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1、Closing.完形填空First read and then choose the best answer. You are supposed to finish reading within 4.5min.My first job was at a local restaurant, where I worked for seven years and learned so many lessons, especially from a fellow 1 .Helen was in her 30s and had extraordinary self-confidence, somethi
2、ng I was really 2 . I looked up to Helen 3 she was doing what she loved 4 people better. She always made everyone, customers and co-workers, 5 and feel good.Being a waitress changed my life. One of my 6 customers was Fred Hasbrook. He always ate an omelet(炒蛋), and when I saw him _7 , I tried to have
3、 it on his table as soon as he sat down.Thanks to the newfound confidence I 8 _from Helen, I dreamed of having my own _9 . But when I called my parents to ask for a loan(貸款), they said, “We just dont have the money.”The next day, Fred saw me and asked, “Whats 10 ? Youre not smiling today.” I _11_my
4、dream with him and said, “Fred, I know I can do more if somebody 12 just have faith in me.”Before long he handed me checks 13 _$50,000along with a note that I have to this day. It reads, “The only collateral(抵押品)on this loan is my trust in your 14 as a person. Good people with a dream should have 15
5、 _to make that dream come true.”I took the checks to Merrill Lynch, where the money was provided for me. I 16 _working at the restaurant, making 17 for the restaurant I would open. My plans soured, though, and I lost the 18 .Later I decided to apply for a job at Merill Lynch. Even though I had no ex
6、perience, I was_19 and ended up becoming a pretty good agent. 20 . I paid back Fred the $50,000, plus 14-percent annual interest. Five years later, I was able to open my own firm.1. A. friend B. waitress C. citizen D. customer2. A. losing B. earning C. sharing D. lacking3. A. while B. though C. beca
7、use D. unless4. A. helping B. respecting C. serving D. praising5. A. work B. eat C. smile D. speak6. A. regular B. favorite C. respected D. fresh7. A. eating B. greeting C.smiling D. coming8. A. found out B. picked up C. got back D. took away9. A. restaurant B. work C. house D. money10. A. ahead B.
8、that C. there D. up11. A. exchanged B. discussed C. shared D. explained12. A. should B. would C. might D. must13. A. counting B. totaling C. adding D. valuing14. A. ability B. honesty C. responsibilty D. identity15. A. patience B. confidence C. choice D. chance16. A. loved B. practiced C. continued
9、D. enjoyed17. A. tables B. plans C. decisions D. suggestions18. A. faith B. honesty C. money D. friend19. A. hired B. rejected C. encouraged D. determined20. A. Fortunately B. Excitedly C. Personally D. Eventual1 / 15Reading comprehension 閱讀理解First read and then choose the best answer . There is onl
10、y one answer to each question . You may spend at most 7min on each passage.A(福建2008)The global energy crisis is approaching. What can we do? Here are some steps you can take.Cooling puts the greatest stress on your summer energy bill and the power grid (電網(wǎng)). Just as a tune-up for your car can improv
11、e your gas mileage, a yearly tune-up of your heating and cooling system can improve efficiency and comfort. Clean or replace filters monthly or as needed.For central air conditioning systems and room air conditioners, look for the ENERGY STAR, the federal governments symbol for energy efficiency. Fo
12、r central air, purchase the system with the highest possible Seasonal Energy Efficiency Ratio (SEER).Use energy-efficient ceiling fans either alone or with air conditioning. Ceiling fans do a great job of circulating air. When used with air conditioning, fans allow you to raise the thermostat (恒溫器)
13、and cut costs. Ceiling fans cool people, not rooms, so before you leave, turn off the ceiling fan.Let a programmable thermostat “remember for you” to automatically adjust the indoor climate with your daily and weekend patterns to reduce cooling bills by up to 10 percent. You can come home to a comfo
14、rtable house without wasting energy and creating pollution all day while you are at work.Try to make your home airtight enough to increase your comfort, make your home quieter and cleaner and reduce your cooling costs up to 20 percent.Cut your air conditioning load, and reduce pollution by planting
15、leafy trees around your home and fixing reflective bricks on your roof.Close blinds or shades on south-and west-facing windows during the day, or fix shading equipment to avoid heat build-up.Turn off everything not in use: lights, TVs, computers. And use fluorescent bulbs (熒光燈), which provide bright
16、, warm light while using at least two-thirds less energy, producing 70 percent less heat and lasting up to 10 times longer than incandescent bulbs (白熾燈).Drive the car that gets better gas mileage whenever possible if you own more than one vehicle. If you drive 12,500 miles a year, switching 10 perce
17、nt of your trips from a car that gets 20 miles per gallon to one that gets 30 mpg will save you more than $65 per year.Carpool. The average U.S. commuter (乘車上班族) could save about $260 a year by sharing cars twice a week with two other people in a car that gets 20.1 mpg assuming the three passengers
18、share the cost of gas.1. According to the passage, the thermostat is used to _.A. make rooms quieterB. control room temperatureC. turn off the air conditionerD. reduce room air pollution2. We can conclude from the passage that the author probably discourages _.A. planting leafy trees around your hom
19、eB. turning off the ceiling fan before you leave your houseC. keeping your south-facing windows open during the dayD. using fluorescent bulbs instead of incandescent bulbs3 According to the passage,you can save fuel by _.A. using energy-efficient ceiling fansB. sharing cars with others on weekdaysC.
