4£®Î¢ÐÅÅóÓÑȦÒѾ­³ÉΪ·Ç³£ÊÜ»¶Ó­µÄÉ罻ƽ̨£®×î½üÄã°àÕë¶Ô"ÊÇ·ñ¸¸Ä¸Ó¦¸Ã±»ÔÊÐí¿´ÄãµÄ΢ÐÅÅóÓÑȦ"ÕâÒ»»°Ì⿪չÌÖÂÛ£¬´ó¼Ò·¢±íÁ˲»Í¬µÄ¿´·¨£®Çë¸ù¾ÝÏÂÃæËù¸øÄÚÈÝ£¬·´Ó³ÌÖÂÛÇé¿ö²¢±í´ï×Ô¼ºµÄ¹Ûµã£®
  ²»Í¬¹Ûµã                      ÀíÓÉ
 
  30%Ö§³Ö
1¡¢ÇàÉÙÄêȱ·¦Éç»á¾­Ñ飬ÐèÒª¸¸Ä¸µÄÖ¸µ¼£®
2¡¢²»ÔÊÐí¸¸Ä¸²ÎÓ룬¿ÉÄÜʹ´ú¹µÔ½À´Ô½À´´ó£¬¶øÔÊÐí¸¸Ä¸²ÎÓë΢ÐÅÅóÓÑȦ¿ÉÒÔ°ïÖú¸¸Ä¸Óë×ÓÅ®¹µÍ¨²¢ÇÒʹ¹Øϵ¸ü¼ÓÇ×½ü£®
  70% ·´¶Ô1¡¢Ã¿¸öÈËÐèÒªÒþ˽£¬¼ÙÈ縸ĸÔÊÐí¸¸Ä¸¿´£¬ÎÒÃǽ«Ã»ÓÐ×Ô¼ºµÄÃÜÃØ£®
2¡¢Î¢ÐÅÅóÓÑȦÊÇÎÒÃǺÍͬÁäÅóÓѽ»Á÷ƽ̨£¬Èç¹ûÔÊÐí¸¸Ä¸¿´ÎÒÃǵÄ΢ÐÅȦ£¬ÎÒÃǽ«ÎÞ·¨×ÔÓɵĺÍÅóÓÑÓÉ·ÖÏíÎÒÃǵÄÏë·¨£®
  ÄãµÄ¹Ûµã·¢±íÄã×Ô¼ºµÄ¿´·¨£®
×¢Ò⣺1£®´ÊÊý120×óÓÒ£¬¿ªÍ·ºÍ½áβÒѸø³ö£¬²»¼ÆÈë×Ü´ÊÊý
2£®²Î¿¼´Ê»ã£ºÎ¢ÐÅÅóÓÑȦ  the Moments of WeChat   ²ÎÓë involvement
Òþ˽ privacy      ´ú¹µ generation gap£®

