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1、2023年甘肃省定西地区通渭县考研英语一临考冲刺试卷Section I Use of EnglishDirections:Read the following text. Choose the best word(s) for each numbered blank and mark A, B, C or D on the ANSWER SHEET. (10 points)阅读下面短文,从短文后所给各题的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出可以填入空白处的最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑。 Many years ago, I owned a service station and roadhou
2、se on the main road between Melbourne and Adelaide.One very cold, wet night at about 3:30 a.m., there was a 1 on the front door of our house. A young man, wet from 2 to toe, explained that he had 3 out of petrol about 30 km up the road. He had left his pregnant(怀孕的)wife and his two children 4 at the
3、 car and said that he would hitchhike(搭便车)back.Once I had 5 a can with petrol, I took him back to his car where his two-year-old and four-year-old children were both 6 , saying that they were cold. Once the car had started, I suggested that he 7 me back.Before leaving, I had turned the heater 8 in t
4、he roadhouse, so that when we went in, it was nice and 9 While the little ones played and ran 10 , I prepared bread and butter for the children, and hot chocolate for the 11 It was about 5 a. m. before they 12 . The young fellow asked me how much he 13 me and I told him that thepetrol pump(加油泵)had 1
5、4 $ 15. He offered to pay“call-out fee”, but I wouldnt accept it.About a month later, I received a 15 from interstate, a large bus company that we bad been trying to 16 to stop off at our roadhouse for a long time, It 17 out that the young fellow I had helped was its general manager, the most 18 per
6、son in the company.In his letter, he thanked me again and 19 me that, from then on, all their buses would stop at my service station, In this 20 , a little bit of kindness was rewarded with a huge amount of benefits.1、AkickBhitCbeatDknock2、AfingerBshoulderCheadDhand3、AdrivenBusedCcomeDrun4、AawayBbeh
7、indCoverDout5、AsuppliedBpouredCequippedDfilled6、AsleepingBcryingCquarrellingDfighting7、AallowBringCleadDfollow8、AonBoffCinDover9、AheatBhotCwarmDattractive10、AaroundBinsideCnearbyDalong11、AdriversBguestsCcustomersDadults12、AleftBarrivedCateDdisappeared13、AgaveBpaidCowedDoffered14、AappearedBexhibitedC
8、calculatedDshown15、AcallBletterCcheckDnotice16、AgetBforceCrequireDhope17、ApointedBturnedCworkedDfound18、AgenerousBsuccessfulCseriousDpowerful19、ApraisedBpersuadedCinformedDconvinced20、AlessonBbusinessCaspectDcaseSection II Reading ComprehensionPart ADirections:Read the following four texts. Answer t
9、he questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on the ANSWER SHEET. (40 points)Text 1The True Story of a Young ManWhen Reginald Lindsay received a scholarship to Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia in 1967, what he wanted most was not a job with a good salary, but a chanc
10、e to be a member of Congress as a southern representative. After earning his degree at Harvard Law School in 1970, he returned to the South to practice law among the poor. “I want to help them understand what their rights are and to help them achieve them,” he said. Then he ran for political office
11、at the local and state level until he was ready to try for Congress.Reg grew up in a low-income Negro section of Birmingham, Alabama. Brought up by his grandparents after his parents were divorced while he was very young, Reg had been living through a period of far-reaching progress in race relation
12、s. In the summer of 1968 Reg himself became a good example of this progress when he became the first Negro student appointed to a special new program. The program introduced bright young students to the workings of the Georgia State government and encouraged them to seek employment there after finis
13、hing their education. “Ive been lucky,” he said. “I seem to have been in the right place at the right time.”But luck was only part of Regs story, for he made the most of opportunities that came his way. He learned to read in kindergarten and began visiting the public library regularly to borrow book
14、s. His grandparents encouraged him, though neither of them had much education, and they bought him a set of encyclopedias. “I loved those books,” he remembered. “I used to come downstairs before breakfast and read short articles. I enjoyed reading about famous men, and then I would pretend to be one
15、 of them. I guess it was partly a childish game and partly an escape. It wasnt too much fun to be a Negro when I was a kid.” While studying for his bachelors degree at Morehouse College, Reg worked on several political campaigns helping candidates get elected to government offices. At the same time he maintained a “B” average while majoring in political science.With just two more years to complete at Harvard Law School, which also gave him a scholarship, Reg made a good start on his