20、 turning off everything not in use D. reducing 10% of your car trips every year4. This passage is mainly about _.A. energy-saving tipsB. fuel-saving tipsC. do-it-yourself tips D. environment-protecting tipsB(浙江 2008)A simple piece of clothesline hangs between some environmentally friendly Americans
21、and their neighbors.On one side stand those who see clothes dryers (干衣機(jī)) as a waste of energy and a major polluter of the environment. As a result, they are turning to clotheslines as part of the “what-I-can-do environmentalism (環(huán)境保護(hù)主義).”O(jiān)n the other side are people who are against drying clothes ou
22、tside, arguing that clotheslines are unpleasant to look at. They have persuaded Homeowners Associations (HOAs) access the U.S. to ban outdoor clotheslines, because clothesline drying also tends to lower home value in the neighborhood. This has led to a Right-to-Dry Movement that is calling for laws
23、to be passed to protect peoples right to use clotheslines.So far, only three states have laws to protect clothesline. Right-to-Dry supporters argue that there should be more.Matt Reck, 37, is the kind of eco-conscious (有生態(tài)意識的) person who feeds his trees with bathwater and reuses water drops from his
24、 air conditioners to water plants. His family also uses a clothesline. But on July 9, 2007, the HOA in Wake Forest, North Carolina, told him that a dissatisfied neighbor had telephoned them about his clothesline. The Recks paid no attention to the warning and still dried their clothes on a line in t
25、he yard. “Many people say they are environmentally friendly but they dont take matters into their own hands,” says Reck. The local HOA has decided not to take any action, unless more neighbors come to them.North Carolina lawmakers are saying that banning clotheslines is not the right thing to do. Bu
26、t HOAs and housing businesses believe that clothesline drying reminds people of poor neighborhoods. They worry that if buyers think their future neighbors cant even afford dryers, housing prices will fall.Environmentalists say such worries are not necessary, and in view of global warming, that idea
27、needs to change. As they say, “The clothesline is beautiful. Hanging clothes outside should be encouraged. We all have to do at least something to slow down the process of global warming.”1. One of the reasons why supporters of clothes dryers are trying to ban clothesline drying is that _.A. clothes
28、 dryers are more efficient B. clothesline drying reduces home valueC. clothes dryers are energy-saving D. clothesline drying is not allowed in most U.S. states2. Which of the following best describes Matt Reck?A. He is a kind-hearted man. B. He is an impolite man.C. He is an experienced gardener. D.
29、 He is a man of social responsibility.3. Who are in favor of clothesline drying?A. Housing businesses.B. Environmentalists.C. Homeowners Associations. D. Recks dissatisfied neighbors.4. What is mainly discussed in the text?A. Clothesline drying: a way to save energy and money.B. Clothesline drying:
30、a lost art rediscovered.C. Opposite opinions on clothesline drying.D. Different varieties of clotheslines.CThe Diet Zone: A Dangerous Place (北京2008)Diet Coke, diet Pepsi, diet pills, no-fat diet, vegetable diet . We are surrounded by the word “diet” everywhere we look and listen. We have so easily b
31、een attracted by the promise and potential of diet products that we have stopped thinking about what diet products are doing to us. We are paying for products that harm us psychologically and physically(身體上). Diet products significantly weaken us psychologically. On one level, we are not allowing ou
32、r brains to admit that our weight problems lie not in actually losing the weight, but in controlling the consumption of fatty, high-calorie, unhealthy foods. Diet products allow us to jump over the thinking stage and go straight for the scale (秤) instead. All we have to do is to swallow or recognize
33、 the word “diet” in food labels. On another level, diet products have greater psychological effects. Every time we have a zero-calorie drink, we are telling ourselves without our awareness that we dont have to work to get results. Diet products make people believe that gain comes without pain, and t
34、hat life can be without resistance and struggle. The danger of diet products lies not only in the psychological effects they have on us, but also in the physical harm that they cause. Diet foods can indirectly harm our bodies because consuming them instead of healthy foods means we are preventing ou
35、r bodies from having basic nutrients (營養(yǎng)成分). Diet foods and diet pills contain zero calorie only because the diet industry has created chemicals to produce these wonder products. Diet products may not be nutritional, and the chemicals that go into diet products are potentially dangerous. Now that we
36、 are aware of the effects that diet products have on us, it is time to seriously think about buying them. Losing weight lies in the power of minds, not in the power of chemicals. Once we realize this, we will be much better able to resist diet products, and therefore prevent the psychological and ph
37、ysical harm that comes from using them.1. From Paragraph 1, we learn that _.A. diet products fail to bring out peoples potentialB. people have difficulty in choosing diet productsC. diet products are misleading peopleD. people are fed up with diet products2. One psychological effect of diet products
38、 is that people tend to _.A. try out a variety of diet foodsB. hesitate before they enjoy diet foodsC. pay attention to their own eating habitsD. watch their weight rather than their diet3. In Paragraph 3, “gain comes without pain” probably means _.A. losing weight is effortlessB. it costs a lot to
