1£®•Yonge-Dundas Square
40Dundas Street West£¬Toronto£¬ON£¬M5G2C2
Opened in 2002£¬the Yonge-Dundas Square provides impressive stonework surfaces£¬a
raised stage£¬and 22amazing computer-programmed fountains£®The square holds events£¬
displays or concerts of various sizes£¬including very large events by closing part of Yonge Street£®
When not used for special events£¬the square becomes an open space for the public to enjoy£®
•CN Tower
301Front Street West£¬Toronto£¬ON£¬M5V 2T6
Visitors can test their courage by walking across the glass floor 113stories above the ground with only 2Vi inches of glass holding you 342m in the air£®
The tower's rotating £¨ÐýתµÄ£©360Restaurant offers an award winning wine list and
fantastic view for any romantic evening£®If you're not wild about heights£¬at the base of the tower£¬there is plenty to shop for in the 10£¬000sq£®foot Marketplace£®
Tips£ºHave A Sky High Birthday!The CN Tower now offers birthday parties!To book your birthday party please call 416-601-4704or email us at birthday@cntower£®ca
•Ontario Science Centre
770Don Mills Rd£®£¬Toronto£¬ON£¬M3C1T3
If you talk to anyone who has visited the centre£¬they'll talk wildly about the hair-raising
electrical ball and the simulated £¨Ä£ÄâµÄ£©Rain Forest£®
With hundreds of exhibits in a variety of exhibition halls plus visiting exhibitions£¬Communication£¬Sport£¬Human Body and The Living Earth are a few of the in-depth exhibits worth exploring£¬along with a film at OMNIMAX theatre£¬and KidSpark£¬a learn-through-play area that is specifically designed for kids eight and under£®
•Royal Ontario Museum £¨ROM£©
100Front Street£¬Toronto£¬ON£¬M5S2C6
Generations of children and adults have visited the museum since it opened in 1914£®th six million objects in its collections and 40galleries £¨³ÂÁÐÊÒ£©of art£¬archeology and natural science£¬the ROM offers a whole world to explore£®Four giant carved totem poles £¨Í¼ÌÚÖù£©rise in the centre of the stairwells£» the largest is 24.5metres tall£®The Hands-on Biodiversity gallery offers families a fun interactive experience about the interdependence of people£¬animals and plants£®

53£®If your classmates would like to explore the secrets of natural science£¬they should go toD£®
A£®Yonge-Dundas Square      B£®CN Tower
C£®Ontario Science Centre   D£®Royal Ontario Museum
54£®At CN Tower you can do the following EXCEPTB£®
A£®test your courage    B£®enjoy a conceit
C£®do shopping          D£®celebrate your birthday
55£®A sites on Front Street are introduced in the passage£®
A£®Two    B£®Three    C£®Four   D£®Five
56£®This passage may appear in aB£®
A£®business newspaper          B£®guide book
C£®geography magazine          D£®science report£®

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54£®B£®Ï¸½ÚÀí½âÌ⣮ÓÉCN Tower ²¿·ÖµÄ½éÉÜÌáµ½ÁË"Visitors can test their courage¡­The tower's rotating £¨ÐýתµÄ£©360Restaurant¡­plenty to shop"¿ÉÖªA¡¢CºÍD¶¼Ìá¼°µ½£¬µ«ÊÇûÓÐÌáµ½ÒôÀֻᣨconcert£©£¬ËùÒÔ´ð°¸Ñ¡ÔñB£®
55£®A£®Ï¸½ÚÀí½âÌ⣮¸ù¾ÝÌ⹩µÄµØÖ·¿É¼û£¬CN TowerºÍRoyal Ontario Museum Î»ÓÚFront Street£¬ËùÒÔ´ð°¸Ñ¡ÔñA£®
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11£®Tonight£¬my piano recital£¨¸ÖÇÙÑÝ×à»á£© was the most important thing in my family£®My grandparents were coming by plane to hear me play£®Even my busy Aunt Dianne£¬who is on TV every night reading the news£¬was coming£®
But one thing was for sure£®I would never win an award for my piano playing£®And
that's just because the more I practiced£¬the more nervous I got£®So there I was£¬on the stage£¬in my beautiful dress£¬and I sat down at the piano£®But when I started to play£¬I hit a wrong note£®I told myself to start over£®But then I hit the wrong note again£®It was as if I hadn't practiced at all£®
Finally the disaster was over£®I ran off the stage£®I couldn't understand why audience£¨¹ÛÖÚ£© were clapping£®But they were£®My mom and dad had flowers for me and we were all supposed to go out for a nice dinner£¬but I couldn't£®I just wanted to go home and cry and never go anywhere again£®After we went back home£¬Aunt Dianne just came in and sat down on the side of my bed£®
"It was my first night on the air£¬"she said£®"I had never been on television before and I made a mistake£®I mispronounced my name and the name of the news show£®And you know what£¿No one even noticed but me£®Just like tonight£¬no one noticed-just you£®"Aunt Dianne was right£®I think we are harder on ourselves than anyone else is£®Maybe I will leave my room£®And maybe I'll play the piano again£®

