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湖北高考完形填空汇总2020Elizabeth Clay decided to go home and spend the holiday with her parents. The next day she drove her old car home along the road. 36 she found she got a flat. The 22-year-old student 37 to stop her car by the side of the road in the winter night and opened the trunk. No 38 tire .At this time, a car 39. Paul and Diane told Clay to 40 them to a service station near their 41 . They arrived to see that it had no suitable tires to 42with her car. “Follow us home,” said Paul.The couple called around to find a tire, No 43. They decided to let her use their own car. “Here,” Paul said, handing Clay a 44of keys, “Take our car. We 45 be using it over the holiday.”Clay was 46. “But Im going all the way to South Carolina, and Ill be gone for two weeks,” she 47 them.“We know,” Paul said. “Well be 48 when you get back. Heres our number if you need to 49 us.”Unable to believe her eyes, Clay watched as the 50 put her luggage into their car and then 51 her off. Two weeks later she 52 to find her old car cleaned inside and out with three new tires and the radio 53 .“Thank you so much,” she said. “How much do I 54 you?” “Oh, no,” Paul said, “we dont want any money. Itsour 55.” Clay realized that while it might have been their pleasure, it was now her duty to pass on their “do unto others” spirit.36ASuddenlyBFinally CImmediately DFortunately37AaffordedBwanted Callowed Dmanaged38Aspare Bfree Cfull Dempty39Apassed Bstopped Cpaused Dstarted40Ahelp Bpush Ctake Dfollow41Agarage Bhouse Cshop Dhotel42Aagree Bmatch Cgo Ddeal43Away Bmessage Csuccess Dluck44Aset Bnumber Cpair Dchain45Acant Bshouldnt Cmustnt Dwont46Asatisfied Bworried Castonished Ddisturbed47Apersuaded Badvised Creminded Dpromised48Ahappy Bhere Caway Dbusy49Aget in touch with Bkeep in touch withCbe in touch with Dput in touch with50Arepairmen Bcleaners Cfriends Dcouple51Asent Bshook Cwatched Ddrove52Ashocked Bhappened Creturned Dcame53Aloaded Bfixed Ctied Drebuilt54Aowe Blend Cgive Doffer55Awish Bjob Cduty Dpleasure3640 ADABD 4145 BCDAD 4650 CCBAD 5155 ACBAD2020You are near the front line of a battle. Around you shells are exploding; people are shooting from a house behind you. What are you doing there? You arent a soldier. You arent 36 carrying a gun. Youre standing in front of a 37 and youre telling the TV 38 what is happening.Its all in a days work for a war reporter ,and it can be very 39 . In the first two years of the 40 in former Yugoslavia(前南斯拉夫), 28 reporters and photographers were killed. Hundreds more were 41 .What kind of people put themselves in danger to 42 pictures to our TV screens and 43 to our newspapers? Why do they do it?“I think its every young journalists 44 to be a foreign reporter,” says Michael Nicholson, “thats 45 you find the excitement. So when the first opportunity comes, you take it 46 it is a war.”But there are moments of 47 . Jeremy Bowen says, “Yes, when youre lying on the ground and bullets are flying 48 your ears, you think: What am I doing here? Im not going to do this again. But that feeling 49 after a while and when the next war starts, youll be 50 .”“None of us believes that were going to 51 ,” adds Michael .But he always 52 a lucky charm(护身符)with him .It was given to him by his wife for his first war .Its a card which says “Take care of yourself.” Does he ever think about dying? “Oh, 53 ,and every time it happens you look to the sky and say to God, If you get me out of this, I 54 Ill never do it again. You can almost hear God 55 , because you know he doesnt believe you.”36AsimplyBreallyCmerelyDeven37AcrowdBhouseCbattlefieldDcamera38AproducersBviewersCdirectorsDactors39AdangerousBexcitingCnormalDdisappointing40AstayBfightCwarDlife41AinjuredBburiedCdefeatedDsaved42AbringBshowCtakeDmake43AscenesBpassages CstoriesDcontents44AbeliefBdreamCdutyDfaith45AwhyBwhatChowDwhere46Aeven soBever sinceCas ifDeven if47AfearBsurpriseCshameDsadness48AintoBaroundCpastDthrough49AreturnsBgoesCcontinues Doccurs50AthereBawayCoutDhome51AleaveBescapeCdieDremain52AhangsBwearsCholdsDcarries53AneverBmany timesCsome time Dseldom54AconsiderBacceptCpromiseDguess55AwhisperingBlaughingCscreaming Dcrying3640 DDBAC 4145 AACBD 4650 DACBA 5155 CDBCB2020In the city of Fujisawa, Japan, lives a woman named Atsuko Saeki When she was a teenager, she 36 of going to the United States. Most of what she knew about American 37 was from the textbooks she had read. “I had a 38 in mind: Daddy watching TV in the living room, Mummy 39 cakes and their teenage daughter off to the cinema with her boyfriend.”Atsuko 40 to attend college in California. When she arrived, however, she found it was not her 41 world. “People were struggling with problems and often seemed 42 ,” she said. “I felt very alone.”One of her hardest 43 was physical education. “We played volleyball.” she said.