·ÖÎö ±¾ÆªÊéÃæ±í´ïÊôÓÚͼ±íÀà×÷ÎÄ£¬¸ù¾ÝÌáʾÐÅÏ¢Õë¶Ô"ÊÇ·ñ¸¸Ä¸Ó¦¸Ã±»ÔÊÐí¿´ÄãµÄ΢ÐÅÅóÓÑȦ"ÕâÒ»»°Ì⿪չÌÖÂÛ£¬´ó¼Ò·¢±íÁ˲»Í¬µÄ¿´·¨£¬Ð´×÷ʱעÒâÒÔϼ¸µã£º1¡¢×ÐϸÔĶÁÓйØÌáʾ£¬ÅªÇåÊÔÌâÌṩµÄËùÓÐÐÅÏ¢£¬Ã÷È·¼¸¸öÒªµã£º·Ö±ð´Ó²»Í¬¹ÛµãºÍÀíÓÉÁ½¸ö·½ÃæÀ´ÌÖÂ۸û°Ìâ 2¡¢Í¼±íÊÇÎÄÕµÄ×ÜÌå¿ò¼Ü£¬ÒªÔÚͼ±íµÄ·¶Î§ÄÚ½øÐзÖÎö¡¢¹¹Ë¼ºÍÏëÏó£®ÒªÒÀ¾ÝÌáʾÇé¾°»ò´ÊÓ°´ÕÕÒ»¶¨Âß¼­¹ØϵÀ´Ð´£®±¾ÎÄд×÷ʱ¿ÉÒÔ°´ÕÕÒªµãËù¸øµÄ˳Ðòд£®3¡¢¸ù¾ÝÒª±í´ïµÄÄÚÈÝÈ·¶¨¾ä×ÓµÄʱ̬¡¢Óï̬£»¾Í±¾ÎĶøÑÔÓ¦¸ÃÓÃÒ»°ãÏÖÔÚʱ̬£®4£®×¢ÒâʹÓø߼¶´Ê»ãºÍ¾äʽ£¬ÒÔÔö¼ÓÎÄÕµÄÁÁµã£®
¡¾ÁÁµã˵Ã÷¡¿±¾ÎĽṹ½ô´Õ£¬²ã´Î·ÖÃ÷£¬¶øÇÒʹÓÃÁ˶àÖÖ±í´ï£ºare for Ô޳ɣ»are against·´¶Ô£»For one thingÒ»·½Ã棻For another thing£¬ÁíÒ»·½Ã棻In my opinionÒÔÎҵĹ۵ãÀ´¿´£»BesidesÁíÍ⣻
Secondly£¬without parents'involvement£¬the generation gap between our parents and us will become bigger and bigger£®£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐÍ£©
In my opinion£¬it is meaningful to let parents see our Moments£¬which makes them happy and stops them from worrying about me£®£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐÍ£©

½â´ð Recently our class held a heated discussion about whether our parents should be allowed to see our Moments£®
      30% of the students are for it£®Firstly£¬as teenagers£¬we need our parents'guidance in social experience£®Secondly£¬without parents'involvement£¬the generation gap between our parents and us will become bigger and bigger£®£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐÍ£©
     70% of the students are against it£®For one thing£¬everyone needs some privacy£®If parents are allowed to see our Moments£¬we won't have our own secrets£®For another thing£¬the Moments of WeChat is mainly a way of communicating with friends of our own age£®If our parents are allowed to see it£¬we can't share our thoughts with our friends freely£®£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐÍ£©
     In my opinion£¬it is meaningful to let parents see our Moments£¬which makes them happy and stops them from worrying about me£®£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐÍ£©Besides£¬our parents feel like seeing our Moments£¬which shows their care and love for us£®£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐÍ£©

µãÆÀ Ó¢Óïд×÷ÊÇÒ»ÏîÖ÷¹ÛÐÔ½ÏÇ¿µÄ²âÊÔÌ⣮Ëü²»½ö¿¼²éѧÉúµÄд×÷»ù´¡¶øÇÒ»¹¿¼²éѧÉúÔÚд×÷¹ý³ÌÖÐ×ÛºÏÔËÓÃÓïÑÔµÄÄÜÁ¦£®ÔÚ׫дʱҪעÒâÖ÷νÓïÒ»Ö£¬Ê±Ì¬ºôÓ¦£¬ÓôÊÌùÇеȣ®ÒªÌá¸ßÓ¢Óïд×÷ˮƽ£¬ÐèÒªÁ½·½ÃæµÄѵÁ·£ºÒ»ÊÇÓïÑÔ»ù´¡·½ÃæµÄѵÁ·£¬ÒªÓÐÔúʵµÄÔì¾ä¡¢·­ÒëµÈ»ù±¾¹¦£¬¼´Óôʷ¨¡¢¾ä·¨µÈ֪ʶÔì³öÕýÈ·ÎÞÎóµÄ¾ä×Ó£»¶þÊÇд×÷֪ʶºÍÄÜÁ¦ ·½ÃæµÄѵÁ·ÒÔÕÆÎÕд×÷·½ÃæµÄ»ù±¾·½·¨ºÍ¼¼ÇÉ£®

