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²Î¿¼´Ê»ã£º´«Í³ÃÀµÂ traditional virtues
Always Be Grateful
As is known to all, it is one of the Chinese traditional virtues to be grateful to whoever has been kind and helpful to us. _________________________________________________________________________________________
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My kids and I were heading into the supermarket over the weekend. On the way, we spotted a man holding a piece of paper that said, ¡°_______my job. Family to Feed.¡±
At this store, a _______ like this is not normal. My 10-year-old noticed him and made a _________ on how bad it must be to have to stand _________ in the cold wind.
In the store, I asked each of my kids to _______ something they thought our ¡°friend¡± there would _________. They got apples, a sandwich and a bottle of juice. Then my 17-year-old suggested giving him a _________. I thought about it. We were _______ on cash ourselves, but¡ well, sometimes _______ from our need instead of our abundance is ________ what we need to do! All the kids __________ something they could do away with for the week.
When we handed him the bag of ________, he lit up and thanked us with ________ eyes. When I handed him the gift card, saying he could use it for __________his family might need, he burst into tears.
This has been a wonderful ________ for our family. For days the kids have been looking for others we can ________! Things would have played out so __________ if I had simply said, ¡°No, we really don¡¯t have __________ to give more.¡± Stepping out not only helped a brother in ________, it also gave my kids the __________ taste of helping others. It¡¯ll go a long way with them.
1.A. Lost B. Changed C. Quit D. Finished
2.A. condition B. place C. sight D. show
3.A. suggestion B. comment C. decision D. call
4.A. outside B. proudly C. by D. angrily
5.A. draw B. say C. arrange D. pick
6.A. order B. supply C. appreciate D. discover
7.A. dollar B. job C. hot meal D. gift card
8.A. easy B. low C. soft D. loose
9.A. giving B. saving C. spending D. begging
10.A. yet B. even C. still D. just
11.A. declared B. shared C. ignored D. expected
12.A. toys B. medicine C. food D. clothes
13.A. sleepy B. watery C. curious D. sharp
14.A. whoever B. whatever C. whichever D. whenever
15.A. experience B. example C. message D. adventure
16.A. rely on B. respect C. learn from D. help
17.A. suddenly B. vividly C. differently D. perfectly
18.A. time B. power C. patience D. money
19.A. fear B. love C. need D. memory
20.A. strong B. sweet C. strange D. simple
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Wandering around the airport terminal(º½Õ¾Â¥), after learning my flight had been delayed four hours, I heard an announcement, ¡°If anyone near Gale A-4 understands any Arabic, please come to the gate immediately.¡± I went there and saw an old woman in full traditional Palestinian dress crying on the floor. A young man from the airport staff asked me to talk to her to find out what was her problem. He said she started to cry when hearing the announcement about the flight.
I knelt down, put my arms around her and asked her what was wrong. My Arabic wasn¡¯t good enough but I managed to get my meaning across. She soon stopped crying and told me she had thought the flight had been canceled. She needed to be in El Paso for an important medical treatment the next day. I said, ¡°You¡¯ll be fine. You¡¯ll get there but only a few hours late. Who is going to pick you up? Let¡¯s call him.¡± We called her son. I spoke to him in English. I told him I would stay with his mother till we boarded the plane. Later, I called my dad whose Arabic was better and asked him to talk to her. She looked much more relaxed while talking on the phone.
Later she took out a sack of homemade cookies stuffed with dates and nuts and offered them to all the women at the gate: the traveler from Argentina, the mom from California, the lovely woman from Laredo. Everybody smiled and accepted her cookies to eat. And my new best friend and I were holding hands, while the others around us were talking with each other with different accents. I almost wanted to hug all those other women too. I looked around that gate and thought to myself, ¡°This is surely the world want to live in.¡±
1.Why did the old lady cry at the airport terminal gate?
A. The plane was canceled. B. Her medical treatment was canceled.
C. She didn¡¯t know which flight to take. D. She misunderstood the announcement.
2.It can be inferred that ________.
A. the author was Palestinian B. most passengers were from America
C. the author¡¯s first language was English D. the old lady had never travelled abroad
3.According to the passage, we learn that the author was ________.
A. talkative and active B. warm-hearted and helpful
C. creative and intelligent D. enthusiastic but aggressive
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In a land often shaken by earthquake, how have Japan's wooden pagodas£¨·ðËþ£©remained standing for centuries? Japanese scholars have been confident for ages about their resilience£¨¿¹ÕðÐÔ£©.
