Three-year-old Teddy Lasry was sleeping in his cowboy outfit(套裝)yesterday at his family’s Fifth Ave. apartment when he shot up in bed screaming. A 3-foot-long black-and-white snake twisted around his left arm and had just bitten his little finger,
“The babysitter was frightened to death.” said Teddy’s father David Lasry, who, along with his wife, Evelyn, was at work when the snake appeared about 4:00 pm. The horrified babysitter called 911 and the building’s doorman. The doorman and two cable TV workers helped take the snake off the boy’s arm and put it in a garbage bag. Police rushed Teddy to Mount Sinai Medical Center, where he spent two hours attached to a heart monitor as a precaution in case the snake was poisonous. It wasn’t. Experts at the snakebite treatment center at Jacobi Medical Center in the Bronx, where policemen took the snake, found out it was a non-poisonous California king snake. But how did it end up in Teddy’s bed?
A little detective work determined that the snake had escaped two weeks ago from its cage in the apartment of a doctor whose family lives four floors below the Lasrys. The owner said his son’s pet snake likely traveled up the water pipes and into his neighbor’s apartment. “It’s a very gentle, very harmless snake, ”he said: “It’s handled by our family all the time.”
David Lasry believed the pet was simply hungry after two weeks of wandering. Evelyn said her son seems to have overcome his fright by thinking of himself as a hero cowboy as he rode in the back of the police car to the hospital.
“I told Teddy he’s a pretty snake, a nice pet snake who got out of his cage.” Evelyn said. “But he asked, ‘Why did he bite my finger, Mamma?’ And I said, ‘Because he saw that you are a big boy, Teddy, in your cowboy outfit and he got scared.’”
1.What did the babysitter do after Teddy was bitten by a snake?
A. She ran out of the apartment.
B. She took the snake off Teddy’s arm.
C. She called the TV company.
D. She made an emergency call.
2.We can learn from the passage that the snake_____.
A. was kept in a cage by its owner
B. was poisonous
C. was deserted by its owner
D. escaped to the apartment downstairs
3.Which of the following is true?
A. Teddy was awake when the snake arrived.
B. The snake had never bitten people before.
C. Teddy’s mother was at home when the snake turned up.
D. Teddy needed a heart machine to stay alive for two hours.
4.Teddy probably believed he was attacked because_________.
A. his parents weren’t at home
B. he was asleep
C. the snake was scared of him
D. the snake was hungry
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Being able to understand local jokes is often seen as an unbelievable ice-breaker for a language learner eager to form friendships with native speakers. “I always felt that humor was a ceiling that I could never break through,” Hannah Ashley, a public relations account manager in London, who once studied Spanish in Madrid, told The Guardian, “I could never speak to people on the same level as I would speak to a native English speaker. I almost came across as quite a boring person because all I could talk about was facts.”
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【題文1】It is implied in the noted sentence in Paragraph 1 that ________.
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B. show that it’s hard to put jokes into another language
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D. show that expressing ability affects the sense of humor
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