¸ù¾ÝËùѧ¿ÎÎÄÄÚÈÝÌî¿Õ¡££¨Ã¿¿Õ0.5·Ö£¬¹²20¿Õ£¬Âú·Ö10·Ö£©

1.µ«µ±ËûÒ»Ïëµ½°ïÖúÄÇЩµÃÁË»ôÂÒµÄÆÕͨ°ÙÐÕʱºò£¬Ëû¾Í¸Ðµ½ºÜÕñ·Ü¡£

But he ____________ ____________ when he thought about helping ordinary people ____________ ____________ cholera.

2.ÖµµÃÔÞÑïµÄÊÇ£¬ËäÈ»ÕâËĸö¹ú¼ÒµÄÈ·ÔÚijЩ·½Ã湲ͬºÏ×÷£¬ÀýÈçÔÚ»õ±ÒºÍ ÔÚ¹ú¼Ê¹ØϵÉÏ£¬µ«ËüÃÇÔÚÓÐЩÖƶÈÉÏÈÔÈ»´æÔÚןܴóµÄÇø±ð¡£

__________ ___________ ____________, the four countries do work together in some areas (eg, the _____________ and international relations), but they still have very different institutions.

3.È»¶ø£¬µ±ÎÒÃǵ½´ïÒ»¸ö¿´ÉÏÈ¥ÏñÒ»¸ö´óÊг¡µÄµØ·½Ê±£¬ ÓÉÓÚÌ«¶àµÄÆøµæ³µÏòËÄÃæ°Ë·½·É±¼£¬ÎÒ¿´²»¼ûÍõƽÁË¡£

However, I _________ _________ _________WangPing when we reached _________looked like a large market because of too many carriages flying by in all directions.

4.ÄãÓÐûÓйýÕâÖÖÇé¿ö£º±ðÈ˿ظæÄãµÄ¼ÇÕߣ¬ËµËû£¨Ëý£©µÄ±¨µÀÍêȫʧʵ£¿

Have you ever had a ________ _________someone _________your journalists _______ getting the wrong end of the stick?

5.³ý·ÇÒ·þÕ³ÌùÔÚÉÕÉËÃæÉÏ£¬·ñÔò¶¼Òª°ÑÒ·þÍѵô¡£Èç¹ûÐèÒªµÄ»°£¬¿ÉÒÔʹÓüôµ¶¡£

Remove clothing ___________ ____________ __________ __________ unless it is stuck to the burn.

Á·Ï°²áϵÁдð°¸
Ïà¹ØÏ°Ìâ

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º2014-2015ѧÄêÖØÇìÊÐÆßУÁª¿¼¸ßÒ»ÏÂѧÆÚÆÚÄ©Ó¢ÓïÊÔ¾í£¨½âÎö°æ£© ÌâÐÍ£ºÊéÃæ±í´ï

¼ÙÉèÄãÊÇÀ£¬¹úÍâijÖÐѧµÄѧÉúÃ÷ÌìÀ´ÄãУ·ÃÎʽ»Á÷£¬Ö÷ÌâÊǸßÖÐÉú¶ÔÎÄ¡¢Àí¿ÆµÄÑ¡Ôñ¡£ÇëÄãÓÃÓ¢Óïдһƪ·¢ÑԸ壬ÏòËûÃǽéÉÜÄãËù×öµÄÑ¡Ôñ£¬²¢ËµÃ÷Ñ¡ÔñµÄÀíÓÉ¡£

×¢Ò⣺ 1¡¢¿ªÍ·ºÍ½áβÒÑΪÄãдºÃ£¬²»¼ÆÈë×Ü´ÊÊý£»

2¡¢´ÊÊý100×óÓÒ£»

3¡¢¶ÌÎÄÖв»ÄܳöÏÖÓë±¾ÈËÏà¹ØµÄÐÅÏ¢¡£

²Î¿¼´Ê»ã£ºÎÄ¿Æ arts£»Àí¿Æscience

Good afternoon, everyone.

Welcome to our school! _____________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________

______________________________________________________________________

Thanks!

