14£®ÃÀ¹úijÖÐѧ¾Ù°ìÓ¢ÓïÊî¼ÙѵÁ·Óª£¬¿ªÉèÒÔÏ¿γ̣ºcooking£¬swimming£¬giving first-aid£¬playing football/basketball£®¼Ù¶¨ÄãÊÇÀ£¬ÇëÄãд·âÉêÇëÐÅ£¬±¨Ãû²Î¼ÓÆäÖÐÒ»Ãſγ̵Äѧϰ£®
ÄÚÈÝ°üÀ¨£º1£®Äã¸ÐÐËȤµÄÒ»Ãſγ̣»2£®ÎªÊ²Ã´ÏëѧÕâÃſγ̣»3£®ÄãÆÚÍû´ÓÖÐѧµ½Ê²Ã´£®
×¢Ò⣺1£®´ÊÊý£º100×óÓÒ£»2£®¿ÉÒÔÊʵ±Ôö¼Óϸ½Ú£¬ÒÔʹÐÐÎÄÁ¬¹á£®
Dear Sir/Madam£¬
I am very glad that your school will hold the English summer camp which contains many courses£¬such as cooking£¬swimming£¬giving first-aid£¬playingfootball/basketballand so on£®
I want to register to attend a course about giving first-aid because it is important to learn some knowledge about first aid£®If a person gets injured£¬he needs medical care before a docter can be found£®At that time£¬even a second really counts£®After graduation£¬I plan to devote myself to medical research£®Hopefully£¬the course will help a lot to deal with some common injuries£®
I would appreciate it if you could take my application into consideration£®
Yours£¬
Li Hua
Yours£¬
Li Hua£®

·ÖÎö ÕæʵһƪÉêÇëÐÅ£¬¸ù¾ÝÌâÄ¿ÒªÇó¿ÉÖªÓõÚÒ»È˳ƺÍÒ»°ãÏÖÔÚʱ£®ÄÚÈÝ°üÀ¨£ºÒ»µãÃ÷ѧУµÄ¿Î³Ì£»¶þ˵Ã÷¸ÐÐËȤµÄÒ»ÃſγÌÒÔ¼°ÏëѧÕâÃſγ̵ÄÔ­ÒòºÍÆÚÍû´ÓÖÐѧµ½Ê²Ã´£»Èý±íʾ¸Ð¼¤£®
¸ß·Ö¾äÐÍ£º
1£®I am very glad that your school will hold the English summer camp which contains many courses£¬such as cooking£¬swimming£¬giving first-aid£¬playing football/basketball and so on£®¾ä×ÓÀïwhich Òýµ¼¶¨Óï´Ó¾ä£¬´úÖ¸ÏÈÐдÊthe English summer camp£®
·Ç³£¸ßÐËÄãÃÇÖÐѧ¾Ù°ìÓ¢ÓïÊî¼ÙѵÁ·Óª£¬°üÀ¨Åëâ¿£¬ÓÎÓ¾£¬¼±¾È£¬×ãÇò£¬ÀºÇòµÈÐí¶à¿Î³Ì
£®2£®I want to register  to attend a course about giving first-aid because  it is important to learn some knowledge about first aid£®¾ä×ÓÀïbecauseÒýµ¼Ô­Òò×´Óï´Ó¾ä£¬it ×öÐÎʽÖ÷Ó´úÖ¸¶¯´Ê²»¶¨Ê½to learn some knowledge about first aid£®
ÎÒÏëÒª±¨Ãû²Î¼Ó¼±¾È¿Î³Ì£¬ÒòΪѧϰһЩ¼±¾È֪ʶºÜÖØÒª£®

½â´ð Dear sir/madam£¬
I am very glad that your school will hold the English summer camp which contains many courses£¬such as cooking£¬swimming£¬giving first-aid£¬playing football/basketball and so on£®¡¾¸ß·Ö¾äÐÍÒ»¡¿£¨µãÃ÷ѧУµÄ¿Î³Ì£©
I want to register  to attend a course about giving first-aid because  it is important to learn some knowledge about first aid£®¡¾¸ß·Ö¾äÐͶþ¡¿If a person gets injured£¬he needs medical care before a docter can be found£®At that time£¬even a second really counts£®After graduation£¬I plan to devote myself to medical research£®Hopefully£¬the course will help a lot to deal with some common injuries£®£¨ËµÃ÷¸ÐÐËȤµÄÒ»ÃſγÌÒÔ¼°ÏëѧÕâÃſγ̵ÄÔ­ÒòºÍÆÚÍû´ÓÖÐѧµ½Ê²Ã´£©
I would appreciate it if you could take my application into consideration£®£¨±íʾ¸Ð¼¤£©
Yours£¬
Li Hua

