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overreact or yell, you might create a fascination with the behavior and a willful child will be more likely to fight against you, she says. Having a child physically return the stolen item helps him or her grasp the situation and the consequence. But don39。t buy. A few hours later, I marched my son back to the store with two dollars from his piggy bank. He walked embarrassedly to the counter and told the clerk that he had taken something without paying for it, that he was sorry to break it and that he would pay for it now. I know exactly how terrible he was feeling. Returning to the scene of the crime is the same shamecausing punishment I received when I was five and stole something from a store. 1 remember my dad sending me back to return the item. It remains one of my clearest childhood memories. After that day, I never stole again. My dad taught me such an important lesson 30 years ago and I saw an opportunity to do the same for my son. But now I wonder if it was the right thing to do. Returning to the store is absolutely the right thing to do, Laura Markham, ., a child psychologist and author of Peaceful Parent, Happy Kids, says. Many children steal they39。s Globe to Shakespearean plays at the Royal Opera House. Plays will run until the end of the year in London, Birmingham, Newcastle and Gateshead. And there39。 including 26. Honey, I have to say I can’t go to the party tonight. I’m tired out . ________. Have some fun! A. Don’t pull my leg B. Don’t be a wet blanket C. Don’t be a black sheep D. Don’t give me the cold shoulder 第二節(jié) 完形填空 (共 20小題;每小題 1分,滿分 20分 ) I always felt sorry for people in wheelchairs. Some people, old and weak, cannot 27 by themselves. Others seem perfectly healthy, 28 in business suits, and wheel themselves around with strong determination. But whenever I saw someone in a wheelchair, I only saw a 29 , not a person. Then I fainted( 暈倒 ) at Euro Disney 30 low blood pressure. This was the first time I had ever fainted, and my parents said that I must 31 for a while after First Aid. I agreed to take it easy, but 32 I stepped toward the door, I saw my dad pushing a (n) 33 in my direction! Feeling the colour burn my cheeks, I asked him to wheel that thing right back to 34 he found it. I could not believe this was happening to me. Wheelchairs were 35 for other people but not for me. As my father wheeled me out into the main street, people 36 began to treat me differently. Little kids ran in front of me, 37 my father to stop the wheelchair suddenly. 38 set in(開(kāi)始 /到來(lái) ) as I was thrown back and forth. “Stupid kids — they have perfectly good 39 . Why can’ t they watch where they’ re going? ”I thought. People 40 down at me, pity in their eyes. Then they would look away, maybe because they thought the 41 they fot me, the better. “I am just like you!” I wanted to scream. “The only 42 is that you’ ve got legs, and I have wheels. ” People in wheelchairs are not 43 . They can see every look and hear each word. Looking out at the faces, I finally understood: I was once just like them. I 44 people in wheelchairs exactly the way they did not 45 to be treated. I realized it is some of us with two healthy legs who are 46 disabled. 27. A. look around B. care about C. make out D. get around 28. A. covered B. dressed C. lost D. folded 29. A. beast B. passerby C. disability D. failure 30. A. by way of B. due to C. as to D. in terms of 31. A. rest B. break C. leave D. sleep 32. A. before B. until C. as D. because 33. A. carriage B. bed C. armchair D. wheelchair 34. A. whom B. that C. where D. which 35. A. sad B. fine C. light D. cheap 36. A. immediately B