Á·Ï°²áϵÁдð°¸
Ïà¹ØÏ°Ìâ

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£ºÌî¿ÕÌâ

17£®Several young girls weresittingaroud£¨ÏÐ×ø×Å£©£¬looking bored£®

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£ºÔĶÁÀí½â

18£®Most episodes£¨Çé¿ö£©of absent-mindedness-forgetting where you left something or wondering why you just entered a room-are caused by a simple lack of attention£¬says Schacter£®"You're supposed to remember something£¬but you haven't encoded £¨Òë³ÉÃÜÂ룩it deeply£®"
Encoding£¬Schacter explains£¬is a special way of paying attention to an event that has a major impact£¨Ó°Ï죩on recalling it later£®Failure to encode properly can create annoying situations£®If you put your mobile phone in a pocket£¬for example£¬and don't pay attention to what you did because you're involved in a conversation£¬you'll probably forget that the phone is in the jacket now hanging in your wardrobe£¨Ò¹ñ£©£®"Your memory itself isn't failing you£¬"says Schacter£®"Rather£¬you didn't give your memory system the information it needed£®"
Lack of interest can also lead to absent-mindedness£®"A man who can recite sports statistics from 30years ago£¬"says Zelinski£¬"may not remember to drop a letter in the mailbox£®"Women have slightly better memories than men£¬possibly because they pay more attention to their environment£¬and memory depends on just that£®
"Visual cues can help prevent absent-mindedness"£¬says Schacter£®"But be sure the cue is clear and available£¬"he cautions£®If you want to remember to take a medication£¨Ò©Îwith lunch£¬put the pill bottle on the kitchen table-don't leave it in the medicine chest and write yourself a note that you keep in a pocket£®
Another common episode of absent-mindedness£ºwalking into a room and wondering why you're there£®Most likely£¬you were thinking about something else£®"Everyone does this from time to time£¬"says Zelinski£®The best thing to do is to return to where you were before entering the room£¬and you'll likely remember£®

21£®We can learn from the passage that encodingC£®
A£®slows down the process of losing our memories
B£®helps us understand our memory system better
C£®gets us to recall something from our memories
D£®helps us to find out the mobile phone in the pocket
22£®Why do women have better memories than men£¿C£®
A£®They seldom use their mobile phones£®
B£®They are more nervous about the environment£®
C£®They are more interested in what's happening around them£®
D£®They usually take some special medicine to improve memories£®
23£®The sentence underlined in Paragraph 4means thatB£®
A£®a note in the pocket will easily get lost
B£®putting something in sight can be a good reminder
C£®taking medicine can get rid of absent-mindedness
D£®people of absent-mindedness must take medicine with them
24£®What is the passage mainly about£¿A£®
A£®The causes of absent-mindedness£®
B£®The environment and memory£®
C£®A way of encoding and recalling£®
D£®The process of gradual memory loss£®