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º2016½ìºþÄϺâÑôÏصÚÒ»ÖÐѧ¸ßÈýÉÏѧÆÚÆÚÖÐÓ¢ÓïÊÔ¾í£¨½âÎö°æ£© ÌâÐÍ£º¶ÌÎĸĴí

¶ÌÎĸĴí(¹²10СÌ⣻ÿСÌâl·Ö£¬Âú·Öl0·Ö)

¼Ù¶¨Ó¢Óï¿ÎÉÏÀÏʦҪÇóͬ×ÀÖ®¼ä½»»»ÐÞ¸Ä×÷ÎÄ£¬ÇëÄãÐÞ¸ÄÄãͬ×ÀдµÄÒÔÏÂ×÷ÎÄ¡£ÎÄÖй²ÓÐl0´¦ÓïÑÔ´íÎó£¬Ã¿¾äÖÐ×î¶àÓÐÁ½´¦¡£Ã¿´¦´íÎó½öÉæ¼°Ò»¸öµ¥´ÊµÄÔö¼Ó¡¢É¾³ý»òÐ޸ġ£

Ôö¼Ó£ºÔÚȱ´Ê´¦¼ÓÒ»¸ö©×Ö·ûºÅ(^)¡£²¢ÔÚÆäÏÂÃæд³ö¸Ã¼ÓµÄ´Ê£®

ɾ³ý£º°Ñ¶àÓàµÄ´ÊÓÃбÏß(£Ü)»®µô¡£

Ð޸ģºÔÚ´íµÄ´ÊÏ»­Ò»ºáÏߣ¬²¢ÔڸôÊÏÂÃæд³öÐ޸ĺóµÄ´Ê¡£

×¢Ò⣺1£®Ã¿´¦´íÎó¼°ÆäÐ޸ľù½öÏÞÒ»´Ê¡£

2£®Ö»ÔÊÐíÐÞ¸Ä10´¦¡£¶àÕß(´ÓµÚ11´¦Æð)²»¼Æ·Ö¡£

In the winter vacation, I paid a visit a mountain village in a suburb of Luoyang. No sooner had I got off the bus when I was greatly surprising to see all the changes. It was far better than I had been expected. Now every family can drink cleanly running water. The villagers needn¡¯t carry water himself any more. Firewood is no longer used for cooking. Marsh gas, a new cheap clean energy, make it very convenient to cook and light. As all the families have color TV set, they can enjoy plays at home. It impressed me most was that the best building in a village was the school. I hope the mountain village will become better and better.

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º2015-2016ѧÄê½­Î÷ǦɽһÖкá·åÖÐѧÁ½Ð£¸ß¶þÉÏѧÆÚÆÚÖÐÓ¢ÓïÊÔ¾í£¨½âÎö°æ£© ÌâÐÍ£ºÍêÐÎÌî¿Õ

ÔĶÁÏÂÃæµÄ¶ÌÎÄ£¬´Ó¶ÌÎĺó¸÷ÌâËù¸øµÄËĸöÑ¡ÏA¡¢B¡¢CºÍD£©ÖУ¬Ñ¡³ö¿ÉÒÔÌîÈë¿Õ°×´¦µÄ×î¼ÑÑ¡Ï²¢ÔÚ´ðÌ⿨ÉϽ«¸ÃÏîÍ¿ºÚ¡£

In France, there once lived a famous man named the Marquis de Lafayette. When he was a little boy, his mother called him Gilbert.

Gilbert¡¯s father and grandfather had both been ________ men in his village. He was proud of them, and he ________ that he might grow up to be like them.

Gilbert¡¯s home was near a ________. One day word came that a cruel ________ had been seen in the woods. Men said it had killed many of the villagers¡¯ sheep. Gilbert was only seven, but all his ________ were about the cruel animal.

¡°Shall we take a ________ ?¡± asked his mother.

¡°Oh, yes!¡± said Gilbert. ¡°We may see that wolf in the forest. But don¡¯t be ________.¡±

His mother smiled, ________ she felt quite sure that there was no ________ .

They did not go far into the woods. The mother sat down under a tree and began to ________ . Seeing Mom interested in her book, Gilbert decided to ________ the animal. He walked quietly into a wilder place. He looked ________ around, but saw only a rabbit.

Then, ________ , he heard footsteps. He stood still and ________, When the animal was very ________ to him, he jumped out of his hiding place and held it round its neck. It did not try to bite. But it threw Gilbert upon the ________ .

Gilbert was soon on his feet again. He was not ________ at all. He looked at the animal: It was not a wolf but a calf(Å£¶¿).

The boy felt very ________ . He hurried back to his mother, tears in his eyes. He told her what had happened.

