最新小托福语言形式与含义模拟题02
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Language Form and Meaning Question 1~4 refer o the following note.
1.Happy Mother’s Day, Mom. I miss you and wish I
drop in for one of your hugs.
2.I want you to know
for a mother. Even with our large family you always
had time to listen to my concerns and help me with my school problems. I even remember all the times you waited up for me when I was dating Jane. I understand how much you cared for us all.
3.I especially
the way you taught me to work. I wasn’t always a willing worker,
4.but you knew I hope I can have the same kind of patience with my own children.
I am very blessed to have you as my mother. Happy Mother’s Day! With all my love.
Question 5~8 refer to the following announcement.
5.Mark Lawrence photographers
at RJ Grey on the morning of November 8 to
6.take pictures of students
picture day back in September,
7.
students who wish to have a picture re-taken. If you have previously ordered a picture
package and are looking for re-takes, you will need to bring the original package to the photographers.
8.will be called out of class on Friday morning. Picture order forms are available in the main office.
Question 9~12 refer to the following announcement.
9.On Monday, April 29, the Centralia golf team traveled to Wright City
in the district golf
10.tournament. Four team members
to play at the sectional golf tournament next Monday.
11.Daymond Dollens, Tim Mixon, Will Mustain, and Dakota Waugh
qualified. Daymond tied for 2nd place.
12.with an overall score of 83.
you see these people in the halls, please give them a pat on
the back.
Question 13~16+ refer to the following part of a short story.
a woman’s coffee. The woman got really angry and hit the man with her
13.A man accidentally
14.supernatural powers in her hands. Does it sound strange? This
in a New York cafe.
People saw it with their own eyes. The woman looked at her hands when she finished with the man. She used her
15.powers to move the chairs and tables. Her screams threw books out of the shelves and pictures
16.from the wall. The terrified customers had no idea
. But don’t worry; it was just a well-prepared trick by a movie company. It was well done!
Question 17~24 refer to the following notice.
17.It’s time
play “remember when” at our Doe High Class of 81 reunion next July, and the organizing
18. committee is in high gear! We’ll get with an informal reception at the Doe House Friday
19. evening, July 14, from 7:00 to 11:00 on Saturday;
may sign up for an afternoon of
20. golf or tennis before the dinner dance at the Doe Inn that evening at 7:00 p.m. Please help us by
out the enclosed questionnaire and returning it to Jane Doe at 1600 Main Street, Springfield, KS 12345,
21.by February 1. We would like to display photographs and
memorabilia.
22.our school days at the dinner dance, so please plan to bring your favorites.
23.you would like to advance your business in our reunion “yearbook”, just send a
24.business card or an ad design to Jane. More information in our next letter. Until then we will appreciate your help in locating address for the following classmates
Question 25~32 refer to the following article.
Johannesburg, South Africa - Hundreds of people continued to be drawn Sunday night to the home where Nelson Mandela died quietly with his family around him.
to celebrate his life. amid the glow of cook fires, candles
25.Some came to mourn his death,
26.and police lighting, people walked about to see the growing shrines
along the streets of
27.Houghton, an affluent district of Johannesburg. People left messages and symbols of Mandela’s life, such as a pair
28.of boxing gloves and a rugby ball. Mandela took up boxing
adult in Johannesburg.
The rugby ball was a reference to his 1995 embrace of the traditionally white Springboks rugby team when they won the 1995 World Cup championship, in a gesture of reconciliation before the stadium crowd that did much to unite the country after decades of racial strife.
29.Some in the crowd danced to songs and chanted before
still to sing the South Africa
national anthem. In a nation
law, whites and blacks and people of various
races came together. Kallia Assonitis, a white South African woman, said she was just 9 when Mandela was released from prison. She and her mother, Bernadette Assonitis, live in the Houghton neighborhood and have known Mandela
30. casually, him over the years at
31. a local school relatives attended. Many others in the crowd were South Africans of Indian
heritages. Dindar, who runs a gas station, proudly described his family’s decades -long friendship with Mandela.
He brought with him a photocopy of a brief handwritten letter of good wishes to him.
32. Mandela in 1990. He said his own great -uncle was a political prisoner
with Mandela.
Question 33~42 refer to the following story.
Some soldiers who have been serving in Iraq and Afghanistan recently made special stops
at schools around the United States. They stopped by to share their experiences and to thank
33. students for letters and packages
.
34. “Keep the cards and letters .” Sgt. Allen Lenn told students who have been writing all year
long. “We read some of the cards you guys are writing over and over again. Some of the solders don’t get any mail,
so your letters mean a lot to them.” The solders even hang the cards around their doors so the inspirational greetings
35. are the last things they see
they head off to work in Iraq. In Shelby County, Alabama,
students welcomed Sgt. Demir Lico to their school. They had written letters to Lico’s army unit in Afghanistan.
36. “The letters the world to us,” Lico said. “We sit around our table, all of us reading. The
37. letters put smiles on my troop’s faces.” Lico the students with an American flag that flew
38. Afghanistan. He hopes the students see the flag as something special. “This is country
in the world and the flag represents this country and freedom.” Lico told a news reporter. Fourth graders in York,
39. Pennsylvania, letters to soldiers in Afghanistan. Last month, Sgt. Keith Lloyd stopped
40. by to thank the students for their letters. “We’re over there to get the mission
done. It’s a good break in the evening to sit down and read a letter,” he said. Sgt.. Ryan Schmitt recently paid a visit to
second graders at a school in St. Ansgar, Iowa. He thanked students for the letters they wrote while he was in Iraq.
41. “
brings a little bit of brightness to the day,” he said.
42.Schmitt is about to return to Iraq for
tour of duty. Many students have pinned yellow ribbons
to their backpacks as a way to remember him until he comes home again.。