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£ºÔĶÁÀí½â

12£®What the Queen keeps inside it has long remained a mystery£®Now a new book claims to cast light on the contents of the royal matriarch's main possession£®
What's in The Queen's Handbag£ºAnd Other Royal Secrets reveals that though the 81-year-old British monarch£¨¾ýÖ÷£©doesn't carry cash£¬keys or passport-since she doesn't own one-her bag is far from empty£®Inside are a collection of little presents from her children£¬a make-up case£¬some family photos£¬and a camera sometimes£®There's also an s-shaped metal hook that she places on the dinner table's edge to hang her bag from so that it doesn't touch the floor£®
Should you ever meet the Queen£¬it's not what's in her bag but what she does with it that should concern you£®She uses her bags£¬of which she has about 200 made by London-based firm Launier£¬to send signals to her staff£®
Before dining with Queen£¬a point is made to inform guests that dinner will end in about five minutes after she places her bag on the table top£®
On walkabouts£¬she holds the bag to one side to show she intends to move on£¬at which point a lady-in-waiting joins the conversation£¬allowing her to slip away without causing offence£®
When at a banquet£¬if the Queen's bag is placed on the floor then it's a sign that she's not finding the conversation interesting£¬and wants nothing more than to escape£®However£¬if the royal bag is dangling£¨Ðü¹Ò£© happily from the crook of her left arm£¬she is happy and relaxed£®
32£®What does the article tell us about the Queen's handbag£¿D
A£®She seldom has it with her£®
B£®She always carries the same handbag£®
C£®It used to be thought empty£®
D£®Its contents are not the same as ours£®
33£®When is it necessary for the Queen to convey her intention with her bag£¿A
A£®When she is with guests£®
B£®When she eats outside£®
C£®When she has her staff around£®
D£®when she is tired of speaking£®
34£®The Queen gives no signal when sheA
A£®hangs her bag on the metal hook 
B£®hangs her bag from her left arm
C£®places her bag on the floor     
D£®puts her bag on the table top
35£®By holding her bag to one side£¬the Queen shows she wants toC
A£®talk to her lady-in-waiting         
B£®start a conversation
C£®stop to continue her walk          
D£®go on with the talk£®

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£º¶ÌÎĸĴí

19£®Çë¸ÄÕýÏÂÃæ¶ÌÎÄÖеĴíÎó£®ÎÄÖй²ÓÐ10´¦ÓïÑÔ´íÎó£¬Ã¿¾äÖÐ×î¶àÓÐÁ½´¦£®Ã¿´¦´íÎó½öÉæ¼°Ò»¸öµ¥´ÊµÄÔö¼Ó¡¢É¾³ý»òÐ޸ģ®Ôö¼Ó£ºÔÚȱ´Ê´¦¼ÓÒ»¸ö©×Ö·ûºÅ£¨¡Ä£©£¬²¢ÔÚÆäÏÂÃæд³ö¸Ã¼ÓµÄ´Ê£»É¾³ý£º°Ñ¶àÓàµÄ´ÊÓÃбÏߣ¨\£©»®µô£» Ð޸ģºÔÚ´íµÄ´ÊÏ»­Ò»ºáÏߣ¬²¢ÔڸôÊÏÂÃæд³öÐ޸ĺóµÄ´Ê£®×¢Ò⣺1£®Ã¿´¦´íÎó¼°ÆäÐ޸ľù½öÏÞÒ»´Ê£»2£®Ö»ÔÊÐíÐÞ¸Ä10´¦£¬¶àÕߣ¨´ÓµÚ11´¦Æ𣩲»¼Æ·Ö£®
Last summer holiday£¬I go to Dalian with my parents£®We travelled there on air£®Dalian is a very beautiful and modern city£®In morning£¬we arrived at the hotel£®After breakfast£¬we began us tour£®First£¬we took a bus to Sea Park£®There were such many different kinds of fish that I couldn't believe my eye£®Then we had lunch in a restaurant£®The seafood£¬which is wellknown£¬was delicious£®After lunch we went swim£®During this trip£¬we also went to another places of interest£®Several days later£¬we left for Dalian£®We felt very happily£®This was the reason why we didn't feel tired£®

