11£®¼Ù¶¨Ó¢Óï¿ÎÉÏÀÏʦҪÇóͬ×ÀÖ®¼ä½»»»ÐÞ¸Ä×÷ÎÄ£¬ÇëÄãÐÞ¸ÄÄãͬ×ÀдµÄÒÔ϶ÌÎÄ£®¶ÌÎÄÖй²ÓÐ10´¦´íÎó£¬Ã¿¾äÖÐ×î¶àÓÐÁ½´¦£®´íÎóÉæ¼°Ò»¸öµ¥´ÊµÄÔö¼Ó¡¢É¾³ý»òÐ޸ģ®
Ôö¼Ó£ºÔÚȱ´Ê´¦¼ÓÒ»¸ö©×Ö·ûºÅ£¨¡Ä£©£¬²¢ÔÚ´Ë·ûºÅÏÂÃæд³ö¸Ã¼ÓµÄ´Ê£®
ɾ³ý£º°Ñ¶àÓàµÄ´ÊÓÃбÏߣ¨\£©»®µô£®
Ð޸ģºÔÚ´íµÄ´ÊÏ»®Ò»ºáÏߣ¬²¢ÔڸôÊÏÂÃæд³öÐ޸ĺóµÄ´Ê£®
×¢Ò⣺1£®Ã¿´¦´íÎó¼°ÆäÐ޸ľù½öÏÞÒ»´Ê£»
2£®Ö»ÔÊÐíÐÞ¸Ä10´¦£¬¶àÕߣ¨´ÓµÚ11´¦Æ𣩲»¼Æ·Ö£®
Last summer£¬Li Hua and his classmates made a trip to London£®On his arrival at the airport£¬it was raining heavy£®So they took a bus to the hotel£¬where was not far from the airport£®The next day£¬they can't wait to see the wonderful place of interest in London£®They first went to the Elizabeth Tower£¬a symbol of United Kingdom£®The guide told them the tower had been appeared in many films£®Then they visit the British Museum£®To their great surprise£¬they found many Chinese artworks displayed there£®Felt very proud£¬they took a lot of photos but they really had great fun£®

·ÖÎö ±¾ÎĽ²ÊöÁËÀºÍËûµÄͬѧÔÚÂ׶ØÂÃÐеľ­Àú£®
µ±Ëûµ½´ïµÄʱºò£¬ÌìÔÚÏÂÓ꣮ËûÃdzË×ø¹«¹²Æû³µµ½´ïÂùݣ®µÚ¶þÌìËûÃDzιÛÁËÒÁÀöɯ°×Ëþ£¬ËüÊÇÓ¢¹úµÄÏóÕ÷£¬ÔںܶàµÄµçÓ°Àï³öÏÖ¹ý£»È»ºóÓÖÈ¥ÁË´óÓ¢²©Îï¹Ý£¬ÄÇÀïÓкܶàÖйúµÄ²ØÆ·£®

