1、完形填空专项练习12篇-必修第三册Unit1Knowing me, Knowing you第一篇An old man lived in a nice farmhouse with a large garden. He was seen tending his flowers (1) Because of his hard work and care, many colorful flowers blossomed (开花) all the year round. The garden was so beautiful that it attracted every passer-by. One
2、 day a young painter (2) the old mans garden. He looked at the garden, (3) how happy he could be if he lived in such a beautiful place. Then he found the old man was (4) . He asked, Why are you busy tending these flowers you cannot see? The blind man smiled, I can tell you (5) reasons. First, I was
3、a(n) (6) when I was young, and Im really familiar with this job. Second, (7) I cant see these flowers, I can (8) them. Third, I can smell the sweetness of them. As for the last one, thats you. Me? But you dont know me, replied the painter. Its (9) that I dont know you. The beauty of my garden will g
4、et everyone into a good (10) .At the same time, it also gives a (11) to me to have a word with you here and to (12) the happiness these flowers have brought us. The blind man grows flowers in his heart. Though he (13) see the beauty hes created, yet every flower has (14) with which they can see the
5、(15) of the mans heart. (1)Aat presentBall the timeCright awayDas usual(2)Awent outBwent throughCwent byDwent over(3)ApicturingBhopingCbelievingDasking(4)AdeafBgenerousCblindDfoolish(5)AoneBtwoCthreeDfour(6)ApainterBgardenerCsailorDartist(7)AunlessBalthoughCuntilDsince(8)AtouchBadvertiseCsellDtaste(
6、9)AtrueBpitifulCmagicalDimpossible(10)AstageBplaceCmoodDfuture(11)AchangeBchanceCchoiceDcharge(12)AenjoyBremoveCacceptDmean(13)Atries toBdeserves toCmanages toDfails to(14)AnosesBearsCeyesDmouths(15)AcrueltyBselfishnessCkindnessDsadness第二篇While driving home today, I passed a man who was holding a si
7、gn, begging for donations. I had two dollars in my wallet. I decided that I was not going to give (1) money was so tight right now.Then, I felt it (2) not to give, and therefore I decided to give him half of what I had. I rolled down my window and (3) him one dollar. He said, God bless you! and I sa
8、id, You too. It was not a full (4) .As I (5) away, I wished that I had spoken more to him, and I wished that I had given him all that I had, but instead I was too (6) to give more of myself.On my way home, I wondered why helping others didnt make me happy. I wondered if I had (7) a powerful universa
9、l lawthe law of giving from my heart instead of my head. Perhaps just (8) not giving it all from my heart, I had blocked (阻塞) what I need to (9) right now.I did not feel guilty, (10) I did feel sad in my heart over my (11) . My giving was from my head, not my heart. Now I (12) have the other dollar
10、in my wallet. I hope that I will have a (13) soon to give it all.It is true that all of us should have courage to give all that we have. Though we do (14) money to buy our own children food and clothes, Christmas presents, socks, toilet paper and so on, we are (15) to try our best to help those in n
11、eed of our help.(1)AifBthoughCwhenDbecause(2)AnecessaryBnormalCunimportantDwrong(3)AshowedBlentChandedDowed(4)AdealBexchangeCbusinessDgreeting(5)AwalkedBturnedCranDdrove(6)ApleasedBsureCafraidDbusy(7)ApassedBignoredCrememberedDpracticed(8)AbyBafterCuponDover(9)AadmitBreceiveCblameDavoid(10)AandBsoCo
12、rDbut(11)AchoiceBfailureCdifficultyDfear(12)AalreadyBevenCstillDalmost(13)AwayBchanceCrightDduty(14)AneedBloseCearnDborrow(15)ApreparedBforcedCsupposedDforbiddenUnit2 Making a differenceTo Huang Qin, a caregiver for the elderly, having a mastery of skills is not enough to become a good caregiverone
13、also needs to have a passion for the job and the ability to (1) . Huang started her (2) as a caregiver at the No. 2 Shanghai Social Welfare House in 1992. She (3) her second day at work: a resident (4) seizures (癫痫) and hit his head against the corner of a table. I was so (5) that I just froze, she
14、says. Our team leader later told me about some of the early warning (6) that led to the occurrence of the seizures. At that moment I understood being a caregiver is also about having (7) skills. Her (8) soon led her to invent care-giving (9) that have made the lives of the elderly in her care better
15、. One of the first people she (10) was an 89-year-old resident. Because of a stroke, she was never able to (11) her fingers by herself and therefore, was (12) getting skin infections on her hand whenever the weather was wet. Inspired by a claw-like weapon she (13) while watching a film, Huang used e
