返回

高中三年级英语

首页
  • 阅读理解
    阅读理解。

                                                                         A Gift of God
         One fine summer morning-it was the beginning of harvest, I remember-Mr. Earnshaw came
    down stairs, dressed for a journey; after he had told Joseph what was to be done during the day,
    he turned to Hindley and Cathy, and me-for I sat eating my porridge with them-and speaking to
    his son, he said:
        "Now, I'm going to Liverpool today. What shall I bring you? You may choose what you like;
    only small things, for I shall walk there and back; sixty miles each way, that is a long time!"
         Hindley named a fiddle (a kind of violin), and then he asked Miss Cathy. She was hardly six
    years old, but she could ride any horse in the stable. She chose a whip(鞭子).He did not forget
    me; for he had a kind heart, though he was rather serious sometimes. He promised to bring me
    a pocketful of apples and pears. Then he kissed his children good-bye and set off.
         The three days of his absence seemed a long while to us all. Mrs. Earnshaw expected him by
    supper-time on the third evening. She put off the meal hour after hour. There were no signs of his
    coming, however. About eleven o'clock the door opened and in stepped the master. He threw
    himself into a chair, laughing and groaning, and told them all to stand off, for he was nearly killed.
    He would never again have another such walk for whatever reasons.
         Opening his great coat, which he held bundled up in his arms, he said: "See here, wife. I was
    never so beaten with anything in my life. But you must take it as a gift of God though it's as dark
    almost as if it came from the devil."
         We crowded round him. And over Miss Cathy's head, I had a look at a dirty, ragged, black-haired
    child-big enough both to walk and talk-yet, when it was set on its feet, it only stared round, and
    repeated over and over again some strange words that nobody could understand. I was frightened,
    and Mrs. Earnshaw was ready to throw it out of doors. She did get angry, asking why he should have
    brought that gipsy child into the house when they had their own kids to feed and look after? What he
    meant to do with it?
       The master tried to explain the matter though he was really half dead with tiredness. All that I could
    make out, among her scolding, was a story of his seeing it starving, and homeless, and almost dumb
    (哑的) in the streets of Liverpool where he picked it up and inquired for its owner. But not a person
    knew to whom it belonged. He said that as both his money and time was limited, he thought it better
    to take it home with him at once than run into vain expenses there. Anyway he was determined he
    would not leave it as he found it.
       Well, finally Mrs. Earnshaw calmed down, and Mr. Earnshaw told me to wash it, give it clean things,
    and let it sleep with the children.
        Hindley and Cathy then began searching their father's pockets for the presents he had promised
    them. But when Hindley drew out what had been a fiddle, crushed (压坏) to pieces in the great coat,
    he cried loudly. And Cathy, when she learned her father had lost her whip in attending on the stranger,
    showed her feeling by spitting at the gipsy child, earning herself a sound blow from Mr. Earnshaw to
     teach her cleaner manners.
                                                                   (Adapted from Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte) 


    1. When did Mr. Earnshaw return home from Liverpool?
    A. By supper time.
    B. An hour after the meal time.
    C. When it was getting dark.
    D. Not until it was nearly midnight.
    2. Mr. Earnshaw brought the gipsy child back home for the following reasons except that ______  .
    A. he couldn't find the parents of the starving child.
    B. he found that the starving child was a dumb boy.
    C. he couldn't afford to stay longer to look for the child's parents.
    D. he couldn't leave the starving child without anyone caring for it.
    3. It can be inferred from the passage that           .
    A. The title "A Gift of God" refers to something he bought in Liverpool.
    B. Cathy was very disappointed and she turned her anger at her father.
    C. Mrs. Earnshaw agreed to keep the gipsy child in spite of everything.
    D. Hindley was good-humoured even if he didn't get his present.
    本题信息:2012年江苏同步题英语阅读理解难度较难 来源:谢雪莲
  • 本题答案
    查看答案
本试题 “阅读理解。 A Gift of God One fine summer morning-it was the beginning of harvest, I remember-Mr. Earnshaw camedown stairs, dressed for a journey; a...” 主要考查您对

故事类阅读

等考点的理解。关于这些考点您可以点击下面的选项卡查看详细档案。
  • 故事类阅读

故事类阅读概念:

这类文章一般描述的是某一件具体事情的发生发展或结局,有人物、时间、地点和事件。命题往往从故事的情节、人物或事件的之间的关系、作者的态度及意图、故事前因和后果的推测等方面着手,考查学生对细节的辨认能力以及推理判断能力。


故事类阅读应试技巧:

1、抓住文章的6个要素:
阅读时要学会从事情本身的发展去理解故事情节而不要只看事件在文中出现的先后顺序。因此,无论是顺叙还是倒叙,阅读此类文章时,必须要找到它结构中的5个W(when, where, who, why, what)和1个H(how),不过不是每篇都会完整地交待六个要素。毫无疑问,寻出这些元素是能够正确快速解题的一个先决条件。
2、注意作者的议论和抒情:
高考英语阅读理解故事类文章常伴随着作者思想情感的流露和表达,因此议论和抒情往往夹杂其中。行文时或按事情发生发展的先后时间进行或按事情发生发展的地点来转换,也可能按事情发展的阶段来布局。在引出话题,讲完一件事情后,作者往往会表达个人感悟或提出建议等。这些体现作者观点或思想的语句在阅读时可以划线,它们往往体现文章中心或者写作意图,属于必考点,所以要仔细体会。
3、结合前两点归纳文章中心,把握作者态度:
故事类文章是通过记叙一件事来表达中心思想的,它是文章的灵魂。归纳文章中心思想时,尤其要分析文章的结尾,因为很多文章卒章显志,用简短的议论、抒情揭示文章中心;文章中议论抒情的句子往往与中心密切相关;也有的文章需要在结合概括各段大意的基础上归纳中心。另外,叙述一件事必有其目的,或阐明某一观点,或赞美某种品德,或抨击某种陋习,这就要求我们在阅读时,通过对细节(第1点中的六要素)的理解,把握作者的态度。
4、有章有据进行解题判断:
分析文章,归纳主题,属于分析、概括、综合的表述能力的考查。切忌脱离文章,架空分析,一定让分析在文章中有依据。