µãÆÀ ¿¼²éÓ¦ÓÃÎÄÖеÄÊéÐŵÄд×÷£®Í¬Ê±Ò²ÊôÓÚÌá¸ÙÀà×÷ÎÄ£¬Òªµã¶¼ÒѾ­¸ø³ö£¬ÔËÓúÏÊʵÄÓï·¨¹æÔòºÍ´Ê»ã°Ñ¸÷Òªµã¶¼×¼È·±íÊö³ö£®ÄѵãÔÚÓÚÑ¡Ôñ´Ê»ãºÍ¾äÐÍ£¬¿ÉÒÔÁé»îÔËÓÃÊ¡ÂԾ䣬µ¹×°¾äºÍÇ¿µ÷¾äÐÍ׼ȷ±íÊö£®Ìá¸ÙÀà¶ÌÎĵĹؼüÔÚÓÚÒªµãҪȫÃæ°üÀ¨£¬²»ÄÜÓÐÒÅ©ºÍÊ¡ÂÔ£®Í¬Ê±×¢Òâıƪ²¼¾ÖµÄ˳Ðò£¬ÔËÓúÏÊʵÄÁ¬½Ó´ÊÁ¬½ÓÈ«ÎÄ£¬Í¬Ê±Ñ¡Ôñ¸ß¼¶µÄ´Ê»ãºÍÓï·¨ÏîÄ¿ÈÃÎÄÕ¸üÓÐÎIJɣ®

Á·Ï°²áϵÁдð°¸
Ïà¹ØÏ°Ìâ

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£ºÑ¡ÔñÌâ

5£®After the fighting£¬the enemy ____£®£¨¡¡¡¡£©
A£®gave upB£®gave outC£®gave offD£®gave in

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£ºÔĶÁÀí½â

5£®Are you a team player£¿
    We hear a lot about team building these days£®Team-building gurus are hired by some corporations to lecture us on how to work more effectively with each other£®And they organize awaydays£¨Ï¢¹¤ÈÕ£©-a time employees spend together away from their usual workplace£®
    Here in the UK£¬employees can take part in activities such as Zombie boot camps where military instructors train you how to fight walking'dead people'£®For the brainier office workers amongst us there are crime investigations modelled on popular TV dramas like Sherlock Holmes and CSI£®
Stressed-out city workers might have ukulele lessons made available to them£®Why is that a good team-building exercise£¿Ukulele teacher Lorraine Bow says£º"The fact that they can play a musical instrument within an hour is quite a fulfilling thing£¬really£®It's not competitive-it's quite easy to do and a bit less intimidating than a guitar¡­"
    Actually£¬a horse might be a bit more intimidating than an instrument£®The animals are used by a company in Abu Dhabi which teaches leadership through horse training£®Basically£¬you have to go in a yard with a horse and persuade it that you're the boss by using body language£®
    Kelly Eide£¬co-founder of True Leadership£¬says£º"The horses don't care if your hair is purple£¬if you're a man or a woman£¬if you're old or young¡­It transcends all of those cultural boundaries-age£¬gender£¬religion£¬tradition etc£®-so that's a perfect fit£®And in an organization where you really need groups of people togel£¬who come from backgrounds which have no common norms£¬you can teach that most efficiently with a horse£®"
     And the horse feels instinctively whether or not you are a natural leader£®So if after you've done a good presentation your boss offers you a carrot£¬you'll know where he might have learnt it from£®

24£®What are awaydays for£¿B
A£®To gather employees to join a meeting on how to work more effectively with each other£®
B£®To building team spirit among people who work for the same company£®
C£®To criticize employer who have not satisfied outstanding achievement£®
D£®To teach people how to make term more united£®
25£®Which of the following is true according to the passage£¿A
A£®The one in which you learn to'kill'Zombies is more physically demanding£®
B£®Ukulele lessons are designed for people who are highly intelligent£®
C£®Stressed-out city workers both have ukulele lessons made available to them£®
D£®A horse must be a bit more intimidating than an instrument£®
26£®How long does it take for you to learn how to play the ukulele£¿A
A£®One hour             B£®Two-hour      C.15minutes      D£®half hour
27£®We can infer that the word"gel"£¨Line 4£¬Para5£©refers toC£®
A£®invitation             B£®recreate        C£®cooperate       D£®help£®