16、lastic (有弹性的) cotton cloth to (14) a tool, allowing the patient to keep her hands unclenched (松开的). These innovations greatly improve the (15) of life for the seniors. (1)AchangeBinnovateCintroduceDinfluence(2)AdreamBcareerCvolunteerDstudy(3)AreflectedBrecognisedCrecalledDmemorised(4)Asuffered from
17、Bwent throughCdied ofDran across(5)AworriedBfrightenedCconcernedDdepressed(6)AsignalsBgesturesCsignsDevidence(7)Amanagement BsocialCprofessionalDcommunication(8)ApersonalityBcreativityCprofessionDattention(9)AtreatmentBmedicineCmachinesDtools(10)AhelpedBsavedCcuredDrescued(11)AopenBexpandCextendDfol
18、d(12)AfrequentlyBsuddenlyCgraduallyDgenerally(13)Asearched for Bmet withCcame acrossDfound out(14)AcarryBcreateCcontrolDwork(15)Ameaning BclassCvalueDquality第二篇Clara Daly was sitting on an Alaska Airlines flight from Boston to Los Angeles. Then a flight attendant asked an urgent question over the lo
19、udspeaker: Does anyone on board know American Sign Language?Clara, at the time, (1) the call button. The flight attendant came by and explained the (2) . We have a passenger on the plane whos blind and deaf, she said. The passenger seemed to want something, (3) he was traveling alone and the flight
20、attendants couldnt understand what he needed.Clara had been (4) ASL for the past year and knew shed be able to finger spell into the mans palm. So she untied her seat belt, walked (5) the front of the plane, and knelt by the seat of Tim Cook, then gently taking his (6) , she signed, How are you? Are
21、 you OK? Cook asked for some water. When it (7) , Clara returned to her seat. The flight attendant (8) again a bit later because he wanted to know the time. On her third (9) , she stopped and stayed for a while. He didnt need anything. He was (10) and wanted to talk, Clara said. So for the next hour
22、, thats (11) they did. She talked about her family and her plans for the future. Cook told Clara how he had (12) become blind over time and (13) stories of his days as a traveling salesman. Even though he couldnt see her, she looked attentively at his face with such (14) , a passenger reported. Clar
23、a was (15) , a flight attendant told Alaska Airlines in a blog interview. You could tell Cook was very excited to have someone he could speak to, and she was such an angel. And Cook said it was the best trip hed ever had.(1)ApressedBreplacedCpassedDraised(2)ApositionBconversationCflightDsituation(3)
24、AbutBandCorDhowever(4)AinventingBstudyingCteachingDresearching(5)AaboveBonCinDtoward(6)AarmBfootChandDleg(7)AarrangedBarrivedCreachedDreflected(8)Acame byBwent downCcame outDwent through(9)AjourneyBvisitCvoyageDlabour(10)ArelievedBgratefulClonelyDfree(11)AwhyBhowCwhichDwhat(12)AshortlyBgraduallyCoff
25、iciallyDeventually(13)AsharedBprovidedCcreatedDobserved(14)ApolitenessBkindnessCsadnessDwitness(15)AchallengingBconfusingCamusingDamazingUnit3 The world of scienceMost of us go through some hardships in life. But few things match the (1) brought upon people by the genocide (种族灭绝) of Jews during Worl
26、d War II and its still (2) people nowadays. Luckily, todays story has a happy (3) for two men and their families. The two cousins (4) got to meet after being separated 75 years ago during the holocaust (大屠杀).Morris and Simon were best friends as kids (5) the Nazis invaded their country Romania in 19
27、40. However, their families lost (6) as they didnt flee the country together. Both grew up believing the other died. Until some time ago their children (7) the two families on Facebook.Morris niece came across Simons daughter while (8) for relatives online only to find out that Simon is (9) in the U
28、K. Morris settles in Israel. It took some time but they organized a (10) for the two long-lost men in Tel Aviv, Israel. Someone recorded a video of this emotional meeting and (11) it online, leaving people all over the world (12) . (13) the fact that both men are in their 80s, they plan to keep in t
29、ouch and see each other often, reconstructing the beautiful (14) they had as children. And it will surely not (15) with time.(1)AgainsBembarrassmentCsufferingsDhope(2)AencouragingBreachingCleadingDaffecting(3)AendingBplotCbackgroundDdesign(4)AhurriedlyBeventuallyCsuddenlyDunwillingly(5)AsinceBbefore
30、CbutDthough(6)AcontactBrelationCnewsDapproach(7)AfoundBrespondedCcalledDreconnected(8)AsearchingBaskingChopingDwaiting(9)AhappyBsociableCaliveDsafe(10)ApartyBdinnerCreunionDtravel(11)AmailedBsharedCdonatedDsupplied(12)Ain silenceBin doubtCin panicDin tears(13)ADespiteBBeyondCThoughDIn case of(14)Awi