His mother said, ¡°You were very ________ . You are my hero because you ________ what you thought was a great danger and you were not afraid.¡±

1.A. famous B. wise C. brave D. generous

2.A. wished B. guessed C. realized D. believed

3.A. mountain B. forest C. farm D. river

4.A. tiger B. lion C. bear D. wolf

5.A. thoughts B. questions C. plans D. complaints

6.A. bath B. picture C. walk D. break

7.A. tired B. afraid C. cruel D. surprised

8.A. so B. once C. but D. for

9.A. danger B. wonder C. use D. point

10.A. sing B. read C. sleep D. draw

11.A. give up B. worry about C. look for D. ask about

12.A. angrily B. hurriedly C. proudly D. carefully

13.A. finally B. suddenly C. gradually D. strangely

14.A. listened B. cried C. waited D. watched

15.A. close B. familiar C. blind D. harmful

16.A. stone B. wall C. tree D. ground

17.A. defeated B. bothered C. frightened D. hurt

18.A. annoyed B. ashamed C. nervous D. excited

19.A. smart B. curious C. courageous D. lucky

20.A. faced B. avoided C. chose D. accepted

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º2015-2016ѧÄê½­ËÕÎÞÎýÊÐËÄУ¸ßÒ»ÉÏѧÆÚÆÚÖп¼ÊÔÓ¢ÓïÊÔ¾í£¨½âÎö°æ£© ÌâÐÍ£ºµ¥ÏîÌî¿Õ

¡ª I regret _______ you that you failed the exam.

¡ª How I regret _______ so much time playing computer games.

A. telling; wasting B. telling; to waste

C. to tell; wasting D. to tell; to waste

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º2015-2016ѧÄ긣½¨°ËÏØÒ»Öи߶þÉÏѧÆÚÆÚÖÐÓ¢ÓïÊÔ¾í£¨½âÎö°æ£© ÌâÐÍ£ºÔĶÁÀí½â

H.T.B. Arts Center

FILM Tickets £2.50 / £ 1.50. Performances at 8 pm unless started otherwise.

WILD AT HEART 127mins.

Wen 6-Fri8 February

Director: David Lynch

Starring: Nicholas Cage, Laura Dern, Willam Dafoe. A first-class film. Cage and his girlfriend Dean are on the run through the dangerous Deep South. They are hiding from gunmen who have been hired to kill Cage by Dean's mother. Victims, yes¡ªbut they also have fun. It's wild at heart, strange on top. Funny, frightening and brilliant.

DICK TRACY 113mins

Mon 11-Sat16 February 6pm

Tickets on sale 5-6 pm

Director: Warren Beatty

Starring: Warren Beatty , Madonna The famous detective tries to stop Big Boy and the Blank from taking over the city. A colorful and exciting film. Some parts are frightening, so think twice about taking children.

BATMAN 126mins

Mon11-Sat16 February 8.30pm

Tickets on sale 7.30-8.30pm

PIZZA PLUS offer 6-7pm

Director: Tim Burton

Starring: Michael Keaton, Jack Nicholson. A few essential questions must be asked...Is Batman a mad hero? Why does Bruce Wayne spend millions dressing up as a bat? Has Nicholson's Joker stolen the whole movie? Great action and excellent acting, especially by Nicholson.

1.We know from Wild at Heart that

A. Wild at Heart is funny rather than frightening

B. Cage was not accepted by his future mother-in-law.

C. A famous detective happened to help Cage and Dean.

D. Cage and Dean are playing the hide-and-seek game with Dean¡¯s mother.

2.According to the text, we can learn that _____.

A. Batman has the longest running time

B. One can buy tickets in advance for all the films

C. You¡¯d better not take your children with you to see Dick Tracy

D. While watching Batman one can enjoy pizza at 7:30 pm.

3.Where can we most probably read this text?

A. In a movie review.

B. In an ad page.

C. In a short story.

D. In an introduction of an art center.

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º2016½ìɽÎ÷´óѧ¸½ÊôÖÐѧ¸ßÈý10ÔÂÔ¿¼Ó¢ÓïÊÔ¾í£¨½âÎö°æ£© ÌâÐÍ£ºÔĶÁÀí½â

My family moved from Taiwan to a small town in central Georgia, where my dad got a visa for his family and a job. I had just learned English, and from what little I could gather from my classmates, Santa Claus would come down one¡¯s chimney and put toys in one¡¯s stocking on Christmas Eve! What a great country, I thought. After I looked up ¡°stocking¡± in my Chinese-English dictionary, I knew what I had to do.

On that fateful night, after everyone went to bed, I took my longest, cleanest knee sock and attached it to a nail already on the mantel(±Ú¯). Obviously, the previous owners of this house were no strangers to this Santa character.

I woke up before everyone else on Christmas Day and ran to the fireplace. To make a sob story short, I was hit with the reality of an empty sock and the biggest lie ever told. I burst into tears, quickly took down the sock, and stuffed it in the back of a drawer. Santa was dead.

