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1£®What does the woman plan to do£¿
A£®Stay at school£® B£®Visit her family£® C£®Go camping£®
2£®What's the topic of the conversation£¿
A£®A ship£® B£®A movie£® C£®A joke£®
3£®Why can't the speakers go on the trip£¿
A£®The man's uncle died£®
B£®The man got sick£®
C£®The woman has to attend a meeting£®
4£®What does the man mean£¿
A£®Benjamin is very honest£®
B£®Benjamin often breaks his words£®
C£®Benjamin is serious about his work£®
5£®What is the relationship between the speakers£¿
A£®Classmates£® B£®Colleagues£® C£®Teacher and student£®
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6£®What is wrong with Kathy'£¿
A£®She can't get on well with her father£®
B£®She is worried about her classmate Don£®
C£®She is upset because she failed the exam£®
7£®What are the speakers mainly talking about£¿
A£®Mid-term exam£® B£®School education£® C£®Pressure from parents£®
ÌýµÚ7¶Î²ÄÁÏ£¬»Ø´ðµÚ8ÖÁ9Ìâ¡£
8£®Where did the man grow up£¿
A£®In a city£® B£® In a small town£® C£®In the countryside£®
9£®What do the speakers see in the street£¿
A£®Kids playing ball£® B£®Nice shops£® C£®A lot of trash£®
ÌýµÚ8¶Î²ÄÁÏ£¬»Ø´ðµÚ10ÖÁ12Ìâ¡£
10£®Why does the woman hesitate at first£¿
A£®Because modern art is new to her£®
B£®Because she is busy with her final paper£®
C£®Because the exhibit is different from studying£®
11£®Which city will the art exhibit go to next£¿
A£®New York£® B£®Chicago£® C£®San Francisco£®
12£®What will they probably do after going to the modern art museum£¿
A£®Go back home£® B£®Visit another museum£® C£®Have something to eat£®
ÌýµÚ9¶Î¶Ô»°£¬»Ø´ðµÚ13ÖÁ16Ìâ¡£
13£®What kind of food does the man want to eat£¿
A£®Thai£® B£®Italian£® C£®Indian£®
14£®What does the woman suggest first£¿
A£®Going to a big city to find the right spices£®
B£®Looking around the local market£®
C£®The man should learn how to cook the food himself£®
15£®Where do the speakers live£¿
A£®In Australia£® B£®In America£® C£®In England£®
16£®Who may the woman ask for help£¿
A£®The man's brother£® B£®The man's uncle£® C£®Her mother£®
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17£®When did the train leave Glasgow last Thursday£¿
A£®At 8£º14 am£® B£®At 9£º20 am£® C£®At 8£º40 am£®
18£®What happened to the speaker£¿
A£®He lost his luggage£® B£®He missed his flight£® C£®He was badly injured£®
19£®What does the speaker mainly complain about£¿
A£®The train's delay£¬ poor service and no apology£®
B£®The rude manners of the crew and the high price of the ticket£®
C£®The delay of the train and poor-quality food of the restaurant£®
20£®What is the purpose of the tape-talk£¿
A£®To comment on the restaurant on the train£®
B£®To give the reason why he missed his flight£®
C£®To urge the company to make up for his loss£®
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21£® If a friend snaps at you or is unfriendly£¬ step back£¬ and with a sense of compassion£¬ try to experience life from his____£®
A£® perspective B£®priority C£®privilege D£® policy
22£®Many education experts stressed in the meeting that scores should not be viewed as the only ____ of success in one's study£®
A£® instruction B£®criterion C£®proportion D£® trick
23£®The severe competition in the job market has eventually ____ many students to the idea that knowledge plus ability is the only way out£®
A£® connected B£® converted C£® confirmed D£® combined
24£®The exhibition _____ such endangered animals as the giant panda and the Siberian tiger and describes the work being done to protect them£®
A£® exploits B£® features C£® demonstrates D£® inspects
25£® If you completely ____ foods and drinks that you love£¬ you'll only set yourself up to go on a large amount of those items later£®
A£®take out B£®cut out C£®give out D£®put out
26£® The shooting death of Michael Brown£¬ an 18-year-old black man£¬ who was fatally shot by a police officer£¬ has _____ a media firestorm across the US since Aug 9£®
A£®set up B£®set out C£®set aside D£®set off
27£®Africa is a very _____ continent£¬ with each country£¬ or even each part of a country having its own unique culture£®
A£® diverse B£® abstract C£® remote D£® vacant
28£®None of the students in the class likes the professor£¬ who is used to being _____ of everything they do£®
A£® optimistic B£® critical C£® interested D£® emotional
29£®The driver stopped his car so _____ that he was hit by the cab right behind him£®
A£® impolitely B£® violently C£® abruptly D£® cautiously
30£®It may be necessary to stop _____ in the learning process and go back to the difficult points in the lessons£®
A£®at intervals B£®at random C£®at ease D£®at length
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On Nov£® 18£¬ 1995£¬ violinist Itzhak Perlman performed a concert at Avery Fisher Hall at Lincoln Center in New York City£®
