8£®¼Ù¶¨Ó¢Óï¿ÎÉÏÀÏʦҪÇóͬ×ÀÖ®¼ä½»»»ÐÞ¸Ä×÷ÎÄ£¬ÇëÄãÐÞ¸ÄÄãͬ×ÀдµÄÒÔÏÂ×÷ÎÄ£®ÎÄÖй²ÓÐ10´¦ÓïÑÔ´íÎó£¬Ã¿¾äÖÐ×î¶àÓÐÁ½´¦£®Ã¿´¦´íÎó½öÉæ¼°Ò»¸öµ¥´ÊµÄÔö¼Ó¡¢É¾³ý»òÐ޸ģ®
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Dear Sir£¬
I'm writing to become one of the host family of the British students£®
We have a large and clean house£¬where lies in the center of the city£®I can speak English fluent and my parents are both English teachers£®Therefore£¬we won't have any difficulty communicate with English speakers£®My father is an excellent driver but we can show foreign students around some places of interest in our own car£®Last month we received two American students£®We had a great fun together£®Besides£¬my mother cooked well£¬so the students will be able to enjoy delicious Chinese food£®I would greatly appreciate if I could have the opportunity to make friends with you£®
I'm looking forward to hearing about you£®
                                                                    Yours£¬
                                                                     Li Hua£®

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½â´ð Dear Sir£¬
I'm writing to become one of the hostfamilyof the British students£®
We have a large and clean house£¬where lies in the center of the city£®
I can speak Englishfluentand my parents are both English teachers£®
Therefore£¬we won't have any difficulty communicatewith English speakers£®
My father is an excellent driverbutwe can show foreign students around some
places of interest in our own car£®Last month we received two American students£®
We had a great fun together£®Besides£¬my mother cooked well£¬so the students
will be able to enjoy delicious Chinese food£®I would greatly appreciate¡Äif I could
have the opportunity to make friends with you£®
I'm looking forward to hearingaboutyou£®
                                                                    Yours£¬
                                                                     Li Hua£®

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4£®communicate¸ÄΪcommunicating    ¿¼²é¹Ì¶¨´îÅä     have any/some difficulty £¨in£© doing sth£®ÒâΪ£º×öijÊÂÓÐÀ§ÄÑ£»¹ÊÓÃcommunicating£®
5£®but¸ÄΪand/so   ¿¼²é¾äÒâ¹ØϵÒÔ¼°Á¬´Ê    ±¾¾äµÄÒâ˼ÊÇ£ºÎҵĸ¸Ç×ÊÇÒ»ÃûÓÅÐãµÄ˾»ú£¬£¨ÄÇô/Òò´Ë£©ÎÒÃÇ¿ÉÒÔÓÃÎÒÃÇ×Ô¼ºµÄ³µ´ø×ÅÍâ¹úѧÉú²Î¹ÛһЩÃûʤ¹Å¼££»´Ë´¦±íʾ˳³Ð/Òò¹û¹Øϵ£¬¹ÊÓÃand/so£® 
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8£®appreciateºó¼Óit    ¿¼²é¹Ì¶¨±í´ï   I would greatly appreciate it ifÒâΪ£ºÈç¹û¡­ÎÒ½«²»Ê¤¸Ð¼¤£»¹ÊÔÚappreciateºó¼Óit£®  
9£®you¸ÄΪthem    ¿¼²éÈ˳ƴú´ÊµÄÒ»ÖÂÐÔ    ´Ë´¦ÔÚ¾äÖÐ×÷±öÓָ´úµÄÊÇÀ´Öйú¼ÒÍ¥¼ÄËÞµÄÓ¢¹úѧÉúÃÇ£¬¹ÊÓÃthem£®
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15£®Jane and Betty£¨74£©are going£¨go£© on separate holidays in a few days'time£®
Jane£ºHello£¬Betty£®When£¨75£©are£¨be£© you off to Guangzhou£¿
Betty£ºNext Thursday evening£®
Jane£ºHow£¨76£©areyougetting£¨get£© to the airport£¿£¨77£©Isanybodyseeing£¨see£© you off£¿
Betty£ºYes£¬my brother Bob £¨78£©is going£¨go£© with me to the airport£®My plane £¨79£©leaves£¨leave£© at seven£¬so I think we'll take a taxi£®£¨80£©Areyougoing£¨go£© anywhere for the holiday£¿
Jane£ºYes£¬I £¨81£©am going£¨go£© to Xi'an with my parents on Friday£®
Betty£ºHow £¨82£©areyougetting£¨get£© there£¿By train£¿
Jane£ºNo£¬by air£®Well£¬I must be off£®See you when I £¨83£©get£¨get£© back£®Have a nice time in Guangzhou£®And say"Hi"to Bob for me£®
Betty£ºOf course£®Have a good trip£®
Jane£ºThanks£®The same to you£®

