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2025年全国I卷完形填空
One August afternoon, I sat in my kitchen 1.staring (stare) at a glass vase that hadn’t seen daylight since my wedding.
My husband and I had just sold our house and we were busy emptying out the beloved home our family had spent 23 years filling up. We had decided on key items for the apartment we were moving to in town, donated 2.what we could, and rented a place to store our supposedly important objects. That left a house still stuffed with things that, while not 3.particularly (particular) valuable, didn’t belong in a landfill (垃圾填埋场).
I took a picture 4.of the vase and posted it online, for $10. A couple of messages came in, one wanting 5.additional (addition) photos, another asking for a price cut. As our move day 6.drew (draw) near, I settled on a new price ($0) and reposted it. The 7.description (describe): “I hate this vase. Maybe you won’t.” In an instant, a woman raced into my house and left happily with the vase.
8.Encouraged (encourage), I posted more. My daily posts and the visits I received became a precious ray of light in the chaos of my house. Each exchange provided 9.a chance to spare the landfill and to please another person I might not otherwise have encountered.
I sit in my apartment today, loving each of the belongings that share our small space. I take joy in knowing that, somewhere nearby, someone is appreciating something 10.that couldn’t come with us.
2025年全国I卷完形填空
Evelyn Donohue is a 65-year-old grandma. She only started to exercise seven years ago after having a wake-up call. She’d been struggling with eating disorders and health issues, 1.which ultimately led her to getting surgery. After that experience, she knew that she needed to make a change. Determined to turn her life around, Ms Donohue began to work out and follow a healthy lifestyle, before 2.discovering (discover)a passion for weightlifting.
Since setting out on the journey, the fitness lover has not only managed to grow 3.an impressive set of muscles — but also a huge following on social media.
The well-liked grandma regularly posts workout content, explaining there’s no reason others can’t look this good. She said it was all down to some key 4.aspects (aspect).
2025年全国2卷完形填空
“Hold on: Consider failure 5.as a stepping stone to success and never give up. Stick to your plan,” she said. “Help others: Lift others up on your journey. Success is 6.sweeter (sweet) when shared.” She 7.previously (previous)explained that “you do not need to have an 8.amazing (amaze)body to exercise ... the goal is to feel good, not look good.”
Ms Donohue used 9.to be laughed (laugh)at for being too old to work out, but she 10.has proved (prove)the doubters wrong in the best possible way and has indeed become an inspiration for many social media users.
2025年全国2卷完形填空
Manuela Ribeiro has a healthy addiction. It’s cooking. A few 1.months (month) ago, the 30-year-old teacher 2.decided (decide) it was time to put her hobby to good use. She signed up on the website Bookalokal, and now welcomes strangers into her Brussels flat twice a week for dinner parties.
Ribeiro charges €35 per person for 3.what is usually a three-course meal that can last up to three hours. For Ribeiro, it has become a perfect platform for pursuing her hobby of buying food, 4.trying (try) out new recipes and holding dinner parties.
2025年浙江1月卷完形填空
“It’s a great opportunity 5.to share (share) my passion for food and to meet new people,” said Ribeiro. Sometimes she prepares 6.traditional (tradition) Brazilian dishes in honor of her native home; other times she pairs dinner courses 7.with her favorite beers.
The platform has enabled Ribeiro to realise her dream with 8.a great deal of freedom, as opposed to a restaurant where the service is impersonal, the menu 9.is known (know) in advance, and the meal is expected to be no surprise.
“But it’s also a great challenge, for it can sometimes take days to organise a single event,” Ribeiro said. “This platform is not only reserved for professional cooks, 10.but also for those willing to discover new experiences.”
2025年浙江1月卷完形填空
I liked to go and watch the sunset at my local park, 1.which was a seaside area in Karachi. There, I would always see the same elderly lady feeding the pigeons (鸽子). The birds, usually around 10 to 15 in number, would gather around her before she even had a chance 2.to take (take) the bag of rice out from her handbag. It was the same each day, part of her routine.
