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Double 11, originating from some universities in Nanjing in the 1990s, is called Singles Day in China because it falls on Nov.11by coincidence when many young people will hold many parties to look for the one they love. Since 2011, Double 11 has become the symbol of E-commerce, when people can buy lots of things they like at a low price. But, at the same time , people might buy some products they don¡¯t need at all or buy something with a high price but in low quality. What¡¯s worse, there are always lots of complaints and they may therefore get annoyed for this. In my opinion, though shopping online on that day brings consumers a lot of convenience, they should be reasonable and buy in the shop with a good reputation in case of being cheated.
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¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º2014-2015ѧÄêºþ±±Àû´¨ÎĶ·Ï糤˳³õ¼¶ÖÐѧ¸ßÒ»ÉÏÆÚÄ©Ó¢ÓïÊÔ¾í£¨½âÎö°æ£© ÌâÐÍ£ºµ¥ÏîÌî¿Õ
In the botanical garden we can find a(n) __________ of plants that range from tall trees to small flowers.
A. species B. group C. amount D. variety
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When I passed the garden, I saw the boy under a tree, .
A£®seat ; read B£®seating ; reading
C£®seated ; read D£®seated ; reading
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¡°Come on! All of us are cutting math. Who wants to take that quiz? We¡¯re going to take a walk and get lunch instead. Let¡¯s go!¡± says the coolest kid in your class. Do you do what you know is right and go to math class, take the quiz? Or do you give in and go with them?
People who are at your age, like your classmates, are called peers£¨Í¬ÁäÈË£©. When they try to influence you how to act, to get you to do something, it¡¯s called peer pressure£¨Ñ¹Á¦£©. It¡¯s something everyone has to deal with¡ªeven adults.
Peers influence your life, even if you don¡¯t realize it, just by spending time with you. You learn from them, and they learn from you. It¡¯s only human nature to listen to and learn from other people in your age group.
Peers can have a positive influence on each other. Maybe another student in your science class taught you an easy way to remember the planets in the solar system. Or you got others excited about your new favorite book, and now everyone is reading it. Sometimes peers influence each other in negative£¨Ïû¼«µÄ£© ways. For example, a few kids in school might try to get you to cut class with them.
It¡¯s difficult to say ¡°no¡± to peer pressure, but you can do it. Paying attention to your own feelings and beliefs about what is right and wrong can help you know the right thing to do.
It can really help to have at least one other peer, or friend, who is willing to say ¡°no¡± too. If you continue to face peer pressure and you¡¯re finding it difficult to handle, talk to someone you trust, a parent, or a teacher. They can help you feel much better and prepare you for the next time you face peer pressure.
1.With his words in the first paragraph, the kid is ________.
A. planning some interesting activities after school
B. talking about a dinner party
C. asking other kids to take a quiz with him
D. encouraging other kids to cut a class
2.According to the author, _________.
A. peer pressure does kids more harm than good
B. math is the most difficult subject for most kids
C. kids today are under greater pressure than before
D. peer pressure exists among people of all age groups
3.What does the underlined word ¡°it¡± in Paragraph 3 refer to?
A. Peer pressure. B. Your time.
C. Your life. D. Human nature.
4.It¡¯s suggested in the last paragraph that the readers _______.
A. make more close friends while at school
B. learn to refuse their friends in a polite way
C. get support from someone else if it¡¯s necessary
D. build closer relations with their parents and teachers
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The planet is getting greener, and we are responsible. Carbon dioxide generated by human activities is promoting photosynthesis (¹âºÏ×÷ÓÃ) and causing a beneficial greening of the Earth¡¯s surface.
For the first time, researchers claim to have shown that the increase in plant cover is due to this ¡°CO2 fertilisation (·ÊÎÖ»¯) effect¡± rather than other causes. However, it remains unclear whether the effect can reduce any negative effects of global warming, such as the spread of deserts.
To home in on the effect of CO2, Randall Donohue of Australia¡¯s national research institute, the CSIRO in Canberra, monitored vegetation (Ö²±») at the edges of deserts in Australia, southern Africa, the US Southwest, North Africa, the Middle East and central Asia. These are regions where there is plenty of warmth and sunlight, but only just enough rainfall for vegetation to grow, so any change in plant cover must be the result of a change in rainfall patterns or CO2 levels, or both.