For centuries, many believed the resilience of pagodas is caused by its big central columns known as shinbashira actually does not carry any weight at all but is hanging down loosely from the top of the pagoda through the middle of the building. The weight of the building is supported entirely by twelve outer and four inner columns.
And what is the role of the shinbashira, the central column? Mr. Ishida, known as ¡®Professor Pagoda¡¯ has built a series of models and tested them on a ¡®shake-table¡¯ in his laboratory. In short, the shinbashira was acting like a big pendulum(ÖÓ°Ú). Under pressure, a pagoda¡¯s loose floors could be made to move back and forth independently. Viewed from the side, the pagoda seemed to be doing a snake dance¡ªwith each floor moving in the opposite direction to its neighbors above and below. The shinbashira, running up through a hole in the centre of the building, made it unlikely that individual floors moved too far because, after moving a certain distance, they banged into it, transmitting energy away along the column.
Another strange feature of the Japanese pagoda is its shape, with each floor being smaller than the one below. In other words, a five-storey pagoda contains not column that travels right up through the building. More surprising is the fact that the individual storeys of a Japanese pagoda are not actually connected to each other. They are simply put on top of another like a small hill of hats.
The extra-wide eaves£¨ÎÝéÜ£©also play a part. Think of them as a balancing pole of tightrope-walkers. The bigger the mass at each end of the pole, the easier it is for tightrope walker to maintain his or her balance. The same holds true for a pagoda.
1.Shuzo Ishida performs experiments in order to ________.
A. put the pendulum into practice
B. gain insight into the ¡°shake-table¡± model
C. learn about the function of the shinbashira
D. locate shinbashira¡¯s excat position in a pagoda
2.The underlined word ¡°loose¡± in paragraph 3 can be replaced by ________?
A. lost B. relaxed
C. base D. shakable
3.Which of the following statements is NOT TRUE according to the article?
A. Some columns may extend from the bottom to the top of a pagoda.
B. The functions of extra eaves and balancing poles are similar.
C. The storeys of a Japanese pagoda aren¡¯t built firmly.
D. Pagodas¡¯s amazing resilience has long puzzled scholars.
4.What is the best title for the passage?
A. How Shinbashira Plays Its Role
B. Why Pagodas Do Not Fall Down
C. Distinct Features of Japanese Architecture
D. Shuzo Ishida, a Famous Engineer
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A few things to do during weekends
to improve your life
Weekend at last! Something you¡¯re so looking forward to after a tiring week at work. Here are several tips on how to make the most of your weekends.
Spend time with loved ones. Reconnect with family members or friends you neglected(Êèºö) lately. Don¡¯t do it out of guilt or because you have to. Do it because you want to. Reach out to them to see how they are doing. 1. Return their calls if you were busy when they last tried to reach you. Talk to them. Listen to them. Be there for them.
2. Stay away from TV, iPad, iPhone and any other electronic devices. Unplug! Your brain needs to clear up from all the stress you¡¯ve put on yourself during the week. Why not read a book instead? A paper one. Seriously, when was the last time you did that?
Laugh, laugh and laugh again. You can never have enough of it. Laugh is the best medicine ever. 3. For example, it helps you manage stress, strengthen your immune system and you are 40 percent less likely to suffer a heart attack.
Express appreciation. 4. Be grateful for your family, friends, health, the food you put on the table, the clothes you wear and the air that you breathe.
There you are. Doing a few things during weekends will have a positive long-term effect on your life. 5. .
A. Apply the ¡°no technology¡± rule.
B. Pause and pay attention to your thoughts.
C. Friendship is the best source of happiness.
D. Don¡¯t call them only when you need them.
E. Put them into practice and you¡¯ll beat the Monday Blues.
F. It benefits your mental and physical health in so many ways.
G. This is something you should be doing every day, not only on weekends.
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The world¡¯s first ¡°Sky Pool¡± has been uncoated£¨Æع⣩-and it¡¯ll give anyone a touch of dizziness£¨Ñ£ÔΣ©, unless he or she is not bothered by heights.
Situated in the capital¡¯s new riverside district beside Battersea Power Station, the glass pool, hanging 10 storeys, or 110 feet up as a bridge between two apartment buildings, is 25m long, 5m wide and 3m deep with a water depth of 1.2m. Swimmers will be able to look down 35 meters to the street below as they take a dip, with only 20cm of glass between them and the outside world. It¡¯s even got a bar, folding chairs and an orange garden.
