching    D. has watched

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科目:初中英語 來源: 題型:


BEING an astronaut sounds cool, doesn’t it? In space, they get to do some pretty amazing things, like floating(漂浮) in zero gravity(重力).

However, there are also plenty of things that astronauts can’t do because of their weightless environment, and that’s very sad. What’s worse, they can’t even let their sadness show, because it’s impossible to cry in zero gravity.

    Of course, astronauts can still produce tears(眼淚). But crying is much more difficult in space, according to The Atlantic(大西洋月刊) in January. Without gravity, tears don’t flow(流動) down out of the eyes like they do here on Earth. This means that when you cry in space, your tears have nowhere to go — they just stick(粘) to your eyes.

    In May 2011, astronaut Andrew Feustel experienced this during one of his spacewalks. “Tears,” he said, “don’t fall off of your eyes. They just stay there.”

    Besides making your vision(視線) unclear, this can also cause physical pain. Back on Earth, tears are supposed to bring comfort to the eyes. But that’s not the case(情況) in space. The space environment dries out astronauts’ eyes, and when tears suddenly wet the eyes, it can cause pain rather than comfort. “My right eye is stinging(刺痛) like crazy,” Feustel told his teammate during the walk.

    Since gravity doesn’t work in space, astronauts need some extra help to get rid of(除去) the tears. Feustel chose to rub his eyes against his helmet to wipe(擦) the tears away. Another choice is to just wait — “When the tears get big enough, they simply break free of the eyes and float around,” astronaut Ron Parise told The Atlantic.

    There are lots of small things — things like crying — that we are so used to on Earth. We usually take them for granted until they become a problem in a totally different environment, like space. There, astronauts can’t talk to each other directly. They also can’t eat or drink in normal ways. They can’t even burp(打嗝), because there is no gravity to hold the food down in their stomach. If they do burp, they just end up throwing up(嘔吐) everything in their stomach, according to the UK National Space Center.

    Therefore, perhaps it’s only space explorers who can honestly say, “Gravity, you’re the best.”

1. From Paragraphs 2 and 3, we can know that __________.

    A. astronauts are unable to feel sad in space

    B. astronauts produce fewer tears in space

    C. tears produced in space flow down more slowly

    D. tears produced in space don’t flow downward

2. What effect do tears have on astronauts?

    A. They cause physical pain.               B. They bring comfort to them.

    C. They make their vision clearer.        D. They float around and cause trouble.

3. The underlined phrase “take them for granted” in paragraph 7 means __________.

    A. find them important                        B. consider them useless

    C. need them during an emergency              D. fail to notice their presence

4. Paragraph 7 is mainly about __________.

    A. suggestions of how astronauts can stay comfortable in space

    B. other basic things that are difficult to do in space

    C. why burping is impossible in space

    D. things human can’t do without gravity

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科目:初中英語 來源: 題型:


 You are a clever boy. ____ do you give up your study?

A. WhyB. When     C. What     D. Where 

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科目:初中英語 來源: 題型:


 ----Do you know _____start the summer vacation?

   ----In July. I can’t tell you the exact day.

  A. when weB. when do we   C. when are we going to   D. when we are going to

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科目:初中英語 來源: 題型:


—Tom, What did you do last Sunday morning ?

       — I _______ my grandma with my parents .

    A. visited               B. visit                  C. will visit            D. have visited

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科目:初中英語 來源: 題型:


The problem is difficult for me.

A fun     B easy   C. hard   D boring

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