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I start school when I was five. The classes were small and the teachers were friendly. At eleven I went to other school. Things didn¡¯t go so well as before. I hated to study subject such as biology and physics and I got terribly marks in tests. My parents tried to teach me which I didn¡¯t understand, but it didn¡¯t help. I got very worrying about my exams. Even though I spent a lot of time review my lessons, I failed all the exams and had to take them again a few months late. That was the worst year of my school life. And I never gave up. Now I am proud my career as a successful engineer.

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7.¿¼²é·ÇνÓﶯ´Ê¡£¸ù¾Ý¶ÌÓïspend some time doing sth.±íʾ¡°»¨·Ñʱ¼ä×öijÊ¡±£¬Òò´ËʹÓö¯Ãû´ÊÐÎʽ¡£¹Êreview¸ÄΪreviewing¡£

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿ Researchers in Japan have installed (°²×°) on a train a speaker that barks like a dog and snorts like a deer in order to prevent collisions with animals on the tracks.

The country has been troubled by a problem with trains colliding with deer on its railways. According to Japan¡¯s transport ministry, there were 613 cases of train services delayed for at least 30 minutes resulting from collisions with deer and other wild animals in 2018-19.

Deer are attracted to railway lines because of a need for iron in their diets. They lick (Ìò) the rails to pick up iron filings caused by the action of wheels against tracks. This dietary need has led to a constant battle to keep the deer separate from the danger of a fast-moving train. In the past, flashing red lights and even lion faces have been unsuccessfully trialed in an attempt to keep deer off the tracks.

This new device has been invented by a team at the country¡¯s Railway Technical Research Institute (RTRD). RTRI officials explain that deer have a habit of repeatedly snorting short, shrill sounds to warn other deer when they sense danger. The barking of the hunting dog, which drives deer to panic, strengthens the effect of the warning noise, according to the RTRI. When the deer hear a combination of a 3-second-long recording of a deer¡¯s snort and 20 seconds of a barking dog, they panic and flee rapidly.

RTRI researchers say late-night tests, at times when deer are most frequently seen by railway tracks, have resulted in a 45 percent reduction of deer sighting. Future plans include still barking sites where deer are commonly seen, but the unpleasant noises will not be so loud in areas where people live beside the tracks.

¡¾1¡¿Why are deer attracted to train tracks?

A.To get close to the passing trail.B.To get nutrition from train tracks.

C.To hunt for food near the train tracks.D.To gather together at night near railways.

¡¾2¡¿What has been tried to solve the railway problem in Japan?

A.Robots.B.Hunting dogs.

C.Lion face paintings.D.Specially designed tracks.

¡¾3¡¿What do we know about the speaker?

A.Its inventors drew inspiration from deer¡¯s habit.

B.It will be put to use in areas where deer appear.

C.It will affect people who live beside the track.

D.It has decreased more than half of deer sighting.

¡¾4¡¿What is the passage mainly about?

A.A dietary habit of deer.

B.A traffic problem caused by deer.

C.A battle between human and animals.

D.An invention designed to keep deer off the tracks.

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Mr. Taylor checked again: water, food, bandage, medicines, a compass, and a map wrapped in plastic... Bingo! He put all that he prepared for the coming hiking into his backpack.

Mr. Taylor was fond of hiking, this time in particular, for it was the first time for him to hike with his two sons, Harry and Joel. Joel liked reading books about explorers and Harry joined the hiking club in his school this term. ¡°It will be an unforgettable experience, definitely.¡± he whispered to himself, unconsciously a smile spreading over his face.

Harry and Joel, however, argued for the first three miles of their hiking trip. Harry accused Joel of wearing smelly old shoes. Joel blamed Harry for using all of the bug spray(ÅçÎí·À³æ¼Á). Harry told Joel he smelled terrible. Joel called Harry a coward(ų·ò).

¡°Will the two of you just quiet down and enjoy our hike together?¡± their father said. ¡°You¡¯re missing all of the beautiful scenery!¡±

It was true. Neither Joel nor Harry had taken notice of the bear their father had spied at the start of their trip. They hadn¡¯t looked up at the eagle he pointed out overhead. Worst of all, they hadn¡¯t paid any attention to the turns and twists along the way while they continued their argument.

¡°Joel threw a stick at me!¡± Harry screamed. ¡°That¡¯s not true!¡± Joel shouted back.

Mr. Taylor could no longer contain his anger. ¡°And both of you need to stop arguing!¡± he erupted. As he turned to face them, his left foot caught on a root. He slipped backward and down muddy bank, falling into the river that ran alongside the path.

Harry and Joel raced to their father¡¯s assistance. They helped him up out of the water, and then dragged his wet backpack up onto land.

Fortunately, their wet-through father found himself just slightly injured.

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Paragraph 1:

But his glasses came off when he fell in the water.

______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Paragraph 2:

¡±Just calm down.¡± Mr. Taylor shouted, ¡°Without my glasses, we need to work together to find our way.

