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            • 1.

              一家英语报社向中学生征文,主题是十年后的我,请根据下列要点和你的畅想完成短文。

              家庭

              工作

              业余生活

              注意:词数100左右;可以适当增加细节,以使行文连贯;

            • 2.

              I had already looked through my old photo albums many times, but nothing happened. The other day I felt a sudden urge to see those old   (1)   again. I found myself   (2)   many beautiful memories from my childhood. There was my dear grandma giving me a bath when I was a(n)   (3)   . There was me and my brother   (4)  infront of the world’s ugliest Christmas tree. There was my first dog lying next to me on the  (5)   and watching TV with me. There was my beautiful mom   (6)   me on her lap.   (7)  , the pictures seemed   (8)   because my eyes were wet. Tears were   (9)   my cheeks. I wiped my wet eyes and   (10)   what was going on. I hadn’t cried before. What was   (11)   now, me or the pictures?

              I soon realised I was different. As I   (12)   , I became more and more mature. I had a better understanding of love. My compassion (同情) had   (13)  . My heart was full of love. I realised too that wet eyes were nothing to be ashamed of   (14)   they came with a warm heart. I smiled and felt Mom and Grandma smiling down on me from Heaven.

              Leo Buscaglia once said: “ I’m not afraid to   (15)   . It cleans out my eyeballs.” I think it cleans out our insides   (16)   . It helps us to wash away our   (17)   , fear and grief (悲伤). It helps us to   (18)   to our love and gratitude. It helps us to become the ones who we were meant to be. The next time you feel your own   (19)   starting then just let them flow.

              Life is full of   (20)   as well as tears. Only by allowing them both can we truly live. Only by hugging them both can we truly love.

            • 3.

              Jack is a retired worker from Rio de Janeiro. Now he is sharing a   (1)   relationship with a penguin which is native toSouth America’s Patagonian region. For the past five years, the penguin seems to have   (2)   its natural migrating (迁徙) route just in order to be able to   (3)   

              Jack several times a year.

              The   (4)   friendship began in 2011, when Jack found the bird, nicknamed Jinling, trapped in oil on the beach near his house. He brought the penguin home,   (5)   him up, and offered him a good meal and a shady spot to rest in. Since then, the penguin has   (6)   stayed away from Jack for too   (7)  .

              Even if the kind man tried to get the penguin to   (8)   the open sea after he got better, the bird just   (9)   coming back. He even took him out in a boat, far from   (10)   and let him loose in the ocean, but by the time he got back home, Jinling was already waiting for him.

                (11)   penguins migrate thousands of miles between breeding colonies in Patagonia and feeding grounds further north inRio de Janeiro, Jinling doesn’t   (12)    Riofor more than four months at a time. He always runs back to Jack’s little   (13)   by the sea, sometimes spending as long as eight months to a year with the old man. And he is a little   (14)  , too –– it seems that he can’t stand other animals getting anywhere close to his   (15)  .

              The local fishermen show their   (16)   of the penguin and they think it’s a great   (17)   not only for Jack himself but also for all the villagers. Jinling has been regarded as the village mascot (吉祥物) since 2012.   (18)  , some are still confused by the   (19)   sight of Jinling walking along with Jack wherever he goes. But they think that penguins must know   (20)  they can repay humans’ kindness.

            • 4.

              Long ago I came to the city near my hometown to find a job. I met all kinds of   (1)   and so I used up all my money soon.

                    One day, I   (2)  a bus quietly at dusk when most people got off work. Suddenly, a   (3)   cried loudly, “Someone has   (4)   my money!” I felt   (5)  , because his money was in my   (6)  . Some people suggested the bus be   (7)  to the police station, but some were against it   (8)  they were in a hurry to go back home. The whole bus was very  (9)  . The driver then   (10)  the bus by the road and turned on the lights to   (11)  the money. At that time, one passenger said, “Turn off the lights and give the thief a chance to take out the money.” Then the bus got   (12)  . When I was still struggling (斗争) in mind whether to take out the money or not, the lights were on again. There was no   (13)  on the floor. Someone said again, “Give him one more   (14)  .” Then the lights were off again. My heart kept beating fast. The lights were on again but they got the   (15)  result. The passengers were in heated discussion again. At that time, someone said again, “Give him the   (16)  chance!” Suddenly I felt   (17)  and took out all the money when the lights were off again.

                    For many years I have felt   (18)  to the one who gave me three chances to   (19)  my mistake. When the first and second opportunities (机会) come, you may not be prepared well or don’t have enough   (20)  to act. When the third opportunity comes you should know clearly what you should do.

            • 5.