Every December since then, the topic of Christmas memories would unavoidably come up, and I would amuse my friends with my poor-little-me story. I had to make it as funny as possible, or else I would cry.

How could I know that Santa was just late? Nine years ago, on Christmas Eve, an older man with a white beard and a red cap knocked on my front door. He said, ¡°I¡¯ve been looking for you for twenty-five years.¡± He handed me a bulging red stocking, winked, and left. On top of the stocking was a card. It read: ¡°For Becky¡ªI may have missed you in the second grade, but you¡¯ve always lived in my heart. Santa.¡±

Through tear-blurred eyes, I recognized the handwriting of Jill, a friend I had met just two months before. I later discovered that the older man was her father. Jill had seen the hurt little girl underneath the thirty-something woman and decided to do something about it.

So now I believe that Santa is real. I don¡¯t mean the twinkle-eyed character of children¡¯s mythology or the creation of American holiday marketers. Those Santas annoy and sadden me. I believe in the Santa Claus that live inside good and thoughtful people. This Santa does not return to the North Pole after a crazy delivery but lives each day purposefully, really listens to friends, and then plans deliberate acts of kindness.

1.What does the underlined part ¡°what I had to do¡± in Paragraph 1 refer to?

A. Waiting for Santa Claus.

B. Putting a stocking on the mantel.

C. Asking for gifts from her parents.

D. Looking up ¡°stocking¡± in the dictionary

2.It can be inferred from the passage that the author¡¯s parents ________.

A. didn¡¯t love their child at all

B. didn¡¯t know the previous owners of the house

C. didn¡¯t know much about Christmas tradition

D. didn¡¯t have enough money to buy the author Christmas presents

3.When the author told her friends about the story, she felt ________ in her heart.

A. proud B. amusing C. hate D. regret

4.The author of the passage is probably ________.

A. a teenager B. a primary school student

C. a middle-aged woman D. a native American

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º2016½ìÉϺ£ÊиßÒ»ÏÂѧÆÚÆÚÄ©Ó¢ÓïÊÔ¾í£¨½âÎö°æ£© ÌâÐÍ£ºÔĶÁÀí½â

In modern society there is a great deal of argument about competition. Some value it highly, believing that it is responsible for social progress and prosperity; others say that competition is bad; that it sets one person against another; that it leads to unfriendly relationship between people.

I have taught many children who held the belief that their self-worth relied on how well they performed at tennis and other skills. For them, playing well and winning are often life-and-death affairs. In their single-minded pursuit of success, the development of many other human qualities is sadly forgotten.

However, while some seem to be lost in the desire to succeed, others take an opposite attitude. In a culture which values only the winner and pays no attention to the ordinary players, they strongly blame competition. Among the most vocal are youngsters who have suffered under competitive pressures from their parents or society. Teaching these young people, I often observe in them a desire to fail. They seem to seek failure by not trying to win or achieve success. By not trying, they always have an excuse: ¡°I may have lost, but it doesn¡¯t matter because I really didn¡¯t try.¡± What is not usually admitted by themselves is the belief that if they had really tried and lost, that would mean a lot. Such a loss would be a measure of their worth. Clearly, this belief is the same as that of the true competitors who try to prove themselves. Both are based on the mistaken belief that one¡¯s self-respect relies on how well one performs in comparison with others. Both are afraid of not being valued. Only as this basic and often troublesome fear begins to dissolve can we discover a new meaning in competition.

1.What does this passage mainly talk about?

A. Competition helps to set up self-respect.

B. Opinions about competition are different among people.

C. Competition is harmful to personal quality development.

D. Failures are necessary experiences in competition

2.Why do some people favor competition according to the passage?

A. It pushes society forward.

B. It builds up a sense of duty.

C. It improves personal abilities.

D. It encourages individual efforts.

3.What is the similar belief of the true competitors and those with a desire to fail ?

A. One¡¯s worth lies in his performance compared with others.

B. One¡¯s success in competition needs great efforts.

C. One¡¯s achievement is determined by his particular skills.

D. One¡¯s success is based on how hard he has tried.

4.Which point of view may the author agree to?

A. Every effort should be paid back.

B. Competition should be encouraged.

C. Winning should be a life-and-death matter.

D. Fear of failure should be removed in competition.

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º2016½ìÖØÇìÊиßÒ»ÏÂѧÆÚÆÚÄ©¿¼ÊÔÓ¢ÓïÊÔ¾í£¨½âÎö°æ£© ÌâÐÍ£ºµ¥ÏîÌî¿Õ

It is quite warm _________January in Chongqing.

A. to B. with

C. in D. for

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

ͬ²½Á·Ï°²á´ð°¸