Stricken with polio £¨Ð¡¶ùÂé±ÔÖ¢£© as a child£¬Perlman 31 walked with the aid of two crutches£¨¹ÕÕÈ£©to a chair in the middle of the stage£®He carefully laid the crutches on the floor£¬ 32 one leg forward and the other underneath his chair£¬ picked up his instrument and nodded to the 33 to begin£®
But something went wrong£® After only seconds of playing£¬ one of the strings on his violin 34 £®The audience immediately knew what happened and fully expected the concert to be 35 until another string or even another insrument could be found£® But Perlman 36 them£® He quickly calmed down£¬ closed his eyes and then 37 the conductor to begin again£®So the orchestra played from where they had 38 and Perlman played on three strings£® He played 39 passion and power£® All the time he worked out new fingering in his mind to make up for the 40 string£® A work that few people 41 play well on four strings Perlman accomplished on three£®
When he finished£¬ a£¨n£© 42 silence hung in the room£®And then as one£¬ the crowd rose to their feet and 43 wildly£®Applause burst forth from every corner of the auditorium 44 fans showed deep 45 for his talent and his courage£® Perlman smiled and wiped the sweat from his forehead£®Then he raised his bow to 46 the crowd and said£¬ not proudly£¬ but in a 47 £¬ quiet£¬ holy tone£¬ ¡°You know£® sometimes it is the artist's 48 to find out how much music you can still make with what you have left£®¡±
Such was Itzhak Perlman£® a great violinist£® Playing a concert on three strings is not unlike his philosophy of life -- he 49 what he had left and still made music£®And isn't that true with us£¿As for me I'm 50 that the world£¬ more than ever£¬ needs the music only you and I can make£®
31£® A£® hopefully B£® painfully C£® immediately D£® eventually
32£® A£® exposed B£® exported C£® expanded D£® extended
33£® A£® conductor B£® audience C£® assistant D£® performer
34£® A£® burst B£® erupted C£® broke D£® collapsed
35£® A£® continued B£® paused C£® proceeded D£® organized
36£® A£® confused B£® amused C£® concerned D£® surprised
37£® A£® signaled B£® marked C£® consulted D£® indicated
38£® A£® cut off B£® put off C£® taken off D£® left off
39£® A£® with B£® for C£® to D£® of
40£® A£® original B£® similar C£® vague D£® missing
41£® A£® might B£® should C£® could D£® would
42£® A£® awesome B£® deliberate C£® subtle D£® evident
43£® A£® pursued B£® cheered C£® responded D£® observed
44£® A£® before B£® until C£® while D£® as
45£® A£® reputation B£® impression C£® appreciation D£® attention
46£® A£® delight B£® emerge C£® relax D£®quiet
47£® A£® thoughtful B£® tough C£® blank D£® weak
48£® A£® status B£® explanation C£® responsibility D£® intelligence
49£® A£® got accustomed to B£® gave way to C£® looked forward to D£® held on to
50£® A£® convinced B£® reminded C£® disappointed D£® informed
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A
My father wasn't a king£¬ he was a taxi driver£¬ but I am a prince-Prince Renato II£¬ of the country Pontinha£¬ an island fort on Funchal harbour£® It's in Madeira£¬Portugal£¬ where I grew up£® It was discovered in 1419£®
In 1903£¬ the king of Portugal sold the land to a wealthy British family£¬ the Blandys£¬ who make Madeira wine£® Fourteen years ago the family decided to sell it forjust €25£¬000£¬ but nobody wanted to buy it either£® I met Blandy at a party£® and he asked if I'd like to buy the island£® Of course I said yes£¬but I had no money-I was just an art teacher£®I tried to find some business partners£¬ who all thought I was crazy£®So I sold some of my possessions£¬put my savings together and bought it£®Of course£¬ my family£® my friends-all thought I was mad£®
When the King originally sold the island£¬he signed a document£¬ selling all the ¡°possessions and the dominions¡±of the island£®It means I can do what I want with it-I could start a restaurant£¬ or a cinema but nobody thought someone would start a country£®So that's what I did£ºI decided it would be my island£¬ about the size of a one-bedroom house£®
I have both a Portuguese passport and one for Pontinha £¨where my passport number is 0001£©£®There are four citizens£º me£¬ my wife£¬ my son and my daughter£®I am the police£¬ the gardener£¬everything£®I am whatever I want to be-that's the dream£¬isn't it£¿If l want to have a national flag£¬it could be blue today£¬red tomorrow£®I can change it any time£®Of course£¬my power is only absolute here£¬ where I am the true sovereign£®
I don't live in my country full time£¬ but I am often there£®My family sometimes drops by£¬ and other people come every day because the country is free for tourists to visit£» I never close for bad weather£®Sometimes I come here when I'm feeling lively£¬after a few drinks£®
