I WAS BORN TO DANCE. I'VE BEEN DANCING ALL MY LIFE, EVER SINCE MY MOTH...

Exercise 2:I was born to dance. I've been dancing all my life, ever since my mother, who gave up a dancing career on thestage when she married my father, picked me up and twirled me around as an infant. As much as I loved dancingwith her, her greatest gift to me was her "unconditional love" during her lifetime.My parents divorced after only 5 years of marriage, but my father remarried a lovely lady who also loved todance. They used to take me to a dancing club where I would listen to the music and watch them dance-occasionally my stepmother, Mary, invited me to dance I also met my wife, Charlotte, in a dancing party. I dancedwith her for about 15 minutes, and during that brief span, I realized that I fell in love with her. We kept dancingthroughout our marriage. My earliest memories of dancing with my daughters started when I came home fromwork to our small home in Marblehead, Massachusetts, and my daughter Laura was about 3 years old. It was veryrelaxing for me. To turn on the record player, pick up Laura in my arms, and dance her around the room!Our family danced a lot. My daughters, Laura and Anne, and I continued to dance on every occasion. Onefavorite memory I have of dancing with Laura and Anne was when I took each of them when they were seniors inhigh school to the Daddy-Daughter dance. We won both dance competitions!As their father, I have tried to provide my daughters with unconditional love, as my Mother provided to me,endless emotional and loving support, and good educations and life experiences which have helped prepare themfor happy and successful adult lives. Being a father who is worthy of their love and respect, I consider fatherhooda privilege, not an entitlement.In 1994, my oldest daughter Laura gave me a lovely book, which I still have, entitled "Fathers and Daughters."My Father's Day suggestion to every father is to dance with your daughters at every opportunity. It will not onlybring you closer, it will give them memories of you“to hang onto" long after we are gone.1. Of the characters mentioned in the passage, who did not like dancing?A. Mary B. Laura C. Anne D. No one2. The writer _________.A. could not dance well B. had a devoted motherC. had not met his father since his parents divorced. D. did not like to dance with his step mother3. Which sentence is not true?A. He used to go to a dancing club with his father and step mother. B. The writer had two daughters.C. The writer enjoyed dancing with his daughters. D. The writer never danced with his step mother4. Which is not referred to what the writer provides his daughters with?A. the arts of dancing C. endless emotional and loving supportB. unconditional love D. good educations and life experiences5. The writer _________ fatherhood.A. underestimates B. appreciates C. dislikes D. disapproves of