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所屬成套資源:2023屆高三英語二輪復(fù)習(xí)學(xué)案名著閱讀之心靈雞湯精選(53份)

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2023屆高三英語二輪復(fù)習(xí)學(xué)案名著閱讀之心靈雞湯精選AChristmasMemory

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這是一份2023屆高三英語二輪復(fù)習(xí)學(xué)案名著閱讀之心靈雞湯精選AChristmasMemory,共12頁。學(xué)案主要包含了文章梗概,詞匯過關(guān),句子學(xué)習(xí)等內(nèi)容,歡迎下載使用。
名著閱讀之心靈雞湯精選 A Christmas Memory班級:____________學(xué)號:____________姓名:____________心靈雞湯精選A Christmas Memory話題歸類閱讀難度詞數(shù)難忘的圣誕經(jīng)歷五星1274【文章梗概】 11月,我、Jack和三孩子開心去看足球賽,小兒突然命危,一紐約警察John盡力急救并送至醫(yī)院,但孩子不幸猝死。雖得John陪熬過痛苦時光,我們?nèi)杂粲艄褮g。圣誕節(jié)前夜,我?guī)ФY物回家途中,看萬家燈火,觸景生情,內(nèi)心不再相信圣誕老人的存在。一圣誕老人來家里給孩子們送圣誕祝福,后發(fā)現(xiàn)是John特意冒雪前來扮演圣誕老人,意在寬慰我們,送來圣誕歡樂。 Christmas is doing a little something extra for someone~Charles SchulzThe snow fell softly, its delicate lace-patterned snowflakeslingering on my woolen poncho. I half-carried, half-dragged my cumbersome load — a large garbage sack loaded with gifts — across the whitening street. It was almost midnight on Christmas Eve, but I was in no hurry to get home. Tears blurred the kaleidoscope of multicolored lights that blinked cheerily from our neighbor’s houses. More subdued candles dimly lit every window at our house in their halfhearted attempt to feign cheer. Suddenly I stopped and stared. A white-bearded, red-clad, overstuffed figure was tapping gently at our front door and muttering “Ho! Ho! Ho!”What is he doing here? I thought bitterly.Christmas wasn’t coming to No. 5 Jodi Lane this year. I feared it might never come again. My mind raced back to that day in November, the day our joy seemed to disappear forever.The fall weather was just turning crisp, and my husband Jack and I and our three children squeezed into the car to head out for the Junior Midgets Sunday afternoon football game. Our two older children, Tara, four, and Sean, eighteen months, ran up and down the bleachers while I tended the baby, Christopher, who was three months old. He was snuggled up warmly in his carriage, napping on his stomach, oblivious to the noise and chill in the air.“I haven’t seen your newest addition yet,” one of our friends, Tony, called, coming to my side. He smiled and peeked into the buggy. Always eager to show off the baby, I lifted him out, his face turned toward Tony. The smile faded from Tony’s face, and horror filled his eyes. What was wrong? I turned Christopher to me. His beautiful, perfect little face was a contorted, grayish-blue. I screamed.Another parent — a New York City policeman — leapt from the bleachers, grabbed Christopher from my arms and began applying CPR before the screams had died from my lips. An ambulance was on standby for the football game, and the policeman ran toward it with our lifeless baby cradled in his arms. Jack ran behind them. By the time they pulled away, I had collapsed, and a second ambulance was called to take me to the hospital.When I arrived minutes later, the policeman who had carried Christopher away opened the door of my ambulance. His name was John, and his brown eyes were kind as he jumped up and sat by me in the ambulance. I didn’t like what I saw in his eyes. He reached out one of his massive hands — hands that had tried to save my baby — and held mine.“Let’s pray for a moment before we go inside,” he said gently.