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Dear Alice,

_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Yours

Li Hua

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Instagram is a fast, beautiful and fun way to share your life with friends and family. Take a picture or video, choose a filter(ÐÞͼ) to transform its look and feel, and then post to Instagram¡ª it¡¯s that easy. You can even share to Facebook, Twitter and more£®It¡¯s a new way to see the world. So many photos of food are contained on Instagram¡ª now a pop-up diner in London is taking advantage of this new trend by letting people settle the bill for their meals simply by uploading photos of their dishes to social networks£®

I always thought people¡¯s taking pictures of their food was kind of silly, but at this new pop-up restaurant in the UK, I¡¯d probably do it too. ¡°The Picture House¡± is the world¡¯s first pay-by-photo restaurant. You order, click a photo of the food, share on Instagram and eat for free!

The restaurant belongs to frozen food giant(¾ÞÈË) Birds Eye, who came up with the idea to cash in on people¡¯s addiction with photographing food and sharing the pictures online. They conducted a survey and found out that more than half of the British population regularly took pictures of their meals£®So they realized it was a better way to advertise their new dining range£®

The pop-up diner was open in Soho, London for three days in May, and is now moving to other major UK cities. They serve two-course meals that customers don¡¯t have to pay for, if they photo and Instagram it.

The restaurant is a part of Birds Eye¡¯s ¡°Food for Life¡± campaign, a new marketing project that aims at changing the way people look at frozen food. ¡°Taking photos of food enables people to show off and to share their mealtime moments¡ªfrom the everyday to the special, ¡±said marketing director Margaret Jobling£®

The reaction to the Picture House has been great so far. And the pay-by-picture concept has proven to be an effective way. Alternative payment methods are actually gaining popularity among a lot of businesses. Last year in a cafe in Germany customers pay by how much time they spend there, not by what they eat£®

1.Instagram probably is_____________

A. a restaurant free of charge.

B. a campaign of ¡°Food for Life¡±.

C. a program used to share photos.

D. a new marketing project.

2.What can we infer from the passage?

A. The Picture House was opened in Scotland.

B. The British people¡¯s response to the Picture House is quite cold.

C. The Picture House is the world¡¯s first pay-by-photo restaurant.

D. Lots of British people like taking photos of their meals.

3.¡°The Picture House¡± encourages sharing photos of its food to__________

A. attract more customers.

B. create a new social media trend.

C. raise the price of frozen food.

D. reward the regular customers.

4.Which of the following can serve as the best title for the passage?

A. Food for Life

B. The Pop-up Diner

C. No Need to Pay

D. Pay by Picture

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The train's about to leave. All________!

A. abroad B. broad

C. aboard D. board

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I've been working all night and I'm _________.

A. put out B. carried out

C. brought out D. worn out

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Mail is ________ to our office twice a day.

A. delivered B. designed

C. devoted D. declared

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Back in 1969, it was the Apollo 11 crew who flew to the moon in a spaceship. When U.S. astronauts Neil Armstrong and Edwin ¡°Buzz¡± Aldrin stepped foot on the moon, they were the first. Meanwhile, their fellow astronaut Michael Coilins circled the moon in their spaceship, named Columbia.

When Armstrong and Aldrin were done with their walk£¬they returned to the command module, and back to Earth. That part of the spaceship is on view at the Smithsonian¡¯s Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C. But, if you cannot get to Washington£¬soon you will be able to see Columbia on your computer or your smartphone.

Digital scientists are scanning the inside of the spaceship. They are creating an online model, in three dimensions, or¡°3 D¡±. By looking at these photographs, you will be able to see outer space£¬the way the astronauts did. It will be like sitting in their seats.

Want your very own Columbia spaceship? You will be able to print a 3D copy of Columbia. Experts say anyone can make a life-sized model. But they expect most people to make smaller models of the 320¡Á400 cm(11¡¯X 13¡¯)command module.

Scientists are using special 3D technology to scan the inside. They use cameras on long arms to take the photographs. The thousands of photographs taken will be combined with 50 laser scans.

What would it be like to sit inside Columbia and take a look around? All the images will be loaded into software that allows you to look around the module on a computer screen. The user will be able to see the Columbia both inside and out. The Smithsonian says that the 3D technology gives the user ways to see things they cannot see at the museum. And it will give information that even the museum curators(¹Ý³¤)have not seen before.

¡°With the Command Module, no one has been inside since it came into the collection,¡± says Adam Metallo. Smithsonian 3D imaging specialist. ¡°Now the information we capture can give anyone in the world a view of what it looks like inside this incredible piece of history.¡±

1.The author mentions moon landing of the Apollo 11 to_____________.

A. introduce the topic

B. honour the astronauts

C. mark the milestone event

D. draw attention to space research

2.According to the text£¬people_______________.

A. are advised to make a life-sized model

B. can clone a spaceship with 3D technology

C. will visit a copy of Columbia in the museum

D. can buy a copied Columbia spaceship in the museum

3.What¡¯s the advantage of a copied spaceship?