If CO2 levels were constant, then the amount of vegetation per unit of rainfall ought to be constant, too. However, the team found that this figure rose by 11 per cent in these areas between 1982 and 2010, mirroring the rise in CO2 emissions (ÅÅ·Å). Donohue says this lends strong support to the idea that CO2 fertilization drove the greening.
The extra plant growth could have knock-on effects on climate, Donohue says, by increasing rainfall, affecting river flows and changing the likelihood of wildfires. It will also absorb more CO2 from the air, potentially damping down (ÒÖÖÆ) global warming but also limiting the CO2 fertilization effect itself.
Donohue cannot yet say to what extent CO2 fertilisation will affect vegetation in the coming decades. But if it proves to be significant, the future may be much greener.
1.According to the author, the increase in plant cover _____.
A. will speed up global warming
B. results from human activities
C. will stop the spread of deserts
D. promotes the CO2 fertilization effect
2.What does the underlined phrase ¡°To home in on¡± in Para 3 probably mean?
A. To hold back. B. To cut down.
C. To improve. D. To observe.
3. The amount of vegetation in those monitored areas rose with _____.
A. the rise in CO2 emissions B. annual rainfall
C. the temperatures around D. the amount of sunlight
4.What¡¯s the best title of the text?
A. More rainfall, less CO2 emission
B. How to deal with carbon emissions
C. Positive effects of global warming
D. CO2 emission making Earth greener
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Agatha Christie (1890-1976) was born Agatha May Clarissa Miller in Devon, England in 1890, the youngest of three children in a conservative, well-to-do family. Taught at home by a governess and tutors, as a child Agatha Christie never attended school. She became skillful at creating games to keep herself occupied at a very young age. A bashful child, unable to adequately express her feelings, she first turned to music as a means of expression and, later in life, to writing.
In 1914, at the age of 24, she married Archie Christie, a World War I fighter pilot. While he was off at war, she worked as a nurse. It was while working in a hospital during the war that Christie first came up with the idea of writing a detective novel. Although it was completed in a year, it wasn¡¯t published until 1920, five years later.
¡°The mysterious Affair at Styles¡± gave the world the unique Hercule Poirot, a retired Belgian police officer who was to become one of the most enduring characters in all of fiction. With his waxed moustache and his ¡°little grey cell,¡± he was ¡°meticulous (careful to do things correctly), a tidy little man, always neat, orderly and a bit absurd.¡±
Christie wrote more than 30 novels featuring Poirot. Among the most popular were¡± The Murder of Roger Ackroyd¡±(1926), ¡°Murder on the Orient Expredd¡±(1934), and ¡°Death on the Nile¡± (1937).
Another of Christie¡¯s most well-known and beloved characters was introduced in ¡°Murder at the Vicarage¡± in 1930. Miss Jane Marple, an elderly single in the old- fashioned English village of St. Mary Mead, solved all manner of mysteries with intense concentration and instinct.
Christies ultimately (finally)became the acknowledged Queen of the Golden Age. In all, she wrote over 66 novel, numerous short stories and screenplays, and a series of romantic novels using the pen name Mary Westmacott. Several of her works were made into successful feature films, the most notable being Murder on the Orient Express (1974). In short, she is the single most popular mystery writer of all time. In 1971 she was awarded the high honor of becoming a Dame of the British Empire.
1.Which of the following is the correct order in which the events happened?
a. Agatha became a Dame of The British Empire.
b. Agatha worked as a nurse
c. The Mysterious Affair at Styles was published.
d. Murder on the Vicarage Express was published
e. Murder on the Orient Express was filmed
f. Archie Christie went to the front as a fighter pilot.
A. f-b-d-c-e-a B. f-b-c-d-a-e
C. f-d-b-c-a-e D. f-d-c-b-e-a
2.What does the underlined word ¡°bashful¡± probably mean?
A. Shy B. Conservative C. Stupid D. Sensitive
3.Mary Westmacott is_________________.
A. Agatha¡¯s governess
B. the name of Agatha¡¯s novel
C. another name for Agatha
D. the heroine of Agatha¡¯s novel
4.Which of the following is NOT true about Hercule Poirot?
A. He was once a policeman
B. He paid much attention to details
C. He sometimes seems rather foolish
D. He solved mysterious with a sixth sense
5.In Agatha Christie¡¯s life, What were the most popular novels that she wrote?
A; biography B. detective novel
C. romantic fiction D. science fiction
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I seldom thought I had a passion. I would sit before the TV all day, thinking 1. nothing but the next shadow. It was not long ago that I first learned how important having a passion is to life.