“Is he alive?” I pleaded.I didn’t want to pray — not then, not for a long time afterwards. John led me into the hospital to Jack, and we stood together as we heard the medical explanation: SIDS (sudden infant death syndrome). Our son was another infant who had simply died in his sleep. No one knew why or how. There had been little anyone could do at the hospital. Christopher was dead when I lifted him from the carriage. He had died sometime during his warm, safe naptime.We had set out that morning — a family with three happy, healthy children. Jack and I returned that evening huddled and bewildered in the backseat of John’s car. Tara and Sean were at a friend’s house. And Christopher, our baby, was dead.John and his family lived about three blocks from us. A twenty-year veteran of the NYPD, John was experienced in dealing with death, but he was neither hardened nor immune to it. It was his patience and compassion that carried us through the worst hours of our lives.The weeks that followed encompassed the two most joyous family holidays of the year — Thanksgiving and Christmas — but for us, they were a pain-filled blur. Jack and I were so overwhelmed with grief, we cut ourselves off from everyone and each other.By the beginning of December, if I could have stopped Christmas from coming for the entire world, I would have done it. Christmas has no right coming this year, I thought angrily.But now, close to midnight on Christmas Eve, Santa Claus was intruding at my front door. If ever I had entertained a belief in the existence of Santa Claus, this was certainly the moment of stark reality — the time I knew he didn’t, never did and never would exist.Angry and exhausted, I set down the load of packages I’d bought for the children weeks ago. I had donated Christopher’s presents to Birth Right shortly after his death. Tara’s and Sean’s gifts had been hidden safely from their spying eyes at a neighbor’s house until this evening. I felt a pang of guilt. Jack and I probably hadn’t done a very good job of preparing for Christmas this year; we had numbly gone through the motions of selecting and decorating a tree with Tara and Sean.By the time I reached the front steps, Jack had opened the door and was looking blankly at the bulky figure. His eyes landed on me, behind the Santa; he probably thought I had dragged the guy home in a feeble attempt to revive some Christmas spirit. I shrugged my shoulders, indicating I was just as bewildered as he, and entered the house behind the red-suited man.Santa ignored us. He merrily bounced up the stairs and made a beeline to the children’s bedrooms. He woke Tara first, gently calling her by name. She sat straight up and smiled. Of course Santa was standing by her bed! What else could you expect on Christmas Eve, her four-year-old mind reasoned, and she immediately launched into a recital of her wish list. “A Barbie doll with lots of clothes, a tea set, Candyland and a doll that really wets,” she finished happily. Santa hugged her and made her promise she would go right back to sleep. “Don’t forget, I’ve been a very good girl,” she called after him.Santa walked into Sean’s room. Sean wasn’t so enthusiastic about waking up (he never was), and he was a bit skeptical, but he remembered getting a reindeer lollipop at the mall from some guy who looked like this and decided to let him stay. Santa lifted him out of his crib. Sean smiled sleepily and gave Santa a hug.I looked at the big strong hands that gently held my son and, lifting my eyes to Santa’s face, saw kindly brown eyes gazing at me over the folds of his fluffy white beard. I remembered those strong hands and the warmth of those eyes.“Oh, John!” I cried and burst into tears. Santa reached out to Jack and me and held us close. “Thought you might all need a little Christmas tonight,” he said softly.Soon Santa left, and we watched him walk out into the snow-covered street toward the warmth of his own home and family. Jack and I wordlessly placed our packages under the tree and stepped back to see their bright paper glow under the Christmas tree lights. Santa had come to No. 5 Jodi Lane. And so had Christmas.  