Madeira is surrounded by water£¬but for some reason we all have to pay to swim in the ocean now£¬at the swimming spots£®However£®I have my island£¬which means I can come swimming whenever I want-it's as if someone has given me the key to the waters£®
Our lives are gone in a flash£®All change in the world begins with something very small£¬ and this is my country-just a small island£®
51£®How did the author get the island£¿
A£®It was a present from Blandy£®
B£®The king sold it to him£®
C£®He inherited from his father£®
D£®He bought it from Blandy£®
52£®It can be learned from the passage that____£®
A£®the author made his living by driving
B£®the author's wife supported to buy the island
C£®blue and red are the main colors of his national flag
D£®people can travel around the island free of charge
53£®What did the author do with his island£¿
A£®He set up a restaurant£®
B£®He started a cinema£®
C£®He founded his own country£®
D£®He opened a swimming pool£®
54£®From his own experience£¬ the author wanted to tell the readers that____£®
A£®you can change your life through small things
B£®you should buy your own country and become a king
C£®becoming a real ruler is of much fun
D£®life is too short£¬ so enjoy it to the fullest
B
On behalf of the Obama family£¬I want to wish you a very happy Thanksgiving£®
Like many of you£® we'll spend the day with family and friends£¬catching up£¬eating some good food and watching a little football£®Before we lift a fork£¬we lend a hand by going out in the community to serve some of our neighbors in need£®And we give thanks for each other£¬ and for all of God's blessings£®We all share this day£¬united by the gratitude for the bounty£¨¿¶¿®£© of this nation£®
And we welcome the contributions of all people-no matter their origin or color or beliefs-who call America home£¬ and who enrich the life of our nation£® It is a belief as old as our founding£º¡°Epluribus unum¡± -- that out of many£¬we are one£® We are reminded that this creed£¬ and America itself was never an inevitability£¬ but the result of ordinary people in every generation doing their part to uphold our founding ideals-by taking the blessings of freedom£¬ and multiplying them for those who would follow£®
As President Kennedy once wrote£¬ even as we give thanks for all that we've inherited from those who came before us-¡°the decency£¨×¯ÖØ£¬ÕýÅÉ£© of purpose£¬ steadfastness£¨¼á¶¨£©of resolve and strength of will£¬ for the courage and the humility£¬ which they possessed£®¡± we must also remember that ¡°the highest appreciation is not to utter words but to live by them£®¡±
Today£¬we are grateful to all Americans who do their part to live by those ideals£¬ including our brave men and women in uniform overseas and their families£¬ who sacrifice so much to keep America safe£®We are grateful to the countless Americans who serve their communities in soup kitchens and shelters£¬looking out for those who are less fortunate£¬and lifting up those who have fallen on hard times£®
This generosity£¬ this compassion£¬ this belief that we are each other's keepers£¬ is essential to who we are£¬ not just on this day£¬but every day£®It's easy to focus on what separates us£®But as we gather with loved ones on this Thanksgiving£¬ let's remember and be grateful for what ties us together£®
Our love of country£®Our commitment to justice and equality£®Our belief that America's best days are ahead£¬and that her destiny is ours to shape-and that our inherited ideals must be the birthright of all of our children£®
That's what today is all about£º that out of many£¬we are one£® Thank you£¬ God bless you£®
55£®What makes America as it is today£¿
A£®The blessings of God£®
B£®The persistent efforts of all Americans£®
C£®The contributions of people from different origin£®
D£®The bonus of World War II£®
56£®As is mentioned several times in the passage£¬ the sentence ¡°out of many£¬ we are one¡± implies
A£® although we come from different places£¬ now we share the same culture£®
B£® onjy if we unite as one can we make a better world£®
C£® we are unique ones picked out by God£®
D£® among the many countries in the world£¬ America is the best one to live in£®
57£® What's the purpose by referring to President Kennedy's saying£¿
A£®To testify what we have today is inherited from our ancestors£®
B£®To emphasis the importance of giving thanks to our forefathers and fellows£®
C£®To remind people to share happiness with others£®
D£®To encourage every American to do their own part in building the country£®
58£®President Obama's speech is made to £®
¢Ùcall on Americans to unite together and help each other
¢Ú raise money to help the people in need
¢Ûclarify how the Thanksgiving comes into being
¢Üexpress thanks to those who serve people at home or abroad
A£®¢Ù¢Ú B£®¢Û¢Ü C£®¢Ú¢Û D£®¢Ù¢Ü
C
lt's a dog's life for the nation's mutts - who are becoming anxious and aggressive through lack of play£¬ experts fear£®