“The other students were 44 it, but I wasnt.”One afternoon, the instructor asked Atsuko to 45 the ball to her teammates so they could knock it 46 the netno problem for most people, but it terrified Atsuko. She was afraid of losing face 47 she failed.A young man on her team 48 What she was going through. “He walked up to me and 49 , Come on. You can do that.”“You will never understand how those words of 50 made me feel. Four words: You can do that I felt like crying with happiness.”She made it through the class. Perhaps she thanked the young man; she is not 51 .Six years have passed. Atsuko is back in Japan, working as a salesclerk. “I have 52 forgotten the words.” she said. “When things are not going so well, I think of them.”She is sure the young man had no idea how much his kindness 53 to her. “He probably doesnt even remember it,” she said. That may be the lesson. Whenever you say something to a person cruel or kindyou have no idea how long the words will 54. Shes all the way over in Japan, but still she hears those four 55 words: You can do that.36. A. learned B. spoke C. dreamed D. heard37. A. way B. life C. education D. spirit38. A. photo B. painting C. picture D. drawing39. A. baking B. frying C. steaming D. boiling40. A. hoped B. arranged C. liked D. attempted41. A. described B. imagined C. created D. discovered42. A. tense B. cheerful C. relaxed D. deserted43. A. times B. question C. classes D. projects.44. A. curious about B. good at C. slow at D. nervous about45. A. kick B. pass C. carry D. hit46. A. through B. into C. over D. past47. A. after B. if C. because D. until48. A. believed B. considered C. wondered D. sensed49. A. warned B. sighed C. ordered D. whispered50. A. excitement B. encouragement C. persuasion D. suggestion51. A. interested B. doubtful C. puzzled D. sure52. A. never B. already C. seldom D. almost53. A. happened B. applied C. seemed D. meant54. A. continue B. stay C. exist D. live55. A. merciful B. bitter C. simple D. easy3640 CBCAB 4145 BACBD 4650 CBDDB 5155 DADBC2020Many years ago, I owned a service station and roadhouse on the main road between Melbourne and Adelaide.One very cold wet night at about 3:30 a.m., there was a 41 on the front door of our house. A young man, wet from 42 to toe, explained that he had 43 out of petrol about 30 km up the road. He had left his pregnant(怀孕的) wife and his two children 44 at the car and said that he would hitchhike(搭便车) back.Once I had 45 a can with petrol, I took him back to his car where his two-year-old and four-year-old children were both 46 , saying that they were cold. Once the car had started, I suggested that he 47 me back.Before leaving, I had turned the heater 48 in the roadhouse, so that when we went in, it was nice and 49 . While the little ones played and ran 50 , I prepared bread and butter for the children, and hot chocolate for the 51 .It was about 5 a.m. before they 52 . The young fellow asked me how much he 53 me and I told him that the petrol pump(加油泵) had 54 $15.He offered to pay “call-out fee”, but I wouldnt accept it.About a month later, I received a 55 from Interstate, a large bus company that we had been trying to 56 to stop off at our roadhouse for a long time. It 57 out that the young fellow I had helped was its general manager, the most 58 person in the company.In his letter, he thanked me again and 59 me that, from then on, all their buses would stop at my service station. In this 60 ,a little bit of kindness was rewarded with a huge amount of benefits.41. A. kickB. hitC. beatD. knock42. A. fingerB. shoulderC. headD. hand43. A. drivenB. usedC. comeD. run44. A. awayB. behindC. overD. out45. A. suppliedB. pouredC. equippedD. filled46. A. sleepingB. cryingC. quarrellingD. fighting47. A. allowB. ringC. leadD. follow48. A