【詞匯過關(guān)】請寫出下面文單詞在文章中的中文意思。1.snowflake [?sn??fle?k] n.___________________________2.linger [?l??ɡ?] vi.___________________________3.poncho [?pɑnt?o] n.___________________________4.cumbersome [?k?mb?s?m] adj.___________________________5.sack [s?k] n.___________________________6.blur [bl??] vt.___________________________7.kaleidoscope [k??la?d?sk??p] n.___________________________8.subdued [s?b?dju?d] adj.___________________________9.feign [fe?n] vt.___________________________10.dimly [?d?mli] adv.___________________________11.red-clad [red-kl?d] adj. ___________________________12.mutter [?m?t?] vi.___________________________13.crisp [kr?sp] adj.___________________________14.bleachers [?bli?t??rz] n.___________________________15.snuggle [?snl] vi.___________________________16.oblivious [??bl?v??s] adj.___________________________17.chill [t??l] n.___________________________18.peek [pi?k] vi.___________________________19.buggy [?b?g?] n.___________________________20.contorted [k?n?t??t?d] adj.___________________________21.grayish-blue [?ɡre???-blu?] adj.___________________________22.cradle [?kre?dl] vt.___________________________23.massive [?m?s?v] adj.___________________________24.infant [??nf?nt] n.___________________________25.huddle [?h?dl] vi.___________________________26.bewilder [b??w?ld?] vi.___________________________27.veteran [?vet?r?n] n.___________________________28.compassion [k?m?p??n] n.___________________________29.encompass [?n?k?mp?s] vt.___________________________30.overwhelm [???v??welm] vt.___________________________31.grief [ɡri?f] n.___________________________32.intrude [?n?tru?d] vi.___________________________33.stark [stɑ?k] adj.___________________________34.pang [p??] n.___________________________35.motion [?m???n] n.___________________________36.bulky [?b?lk?] adj.___________________________37.feeble [?fi?bl] adj.___________________________38.revive [r??va?v] vt.___________________________39.shrug [?r] vt.___________________________40.beeline [?bi?la?n] n.___________________________41.recital [r??sa?tl] n.___________________________42.lollipop [?l?lip?p] n.___________________________43.crib [kr?b] n.___________________________44.gaze [ɡe?z] vi.___________________________45.fluffy [?fl?f?] adj.___________________________46.glow [ɡl??] vi.___________________________【句子學(xué)習(xí)】請根據(jù)中文句子填空。(一)動作描寫1.I _____________________, _____________________ my cumbersome load — a large garbage sack loaded with gifts — across the whitening street.我半拖半拉著我的龐大沉重的行李一個裝滿禮物的垃圾麻袋穿過變白的街道。2.A white-bearded, red-clad, overstuffed figure was _____________________ at our front door and _____________________Ho! Ho! Ho!” 一個長著白胡子的,穿著紅衣服的,身材臃腫的家伙正在輕輕地敲我家的大門,嘴里嘟囔著嗬嗬嗬。3.He__________________________________________ in his carriage, __________________________________________,_____________________the noise and chill in the air. 他溫暖地依偎在車?yán)?,趴著在打瞌睡,完全沒有注意到外面的聲音和空氣中的寒意。(二)情緒描寫1._____________________Tony’s _____________________, and__________________________________________. 湯尼臉上的笑容漸漸消失了,眼里充滿了恐懼。2.Jack and I __________________________________________, we cut ourselves off from everyone and each other. 杰克和我太過于悲傷,我們把自己與所有人以及彼此都隔絕了。3._____________________, I set down the load of packages I’d bought for the children weeks ago. 又生氣又累,我放下了幾周之前給孩子們買的一堆包裹。4.I __________________________________________.我感覺到一陣負(fù)罪感。(三)環(huán)境描寫1._____________________, its __________________________________________lingering on my woolen poncho. 雪輕柔地落下,精致的蕾絲花紋的雪花緩慢消失在我的羊毛斗篷上。2.Tears blurred the __________________________________________ that __________________________________________ our neighbor’s houses.   眼淚模糊了鄰居家那閃爍著的令人愉悅的、千變?nèi)f化的、五顏六色的燈火。