he'scarry on my songrandfather's son,but notcarry on my sonunder.he's my什么人

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少儿英语讲故事
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少儿英语讲故事篇一:儿童英语故事、小学生双语故事(超全版)儿童英语故事、小学生英语故事寓言、成语故事(1-19页)幽默故事(19-25页)普通小故事(25-72页)通过阅读英语笑话、故事等趣味英语,可以激发小朋友们学英语的兴趣,提高单词量,帮助他们提高成绩。最好每天背一篇,会有不错的效果的O(∩_∩)O儿童寓言故事Story1ThreeGoodFriendsOneday,amonkeyrideshisbikeneartheriver.Thistimeheseesalionunderatree.Thelionrunsathim.Heisafraidandfallsintotheriver.Hecan?tswim.Heshouts.Therabbithearshim.Hejumpsintotheriver.Therabbitswimstothemonkey,buthecan?thelphim.Luckily,anelephantcomesalong.Heisverystrong.Hehelpstherabbitandmonkey.Threefriendsareveryhappy.Theygototheelephant?shome.Then,threeofthembecomegoodfriends.故事一三个好朋友一天,一只猴子在河边骑车。这时他看见树下有一只狮子,狮子向他跑来。他非常的害怕,掉进河里。他不会游泳,大叫起来。兔子听见了,跳进水里,但他却没有办法救猴子。幸运的是,一只大象过来了。大象非常强壮,救出了兔子和猴子。他们来到大象的家,在那里吃了一顿大餐。从此他们成了好朋友。Story2AGoodBoyLittleRobertaskedhismotherfortwocents.WhatdidyoudowiththemoneyIgaveyouyesterday?Igaveittoapooroldwoman,heanswered.You'reagoodboy,saidthemotherproudly.Herearetwocentsmore.Butwhyareyousointerestedintheoldwoman?Sheistheonewhosellsthecandy.故事二好孩子小罗伯特向妈妈要两分钱。“昨天给你的钱干什么了?”“我给了一个可怜的老太婆,”他回答说。“你真是个好孩子,”妈妈骄傲地说。“再给你两分钱。可你为什么对那位老太太那么感兴趣呢?”“她是个卖糖果的。”Story3SpringintheGreenSeasonSpringiscoming.Springisthefirstseasonoftheyear.InChina,springcomesinFebruary.Itisstillcold,butitisgettingwarmerandwarmer.Thedaysgetlongerandlonger.Theleavesonthetreesbegintoturngreen.Thentheycomeupgreenleavesinthespringwindontheground.Springisalsosowingtimeseason.故事三春天来了,春天是每年的第一个季节。在中国,春天二月来临,那时候还是很冷,但是会运来月暖和,白昼悦来越长。树上的叶子开始变绿,沐浴着大地春风长出了嫩芽。春天也播种的季节。Story4LookforaFriendSamisalittlefish.Helivesinthesea.Heisverylonely.Hewantstohaveafriend.Thefriendlookslikehim.Samseesaninkfish.Theinkfishhaseightlegs.Hedoesn’tlooklikeSam.SoSamgoesaway.Sammeetsashark.Hewantstosayhellototheshark.Thesharkopenshisbigmouth.Samrunsawayquickly.Samistiredandhungry.Hewantstohavearest.Thenheseesaroundfish.Shesaystohim.“Hello!Wouldyouliketobemyfriend?”Samanswers:“Ofcourse!Butyouareround.Iamflat.”Theroundfishdays:“Butwearebothfishes.”Samthinksandsays,“Youareright.Let?sbefriends.”Theybecomegoodfriends.故事四:找朋友塞姆是一条小鱼,他在海里。他生在海里。他很孤独
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As China's future leaders, we must understand the hope — and the danger — that idealism brought to China's founding generation.
By Yifu Dong graduated from Beijing No.4 High School and is now a student at Yale University.
“How have you been recently?” I asked my paternal grandfather, Yao Guoxiang, during my summer vacation this year.
“Very bad,” he answered on the other end of the phone. “Not a single doctor can cure my humpback and lower back pain.” The chronic pain was not due to his 86-year-old joints. Rather, it was a lingering symptom of the beatings he’d suffered during China’s Cultural Revolution.