I found that 3.watching (watch) her perform this ordinary task with such 4.enthusiasm (enthusiastic) was both calming and 5.beautiful (beauty).
2025年1月八省联考卷完形填空
On this particular evening, the lady arrived 6.at her usual spot to feed the birds. But, as she 7.approached (approach) the bench (长凳) to sit down, her necklace (项链) fell to the ground.
I was sitting on 8.the grass nearby waiting for the sun to set. Noticing that, I got up to get it back for her. However, before I reached it, one of the pigeons from the group picked up the necklace, flew to the bench, and dropped it on her lap.
I couldn’t believe 9.my (I) eyes. The old lady, also surprised, began laughing 10.quietly (quiet) to herself. I was left with a huge smile on my face and happily went back to watching the sunset.
2025年1月八省联考卷完形填空
I’ve been motivated—and demotivated—by other folks’ achievements all my life.
When I was a teenager, a neighborhood friend won a marathon race. Feeling 1.motivated (motivate), I started running 2.regularly (regular), but then two things happened. First, a girl I met one day told me she was training for a “super”, referring to a 52.4-mile double marathon. Then, the next day I went on my 3. longest (long) run—15 miles. To be honest, I hated it! Between the girl 4.making (make) my achievement seem small and the pure 5.boredom (bore) of jogging, I decided that the only reason I’d ever run again is if a big dog was running 6.after me!
2024年新课标1卷完形填空
So I turned to cycling. I got a good bike and rode a lot. I dreamed of entering cycle races until I flew to San Diego to visit my sister. While she was at work one day, I 7.borrowed (borrow) her bike and went for a ride. The problem: The roads there went through large valleys 8.where I’d be riding uphill for miles at a time. I’d never faced such challenges. That day, I got 9.passed (pass) by about 100 “local” bikers who were used to such roads. When I got back home, suddenly riding my bike didn’t seem quite as appealing. I 10.have matured (mature) a lot since then.
I’ve come to accept that whatever goals I set for myself, they just have to be my own.
2024年新课标1卷完形填空
When I decided to buy a house in Europe ten years ago, I didn’t think too long. I liked traveling in France, but when it came to picking my favorite spot 1.to settle (settle), Italy was the clear winner.
During my first visit to Italy, I 2.struggled (struggle) to ask for directions or order in a restaurant. But every time I tried to string a sentence of Italian together, the locals smiled at me and praised my language skills. That 3.encouragement (encourage) helped me to get through the language barrier. After I made Italy my permanent home, I discovered 4.how warm-hearted Italians are. Neighbors will bring me freshly 5.made (make) cheese and will come to my door to remind me to close the window in my car when rain is coming. It’s these small acts of kindness 6.that make a new country feel like home.
2024年新课标2卷完形填空
As 7.a foodie, the way to my heart is through my stomach, and nowhere fuels my appetite quite like Italy. Each town has its own traditional dish, and every family keeps a recipe passed from one generation to another. Families gather for big meals on Sundays, birthdays, and whatever other excuses they can come up 8.with. These meals are always accompanied by laughter and joy. Whatever disadvantages life in Italy might have, the problems 9.are forgotten (forget) once you sit down to a big meal with friends and family, 10.enjoying (enjoy) the warmth of companionship.
2024年新课标2卷完形填空
One day, we had a family dinner. While the adults 1.were (be) busy with their serious talk outside, I 2.was left (leave)was alone in the kitchen to help my grandmother wash dishes. As always, my grandmother would tell me stories about her childhood.
Born just before WWII, my grandmother experienced 3.an entirely different childhood lifestyle from 4.mine (me). She did not have a chance to go to school. Like in typical families, 5.where boys were favored much more than girls, my grandma had to stay at home to do housework. The only opportunity she could seize to study was when her brother was having Chinese lessons with the family tutor. She would sit quietly at the far end of the long dinner table, 6.listening (listen) closely. This training taught her to read and write her Chinese upside down — a skill that has turned out to be quite practical, especially whenever we share the newspaper.
