Mrs. Gibson was ______.A.Dr. Gibson's motherB.Molly's motherC.Cynthia's daughterD.the Doct
Mrs. Gibson was ______.
A.Dr. Gibson's mother
B.Molly's mother
C.Cynthia's daughter
D.the Doctor's wife
Mrs. Gibson was ______.
A.Dr. Gibson's mother
B.Molly's mother
C.Cynthia's daughter
D.the Doctor's wife
Mrs. Gibson was______.
A.Molly' s mother
B.Cynthia' s daughter
C.the doctor' s wife
D.Dr. Gibson' s mother
"Well now, dad." she said, "I'm going to have you all to myself for a whole week. You must be very obedient."
"I hope you aren't going to boss me, Molly. You're walking me out of breath already. We mustn't pass Mrs. Goodmays in our hurry."
They crossed the street to Mrs. Goodmays, one of the doctor's patients.
"We've just been seeing my wife and her daughter off to London. They've gone up for a week."
"Dear me, to London, and only for a week!" said Mrs. Goodmays, with surprise. "It seems hardly worth the packing. It'll be lonely for you, Molly, without your stepsister."
"Yes," said Molly, suddenly feeling as if she ought to have taken this view of the ease.
"I'll miss Cynthia."
"And you, Dr. Gibson. I hope you won't feel like a widower once again. You must come and have supper with me one evening. What about Tuesday?"
Dr. Gibson felt a sharp blow on his leg from the toe of Molly's shoes, but even so he accepted the invitation, much to the old lady's satisfaction.
A moment later, Molly said to him, "How could you go and waste one of our precious evenings? We've got five now, I've been planning all sorts of things for us to do together."
What were Molly's feelings as they walked home?
A.She wished she had gone to London too.
B.She was delighted to be alone with her father,
C.She was looking forward to Mrs. Gibson's return.
D.She hated being apart from Cynthia.
"Well now, Dad." she said, "I'm going to have you all to my- self for a whole week. You must be very obedient."
"I hope you aren' t going to boss me, Molly. You' re walking me out of breath already. We mustn' t pass Mrs. Goodmays in our hurry." They crossed the street to speak to Mrs. Goodmays, one of the doctor' s patients. "We' ve just been seeing my wife and her daughter off to London. They've gone up for a week."
"Dear me, to London, and only for a week!" said Mrs. Goodmays, with surprise. "It seems hardly worth the packing. It'll be lonely for you, Molly, without your stepsister."
"Yes," said Molly, suddenly feeling as if she ought to have taken this view of the case. "I' 11 miss Cynthia."
"And you, Dr. Gibson, I hope you won' t feel like widower once again. You must come and have supper with me one evening. What about Tuesday?"
Dr. Gibson felt a sharp blow on his leg from the toe of Molly' s shoe, but even so he accepted the invitation, much to the old lady' s satisfaction.
A moment later Molly said to him, "How could you go and waste one of our precious evening! We' ve only got five now. I' ve been planning all sorts of things for us to do tonight." "What sort of things'?."
"Oh, I don' t know. Things you used to like." She looked at him boldly. "Forbidden things now."
Her father's eyes lit up, but his face remained serious. "I'm not going to be pulled down, Molly. With hard work and sensible guidance I' ye reached a very fair height of civilized behavior, and there I' m going to stay."
"Oh, no, you' re not. We' re having bread and cheese for sup
per tonight, in armchairs in front of the TV ! And you shall wear your dressing - gown at breakfast tomorrow--and every morning for a week ! And you shall read the paper at the dining-table f That' s only a start. I haven' t finished by a long way yet."
What were Molly's feelings as they walked home?
A.She was looking forward to Mrs. Gibson's return.
B.She was delighted to be alone with her father.
C.She hated being apart from Cynthia.
D.She wished she had gone to London too.
Part A
Directions: Read the following three texts. Answer the questions on each text by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.
That afternoon Molly almost danced along the street, as she walked home with her father from the station. They had seen Mrs. Gibson and Cynthia off to London. She wished her stepmother would take herself off to London much more often.
"Well now, Dad," she said, "I'm going to have you all to myself for a whole week. You must be very obedient."
"I hope you aren't going to boss me, Molly. You're walking me out of breath already. We mustn't pass Mrs. Goodmays in our hurry. "They crossed the street to speak to Mrs. Goodmays, one of the Doctor's patients, "We're just been seeing my wife and her daughter off to London. They've gone up for a week."
"Dear me, to London, and only for a week!" Said Mrs. Goodmays, with surprise. "It seems hardly worth the packing. It'll be lonely for you, Molly, without your stepsister."
"Yes," said Molly, suddenly feeling as if she ought to have taken this view of the case. "I'll miss Cynthia."
"And you, Dr. Gibson, I hope you won't feel like widower once again. You must come and have supper with me one evening. What about Tuesday?"
Dr. Gibson felt a sharp blow on his leg from the toe of Molly's shoe, but even so he accepted the invitation, much to the old lady's satisfaction.
A moment later Molly said to him, "How could you go and waste one of our precious evening! We've only got five now. I've been planning all sorts of things for us to do tonight."
"What sort of things?"
"Oh, I don't know. Things you used to like. "she looked at him boldly. "Forbidden things now."
Her father's eyes lit up, but his face remained serious. "I'm not going to be pulled down, Molly. With hard work and sensible guidance I've reached a very fair height of civilized behavior, and there I'm going to stay."
"Oh, no, you're not. We're having bread and cheese for supper tonight, in armchairs in front of the TV ! And you shall wear your dressing-gown at breakfast tomorrow — and every morning for a week ! And you shall read the paper at the dining-table ! That's only a start. I haven't finished by a long way yet."
What were Molly's feelings as they walked home?
A.She wished she had gone to London, too.
B.She was delighted to be alone with her father.
C.She was looking forward to Mrs. Gibson't return.
D.She hated being apart from Cynthia.
Which of the following best describes the author's attitude toward Gibson's work?
A.Rejection, on the grounds of Gibson's unqualified pessimism concerning the uses of machinery
B.Praise for Gibson's thesis, despite skepticism at the ultimate effects of his work
C.Uncritical approval for all but Gibson's rejection of traditional Western models of labor
D.Reluctant acceptance of the necessity of Gibson's work to the canon of post- modern literature
E.Enthusiasm tempered by minor reservations for Gibson's reluctant support for unorthodox models of action and labor
吉布森(Gibson)和沃克(Walk)探索婴儿深度知觉发展的研究是
A.“视崖”实验
B.习惯化方法
C.客体隐藏任务
D.视觉偏爱法
From the passage we can be certain that ______.
A.the Doctor's first wife had died
B.Mrs. Gibson/lad no children of her own
C.Mrs. Gibson had never been married before
D.the doctor had never had another wife
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