Fifty years ago, mass violence broke out across the country after Chinese leader Mao Zedong issued a call to arms to the nation’s youth to root out “secret capitalists” and “class enemies.” On August 18, 1966, Mao
a crowd of students at Beijing’s Tiananmen Square, encouraging the use of force against the alleged infiltrators. Revolutionary paranoia swept school campuses across China, and students grouped into militant cliques called the Red Guards. Schools and teachers were among the hardest hit in what later became known as “Red August” — after the Red Guards, red terror, and the color of blood.
Thus began what many of my generation, born in the 1990s, well after China had launched its meteoric ascent to prosperity and global power, view as the defining catastrophe of a lifetime. My grandparents, all four of them school officials in 1966, were immediately accused of “taking the capitalist road,” and endured persecution for the next decade. My grandfather Yao suffered the most. Yet he, as with many of his generation, seems strangely content with his lot, showing little bitterness towards his past. Grandpa Yao reads a lot of news online, and sees the internet as a potent tool to express his thoughts. It was only after I read his unpublished memoirs, compiled in a
he set up himself, that I understood why he seems at peace with an era that left him with physical pain and emotional scars, and began to glimpse the gulf that separates my generation from his.
Grandpa Yao served as the principal of the No. 6 Middle School in Fushun, a coal mining boomtown in northeastern China’s Liaoning Province. As soon as Red August’s purges began, Red Guards stripped him of his title and took him into custody. Each day, he had to make three public confessions out he and his fellow prisoners would bend forward 90 degrees, confess, and ask for leniency. A wood board inscribed with his crimes hung around his neck by a razor-thin wire that cut into the back of his neck, leaving thin red scars. A slip of tongue during confessions would warrant a whipping from Red Guards.
For Grandpa Yao, the physical abuse was harder to take than humiliation. After Red Guards beat him in a hotel room, he saw stars and barely remained conscious. Later, when he was exiled to the countryside for hard labor, beatings were routine. His body was frequently covered in red and green bruises. Once he was hit so hard with a spade that the handle broke. A Red Guard once even ordered the prisoners to beat each other up. As some prisoners started throwing fists at their former colleagues, my grandfather retorted angrily, “Aren’t you already accusing me of a crime? Isn’t beating people a crime added to a crime?” The man suddenly found himself tongue tied, so he dropped the demand.
Hard labor was not just physically trying but outright dangerous. Grandpa Yao worked on roofs without any protection, barely escaped a tractor accident, and toiled in a petroleum factory in the dead of winter during the Chinese New Year holiday, a time for celebration and family reunion. “If I succumbed,” my grandfather concluded, “it would have been no big deal, and maybe some would even have framed it as suicide.”
Even as he recounts these horrors of the Cultural Revolution on his blog, my grandfather still plays “red songs” – Communist-era ditties praising Mao — on his computer every day, and writes other entries extolling the ruling Communist Party. At first, I couldn’t understand this. Didn’t Mao and the party subject him to beatings and humiliation during the Cultural Revolution? Didn’t they steal years of his life away by forcing him into hard labor in the countryside? To understand Grandpa Yao’s almost conciliatory attitude towards this dark history, I set out to learn more about his life.
What I learned was that the Cultural Revolution was only one in a long series of national tragedies that Grandpa Yao personally experienced. He was born in 1930. The next year, Manchuria fell to the Japanese. China’s war against the Japanese invasion began in July 1937, two years before Hitler and Stalin divided up Poland. As Japanese forces swept into southern China Grandpa Yao was forced to flee his hometown of Hangzhou with his family, becoming war refugees. They faced hazards almost unheard of in China today. He lost his mother to typhus and younger sister to fatigue, and buried them in unmarked graves. Even my grandfather almost succumbed to exhaustion on multiple occasions. By the time fighting ended in 1945, 15 to 20 million of his countrymen had perished.
