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To: Christin foo@hotmail.com
Date: 23rd March
Subject: The Riding for the Disabled Association
Hi Christine,
Sorry I haven¡¯t emailed lately ¡ªI¡¯ve been very busy since becoming a volunteer for the Riding for the Disabled Association.
Every Saturday, I help to get the horses ______51_____ for the disabled(²Ð¼²) riders. Many more disabled people want to ride _____52______ than you¡¯d imagine. It¡¯s a disadvantage that I don¡¯t know how to ride ¡ªI¡¯d love to get on long rides with the riders¡ª but I¡¯ll learn _______53____. Right now, I¡¯m just happy to be able to lead the horses around for the disabled riders.
I¡¯m ______54_____ helping to organize a sale, which will be _____55______ next month. It¡¯s a lot more work than helping the disabled. I need to collect second-hand things to sell at the sale. There are _____56______ things available(»ñµÃµÄ) than I thought, but I¡¯m sure we¡¯ll have ______57_____ next month.
I hope the sale raises more money than last month¡¯s walk. It was rainy, so too few people took part in the event. Last week, we held an auction(ÅÄÂô). The auction took much less _____58______ to organize than the walk. _____59______, for some reason, people offered too little money for the things, so we didn¡¯t raise enough money.
I¡¯m ______60_____ you some pictures in the letter, as well as a speech I gave last week. Robin
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At Blossom End Railroad Station, 22-year-old Stanley Vine sat, waiting for his new employer. The surrounding green fields were so unlike the muddy landscape of war-torn France. After four horrible years as an army private fighting in Europe, Stanley had returned to England in February 1946. Armed now with some savings and with no prospects for a job in England, he answered a newspaper ad for farm help in Canada. Two months later he was on his way.
When the old car rumbled (·¢×Åê¤ê¤Éù) toward the tiny station, Stanley rose to his feet, trying to make the most of his five foot and four inches frame. The farmer, Alphonse Lapine, shook his head and complained, ¡°You¡¯re a skinny thing.¡± On the way to his dairy farm, Alphonse explained that he had a wife and seven kids. ¡°Money is tight. You¡¯ll get room and board. You¡¯ll get up at dawn for milking, and then help me around the farm until evening milking time again. Ten dollars a week. Sundays off.¡± Stanley nodded. He had never been on a farm before, but he took the job.
From the beginning Stanley was treated horribly by the whole family. They made fun of the way he dressed and talked. He could do nothing right. The humourless farmer frequently lost his temper, criticizing Stanley for the slightest mistake. The oldest son, 13-year-old Armand, constantly played tricks on him. But the kind-hearted Stanley never responded.
Stanley never became part of the Lapine family. After work, they ignored him. He spend his nights alone in a tiny bedroom. However, each evening before retiring, he lovingly cared for the farmer¡¯s horses, eagerly awaiting him at the field gate. He called them his gentle giants. On Saturday nights he hitch-hiked into the nearest town and wandered the streets or enjoyed a restaurant meal before returning to the farm.
Early one November morning Alphonse Lapine discovered that Stanley had disappeared, after only six months as his farmhand. The railway station master, when questioned later that week, said he had not seen him. In fact no one in the community ever heard of him again. That is, until one evening, almost 20 years later, when Armand, opened an American sports magazine and came across a shocking headline, ¡°Millionaire jockey (ÈüÂíÆïʦ), Stanley Vine, ex-British soldier and 5-time horse riding champion, began life in North America as a farmhand in Canada.¡±
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ1¡¿Stanley Vine decided to go to Canada because ___________.
A£®he wanted to escape from war-torn France |
B£®he wanted to serve in the Canadian army |
C£®he couldn¡¯t find a job in England |
D£®he loved working as a farmhand |
A£®Stanley joined the French army when he was 18 years old. |
B£®On the farm Stanley had to milk the cows 14 times a week. |
C£®The Lapine family were very rich but cruel to Stanley. |
D£®Stanely read about the job offer in a newspaper. |
A£®Hitch-hiking to different towns. |
B£®Caring for the farmer¡¯s horses. |
C£®Wandering around the farm alone. |
D£®Preparing meals on the farm. |
A£®He didn¡¯t know Stanley had been a British soldier. |
B£®He had no idea Stanley had always been a wealthy man. |
C£®He didn¡¯t know his father paid Stanley so little money. |
D£®He didn¡¯t expect Stanley to become such a success. |
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At Blossom End Railroad Station, 22-year-old Stanley Vine sat, waiting for his new employer. The surrounding green fields were so unlike the muddy landscape of war-torn France. After four horrible years as an army private fighting in Europe, Stanley had returned to England in February 1946. Armed now with some savings and with no prospects for a job in England, he answered a newspaper ad for farm help in Canada. Two months later he was on his way.
