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Antarctica(Äϼ«) is like no other place in the world. It is ______ . It is very big. It is like the United States and Australia together. Antarctica is the ______ place in the world. The temperature is sometimes -87¡æ. August and September are the coldest months because there is no ______ .

Antarctica is the highest continent, about 10,000 feet high. Antarctica also has very strong winds. The wind sometimes ______ as fast as two hundred miles an hour. It is also the driest place in the world.

Antarctica is also ______ . There are huge glaciers and ice everywhere. A glacier is an area of ice that ______ slowly. The ice and glaciers are beautiful. But most plants and land animals cannot ______on the ice. There are no trees, no rivers, and no cities in Antarctica. Only penguins and other sea birds live there.

Antarctica does not ______ any one country. ______ , every country owns Antarctica. More than twenty countries have stations in Antarctica. A station is a place where scientists do experiments. The ______ are the only people who live in Antarctica.

Life on an Antarctica station is______ It is like life on a space station. The sun shines for six months, and then it is ______for six months. People usually have problems with sleeping and eating. They eat more ______they are not busy. In an emergency, it is hard to get ______ . Once, an American doctor Nielsen realized she was ______ . She had cancer. It was winter, and airplanes could not ______ in Antarctica. Dr.Nielsen had no choice but to ______ . An airplane dropped medicine to her, and she had to______ herself. Several months later, Dr.Nielsen ______ to the United States to get special medical help.

Today, ships go to Antarctica during the summer months from November to February. People want to ______this unusual place, but they don¡¯t want to live there!

1.A. strangeB. flatC. terribleD. unique

2.A. greatestB. cleanestC. coldestD. worst

3.A. sunB. airC. waterD. food

4.A. comesB. blowsC. risesD. drops

5.A. emptyB. dangerousC. noisyD. important

6.A. formsB. happensC. shakesD. moves

7.A. remainB. produceC. liveD. change

8.A. depend onB. complete withC. appeal toD. belong to

9.A. Above allB. In factC. For exampleD. On average

10.A. scientistsB. huntersC. fishermenD. sailors

11.A. hardB. interestingC. normalD. active

12.A. dayB. nightC. vacationD. winter

13.A. whileB. soC. thoughD. because

14.A. messagesB. repliesC. helpD. relief

15.A. aloneB. anxiousC. sickD. hungry

16.A. landB. remainC. standD. fly

17.A. continueB. stayC. workD. adjust

18.A. took pride inB. felt sorry forC. pay attention toD. took care of

19.A. referredB. traveledC. returnedD. drove

20.A. rememberB. visitC. controlD. save

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Last Friday,1 was standing near a subway exit, tried to call a taxi. But no luck.

Then I thought of the taxi-booking app my friend has recommended and I booked a taxi through my cell-phone. Soon it came, and l stepped in, feeling pretty proudly of my high-tech way and satisfied with the convenience brought by the app. So later,1 was upset to find that the driver was busy looking his cell-phone to get the next order. It was just then when I began to worry about my safety. What¡¯s bad, the driver¡¯s informations might be unreliable. How can we passengers' legal rights be protecting if something bad happens? So be careful when you use the taxi-booking app the next time.

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I still remember how nervously I was on my first day in the new school three years before. I found it how difficult to follow my teacher in first English class. She spoke in English throughout the class, that was totally different as the lessons I had taken before. In the morning class the next day, my English teacher came to me while she was reading the text aloud. After listen to me for a while, she gave me a big smile and said she likes my voice very much. The smile shone on the whole day and for several day. Thanks to the smile, I began to be confident.

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Susan Williams went to a boarding school. Here is one of the letters she wrote to her parents from the school.

Dear Mom and Dad,

I¡¯m afraid I have some very bad news for you. I have been very naughty and the school principal£¨Ð£³¤£©is very angry with me. She is going to write to you. You must come and take me away from here. She does not want me in the school any longer.

The trouble started last night when I was smoking a cigarette in bed£®This is against the rules, of course. We are not supposed to smoke at all.