But the bloodshed wasn’t over. The alliance between Chinese Communists and Nationalists soon fell apart, plunging the country once again into civil war, and Grandpa Yao took sides. His older brother, a prominent underground Communist, cultivated my grandfather’s communist ideals. In July 1947, at the height of the conflict, my grandfather went up north to Nationalist-controlled Beijing, where he enrolled in college but was soon expelled for repeatedly publishing anti-Nationalist propaganda and starting his own library with collections of Communist pamphlets. Upheaval continued to occupy my grandfather’s late teens until Mao and the Communist Party declared victory on October 1, 1949. It would have been impossible to imagine then that, less than 20 years later, my grandfather would be again made to suffer.
Chinese society today shows hardly any traces of the circumstances that shaped my grandfather’s worldview. The China I know is fully transformed from the war, disease, and chaos that characterized China’s path through Japanese invasion, civil war, and the Cultural Revolution. My parents are among China’s growing middle class, living in spacious apartments, drinking Starbucks, and shopping online. Many in my generation receive such good education in China that we are able to study in world-class universities abroad. We lead lives my grandparents could scarcely have imagined. They feel not just fortun they are grateful for what China has become for their children and grandchildren.
It’s gratitude that I sense in Grandpa Yao when he refuses to pity himself for the abuse he experienced during the Cultural Revolution. But it’s more than that too. For my grandfather’s generation, communist ideals had offered a convincing alternative to the darkness and despair of their earlier lives. Those ideals inspired millions of Chinese like my grandparents to devote themselves to building a brighter future. Those loyal to the Communist Party were initially rewarded, before Mao’s political campaigns betrayed them. But Grandpa Yao, just like many other loyal party members who suffered under Mao, simply refuses to believe that the cause to which he committed so much turned out to be an illusion. He believes, instead, that individuals – but not Mao — subverted communist ideals for personal power and gain.
Though young Chinese still receive communist indoctrination in school, we have never shared in the miseries of our grandparents’ childhoods. We can no longer understand exactly why those ideals matter or how they are relevant to the materialistic society that China has become.
Sometimes, though, despite the distance in age and experience that separates us, I see in my grandfather echoes of the same questions about our shared history that trouble me. “I still wonder,” Grandpa Yao said of those who made his life miserable in the name of Mao’s revolution, “why they picked up the same inhumane tactics as the Japanese and the Nationalists to torture us.” I see it as cautionary tale – even ideas we believe in can betray us, if the power to wield them remains unchecked and unlimited. I hope that my generation, as we gradually rise in the ranks of our nation’s leadership, can remember the lessons of our grandparents.
China Photos/Getty Images