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19£®It is known to all that fresh air isbeneficialto our health and the new park benefits us all£¬so we should keep it clean£®£¨benefit£©

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16£®People who are slightly overweight or mildly obese£¨·ÊÅֵģ© have a lower risk of early death than normal weight individuals£¨¸öÈË£»¸öÌ壩£¬according to a new analysis of nearly 100international studies£®
The studies£¬most conducted within the past decade£¬included about three million adults from around the world£®The result of these studies by researchers at the National Center for Health Statistics in Maryland£¬part of the U£®S£®Centers for Disease Control and Prevention£¬shows that slightly overweight or obese people were six percent less likely to die from all causes compared to people of normal weight£®But the researchers found that seriously obese individuals were still at a 30percent greater risk of death compared to healthy-weight individuals£®
Study lead author Katherine Flegal says she was not surprised that overweight people would not have a higher death risk£®"Because we'd actually already read a lot of this literature and realized that death rates for overweight would be at least not higher than normal[weight£¬"she said£®"I guess l was a little bit surprised that it was definitely lower£®And l was also surprised that the lower rates of obesity didn't seem to differ from normal weight£®"
But Flegal stresses the difference in death rates appear to be small between normal-weight people and overweight and mildly obese individuals£®
The finding by Flegal and colleagues have raised new questions about the reliability£¨¿É¿¿ÐÔ£©of the so-called"body mass index"or BMI£¬a measurement of body fat as a ratio£¨±ÈÀý£¬±ÈÂÊ£©of height to weight£¬that has become popular in recent years among public health experts to measure potential health risks£®
But Heymsfield warns that individuals should not conclude that it's okay to put on extra kilograms£¬since being at a healthy weight lowers the risk for heart disease and diabetes£®

25£®Katherine Flegal feels surprised at the fact thatB£®
A£®obese people have higher death rates
B£®slightly obese people have lower death rates
C£®obese people tend to die early
D£®death rates have nothing to do with body weight
26£®What do we learn from the fifth paragraph£¿A
A£®BMI may not be so reliable£®
B£®The study provides further evidence for BMI£®
C£®BMI tells nothing about potential health risks£®
D£®BMI has been much questioned recently£®
27£®What can we conclude from the passage'£¿B
A£®It's OK to put on extra weight£®
B£®It doesn't matter if you are slightly obese£®
C£®Obese people are much healthier£®
D£®Body weight has nothing to do with death rates£®
28£®What topic does the passage mainly deal with£¿C
A£®Technology£®        B£®Dieting£®
C£®Health£®            D£®Death£®

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3£®There is a change in the air at the tea factory in Thika£¬Kenya£®It is free of the dark smoke that rises from the boilers£¨¹ø¯£© of Kenya's other tea factories£®
Makomboki Company has begun to use a less costly and more environmentally friendly fuel£®Instead of burning wood£¬the tea maker is burning briquettes£¨ÃºÇò£© made of animal material waste and something else£¬The Kenya Tea Development Authority supervises£¨ÖÎÀí£© Kenya's 66 tea factories£®Makomboki is the only one that does not use firewood in tea production£®The factory is deep in central Kenya's hilly and fertile tea-growing Muranga County£®The employees feed the factory's boilers with briquettes of plants and rice husks-the dry outer covering of the seeds
-mixed with sawdust£¨¾âм£©£®John Gitau£¬manager at the factory£¬expressed excitement about their change in fuels£®They haven't used a single cubic meter of firewood in the last six months£®
In 2010£¬the International Trade Center started a training project£®It aimed to teach Kenyan tea makers new production methods to help limit the release of climate change gases£®Since then£¬Makomboki Company has increased its use of optional fuels and stopped depending on firewood£®Taylors of Harrogate is a Makomboki customer£®The British tea and coffee company helped the Kenyan factory change fuels£®It connected Makomboki with the Living Earth Foundation£®The non-governmental group donated the machines to make the briquettes£®The husks for the briquettes come from otherfactories within Muranga and Kiambu counties£®The sawdust comes from factories near the tea factory£®
John Gitau said it takes the factory six months to produce about 2.5 million kilograms of tea£®During that time£¬their boilers would use up to 10£¬000 cubic meters of wood-or about 30£¬000 trees worth£®Furthermore£¬the factory used to spend 542£¬000ayearonfirewood£®Now£¬theintroductionofbriquetteshascuttheenergybillto295£¬600£®
John Gitau said representatives from other factories have visited Malomboli to learn more about the optional fuel£®He hopes more factories will follow his company's lead in 2016£®
28£®Malomboki use optional fuels mainly forD£®
A£®economic benefits           
B£®quality of the products
C£®the foreign assistance          
D£®environmental protection
29£®Malomboki Company might not have changed its fuel ifD£®
A£®it hadn't enough money for it         
B£®Taylors hadn't helped it   
C£®Harrogate hadn't offered it machines               
D£®it were not located in Muranga county
30£®What do the factories mentioned in Para.3 probably do£¿A
A£®They have fuel processing        
B£®They have rice processing
C£®They have wood processing   
D£®They carry out tea production
31£®Which of the following is NOT true£¿A
A£®There are only 66 tea factories in Kenya and they are all environmentally friendly factories
B£®Now Makomboki has saved 246£¬000 dollars on energy a year
C£®John thinks highly of the briquettes as an environmentally friendly fuel in tea production  
D£®Makomboki is a tea factory that doesn't use firewood to produce tea£®