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£ºÔĶÁÀí½â

2£®For those who have no access to clean water£¬the phrase"a thirst for knowledge"may soon have a new meaning£®Researchers have developed a book with specially treated pages that can make water safe to drink£®The researchers say their invention could improve the lives of many in the developing world£®
    An estimated 600 to 700 million people around the world are at risk of disease or even death because their drinking water is not clean£®The water is infected with harmful bacteria or other pollutants£®But researcher Teri Dankovich has developed a special book that could turn dirty water into clean£¬drinkable water£®The book contains 25 pages£®Each page is about one millimeter thick£®The pages contain very small particles £¨Î¢Á££© of silver£®The pages can be used as filters £¨¹ýÂËÆ÷£© to remove harmful microorganisms that can pollute drinking water£®The filter kills the organisms that pass through it£®Ms£®Dankovich says each page can treat up to 100 liters of water£®Pictures on the pages show the dangers of dirty water and how to use the book for those unable to read£®The pages are made of filter paper£®They are designed to be torn from the book£®Water can be poured through the paper to be decontaminated£®
    Teri Dankovich and another researcher tested the drinkable book in Bangladesh£¬Ghana and South Africa£®The tests proved to be successful£®At the meeting of the American Chemical Society in Boston£¬Ms£®Dankovich was asked whether she has considered adding classic literature on the book's pages£®"The idea of classical texts-that's of interest maybe later£®But we have discussed a little bit more exciting text£®But we really haven't had the time to go through that part£¬"she laughed£®
Water for Life£¬a non-governmental organization£¬has provided financial support for the project£®It costs just pennies per page to produce each book£®

28£®How does the book help people get clean water£¿A
A£®The tiny metal particles on the pages remove the pollution£®
B£®Its pages can produce small particles when dropped into water£®
C£®It contains knowledge of water cleaning on each of the pages£®
D£®It carries information about the harm caused by dirty water£®
29£®The underlined word"decontaminated"in Paragraph 2 probably meanD£®
A£®tested    B£®boiled  C£®absorbed    D£®cleaned
30£®What can we infer about the drinkable book with classical texts£¿D
A£®It will be available soon£®
B£®It's a joke to the researchers£®
C£®It's a waste of time to do research on them£®
D£®It has not been on the researchers'schedule£®
31£®What is the passage mainly about£¿A
A£®Book pages providing safe drinking water£®
B£®Water pollution in developing countries£®
C£®Books designed to improve people's lives£®
D£®A new test carried out successfully£®

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£ºÔĶÁÀí½â

9£®You might not realize just how much work goes into making a newspaper£®Apart from searching for a good story and the endless editing required to correct mistakes£¬copy editors need to make sure that everything fits perfectly£®A good headline tells as much as possible in a short space£®There never seems to be quite enough space to express completely what you want to say£®
    News headlines often focus on the central and most important new information£®The relevantly insignificant information might be left out in order to stress the main idea or just to be brief£®News headlines are featured by the vivid language£®They add something special to attract readers'eyes£®Because the headline aims to describe the main focus of the story in six or seven words£¬every word counts and accuracy is decisive£®For instance£¬"stab"£¨´Ìɱ£©is a better verb than"kill"because it tells the reader how the criminal did his deed£» similarly£¬"Toyota"is a better noun than"car"£®But the make of a good headline is not characterized necessarily by the amount of information in it£®For instance£¬the front-page headline on the Los Angeles Times on September 11-the day New York's World Trade Center was attacked-simply read"TERROR STRIKES"£¬all in capitals£®While these two words do not describe how£¬where or why the buildings were attacked£¬they were accompanied by a half-page photo that captured£¨²¶×½£©the event in which around 3£¬000people lost their lives£®

24£®What is vital in making news besides a good story and perfect edition£¿A
A£®An appropriate headline    B£®A capital headline
C£®Vivid language           D£®A brief report
25£®New headlines should beA£®
A£®attractive      B£®countable
C insignificant    D£®long enough
26£®The underlined word"they"in the last paragraph refers toB£®
A£®the buildings     B£®the two words
C£®the people       D£®the twin towers
27£®The example of"TERROR STRIKES"is used to support the view thatC£®
A£®a good headline tells as much as possible in a short space
B£®news heading often focus on the central and most important news information
C£®a good headline is not marked necessarily by the amount of information in it
D£®news headlines are featured by the vivid language£®

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£ºÐÅϢƥÅä

19£®How to Manage Your Phone's Data Use
Smart phones give you access to a wealth of information and media£¬but most networks put a limit on the amount of data you can use each month£®A typical phone contract includes a data allowance of between 500MB and 10GB per month£®£¨36£©A You see£¬your usage can mount up surprisingly quickly-watching a film on the phone is about 700 MB in SD£¬an hour of streaming TV is around 500 MB or 60-140 MB for the same of radio£¬chatting on Skype for an hour is around 40 MB£®£¨37£©C  
•If possible£¬wait until you can connect to free Wi-Fi before using your phone's data features£®
•When you are on the road£¬use your car's GPS£¬not your phone£¬to find the way£®£¨38£©F But maps are preloaded in a GPS£¬making this free to use£®
•£¨39£©G Many of these are funded by ads that pop up on your screen£®Every ad has to download through your network£¬using up your data allowance£®
•If you regularly need to use a lot of data on your phone£¬consider a data-compressing£¨Ñ¹Ëõ£© app£¬such as Onavo£¨www£®onavo£®com£©£®£¨40£©D So you use less of your monthly allowance£®You may have to subscribe to such compression services£¬so you'll need to weigh up whether it's worth the cost£®

