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An unforgettable experience
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My Emotional (¸ÐÈ˵Ä) Experience in Jaipur
I came to India in February 2012 to complete a volunteer practicum requirement with some friends£®It was really an unforgettable experience!
Before we set off, I thought it would be a hard job, ____ that I could not adapt to the poor living conditions£®After arriving in Jaipur, we went straight to the hotel that the Center had ____ for us; a relief to us as we were tired from the ___£®During the following days we were ____ to the city and had Hindi lessons with our guide Ravi£®
On our fourth day in Jaipur we were taken to the head office£®There we were ___ for the Child Development Program and over the course we ____ two studies related to child work and child rights£®We focused on the experiences of the children who were working and the ____ that pushed them into work£®The experience was entirely new for me and I learned so much through the ____£®The best part of the work, however, was ____ being in the communities and interacting with the children and their parents£®I was ____ to a way of life completely different from my own£®In spite of the poor living situations, people in Jaipur were ____£®We found that the parents communicated openly with each other and they were always ____ to share their own thoughts and feelings with their children£®I could ____ that people in Jaipur have positive relationships with their family and community members£®Talking with the people there and hearing their stories was something that had a strong effect on my worldview, continuing to ____ how I understand everything around me now£®I have been ____ by the people that I met through this experience£®
On the weekends I spent time in Jaipur, ____ the city and shopping£®We were ___ enough to be there during Holi, an exciting and colorful celebration in February end or early March in India! We really ____ every minute of the life in Jaipur!
Generally, my practicum experience with Volunteering India was extremely ____£®I know that I will be thinking about everything that I saw, learned and ____ in India and look forward to the day that I can return to this amazing country£®
1.A£® expecting B£® worrying C£® determining D£® promising
2.A£® booked B£® covered C£® reported D£® designed
3.A£® distance B£® program C£® movement D£® journey
4.A£® limited B£® arranged C£® introduced D£® pointed
5.A£® responsible B£® available C£® famous D£® powerful
6.A£® described B£® conducted C£® exchanged D£® benefited
7.A£® standards B£® chances C£® fears D£® causes
8.A£® adventure B£® memory C£® process D£® discovery
9.A£® really B£® simply C£® properly D£® generally
10.A£® exposed B£® selected C£® compared D£® delivered11.A£® independent B£® attractive C£® comfortable D£® cheerful
12.A£® careful B£® willing C£® upset D£® ashamed
13.A£® predict B£® advise C£® sense D£® wonder
14.A£® influence B£® reflect C£® analyze D£® test
15.A£® reminded B£® witnessed C£® admitted D£® inspired
16.A£® identifying B£® exploring C£® representing D£® charging
17.A£® curious B£® energetic C£® lucky D£® generous
18.A£® valued B£® delayed C£® confirmed D£® permitted
19.A£® complex B£® reasonable C£® reliable D£® positive
20.A£® declared B£® imagined C£® experienced D£® promoted
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She has been dreaming a future ____ she can spend more time growing flowers£®
A£® that B£® when C£® where D£® which
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Amanda Clement grew up in Hudson, South Dakota. Baseball was always her favorite sport. Once in a while her brother Hank and his friends would let her play first base in their games. More often, however, they asked her to umpire (²ÃÅÐ) for them, because they knew her calls would be fair and there would be no arguing.
One day in 1904, Amanda and her mother traveled to Hawarden, Iowa, to watch Hank play for the home team against Hawarden. When they arrived at the ball field, two local teams were waiting to play a preliminary (Ô¤±¸) game. The umpire hadn¡¯t arrived, so Hank argued that the teams should let his sister serve as umpire. The players finally agreed.
Amanda, then sixteen and standing five feet, ten inches tall, made perfect calls. She was so good that players for the main game asked her to umpire for them and even offered to pay her. Thus, at sixteen, Amanda Clement became the first paid female baseball umpire of all time. She is honored in the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York.