56£®From the passage we can know Aunt DianneB£®
A£®worked as an actress           
B£®worked as a news broadcaster on TV
C£®worked as a hostess on TV      
D£®hosted the piano recital
57£®The underlined part"the disaster"in Paragraph3  meansC
A£®the laughs from the audience     
B£®the loud cheers of the audience
C£®the author's piano performance   
D£®the author's practice on the stage
58£®What did the author learn from her piano performance£¿A
A£®Don't be too hard on yourself£®
B£®Things seldom go as well as people expect£®
C£®No one will care what others have done£®
D£®Never rely on yourself
59£®What would be the best title for the text£¿C
A£®A wonderful Piano recital performance       
B£®Support from my Family
C£®A lesson from Piano Recital Disaster         
D£®Encouragement from the audience£®

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12£®There has been much discussion recently about reducing the weight of English in China's high-stake tests such as the national college entrance examination£®It is argued by some applauding the recent change to reduce the importance of English in tests so that it will lead students to focus more on learning Chinese£®The TV program Writing in Chinese has exposed the problem that students and the general public cannot write in Chinese as they used to do£®
Some blame the design of the curriculum for giving English an equal or greater amount of emphasis£¬which might have contributed to the failure in teaching Chinese£®But this is probably not a fair accusation since children in English speaking countries cannot spell either£®
I doubt that studying English in itself hurts the study of Chinese£®In fact£¬high achievers in English or another foreign language are more likely to be high achievers in Chinese£®It has been proved many times in recent Chinese history that those capable of using a foreign language are also masters in their mother tongue£®Qian Zhongshu£¬Lu Xun and Lin Yutang are just a few examples£®
Another trend of thought for curriculum reform is related to the perception of"worth"£®It is true that English is one of the subjects that students do spend too much time on£¬with pitiful results£®This makes some doubt if it is worth giving it priority£®But this is not a sound argument either as students still need to study things that matter more to their future in spite of challenges learning English presents to them£®
Improvements in Chinese language education should not be achieved by sacrificing another important subject£®There should be a robust£¨½¡¿µµÄ£© foreign language education program£¬as a foreign language improves a student's future job prospects£®Bashing£¨Åê»÷£© English education as a waste of time or using it as a goat for failures in Chinese education are both harmful tendencies£®
To be constructive£¬we ought to start a dialogue on ways to make improvements in learning outcomes so that students'time learning English is spent more effectively£®There are a few things that could improve English education£¬such as assessment design£¬learner motivation and teaching style£¬
I am sure there are many other areas where changes can greatly improve the effectiveness and efficiency of English learning£®The public discourse at present is a little oversimplified£®People are arguing for or against English having less weight in major tests£¬when the dialogue should be taken a step further£¬to the improvement of learning or teaching methods that may benefit the teaching of other subjects as well£¬Chinese included£®

63£®In paragraph 3 Qian Zhongshu£¬Lu Xun and Lin Yutang are mentioned toB£®
  A£®show respect for their capabilities of learning languages
  B£®prove English and Chinese are not contradictory
  C£®confirm the importance of learning English in China
  D£®tell the readers English Education is to blame
64£®According to the passage£¬which of the following statements is right£¿C
  A£®The TV program Writing in Chinese is very popular at present£®
  B£®Good results of learning English are not worth so much time£®
  C£®Some are in favor of attaching less importance to English in exams£®
  D£®Sacrificing English can improve Chinese language education£®
65£®In the writer's opinion£¬what should be done to solve the argument£¿D
  A£®Increasing time spent in learning Chinese£®
  B£®Increasing time spent in learning English£®
  C£®Reducing the weight of English in examinations£®
  D£®Improving the learning outcomes effectively£®
66£®Which of the following can best serve as the title of the passage£¿A
A£®English education is still important in China£®
B£®Chinese education is more important in China£®
C£®English contributes to the failure in teaching Chinese              
D£®Ways to make improvements in learning Chinese£®

