一、完形填空
In a narrow *hutong* in Beijing lies a small library. It is only seven square metres in size, but thousands of books are 1 in it. Unlike traditional libraries, this one doesn't require its readers to 2 the books. Instead, it encourages them to pass those books on to someone else when they've finished reading.
This library was 3 by Mr Xu, a businessman, in 2010. The idea took shape when Xu recommended books online to students, but found it 4 for them to get the books from their school libraries. So, Xu bought and 5 nearly 1,000 books in the following year. The students who received the books were very thankful. Their thank-you letters got Xu to turn his book-gifting effort into a physical space.
Xu's library might be the smallest in the world, but in another sense, it's also the biggest because its books keep 6. Once, a reader took home an English book on Chinese history. A week later, he passed it on to a neighbour. 7, the book travelled all the way abroad and ended up in Germany. "The 8 of the book is a wonder. Many wonders like this keep the culture of reading alive," Xu tells the newspaper.
Xu says he will continue this work although the library is now faced with the 9 of e-books. "This is the most 10 thing I've done in my life," he says. "I hope that the library can stay open forever."
(
B. written
C. printed
D. punished
(
B. copy
C. lend
D. buy
(
B. started
C. hidden
D. guarded
(
B. harmful
C. possible
D. hard
(
B. picked up
C. gave away
D. threw away
(
B. moving
C. falling
D. shaking
(
B. Hopefully
C. Generally
D. Amazingly
(
B. language
C. journey
D. background
(
B. truth
C. mistake
D. challenge
(
B. scary
C. common
D. meaningful
In a narrow *hutong* in Beijing lies a small library. It is only seven square metres in size, but thousands of books are 1 in it. Unlike traditional libraries, this one doesn't require its readers to 2 the books. Instead, it encourages them to pass those books on to someone else when they've finished reading.
This library was 3 by Mr Xu, a businessman, in 2010. The idea took shape when Xu recommended books online to students, but found it 4 for them to get the books from their school libraries. So, Xu bought and 5 nearly 1,000 books in the following year. The students who received the books were very thankful. Their thank-you letters got Xu to turn his book-gifting effort into a physical space.
Xu's library might be the smallest in the world, but in another sense, it's also the biggest because its books keep 6. Once, a reader took home an English book on Chinese history. A week later, he passed it on to a neighbour. 7, the book travelled all the way abroad and ended up in Germany. "The 8 of the book is a wonder. Many wonders like this keep the culture of reading alive," Xu tells the newspaper.
Xu says he will continue this work although the library is now faced with the 9 of e-books. "This is the most 10 thing I've done in my life," he says. "I hope that the library can stay open forever."
(
A
) 1. A. keptB. written
C. printed
D. punished
(
A
) 2. A. returnB. copy
C. lend
D. buy
(
B
) 3. A. lockedB. started
C. hidden
D. guarded
(
D
) 4. A. interestingB. harmful
C. possible
D. hard
(
C
) 5. A. dug upB. picked up
C. gave away
D. threw away
(
B
) 6. A. burningB. moving
C. falling
D. shaking
(
D
) 7. A. ClearlyB. Hopefully
C. Generally
D. Amazingly
(
C
) 8. A. historyB. language
C. journey
D. background
(
D
) 9. A. deathB. truth
C. mistake
D. challenge
(
D
)10. A. sillyB. scary
C. common
D. meaningful
答案
1. A
2. A
3. B
4. D
5. C
6. B
7. D
8. C
9. D
10. D
2. A
3. B
4. D
5. C
6. B
7. D
8. C
9. D
10. D
解析
翻译:
### 一、完形填空
在北京的一条狭窄胡同里,有一个小图书馆。它的面积只有七平方米,但里面存放着成千上万本书。与传统图书馆不同,这个图书馆不要求读者归还书籍。相反,它鼓励读者读完书后把书传递给其他人。
这个图书馆是由商人徐先生在2010年创办的。当徐先生在网上向学生推荐书籍,但发现他们从学校图书馆获取这些书很困难时,这个想法就形成了。于是,在接下来的一年里,徐先生购买并赠送了近1000本书。收到书的学生非常感激。他们的感谢信促使徐先生把送书的努力转化为一个实体空间。
徐先生的图书馆可能是世界上最小的,但从另一种意义上说,它也是最大的,因为它的书一直在流动。有一次,一位读者把一本关于中国历史的英文书带回家。一周后,他把书传给了邻居。令人惊讶的是,这本书一路传到了国外,最后到了德国。“这本书的旅程是一个奇迹。许多这样的奇迹让阅读文化保持活力,”徐先生告诉报纸。
徐先生说,尽管图书馆现在面临着电子书的挑战,但他会继续这项工作。“这是我一生中做过的最有意义的事情,”他说,“我希望这个图书馆能永远开放。”
### 一、完形填空
在北京的一条狭窄胡同里,有一个小图书馆。它的面积只有七平方米,但里面存放着成千上万本书。与传统图书馆不同,这个图书馆不要求读者归还书籍。相反,它鼓励读者读完书后把书传递给其他人。
这个图书馆是由商人徐先生在2010年创办的。当徐先生在网上向学生推荐书籍,但发现他们从学校图书馆获取这些书很困难时,这个想法就形成了。于是,在接下来的一年里,徐先生购买并赠送了近1000本书。收到书的学生非常感激。他们的感谢信促使徐先生把送书的努力转化为一个实体空间。
徐先生的图书馆可能是世界上最小的,但从另一种意义上说,它也是最大的,因为它的书一直在流动。有一次,一位读者把一本关于中国历史的英文书带回家。一周后,他把书传给了邻居。令人惊讶的是,这本书一路传到了国外,最后到了德国。“这本书的旅程是一个奇迹。许多这样的奇迹让阅读文化保持活力,”徐先生告诉报纸。
徐先生说,尽管图书馆现在面临着电子书的挑战,但他会继续这项工作。“这是我一生中做过的最有意义的事情,”他说,“我希望这个图书馆能永远开放。”
登录