39、lose weightC. diet products bring no painD. diet products are free from calories4. Diet products indirectly harm people physically because such products _.A. are over-consumedB. lack basic nutrientsC. are short of chemicalsD. provide too much energy任務(wù)型First read and then fill in the chart below usin
40、g one word in each blank only. You may spend at most 7min on it.The family sphere(范圍) used to be defined by its isolation from the public realm. There was the public male realm(領(lǐng)域)of "rational accomplishment" and cruel competition, and the private female and child-rearing sphere of home, i
41、ntuition(直覺)and emotion. The private realm was supposed to be isolated from the realities of adult life. For both better and worse, television and other electronic media tend to break down the difference between those two worlds. The membrane around the family sphere is much more permeable(可滲透的). TV
42、 takes public events and transforms them into dramas that are played out in the privacy of our living rooms, kitchens and bedrooms. Parents used to be the channel through which children learned about the outside world. They could decide what to tell their children and when to tell it to them. Since
43、children learn to read in stages, books provide a kind of natural screening process, where adults can decide what to tell and not tell children of different reading abilities. Television destroyed the system that separated adult from child knowledge and separated information into year-by-year slices
44、 for children of different ages. Instead, it presents the same information directly to children of all ages, without going through adult filters. So television presents a real challenge to adults. While a parent can read a newspaper without sharing it with children in the same room, television is ac
45、cessible to everyone in that space. And unlike books, television doesn't allow us to flip(翻轉(zhuǎn))through it and see what's coming up. We may think we're giving our children a lesson in science by having them watch the Challenger take off, and then suddenly they learn about death, disaster an
46、d adult mistakes. Books allow adults to discuss privately what to tell or not tell children. This also allows parents to keep adult material secret from children and keep their secret keeping secret. Take that same material and put it on The Today Show and you have 800,000 children hearing the very
47、things the adults are trying to keep from them. "Television takes our kids across the globe before parents give them permission to cross the street." More importantly, children gradually learn that adults are worried and anxious about being parents. Actually, television has also places fam
48、ilies under a lot of stress. How Television Changes Childhood?Main comparisonsContextsDistance between _1_and the outside.Homes used to be isolated from the _2_realm.Homes nowadays are _3_to the outside world. Media through which children can obtain informationIn the past, children might learn _4_ab
49、out the outside world with the help of parents and _5_.More information is got directly through TV and other electronic media, which breaks down the _6_ between adult world and the child world._7_ of the information children getTraditionally, kids could only knew what they should learn at their age,
50、 carefully_8_by their parents.Everything can possibly be known by children, including many aspects of _ life.Effects on family educationParental instructionFamilies are now under greater stress than before. Adults are anxious about being parents and faced with new _10_.拓展閱讀:Students out to repair br
51、oken English found on city's signsBy Liu Yujie (China Daily)Updated: 2010-12-14 10:27Multilingual notices welcomed but drive begins to make them betterMore than 500 Chinese and foreign university students will hit the streets this week to identify mistranslations into English and French on publi
52、c signs.Related readings:Close the book on Chinglish Shanghai goes all out to beat 'Chinglish' The project was launched by the Foreign Affairs Office of the Beijing Municipal Government and the Multi-language Service Center (MSC) of Beijing Foreign Studies University on Dec 11.Zhan
53、g Qian, vice-director of the Beijing Foreign Affairs Office (BFAO), said the activity aims to address the incorrect translations still visible in public places around Beijing, and standardize translations in the future.Wei Jinyi, at the MSC, who is in charge of the activity, told METRO on Monday tha
54、t while the inspection of public signs in English goes on every year, this year marks the first time that French translations will also be thoroughly checked.He said the volunteers have been divided into two groups, on-site and off-site. The off-site group will periodically visit public places to ta
55、ke photos of signs, while the on-site group will process the images and do linguistic assessments.The city's underground stations, Beijing Capital International Airport, the Summer Palace, Beijing Friendship Hospital, Bird's Nest and the National Aquatics Center are among the first places th
56、at will be inspected.Wei said the first phase is due to be completed by the end of December."However, the activity will continue into next year, covering more public places in the capital," Wei added.All the volunteers are selected from universities featuring foreign language studies, incl
57、uding Beijing Foreign Studies University, China Foreign Affairs University, Renmin University of China, the Communications University of China, and the University of International Relations.Before the launch of the activity, all the volunteers underwent training.The data collected will be handed over to a team of professional translators including expats and teachers of English who will correct the errors and establish a p
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