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My husband Mike hated Christmas. He didn’t hate the true meaning of &&&&36&&&&, but the commercial aspects (方面) of it. Knowing he felt this &&&&&&&&37&&&&, I decided one year to&&&&38__the usual shirts, sweaters, ties and so on. I reached for something &&&&39_just for Mike. The idea came in an unusual way.    Our son Kevin, who was 12 that year, was&&&&_40__at the junior level at the school he attended and shortly before Christmas, there was a non-league match_&&&&41&&&&a team sponsored(资助) by a church.    These youngsters from the church, dressed in shoes so&&&&&&&&42_&&&&that shoestrings(鞋带) seemed to be the only thing holding them together,&&&&_43_&&&&our son’s team were in their beautiful new wrestling shoes.    As the match began, I was&&&&_44_&&&&to see that the other team was wrestling without a helmet(头盔) designed to_&&&&45&&&&a wrestler’s head. They clearly could not&&&&_46_&&&& them. Well, our son’s team ended up defeating them and took every weight class. But as the other team &&&&&&&&47__up from the mat(垫子), they walked around with a sense of pride that couldn’t admit&&&&_48_&&&&.    Mike, seated beside me, shook his head&&&&_49_&&&&, “I wish just one of them could have won,” he said. “They have a lot of potential(潜力), but&&&&_50_&&&&like this could take the heart right out of them.” Mike loved__51&&&&_and he knew them, having coached little league football, baseball. That’s when the &&&&52_&&&&for his present came. That afternoon, I went to a local sporting goods store and _&&&&53&&&&&&&&some wrestling helmets and shoes and sent them to the church.    On Christmas Eve, I placed the envelope on the tree, the note inside telling Mike what I had done and that this was his_&&&&54_&&&&from me. His smile was the&&&&55_&&&& thing about Christmas that year. 【小题1】A.the giftB.an envelopeC.the wrestling D.Christmas【小题2】A.wayB.joyC.musicD.fear【小题3】A.buyB.avoid  C.wearD.give【小题4】A.beautifulB.expensive C.specialD.new【小题5】A.wrestlingB.weightliftingC.shootingD.boxing【小题6】A.atB.against   C.forD.on【小题7】A.bigB.small  C.wornD.cheap【小题8】A.becauseB.if  C.soD.while【小题9】A.frightenedB.disappointedC.pleasedD.surprised【小题10】A.coverB.surround   C.protectD.hide【小题11】A.carryB.afford  C.designD.expect【小题12】A.gotB.dressed    C.turnedD.cheered【小题13】A.defeatB.evidence   C.chargeD.mistake【小题14】A.gentlyB.sadly  C.nervouslyD.gladly【小题15】A.runningB.winning   C.losingD.shaking【小题16】A.workmatesB.parents    C.friendsD.kids【小题17】A.invitationB.idea   C.careD.money【小题18】A.returnB.sold   C.boughtD.left【小题19】A.giftB.warning    C.praiseD.love【小题20】A.brightestB.funniest C.ugliestD.darkestD&
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题型:解答题&|&来源:2013-福建长泰县第二中学高二下学期第二次月考英语题
分析与解答
习题“My husband Mike hated Christmas. He didn’t hate the true meaning of ____36____, but the commercial aspect...”的分析与解答如下所示:
本文叙述了作者的丈夫迈克不憎恨圣诞节本身的意义,但他讨厌圣诞节被商业化了,人们大把大把地花钱;疯狂地瓜分礼物,把一切都抛在脑后。正是因为知道他的这种感受,于是有一年作者决定打破常规(平时都送些衬衣呀、毛衣或是领带等礼物)。为迈克准备了一些特别的东西。她到本地的一家运动用品商店买了摔跤专用的头盔和鞋子,并以匿名的形式把礼物送到了本市的教会。作者把一个信封挂在圣诞树上,里面写着她做的事情,并告诉迈克这是她送给他的礼物。他的笑容是那年圣诞节最明亮的饰物,多少年来那笑容还一直延续着。【小题1】考查名词及上下文的呼应。the gift礼物; an envelope信封; the wrestling摔跤; Christmas圣诞节。根据My husband Mike hated Christmas可知应该选D。【小题2】考查名词及上下文的呼应。way习惯,方法; joy 高兴; music音乐; fear恐惧。正是因为知道他的这种感受,于是有一年我决定打破常规,故选A。【小题3】考查动词及上下文的呼应。buy 买; avoid 避免; wear穿; give给。于是有一年我决定打破常规我为迈克准备了一些特别的东西。故选B。【小题4】考查形容词及上下文的呼应。beautiful漂亮的; expensive贵的; special特别的; new新的。我为迈克准备了一些特别的东西。故选C。【小题5】考查名词及上下文的呼应。wrestling摔跤; weightlifting举重; shooting射击; boxing拳击。那年我们的儿子凯文十二岁,在学校摔跤队的初级班里接受特别训练。故选A。【小题6】考查介词及上下文的呼应。against对抗 ;圣诞节前夕,学校安排了一场非联赛的摔跤比赛,对手是本市教会资助的一只队伍,他们大部分队员都是黑人。故选B。