As I was smoking, I heard footsteps coming towards the room. I did not want a teacher to catch me smoking, so I threw the cigarette away. Unfortunately, the cigarette fell into the waste-paper basket, which caught fire. There was a curtain near the waste-paper basket which caught fire, too. Soon the whole room was burning. The principal phoned for the fire department. The school is a long way from the town and by the time the fire department arrived, the whole school was in flames. Many of the girls are in the hospital.

The principal says that the fire was all my fault and you must pay for the damage. She will send you a bill for about a million dollars.

I am very sorry about this.

Much love, Susan.

P.S. None of the above is true, but I have failed my exams. I just want you to know how bad things could have been!

1.Susan wrote home ________.

A. to tell her parents she had failed her exams

B. to ask for a million dollars

C. to tell her parents about the fire

D. to tell her parents she had to leave school

2.In the letter, Susan told her parents that the principal was angry with her for the reason that_____.

A. she had failed her exams.

B. she had been caught smoking in bed.

C. it was her fault that the school had caught fire.

D. she had not phoned for the fire department in time.

3.Susan told her parents about the fire ________.

A. to warn them about what the principal would do

B. to make them less angry at her real news

C. to make them feel worried

D. to make them laugh

4.How true was the letter before the P.S.?

A. Partly true.

B. All true.

C. The story doesn¡¯t really tell us.

D. Completely untrue

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Mark Twain was a great writer. He was from the USA. He was born in 1835. He was also a famous speaker. He was famous for his sense of humour. Many people liked to listen to him , because he liked to tell some interesting stories to make people laugh all the time.

One day Mark Twain was going to a small town because of his writing. Before he was going to leave, one of his friends said to him that there were always a lot of mosquitoes(ÎÃ×Ó) in the town and told him that he¡¯d better not go there. Mark Twain waved his hand and said, ¡°It doesn¡¯t matter. The mosquitoes are no relatives of mine. I don¡¯t think they will come to visit me.¡±

After he arrived at the town, Mark Twain stayed in a small hotel near the station. He went into his room, but when he was just about to have a rest, quite a few mosquitoes flew about him. The waiters felt very sorry about that. ¡°I¡¯m very sorry, Mr. Mark Twain. There are too many mosquitoes in our town.¡± One of them said to him.

Mark Twain, however, made a joke, saying to the waiter, ¡°The mosquitoes are very clever. They know my room number. They didn¡¯t come into the wrong room.¡± What he said made all the people present laugh heartily.

But that night Mark Twain slept well. Do you know why? That was because all the waiters in the hotel were driving the mosquitoes away for him during the whole night.

1.That day Mark Twain went to the town _____.

A. to see one of his friends

B. because he wanted to do something there for his writing

C. because he was told there were a lot of mosquitoes there

D. to see one of his relatives

2.The waiters felt sorry because _____.

A. they did something wrong to Mark Twain

B. their hotel was too small

C. the room was not very clean

D. there were quite a few mosquitoes in Mark Twain¡¯s room

3.All the people present laughed heartily because _____.

A. the mosquitoes were very clever and they didn¡¯t come into the wrong room

B. the mosquitoes knew Mark Twain¡¯s room number

C. Mark Twain gave the waiters some nice presents

D. Mark Twain made a joke

4.From the story we know _____.

A. no mosquitoes troubled Mark Twain in the night

B. the owner of the hotel told the waiters to look after Mark Twain well at night

C. Mark Twain didn¡¯t have a good rest that night

D. there were not mosquitoes in the hotel any longer

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Every people uses its own special word to show its ideas and feelings. Some of these expressions are commonly used for many years. Others are popular for just a short time. One such American expression is ¡°Where¡¯s the beef?¡± It is used when something is not as good as it is said to be. In the early 1980s ¡°Where¡¯s the beef?¡± was one of the most popular expressions in the United States. It seemed as if everyone using it at the time.