One day I went with Mum to drop my sister off at the gym. Then, 2. Mum stopped at a red light, someone on the roadside caught my eyes. It was a man 3. (dress) in rags, homeless. That didn¡¯t interest me, for I 4. (see) many like him before.
But he man wasn¡¯t sitting down with a sad 5. (express). He had a radio in his hand and was dancing 6. (merry) to the music. The radio seemed to be the most precious thing 7. he had.
¡°Mum, why does that man have a radio even though he¡¯s homeless?¡± I asked.
¡°He bought 8.,¡± she replied.
¡°But if he¡¯s homeless, why doesn¡¯t he use the money to buy food or clothes? He wasted it on something he doesn¡¯t need.¡±
¡°Well, Sarah, sometimes food and clothes aren¡¯t 9. only important things. We need happiness, too.¡±
¡°I see.¡± The man must care too much about music, so he bought a radio instead of food and clothes. I realized that happiness is the key to life. 10. it, there¡¯s nothing to look forward to. A passion gives a person the happiness they need to keep going!
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When you get in your car, you reach for it. When you're at work, you take a break to have a moment alone with it. When you get into a lift, you play with it.
Cigarette? Cup of coffee? No, it's the third most addictive thing in modern life, the cell phone. And experts say it is becoming more difficult for many people to curb their longing to hug it more tightly than most of their personal relationships.
The costs are becoming more and more evident, and I don't mean just the monthly bill. Dr. Chris Knippers, a counselor at the Betty ford Center in Southern California, reports that the overuse of cell phones has become a social problem not much different from other harmful addictions: a barrier to one-on-one personal contact, and an escape from reality. Sounds extreme, but we' ve all witnessed the evidence: The person at a restaurant who talks on the phone through an entire meal, ignoring his kids around the table; the woman who talks on the phone in the car, ignoring her husband; the teen who texts messages all the way home from school, avoiding contact with kids all around him. Jim Williams, an industrial sociologist based in Massachusetts, notes that cell - phone addiction is part of a set of symptoms in a widening gulf of personal separation. He points to a study by Duke University researchers that found one-quarter of Americans say they have no one to discuss their most important personal business with. Despite the growing use of phones, e - mail and instant messaging, in other words, Williams says studies show that we don't have as many friends as our parents." Just as more information has led to less wisdom, more acquaintances via the Internet and cell phones have produced fewer friends," he says.
If the cell phone has truly had these effects, it's because it has become very widespread. Consider that in 1987, there were only l million cell phones in use. Today, something like 300 million Americans carry them. They far outnumber wired phones in the United States.
1.From the first two paragraphs, we can know ________.
A. cell phones have become as addictive as cigarettes
B. cell phone addiction is good for building personal relationships
C. people are longing to have their own cell phones
D. cell phones are the same as cigarettes
2.Cell phone addiction has caused the following effects EXCEPT_________
A. a barrier to personal contact
B. fewer friends
C. an escape from reality
D. a serious illness
3.The underlined word "curb" in Paragraph 2 means________.
A. ignore B. control C. develop D. rescue
4.The example of a woman talking on the phone in the car supports the idea that__________.
A. women use cell phones more often than men
B. talking on the phone while driving is dangerous
C. cell phones do not necessarily bring people together
D. cell phones make one - on - one personal contact easy
5.Which of the following is the best title for the passage?
A. Cell phones are the New Cigarettes
B. Cell phones are harmful to the Society
C. The New Report about the Cell phone
D. The Disadvantages of the Cell phone
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Have you been asked for money by some beggars who have disabilities while you¡¯re
enjoying shopping? Do you have any pity for that kind of people or just feel afraid? For whatever reasons the number of disabled beggars bumming(ÐÐÆò) along the street has increased rapidly.
Why are there so many disabled people begging in the street? The reasons are so various that we don¡¯t need to understand. But we know that they do not lead an easy life. So we should help them in some ways.
The treatment for disabled people should go like this: First£¬accept them. Don¡¯t be afraid of looking at the terrible shape of disabled. Try to treat
them equally. Because they are a part of the society.we can¡¯t abandon them. The second is to help them as much as we could. If you can be a volunteer and do some work for the disabled people that would be very nice. That does good not only to disabled people but also to yourself£¬because you will feel good after your kind action.
So give an air of warmth to disabled people£¬and the world would be much better.
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