31、shesBunderstandingCfriendshipDideas(15)ApassBcomeCshowDdecline第二篇While in the army there was nothing I dislike so much as the map reading course, for the simple reason that I always feel (1) even with a map in my hand. For weeks I had (2) awake at night thinking of the practical (3) I would have to
32、face at the end of the course. At last, the day arrived. It was my responsibility to (4) a small group of soldiers back to camp from the middle of (5) . We were driven out in a closed truck and (6) in a ploughed (犁地) field with (7) to get back to camp as quickly as possible. Well knowing my weakness
33、, the soldiers smiled as they saw me (8) the map and they made all sorts of helpful suggestions. I said that we would (9) east. After walking for over an hour we came to a wide stream. Hopelessly, we sat down in the cool (10) and I felt like (11) the map into the water. Fifteen minutes later, a boat
34、 passed and I asked the boatman if he could give us a (12) to the nearest village. I (13) that we had been out for a walk and (14) got lost. Not long afterwards, we (15) that boat and, following the boatmans instructions, took a bus into the village and got back to camp. (1)AexcitedBstupidCblindDlos
35、t(2)AsufferedBlainCsleptDlaid(3)AexperienceBcourseCtestDmarch(4)AleadBdriveChelpDwatch(5)AvillageBdowntownCnowhereDforest(6)AleftBworkedCfoughtDcamped(7)AsuggestionsBdirectionsCinformationDinstructions(8)Alooking atBfolding upCpicking upDputting on(9)AheadBpointCfindDguide(10)AtentBgroundCcoastDshad
36、e(11)AtearingBthrowingCstrikingDdestroying(12)AliftBrouteCfavourDservice(13)AdeclaredBpretendedCadmittedDdescribed(14)AaltogetherBalmostCpossibleDsomehow(15)Atook offBgot onCgot offDgave upUnit4 Amazing artJust because a scientist puts a GPS tracking collar on a wild polar bear does not mean the ani
37、mal will obligingly keep it on. (1) , these huge collars are purposefully loose. If one becomes annoying, a bear can (2) it. But scientists have now found a way to use (3) from the discarded(丢弃的)devices. These dropped collars (4) would have been considered garbage data, says Natasha Klappstein, a po
38、lar bear researcher at the University of Alberta. She and her colleagues instead used (5) from such collars, left on sea ice in Canadas Hudson Bay, to track the ice itself. For their study, published in June in The Cryosphere, the researchers identified twenty collars that transmitted movement data
39、in line with ice drift rather than polar bear (6) between 2005 and 2015. The resulting records of how melting ice typically drifts in Hudson Bay are unique. There are no easily (7) on-the-ground sensors, and satellite observations often cannot accurately capture the motion of small ice sheets. The t
40、eam (8) the discarded collars movements with widely used ice-drift modeling data from the U. S. National Snow and Ice Data Center(NSIDC). Collar data indicated that the NSIDC model underestimates the speed at which ice moves around in Hudson Bay-as well as the overall (9) of drift. Over the course o
41、f several months, the model could drift away from an ice sheets location by a few hundred kilometers, the researchers say. This means the bears may be working harder, when moving against the direction of the ice, than scientists had (10) : Since were underestimating the speed of drift, were likely u
42、nderestimating the energetic effort of polar bears, says Natasha Klappstein. The research reveals (11) insight into how highly mobile ice moves. As melting increases in the coming years, such ice will likely become more (12) farther north, in the central Artic. Scientists had known NSIDC data could
43、underestimate drift speeds, but any time we can find a data (13) , it is a good thing. Plus, such data could improve predictions about how oil spills or other pollutants may (14) in seas, littered with drifting ice, says Walt Meier, a senior NSIDC research scientist, who was not involved in the stud
44、y. The findings may even (15) future NSIDC models: Its a really nice data set, Meier says. And certainly, one well take under consideration. (1)AIn factBIn awayCIn additionDIn the end(2)AdestroyBremoveCresistDreject(3)AscratchesBsensesCsamplesDsignals(4)AparticularlyBrelevantlyCintentionallyDpotentially(5)AestimatesBsubjectsCmeasurementsDpatents(6)AbehaviorBhabitatCmannerDmotion(7)AflexibleBfavorableCaccessibleDchangeable(8)AoverloadedBcomparedCexc