【小题7】考查形容词及上下文的呼应。big大的; small小的; worn用旧的; cheap便宜的。这些小伙子们穿着破烂不堪的运动鞋,唯一能够绑在脚上的仿佛只有那条鞋带。故选C。【小题8】考查连词及上下文的呼应。because因为; if 如果; so 因此; while而,既然。而与之形成鲜明对比的是我们的孩子,他们身披金蓝相间的制服,脚蹬崭新的摔跤鞋,显得分外耀眼。故选D。【小题9】考查形容词及上下文的呼应。frightened害怕的; disappointed失望的; pleased高兴的; surprised吃惊的。比赛开始了,我惊异地发现对方选手在摔跤的时候没有带专业头盔,故选D。【小题10】考查动词及上下文的呼应。cover 包括; surround包围; protect 保护;&&&&&& hide躲藏。只有一种好象质地很薄的帽子保护着选手的耳朵。故选C。【小题11】考查动词及上下文的呼应。carry搬运; afford 负担得起; design 设计;&&&&&&& expect期待。很清楚他们买不起头盔,故选B。【小题12】考查动词及上下文的呼应。get up 站起; dress up打扮; turn up 出现;&&&&&& cheer up使振奋。比赛结束了,他们队的每个男孩从地毯上爬起来,故选A。【小题13】考查名词及上下文的呼应。defeat失败; evidence 证据; charge费用,&&&&&&&& mistake错误。在溃败的失意中昂首阔步装出一副获胜的样子,故选A。【小题14】考查副词及上下文的呼应。gently轻轻地; sadly伤心地; nervously紧张地; gladly高兴地。坐在我身旁的迈克伤心地摇摇头说道,故选B。【小题15】考查动名词及上下文的呼应。running跑; winning 赢; losing 失去; shaking握手。但是就这样输掉了比赛就等于输掉了他们的信心,故选C。【小题16】考查名词及上下文的呼应。workmates同事; parents父母; friends 朋友;&&&&&& kids孩子。迈克爱孩子——所有的孩子。故选D。【小题17】考查名词及上下文的呼应。invitation邀请; idea 想法; care 关怀;&&&&&&&&&money钱。而我的灵感也由此而发。故选B。【小题18】考查动词及上下文的呼应。return返回; sold卖; buy买; leave离开。我就到本地的一家运动用品商店买了摔跤专用的头盔和鞋子,故选C。【小题19】考查名词及上下文的呼应。gift礼物; warning警告; praise 赞扬; love爱。并告诉迈克这是我送给他的礼物。故选A。【小题20】考查形容词及上下文的呼应。brightest最亮的; funniest最逗得; ugliest最丑的; darkest最黑的。他的笑容是那年圣诞节最明亮的饰物,故选A。
依据首句提供的启示,快速阅读文章,从整体感知全文,掌握大意。这是第一遍阅读,读时要跳过空格,不看选项,困难肯定是有的,不懂之处不要停留,力求把注意力集中在文章的主线上。要注意文中的暗示,努力找出关键词。如果是故事性文章,关键词就是时间、地点和人物。抓住了关键词就抓住了故事的线索,进而理解全文。然后根据文章的大意进行第二遍阅读,此时可边阅读边粗选答案,这是为了尽量减少空格,帮助更透彻地理解全文。
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My husband Mike hated Christmas. He didn’t hate the true meaning of ____36____, but the commercial a...
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欢迎来到乐乐题库,查看习题“My husband Mike hated Christmas. He didn’t hate the true meaning of ____36____, but the commercial aspects (方面) of it. Knowing he felt this ________37____, I decided one year to____38__the usual shirts, sweaters, ties and so on. I reached for something ____39_just for Mike. The idea came in an unusual way.    Our son Kevin, who was 12 that year, was_____40__at the junior level at the school he attended and shortly before Christmas, there was a non-league match_____41____a team sponsored(资助) by a church.    These youngsters from the church, dressed in shoes so________42_____that shoestrings(鞋带) seemed to be the only thing holding them together,_____43_____our son’s team were in their beautiful new wrestling shoes.    As the match began, I was_____44_____to see that the other team was wrestling without a helmet(头盔) designed to_____45____a wrestler’s head. They clearly could not_____46_____ them. Well, our son’s team ended up defeating them and took every weight class. But as the other team ________47__up from the mat(垫子), they walked around with a sense of pride that couldn’t admit_____48_____.    Mike, seated beside me, shook his head_____49_____, “I wish just one of them could have won,” he said. “They have a lot of potential(潜力), but_____50_____like this could take the heart right out of them.” Mike loved__51_____and he knew them, having coached little league football, baseball. That’s when the ____52_____for his present came. That afternoon, I went to a local sporting goods store and _____53________some wrestling helmets and shoes and sent them to the church.    On Christmas Eve, I placed the envelope on the tree, the note inside telling Mike what I had done and that this was his_____54_____from me. His smile was the____55_____ thing about Christmas that year. 