½â´ð Last summer£¬Li Hua and his classmates made a trip to London£®On his arrival at the airport£¬it was raining heavy£®So they took a bus to the hotel£¬where was not far from the airport£®The next day£¬they can't wait to see the wonderful place of interest in London£®They first went to the Elizabeth Tower£¬a symbol of¡ÄUnited Kingdom£®The guide told them the tower had been appeared in many films£®Then they visit the British Museum£®To their great surprise£¬they found many Chinese artworks displayed there£®Felt very proud£¬they took a lot of photos but they really had great fun£®
½âÎö£º
1£®his--their£®¿¼²é´ú´ÊÒ»Ö£®´úÖ¸Li Hua and his classmates ÓÃtheir£®
2£®heavy--heavily£®¿¼²é¸±´ÊµÄÓ÷¨£®ÐÞÊζ¯´Êwas raining Óø±´Êheavily£®
3£®where--which£®¿¼²é¶¨Óï´Ó¾äµÄ¹Øϵ´Ê£¬´úÖ¸ÏÈÐдÊthe hotel£¬×ö¶¨Óï´Ó¾äwas not far from the airportµÄÖ÷ÓӦ¸ÃÓÃwhich£®
4£®can't--couldn't£®¿¼²éʱ̬һÖ£®ºÍÉÏÎĵÄÒ»°ã¹ýȥʱ̬ºôÓ¦£¬ÓÃcan't µÄ¹ýȥʽcouldn't£®
5£®place--places£®¿¼²éÃû´Ê£®ºóÎÄÌáµ½ËûÃÇÈ¥Á˼¸¸öµØ·½£¬ËùÒÔ±¾¾äÓ¦¸ÃÓÿÉÊýÃû´Ê placeµÄ¸´Êýplaces£®
6£®United KingdomÇ°¼Óthe£®¿¼²é¹Ú´Ê£®×¨ÓÐÃû´ÊUnited KingdomÓ¦¸ÃÓÃthe ÐÞÊΣ¬±íʾ"Ó¢¹ú"£®
7£®È¥µôbeen£®¿¼²é±»¶¯£®Ö÷Óïthe tower ºÍνÓﶯ´ÊappearÖ®¼äÊÇÖ÷¶¯¹Øϵ£¬ËùÒÔÈ¥µôbeen£®
8£®visit--visited£®¿¼²éνÓﶯ´ÊµÄʱ̬£®ºÍÉÏÎĽ²Êö¹ýÈ¥µÄÊǺôÓ¦£¬ÓÃvisitµÄ¹ýȥʽvisited£®
9£®Feel--Feeling£®¿¼²é·ÇνÓﶯ´Ê£®Feel very proud×öthey took a lot of photos µÄ°éËæ×´Ó¶øÇÒºÍÖ÷ÓïtheyÖ®¼äÊÇÖ÷¶¯¹Øϵ£¬Ó¦¸ÃÓÃÏÖÔÚ·Ö´ÊFeeling£®
10 but--£®and£®¿¼²éÁ¬´Ê£®they took a lot of photos±íʾ"ËûÃÇÅÄÁ˺ܶàÕÕƬ"£¬ºÍthey really had great funÖ®¼äÊdzнӹØϵ£¬ËùÒÔandÁ¬½Ó£®

µãÆÀ ¿¼²é¶ÌÎÄ¸Ä´í£®
´ðÌâÖÐ×¢Òâ¾ä×ÓÖÐÈ˳ƺÍÊýÊÇ·ñÒ»Ö£¬Ê±Ì¬ÊÇ·ñÒ»Ö£®¸÷ÖÖ´ÊÐÔÖ®¼äµÄÇø±ðÒÔ¼°Ò»Ð©³£ÓþäÐÍ£¬¹Ì¶¨¶ÌÓïµÄÓ¦Óã®Ò»°ãµÄÕâÀàÌâÐͲ»»á³öÏÖÌ«¸´Ôӵĵ¥´ÊºÍ¾ä×Ó£¬ÕâÀàÌâÐÍ¿¼²éµÄ¾ÍÊÇÎÒÃǵĻù´¡ÖªÊ¶£®Æ½Ê±Ó¦×¢ÖØ»ýÀÛ£¬Êì¼ÇһЩ¾äÐͼ°¹ßÓýṹ£®