2024年全国甲卷完形填空
On most 7.weekends (weekend), my grandmother, a young girl then, and her brother would go to the beach. There, they would walk through deep water, sit down cross-legged underwater and hold their breath while they watched all action going on around them. This is something I admire --- her ability to open her eyes underwater and still sit 8.comfortably (comfortable) on the seabed.
My childhood is quite happy compared 9.with hers. I am grateful that I did not need to go through the hardships like she did. I’ve never faced the problem of education. I guess our different childhood background is 10.what makes my grandmother such an amazing person to talk to: her stories always make my history textbooks come alive.
2024年全国甲卷完形填空
While taking a 20-hour train ride along the edge of the Taklimakan Desert in northwestern China, I had the kind of humbling, 1.educational (education), and above all else, wonderful encounter with a local that all travelers long for. A young Chinese man 2.approached (approach) me on the train. My new friend spoke virtually no English, so I happily took the chance 3.to practice (practice) my Chinese.
Over several hours he told me about how he 4.had attended (attend) a two-year professional school to quickly find a job 5.building (build) highways in order to help support his family. Perhaps most remarkable, however, was the fact 6.that this man spent hours studying every day after hard physical labor......
2024年浙江1月卷完形填空
......Without batting an eye he would quote a translated Emerson passage before asking about the literary influence of American writers as 7.a whole. “And what do you all learn about Russian authors?” I recalled him asking at one point.
It would have been easy to rely on my assumptions about this highway builder 8.who had never been more than a few hundred miles from home. But this highly informed, self-educated, and admirable person prevented me 9.from doing so. In the course of a couple of hours, he showed me just how much one can gain from traveling with an open mind, and a 10.willingness (will) to engage with locals from all walks of life.
2024年浙江1月卷完形填空
On Oct. 11, hundreds of runners competed in a cross-country race in Minnesota. Melanie Bailey should have finished the course 1.earlier (early)than she did. Her delay, however, came because she was carrying a 2.competitor (compete) across the finish line, 3.which made her miss the best time she could have achieved.
As reported by a local newspaper, Bailey was more than two-thirds of the way through her race when 4. a runner in front of her began crying in pain. She stopped to help her fellow runner, Danielle Lenoue. Bailey took her arm to see if she could walk forward with aid. She couldn’t. Bailey then bent down 5.to let (let) Lenoue climb onto her back and carried her all the way to the finish line, then another 300 feet to where Lenoue could get medical attention.
2023年新课标1卷完形填空
Once there, Lenoue was assessed carefully and later 6.taken (take) to a hospital, where she learned that she had serious injuries in one of her knees. She would have struggled with extreme pain to make it to that aid checkpoint 7. without Bailey’s help.
As for Bailey, she is more 8. confused (confuse) about why her act 9.is considered (consider) a big deal. “She was just crying. I couldn’t leave her,” Bailey told the reporter. “I feel like I was just doing the right thing.”
Although the two young women were complete strangers before the meet, they’ve since become friends. Neither won the race, 10. but the display of human kindness won the day.
2023年新课标1卷完形填空
In April last year, I saw a post on the PNP (Pilots N Paws) website from a family in Topeka. They had to move to Virginia 1. but they were on a very tight budget . They could not afford to pay for 2. transportation (transport) for their dog, Tiffy, and 3. desperately (desperate) wanted to take her with them.
It just happened 4. that I was planning another PNP flight with another pilot, Karen, 5. who offered to take Tiffy from Kansas City to Virginia. 6. What I was to do was fly to Topeka to pick up Tiffy.
2023年新课标2卷完形填空
When I met Tiffy’s owners, they seemed very nervous. George, the husband, was trying to be calm, but I could tell this was hard for him, 7. having (have) to leave his dog to a stranger and trust that everything would work out.
After some goodbyes, I asked George and his wife to help me load Tiffy into 8. the plane. I promised to take care of Tiffy and call them as soon as we got to Kansas City.
The flight was uneventful, and Tiffy was a great passenger. The next day, she flew with Karen and 9. made (make) it back to George in Virginia within a few days. He was so thankful and sent me a nice e-mail with pictures. It felt great to know that I 10. had helped (help) bring this family together again.