3.More subdued candles dimly lit every window at our house _______________________________________________________________.更加令人抑郁的燭光暗淡地照亮著我們家的每一扇窗戶,它們只是半心半意地裝出高興的樣子。4._____________________was just_____________________. 秋天的天氣剛剛轉(zhuǎn)涼(四)修辭1.We __________________________________________— a family with three_____________________, _____________________ children. Jack and I__________________________________________ in the backseat of John’s car.那天早上我們出發(fā)時是一個有著三個快樂、健康孩子的家庭。那天晚上杰克和我卻是蜷縮在約翰的車?yán)?,茫然不知所措?/span>2.If ever I had entertained a belief in the existence of Santa Claus, this was certainly the moment of stark reality — the time I knew __________________________________________. 如果我曾經(jīng)相信圣誕老人的存在,那么現(xiàn)在這絕對是一個殘酷的現(xiàn)實(shí),我知道他不存在,從來沒有存在過,也將永遠(yuǎn)不會存在。拓展練習(xí)讀后續(xù)寫閱讀下面材料,根據(jù)其內(nèi)容和所給段落開頭語續(xù)寫兩段,使之構(gòu)成一篇完整的短文。“David, it’s time for breakfast,” Mrs. Motangi called. “There’s a birthday present for you to open.”David ran into the kitchen and saw a shiny new soccer ball on the table. He smiled and started jumping up and down with excitement. “Can I take the ball to school with me, please?” asked David. “Of course,” Mrs. Motangi said. “But you need to be careful with your first real soccer ball.”At school, David immediately put his soccer ball under his desk. During the morning lessons, he kept quietly tapping the ball with his foot to make sure it was still there. Finally, it was break time. David seized the ball and quickly ran outside. He kicked the ball skillfully across the field to a group of students.Soccer was David’s favorite sport. Since he had arrived in England and started school two months ago, he had played soccer every day during the break. Break was always his favorite time because he didn’t have to speak English, a language that was still fairly new to him. When he played soccer, he would forget that he felt like an outsider at this new school“Look!” called David. “I got a new soccer ball. We can use it for our game today.” The other students exchanged glances and just stared at David. These were the most words David had ever spoken to them.“We don’t need your ball,” said a tall boy, Jacob. “We already have one.” Jacob liked playing soccer but poorly. Jacob kicked David’s ball with all his strength. The ball soared over the school’s high fence, bounced once, and rolled to the back of a nearby house. “What a good kick!” screamed the other kids, jumping up and down and slapping Jacob on the back. David watched in horror as his cherished football went out of sight, tears coming to his eyes. What would his mother say?注意:1.續(xù)寫詞數(shù)應(yīng)為150左右;2.請按如下格式在答題卡的相應(yīng)位置作答。Paragraph 1: He was going outside when his teacher, Mr. Bleachers, came with the ball.Paragraph 2: With the help of David, they got prepared for the soccer match between classes.  心靈雞湯精選答案【詞匯過關(guān)】請寫出下面文單詞在文章中的中文意思。1.snowflake [?sn??fle?k] n.雪花2.linger [?l??ɡ?] vi.緩慢消失3.poncho [?pɑnt?o] n.斗篷4.cumbersome [?k?mb?s?m] adj.大而笨重的5.sack [s?k] n.麻布袋6.blur [bl??] vt.使模糊不清7.kaleidoscope [k??la?d?sk??p] n.千變?nèi)f化8.subdued [s?b?dju?d] adj.抑郁的9.feign [fe?n] vt.假裝10.dimly [?d?mli] adv.昏暗地11.red-clad [red-kl?d] adj. 穿紅衣的12.mutter [?m?t?] vi.嘟囔13.crisp [kr?sp] adj.涼爽的14.bleachers [?bli?t??rz] n.露天看臺15.snuggle [?snl] vi.依偎16.oblivious [??bl?v??s] adj.沒察覺17.chill [t??l] n.寒意18.peek [pi?k] vi.偷看19.buggy [?b?g?] n.童車20.contorted [k?n?t??t?d] adj.扭曲的21.grayish-blue [?ɡre???-blu?] adj.灰藍(lán)色的22.cradle [?kre?dl] vt.輕輕抱著23.massive [?m?s?v] adj.結(jié)實(shí)的24.infant [??nf?nt] n.嬰兒25.huddle [?h?dl] vi.蜷縮26.bewilder [b??w?ld?] vi.迷糊27.veteran [?vet?r?n] n.老手28.compassion [k?m?p??n] n.同情29.encompass [?n?k?mp?s] vt.包含30.overwhelm [???v??welm] vt.壓倒31.grief [ɡri?f] n.悲傷32.intrude [?n?tru?d] vi.