Á·Ï°²áϵÁдð°¸
Ïà¹ØÏ°Ìâ

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£ºÌî¿ÕÌâ

1£®One day a small opening appeared on a cocoon£¨¼ë£©£®A man sat and watched the butterfly for several hours as it struggled to force its body through that little hole£®Then it seemed to stop making any progress£®It appeared as if it had gotten as far as it could and it could go no £¨61£©further£¨far£©£®So the man decided to help£®He took a pair of scissors and cut off the £¨62£©remaining £¨remain£© bit of the cocoon£®
The butterfly then came out easily£®But it had a swollen£¨Ö×Õ͵ģ©body and small£¬folded wings£®The man continued to watch the butterfly because he expected that the wings would enlarge and expand to be able to support the body£¬£¨63£©whichwould contract in time£®£¨64£©Neither happened!In fact£¬the butterfly spent the rest of £¨65£©its£¨it£© life crawling around with a swollen body and folded wings£®It was never able to fly£®What the man in his £¨66£©kindness £¨kind£© and hurry did not understand was that the cocoon and the struggle required for the butterfly to get through the tiny opening £¨67£©were £¨be£© God's way of forcing fluid£¨ÒºÌ壩from the body of the butterfly into its wings so that it would be ready for flight once it £¨68£©achieved £¨achieve£© its freedom from the cocoon£®
Sometimes struggles are £¨69£©exactly £¨exact£© what we need in our life£®If God allowed us to go through our life without any obstacles£¬it would disable us£®We would not be as strong as what we
£¨70£©could have been £¨be£©£®

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£ºÑ¡ÔñÌâ

2£®Laughter produces short-term changes in the function of the heart and blood circulation£¬           heart rate and oxygen consumption£®£¨¡¡¡¡£©
A£®increasingB£®to increase
C£®having increasedD£®being increased

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£ºÐÅϢƥÅä

19£®Everyone wants to be happy£¬but not everyone can make it£®Do you want to have a good mood every day£¿If so£¬the following steps will be useful to you£®
Be grateful£®
£¨36£©GThey can be simple things like the purple flower on the sidewalk£¬the beautiful sunset£¬and the hot shower you take every day£®When you have a grateful heart£¬you'11cherish them and be naturally filled with happiness£®
£¨37£©B
When you put your mind£¬heart and soul into what you're doing£¬you're creating a happiness state-called the"flow"£®When you're living in the flow£¬you're less likely to mind what others may think about you£¬and less bothered by unimportant things£®The result£¿More happiness£¬of course!
Become a problem solver£®
Happy people are problem solvers£®£¨38£©DInstead£¬they face up to the challenge and channel their energies into finding a creative solution£®By becoming a problem solver£¬you'll build up your self-confidence and your ability to accomplish whatever you determine to do£®
Practice forgiveness£®
Hatred and anger are forms of self-punishment£®When you forgive£¬you'reactually practicing
kindness to yourself£®£¨39£©C Everyone makes mistakes£®It's through our mistakes that we learn and grow to become a bigger and better person£®
Give back£®
Doing good is one of the surest ways to feel good£®According to Harvard£¬when people do good£¬their brains become active in the very same reward center that is stimulated when they experience other rewards£®
£¨40£©F

A£®Go with the flow£®
B£®Focus on what you are doing£®
C£®And most importantly£¬learn to forgive yourself£®
D£®When they face a challenge in life£¬they don't fall into a sad state£®
E£®When they meet with difficulties£¬they will solve them on their own£®
F£®So It's not a surprise that people who care more about others are happier£®
G£®Slow down£¬look around£¬and pay attention to the little details in your life£®

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£ºÔĶÁÀí½â

6£®Each time Chinese New Year is approaching£¬preparations are underway around the world£®Here are some Chinatowns for those outside of China wishing to mark the day£®
London
Although it may not be as large or as long-built as others£¬having only become a center for the Chinese community during the 1950s£¬London's Chinatown is a perfectly formed little firework that knows how to see in the year with a bang£®Decorated with red lanterns £¨µÆÁý£©£¬previous years have seen shows with acrobatics £¨ÔÓ¼¼£©£¬martial arts £¨ÎäÊõ£©£¬dance and opera nearby£®
San Francisco
San Francisco's Chinatown is perhaps the most famous in the United States£®The city was the main entry-point for Chinese who had crossed the Pacific to the USA during the early 19th century£®Between the Grant Avenue and the Stockton Street£¬this historic area is a local treasure£¬attracting more visitors per year than the Golden Gate Bridge£®
Bangkok
With an about 100-year-old history£¬the Thai capital's Chinatown contains complex streets offering all kinds of tasty treats£¬clothes£¬toys and antiques£®Sunday market days are such a good time to get the full atmosphere of the neighborhood£®The area is also known for its gold dealers£¬whose shops line the road£®
Mauritius
Found in Port Louis£¬this Mauritian Chinatown shows the island nation's rich multicultural diversity£®Established in the early years of the 20th century by settlers from China£¬its tiny shops and restaurants serve locals and visitors£®During the Chinese Spring Festival£¬the most exciting sight is the Dragon Dances on Rue Royal when Chinese musicians and dancers perform the traditional Lion dances through the streets£®

