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1、Passage 1My neighbour Mitzi is a very bright 3-year-old who often comes over to my house to ask questions. We were taking a walk one day and I noticed that about 10 feet ahead and off to the side of our path was a dead bird. Well, Mitzi is a curious child and rather than get involved with a lot of q

2、uestions about a dead bird. I made a detour and directed her attention in the opposite direction. I learned then that if you dont want a 3-year-old to see something you step on it. Walking around it only makes it more obvious.“Whats that?” Mitzi asked.“It is a dead bird,” I responded.As we approache

3、d the bird, she questioned further, ”Whats dead?”“Dead is when the birds heart doesnt go thump-thump anymore. The bird doesnt breathe. It cant sing or fly anymore.”“Oh,” she acknowledged and started to pick up the bird. The bird had been dead for several days, so stopped her from touching it, giving

4、 her a stick instead to investigate the bird with. Very carefully she turned the bird over. There were worms and bugs on the bird, but this didnt bother(烦扰)Mitzi at all. I made sure she couldnt see my face because it bothered me.“Can I take it home?” she asked. I suggested that instead, we cover it

5、with leaves, and Mitzi agreed.She gathered a bunch of leaves, and as she placed them on the bird, Mitzi asked, ”Do birds go to heaven?”I thought to myself, here we go. Id learned a long time ago that Mitzi frequently has her own ideas about what she asks, so I responded, ”Do you think birds go to he

6、aven?”She thought for a while and decided that they did. She continued to gather leaves and place them on the bird. All at once started taking leaves off the bird and announced, ” It wont work.”I knew things had been going too smoothly. ”What wont work, Mitzi?”“The bird cant be in heaven and still b

7、e on the ground.” She sat down next to the bird and used the stick to poke(拨弄)at it. I was trying to figure out how to explain things to her without adding to her confusion when her face brightened and she asked, ”Can part of a bird go to heaven? ”“What part?” I asked.“The part that made the bird si

8、ng and fly.”I put my arm around her and answered, ” Yes.” Together we covered the bird and continued on our walk.1. While taking a walking, Mitzi and I found a dead bird_.A) in the middle of the path B) far away from where we wereC) just outside my house D) near the path we were walking along2. At t

9、he sight of the dead bird, I _.A) was anxious to tell Mitzi to look at itB) tried to distract Mitzi from gazing on itC) stepped on it for fear that Mitzi got frightenedD) was caught up in conversation with Mitzi over the bird3. In the passage the expression similar to “make a detour” is _.A) come ov

10、er B) walk around itC) add to her confusion D) continue on our walk4. None of the following statements is true except _.A)i was bothered by Mitzis one question after anotherB) Mitzi was a little girl who kept asking silly questionsC) The bird died a few days ago, covered with leavesD) My explanation

11、 of “dead” was easy enough for Mitzi to understand5. The meaning of “Here we go” is _.A) we, like the bird, would also go to heavenB) we could begin our discussion about the birdC) she raised her own question, as I had expectedD) she needed to be taught morePassage2Roger Conner is a modern-day Horat

12、io Alger hero. Roger started out as an unpaid worker in a small flower shop. He has become the owner of a florist company whose sales are well over ¥100,000 a year.One day when Roger was only twelve, he stopped at a local flower shop. He asked the owner if he could work for him, without pay, in orde

13、r to learn the business. Roger started working every day after school and on weekends. After two years on the job,he finally asked for a small salary. The owners told him he ”wasnt good enough to be paid.” So he quit, and found a paying job at another local flower shop. He worked hard there, but aft

14、er six months they laid him off because business was slow.Not discouraged, Roger decided to do it alone and started his own flower store in a basement. He started his business with only sixty-five dollars. He bought old refrigerators at garage sales and knocked the shelves out. This turned them into

15、 coolers for his flesh-cut flowers. His business grew rapidly as he built up a reputation(声誉) for top quality and fine service. In 1977, Roger bought out the flower store where he had worked without pay for over two years. The people who said he “wasnt good enough” were astonished to find that they

16、were being taken over by a teenager. He had plans to renovate the whole store.One of the reasons the owners sold out to Roger was that the store wasnt doing well.But after Roger took over ownership and redid the store,business started booming. In fact, business was so good after that one year, he ce

17、lebrated by buying out the other store where he had worked. Roger then combined both stores and moved to a location in the center of his town.The new store has2,000 square feet and seven employees. And he did it all before he reached the age of twenty.6. The author is most eager to show that people

18、who want to get ahead in business should_A) work without pay. B) work hard and be persistent.C) own a flower shop. D) work as teenagers.7. Which of the following does NOT describe Roger Comers history in business?A) He worked for two years without payB) He needed luck to be successfulC) He opened hi