onB. offC. inD. over49. A. neatB. hotC. warmD. attractive50. A. aroundB. insideC. nearbyD. along51. A. driversB. guestsC. customersD. adults52. A. leftB. arrivedC. ateD. disappeared53. A. gaveB. paidC. owedD. offered54. A. appearedB. exhibitedC. calculatedD. shown55. A. callB. letterC. checkD. notice56. A. getB. forceC. requiteD. hope57. A. pointedB. turnedC. workedD. found58. A. generousB. successfulC. seriousD. powerful59. A. praisedB. persuadedC. informedD. convinced60. A. lessonB. businessC. aspectD. case4145 DCDBD 4650 BDACA 5155 DACDB 5660 ABDCD2020On a warm Monday, Jenny Neilson bought a sandwich and parked her car under some trees. Rolling down the windows to _41_in fresh air, she settled back to enjoy her lunch. Suddenly she _42_a big bald(秃顶的)man running through the parking lot. Before she _43_what would happen, the man was there, shouting through window. “Get out!”Neilson_44_.Pulling open her door, the man seized her _45_the neck and hair, and threw her out of the car onto the ground. She screamed, _46_her purse and the keys.Two reporters of the local newspaper, Robert Bruce and Jeff Jackson, just outside their office building on a _47_, heard the screams and began running.When they _48_Neilsons car, the attacker had jumped into the drivers seat and was _49_ searching for the keys. Bruce opened the door, and he and Jackson dragged the man out. The attacker _50_ back. But even in his cornered panic, he was no_51_for the two athletic men.Reggie Miller, a worker of the local newspaper, heard the screams, too. He rushed back to the office to_52_the police , and then ran back with some plastic ropesused to tie up newspapers.With his arms_53_tightly behind him, the prisoner looked up and said _54_. “I hope you guys feel good about yourselvesyou just caught one of the most wanted men.” They _55_him and waited for the police.Later, Bruce and Jackson were shocked to learn the man was the _56_carjacker(劫车者)and suspected murderer, whose_57_but with a full head of hairhad been recently printed in their own newspaper.Neilson considers herself lucky _58_she suffered injuries. She believes the story might have had a _59_ending if those good people had not come to her aid. “Unfortunately, ”she says, “many people would_60_have done what they did , and that is the real truth. ”41. A. bring B. let C. gather D. send42. A. recognized B. watched C. noticed D. met43. A. realize B. understand C. imagine D. conclude44. A. escaped B. struggled C. refused D. obeyed45. A. by B. around C. with D. on46. A. burying B. forgetting C. offering D. grabbing47. A. trip B. visit C. break D. holiday48. A. started B. stopped C. entered D. reached49. A. carefully B. madly C. disappointedly D. patiently50. A. fought B. turned C. jumped D. shouted51. A. match B. target C. equal D. companion52. A. remind B. phone C. invite D. beg53. A. rolled B. folded C. bent D. tied54. A. angrily B. kindly C. coldly D. warmly55. A. caught B. thanked C. comforted D. ignored56. A. ordinary B. professional C. honest D. outstanding57. A. picture B. background C. character D. story58. A. and B. but C. though D. when59. A. ridiculous B. similar C. strange D. different60. A. sometimes B. never C. often D. forever4145 BCACA 4650 DCDBA 5155 ABDCD 5660 BACDB2020There was a very special teacher who made a far reaching difference in my life.Fall, 1959, the first day of class at Bethesda Chevy Chase High School was about to begin. “Who,” I asked a senior, is Mrs. McNamara, my 10thgrade English teacher? He just 31 and said something about my being in _32_Soon, I understood what he meant. Mrs. McNamara had a pattern of _33_that she repeated again and again ,we would have a literature reading task for_34_The next day, when we came to class, there would be two or three topics on the blackboard _35_ to the homework reading. We were_36_to write an inclass essay about one of the topics, The following day, she would _37_the corrected and graded essays and each person would be called _38_to stand in front of the class and to _39_hisher essay. The class were required to criticize(评论) that essay _40_the grade of everyone in class would be reduced.The first time that I_41_her readwrite-criticize method, I had not _42 to do the homework and had written something without knowing what it meant _43_the extreme embarrassment I suffered, standing before my classmates _44_myself No one laughed at me, no one would be _45_enough, or foolish enough, to do that in Mrs.

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