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Dear Mary,
Congratulations!__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ _____________________
With best wishes.
Yours sincerely,
Li Hua
¡¾´ð°¸¡¿Dear Mary,
Congratulations! I am delighted to hear that you won first prize in the Chinese Speech Contest held in your school. This is the most exciting news I have received recently. I would like to express my heart-felt congratulations on your success in learning Chinese. With so much interest you have shown in learning Chinese and the great achievements you have made, I am sure you will certainly do better in Chinese and make greater progress in the future. If you have any difficulty with Chinese, don¡¯t hesitate to tell me. I will give you any help I can. And I am looking forward to hearing more from you.
With best wishes.
Yours sincerely,
Li Hua
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¡¾1¡¿¡¾1¡¿Where does the conversation take place?
A. In a bank.
B. At a police station.
C. At an airport ticket office.
¡¾2¡¿¡¾2¡¿Where was the woman¡¯s money probably stolen?
A. Near the bank.
B. Around the police station.
C. On the moving stair from the underground.
¡¾3¡¿¡¾3¡¿Why does the woman exchange some traveler¡¯s checks for money?
A. To go shopping. B. To buy her airline ticket. C. To pay for her travel.
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An Italian town will pay people hundreds of euros(Å·Ôª) per year if they cycle to work instead of¡¾1¡¿(drive) their cars. The government will pay¡¾2¡¿(cycle)25 cents per kilometre, up to a monthly limit of 50 euros. That means commuters(ͨÇÚÕß)who switch to two wheels could pocket up to 600 euros in a year. It is said to be the first such plan in Italy.
Fifty workers will be included in a 12-month trial, which will use a smart phone app to record the¡¾3¡¿(distant) travelled each day. The plan is being supported from fines¡¾4¡¿(collect) from traffic tickets in the town,¡¾5¡¿by law have to be spent on road safety.
The plan will encourage citizens¡¾6¡¿(make)sure the area becomes more liveable. It will ¡¾7¡¿(natural )mean less traffic on the streets and more health benefits. A bicycle organization which helped to develop the idea, says it hopes that other towns will now follow the lead.
A similar plan¡¾8¡¿(introduce)in France in 2014, with mixed results. A six-month trial found that paying people to cycle to work did increase the numbers doing so, but the¡¾9¡¿(major) had been using public transport, rather than private vehicles.¡¾10¡¿those making the move from cars to bicycles, most had already been carpooling (Æ´³µ). Private cars remained crowded in the Streets
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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿ The first men and women came to Britain over two and a half million years ago. ¡¾1¡¿ But the British Isles only became islands separated from the rest of Europe about 8, 500 years ago, when melting ice formed the English Channel!
3,000 years after Britain became an island, new tribes who came by boat from the mainland introduced farming.¡¾2¡¿Many of these man-made hills can still be seen.
Later on, people learned to build stone monuments. The most amazing is Stonehenge, a circle of huge stones begun about 4,500 years ago. Stonehenge is the world's most famous prehistoric monument. ¡¾3¡¿
3,000 years ago the climate in Britain became colder and wetter than before. ¡¾4¡¿ A bit later iron started to be used for tools and weapons instead of bronze. Knowledge of ironworking may have been brought by the Celts, a new wave of immigrants who started to arrive from southern Europe in about 500 BC.
What we know about the first people in Britain has been worked out by archaeologists from the remains they left behind them. Pytheas, a Greek, was the first person who could read and write to come to Britain. His visit was in about 330 BC, over 2, 000 years after Stonehenge was begun. Unfortunately, what Pytheas wrote has been lost, so we don't have any written record of Britain until the Romans came. ¡¾5¡¿
A. That was almost 300 years after he did!
B. As a result, people had to move down from high ground.
C. Because of the climate change, much of the ice has melted.
D. Many archaeologists believe that Britain was once covered by ice.
E. These tribes built earthworks for protection and as tombs for their dead bodies.
F. They were hunters and gatherers of food, who used stone tools and weapons.
G. We don't know what it was used for, though many different suggestions have been made.
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On a storm night, I was alone at home. After finishing my homework, I was about to go to bed. All of sudden, the light went out. Meanwhile, there was a flash of lightning following by thunderstorms. I was so terrified that I ran to my bed but hid me under the blanket. To make matters bad, my parents went to hospital to accompany with my sick grandfather. I felt too frightened because my mind was full of scary thoughts. After some time passed, I fall asleep at last. At breakfast I told my parents that I had seen last night. My parents were also frightened and they promised that they would ever leave me at home alone.
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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿Many of the earth¡¯s plants and animals have already¡¾1¡¿(die) out, and a hundred species become ¡¾2¡¿(endanger) every day. If nothing is done, we may find ourselves¡¾3¡¿ (lonely) on the earth.
Wild animals live in the¡¾4¡¿ (forest) which are being destroyed by people. As¡¾5¡¿ result, the animals are ¡¾6¡¿(lose) their habitats. Without the trees, the animals are short of food. And many animals are dying out because of pollution.
I suggest that measures should be taken ¡¾7¡¿(protect) wildlife. The government should keep people ¡¾8¡¿destroying forests and shut down the factories ¡¾9¡¿ pollute rivers and air, I think more wildlife reserves should also be ¡¾10¡¿(build)
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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿Each year more than 2,500 people die and 12,600 are injured in home fires just in the United States, with direct property£¨²Æ²ú£©loss because of home fires at about $7.3 billion every year. Every day Americans experience the horror of fires, but most people don¡¯t understand fires.