闖入33.stark [stɑ?k] adj.殘酷的34.pang [p??] n.一陣35.motion [?m???n] n.動作36.bulky [?b?lk?] adj.龐大的37.feeble [?fi?bl] adj.無力的38.revive [r??va?v] vt.復(fù)蘇39.shrug [?r] vt.40.beeline [?bi?la?n] n.直線41.recital [r??sa?tl] n.逐一列舉42.lollipop [?l?lip?p] n.棒棒糖43.crib [kr?b] n.嬰兒床44.gaze [ɡe?z] vi.凝視45.fluffy [?fl?f?] adj.毛茸茸的46.glow [ɡl??] vi.發(fā)【句子學(xué)習(xí)】請根據(jù)中文句子填空。(一)動作描寫1.I half-carried, half-dragged my cumbersome load — a large garbage sack loaded with gifts — across the whitening street.我半拖半拉著我的龐大沉重的行李一個裝滿禮物的垃圾麻袋穿過變白的街道。2.A white-bearded, red-clad, overstuffed figure was tapping gently at our front door and muttering “Ho! Ho! Ho!” 一個長著白胡子的,穿著紅衣服的,身材臃腫的家伙正在輕輕地敲我家的大門,嘴里嘟囔著嗬嗬嗬。3.He was snuggled up warmly in his carriage, napping on his stomach,oblivious tothe noise and chill in the air. 他溫暖地依偎在車?yán)?,趴著在打瞌睡,完全沒有注意到外面的聲音和空氣中的寒意。(二)情緒描寫1.The smile faded from Tony’s face, andhorror filled his eyes. 湯尼臉上的笑容漸漸消失了,眼里充滿了恐懼。2.Jack and I were so overwhelmed with grief, we cut ourselves off from everyone and each other. 杰克和我太過于悲傷,我們把自己與所有人以及彼此都隔絕了。3.Angry and exhausted, I set down the load of packages I’d bought for the children weeks ago. 又生氣又累,我放下了幾周之前給孩子們買的一堆包裹。4.I felt a pang of guilt.我感覺到一陣負(fù)罪感。(三)環(huán)境描寫1.The snow fell softly, its delicate lace-patterned snowflakeslingering on my woolen poncho. 雪輕柔地落下,精致的蕾絲花紋的雪花緩慢消失在我的羊毛斗篷上。2.Tears blurred the kaleidoscope of multicolored lights that blinked cheerily from our neighbor’s houses.   眼淚模糊了鄰居家那閃爍著的令人愉悅的、千變?nèi)f化的、五顏六色的燈火。3.More subdued candles dimly lit every window at our house in their halfhearted attempt to feign cheer.更加令人抑郁的燭光暗淡地照亮著我們家的每一扇窗戶,它們只是半心半意地裝出高興的樣子。4.The fall weather was just turning crisp. 秋天的天氣剛剛轉(zhuǎn)涼(四)修辭1.We had set out that morning— a family with threehappy, healthy children. Jack and Ireturned that eveninghuddled and bewildered in the backseat of John’s car.那天早上我們出發(fā)時是一個有著三個快樂、健康孩子的家庭。那天晚上杰克和我卻是蜷縮在約翰的車?yán)?,茫然不知所措?/span>2.If ever I had entertained a belief in the existence of Santa Claus, this was certainly the moment of stark reality — the time I knew he didn’t, never did and never would exist. 如果我曾經(jīng)相信圣誕老人的存在,那么現(xiàn)在這絕對是一個殘酷的現(xiàn)實(shí),我知道他不存在,從來沒有存在過,也將永遠(yuǎn)不會存在。     拓展練習(xí)讀后續(xù)寫參考范文He was going outside when his teacher, Mr. Bleachers, came with the ball. The “conflict” didn’t escape his notice. Having returned it to David, he turned to Jacob, demanding an apology. Jacob, drooping his head, uttered a sincere “sorry”. “Boys, remember the coming soccer match? With David, we can be a stronger team,” Mr. Bleachers said with encouragement. David cast Jacob a smile, who immediately straightened up his slumped shoulders. In the following days, it was David’s patient guidance that saw their strides in football skills.     With the help of David, they got prepared for the soccer match between classes. With soaring confidence and sharpened football skills, they put five consecutive wins under their belt and entered the tight final. Although the rival scored a goal first, Jacob battled to tie it with David’s smart assistance. Finally, they won the game. Wild cheers and applause erupted from the stand. When David held the trophy high, he knew that it was the football from his mother that overcame the language barrier and befriended his class.

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2023屆高三英語二輪復(fù)習(xí)學(xué)案名著閱讀之心靈雞湯精選ADivineCreature

2023屆高三英語二輪復(fù)習(xí)學(xué)案名著閱讀之心靈雞湯精選ADivineCreature

2023屆高三英語二輪復(fù)習(xí)學(xué)案名著閱讀之心靈雞湯精選ADifferentPath

2023屆高三英語二輪復(fù)習(xí)學(xué)案名著閱讀之心靈雞湯精選ADifferentPath

2023屆高三英語二輪復(fù)習(xí)學(xué)案名著閱讀之心靈雞湯精選ACanineNanny

2023屆高三英語二輪復(fù)習(xí)學(xué)案名著閱讀之心靈雞湯精選ACanineNanny

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