A£®The more data£¬the higher the monthly cost£®
B£®Remember to use free Wi-Fi anywhere you go£®
C£®Try these tips to better manage your data use£®
D£®It compresses data before it is fed to your phone£®
E£®But you might end up paying more than expected£®
F£®The phone has to download map data as you move£®
G£®Be careful of how many"free"games you play on the phone£®

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£ºÌî¿ÕÌâ

4£®He is a social boy£¬preferring£¨¸üϲ»¶£© talking face to face to chatting online£®

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£ºÊéÃæ±í´ï

1£®½üÄêÀ´£¬ºÜ¶à¸¸Ä¸Ñ¡ÔñÅã°éº¢×Ó¶ÁÊéѧϰ£¬Åã¶ÁÒѳÉΪһÖÖÆÕ±éÏÖÏó£®ÇëÄã¸ù¾ÝÒÔÏÂÒªµãдһƪ¶ÌÎÄ£¬ÄÚÈÝÓ¦°üÀ¨£º
1£®¼òÒªÃèÊöÅã¶ÁÏÖÏó£»2£®·ÖÎö¸¸Ä¸Åã¶ÁµÄÔ­Òò£¨2ÖÁ3¸ö£©£»3£®·¢±íÄã¶Ô´ËµÄ¿´·¨£®

×¢Ò⣺´ÊÊý120´Ê×óÓÒ£®
Should Our Parents Accompany Us in Studying at School£¿
In recent years£¬many parents choose to accompany their children in studying£¬which has aroused a wide concern£®
These parents are willing to leave their hometown£¬even quit their jobs to follow their children into the campus£®Most of them rent an apartment nearby so as to take good care of their children£®Parents consider it necessary to offer a better living condition to the kids£®Meanwhile£¬it can allow them to keep track of the kids'academic performance£®Nevertheless£¬what they've ignored is that it will get their kids into the habit of being dependent£®Thus£¬they will never develop the ability of self-control in the future£®
Trust leads to independence£®So it seems to me that parents should create room for children's growth and study in order to ensure their overall development£®£®

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£ºÐÅϢƥÅä

1£®¸ù¾Ý¶ÌÎÄÄÚÈÝ£¬´Ó¶ÌÎĺóµÄÑ¡ÏîÖÐÑ¡³öÄÜÌîÈë¿Õ°×´¦µÄ×î¼ÑÑ¡ÏѡÏîÖÐÓÐÁ½ÏîΪ¶àÓàÑ¡Ï
Every one complains£®Even if you argue that you are the happiest person in the world£¬you still complain sometimes£®Sometimes you complain£ºwithout even realizing ill£¬but rarely is it ever helpful£®£¨16£©F£®Here are some tips to stop complaint and give up the negative thoughts£º
£¨17£©A  
When you find yourself thinking or saying a negative comment about someting or someone£¬stop and force yourself to say something positive instead£®Seek the help of a cheerful friend to change you when you complain and help you to see the positive in the situation£®
Make a list of things we are grateful for£®
We often complain about the things we don't have without noticing those things we already have£®Be grateful for what we have in our life because we are lucky simply for being ourselves£®£¨18£©G£®
Learn to adapt to the changes£®
There are many things we can't change£®£¨19£©C£®Always find the positive side of each situation£¬regardless of however difficult the situation is£¬with parents'and friends'support£¬we can survive any life changes£®
Allow yourself to express your feelings every once in a while£®
Constantly ignored negative thoughts could add up if you are really going through a hard time£¬don't be afraid to share your feelings with close friends or family members or see a therapist£®
Find what makes you happy£®
£¨20£©D£®Maybe it is time to make the hard decision to move on to another job or career£®Uncover what your biggest complaints are about and see if you can change the situation to make you happy£®Stop complaining£¬focus on the positive£¬and be kind always!

A£®Change the way you think
B£®Make positive people friends
C£®The best and only thing we can do is to accept them
D£®Are you constantly complaining about your present job£¿
E£®Sometimes this list can be easy£¬full of hobbies you enjoy
F£®So how can you manage to force yourselves to end complaining£¿
G£®Set down things we are thankful for and we'll see that we don't have any reason to complain£®

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

ͬ²½Á·Ï°²á´ð°¸