| A£®Britain | B£®Israel |
| C£®Britain and Israel | D£®Israel and Thailand |
| A£®In Thailand people give fish and birds to the birthday person as presents. |
| B£®In Holland people give presents to unbirthday persons on their birthdays. |
| C£®In Nigeria people who were born in the same period may celebrate their birthdays on the same day. |
| D£®In Thailand a candle will be lighted on the birthday night. |
| A£®Different countries have different birthdays. |
| B£®Celebrating birthdays is exciting. |
| C£®Different ways of celebrating the birthday in different countries. |
| D£®Everyone likes celebrating his or her birthday. |
| Äê¼¶ | ¸ßÖÐ¿Î³Ì | Äê¼¶ | ³õÖÐ¿Î³Ì |
| ¸ßÒ» | ¸ßÒ»Ãâ·Ñ¿Î³ÌÍÆ¼ö£¡ | ³õÒ» | ³õÒ»Ãâ·Ñ¿Î³ÌÍÆ¼ö£¡ |
| ¸ß¶þ | ¸ß¶þÃâ·Ñ¿Î³ÌÍÆ¼ö£¡ | ³õ¶þ | ³õ¶þÃâ·Ñ¿Î³ÌÍÆ¼ö£¡ |
| ¸ßÈý | ¸ßÈýÃâ·Ñ¿Î³ÌÍÆ¼ö£¡ | ³õÈý | ³õÈýÃâ·Ñ¿Î³ÌÍÆ¼ö£¡ |
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| A£®huge dust storms can destroy carbon dioxide |
| B£®huge dust storms can destroy the oceans on the earth |
| C£®huge dust storms can¡¯t do anything beneficial for man |
| D£®planting trees is the only way to control huge dust storms |
| A£®dust plays a more important part than trees |
| B£®trees shouldn¡¯t have been planted in dry places |
| C£®carbon dioxide is harmful to everything on the earth |
| D£®environmental problems are more complex than expected |
| A£®grassland areas should be covered by forests |
| B£®trees hold more carbon than grass |
| C£®carbon can turn grass into dust |
| D£®less carbon can make trees grow faster |
| A£®learn about | B£®fight against | C£®live with | D£®give up |
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| A£®It¡¯s always important to carry enough small money with you every day. |
| B£®It only costs RMB 25 to get around in Chengdu by bus per month. |
| C£®Personal identification is not essential when applying for a bus card for locals. |
| D£®RMB 0.2 will be saved each time if you use E-purse rather than cash on the bus. |
| A£®Because Chengdu is not a safe place. |
| B£®Because some thieves like stealing things in crowded buses. |
| C£®Because people can transfer buses for fee within two hours. |
| D£®Because the bus card must be swiped at the front door. |
| A£®Because it helps know clearly where to get off the bus. |
| B£®Because it can prevent people from missing the bus they want to board. |
| C£®Because the place names are merely announced in Chinese. |
| D£®Because it prevents the passengers getting off at the next stop on time. |
| A£®The local Chengdu people who are interested in traveling by bus |
| B£®Regular bus riders in Chengdu who fails to manage their bus cards properly. |
| C£®New foreigners in Chengdu who want to get around by bus. |
| D£®Pedestrians in Chengdu who are considering choosing to take the bus. |
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| A£®desire is the root of both absolute and relative needs |
| B£®absolute needs come from our sense of superiority |
| C£®relative needs alone lead to insatiable demands |
| D£®absolute needs are stronger than relative needs |
| A£®They want to show their superiority. |
| B£®They find specialty important to meals. |
| C£®Their demands for food are not easily satisfied. |
| D£®Their choice of dinner is |
| A£®Understanding. | B£®Increase | C£®Difference | D£®Study |
| A£®absolute needs have no limits |
| B£®demands for quality are not insatiable |
| C£®human desires influence ideas of quality |
| D£®relative needs decide most of our spending |
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| A£®The water in Badwater is 86 meters below the level of the ocean. |
| B£®The highest air temperature in summer can reach as high as 74¡æ. |
| C£®The ground has been pushed up violently by explosions of volcanoes. |
| D£®There might have been marine lives living in Death Valley. |
| A£®Because they didn¡¯t respect Death Valley and thus they were punished. |
| B£®Because it is extremely hot in summer and dangerously cold in winter. |
| C£®Because they were not careful enough to take with them what they needed. |
| D£®Because several volcanoes erupted and caused huge explosions. |
| A£®bent and turned | B£®created and developed |
| C£®built and shaped | D£®changed and ruined |
| A£®encourage people to visit Death Valley, a beautiful national park in America |
| B£®warn people not to visit Death Valley because it is quite dangerous there |
| C£®introduce to us readers a special national park in America, Death Valley |
| D£®raise money for the protection of Death Valley because it is in danger now |
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| A£®they failed to present resumes that are free of mistakes |
| B£®they failed to give a detailed description of their background |
| C£®they crossed out their names from the applicants list themselves |
| D£®their handwriting on the resume was hard to recognize |
| A£®neglect | B£®recommend | C£®wipe | D£®introduce |
| A£®trees are as important as forests |
| B£®we should pay much attention to details |
| C£®we shouldn¡¯t go too far in details to lose our goals |
| D£®perfectionists are capable of achieving perfect results |
| A£®minor mistakes can be ignored |
| B£®failure is the mother of success |
| C£®adjustments are the key to the successful completion of any work |
| D£®keeping one¡¯s goal in mind helps decide which details can be overlooked |
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| A£®Kimchi contains something that can kill the H5N1 virus. |
| B£®Kimchi is rated as the healthiest food in the world. |
| C£®Kimchi is a cultural treasure for Koreans. |
| D£®Each person eats 40 pounds of kimchi per month. |
| A£®predict | B£®prevent | C£®overcome | D£®develop |
| A£®The nutritional value of kimchi. | B£®Ways of making kimchi. |
| C£®The origin of kimchi. | D£®Kimchi and what it means to Koreans. |
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¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º²»Ïê ÌâÐÍ£ºÔĶÁÀí½â
| A£®health and lifestyle | B£®science and technology |
| C£®culture and custom | D£®education and entertainment |
| A£®To wish them good luck . | B£®To make fun of them. |
| C£®Not mentioned . | D£®To draw attention to them . |
| A£®They are always held in churches whoever they are . |
| B£®The bride¡¯s father is usually present to lead his daughter to the bridegroom and give her to him . |
| C£®Only bridegrooms send rings to brides . |
| D£®Brides needn¡¯t make vows before bridegrooms . |
| A£®e-b-c-d-a | B£®e-c-d-a-b | C£®b-c-d-a-e | D£®e-a-c-d-b |
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