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£ºÊéÃæ±í´ï

9£®¼ÙÈçÄãÊÇÀ£¬ÄãµÄÍøÓÑTom¼´½«Íâ³öÂÃÐУ¬ÇëÄã¸ù¾ÝÒÔÏÂÌáʾ£¬ÓÃÓ¢Óï¸øËûд·âµç×Ó
Óʼþ£¬ÏòËû½éÉÜÄã¶ÔÂÃÓεĿ´·¨²¢ÌáÐÑËûÂÃÐÐ×¢ÒâÊÂÏ
1£®ÂÃÓÎÊÇÒ»Öַdz£ºÃµÄ»î¶¯£®
2£®ÂÃÐÐÇ°µÄ×¼±¸£ºÁ˽âÌìÆø£¬´øºÃÒ·þ¡­
3£®ÂÃÐÐʱעÒâÒûʳÎÀÉúºÍ°²È«£¬·ÀֹС͵£®
ÒªÇó£º1£®¿ÉÒÔÊʵ±Ôö¼Óϸ½Ú£¬ÒÔʹÐÐÎÄÁ¬¹á£¬²»µÃÖð¾ä·­Ò룻
2£®´ÊÊý£º100´Ê×óÓÒ£¬¿ªÍ·ÒѸø³ö£¬²»¼ÆÈë×Ü´ÊÊý£®
Dear Tom£¬
I'm glad to hear that you are going to travel£®Now I'd like to share my view on travelling with you£®
                                   
Yours£¬LiHua£®

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£ºÔĶÁÀí½â

16£®When someone told 85-year-old Johnny Long that he was called a living legend£¨´«Æ棬´«Ëµ£©£¬he replied£¬"I don't know about that£¬but I'm living£¬and that's important£®"
Starting in 1949as a high school band director and later as director of the Troy University band£¬Johnny Long became known as one of the most inspirational band directors in America£®More than three hundred of his students went on to become band directors themselves£®"I have been a band director for more than 60years and all I know about the word¡®band'is that you spell it F-U-N£¬"Long said£®"And if you change that£¬it's over£®"
Long retired 14years ago to spend more time with his wife Mary Lynn£®But his passion £¨ÈÈÇ飩 for bands never went away£®He dreamed of forming a top-notch £¨°Î¼âµÄ£© community band in Troy£®But Troy is a small town-with not a ton of top-notch talent£®"I didn't think it would work£¬I really didn't£¬"Long said£®
Fortunately£¬there was one thing Johnny hadn't considered£ºthe devotion of his former students£®Now£¬once a week during the concert season£¬they drive in from all over the south and across the decades£®
65-year-old Bobby Johnson was in Long's first college class£®He lives in Atlanta and drives 3hours to practice£®Johnson said he does it because Long's"such a unique character and I just admire him so much£®"
Many people do it for the same reason£®"He's the single biggest influence on my career£®""He was a father figure to me£®He's just a genuine person£®"
Long said he wanted to be remembered as a teacher£®"I think¡®teacher'is the greatest word in the English language£¬next to¡®mother'£®"

21£®What Long got most from bands wasA£®
A£®pleasure     
B£®health     
C£®wealth       
D£®honor
22£®Why did Long retire 14years ago£¿C
A£®Because he found no band talent in Troy£®
B£®Because he was tired of working as a director£®
C£®Because he hoped to spend more time with his wife£®
D£®Because he found his students were not devoted to music£®
23£®The words of Long's students show thatC£®
A£®Long treated his students like a father
B£®Long was born to be a good teacher
C£®Long influenced his students greatly
D£®Long was very special as a teacher
24£®What's the main idea of the text£¿D
A£®Johnny Long still teaches at the age of 85£®
B£®A band director had more than 300students£®
C£®A band lover organized a band in a small town£®
D.85-year-old band director still inspires others£®

