16£®¼ÙÈçÄãÊÇÓ¢¹úµÄJackson£¬ÏÖÔÚÖйúµÄÒ»ËùÖÐѧѧϰ£®ÇëÒÔSchool life in ChinaΪÌ⣬¸ø¹úÄÚµÄÅóÓÑAnnie·¢Ò»·âe-mail½éÉÜÄãËùÔÚѧУµÄÇé¿ö£®ÎÄÕÂÓ¦°üÀ¨ÒÔÏÂÄÚÈÝ£º
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Dear Annie£¬
We haven't seen each other for a long time£®I'm glad to introduce the school I'm studying in to you£®                                                   
Yours sincerely
Jackson£®

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½â´ð Dear Annie£¬
We haven't seen each other for a long time£®I'm glad to introduce the school I'm studying in to you£®Our school begins classes before 8 a£®m£®every day£®The size of classes is bigger than that of classes in my old school and the number of the students in each class is more than 50 on average£®£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐÍ£©I have so many classes and heavy homework that it is a struggle for me to attend activities after class£®£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐÍ£©I also have no much time to learn by myself£®But most of the students study very hard to enter key universities£¬which are their dreams£®£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐÍ£©Not only teachers but also classmates are very kind to me£®They give me a lot of help£®I feel very lucky to experience this different way of life£®I achieved a lot£®
I hope you have a chance to come here and study with me together£®
Yours sincerely
Jackson

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6£®Five couples have been living side by side on Beasley Street in Pearce for 45years£®
In May l968£¬five young couples£®moved into new houses£®Forty-five years later£¬they are still there£¬and although most are now retired and their children have left  home£¬the neighbors remain good friends£®
Yesterday£¬they gathered at Mr£®and Mrs£®Miller's house to share lunch£®The Browns£¬who moved here three decades£¨Ê®Ä꣩ago£¬also joined in the lunch£®On either side of the Millers lived the Blacks£¬the Greens£¬and the Stevens£®The only person  missing the lunch was their neighbor£¬Lath Amon£¬who was traveling overseas£®
When the five families moved in£¬there were a few houses there£¬and they could see cattle eating gross in the street outside their houses£®Their children played all day at each other's houses without their parents worrying about their safety£®
"There are no children in the place now£¬since Pearce School closed£¬but we still enjoy it£¬"Mr£®Black said£®
The neighbors often feed£¬each other's pets£®When someone goes on holiday they will water their plants£®
Mrs£®Brown said she first got to know the Miller family when she and Mrs£®Miller took a writing course together£¬and the pair struckup a friendship£®
Mr£®Black said as they got older he and his wife had considered moving to a small house£¬but finally decided to give up the idea£®
"We've often discussed getting out and getting into a smaller unit or something£¬but all of us think£¬no£¬the neighbors are too good£¬it's too good to leave£¬"he says£®
49£®When did the Browns move in£¿D
A£®In l923£®    B£®In l968£®
C£®In l938£®    D£®In l983£®
50£®What changes have happened in the place£¿B
A£®There are no houses in Pearce now£®
R£®A school there has been closed£®
C£®More cattle are allowed to eat grass freely£®
D£®Kath Anion has moved out£®
51£®What do the five families often do£¿C
¢ÙThey help each other by looking after pets£®
¢ÚThey have writing classes together£®
¢ÛThey help each other by watering plants£®
¢ÜThey let their children play at each other's houses£®
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52£®What does the underlined phrase"stuck up"probably mean£¿A
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4£®You Mi£¬a lovely and confident 17-yearold student£¬is the first Chinese high school student to appear on the cover of the popular young adults fashion magazine Seventeen
"You is IN"said Wang Lihua£¬Editor-in-Chief of Seventeen£®"You is active£®and mature  £¨ ³ÉÊìµÄ£©   because of her knowledge on everything from academic studies£¬to books on art£¬to movies£®We found she's the very style we're looking for to represent young people's attitudes£®"
You also impressed Wang with her fluent English when they first met last year£®As the hostess of an English broadcasting programme at the High School Affiliated to Renmin University£¬she is always praised for speaking English almost like a native speaker£®"I've built up my English by watching thousands of English DVDs since I was 10£¬"she explained
But for her£¬watching isn't enough£®Last year£¬while in Senior One£¬You met a talented boy who showed self-made DV movies at the English Corner in her school
"I thought it was so cool and!knew that I should start making my own films£¬"she said£®So she wrote a campus £¨Ð£Ô°£©  story£¬persuaded schoolmates to star in it and then began shooting a 30-minute DV movie£¬all in English"I played one of the leading roles£¬actually I was everything in my film£®I worked on it every single day during the SARS holidays£¬"she recalled£®The movie finally became a big hit on campus£¬earning You a strong reputation £¨ÃûÆø£© as a DV movie director£®
But this is not the only field she wants to master£®Despite being a science student£¬she likes  art£¬literature and fashion design very much£®
"There are people who can be artists£¬there are people who edit books£¬and there are people who become film producers£®But I just hope to mix all the things up!"she said£®
"There is an old saying I believe£ºChance favours only£®the prepared mind£®"

