浙江省台州市20xx-20xx学年高一英语上学期期中试题内容摘要:

me. Sometimes friends don39。 t get along well, which doesn39。 t mean that they no longer like each other. Most of the time they will go on being friends. Sometimes friends move away, then we feel very sad. We miss them much, but we can call them and write to them. Maybe we would never see them again, and we can make new friends. It is surprising to find out how much we like new people when we get to know them. Families sometimes name their children after a close friend. Many places are named after men and women, if they are friendly to people in a town. Some libraries are named in this way, so are some schools. We think of these people when we go to these places. There39。 s more good news for people, if they have friends. These people live longer than those people if those don39。 t have friends. Why? It could be that they are happier. Being happy helps you stay well. Or it could be just knowing that someone cares, if someone cares about you, you will take better care of yourself. 28. Which of the following is what the writer doesn39。 t say in the passage? A. People like their friends very much if they get to know them. B. People may never see their friends after their friends move away. C. People can know their friends in different ways. D. People are happy when their friends leave them. 29. If people have friends, they would live longer, because __________. A. they feel unhappier and healthier B. they get a lot of help from their friends C. they take better care of themselves D. both A and C 30. This passage tells us __________. A. that people are all friends B. how to name a place C. how to get to know friends D. that all people need good friends D Samantha, or Sam, as her husband, John, called her, had left the doctor’s house looking perfect, satisfied with her appearance. The year was 1862. It seemed that the war with the North would never e to an end. Sam’s father had left as soon as possible, swearing that he’d fight for Virginia, for their land, for their new government, for God, for the South. At last, Samantha reached the house that she and John owned. It was a cold, rainy night, and she was glad to be home. She stepped into the sitting room. John rested in an armchair, reading a book. He glanced at her, put the book down, and stood, reaching his arms out for her. They kissed briefly. He put a hand to her now slightly round belly and asked, “What did the doctor say?” “He said the baby was fine and that I seemed healthy. Do you have any news?” “Surprisingly, yes.” John hesitated for a moment, as if deciding how he would phrase what he was about to say, and then unwillingly continued, “I’ve been demanded to join the army.” Sam screamed, “What?” She was near tears. “But but we’re just starting out.” Her voice shook. “I thought that after two years of begging my mother to let the two of us get married that our life would finally be happy. Isn’t there any way you can get out of this?” John answered, “I’m afraid not.” “Please. Please, John, if you love me, please get out of this. Break a leg, fake an illness, and do something.” She began to sob. John forted her, resting her head on his shoulder. “Sam.” “What?” “Name the child after me。 name it John or Joanna. I’ll e back as soon as I can. I promise.” Sam smiled into his collar bone, knowing that John lived by his word. He never broke a promise. She pressed her hand to her belly, and, unknown to her, the baby was a girl. And unknown to both of them, the promise that John had just made would be the only promise he would ever break. 31. Sam visited the doctor probably because she ________. A. tried to see her husband B. wanted to look perfect C. needed an examination for her baby。
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