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£ºÍêÐÎÌî¿Õ

13£®Most people believe they don't have much imagination£®They are£¨50£©A£®Everyone has imagination£¬but most of us£¬once we become adults£¬forget how to £¨51£©Cit£®Creativity isn't always £¨52£©Dwith great works of art or ideas£®People at work and in their free time£¨53£©Bthink of creative ways to solve problems£®Maybe you have a goal to achieve£¬a tricky question to answer or you just want to expand your mind!Here are three techniques to help you£®
Making connections This technique involves taking£¨54£©Bideas and trying to find links between them£®First£¬think about the problem you have to solve or the job you need to do£®Then find an image£¬word£¬idea or object£¬for example£¬a candle£®Write down all the idea/words£¨55£©Dwith candles£ºlight£¬fire£¬matches£¬wax£¬night£¬silence£¬etc£®Think of as many as you can£®The next stage is to relate the£¨56£©Ato the job you have to do£®So imagine you want to but a friend an original£¨57£©C£» you could buy him tickets to match or take him out for the night£®
NO limits!Imagine that normal limitations don't£¨58£©C£®You have as much time/space/money£¬etc£®as you want£®Think about your goal and the new£¨59£©A£®If your goal is to learn to ski£¬£¨60£©D£¬you can now practise skiing every day of your life £¨because you have the time and the money£©£®Now £¨61£©B this to reality£®Maybe you can practise skiing ever day in December£¬or every Monday in January£®
Be someone else!Look at the situation from a £¨62£©Cpoint of view£®Good businessmen use this technique in trade£¬and so do writes£®Fiction writers often imagine they are the£¨63£©Din their books£®They ask question£ºWhat does this character want£¿Why can't she get it£¿What changes must she make to get what she wants£¿If your goal involves other people£¬put yourself in their£¨65£©A£®The best fishermen think like fish!

50£®A£®wrongB£®unbelievableC£®reasonableD£®realistic
51£®A£®put up withB£®catch up withC£®make use ofD£®keep track of
52£®A£®equippedB£®comparedC£®coveredD£®connected
53£®A£®skillfullyB£®routinelyC£®vividlyD£®deeply
54£®A£®familiarB£®unrelatedC£®creativeD£®imaginary
55£®A£®presentedB£®markedC£®litD£®associated
56£®A£®ideasB£®ambitionsC£®achievementD£®technique
57£®A£®experienceB£®serviceC£®presentD£®object
58£®A£®workB£®lastC£®existD£®change
59£®A£®possibilitiesB£®limitationsC£®tendencyD£®practice
60£®A£®in factB£®in particularC£®as a wholeD£®for example
61£®A£®devoteB£®adaptC£®leadD£®keep
62£®A£®privateB£®globalC£®differentD£®practical
63£®A£®positionsB£®dreamsC£®imagesD£®directions
64£®A£®positionsB£®dreamsC£®imagesD£®directions

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

¿ÆÄ¿£º¸ßÖÐÓ¢Óï À´Ô´£º ÌâÐÍ£ºÔĶÁÀí½â

1£®Life gets noisier every day and very few people can be free from noise of some sort or another£®It doesn't matter where you live---in the middle of a modern city or a faraway village---the chances are that you'll be disturbed by jet planes£¬transistor radios£¬oil-powered engines£¬etc£®We seem to be getting used to noise£¬too£®Some people feel quite lonely without background music while they're working£®
Scientific tests have shown that total silence can be a very frightening experience for a human being£®However£¬some people are fond of listening to pop music which is very loud£¬and this can do harm to their eardrums£¨¶ú¹Ä£©£®The noise level in some discos is far above the usual safety level for heavy industrial areas£®
One recent report about noise and concentration£¨×¨×¢£©£®suggested that although a lot of people say that any noise disturbs their concentration£¬what really influences their ability to concentrate is a change in the level of noise£®It goes on to say that a background noise which doesn't change too much £¨music£¬for example£© may even help people to concentrate£®
21£®According to this passage£¬the noise pollutionC£®
A£®has become the worst in the countryside   
B£®has become better in big cities
C£®has spread from cities to villages      
D£®has been controlled in modern cities
22£®What does background music refer to£¿A
A£®Music played while people are working£®
B£®Music played in the backyard£®
C£®Noise that continues while you're listening to other noises£®
D£®Music used to help people to concentrate£®
23£®Some people have their hearing harmedA£®
A£®while listening to pop music         
B£®in complete silence
C£®when speaking loudly           
D£®while watching TV£®

²é¿´´ð°¸ºÍ½âÎö>>

ͬ²½Á·Ï°²á´ð°¸