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9£®Blind imitation is self-destruction£®To those who do not recognize their unique worth£¬imitation appears attractive£» to those who know their strength£¬imitation is unacceptable£®
In the early stages of skill or character development£¬imitation is helpful£®When I first learned to cook£¬I used recipes £¨²ËÆ×£© and turned out some tasty dishes£®But soon I grew bored£®Why follow someone else's way of cooking when I could create my own£¿Imitating role models is like using training wheels on a child's bicycle£» they help you get going£¬but once you find your own balance£¬you fly faster and farther without relying on them£®
In daily life£¬imitation can hurt us if we subconsciously £¨ÏÂÒâʶµØ£© hold poor role models£®If£¬as a child£¬you observed people whose lives were bad£¬you may have accepted their fear and pain as normal and gone on to follow what they did£®If you do not make strong choices for yourself£¬you will get the results of the weak choices of others£®
In the field of entertainment£¬our culture glorifies celebrities£®Those stars look great on screen£®But when they step off screen£¬their personal lives may be disastrous£®If you are going to follow someone£¬focus on their talent£¬not their bad character or unacceptable behaviors£®
Blessed is the person willing to act on their sudden desire to create something unique£®Think of the movies£¬books£¬teachers£¬and friends that have affected you most deeply£®They touched you because their creations were motivated by inspiration£¬not desperation£®The world is changed not by those who do what has been done before them£¬but by those who do what has been done inside them£®Creative people have an endless resource of ideas£®The problem a creator faces is not running out of material£» it is what to do with the material knocking at the door of imagination£®
Study your role models£¬accept the gifts they have given£¬and leave behind what does not serve you£®Then you can say£¬"I stand on the shoulders of my ancestors'tragedies and declare victory£¬and know that they are cheering me on£®"

36£®Imitation proves useful when youC£®
A£®know you are unique
B£®lose the balance of life
C£®begin to learn something new
D£®get tired of routine practice
37£®To avoid the bad result of imitation£¬we shouldB£®
A£®forget daily fear and pain
B£®choose the right example
C£®ask others for decisions
D£®stay away from stars
38£®According to the author£¬the world moves on because of those who areB£®
A£®desperate to influence others with their knowledge
B£®ready to turn their original ideas into reality
C£®eager to discover what their ancestors did
D£®willing to accept others'ideas
39£®The trouble a creator faces isD£®
A£®the lack of strong motivation
B£®the absence of practical ideas
C£®how to search for more materials
D£®how to use imagination creatively
40£®What is the author's purpose in writing this passage£¿A
A£®To highlight the importance of creativity£®
B£®To criticize the characters of role models£®
C£®To compare imitation with creation£®
D£®To explain the meaning of success£®

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16£®We _weigh the pros and cons before deciding whether to invest our money or let it stay in the bank£®£¨¡¡¡¡£©
A£®canB£®wouldC£®mustD£®dare

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6£®In a research on the effect of the transport sector£¨ÔËÊäÁìÓò£©on climate£¬it proves that road traffic contributes the most to global warming£®The aviation£¨º½Ì죩sector has the second largest warming effect while shipping has a cooling effect on the Earth's Climate£®
The study concludes that since pre-industrial times£¬15%of CO₂emissions£¨ÅÅ·ÅÁ¿£© made by humans have come from the transport sector£®The study implies that more attention needs to be paid to the fast growing road sector£®Looking only at CO₂emissions£¬road traffic alone has led to two-thirds of the warming caused by total transport emissions£®The reason why road transport tops the list is mainly due to the large number of vehicles on the roads and the smaller cooling effect from their emissions£®The researchers said that the road emissions of today will make Up three quarters of the warming caused by transport over the next hundred years£®
Following road transport£¬aviation is the second largest transport contributor to global warming£®However£¬the historical contribution from aviation emissions to global warming is more than doubled the contribution from road emissions£®In fact£¬over the next 100years£¬today's road emissions will have a climate effect that is four times higher than the climate effect from today's aviation emissions£®
For shipping£¬the picture is more complicated£®Until now£¬shipping has had a cooling effect on climate£®This is because shipping produces a large amount of S02£¬which has a cooling effect£®However£¬although the gas£¬until now£¬has given the shipping industry a cooling effect£¬this effect will disappear after a while£¬as the gas doesn't last long in the atmosphere£®The long-lived CO₂will dominate£¨Õ¼ÓÅÊÆ£©£¬giving shipping a warming effect in the long run£®
In general£¬the transport sector's contribution to global warming will be continuously high in the future£®