46£®You  Mi was chosen to appear on the cover of Seventeen£¬mainly because sheD£®
A£®is beautiful
B£®she is lovely and full of confidence
C£®has rich knowledge
D£®is active and mature
47£®You  Mi's fluent English is based onA£®
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B£®the influence of her parents
C£®watching thousands of English DVDs
D£®her making DV movie
48£®The author mentioned a talented boy to showA£®
A  the great influence he had on You Mi
B£®he was admired by his schoolmates
C£®the young can do things as well as the adults do
D£®self-made DV movies are popular at school
49  In the 30-minute DV movie£¬You Mi didn't act as a  £¨n£©B£®
A director           B£®musician
C£®actress           D£®producer
50£®We can learn from the passage thatA£®
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B£®the success of a 30-minute DV movie shocked You Mi
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1£®My childhood was less than ideal--in fact£¬I was the only girl in my family who did not run away from home during adolescence£®
£¨76£©G£®Coming from a blue-collar family and an easy rural high school to a white-collar university that gave a"C"for work that would be a"B"at another school£¬I felt like a misfit financially£¬culturally£¬and educationally£®
Somehow I made it through my freshman year£¬and headed back for the second year£®£¨77£©F£®
Barb seemed the exact opposite of me£®£¨78£©E£®One day I watched Barb draw while waiting for class to start£®I sighed£¬thinking how Barb could do anything she wanted to£ºdraw£¬paint£¬sing£¬and play the guitar£®
£¨79£©B£®"I wish I was artistic£¬"I replied£®
"Mary£¬"she said in amazement£®"You ARE artistic!"
I figured she was just being nice£¬but if Barb thought I was artistic£¬there must be something to it£¬even if I thought my only artistic abilities were with words£®Thanks to her£¬I learned to recognize my artistic abilities£®
This summer I wrote to Barb and reminded her of that conversation£®£¨80£©C£®I had removed a closet in my bedroom for more space£¬and needed to choose colors and wall hangings£®I felt quite upset£®Just as I was about to give up£¬I heard Barb's voice in my memory£¬"Mary£¬you ARE artistic!"With her words ringing in my head£¬I found the perfect color for the walls and the perfect pictures for the walls£®
Thanks£¬Barb£¬for believing in me all those years ago£®
A£®It was 1990when Barb said those words for me£®
B£®Barb heard me sigh£¬and asked what was wrong£®
C£®I let her know her words are still working their magic£®
D£®I'd been writing poems and short stories since I was 12£®
E£®She was popular£¬out-going£¬confident£¬talented£¬and artistic£®
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5£®A year ago£¬I paid no attention to English idioms£¬though my teacher emphasized £¨Ç¿µ÷£© the importance again and again£®But soon£¬the importance of English idioms was shown in an  amusing experience
One day£¬I happened to meet an Englishman on the road£¬and soon we began to talk£®As I was talking about how I was studying English£¬the foreigner seemed to be surprised£®Gently shaking his head£¬shrugging his shoulders£¬he said£¬"You don't say!""You don't say!"I was puzzled£®I thought£¬perhaps this is not a proper topic£®"Well£¬I'd better change the topic£®"So I said to him£¬"Well£¬shall we talk about the Great Wall£¿By the way£¬have you ever been there£¿""Certainly£¬everyone back home will laugh at me if I leave China without seeing it£®It was wonderful£®"He was deep in thought when I began to talk like a tourist guide£®"The Great Wall is one of the wonders in the world£®We are very proud of it£®"Soon I was stopped again by his words£º"You don't say!"I couldn't help asking£¬"Why do you ask me not to talk about it£¿""Well£¬I didn't ask you to do so£¬"he answered£¬greatly surprised£®I said£¬"Didn't you say¡®you don't say'£¿"Hearing this£¬the Englishman laughed to tears£®He began to explain£¬¡®You don't say£®'actually means¡®really'!It is an expression of surprise£®Perhaps you don't pay attention to English idioms£®"Only then did I know how foolish I had been£®Since then I have been more careful with idiomatic expressions£®Remember£ºwhat the English teachers said is always right to us students£®

