Many times when people hear the words social networking, their brains automatically go to sites such as Twitter or Facebook£®However, there are sites for those into social networking and into reading£® Sound crazy? It's really not£®
If you' ve ever wanted a site where you can receive book recommendations, follow your favorite authors, and keep up with what your friends are reading£®then look no further than Goodreads, com£®
Goodreads provides useful services for those in the reading world, It is a site where you can win books by going to giveaways and simply entering your information£®Some giveaways are even signed by the author£®And the books aren't boring, old or torn copies - many of them are ARC¡¯s £¨Advanced Readers Copies£©, for which you can write a short review on the site£®Anyone can post reviews of their favorite books or series so that others may feel inclined to read them as well£®
Another function of the site is offering book clubs and interest groups£®You can have interactive discussions with groups of people reading the same things, sort of like a blog£®You can also make friends with people and post statuses similar to Facebook£®Your friends can send you hook recommendations and you can add them to your shelf if you choose£®
Shelves are by far one of the best features on the site£®You can categorize your entire library and put hooks you want to read on your "to - read" shelf£®These virtual £¨ÐéÄâµÄ£©shelves allow you to see what you' ve read and also let you keep track of the number of books you' ve read in a year£®
You can even read original writing for free because many people post their own writing on the site to gain feedback and advice on how to improve£®Anyone can join this site for free and fall in love with not just a hook, but a book site as well£®
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ1¡¿People who go to the site Twitter mostly want to              £®

A£®get more books to readB£®buy goods for their daily life
C£®Set to know more peopleD£®post their book recommendations
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ2¡¿According to the author, if you want to interact with others about reading,            £®
A£®you have a lot of websites to log on
B£®you'd better go to Goodreads£®com
C£®you should go to bookstores or libraries
D£®you can go to Twitter or Facebook
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ3¡¿The underlined part "feel inclined" in£®Paragraph 3 is the closest in meaning to ¡°____¡± £®
A£® have a tendency                                                 C£® have no difficulty
C£® have a possibility                                                D£® have no doubt
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ4¡¿You can do all of the following things on Goodreads£®com EXCEPT         £®
A£®receiving books signed by the authors
B£®publishing your comments on books
C£®exchanging your ideas with other people
D£®buying all kinds of books that you like
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ5¡¿What do we know about the shelves on Coodreads£®com?
A£®They are filled with all kinds of books from some libraries£®
B£®They are real bookshelves presented to readers by the site£®
C£®That is where people put books they have read or want to read£®
D£®New books will continuously be added to readers shelves by the site£®


¡¾Ð¡Ìâ1¡¿C
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ2¡¿B
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ3¡¿A
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ4¡¿D
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ5¡¿C