1.Why did Hank and his friends often ask Amanda to umpire for them?
A. Because she called them brothers.
B. Because they wanted to make her happy.
C. Because no one else wanted to do it for them.
D. Because she knew the rules well and was fair.
2.Amanda went to Hawarden in order to ______.
A. serve as umpire
B. watch her brother play
C. make money
D. help the local teams
3.Amanda most probably learned how to umpire a baseball game ______.
A. in her P. E. classes at school
B. in an umpire training school
C. by watching and playing the games
D. from her mother, a baseball umpire
4.Which of the following can be the best title of the passage?
A. The Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown
B. Amanda Clement, First Female Umpire
C. Baseball Games in Hawarden, Iowa
D. A Family of Baseball Fans
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Forty people were expected to the party. But only half of them ______.
A. turned around B. turned up
C. turned off D. turned out
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----You¡¯re coughing badly, Martin. Why not give up smoking?
---Give up smoking? Easier said than done, Amy. Once you ________ the habit of smoking, it is very hard for you to _______ .
A. keep up; break it away B. take up; drop it out
C. pick up; get rid of it D. build up; do away with it
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If you never read the classic F. Scott Fitzgerald¡¯s novel The Great Gatsby, now is your chance to catch up ¡ª by watching the latest film adaptation. Because if there¡¯s one sentence to sum up the film, it would be, as Fox News says in its review, ¡°It¡¯s just like the book¡±
Director Baz Luhrmann¡¯s main challenge was ¡°either to find a visual equivalent(ÏàµÈÎï) for Fitzgerald¡¯s elegant essay--the open secret of the book¡¯s staying power-- or to bend the material to his own exotic(Òì¹úµÄ) strengths,a Time magazine review says. He tries it both ways, with varying degrees of success.
Considered to be Fitzgerald's representative work, The Great Gatsby explores themes of idealism, resistance to change, social change, and excess, creating a portrait of the Jazz Age or the Roaring Twenties that has been described as a cautionary tale regarding the American Dream.
Nick, the narrator, moves to New York for the summer to visit his cousin Daisy. His next-door neighbor is Jay Gatsby (Leonardo DiCaprio), who rarely contacts with others and is rumored to be a hero of the Great War. Gatsby claims to have attended Oxford University, but the evidence is suspect. As Nick learns more about Gatsby, every detail about him seems questionable, except his love for the Daisy. Though Daisy is married, Gatsby still adores her as his ¨Dgolden girl.They first met when she was a young lady from a wealthy family and he was a working-class military officer. Daisy promised to wait for his return from the war. However, she married Tom, a classmate of Nick¡¯s. Having obtained a great fortune, Gatsby sets out to win her back again.
¡±All of Fitzgerald¡¯s original creation finds its way into this film, even going as far to include quite a bit of the original dialogue,US film critic Justin Taroli writes in his review. ¡°The cast is beautiful as is the script, and the scenes are a visual feast.Taroli adds.
DiCaprio does a good and professional job as the socialite by re-creating Fitzgerald¡¯s description of Gatsby¡¯s charm. ¡°He can look at someone for an instant and understand how, perfectly, he or she wants to be seen,David Denby, a film critic for The New Yorker, says in his review.
The use of music is almost reason enough to see the film. ¡°Luhrmann is at his best mixing visual and musical styles together to create something wholly original, the Fox News review said.
For example, in one of the most outstanding scenes in the film, the first party scene, Nick walks quickly from one party guest to another party guest trying to explain all the gossip about Gatsby until he is finally introduced to the man himself, while the most stirring version of Rhapsody in Blue (composed by American musician George Gershwin in 1924) is played in the background.
1.What did Baz Luhrmann do to make the film a success?
A. He adapted the story in the novel as he wished.
B. He made the film more powerful than the book.
C. He mixed his style with the elegance of the essay.
D. He showed the elegance of the pictures in the film.
2.What is Taroli¡¯s attitude towards the film?