56£®At first£¬on hearing"You don't say"£¬I thought the foreigner meantC£®
A£®I had talked too much 
B£®I had to stop talking
C£®He was not interested in the topic
D£®He was only interested in the Great Wall
57£®The underlined word in the first paragraph probably meansA£®
A£®interesting   B£®important  
C£®terrible      D£®unlucky
58£®Which of the following is true according to the passage£¿D
A£®The Englishman wanted me to act as his guide£®
B£®The Englishman left China without seeing the Great Wall£®
C£®The Englishman wanted to see the Great Wall after I talked about it£®
D£®The Englishman visited the Great Wall and thought it worth visiting£®
59£®After the Englishman explained the idiom£¬A£®
A£®I felt very foolish
B£®the Englishman became a real fool
C£®I became more careful in everything
D£®I thought the Englishman had made me a fool£®

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3£®It is Sunday and lunch has£¬as usual£¬come to a hurried end£® My wife and I are still sitting at the table£® My wife likes to be£¨36£©Cin the life of her child£¬but I sometimes fear she is in too deep£® She has£¨37£©Athe morning on an online student forum£¬asking questions about UCAS£¨38£©BDick£®
"A lot of people haven't had any offers yet£¬"she says£®"I said I already had one£®"
"Wait£¬"Dick says£®"Are you£¨39£©Dto be me£¿"
"No£¬I have my own login details now£¬"she says£®
"How do you know he isn't his own mother pretending to be him£¿"Dick says£®
Earlier£¬when we all sat down to lunch£¬Dick£¬who had been to parties the£¨40£©Cevening£¬came back£®
"Who were there£¿"my wife asks Dick£®"What was it like£¿"
"It was OK£®"he says£®
"Not good enough£¬"she says£®"What was the worst thing£¨41£©Bhappened£¿"My wife's continued question£¨42£©Ba deepening£¬boring silence£® I start to eat faster£® There is a long£¬highly £¨43£©Dpause in the conversation£®
"So£¬"she says£¨44£©A£¬"was it a kissing party£¿"
"Oh my God!"shouts Dick£¬£¨45£©Chis fork£®"What is wrong with you£¿Why are you like this£¿"
Surrounded by further scolds£¬lunch comes to a hurried end£® Dick finds himself£¨46£©Dwith clearing up£®£¨47£©A£¬the running of water and the sound of washing plates are the only sounds in the room£®
"£¨48£©Bat any time you're prepared to apologize for being rude£¬"she says£¬"you can go and finish watching the football£®"
"Are you joking£¿"he shouts£®"No way!Why £¨49£©CI apologize to you£¿"
He pauses to look into the bottom of a pan£¬and a smile£¨50£©Dacross his face£®"What I mean is£¬I'm really very sorry£¬"he says£¬dropping the pan into the sink and running from the room£®"Bye!"
"You don't have to worry£¬"my wife says£®"In a£¨51£©B's time£¬you'll be 18 and I won't be able to do this to you any more£®"
"Really£¿"he says£®
"You'll be a£¨n£©£¨52£©D£¬"she says£®
The boy stops to consider the blue print that after a£¨53£©Dset seven days from then on£¬his parents will be£¨54£©Ato stop ruining his life£® He looks both doubtful and a little alarmed£®
I approaches my wife£¬whispering to her£®"Dear£¬I agree with you-understanding and trust may £¨55£©Cbe a good way to communicate with our teen children£®"

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