½âÎöÊÔÌâ·ÖÎö£º
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ1¡¿ÍÆÀíÌâ¡£¸ù¾ÝµÚÒ»¶Î1,2ÐÐMany times when people hear the words social networking, their brains automatically go to sites such as Twitter or Facebook£®ËµÃ÷ÔÚTwitter or FacebookÖÐÈËÃÇÔÚÄÇÀï¿ÉÒÔÓë±ðÈËÓн»Á÷¡£¹ÊCÕýÈ·¡£
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ2¡¿Ï¸½ÚÌâ¡£¸ù¾ÝµÚ¶þ¶ÎIf you' ve ever wanted a site where you can receive book recommendations, follow your favorite authors, and keep up with what your friends are reading£®then look no further than Goodreads, com˵Ã÷Èç¹ûÄã¼ÈÏë¶ÁÊéÒ²Ïë½ÌÅóÓÑ£¬ÄÇôÄã¾Íµ½Goodreads, comÕâ¸öÍøÕ¾À´¡£¹ÊBÕýÈ·¡£
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ3¡¿ÍÆÀíÌâ¡£¸ù¾Ý±¾¾ä£®Anyone can post reviews of their favorite books or series so that others may feel inclined to read them as well£®ÈËÃÇ¿ÉÒÔ¶ÔËûÃÇϲ»¶µÄÊé·¢±íÆÀÂÛÒÔÖÁÓÚÆäËüµÄÈË¿´ÁËÕâЩÆÀÂÛÒ²ÏëÈ¥¿´ÕâÑùµÄÊ飬˵Ã÷¸Ã´ÊÊÇÖ¸ÇãÏòÓÚ¡£¹ÊAÕýÈ·¡£
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ4¡¿Ï¸½ÚÌâ¡£¸ù¾ÝÎÄÕµÚÈý¶ÎIt is a site where you can win books by going to giveaways and simply entering your information£®Some giveaways are even signed by the authorºÍyou can write a short review on the site£®Anyone can post reviews of their favorite books or series ˵Ã÷ABCÈýÏîÔÚÕâ¸öÍøÕ¾É϶¼ÊÇ¿ÉÒÔ×öµÄ£¬Ö»ÓÐDÏîûÓÐÌá¼°£¬¹ÊD·ûºÏÌâÒâ¡£
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ5¡¿ÍÆÀíÌâ¡£¸ù¾ÝÎÄÕµ¹ÊýµÚ¶þ¶ÎÖÐShelves are by far one of the best features on the site£®You can categorize your entire library and put hooks you want to read on your "to - read" shelf£®ËµÃ÷ÔÚÕâÀïµÄÊé¼ÜÉÏ£¬Äã¿ÉÒÔ°ÑÄã¿´¹ýµÄÊé·ÅÔÚÉÏÃ棬Ҳ¿ÉÒÔ°ÑÄãÏëÒª¿´µÄÊé·ÅÔÚÉÏÃæ¡£¹ÊCÕýÈ·¡£
¿¼µã£º¿¼²é¹ã¸æÀà¶ÌÎÄÔĶÁ
µãÆÀ£º±¾ÎÄʵ¼ÊÉÏÊǽéÉÜÁËGoodreads, comÕâÑùµÄÒ»¸ö¶ÁÊéÍøÕ¾£¬ÔÚÕâÀïÄã¿ÉÒÔ·¢±íÊéÆÀ£¬Äã¿ÉÒԺͱðÈ˽øÐн»Á÷¡£Ò²ÓÐÊé¼Ü¿ÉÒÔ°Ñ×Ô¼ºÏë¶ÁµÄ£¬»òÕßÒѾ­¶È¹ýµÄÊ鶼·ÅÔÚÉÏÃæ¡£±¾ÎĵÄÄѵãÔÚÓÚ׼ȷÀí½âÎÄÕµÄϸ½ÚºÍ¾ßÌåµÄ¿¼²éÄÚÈݵĶ¨Î»£¬ÒªÇó¸ù¾ÝÉÏÏÂÎĵÄÓïÒå´®ÁªÈ·¶¨¾ßÌåµÄ¿¼²éµã¡£

Á·Ï°²áϵÁдð°¸
Ïà¹ØÏ°Ìâ

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£ºÕã½­Ê¡¶«ÑôÊÐ2009-2010ѧÄê¶È¸ß¶þÏÂѧÆÚµÚÒ»´ÎÔ¿¼ ÌâÐÍ£ºÍêÐÍÌî¿Õ

µÚ¶þ½Ú£ºÍêÐÎÌî¿Õ£¨¹²20СÌ⣻ÿСÌâ1.5·Ö£¬Âú·Ö30·Ö£©

ÔĶÁÏÂÃæ¶ÌÎÄ£¬´Ó¶ÌÎĺó¸÷ÌâËù¸øµÄËĸöÑ¡ÏA¡¢B¡¢CºÍD£©ÖУ¬Ñ¡³ö¿ÉÒÔÌîÈë¿Õ°×´¦µÄ×î¼ÑÑ¡Ï²¢ÔÚ´ðÌ⿨ÉϽ«¸ÃÏîÍ¿ºÚ¡£

I¡¯ve loved my mother¡¯s desk since I was just tall enough to see above the top of it as mother sat doing letters. Standing by her chair, looking at the ink bottle, pen, and white paper, I decided that the act of ___21___ must be the most ___22___ thing in the world.

Years later, during her final illness, mother ___23__ different things for my sister and brother. ¡°But the ___24___¡±, she said, ¡°is for Elizabeth¡±.

I never saw her angry, and never saw her cry. I knew she ___25___ me, she showed it in action. But ___26___ a young girl, I wanted heart-to-heart talks ___27___ mother and daughter. They never happened. And a gulf(ÉîÔ¨) opened between us. I was ¡°too emotional¡±. ___28___ she lived ¡°on the surface¡±.

As years passed and I graduated from college, I loved my mother and I wrote to her in ___29__ words and asked her to let me know in any way she chose that she did ___30___ me.

I posted the letter and waited for her answer. ___31___ came. My hope turned to ___32___, then little interest, finally, peace --- it seemed that nothing happened. I couldn¡¯t be sure that the ___33___ had even got to Mother. I only knew that I had written it, and I could ___34___ trying to make her into someone she was not.

Now the ___35___ of her desk told me, as she¡¯d ___36___ been able to, that she was ___37___ that writing was my chosen work. I ___38___ the desk carefully and found some papers ___39___---- a photo of my father and a one-page letter, folded and refolded many times.

