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I used to like junk food very much, and my mother didn't allow me to eat it. Sometimes I would secret go to eat it. I liked to eat French fries£¨ÊíÌõ£©, and could eat a lot at a time. One day I went to have some again. I ordered two fries and two sandwich. After finish the meal, I got a sick feeling in the stomach. I was very afraid that I didn't tell my mother. Then I throw up and felt hot all over my body. As a result, my mother came and found that if I got a fever. He took me to the nearby hospital in the hurry. Since then, I never touched junk food again.

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿It¡¯s 10:00 on a beautiful Sunday morning in California. To my left is some of the most beautiful coastline. I¡¯m walking along a road ordinarily packed with cars on days like this, but today, thanks in part to my $135 entry fee, it is closed to traffic.

There¡¯s only one problem: I should be running, not walking. Over the past year, I¡¯ve spent hundreds of dollars on running gear(É豸) and race entry fees. I¡¯ve jogged than 1,600 miles training for this event.

Dozens of runners pass me on either side, each of them experiencing varying degrees of sadness similar to my own. Most of them, like me, have traveled hundreds of thousands of miles to get here, spending $500, $1,000 or more to participate in this event.

Actually I¡¯m by no means a competitive athlete. My best finish ever was fourth place, in a 5-kftometer race with only 74 participants, many of whom were walking the entire course.

Last year, over 500,000 runners completed a marathon in the U.S. alone. Nearly all of these runners had absolutely no chance of victory. The PR-personal record-is everyone¡¯s definition of a ¡°good race,¡± whether he finishes in first or 301st.

I should buy a new watch that not only tracks my location by GPS, but also by counting steps. This can more accurate and much more expensive. Finally, I have reached the finish line. I know that the official race photographers will be taking photos as I cross the line, so I raise my arms in ¡°victory¡± I finish, in a time of 3:37:55, good for 354th place.

A few days after the race, the race organizers email me a link to a site where I can preview my official photos Ò» and download them, for a fee, of course.

I wish I could say the feeling was unique; it¡¯s probably not Indeed probably a feeling most runners get in most marathons. Running a lot of marathons 9 in fact, may not even be good for your health.

In America, marathoning is a rich person¡¯s sport.

¡¾1¡¿Which of the following is free of charge for the marathoners according the passage?

A. Race entry.

B. Coastal scenery.

C. Running gear.

D. Official photos.

¡¾2¡¿What was the author sure of before entering for the marathon?

A. His winning the victory.

B. His improvement of speed.

C. His falling behind many others.

D. His setting up a new record.

¡¾3¡¿How did other runners feel while running on the coastline road according to the author?

A. Happy B. Unhappy.

C. Unique. D. Excited.

¡¾4¡¿What would the author agree with?

A. Marathons are not worth it.

B. Marathon can improve our PR.

C. Marathons are based on attitudes.

D. Marathons are good for our health.

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People who have spent time in other cultures often talk about "reverse£¨ÄæÏòµÄ£©culture shock". If you leave your country for more than a short tourist trip and then go back home, you may feel¡¾1¡¿.What is ¡°reverse culture shock¡±? Well, imagine the following: You have just adjusted to a new culture and have come¡¾2¡¿(enjoy) life in it. You have made new friends and have had¡¾3¡¿great variety of new experiences. Then, ¡¾4¡¿(sad) enough, it's time to leave, but you are also very excited about¡¾5¡¿(go) home. Arriving home is wonderful-seeing all the friends and relatives you haven't seen, eating all the special foods, reading the newspapers¡¾6¡¿hearing music you haven't heard in such a long time. But then after a few weeks, perhaps, things may not seem so ¡°wonderful¡±. You may become critical of your home country¡¾7¡¿you have grown up. You may not like certain things or ideas.¡¾8¡¿your eyes, either you or your home country¡¾9¡¿(change).

This is the process of re-adjustment. It's a difficult period, and many people experience it after the¡¾10¡¿(excite) of coming home has worn off. Fortunately, it doesn't usually last as long as adjustment to a new culture does.

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Winters are long and unforgiving in North Dakota. The winter of 1996 was especially brutal. It was a hard time in my own life too. A neck injury had kept me flat in bed for nearly a year. ¡°Just in time for Easter,¡±my husband, Dick, said. But how could I feel the joy when the snow was four feet deep and I had months of painful physical treatment ahead?
I was doing the dishes one day, feeling hopeless when there was a tap against the glass. It was a branch of the troublesome cottonwood (ÃÞ°×Ñî).Back in the fall of 1979, it was a new subdivision (·ÖÖ§£©then, an eight-foot stick. The people who'd briefly occupied the house before us had placed the pipe from the pump next to it. The earth was so wet that the poor thing had fallen down, most of its bare root system pointing skyward, and blowing hopelessly back and forth in the cold wind. Dick decided to pull it out one day, but I protested.
¡°Look at how hard it's trying!¡± I said, pointing to the way it strongly kept hold of the earth. ¡°It deserves a chance.¡±
Dick borrowed some tools. We packed dry soil around the tree and put up some stakes (×®) into the ground, making it stand upright. That winter was still terrible. Surprisingly,in the spring my ¡°rescue stick¡±put forth a few leaves,then with lots of branches. The year after that, we were able to remove the stakes. By the 1990s that little stick was a giant, towering over the house.
Now the tapping at the window continued, louder as the wind picked up, almost as though to tell me to look up. At last, I did. I caught my breath. In the window against the icy blue sky, thousands and thousands of fresh red buds were waving in the wind.
The tree was bursting with life and I had a wonderful Easter.
£¨1£©What is the meaning of the underlined word "brutal" in Paragraph 1 probably mean?
A.busy.
B.hard.
C.long.
D.warm.
£¨2£©How did Dick rescue the new subdivision?
A.By supporting the stick firmly.
B.By watering the stick regularly.
C.By distributing chemical fertilizer.
D.By gathering sticks day and night.
£¨3£©What is the author's purpose in writing the last paragraph?
A.To inform us of the current condition of her cottonwood.
B.To imply that she'd spent the hardest time and felt hopeful.
C.To tell us that the tree had survived from the awful winter.
D.To suggest what she was going to do for the coming festival.
£¨4£©Which of the following can serve as the main idea of the passage?
A.A friend in need is a friend indeed.
B.There is no garden without its weeds.
C.Success is the accumulation of sweat.
D.Where there is life, there is hope.