Beef, of course, is the meat from a cow, and food is more popular in America than a hamburger made from beef. In the 1960s a businessman named Ray began building small restaurants that sold hamburgers at a low price. Ray called this ¡°McDonald¡¯s¡±. Ray became one of the richest businessmen at last in America.

Other business people watched his success. Some of them opened their own hamburger restaurants. One company called ¡°Wendy¡¯s¡± said its hamburgers were bigger than those sold by McDonald¡¯s or anyone else. The Wendy¡¯s Company began to use the expression ¡°Where¡¯s the beef?¡± to make people know that Wendy¡¯s hamburgers were the biggest. The Wendy¡¯s television advertisement showed three old women eating hamburgers. The bread that covered the meat was very big, but inside there was only a bit of meat. One of the women said she would not eat a hamburger with such a little piece of beef. ¡°Where¡¯s the beef?¡± she shouted in a funny way. The advertisement for Wendy¡¯s hamburger restaurants was a success. As we said, it seemed everyone began using the expression ¡°Where¡¯s the beef?¡±

1._______ started McDonald¡¯s restaurant.

A. McDonald B. Ray C. Wendy D. Three old women

2.Other people wanted to open hamburger restaurants because they thought _______.

A. they could sell hamburgers at a low price

B. beef was very popular in America

C. they could make a lot of money

D. hamburgers were easy to make

3.Wendy¡¯s made the expression known to everybody _______.

A. by a television advertisement

B. with many old women eating hamburgers

C. while selling bread with a bit of meat in it

D. at the McDonald¡¯s restaurant

4.We can learn from the passage that the expression ¡°Where¡¯s the beef?¡± means that _______.

A. the beef in hamburgers is not as much as it is said to be.

B. the hamburgers are not as good as they are said to be.

C. Wendy¡¯s beef is the biggest one in American restaurant.

D. it is used when something is not as good as it is said to be.

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Siri is an artificial intelligence (AI) that you can carry around in the pocket, where it waits patiently to be told what to do. In the week we spent together, my AI assistant has performed admirably in finding me restaurants, or the location of the nearest coffee shop.

A typical command might be: ¡°Reserve a table for two at a good French restaurant in San Francisco.¡± Siri responds by presenting a list of top-rated restaurants that can be booked on OpenTable.com. If you say which time you want, it can book you a table without your lifting a finger. In some ways Siri is just a fancy front-end (Ç°¶Ë³ÌÐò) to the 35 sites it can connect to, from taxi booking sites to movie review databases. But what¡¯s new is the way it can analyze the intentions of its master or mistress and use those sites to put them into action.

Siri attaches probabilities to the explanation of each word and cross-references (¶ÔÕÕ¼ìË÷) with your location and other data, some of which you must provide yourself. To send email reminders, Siri obviously needs to know your email address. To ¡°find me the flower shop closest to work¡±, it needs to know where you work. To pay bills or buy airline tickets, it would need access to your credit card.

That raises the question of how far we are willing to trust a piece of software that can go and do things for us based on what it ¡°thinks¡± we mean, a topic that occupies some engineers working on artificial intelligence. The more data, and power, you give your virtual assistant, the more damage it could do. Siri may be simple, and always shows its explanation of a command before carrying it out. But it gives users a preview of a new balance between privacy, trust and convenience that the expansion of AI into everyday life is likely to develop.

1.What is Siri?

A. A digital e-book reader.

B. A music-sharing software.

C. A voice-controlled website.

D. An artificial intelligence software.

2.When asked ¡°do I need my umbrella today?¡±, what will Siri probably respond with?

A. The list of umbrella makers.

B. The list of umbrella shops.

C. The local weather forecast.

D. The local climate conditions.

3.Siri is new in that it has the ability ______.

A. to understand what you speak

B. to connect a lot of websites

C. to give a variety of commands

D. to create computerized database

4.What question does Paragraph 4 answer?

A. Does Siri think itself? B. Can I trust you, Siri?

C. Is Siri simple for use? D. Will Siri be popular?

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When a basketball game is held, there is always an interval ______ players can have a break.

A. which B. when C. what D. that

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