¡°Give me an answer¡±, my letter asks, ¡°in any way you chose¡±. Mother, you always chose the ___40___ that speaks louder than words.

21. A£®Speaking         B£®writing                   C£®looking                  D£®listening

22. A£®Wonderful       B£®tiring                     C£®funny                    D. Productive

23. A. bought               B. gave                        C. designed                  D. kept

24. A. pen                    B. paper                       C. chair                       D. desk

25. A. loved                 B. disliked                   C. appreciated              D. sympathized

26. A. like                   B. as                        C. be                        D. unlike

27. A. with                  B. among                     C. beside                     D. between

28. A. So                     B. And                         C. But                     D. Or

29. A. careful               B. active                      C. thankful                  D. serious

30. A. ignore                B. accept                      C. forgive                    D. dislike

31. A. No one              B. None                    C. Something               D. Neither

32. A. surprise           B. joy                       C. disappointment         D. happiness

33. A. ides                   B. information              C. news                       D. letter

34. A. stand                 B. stop                         C. continue                D. practice

35. A. present               B. appearance               C. shape                      D. sight

36. A. always               B. ever                        C. never                      D. often

37. A. sorry                 B. encouraged              C. regretful                  D. pleased

38. A. moved               B. cleaned                 C. fixed                       D. emptied

39. A. inside                B. outside                    C. below                      D. above

40. A. gesture               B. method                    C. action                   D. way

 

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£ººÓÄÏÖ£ÖÝÖÇÁÖѧУ2010½ì¸ßÈýÏÂѧÆÚÄ£Äâ²âÊÔÊÔ¾í£¨Ó¢Ó ÌâÐÍ£ºÔĶÁÀí½â

 

After the September 11 terrorist attacks, some high schools in America wanted the students to pledge allegiance£¨ÐûÊÄЧÖÒ£© to the flag. Is it necessary or not? Let¡¯s see how the kids think of this requirement.

Lea Mouallem, Marymount High School

I believe that saying the Pledge of Allegiance is a way of reminding our country that no matter what happens, we are united. I don¡¯t think our president wants us to go and join the army now, but he wants to tell us that we will be able to overcome the disaster as a whole nation that is working together.

Harry Chin, 15, Culver City High School

I am not for the Pledge of Allegiance and I am not against the Pledge of Allegiance because I just say it so many times that it loses meaning. I say it every day at school in the second period. It doesn¡¯t mean anything any more.

David Tran, 15, Warren High School.

The Pledge of Allegiance is another sign of country. We should have some respect to it. In many schools, we don¡¯t say the Pledge every morning-we just stand up and let the National anthem ring through the silence. We said the Pledge of Allegiance on Sept. 12.

Danny Maryanor, 16, Santa Monica High School

I wonder why we were suddenly asked to recite the Pledge when many of us stopped after elementary school; and the Pledge was recited before the play of ¡°Ode to Joy¡± £¨»¶ÀÖËÌ£©with recorders. This was not to express patriotism£¨°®¹úÖ÷Ò壩, or even to remember those who lost their lives on Sept. 11.

I feel I cannot support a nation that in this time of crisis looks outward for revenge£¨±¨¸´£©instead of inward for peace. Perhaps we should think more about our problems.

1£®Saying the Pledge of Allegiance to the flag first appeared in American schools_______.

         A£®after Sept. 11, 2000  B£®before Sept. 11, 2001

         C£®on Sept. 11, 2001                D£®after Sept. 11, 2001

2£®Who were for the Pledge of Allegiance?

         A£®Lea Mouallem; David Tran         B£®Harry Chin; Danny Maryanor

         C£®Lea Mouallem; Danny Maryanor       D£®Harry Chin; David Tran

3£®Which of the following is TRUE?

         A£®Harry Chin thought the government required them to join the army.

         B£®Lea Mouallem thought the Pledge of Allegiance of no meaning.

         C£®Danny Maryanor felt the terrorist attacks happened partly because of America¡¯s own problem.

         D£®The Pledge of Allegiance is of another country.

4£®According to the passage, it can be imagined that___________.

         A£®all high school students say yes to the Pledge of Allegiance.

         B£®all high school students say no to the Pledge of Allegiance.

         C£®all kids don¡¯t agree to the requirement of saying the Pledge of Allegiance.

         D£®all high schools will require their students to pledge allegiance to the flag.