53£®What can we learn about road traffic£¿D
A£®It has the second largest warming effect on climate£®
B£®It produces l5%of all CO₂into the air every year£®
C£®It created more CO₂emissions than aviation in history£®
D£®Its CO₂emissions will probably increase in future£®
54£®Shipping has a cooling effect becauseC£®
A£®shipping conditions have been improved
B£®the amount of ships at sea is small
C£®it produces a gas which has a cooling effect
D£®the gas it produces can absorb CO₂
55£®The underlined phrase in paragraph 4probably means"A"£®
A£®after a long time    B£®in a tiring race
C£®all the time         D£®during a long voyage
56£®The passage mainly talks aboutB£®
A£®the effect of CO₂0n global climate
B£®the effect from traffic on global warming
C£®how to choose a green way to travel
D£®why transport produces so much CO₂

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13£®-Some English idioms are difficult to understand£®
--Exactly       you know the meaning of each word£®£¨¡¡¡¡£©
A£®if onlyB£®even ifC£®as ifD£®now that

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10£®At just six years old£¬Joey Kilpatrick is Australia's unofficial hide-and-seek£¨×½ÃԲأ©champion after he hid in a bedroom cupboard for eight hours while playing his favorite game£¬causing a big rescue operation£®
     The determined little boy's disappearing act led to a careful search£¬including nice police officers£¬five State Emergency Service volunteers£¬tracker dogs and almost all of the people of the town of Goombungee£®
     His mother£¬Chris£¬says she called the police when Joey disappeared one afternoon after telling his older brother£¬Lachlan£¬14£¬that he was off to play hide-and-seek£®
"I called the two boys for dinner£¬"Chris says£®"After about 20 minutes I started to worry£¬I was shouting to Joey£¬¡®OK£¬we can't find you£¬time to come out!'"
     But there was no sign of her little boy£®Within minutes of Chris calling the police£¬the policemen started one of the biggest ground searches in the town's history£®
"I was really frightened£®I rang my husband£¬Kris£¬who works out of town£¬and he immediately hit the road£¬calling me every 10 minutes£®"Chris recalls£®"They searched the house from top to bottom£» everyone was out looking for him£®When a neighbor asked if I'd checked the water tank£¬that's when reality hit£®I was afraid£®"
    After hours of searching the town£¬confused£¨À§»óµÄ£©police decided to search the house one more time£®
"I just sat there waiting£¬"Chris says£¬"Then a strange feeling came over me£¬and I rushed into the bedroom and put my hand on a pile of blankets in the cupboard£®As I pulled then out£¬there he was---asleep and completely not realizing what was going on!I've never held him in my arms so hard£®"
Senior officer£¬Chris Brameld£¬from Goombungee police£¬says he is glad that Joey's game had a happy ending£º"When we realized he was safe£¬we agreed that it didn't get much better than that!"
    And young Joey promises that next time he won't be so intent£¨×¨×¢ÓÚ£© on finding the best hiding place£®"I want to say sorry to the policemen and to Mummy for scaring them£¬"he says£¬"I promise next time I'll hide where they can find me and I won't fall asleep!"
55£®Why did the boy hide in a bedroom cupboard£¿C
A£®He thought it was a good place to sleep
B£®He wanted to start a big rescue operation
C£®He didn't think he could be easily found there
D£®He is Australia's unofficial hide-and-seek champion£®
56£®What did the boy's mother do when she couldn't find her son£¿B
A£®She checked the water tank£®
B£®She called the police and her husband£®
C£®She turned to her neighbor for help£®
D£®She searched the town from top to bottom£®
57£®What can we learn from the passage£¿D
A£®The boy felt very cold when he was found£®
B£®The boy knew clearly what was going on£®
C£®The mother usually hugged her boy very hard£®
D£®The mother was very grateful to find her boy£®
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C£®Frightened
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