--- Hey! Everyone in the office was at the dinner party in honor of Mr. Charles except you. What happened?
--- I ____ after Mike, my colleague. He was badly ill.

A£®have lookedB£®was looking C£®would look D£®had looked

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  You're rushing to get out of the door for a meeting, but you just can't seem to find your car keys. Or you've got tickets booked for a Caribbean cruise(×ø´¬ÂÃÐÐ) , but your passport disappeared. Or maybe you've just come back from a grocery store tour and realized¡­Hey, did I leave my baby in the checkout line?

     Ok, you've probably never gone to the extremes of our last example (we hope), but most of us experience slip - ups like these on a daily basis. No matter how smart you may be, it doesn't mean your brain won't turn to Swiss cheese every so often, and no amount of e-mail reminders can help you remember where you left your TV remote or lucky penny.

     But now, there is a new pair of eyeglasses that can help to find all those little things you know must be around somewhere :  Let's call it Vision 2.0.

     The new glasses, which are being developed in a Japanese lab under the code name Smart Goggles,are similar to a Google search engine for your eyes. The high - tech glasses come with a camera that records everything you see on a daily basis, and boast built - in object recognition software that allows them to keep track of whatever comes across their field of vision. If you've got a collection of art sculptures that the camera can't recognize immediately, no problem :  Just say the name of each item,  and the glasses will memorize them right away.

     The Smart Goggles' superb tracking abilities mean that whenever you're looking for your keys, your overdue library book, or yes, even your baby, all you have to do is to say the word and the Goggles' camera will show you the last time your desired object appeared on screen, telling exactly where you'll be able to find it.

     Though the glasses are still too big for general use, the research team in Japan believes that they'll be able to make the modem glasses smaller to the size of normal glasses in the near future, making them the perfect new accessory for yourself or any other absent - minded Professor you know.

      With these intelligent designs, you'll never lose anything again. Except maybe your glasses.

1.The best title for the passage should be _______.

A. A Habit of Forgetting Small Things  

B. Usage of New High - Tech Glasses

C. How to Find Little Things Easily

D. Glasses Will Help Find Your Things

2.Which of the following is a slip - up according to the passage?

A. You can't find your watch before going to work.

B. You can't work out a math problem in given time.

C. You don't know how to deal with a naughty boy.

D. You don't know how to get to a hospital.

3.Which of the following statement is true about Smart Goggles?

A. They're a search engine used on the Internet.

B. They're a camera with recognition software.

C. They're software used in computers.

D. They're sunglasses protecting our eyes.

4.Where are the new glasses being developed?

A. In China.          B. In America.      C. In Japan.          D. In France.

 

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It is easy to find your way about in New York. It is laid out so regularly. Instead of streets winding and twisting (ÓØ»Ø) as they do in London, they are all regular and well planned. The streets running north and south are called ¡°avenues¡± and are numbered, e.g. 1st Avenue, 2nd Avenue, etc. The streets going east and west are called ¡°streets¡± and are also numbered, e.g. 51st Street, 63rd Street. It is all much more logical (ºÏÀíµÄ) than London¡¯s street names. But I couldn¡¯t help thinking how much more interesting than these dull cold numbers are London¡¯s illogical but colorful names of streets, e.g. ¡°Bishopgate¡± (which is not a gate and hasn¡¯t a Bishop in it); ¡°Haymarket¡± or ¡°Corn market¡± (where you won¡¯t see any hey or corn) or ¡°Poultry¡± (without a living chicken anywhere in sight) or ¡°Thread needle Street¡± (where you won¡¯t find little girls learning to sew).

1.In the second sentence of the passage, ¡°laid out¡± means ______.

A£®built             B£®be put            C£®designed          D£®cut down

2.The streets running from north to south are called _______.

A£®avenues in London                      B£®streets in America

C£®avenues in New York                     D£®streets in London

3.According to the writer¡¯s opinion, ______.

A£®avenues and streets are the same

B£®streets in America are better than avenues in England

C£®streets in New York are better than those in London

D£®the writer didn¡¯t agree with the London streets planners

4.The names of streets both in London and New York ______.

A£®are quite good                         B£®are interesting

C£®are not practical                        D£®differ greatly in form

5.The writer tells his readers that he prefers (¸üϲ»¶) _____.

A£®London streets                         B£®New York streets

C£®both                                 D£®neither

 

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     Being healthy means taking care of yourself physically and mentally. Here are some of my best tips on how to do both:

Break a bad habit.

You don¡¯t really ¡°break¡± habits. __66__. So if your problem is that you eat too much when you get home from work, find something new to do that is incompatible£¨²»Äܹ²´æµÄ£©with what you usually do. You can¡¯t walk around the track at the school and pig out in your kitchen at the same time.

Grow your marriage.

__67__. It¡¯s always a give-and-take, always requires work. It¡¯s as if you planted a garden and came back six months later©¤you wouldn¡¯t even be able to find it. __68__.

Beat stress.

My dog, Maggie, is the best anti-stress tool I have. A few minutes petting, scratching or playing with her, and __69__. Exercise also helps. Just about every day, I¡¯m on the tennis court. It¡¯s a great workout, and if I don¡¯t have that, I don¡¯t cope as well, sleep as well or think as well.