 

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º°²»ÕÊ¡2010½ì¸ßÈýÏÂѧÆÚµÚÈý´ÎÄ£Ä⿼ÊÔÓ¢ÓïÊÔ¾í ÌâÐÍ£ºÔĶÁÀí½â

Watch out, Yahoo. There is a search engine out there with super speed and accuracy. It¡¯s very cool.

Google is the Web¡¯s largest search engine. In just two years it has gained a reputation for surprising speed and accuracy, delivering what you are looking for in a second. The site now does this 40 million times a day --- a number achieved without spending a penny on a TV or newspaper ad.

Google doesn¡¯t need them. In the past six months alone, the site has won a Webby (the online version of the Oscar) for technical excellence, set a new record for search engines by indexing a billion Web pages.

Yahoo still has ten times the audience, but Google consistently ranks first in customer satisfaction: 97% of users find what they are looking for most or all of the time. ¡°You see people smile when they use it, like they¡¯ve found something no one else knows about,¡± says Danny Sullivan, editor of an online newsletter.

No one is smiling more than Larry Page, 27, and Sergey Brin, 26, who seem certain to become billionaires when the company goes public, probably sometime in 2004. they make a great comedy duo(³É¶ÔµÄ±íÑÝÕß)¡£When they first met as Ph. D. students, the pair say, they found each other horrible ¨C ¡°I still find him horrible,¡± adds Brin ¨C but driven together by a computer-science project aimed at coming up with better ways of searching the Web.

The idea behind the Google is that traditional search engines are stupid. They think relevance (¹ØÁª) is based on repetition; if you type in a request for Tiger Woods, say, you¡¯ll get websites listed according to how many times those words appear. Not only is this no guarantee of quality, but it¡¯s also open to abuse. If you own a Tiger fan site and want to lead more people to it, simply type his name thousands of times in the site¡¯s source code(±àÂë).

1What does the underlined word ¡°them¡± in the third paragraph refer to?

A. 40 million times              B. Speed and accuracy. 

C. TV and newspaper ads.        D. Web pages

2. Which of the following win greater customer satisfaction?

A. Yahoo        B. Tiger Woods      C. Larry Page     D. Google

3. It can be inferred that Page and Brin ______________.

A. hold very important positions in Google

B. are two ordinary computer programmers of Google.

C. used to hate each other very much

D. hold quite different opinions of computer-science

4. We can learn from the last paragraph that ___________.

A. Google is open to abuse

B. Google remains a traditional search engine

C. Google thinks relevance is based on repetition

D Google is better than traditional search engines

 

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º2011-2012ѧÄêɽ¶«¼ÃÄþãëÉÏÒ»ÖиßÈý12ÔÂÔ¿¼Ó¢ÓïÊÔÌâ ÌâÐÍ£ºÆäËûÌâ

¸ù¾Ý¶ÌÎÄÄÚÈÝ£¬´Ó¶ÌÎĺóµÄÑ¡ÏîÖÐÑ¡³öÄÜÌîÈë¿Õ°×´¦µÄ×î¼ÑÑ¡ÏѡÏîÖÐÓÐÁ½ÏîΪ¶àÓàÑ¡Ïî¡£

When you are hungry, what will you respond ? Have your favorite meal and stay quiet after that£¿   1   But it never lets you know£¬because you keep it busy thinking about your friends or favorite stars£®So it silently serves your needs and never lets itself grow£®When mind loses its freedom to grow£¬creativity sets a full stop£®This might be the reason why we all sometimes think ¡°What happens next£¿¡±, or ¡°Why can¡¯t I think£¿¡±

  2   Why reading but not watching TV£¿It is because reading has been the most educative tool used by us right from childhood£®Since it develops other aspects of our life£¬we have to take help from reading£®

When you read a book£¬of course you run your eyes through the lines and your mind tries to explain something to you£®  3   Now this seed is unknowingly used by you to develop new ideas£®If it is used many times£¬the same seed can give you great help to relate a lot of things£¬which you would have never thought of in your wildest dreams!

This is nothing but creativity£® Within no time you can start talking with your friends in English or any other language and never run out of the right words£®

So, friends, do give food to your thoughts by reading, reading and more reading£®  Go and get a book!

A£®The interesting part of the book is stored in your mind as a seed£®

B£®Why not do some reading while you are hungry?

C£®Just like your stomach, your mind is also hungry£®

D£®Now what are you waiting for?

E£®Hunger of the mind can be actually solved through wide reading£®

F£®Reading can help you make more friends, too£®

G£®Also this makes a significant contribution to your vocabulary£®

 

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

ͬ²½Á·Ï°²á´ð°¸