21£®According to the text£¬which of the following has the longest history£¿B
A£®London's Chinatown£®
B£®San Francisco's Chinatown£®
C£®Mauritius's Chinatown£®
D£®Bangkok's Chinatown£®
22£®What's special about Bangkok's Chinatown£¿A
A£®It is well-known for its gold business£®
B£®It is the major entrance for the Chinese£®
C£®It is crowded with Chinese restaurants£®
D£®It is where you can enjoy fireworks£®
23£®If you want to enjoy the Dragon Dances£¬you can go toB£®
A£®the Sunday market in Bangkok£®
B£®Rue Royal in Port Louis£¬Mauritius£®
C£®the Grant Avenue in San Francisco
D£®the Chinese community in London£®

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£ºÔĶÁÀí½â

16£®From McDonald's to Sonic£¬fast food had a bad effect on my waistline and my budget£®It was nothing to run to a drive-through to pick up a cold drink or a quick bite to eat£®It was so easy to use my card for a small purchase£®For me£¬I got a lot of satisfaction from fast food£®
One day I sat down and calculated that I was spending a surprising©†40 a week on fast food£®This was a lot of iced coffee and hamburgers!Instead of reducing my guilty pleasures£¬I decided to give myself a strong budget to reduce my consumption£®Every Monday I placed an envelope with©†20 in my purse£®That was my fast food budget for the entire week£®If there was anything left over at the end of the week£¬it was mine to save or spend£®If I spent all of the money during the week£¬there were no more fast food stops that week£®
The budget made me more mindful of my purchases£®Instead of purchasing a large drink from Sonic£¬I would purchase a small£®It was still satisfying but not nearly as pricey£®Instead of eating a whole meal£¬I would pick the part that I actually wanted£®Many days£¬the thought of hanging onto the money for a special purpose meant more to me than the instant satisfaction of fast food£®I never really felt unhappy because it was a conscious choice to spend or save with each purchase£®
Envelope budget kept me honest£®I had a clear idea how much money was spent each week on fast food purchases£®I started to bring my lunches more often to save more money for the week£®It was a fun challenge to see how much I could save every week£®
Changing the way I spent on fast food not only helped my budget£¬but improved my weight£®In the first month I was able to get rid of 5pounds by simply changing the way I approached spending on fast food£®Now I am more likely to bring my lunch than to buy it£®I am not upset£¬but empowered to make positive choices to improve my life£®

21£®According to Paragraph 1£¬the authorB£®
A£®had no time to cook for herself
B£®was fond of fast food very much
C£®lived with a small amount of money
D£®got some benefits from using her card
22£®The author set her envelope budget toC£®
A£®buy fast food at a good bargain
B£®save money to buy more fast food
C£®make fast food spending under control
D£®get rid of the habit of eating fast food
23£®What is the passage mainly about£¿D
A£®Why the author became addicted to fast food£®
B£®Why the author took envelope budget seriously£®
C£®How fast food controlled the author's behavior£®
D£®How envelope budget changed the author's life£®