To protect yourself, it is important to learn something about home fires.
In less than 30 seconds a small flame can get completely out of control and turn into a major fire. It only takes minutes for thick black smoke to fill a house or for it to be in flames. Most deadly fires occur in the home when people are asleep. If you realize a fire, you won¡¯t have time to take valuables because the fire spreads too quickly and the smoke is too thick. The fire uses up the oxygen you need and produces smoke and poisonous gases that kill. Breathing even small amounts of smoke and toxic gases can make you tired and sleepy, and short of breath. The smoke can cause you to be a deep sleeper before the flames reach your door. You may not wake up in time to escape.
Room temperatures in a fire can be 100 degrees at floor level and rise to 600 degrees at eye level. Breathing in this super-hot air will burn your lungs. It can melt clothes to your skin. In five minutes, a room can get so hot that everything in it starts to burn at once.
Fires are bright at first, but quickly produce black smoke and complete darkness. If you wake up to a fire you may be blinded, confused about where you are or which direction you should go and unable to find your way around the home you¡¯ve lived in for years.
Only when we know the true nature of fires can we prepare our families and ourselves.
¡¾1¡¿How does the first paragraph develop?
A. By raising questions. B. By giving examples.
C. By expressing opinions. D. By listing reasons.
¡¾2¡¿What can we infer from the third paragraph?
A. It is necessary to escape in time.
B. It is important to find poisonous gases.
C. It is impossible to keep away from smoke.
D. It is dangerous to sleep away from the door.
¡¾3¡¿How does black smoke trouble us?
A. Getting us lose our ways.
B. Making our faces turn black.
C. Causing us to feel hopeless.
D. Forcing us to walk around the home.
¡¾4¡¿What is the passage mainly telling us?
A. Different processes of home fires.
B. Some basic knowledge of home fires.
C. Great damage of them fires in the USA.
D. Some good ways to prevent home fires.
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We've all heard that breakfast is¡¾1¡¿most important meal in the day.It may actually be true.Recently, a study of more than 50,000 adults aged 30 and older¡¾2¡¿(find) that people who have breakfast are more likely to lose¡¾3¡¿(weigh) than those who don't eat a morning meal.Other studies connect not eating breakfast¡¾4¡¿a higher risk of high blood pressure, heart disease and so on.
However, it's not just when you eat that matters, but¡¾5¡¿you eat also matters.¡¾6¡¿(keep)fit, you should have a balanced diet with protein, fiber and healthy fats, which is the key to a satisfying¡¾7¡¿nutritious breakfast .If you want to keep¡¾8¡¿(you) from being hungry later of the day,you¡¯d better eat within 90 minutes after waking up.Also, coffee drunk on an empty stomach is not recommended because it can be¡¾9¡¿(harm)to your body.
There is an old saying that advises "Eat breakfast like a king, lunch like a prince, and dinner like a beggar It is worth¡¾10¡¿(follow).
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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿¡°Anywhere they play in Bangkok, I¡¯ll be there,¡± said Warin Nithihiranyakul, 73, a dedicated fan of the Sai Yong Hong Chinese Opera troupe£¨¾çÍÅ£©for more than 10 years. While waiting for his friends to arrive, he helps out by starting to set up plastic red chairs for the audience to watch the evening¡¯s performance in an area just south of Bangkok¡¯s Chinatown. A devotee of 11 years, Wandee Tengyodwanich, 62, says that Sai Yong Hong is the best Chinese opera in Thailand because it invests in very splendid costumes. She and her friends go to see the group a couple of times a year. They eat and catch up as they recall the first time they saw Chinese opera as children.
They are part of a shrinking community of people that has formed around Chinese opera in Thailand. They are preserving a cornerstone of culture and heritage£¨ÒŲú£©dating to the seventh-century Tang Dynasty, making it one of the oldest dramatic art forms in the world. Like so much of Chinese opera throughout the world, the performances are a product of a large Chinese migration. Sai Yong Hong is one of about 20 Chinese opera troupes in Thailand. The audience consists mostly of older Thai-Chinese adults, some of whom take their grandchildren to connect with a cultural memory that has been passed down for generations.
Chinese migration to Thailand can be traced to the 13th century. Today about 14 percent of the population is ethnically£¨ÈËÖÖÉÏ£©Chinese, making Thailand the home of one of the world¡¯s largest Chinese communities outside China.
For many of the actors, the stage is home. Women could not even touch the shrine£¨Éñí裩, only men were allowed; now the whole industry has changed. As the community ages and audiences decrease, there is a fear that the art will die out. Performers face uncertain futures. Mr. Tatchai, who is Chinese and Thai, has been in the industry since he was 7. He has seen the changes as well, and he said he thought the industry would continue to get smaller but would not go away. ¡°As long as Chinese shrines exist and people continue praying,¡± he said, ¡°the Chinese opera will be here.¡±
¡¾1¡¿What impressed Wandee most on Sai Yong Hong?
A. Its comfortable service. B. Its long history.
C. Its wonderful costumes. D. Its enormous dedicated fans.
¡¾2¡¿It can be inferred that Chinese overseas usually .
A. basically forget their native cultures
B. try to bring oversea culture back to hometown
C. forbid their offspring to see Chinese opera
D. spread traditional dramatic arts globally
¡¾3¡¿What¡¯s Mr. Tatchai¡¯s attitude on the future of the Chinese opera?
A. Pessimistic. B. Doubtful. C. Optimistic. D. Neutral.
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