问题 阅读理解
阅读下面短文,按要求回答问题。
    Fifteen is such an awful (糟糕的) age, I should know. I really wish I were eighteen. If you are an
adult, you can be your own boss. People like my parents and my teachers are always telling me what
to do. You know what I mean. "It's time for bed, Sandy." Or "Sandy, you've watched too much TV
for one night." "Sandy, stand up straight." "Sandy, you must improve your handwriting." Sandy this,
Sandy that. No one tells adults when they go to bed or not to watch TV. Besides, adults get to wear
what they like. Now it's going to be great to be an adult. Don't you agree?

     I'm Sandy's mother. Having a fifteen-year-old daughter isn't always easy. Right now, we've got
a problem. Our neighhour, Mrs White, wants Sandy to look after her pet dog for one week. Sandy
really wants to do it, but (I                          ). She's too young and inexperienced. Well, I will
never be able to relax knowing she is all alone with a dog. I've tried to explain my feelings to her,
but she won't listen. She keeps telling me that the Whites live very near, so she can ask for help.
She insists that Mrs White won't ask her to look after her pet dog if she doesn't think Sandy is old
enough. She says I'm "babying" her and I hate to see her mad at me. What should I do?
1. Sandy is fifteen years old and she wishes to be her own _______.
2. Sandy thinks her parents and her teachers are always telling her what to do. Give an example.
                                                                                                                                        
3. 将文中括号内的英文句子补充完整。
4. 将划线句子She says I'm "babying" her and I hate to see her mad at me. 译成汉语。 
                                                                                                                                         
5. Should Sandy look after Mrs White's pet dog? Why or why not? 
                                                                                                                                         
答案

1. boss master

2. It's time for bed, Sandy. / Sandy, you've watched too much TV for one night. Sandy, stand up straight. / 

    Sandy, you must improve your handwriting.

3. I don't want Sandy to do it. / I'm worried. / I disagree.

4. 她说我总是把她看成孩子,而我也不想看到她朝我发火。

5. No, I don't think so because she is too young and inexperienced. / Yes, I think so. If she has problems,

    she can ask Mrs White for help.

(答案不唯一)

阅读理解

阅读理解 。

     Perhaps the only test score that I remembered is the 55 when I was in high school.

     The test was the final for a course. I remembered waiting anxiously as my teacher Mr. Right passed out our papers one by one. It was a rather difficult

test. I heard my classmates groaning, and I could tell by the groans that the

scores weren’t looking good.

     Mr. Right put my paper on my desk. There in big red numbers, circled to

draw attention, was my score, 55!

     I lowered my head, and covered the score up quickly. A 55 is not

something that you wanted your classmates to see. “The scores were not

very good, none of you passed,” Mr. Right said. “The highest score in the

class was a 55.”

     A 55. That’s me!

     Suddenly my sad look didn’t look so bad. I had the highest score. I felt a lot better.

     I walked home alone that day with the low but high score. My father knew that I had a big test that day and asked me as soon as I got home, “How did

you do in your test?” “I made a 55,” I said.

     A frown(皱眉) now stood on my father’s face. I knew I had to explain

immediately. “But Dad, I had the highest score in the class, ” I proudly

stated. I thought that explanation would make a difference. “You failed!” my father replied. “But it’s the highest!” I insisted. “I don’t care what scores others had, but you failed. What matters is what you do!” my father

firmly said.

     For years, my father was always that way. It didn’t matter what others

did, it only mattered what I did and that I did it excellently.

     We often don’t understand the wisdom(智慧)of good parents until

we ourselves stand in the parents’ shoes. My father’s words have carried me throughout life.

1. The word “groaning” is the closest in meaning to      .

A. singing        

B. laughing      

C. complaining  

D. quarreling

2. In class, to hide my score from my classmates, I        .

A. lowered my head                

B. covered my score up

C. walked home alone              

D. explained immediately

3. A frown stood on my father’s face because he thought     .

A. I did a bad job in the test          

B. I gave a good excuse

C. I became the worst student        

D. I stood in his shoes

4. We can infer from the passage that         .

A. the father was strict with his child

B. the writer was always poor in tests

C. Mr. Right was worried about the writer

D. the writer was always happy with his scores

5. Which is the best title of the passage?

A. The Final Test                  

B. That’s Me!

C. My Strict Teacher                

D. Scores, Important?

选择题