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£ºÐÅϢƥÅä

3£®Out of the coldThere are no known cures for colds and the flu£¬so cold and flu prevention should be your goal£®The most effective way of preventing the flu is to get the flu shot£®£¨36£©ABut there are other techniques you can employ as well£®Here are some tips you can use to help prevent colds and the flu naturally£º
Put a box of of tissues£¨Ö½½í£©wherever people sit£®Place tissue boxes strategically around the house£¬at work£¬and in the car£®£¨37£©BThen anyone who has to cough or blow their nose can use them in a way least likely to spread bacteria£®
Leave the windows open in winter£®Not all of them£¬but one or two in the rooms in which you spend the most time£® £¨38£©D
Add green tea and an apple to your morning break£®Recent research by food nutritionists at Auckland University in New Zealand£¬found that eating food rich in flavonoids£¨Àà»Æͪ£©could lower the risk of adults catching a cold by as much as 33%£® £¨39£©F  Eating five servings of vegetables and two servings of fruit
each day in a variety of colours is a great way to make sure you get enough flavonoids in your diet£®
£¨40£©C The knuckle£¨Ö¸¹Ø½Ú£©is less likely to have viruses than your fingertip£®The eye provides a perfect entry point for bacteria£¬and the average person rubs his eyes or nose or scratches his face 20--50times a day£¬making fingers particularly good at spreading bacteria£®

A£®It works better than anything else£®
B£®You need to make them widely available£®
C£®Use your knuckle to gently rub your eyes£®
D£®Fresh air does wonders for chasing out bacteria£®
E£®Never come into direct contact with viruses and bacteria£®
F£®They are found in green tea£¬apples£¬blueberries£¬red wine and cocoa£®
G£®When you feel a cough coming£¬use a tissue£¬then throw it away immediately£®

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£ºÔĶÁÀí½â

20£®Garlic is one of the most common cooking ingredients around the world£®Many dishes in Europe£¬Africa£¬Asia and the Americas use this strong-flavored vegetable£®
Garlic is similar to other bulb-shaped plants£¬including onions£¬chives£¬leeks and scallions£®But garlic is special£®For centuries£¬people have used garlic not only for cooking£¬but also for medicine£®
Medicinal garlic throughout time£®
Researchers at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center and Cornell University studied the medicinal use of garlic throughout history£®They found references to garlic in ancient texts from Egypt£¬Greece£¬Rome£¬China and India£®
For example£¬in ancient Greece and Rome£¬people considered garlic an aid to strength and endurance£®
The original Olympic athletes in Greece ate garlic to improve their performance£®The ancient Romans fed garlic to the soldiers and sailors£®
Workers who built the pyramids in Egypt ate garlic£®In fact£¬this is a theme throughout early history--workers eating garlic to increase their strength£®
Some researchers in China have gone so far as to call hydrogen sulfide the key to a longer life£®
_______!
In a 2007 study£¬researchers at the University of Alabama at Birmingham studied how garlic increased hydrogen sulfide and how that£¬in turn£¬affected red blood cells£®
David Kraus led that study£®
In 2013£¬scientists were finally able to see this process happen£®Chemists Alexander Lippert of Southern Methodist University in Dallas and Vivian S£®Lin discovered how to observe this process in living human cells£®
Their discovery has opened the door to more research into the health benefits of garlic and the production of hydrogen sulfide in the body£®
In a 2015experiment at Penn State University£¬researchers injected a solution that would create hydrogen sulfide in the arms of healthy young adults£®They wanted to see what hydrogen sulfide would do to a small area of blood vessels£®
The initial findings are that hydrogen sulfide widened blood vessels£¬which then increased the flow of blood£®These researchers plan to continue their research£®They published their findings in The Journal of Physiology£®
Older garlic may be even healthier£®
But let's leave the laboratory and go to the kitchen£®Don't throw out older garlic that has sprouted£®You may have thought that garlic growing light green sprouts was past its prime or old and on its way to the trash bin£®
But not so fast£®
Scientists have reported in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry that this older garlic has even more properties that are good for our bodies than fresh garlic£®When researchers tested garlic that had sprouted for five days£¬they found it had higher antioxidant activity than fresher bulbs of garlic£®
Also£¬to get the full effect of garlic's health benefits£¬do not add it to food or cook with it immediately£®Cutting£¬crushing or mincing garlic releases the healthy compound found in the vegetable£®But heating the garlic or adding it to other ingredients prevents the release of this healthy compound£®So cut or crush or mince the garlic£¬and let it rest by itself for a couple minutes£®
So£¬are there any downsides to garlic£¿Well£¬the same reason garlic is good for us and good in dishes--that strong sulfur odor--is the same reason it gives us bad breath£®
But there might be a cure for that£¬too£®Yet another study found that eating an apple or lettuce after eating garlic cuts down on the strong garlic smell on one's breath£®

