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Last week I noticed Jack coughing on our math class. See this, I offered to take him to a clinic. There the doctor asked Jack how he had coughed sometimes for long time. Jack nodded his head immediate. The doctor then wrote a prescription with instruction on how to take the Chinese medicine. When Jack tasted the medicine, he almost brings it up. I comforted him with an old saying ¡°Good medicine for health tastes bitter to the mouth¡±. Jack managed to swallow them unwillingly. But when he had recovered three days later, he felt amazing at the effect of the Chinese medicine.

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This summer, I attended a journalismthemed summer camp, where I learn a lot.

What impressed me most was the interviews carrying out in the streets. In the beginning, I wasn¡¯t used to talk to strangers.But with my teammates encouragement, I was able to communicate smooth with them. Then we were noticed most of the answers we got were brief. After a discussion, my teammates and I realized that was why our questions weren¡¯t openended enough. So we changed their questions and our interviewees were more willing to share with us their ideas in end.

From this experience I¡¯ve gained several skill for interviewing people as a journalist.

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The Sculptor Speaks

Appreciation of sculpture depends upon the ability to respond to form in three dimensions(ά¶È). That is perhaps why sculpture has been described as the most difficult of all arts; certainly it is more difficult than the arts which involve ¡¾1¡¿ of flat forms, shape in only two dimensions. Many more people are ¡®form-blind¡¯ than color-blind. Children learning to see, first distinguishes only two-dimensional shape; it cannot judge distances, depths. Later, for their personal safety and practical needs, they have to develop partly by ¡¾2¡¿ of touch, the ability to judge roughly three-dimensional distances. But after they ¡¾3¡¿ the requirements of practical necessity, most people go no further. Though they may ¡¾4¡¿ considerable accuracy in the perception(Öª¾õ£¬¸ÐÖª) of flat form, they do not make the further intellectual and emotional effort needed to ¡¾5¡¿ form in its full spatial existence.

This is what the sculptor must do. He must ¡¾6¡¿ continually to think of, and use, form in its full spatial completeness. He gets the solid shape, as it were, inside his head¡ªhe thinks of it, whatever its size, as if he were holding it completely in the hollow of his hand. He ¡¾7¡¿ visualizes a complex form from all round itself; he knows while he looks at one side what the other side is like, he will have to ¡¾8¡¿ himself with its centre of gravity, its mass, its weight; and he realizes its volume, as the space that the shape displaces in the air.

And the sensitive observer of sculpture must also learn to feel shape simply as ¡¾9¡¿, not as description or reminiscence(»ØÒ䣬ÁªÏë). He must, for example, see an egg as a simple single solid shape, quite apart from its significance as food, or from the ¡¾10¡¿ idea that it will become a bird. And so with solids such as a shell, a nut, a plum, a pear, a tadpole, a mushroom, a mountain peak, a kidney, a carrot, a tree-trunk, a bird, a bud, a lark, a ladybird, a bulrush, a bone. From these he can go on to appreciate more complex forms of combinations of several forms.

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Kangaroo Island is the place where you can quiet ¡°go bush¡± and see native Australian animals and birds as they are meant to be seen in the wild, which is filled with history dated back to 1802 when it was first sighted by Captain Matthew Flinders. The first European explorers found Kangaroo Island uninhabited, that evidenced by the lack for campfires and tamed animals. By far, aboriginal campsites have discovered in the number of areas.

As Australia¡¯s third-large island, Kangaroo Island has a beach to suit every moods. However, the island attracts surfers, scuba divers, and those enthusiastic about exploring the ocean around their shores.

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿Birds' singing is sometimes a warning to other birds __________ away.

A. to stay B. staying

C. stayed D. stay

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿¡°Got it?¡± Professor Smith says, ¡°______, let¡¯s move on to the next part.¡±

A. If not B. If anything C. If ever D. If so

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿ Addyson Moffitt is an 8-year-old from Kansas City, Missouri. Maurine Ghelagat is a 9-year-old from a village in Kenya called Bartabwa. It might not seem as if the girls have much in common, but when they met at a dinner two years ago. in Kansas City, they immediately hit it off.

¡°We had this one little red ball to play with,¡±Addyson told TIME for Kids. ¡°We didn't have any electronics or phones, no iPads or TV. It was just us playing.¡± Addyson and Maurine still keep in touch now.

The dinner was hosted by the nonprofit group World Vision International, which builds wells, pipelines, and rain catchers in communities where people find it hard to get clean water.Addyson, was at the dinner because her family supports World Vision. Maurine was there because her village had been without clean water. World Vision fixed that by building a water station there.

¡°People helped Maurine so she could have clean water, and kids are dying because they don't have it, "Addyson says. "I want to help.¡±

Races are one way World Vision raises money to pay for its water projects. Runners run a race, often a 26-mile marathon or 13-mile half marathon. They ask people to support them by donating(¾èÔù) to World Vision.

Addyson decided to run the 2017 Kansas City Half Marathon for World Vision. At age 7, she was one of the youngest-ever runners in the race, and had to get special permission to take part.

Addyson spent four months training with her parents, waking up before 6 a.m. to run. Meanwhile, she started fundraising(ļ¾è)by asking friends to make donations as birthday presents and clearing tables at a restaurant for tips.

By October 2017, when Addyson ran the race, she'd raised more than $20,000. She's the youngest person in World Vision history to raise more than $10,000. In 2018, she ran again and raised $36.000.

But Addyson's work is not finished. ¡°My goal is for every kid to have clean water,¡± she says.

¡¾1¡¿What does the underlined part"hit it off"in Paragraph I probably mean?

A.Became friends.B.Hit on a good idea.

C.Helped each other.D.Reached an agreement.

¡¾2¡¿What can we learn about Addyson's family?

A.They are good at marathons.B.They run a restaurant in Kansas City.

C.They are generous and warm-hearted.D.They founded World Vision International.

¡¾3¡¿Why did Addyson run the Kansas City Half Marathon?

A.To meet up with Maurine.B.To compete with her parents.

C.To get a chance to have clean water.D.To raise money for kids like Maurine.

¡¾4¡¿What record has Addyson made in World Vision history?

A.The first kid to finish a half marathon.

B.The first runner to raise more than $20,000.

C.The youngest runner in a 26-mile marathon.

D.The youngest kid to raise more than $10, 000.

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The other day after work, I was walking down the street while I saw a boy riding a nice bicycle, one of those bicycle with only one wheel. Dressing in all pink from head to toe, he was singing a song which was sounded like a kid¡¯s song. I thought he must be total crazy. Just then, a lady dropped 20-dollar bill on the ground, but he didn¡¯t realize it and started to walk away. The guy in pink picked out the money and gave it back to her. After that, he rode on but soon disappeared before the lady could thank him. How a strange and good guy!

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