19、s first flower business in a basementD) He opened a store in the middle of his town8. The style of the passage is mostly like a _A) newspaper article. B) television play. C) humorous story. D) magazine interview9. Which of the following words is closest in meaning to the word” renovate” in the fourt

20、h paragraph?A) relocate B) resell C) rebuild D) repaint10. Which of the following statements about Roger Conner is NOT true? A) He gave customers better service than the other shops ha had worked for.B) He was a very brave

21、60;and heroic young man C) He worked hard without pay in a flower shop, in order to get to know the business.D) He is free to make decisions on the location of his shop.Passage 3Samoa Sasa sat cross-legged in his one-room, open-air home, and said through an interpreter: ”I am fri

22、ghtened by the sounds of progress everywhere. For most of my fifty years the time has stood still in Samoa. Now western-style homes are springing up around the village and the young men are leaving for New Zealand. In the town there are people from all over the world telling my government that what

23、we need is progress. I dont understand what all this progress is.”He stood up and drove away some chickens strutting across the floor mats. He went on slowly:” The people of Luantuanauu Village and my eight children have always worked the banana plantations and respected the custom that the Matais (

24、family chiefs) represented absolute authority.” Sasa himself was a Matais.” All the people in the old days owned all the land communally, they elected a parliament and they administered justice in each village, so there was little for our policemen to do. All that too has changed.”He puffed at his c

25、lay pipe and went on:” We are a poor country and change must come, but I do not want it so fast. I do not want my children to go to New Zealand to look for big money. I want them to stay here in Luantuanauu and work our plantations as we have always done.”The confusion Sasa feels is shared by many o

26、f the 150,000 Western Samoans-and undoubtedly by the peoples of other newly independent, developing nations as well.Mr. Felise Vala, the young editor of the Samoan Times, expresses another point of view. “Already the streets are being torn up for a new road system that the island badly needs. A hosp

27、ital is being rebuilt and a new one-million-pound hotel is being opened to promote tourism. We are modernizing the communications system and the Japanese have built sawmills and are building houses. We are being forced into the twentieth century. Of course many of our people are not sure that they w

28、ant all this. Many want modern enjoyment but they dont want to throw away our culture to get them. There is no easy answer because in many ways our culture slows down progress and development. The question people are asking is: what is balance between the past and the future?”11. What do we learn fr

29、om the passage about Samoa?A) It is a newly independent, developing country.B) It is still in a fairly backward state. C) It is a country with agriculture as its major economy.D) All of the above.12. In the past fifty years or so, _.A) Samoa has had little progress.B) Samosans have built lots of wes

30、tern-style houses.C) People from different parts of the world have come to settle down in Samoa.D) Young Samoans have kept leaving for New Zealand.13. A Matais used to have absolute control over _.A) Samoa B) his village C) his family D) his plantations14. In the past, according to Samoa Sasa, the p

31、olice_.A) had to work very hard maintain law and orderB) were required to pay high respects to MataisC) had almost nothing to doD) administered justice in each village 15. We are told that many people in Samoa_.A) are eager to have rapid progressB) find it difficult to choose between old and modern

32、livesC) do not want modern enjoymentD) prefer to live the kind of life they are used toPassage 4 To be a good teacher, you need some of the gifts of a good actor: you must be able to hold the attention and interest of your audience; you must be a clear speaker, with a good, strong, pleasing voice wh

33、ich is fully under your control; and you must be able to act what you are teaching, in order to make its meaning clear. Watch a good teacher, and you will see that he does not sit motionless before his class: he stands the whole time while teaching; he walks about, using his arms, hands and fingers

34、to help him in his explanations, and his face to express feelings. Listen to him, and you will hear the loudness, the quality and the musical note of his voice always changing according to what he is talking about.The fact that a good teacher has some of the gifts of a good actor doesnt mean that he

35、 will indeed be able to act well on the stage, for there are very important differences between the teachers work and the actors. The actor has to speak words which he has learnt by heart; he has to repeat exactly the same words each time he plays a certain part, even his movements and the ways in w

36、hich he uses his voice are usually fixed beforehand. What he has to do is to make all these carefully learnt words and actions seem natural on the stage.A good teacher works in quite a different way. His audience takes an active part in his play: they ask and answer questions, they obey orders, and

37、if they dont understand something, they say so. The teacher therefore has to suit his act to the needs of his audience, which is his glass. He cannot learn his part by heart, but must invent it as he goes along.16. The passage is mainly about_.A) how to become an ordinary teacherB) what a good teach

38、er should do outside the classroomC) what teachers and actors could learn from each otherD) The similarities and differences between a teachers work and an actors17. A good teacher _.A) knows how to hold the interest of his studentsB) has a low voiceC) knows how to act on the stageD) stands or sits