The pool will be part of Embassy Gardens at Nine Elms, a huge¡ê15 billion building project beside the new American Embassy in south-west London. The project is creating thousands of apartments, the smallest of which are expected to cost nearly $1 million, and the pool will only be open to the apartments¡¯ owners.
Embassy Gardens takes design inspiration from the Meatpacking District of New York with floor to ceiling windows and brick frontages. The designer, Sean Mulryan, desired to push the boundaries in the capability of construction and engineering and do something that had never been done before. The Sky Pool¡¯s transparent structure is the result of significant advancements in technologies over the last decade.
The experience of the pool will be truly unique and it will feel like floating through the air in central London.
Those people lucky enough to swim there will have a perfect view of the Palace of Westminster and the London Eye. It will be a selling point for developers when the second stage of the development is released to market.
1.Who can swim in the Sky Pool?
A. Anyone at Nine Elms.
B. Visitors to London.
C. People living in Embassy Gardens.
D. Those who are not terrified of heights.
2.People lucky enough to swim in the Sky Pool can do the following except.
A. drinking with friends.
B. experiencing diving and surfing.
C. appreciating the London Eye.
D. sitting in the orange garden.
3.What do we know from the text?
A. The pool lies in the centre of London.
B. The pool is 25 metres above the ground.
C. The pool was similar to New York¡¯s modern constructions.
D. The pool is helpful for selling apartments in Embassy Gardens.
4.We can infer from the text that.
A. the apartments in Embassy Gardens are fairly expensive.
B. the new American Embassy has been moved away.
C. Nine Elms is a street in Embassy Gardens.
D. building the pool is not a complex job.
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Not so long ago, a terrible fire broke out in an apartment in the city of Pitesti, just west of Bucharest. In no time,_________were welcomed by 5-metre-tall flames and roaring smoke._________, using their advanced equipment, they quickly brought the beast under________.
The apartment¡¯s owner Mr. Petri and his lovely dog, Sandy, were the_________of the big fire. Local firefighting hero, Costache Mugurel _______his way through the cruel flames to rescue the man and his pet. Mr. Petri,______ injured in the fire, was rushed to hospital. Sandy fell over________breathing in too much smoke and lifelessly lay on the roadside.
Mugurel, remembering his CPR(ÐÄÔิËÕÊõ) training, passionately________the chest of the dog, desperately trying to_______his life. And he began to lose hope after many________.He was physically and mentally________. Finally he performed mouth-to-mouth on the dog, screaming ¡°______gets left behind!¡±. Unexpectedly the dog_____ himself and began panting. The on-looking crowd cheered and Mugurel began to weep with_________. He hurriedly carried him to the awaiting vet(ÊÞÒ½).
Like________, the story of Mugurel and his newfound friend spread around the city. His Facebook was_____ words of gratitude, loving emoticons(±íÇé·ûºÅ)and notes from friends and fans alike.
According to vet experts, recovering animals via CPR is rather________. The American Heart Association calculates that only less than 6 percent of cats and dogs survive if they________heart attacks.
There have been many stories related to________in Pitesti, but none have caught the_______of the population quite like Sandy¡¯s.
1.A. firefighters B. policemen C. friends D. neighbours
2.A. Therefore B. Besides C. However D. Moreover
3.A. treatment B. control C. stress D. way
4.A. causes B. results C. victims D. heroes
5.A. battled B. lost C. pushed D. got
6.A. blindly B. hardly C. slightly D. seriously
7.A. after B. before C. in spite of D. in case of
8.A. patted B. beat C. examined D. touched
9.A. care about B. take away C. save D. stop
10.A. countings B. trainings C. shouts D. attempts
11.A. relaxed B. exhausted C. concerned D. troubled
12.A. Somebody B. Everybody C. Nobody D. Anybody
13.A. came up B. came over C. came out D. came to
14.A. joy B. pity C. stress D. fright
15.A. wildfire B. wind C. disasters D. sounds
16.A. informed of B. linked with C. reminded of D. flooded with
17.A. common B. rare C. practical D. easy
18.A. cure B. avoid C. miss D. suffer
19.A. fires B. vets C. dogs D. accidents
20.A. attention B. meaning C. breath D. heart
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