A. Favorable. B. Sceptical.
C. Amazed. D. Unconcerned.
3. What are the characteristics of Gatsby?
A. Faithful and warm-hearted.
B. Charming and professional.
C. Selfish and stubborn.
D. Mysterious and devoted.
4.Why does the author give the example of the first party scene in the last paragraph?
A. Unfold the fact that Nick wants to know more about Gatsby.
B. Show the version of Rhapsody in Blue matches the film well.
C. Prove that the director is good at combining visual and music.
D. Convince us that the first scene is perfectly shot by the director.
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Last year I ruined my summer vacation by bringing along a modern convenience that was too convenient for my own good: the iPad. Instead of looking at nature, I checked my e-mail. Instead of paddling a small boat, I followed my Twitter feed£¨ÍÆÌؼòѶ£©. Instead of reading great novels, I stuck to reading four newspapers each morning. I was behaving as if I were still in the office. My body was on vacation, but my head wasn¡¯t.
So this year I made up my mind to try something different: withdrawal£¨Í˳ö£©from the Internet. I knew it wouldn¡¯t be easy, since I¡¯m bad at self-control. But I was determined. I started by giving the iPad to my wife.
The cellphone signal at our house was worse than in the past, making my attempts at cheating an experience in frustration £¨¾ÚÉ¥£©. I was trapped, forced to go through with my plan. Largely cut off from e-mail, Twitter and my favorite newspaper websites, I had few ways to connect to the world except for the radio¡ªand how much radio can one listen to, really? I had to do what I had planned to do all along: read books.
This experience has had a happy ending. With determination and the strong support of my wife, I won in my vacation straggle against the Internet, realizing finally that it was I, not the iPad, that was the problem. I knew I had won when we passed a Starbucks and my wife asked if I wanted to stop to use the Wi-Fi. ¡°I don¡¯t need it,¡± I said.
However, as we return to post-vacation life, a harder test begins: Can I continue when I¡¯m back at work?
There are times when the need to know what¡¯s being said right now is great. I have no intention of giving up my convenience completely. But I hope to resist the temptation £¨ÓÕ»ó£©to check my e-mail every five minutes, which leads to checking my Twitter feed and a website ortwo.
I think a vacation is supposed to help you reset your brain to become more productive. Here I hope this one worked.
1.What do we know about the author¡¯s last summer vacation?
A. He was determined to enjoy the beautiful view.
B. His iPad ruined his plan of finishing a great novel.
C. He felt satisfied that he had stuck to his usual timetable.
D. He hated himself for acting as if he were working on vacation.
2.What did the author do to keep away from the Internet this year?
A. He handed his iPad to his wife.
B. He cut off his cellphone signal.
C. He refused to cheat in his house.
D. He listened to the radio most of the time.
3.When back at work, the author will probably choose to ________.
A. stay away from the Internet for ever
B. continue to road more and more books
C. keep control of when and how to use the Internet
D. stop checking what is being said right now completely
4.What is the author¡¯s opinion of a great vacation in the passage?
A. A vacation is having nothing to do but read all day.
B. A vacation proves that a life of pleasure is overvalued.
C. A vacation is a period of time to do whatever one wishes to.
D. A vacation means a change of pace to make one more creative.
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Mistakes are something did, said or believed, as a result of wrong thinking or understanding, lack of knowledges or skills. No one is perfect, but no one makes no mistake. Because many people are afraid of making mistakes, we don¡¯t believe, say or do much. They behaved like this just because they want to make no mistake. As I said, it¡¯s impossible. Being afraid of making mistakes is mistake itself. Only through mistakes can there be discover or progress. Making mistakes for seeking truth is much more better than doing nothing. Mistakes are the best teachers which guide us through difficulties. Don¡¯t let mistakes scare you. Let¡¯s learn on mistakes.
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