39、motionless while teaching18. In what way is a teachers work different from an actors?A) The teacher must learn everything by heart.B) He knows how to control his voice better than an actor.C) He has to deal with unexpected situations.D) He has to use more facial expressions.19. The main difference b

40、etween students in class and a theatre audience is that_ .A) there is no stage to watchB) Students must keep silent while theatre audience needntC) No memory work is needed for the studentsD) The students must take part in the play20. Why cant some good teachers play well on the stage? A) Nobody has

41、 taught them how to act on the stage. B) Their audiences are different.C) It is impossible for them to do so much memory work.D) They are not used to repeating exactly the same words.Passage 5England is not a big country: from north to south and from east to west it is only about three hundred miles

42、 across. But for a small country it has a surprising range of climate. People who have never visited England, or who have visited only one part of it, often make the mistake of thinking that it is a cold and wet country. Except for the summer months of June to September, this is probably true of the

43、 north of England and the Midlands. In the south, however, the climate is much more pleasant. One result is that when people retire from a job in the north they often prefer to move down to the milder south. Perhaps the warmest part of the country is the south-west, which consists of the countries o

44、f Devon and Cornwall. The warm Gulf stream flows across the North Atlantic ocean from the Gulf of Mexico and makes the coastal regions of the south-west quite warm. Palm trees, bamboo and many semi-tropical plants grow well in the south-west of England, flowers and vegetables ripen as much as a mont

45、h earlier than those elsewhere. Farmers in the area obtain a higher price for their vegetables and flowers because they are ready earlier. In winter there may be several feet of snow in other parts of England but there will probably be no snow at all in the southwest. This may be one of the reasons

46、why the southwest is one of England's most popular holiday areas. 21. The distance from the center of England to south coast is about_. . A) one hundred miles B) three hundred milesC) one hundred and fifty miles D) six hundred miles22. England is a country_. . A) with a cold and wet climate B) w

47、ith a surprising climateC) with a pleasant climate D) with a variety of climates23. According to the passage,_. . A) flowers and vegetables from Devon are on the market one month earlierB) farmers in the southwest grow as many vegetables and flowers as farmers elsewhereC) people in the southwest hav

48、e to pay a higher price for vegetables and flowersD) vegetables in Cornwall ripen as much as a month earlier than flowers24. In the north of England and the Midlands,_. . A) it is cold wet all the year round B) the climate is pleasant as a wholeC) it is warm most of the time in a yearD) only the sum

49、mer is not cold and wet25. In winter, people in Devon and Cornwall _. A) seldom see snow B) never see any snow C) may have several feet of snow D) often see snowPassage 6An English traveler spent a few weeks in Sweden. When he was about to return home he had only enough money to get a ticket back to

50、 England. Thinking the matter over, he decided that as it was only a two-days voyage he could get home without eating anything. So he bought a ticket with that little money he had and went on board the ship.He closed his ears to the sound of the lunch bell, and when dinner time came ,he refused to g

51、o down to the place where people had their dinner, saying that he did not feel well.The following day he did not get up until breakfast was over, pretending that he had overslept himself. At lunch time, too, he kept out of the way. By the time of dinner, however, he became so hungry that he could ev

52、en have eaten paper.“I cant stand this any longer, ”he said to himself. “I must have something to eat.” At dinner-table he ate everything put in front of him. When he was quite satisfied, he felt stronger and at once went to see the waiter. “Bring me the bill,” he said to the waiter.“the bill?” said

53、 the waiter in surprise.“Yes,” answered the traveler.“There isnt any bill here .” Said the waiter . “On this ship, meals are already included in the ticket.”26. The traveler thought that he_.A) would find no food served on board.B) could not get home without having meals on board.C) could do without

54、 any food before he got homeD) would not be allowed to eat on board27. “He closed his ears to the sound of the lunch bell” (Para.2)means that_.A) he did not hear the lunch bellB) He heard the lunch bell but didnt go for lunchC) He put something in his ears to close them D) He did not know it was the

55、 lunch bell28. The first day he did not have his lunch because he did not _.A) feel well B) know the time for lunch C) hear the lunch bell D)have the money29. The traveler said to himself “_”.A) I cant bear any longer.B) I cant stay here any longer .C) I cant keep my feet on this place any longer.D)

56、 I must sit down for a while.30. He became so hungry that he_.A) went to sleep B) ate paper C) went to the dinner-table D) kept out of the wayPassage 7There have been many great inventions, things that changed the way we live. The first great invention was one that is still very important today-the

57、wheel. This made it easier to carry heavy things and to travel long distances. For hundreds of years after that there were few inventions that had as much effect as the wheel. Then in the early 1800's the world started to change. There was little unknown land left in the world. People didnt have to explore much anymore. They began to work instead to make life better. In the second half of th

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