              It was about the third week in June last year. My 15 - year - old son had already got into his summer routine (常规). Go to ____  (1)  ___ at 2 a. m. and wake up at 1 p. m. and get back on his computer to play computer games ____  (2)  ____ dinner.

                 It was the middle of the ____  (3)  ____ when the sound of his computer games woke me up again. I couldn't ___  (4)  ____ that any more and decided it was time for him to get a summer job. I got on the computer and found a lifeguard certification (证书) class that ____  (5)  ____ the next day, and a company that ____  (6)  ____ teenagers

              to guard their pools. From that day I woke him up at 8 a. m. every day for him to ____  (7)  ____ the class. At first, he continued to complain that I was ____  (8)  __ his summer. But by the end of the week, he was actually ___  (9)  ___ going. He learned something about first aid, thought he really could ___  (10)  ___ someone from drowning (溺水), and got some ideas on how to ____  (11)  ___ work for a living. Two weeks later, he had a ____  (12)  ____ as a lifeguard. He took his responsibility very ___  (13)  ____ and never went to work late. This summer, he will be working full - time at a pool. He says a lot of his ____  (14)  ___ don't have jobs. And I say that is because their mothers didn't try ____  (15)  ___ enough! Even if your kid is very ____  (16)  ____ with finals and after - school activities and doesn't have time, you can ____  (17)  __ job information for him. Whether it is an ice cream store, a movie ____  (18)  ____, or a summer camp, you can ask if they are hiring ____  (19)  ____ for the summer. After your kid gets a job, pay attention to the ___  (20)  ___ to make sure he is never late.

            • 6.

                I was a single mother and I have two daughters to bring up. I just moved to Chicago this year.

                 Though I tried my best, what I ____  (1)  ___ just made ends meet. I was always ___  (2)  ____ of the last days of a month, during which many bills were waiting for me to pay. Now the ___  (3)  ____ month was going to end. When I ___  (4)  ___ the monthly bills, I saw I couldn't ____  (5)  ____ what my girls wanted.

                 I still remembered what I had ____  (6)  ____ my daughters. For our first Christmas in a ____  (7)  ____ state, I wanted to get my daughters something ____  (8)  ____. "What do you want from Santa this year?" I asked them.

                 "Bicycles!" they replied at once. ____  (9)  ____ they had their hopes set. But after I got the monthly bills, I ____  (10)  ____ the money left was not enough for one bike. What could I do to get two? I turned the matter over in my ____  (11)  ____ several times: Lord, would it be fair to my landlord to be ____  (12)  ____ with the rent this month?

                 Over the next few ____  (13)  ____, I always asked myself the same question when my daughters were deep in sleep. ___  (14)  ____, the only voice I heard was my grandpa's, "Diane, whatever you do, always pay your rent on time," he ____  (15)  ____ to say.

                 I guess I had my ____  (16)  ____. I carefully put the rent check under the landlord's door and called the girls in. The phone rang when I was about to toll them the bad ____  (17)  ___.

                 "I want you to __  (18)  ___ something," my landlord said. I heard the sound of paper being torn. "That was your December rent check," he said. "It is being torn into pieces because you always pay your rent ___  (19)  ____. Merry Christmas to you and the girls."

                 Grandpa's kind ___  (20)  ____, a generous landlord and some unknown reasons added up to a Christmas gift that my daughters and I will never forget.

            • 7.

              God wants you to be happy. It’s a simple idea, but a complicated reality.

              When traveling to Rwanda to find out the   (1)   of a new orphanage (孤儿院),I found children who had been injured physically and   (2)   from their families. But I also found something   (3)  : children who seemed to be truly happy. No   (4)   they had shed (流) many tears,   (5)   most of them were not sad or angry. They played, sang, and   (6)   the company of their fellow orphans.

              I also met Fred Nkunda, a Ugandan man who was   (7)   with joy despite his poverty, and long hours of working for a small salary. A few years later, he   (8)   cancer, but while he lived, he wore a big   (9)   as he selflessly gave himself to others. The same was true for a young Canadian couple who   (10)   their lives to the mission work (布道).

              When I came home, I noticed a sharp   (11)  . Most Americans lacked the   (12)   that those Rwandan children and mission workers owned. Despite great wealth, modern conveniences and other endless material blessings, people here were   (13)   to each other, exhibited impatience, and expressed their   (14)  . How could this be?

              Somewhere along the way, many of us in America have   (15)   something. We have   (16)  experience happiness—real happiness that comes from within and flows to others. And it’s not just missing in “the world”. It’s in short   (17)   in our homes, businesses, and churches.

                  (18)   is actually a personal character. We understand the   (19)   of love, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. But happiness? It is   (20)   ignored or considered as unachievable in this life.