______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿ People may have some unclear memories of their childhood£¬ but almost everyone will remember the beautiful princess and the cruel queen in "Snow White"£¬ the innocent little girl and the greedy big gray wolf in "Little Red Riding Hood"£®¡¾1¡¿ For example£¬ "True love can overcome anything"£¬ and "Even a frog can turn into a prince"£® However£¬ at a certain age£¬ we start to learn new things about life£¬ particularly that love doesn't always win£¬ and that a frog is just a frog£®

¡¾2¡¿ Just look at animated films like "The Lion King" and "Frozen"£¬ which have millions of fans young and old£® And this year's Lucerne Festival in Switzerland - a classical music festival - will also feature the themes of "Childhood" and "Fairy tales"£®

"Fairy tales endure because they are the stories of our lives in their most stripped down form£¬" wrote US author Laura Packer£® "They are stories of love and loss£¬ desire and death£¬ riches and ruin£®" ¡¾3¡¿ But if children only see just one side of reality£¬ adults usually see the other£® For example£¬ in the movie "Maleficent"£¬ we¡äre told the tale of Sleeping Beauty from the perspective of the evil queen£® ¡¾4¡¿ Instead£¬ she suffers great losses growing up£¬ leading to the creation of her "evil' side£® And in US author James Finn Gamer's book "Politically Correct Bedtime Stories "£¬he tells the classic story of "Little Red Riding Hood"£¬ but with a modem touch£®

¡¾5¡¿ They may usually start with "Once upon a time but as we grow older£¬ we learn that every story doesn't always need a "happily ever after" to be a good one£®

A£®Fairy tales are all about reality£®

B£®But somehow£¬ our love for fairy tales never dies£®

C£®Most of us get our earliest life lessons from fairy tales£®

D£®The theme of fairy tales is to teach people courage and kindness£®

E£®Fairy tales have been adapted into versions suitable for children£®

F£®It looks like fairy tales aren't just stories our parents read us at bedtime£®

G£®Unlike the children's version of the story£¬ we see that the queen wasn't born evil£®

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿ By the end of the year, editors of New York Times have picked the 4 best books of 2019, including fiction and non-fiction. Let¡¯s see which one will take your fancy.

Disappearing Earth

By Julia Phillips

In the first chapter of this novel, two young girls vanish, sending shock waves through a town on the edge of the remote and mysterious Kamchatka Peninsula. What follows is a novel of overlapping short stories about the different women who have been affected by their disappearance. Each tale pushes the narrative forward another month and exposes the ways in which the women of Kamchatka have been destroyed ¡ª personally, culturally and emotionally ¡ª by the crime.

No Visible Bruises

By Rachel Louise Snyder

Snyder¡¯s thoroughly reported book covers what the World Health Organization has called ¡°a global health problem¡±. In America alone, more than half of all murdered women are killed by a current or former life partner; domestic violence cuts across lines of class, religion and race. Snyder reveals pervasive myths (restraining orders are the answer, abusers never change) and writes movingly about the lives (and deaths) of people on both sides of the equation. She doesn¡¯t give easy answers but presents a wealth of information that is its own form of hope.

Midnight in Chernobyl

By Adam Higginbotham

Higginbotham¡¯s superb account of the April 1986 explosion at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant is one of those rare books about science and technology that read like a tension-filled thriller. Filled with vivid detail and sharply etched personalities, this narrative of astonishing incompetence moves from mistake to mistake, miscalculation to miscalculation, as it builds to the inevitable, history-changing disaster.

Exhalation

By Ted Chiang

Many of the nine deeply beautiful stories in this collection explore the material consequences of time travel. Reading them feels like sitting at dinner with a friend who explains scientific theory to you with no airs and graces. Each thoughtful, elegantly crafted story poses a philosophical question; Chiang arranges all nine into a conversation that comes full circle, after having travelled through remarkable areas.

¡¾1¡¿Which of the following tells about the violence from a husband to a wife in a family?

A.Disappearing EarthB.No Visible Bruises

C.Midnight in ChernobylD.Exhalation

¡¾2¡¿How may readers feel when reading the book Midnight in Chernobyl?

A.Delighted.B.Awkward.

C.Tense.D.Calm.

¡¾3¡¿What kind of book is Exhalation?

A.A folk tale.B.A biography.

C.A love story.D.A sci-fi story.

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Dear Adam,

______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

Yours,

Li Hua

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¡¾1¡¿What¡¯s the big problem of the woman?

A.She doesn¡¯t know how to go to Japan.

B.She isn¡¯t good at Japanese.

C.She doesn¡¯t want to go to Japan.

¡¾2¡¿Why does the man think it is a chance for the woman?

A.Because she can make new friends.

B.Because she can learn a new language.

C.Because she can be a tour guide.

¡¾3¡¿How can the woman learn Japanese?

A.By learning from the Japanese who can speak English.

B.By asking a tour guide in Japan for help.

C.By attending a language school in Japan.

¡¾4¡¿What will the speakers do next?

A.Go for a walk.B.Have a drink.C.Travel together.

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿¡ª Were all the articles of clothing for the models carried to the fashion show?

¡ª No,_______only some of them.

A.it isB.it wasC.they areD.they were

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿History is the best teacher. It ________ records the development path of each country and foretells the future to us.

A.apparentlyB.conventionallyC.faithfullyD.eventually

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