【小题1】A.the giftB.an envelopeC.the wrestling D.Christmas【小题2】A.wayB.joyC.musicD.fear【小题3】A.buyB.avoid  C.wearD.give【小题4】A.beautifulB.expensive C.specialD.new【小题5】A.wrestlingB.weightliftingC.shootingD.boxing【小题6】A.atB.against   C.forD.on【小题7】A.bigB.small  C.wornD.cheap【小题8】A.becauseB.if  C.soD.while【小题9】A.frightenedB.disappointedC.pleasedD.surprised【小题10】A.coverB.surround   C.protectD.hide【小题11】A.carryB.afford  C.designD.expect【小题12】A.gotB.dressed    C.turnedD.cheered【小题13】A.defeatB.evidence   C.chargeD.mistake【小题14】A.gentlyB.sadly  C.nervouslyD.gladly【小题15】A.runningB.winning   C.losingD.shaking【小题16】A.workmatesB.parents    C.friendsD.kids【小题17】A.invitationB.idea   C.careD.money【小题18】A.returnB.sold   C.boughtD.left【小题19】A.giftB.warning    C.praiseD.love【小题20】A.brightestB.funniest C.ugliestD.darkest”的答案、考点梳理,并查找与习题“My husband Mike hated Christmas. He didn’t hate the true meaning of ____36____, but the commercial aspects (方面) of it. Knowing he felt this ________37____, I decided one year to____38__the usual shirts, sweaters, ties and so on. I reached for something ____39_just for Mike. The idea came in an unusual way.    Our son Kevin, who was 12 that year, was_____40__at the junior level at the school he attended and shortly before Christmas, there was a non-league match_____41____a team sponsored(资助) by a church.    These youngsters from the church, dressed in shoes so________42_____that shoestrings(鞋带) seemed to be the only thing holding them together,_____43_____our son’s team were in their beautiful new wrestling shoes.    As the match began, I was_____44_____to see that the other team was wrestling without a helmet(头盔) designed to_____45____a wrestler’s head. They clearly could not_____46_____ them. Well, our son’s team ended up defeating them and took every weight class. But as the other team ________47__up from the mat(垫子), they walked around with a sense of pride that couldn’t admit_____48_____.    Mike, seated beside me, shook his head_____49_____, “I wish just one of them could have won,” he said. “They have a lot of potential(潜力), but_____50_____like this could take the heart right out of them.” Mike loved__51_____and he knew them, having coached little league football, baseball. That’s when the ____52_____for his present came. That afternoon, I went to a local sporting goods store and _____53________some wrestling helmets and shoes and sent them to the church.    On Christmas Eve, I placed the envelope on the tree, the note inside telling Mike what I had done and that this was his_____54_____from me. His smile was the____55_____ thing about Christmas that year. 【小题1】A.the giftB.an envelopeC.the wrestling D.Christmas【小题2】A.wayB.joyC.musicD.fear【小题3】A.buyB.avoid  C.wearD.give【小题4】A.beautifulB.expensive C.specialD.new【小题5】A.wrestlingB.weightliftingC.shootingD.boxing【小题6】A.atB.against   C.forD.on【小题7】A.bigB.small  C.wornD.cheap【小题8】A.becauseB.if  C.soD.while【小题9】A.frightenedB.disappointedC.pleasedD.surprised【小题10】A.coverB.surround   C.protectD.hide【小题11】A.carryB.afford  C.designD.expect【小题12】A.gotB.dressed    C.turnedD.cheered【小题13】A.defeatB.evidence   C.chargeD.mistake【小题14】A.gentlyB.sadly  C.nervouslyD.gladly【小题15】A.runningB.winning   C.losingD.shaking【小题16】A.workmatesB.parents    C.friendsD.kids【小题17】A.invitationB.idea   C.careD.money【小题18】A.returnB.sold   C.boughtD.left【小题19】A.giftB.warning    C.praiseD.love【小题20】A.brightestB.funniest C.ugliestD.darkest”相似的习题。

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