Refocus your anger.

Expressing your anger is just not that good an idea. You say things you don¡¯t mean. __70__. When you do that, you¡¯re a problem solver.

Don¡¯t medicate(²ôÈëÒ©) with food.

It never, ever works. You¡¯re denying your issue by eating your way through it, instead of saying, ¡°Hey, I¡¯ve got a problem.¡±

 

A.     You replace the unwanted behavior with something that prevents you from doing it and that doesn¡¯t have

unhealthy side effects.

B.     I¡¯ll feel easy.

C.     If there is a problem, you needn¡¯t deal with it immediately.

D.     You have to tend it, feed it, weed it, and deal with the problems.

E.      Instead, recognize that anger is usually a symptom of hurt, fear or frustration, and deal with the causes rather than blow up.

F.      Relationships are negotiated£¨Ð­ÉÌ£©, and the negotiation never stops.

G.     You do something without any good effect on your health during the time when you usually do something harmful to your body.

 

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---- Why didn¡¯t you answer me in the exam just now?

---- Hey, I really don¡¯t like to help you cheat.

----    6   

---- Yes, we are. But that¡¯s nothing to do with good friends or not.

---- Why ?   7     People say ¡°A friend in need is a friend indeed.¡±

I needed your help just now.

---- Well,    8    If I had helped you cheat just now, then I would

not be a real friend. If I had helped you, you might be able to pass

the exam but you can¡¯t learn anything and you will never try to

study hard.

----     9    You know my father will beat me if I can¡¯t pass this

exam.

---- Well, if your father beats you then, that should be a good lesson for

you.

---- Now I really doubt if you are really my friend or not.

----    10  

---- Good for me? You want me to be beaten by my father?

A£®Good friends should know what I mean.

B£®I think you should know what I mean.

C£®Come on! It¡¯s just an exam.

D£®I don¡¯t agree with you.

E.We are good friends, aren¡¯t we?

F.I can¡¯t agree with you more.

G.What I said and did is for your own good.         

 

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¡°Hey, Jenna, do you think we¡¯ll still be friends when we¡¯re eighty ¨C two?¡± I asked my friend. It was clear she was wondering where I had come up with such a question. Losing Jenna would  be like losing a very close sister. We hung out together. We gave each other advice.

¡°Of course, we¡¯ll still be friends when we¡¯re eighty ¨C two.¡± Jenna announced loudly.

The next year, in fourth grade, we met Jamie. The three of us soon became close friends. We played together almost every day. I thought even time couldn¡¯t pull us apart, but I was sadly mistaken.

The three of us started fighting a lot. Before Christmas, we had a really big fight, and Jamie and Jenna were against me, both saying I was bossy. I felt helpless and lonely. I thought Christmas would be horrible!

I was surprised when Jenna came to my house and gave me an awesome Christmas card she had made for me. I was so sure that she was still disappointed with me.

¡°Wow, ¡± I said. breaking the silence as we stood on either side of my front door. ¡°Thanks.¡±

¡°Okay¡­well¡­I have to go,¡± she said softly.

¡°Okay. See you late then¡­¡± and I closed the door.

¡°Who was that at the door?¡± my mum asked.

The card stared off with ¡°Merry Christmas¡±, but then it said, ¡°I am so glad we¡¯re friends. I am sorry about what I said when we were fighting. A fight won¡¯t stop us from being friends. Besides, we said we were going to be friends even when we¡¯re eight ¨C two.¡±

I stopped reading and started laughing. I couldn¡¯t believe I had forgotten what she said that day in her back yard. I couldn¡¯t believe I had been so selfish in trying to get even and making my friends feel sorry for me that I had forgotten about real friendship.

¡¾Ð¡Ìâ¡¿How would the author and Jenna get along with each other after Christmas?

A. They would be close friends again.

B. They would not speak to each other.

C. They would lose touch with each other.

D. They would go on fighting with each other.

¡¾Ð¡Ìâ¡¿The underlined sentence ¡°I was bossy¡± in the fourth last paragraph means ¡°_________¡±.

A. I looked like a boss                             B. I acted as boss

C. I was fond of giving orders                      D. I was fond of fighting

¡¾Ð¡Ìâ¡¿Which of the following is the right time order according to the passage?

a. Jamie became our friend.

b. I felt lonely and unhappy.

c. Jenna, Jamie and I fought a lot.

d. Jenna brought me a Christmas card.

e. I was sorry for what I did to her.

f. Jenna and I promised to be lifelong friends.

A. f ¨C a ¨C b ¨C c ¨C e ¨C d                  B. a ¨C c ¨C f ¨C b ¨C d ¨C e

C. a ¨C b ¨C c ¨C f ¨C e ¨C d                  D. f ¨C a ¨C c ¨C b ¨C d ¨C e

¡¾Ð¡Ìâ¡¿The author was delighted when she read the card from Jenna because _________.

A. what Jenna wrote was funny           

B. Jenna would be her friend again

C. she was happy about the coming Christmas

D. she was happy to receive a Christmas cad

 

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