2023年新课标2卷完形填空
Many years ago, I bought a house in the Garfagnana, where we still go every summer. The first time we 1. stayed (stay) there, we heard the chug-chug-chug of a motorbike 2. making (make) its way down the hill toward us. It was a neighbor called Mario, coming to bring us a box containing some tomatoes and a bottle of wine. It was a very nice gesture for him to make. But when we looked at the tomatoes, we were 3. worried (worry) because they were so misshapen: not at all like the nice, round, 4. shiny (shine) things you get in a supermarket. And the wine was cloudy, in a funny old bottle with no label (标签) on 5. it . These can’t be any good, we thought. But we were 6. thankful (thank) for his kindness, so we tried them.
2023年全国甲卷完形填空
What we discovered is that it’s 7. unwise (wise) to judge what you eat only by its 8. appearance (appear). Those tomatoes had a taste that reminded me of the ones my uncle used to grow when I was a child. Nowadays supermarket tomatoes look perfect but taste of water. Nobody’s going to have a happy memory of those. It’s a surprise they haven’t managed to grow square ones so that they can pack them easily. Mario’s wine may have been cloudy and come out of an old bottle, but it was perfect.
It’s good to eat things at the correct time, when they’re 9. in season, and as close as possible to where they were 10. grown (grow). What Mario had given us was the taste of the Garfagnana.
2023年全国甲卷完形填空
1.To become (become) the Olympic champion in the individual (个人) all-around event, Gabby Douglas had to leave everything she knew best. She had to pack up her bedroom in Virginia. She had to say goodbye to her two dogs and to the beach, 2.where she loved to ride waves on her board. But it was time to take the leap (飞跃), however heartbreaking it would be. Even at 14, Douglas knew that. So she went off about 1,200 miles away from home, to train with 3.a coach from China. She lived with a family she had never met and everything was new to her.
As it turned out, Douglas did 4.exactly (exact) what she needed to do to become Olympic champion when she defeated two 5.Russians (Russian)......
2023年全国乙卷完形填空
......The Chinese coach 6.transformed (transform) Douglas into one of the best gymnasts in the world, 7.helping (help) her skyrocket from an average member of the national team to the top of the sport. By winning the Olympic all-around title, she became the first black woman to do so. She led the competition from beginning to end. She said she had felt 8.confident (confidence) all along that she would win.
Not so long ago, Martha Karolyi, the coordinator (联络人) of the women’s national team, did not think Douglas had 9.what it took to be an Olympian. 10. As time went by, she thought more and more that she could make the London Games — and win.
“I’m going to inspire so many people,” she said. “I’m ready to shine.” And shine she did.
2023年全国乙卷完形填空
The sun was beginning to sink as I set off into the Harenna Forest. I was on my way 1.to witness a unique honey harvest. Here, in south-east Ethiopia,hand-carved beehives(蜂箱) 2.are placed (place) in the treetop. Reaching them to get the honey is difficult-and often dangerous.
I followed beekeeper Ziyad over a wide stretch of grassland before entering a thick jungle. Ziyad began preparations. He gathered handfuls of damp tree leaves, wrapped them with string,3.and lit the bunch 4.to create (create) a torch(火把). Then, with one end of a rope 5.tied (tie) to his waist and the other end around the trunk of a tree, Ziyad began climbing. He stopped every few minutes to move the rope higher up the tree trunk.
2023年浙江1月卷完形填空
6.Finally (final), Zivad got close to the hive 7.which/that was around 20 metres above the ground. 8.Sitting (sit) on a branch, he inched towards it and blew smoke from his torch into a tiny hole in the hive. Suddenly, Ziyad let out 9.a sharp cry. Within10.seconds (second), he’d slid down the trunk and was back on the ground.
It was too early to collect the honey. A cool summer had delayed hatching. Baby bees were still in the honeycombs (蜂巢). The adult bees were angry and kept attacking as Ziyad escaped from the tree. He had to wait for the right moment to go back up.
2023年浙江1月卷完形填空
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