            • 8.

              The sky was getting dark as we walked through the forest. My two friends and I felt hot and   (1)  . We were heading for a small village in northern India. The villagers were   (2)   us, but we were already four hours late.

              As the last of the daylight   (3)   , we began to feel very   (4)   and afraid. We tried to find our way to the village, but it was   (5)   to tell which path we should follow in the darkness. All around us, strange creatures made   (6)   noises as they woke up and began to hunt for food. We hoped they wouldn’t want to eat us!

              Then George, who was in front,   (7)   suddenly. He ran towards us rapidly, pointing at a large, dark shape moving through the trees. We could   (8)   the black stripes (条纹) and shining yellow eyes of the most dangerous animal in the   (9)  . We stared at the tiger, too   (10)   to move.

              After a few seconds that felt like hours, there was the sound of branches (树枝) breaking, and the tiger jumped at us, roaring (咆哮) loudly. We   (11)  , because we were sure it would kill us.

                (12)  , though, the tiger stopped --- and then I noticed that it had six legs, two of them   (13)  !

              The “tiger” stood up, and a young man   (14)   the striped skin covering his head and shoulders. “Hello!” he said, smiling broadly. “I’m Abi, from the village. When you didn’t   (15)   , we were worried, so I came to   (16)   you,” he explained. “It’s traditional for us to   (17)   the tiger skin to greet new guests…and I couldn’t help playing a trick on you ! I hope you don’t   (18)  .”

              Recovering(恢复) from the   (19)  , we began to laugh. We followed Abi to his village, where the villagers gave us a warm   (20)   .

            • 9.

              John’s parents acquired the washer when he was a small boy. It happened during World War II. His family never   (1)   a washing machine and, since gasoline was expensive, they could not   (2)   trips to the laundry (洗衣店) several miles away. Keeping clothes   (3)   became a problem for young John’s household.
                  A family friend joined the army, and his wife   (4)  to go with him. John’s family   (5)  _ to store their furniture while they were away. To the family’s   (6)  , the friend suggested they use their Bendix. So this is how they   (7)   the washer.
                 Young John helped with the washing, and across the years he   (8)  a love for the old, green Bendix. But   (9)   the war ended. When the friends came to take it back, John grew terribly   (10)  .  His mother   (11)   him and said. “You must remember, that machine   (12)   belonged to us in the first place. That we ever got to use it at all was a gift. So, instead of being   (13)   at it being taken away, let’s use this   (14)   to be grateful that we had it at all.”
                  The lesson turned out   (15)  . Years later, John watched his eight-year-old daughter die a slow and painful death of leukemia (白血病). Though he   (16)   for months with her death, John could not begin getting over from the   (17)   until he remembered the old Bendix.
                  His daughter was a   (18)  . When he realized the simple fact, everything changed. He could now begin recovering from the death of his daughter. He started to see her as a marvelous gift that he was fortunate enough to   (19)   for a time. He felt   (20)  . He found strength and recovery. He knew he could get through the valley of loss.  

            • 10.

                 Karen, Judy and I were the last ones back in the school room after lunch and all of the other sixth graders were already playing outside.

                 "Wow! How ___41___ it would be to write on the blackboard while everyone is ___42___." Judy said.

                 "But Mrs. Eiffler doesn't want us writing on the ____43______," I responded.

                 "Janet, everyone is outside. No one will ever ___44____," said Karen, reaching into the box and drawing out a piece of ____45____. Judy also began drawing.

                 I reluctantly (勉强地)___46_____ my friends, but afraid of being __47____. Then Judy had an idea. " We're all right-handed. Let's see who can write their ___48_____ best using their left hand."

                 Judy and Karen started ____49____.I chose a piece of white chalk from the box and wrote my name.

                  "We'd better get this board cleaned off ____50____Mrs. Eiffler comes back." said Judy, eying the clock. She picked up a(n) ___51____ and began erasing our names from the board. ___52____ came off but my name.

                  I ___53____ looked at the white chalk I used and found it wasn't chalk at all, but a white crayon(蜡笔)! My knees felt ___54____. Hurriedly, we tried many ways, but my name still ____55___. At last, Karen got a knife and scraped it. It ___56_____ finally, but we left an abrasion(磨损处) on the blackboard.

                  As the bell rang, the teacher walked in soon.

                  Mrs. Eiffler never asked about the abrasion and maybe never ___57____ it. But I did. Every time I walked past the blackboard, I ___58____.

                  Although over forty years have passed since the event, I still remember the lesson. " No one will ever know" is never ___59_____. Even if no one else found out, I myself knew. Sometimes living with a ___60____ conscience is punishment enough.

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