新视野大学英语3 考试中的阅读理解unit5
玛丽莲梦兔
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2020年07月29日 16:17
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艮字怎么读-碣怎么读
At last we found one: a late Victorian cottage, in a street where the houses, all small, range from late 18th to mid 20th century. It was near enough to where we wanted to live. It had no basement(地下室), which was a great convenience for aging legs; there were only two floors above ground level: one for ourselves and one where friends, children, and grandchildren could spread themselves when they came to stay. Each floor had two rooms. There was a kitchen on the ground floor, with the bathroom above it. (Words: 289)
passage concerns ________.
A. buying a house for a newly married couple
B. buying a large house for a growing family
D. buying a smaller house for older people whose children have left home
passage implies that grown-up children are _______.
A. more friendly to their parents when they are grown up
B. distant from their parents
C. friendly but not very close
D. annoying
author decided to move ________.
A. when their house gave them too much work and cost too much to run
B. when they grew tired of their house
C. when they suddenly got the strength to do so
D. before the house collapsed
author advises people in his own situation ________.
A. to move into a very small house
B. to move somewhere where the largest possible pieces of furniture will fit
C. not to move too far from the main road
D. to choose somewhere not so noisy
ding to the passage, their new house had _________.
A. two floors
B. three floors
C. four floors
D. two bathrooms
Questions 46 to 50 are based on the same passage or dialog.
I sat down where the road passed over a hilltop to examine my position. I could see all round me for miles but there was no sign of human life. In the sky the birds sang — and then I heard that heated noise again.
I realized that my position that I had thought so well might in truth be a trap, for there was no shelter anywhere in these bare green patches (小块土地). I sat quite still and hopeless while the airplane came I could see one of the two men looking at me through glasses.
Suddenly it began to rise, and then flew rapidly away till it was a mere dot in the distance.
That made me do some hard thinking. The airplane had seen my bicycle and would naturally think that I would try to escape by road. I walked with the machine a hundred yards from the road and threw it into a deep pool, where it sank out of sight. Then I climbed up to where I could see the road on both sides of the hill. Nothing was moving on it.
As I have said, there was nowhere to hide, and now these free moors seemed like prison walls. I went on and after a time came to another high piece of ground, from which I could see some men two mil