When the old car rumbled (·¢×Åê¤ê¤Éù) toward the tiny station, Stanley rose to his feet, trying to make the most of his five foot and four inches frame. The farmer, Alphonse Lapine, shook his head and complained, ¡°You¡¯re a skinny thing.¡± On the way to his dairy farm, Alphonse explained that he had a wife and seven kids. ¡°Money is tight. You¡¯ll get room and board. You¡¯ll get up at dawn for milking, and then help me around the farm until evening milking time again. Ten dollars a week. Sundays off.¡± Stanley nodded. He had never been on a farm before, but he took the job.
From the beginning Stanley was treated horribly by the whole family. They made fun of the way he dressed and talked. He could do nothing right. The humourless farmer frequently lost his temper, criticizing Stanley for the slightest mistake. The oldest son, 13-year-old Armand, constantly played tricks on him. But the kind-hearted Stanley never responded.
Stanley never became part of the Lapine family. After work, they ignored him. He spend his nights alone in a tiny bedroom. However, each evening before retiring, he lovingly cared for the farmer¡¯s horses, eagerly awaiting him at the field gate. He called them his gentle giants. On Saturday nights he hitch-hiked into the nearest town and wandered the streets or enjoyed a restaurant meal before returning to the farm.
Early one November morning Alphonse Lapine discovered that Stanley had disappeared, after only six months as his farmhand. The railway station master, when questioned later that week, said he had not seen him. In fact no one in the community ever heard of him again. That is, until one evening, almost 20 years later, when Armand, opened an American sports magazine and came across a shocking headline, ¡°Millionaire jockey (ÈüÂíÆïʦ), Stanley Vine, ex-British soldier and 5-time horse riding champion, began life in North America as a farmhand in Canada.¡±
1.Stanley Vine decided to go to Canada because ___________.
A£®he wanted to escape from war-torn France
B£®he wanted to serve in the Canadian army
C£®he couldn¡¯t find a job in England
D£®he loved working as a farmhand
2.Which of the following is TRUE according to the passage?
A£®Stanley joined the French army when he was 18 years old.
B£®On the farm Stanley had to milk the cows 14 times a week.
C£®The Lapine family were very rich but cruel to Stanley.
D£®Stanely read about the job offer in a newspaper.
3.What did Stanley like doing after work each day?
A£®Hitch-hiking to different towns.
B£®Caring for the farmer¡¯s horses.
C£®Wandering around the farm alone.
D£®Preparing meals on the farm.
4.Why was Armand so astonished when he read about Stanley in the magazine?
A£®He didn¡¯t know Stanley had been a British soldier.
B£®He had no idea Stanley had always been a wealthy man.
C£®He didn¡¯t know his father paid Stanley so little money.
D£®He didn¡¯t expect Stanley to become such a success.
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To: Christin foo@hotmail.com
Date: 23rd March
Subject: The Riding for the Disabled Association
Hi Christine,
Sorry I haven¡¯t emailed lately ¡ªI¡¯ve been very busy since becoming a volunteer for the Riding for the Disabled Association.
Every Saturday, I help to get the horses ______51_____ for the disabled(²Ð¼²) riders. Many more disabled people want to ride _____52______ than you¡¯d imagine. It¡¯s a disadvantage that I don¡¯t know how to ride ¡ªI¡¯d love to get on long rides with the riders¡ª but I¡¯ll learn _______53____. Right now, I¡¯m just happy to be able to lead the horses around for the disabled riders.
I¡¯m ______54_____ helping to organize a sale, which will be _____55______ next month. It¡¯s a lot more work than helping the disabled. I need to collect second-hand things to sell at the sale. There are _____56______ things available(»ñµÃµÄ) than I thought, but I¡¯m sure we¡¯ll have ______57_____ next month.
I hope the sale raises more money than last month¡¯s walk. It was rainy, so too few people took part in the event. Last week, we held an auction(ÅÄÂô). The auction took much less _____58______ to organize than the walk. _____59______, for some reason, people offered too little money for the things, so we didn¡¯t raise enough money.
I¡¯m ______60_____ you some pictures in the letter, as well as a speech I gave last week. Robin
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