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13£®In 2004£¬he went to Oxford University            he became interested in Chinese culture£®£¨¡¡¡¡£©
A£®whichB£®thatC£®whoseD£®where

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20£®I felt upset when I  was told£¨ 61£©that I would have to leave the company£®In order to find £¨62£©a new job to support the family£¬I read almost all the newspapers£¨63£©and set down almost all the telephone numbers in ads £¨64£©in my notebook and tried to call almost all the companies that needed new clerks£®Not until I £¨65£©found £¨find£© a job in a small town near Townsville did I calm down£®My new boss£¬Mr£®Brown£¬was one of my schoolmates £¨66£©who/that/whom I was getting along well with at school£®Both of us were£¨67£©excited£¨excite£© to see each other and we spent the whole afternoon £¨68£©talking£¨talk£© about things and persons £¨69£©that we remembered at school£®He asked me to give him some advice on how to enlarge his present business and he was £¨70£©entirely£¨entire£© happy about my advice£®

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17£®It isimpolite £¨polite£© to ask other's income£¬marriage and age£®

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18£®In a world today of immense technology£¬population growth and economic flourish£¬planning for future residential £¨ÊʺϾÓסµÄ£© and commercial developments needs careful analysis with well thought through assumptions about effects on the environment and the people of the community£®
One example of a growing city is Wooster£¬Ohio£¬my place of residency£¬Wooster in the last five years has grown considerably in population£¬leading to a growth in commercial business£®Surrounded by farmland£¬Wooster's planning commission chose to extend the community into these farm areas in the form of residential and commercial areas£®
Picture this-corn fields£¬old trees£¬clean air£¬country roads£¬and wildlife are all part of the area£®Within four years£¬the people living on this farm step outside on their front porch to view an extensive shopping center containing Wal-Mart£¬McDonald's£¬Wendy's£¬TCBY£¬and a Cinemark movie theatre£®The once quiet road is now a city street with traffic lights£¬busy with automobiles day and night£®The air smells of car exhaust and fast food£®
Some destruction of farmland is unavoidable when a city expands£®Instead of expanding outward£¬planning commissions should consider interior£¨ÄÚ²¿µÄ£©remodeling of a city£®Tearing down unusable buildings could remodel many areas inside the city£®In addition£¬commercialized buildings could extend upwards to avoid unnecessary use of land£®
Environmentally£¬commercial expansion is harmful to the land£®Besides forms of pollution£¬wildlife£¬including both plants and animals£¬is put at risk£®A planning commission could have realized the benefits of environmental protection£®Why not preserve the beauty and naturalness of the land while at the same time allowing for growth£¿
With a steady growth of population and the need for more homes and more workplaces£¬many problems arise when planning for the future£®The hillsides£¬fields and animal habitats need to be preserved while expanding cities£®In the future£¬a world covered with concrete and asphalt£¨Á¤Çࣩcould become reality£®Serious research and analysis are needed when planning for the future of our home communities and for the entire globe to avoid such a miserable result£®
32£®It can be inferred from the passage thatB£®
A£®it is unavoidable to destroy farmland when a city grows
B£®Wooster used to be a quiet and peaceful city surrounded by farmland
C£®with many nationwide shopping centers£¬Wooster lost its uniqueness
D£®commercial expansion has done no harm to Wooster
33£®It can be concluded from the passage that the author thinks Wooster's planning commissionC£®
A£®has tried its best to protect the environment¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡
B£®preserves the hillsides and fields
C£®should have avoided such a tragedy ¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡
D£®is the cause of environmental pollution
34£®Which of the following sentences best expresses the main idea of the passage£¿D
A£®Planning for future residential and commercial developments has bad effects on the environment and the living things£®
B£®With a safety growth of population£¬more homes and more workplaces are needed£®
C£®With immense technology£¬population growth and economic prosperity£¬we need to plan for the future£®
D£®When planning for future developments£¬effects on the environment should be taken into account£®
35£®What is the writer's attitude towards the current planning of cities£¿A
A£®Critical£¨ÅúÆÀµÄ£©£®                                            
B£®Favorable£®
C£®Objective£¨¿Í¹ÛµÄ£©                                             
D£®Depressed£®

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