A. It can attract more visitors.

B. It can help look far into the universe.

C. It makes 3D technology more popular.

D. It provides more knowledge than the museum.

4.What might be the best title for the text?

A. Apollo 11 Spacecraft lands in your smartphone

B. 3D technology, the new way to explore space

C. Landing on the moon, a milestone in space travel

D. An online model shows you how to land on the moon

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An old woman was sitting outside an ice-cream shop with dirty clothes and rough hair.She____and walked,but it seemed quite____,her legs shivering£¨²ü¶¶£©and her eyes showing deep sorrow of being left alone and homeless.

I didn't____an ice cream,so I was outside the shop,____her,while my family went in.Her legs were weak.I saw her difficulties and came up to her with 10 dollars in my____and handed it over to her.She was so____and started blessing me instantly.

I wanted to talk with her as that seemed very important____.I asked her about her____.She said there was no one,and that all died one by one,with tears in her eyes.

"Where does she live?"I____.The response was quite____.I noticed her ¡°luggage¡±,two plastic bags,containing her____.At this point,I gave her my____,thin stole£¨Åû¼ç£©.It was bright yellow and looked new.

But she was not ready to accept____.She was worried about my feeling cold for few minutes before I got home. She finally____the stole and covered herself,when I insisted.She was____me even more.I checked my bag and kept giving anything that I thought she could use.How grateful she was!At this moment,I saw change in her____state of mind.By this time,she seemed calm and____.And so did I.

The look of____and hopelessness was transformed.She looked at the people who passed by us with more____in that moment.

I realized it was my small kind act____had counted a lot to the old woman.

1.A. got out B. got over C. got off D. got up

2.A. tunny B. interesting C. difficult D. attractive

3.A. want B. touch C. serve D. taste

4.A. finding B. leading C. ignoring D. watching

5.A. pocket B. bag C. hand D. luggage

6.A. angry B. thankful C. strange D. cautious

7.A. as well B. in all C. so well D. at all

8.A. friend B. habit C. career D. family

9.A. replied B. wondered C. claimed D. stated

10.A. different B. serious C. obvious D. weak

11.A. belongings B. goods C. clothes D. books

12.A. smooth B. warm C. special D. rough

13.A. one B. them C. those D. it

14.A. brought B. received C. took D. carried

15.A. calming B. supporting C. blessing D. helping

16.A. emotional B. common C. conventional D. unique

17.A. convenient B. content C. appropriate D. available

18.A. desperation B. expression C. confusion D. devotion

19.A. doubt B. trust C. regret D. confidence

20.A. since B. which C. when D. that

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How many times a day do you check your email? When you wake up? Before bed? A dozen times in between? The technology that was supposed to make our lives simple has taken up too much time. The average young man spends more than seven hours a day using technological devices(É豸), with an additional hour just text-messaging friends.

The advantage of technological devices is connectedness: email lets us respond on the go, and we are in touch with more people during more hours of the day than at any other time in history. But is it possible that we¡¯re lonelier than ever, too? That¡¯s what MIT professor Sherry Turkle observes in her new book, Alone Together, which clearly describes our changing relationship with technology.

For Turkle, the biggest worry is the effect the weak connections have on our development. Technology isn¡¯t offering us the lives we want to live. ¡°We¡¯re texting people at a distance,¡± says Turkle, ¡°We¡¯re using lifeless objects to convince ourselves that even when we¡¯re alone, we feel together. And then when we¡¯re with each other, we put ourselves in situations where we are alone¡ªalways on our mobile devices. It¡¯s what I call a perfect storm of confusion about what¡¯s important in our human connections.¡±

Moreover, communicating online is not equal to face-to-face communication. Online, you can ignore others¡¯ feelings. In a text message, you can avoid eye contact. A number of studies have found that this generation of young people is less sympathetic(ÓÐͬÇéÐĵÄ)than ever. ¡°That doesn¡¯t lead to disaster,¡± says Turkle, ¡°but the disadvantages still cannot be ignored.¡±

1.From the first paragraph we can learn that_________.

A. email checking helps people wake up early

B. people communicate mainly by text-messaging now

C. technological device production has been simplified

D. using technological devices costs young men much time

2.What is Sherry Turkle¡¯s biggest worry?

A. Technology may make human connections confusing

B. Technology can¡¯t help people remove loneliness

C. Technology may make people¡¯s lives hard

D. Technology keeps people together

3.What is the author¡¯s attitude to the influence of technology on people¡¯s life?

A. Positive B. Negative

C. Hopeless D. Uncertain

4.What is the passage mainly about?

A. Technology brings many conveniences to people¡¯s lives

B. Young men spend too much time on technological devices

C. Technology also brings people some disadvantages

D. Sherry Turkle observes people¡¯s changing relationship with technology

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I thought she was famous£¬but none of my friends have ________ heard of her.

A. even B. ever

C. just D. never

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