63£®According to the passage£¬which of the following statements is NOT true£¿C
A£®Garlic can be used not only for cooking£¬but also for medicine£®
B£®Workers would eat garlic to increase their strength in the past£®
C£®Garlic growing light green sprouts was past its prime or old and should be thrown to the trash bin£®
D£®Heating the garlic or adding it to other ingredients would reduce the health benefit of garlic£®
64£®Which sentence could be filled in the blanks£¿A
A£®So many studies on garlic 
B£®Medicinal garlic throughout time
C£®Garlic is such a healthy food
D£®Study about garlic
65£®Where can you probably find the text£¿D
A£®In a popular magazine£®
B£®In a story book£®
C£®In a biology textbook£®
D£®In a health report£®

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£ºÔĶÁÀí½â

17£®When I first started university£¬I remembered hearing about bone marrow£¨¹ÇË裩donation during Freshman's Week£®Some students volunteers from a group called Marrow tried to convince me to attend an event so I could learn more about it£®The word"bone"immediately made me think that donating would be a painful procedure£¬so I refused£® Back then£¬there was no way I could have known three years later£¬I would be one of the many people that desperately needs a bone marrow donor to save their lives£®
I am currently waiting to be matched with a donor and if I am lucky enough to find a good match£¬it will be this lovely stranger that saves my life£®I received my cancer diagnosis in June£®It is only at that time that I realized how ignorant I had been about the bone marrow donation process£®
The process of donating stem cells is actually very simple£®In 90% of cases£¬donors are asked to donate their blood stem cells£¬the other 10% will give their bone marrow£®Lots of donors say that both these things are virtually pain free£¬and nothing to be scared about£®Being a bone marrow donor should be something to be proud of£¬as every donor has an opportunity to save someone's life!
At the moment I know that the doctors are busy searching for a match£¬I simply live every day in the hope that there will be a donor right for me£®If I have an opportunity for life£¬I won't waste it£®
When I was a first year at university£¬I made the mistake of walking away from becoming a stem cell donor£®Please don't make the same mistake that I did£®There are so many people out there£¬including myself£¬that need your help£» and by undergoing a simple£¬pain-free procedure£¬you could have the chance to proudly say that you saved someone's life£®

25£®Why did the author refuse to learn more about bone marrow donation before£¿B
A£®Because she could get nothing from it£®
B£®Because she thought that donating would be painful£®
C£®Because she had known nothing about it£®
D£®Because she was in poor health£®
26£®What can we learn from the underlined sentence in paragraph1£¿C
A£®The author was concerned about others£®
B£®The author was confident about the bone marrow donation£®
C£®The author needs the bone marrow donation now£®
D£®The author donates her bone marrow to save others£®
27£®The author needs the bone marrow because she gotA
A£®cancer        
B£®headache     
C£®flu     
D£®high blood pressure
28£®The author told us her story toD
A£®show us the experience of her college life£®
B£®explain the cause of her cancer£®
C£®recall her painful past£®
D£®encourage people to be a bone marrow donor£®

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

ͬ²½Á·Ï°²á´ð°¸