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indulge in take up according to become involved in
be related to lose one's temper back up


£¨1£©Researches need to be undertaken to theories.
£¨2£©Doctors and scientists agree that physical health psychological well-being closely.
£¨3£©Everything went plan, so we arrived on time.
£¨4£©I've never seen him get cross or .
£¨5£©Scientists believe that little pleasures can improve our health.

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿¼Ù¶¨ÄãÊÇÀ£¬ÄãµÄÃÀ¹ú±ÊÓÑTomÀ´ÐÅÏòÄãÁ˽⾩¾çµÄÓйØÇé¿ö¡£ÇëÄãÓÃÓ¢Óï¸øËûдһ·â»ØÐÅ£¬ÄÚÈÝ°üÀ¨£º
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2). ¾©¾çÓÐÁ½°ÙÄêµÄÀúÊ·£»
3). ÔÚ¹úÄÚÍâÏíÓÐÊ¢Óþ¡£
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2). ¿ÉÒÔÊʵ±Ôö¼Óϸ½Ú£¬ÒÔʹÐÐÎÄÁ¬¹á¡£
Dear Tom,
Yours,
Li Hua

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It was a winter morning,just a couple of weeks before Christmas 2005.While most people were warming up their ears,Trevor,my husband,had to get up early to ride his bike four kilometers away from home to work.On arrival, he parked his bike outside the back door as he usually does.After putting in 10 hours of labor,he returned to find his bike gone.
The bike,a black Kona 18 speed,was our only transport£¨½»Í¨¹¤¾ß£©.Trevor used it to get to work,putting in 60-hour weeks to support£¨Ñø»î£©his young family.And the bike was also used to get groceries£¨Ê³Æ·ÔÓ»õ£©saving us from having to walk long distances from where we live.
I was so said that someone would steal our bike that I wrote to the newspaper and told them our story.Shortly after that,several people in our area offered to help.One wonderful stranger even bought a bike,then called my husband to pick it up.Once again my husband had a way to get to and from his job.It really is an honor£¨ÐÒÊ£©that a complete stranger would go out of their way for someone they have never met before.
People say that a smile can be passed from one person to another,but acts of kindness from strangers are even more so.This experience has had a spreading effect in our lives because it strengthened our faith in humanity£¨ÈËÐÔ£©as a whole.And it has influenced£¨Ó°Ï죩us to be more mindful of ways we,too,can share with others.No matter how or how small,an act of kindness shows that someone cares.And the results can be everlasting.
£¨1£©Why was the bike so important to the couple?
A.The man's job was bike racing.
B.It was their only possession.
C.It was a nice Kona 18 speed.
D.They used it for work and daily life.
£¨2£©We can infer from the text that______.
A.The couple worked 60 hours a week
B.people were busy before Christmas
C.the stranger brought over the bike
D.life was hard for the young family
£¨3£©How did people get to know the couple's problem?
A.From radio broadcasts.
B.From a newspaper.
C.From TV news.
D.From a stranger.
£¨4£©What do the couple learn from their experience?
A.Strangers are usually of little help.
B.One should take care of their bike.
C.News reports make people famous.
D.An act of kindness can mean a lot.

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿¼Ù¶¨ÄãÊÇÀ£¬ÄãµÄÓ¢¹úÅóÓÑPeterÀ´ÐÅÏòÄã×ÉѯÈçºÎ²ÅÄÜѧºÃÖÐÎÄ¡£ÇëÄã¸ù¾ÝÏÂÁÐÒªµãд»ØÐÅ¡£Òªµã£º¢Å ²Î¼ÓÖÐÎÄѧϰ°à£»¢Æ ¿´ÖÐÎÄÊ鿯¡¢µçÊÓ£» ¢Ç ѧ³ªÖÐÎĸèÇú£» ¢È ½»ÖйúÅóÓÑ¡£
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Dear Peter,
I'm glad to receive your letter asking for my advice on how to learn Chinese well.
Best wishes,
Li Hua

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿China¡¯s top education authority has implemented a revision of textbooks on the length of the country¡¯s war against Japanese aggression, ______ the start of the war began on Sept 18,1931.

A. one that B. one where

C. the one that D. the one where

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