A study of 4£¬000 dog owners has found a clear link between limited playtime and behaviour problems£¬ such as being nervous when left alone£¬ disobedience and snapping at other animals£® And while researchers can't be sure that playing less is directly to blame£¬ they say that games provide vital intellectual stimulation and exercise£® The Bristol University study showed that only one in five owners play with their dogs six times a day£® Half play two or three times a day and 10 per cent have just one play session£®
Mark Evans£¬ former chief vet for the RSPCA£¬ said that dogs are one of the few animals to play into adulthood£® He told the Sunday Times£º 'There is a clear association in the results£® Owners report more potential behaviour problems in dogs that play less£®'
Emily Blackwell -- who conducted the research uncovered tonight on Channel 4's Dogs£º Their Secret Lives - said dogs often enjoy playing so much that they slow down or change strategy to make the fun last longer£® The lecturer in canine£¨È®¿Æ¶¯Î welfare hopes that 10£¬000 people will eventually fill out the survey£® This will enable her to firmly establish whether lack of play is affecting dogs' moods - or if their emotional problems put their owners off spending time with them£® For instance£¬they may slow down when playing 'chase'£¬ allowing their owner to catch up with them and the game to continue£® Favourite games include wrestling£¬ chase and tugging at toys£¬ and perhaps unsurprisingly£¬'fetch' topped the list£® Tennis balls were the favourite toys£¬ followed by soft£¬ squeaky toys£¬ rubber balls and rope toys£®
The research comes just days after an animal charity warned that millions of dogs are becoming fat£® aggressive and destructive because their owners are clueless about basic animal care£®The PDSA said that treats including beer£¬ chips and leftover takeaways are making dogs fat and unwell ¨C and wamed that almost a million are never taken for a walk£®
59£® If the dogs are not looked after carefully£¬ £®
A£® they may become rebelling and damaging
B£® they may get hurt and run away from home
C£® they may become less active and dislike playing with the owners
D£® they are more likely to fight with other animals
60£® What is Emily Blackwell's opinion on dogs' behavior£¿
A£® If the owners spend less time with their dogs£¬ they may become aggressive£®
B£® Dogs know how to make their playing time last longer£®
C£® Only a few owners spend enough time playing with their dogs£®
D£® Some junk food or leftover may cause obesity on dogs£®
61£®The underlined word "this" in the fourth paragraph probably refers to £®
A£®canine welfare B£®Channel 4's Dogs£º Their Secret Lives
C£®the survey D£®favourite games
62£®What can we learn from the passage£¿
A£®Researchers confirm that playing less is to blame for dogs' bad behaviours£®
B£®Most of the owners will play with their dogs many times in a day£®
C£®Chase and tennis balls are the favourites of dogs£®
D£®It's obvious that dogs' behaviour problems are related with their playing time£®
D
Older couples in a bad marriage -- particularly female spouses -- have a higher risk for heart
disease than those in a good marriage£¬ finds the first nationally representative study of its kind£®The findings suggest the need for marriage counseling£¨×Éѯ£© and programs aimed at promoting marital quality and well-being for couples into their 70s and 80s£¬ said lead investigator Hui Liu£¬ a Michigan State University sociologist£®
"Marriage counseling is focused largely on younger couples£¬" said Liu£® "But these results show that marital quality is just as important at older ages£¬ even when the couple has been married 40 0r 50 years£® "
The study£¬ funded by the National Institute of Aging£¬ an arm of the National Institutes of Health£¬is published online in the Journal of Health and Social Behavior£®
Liu analyzed five years of data from about 1£¬200 married men and women who participated the National Social Life£¬ Health and Aging Project£® Respondents were aged 57-85 at the beginning of the study£®
The project included survey questions about marital quality£¬ lab tests and self-reported measures of cardiovascular health such as heart attacks£¬ strokes£¬ hypertension and high levels of C-reactive protein in the blood£®
Liu set out to learn how marital quality is related to risk of heart disease over time£¬ and whether this relationship varies bygender and/or age£® Among her findings£º Negative martial quality£¨e£®g£®spouse criticizes£¬ spouse is demanding£© has a bigger effect on heart health than positive marital quality£®In other words£¬ a bad marriage is more harmful to your heart health than a good marriage£®The effect of marital quality on cardiovascular risk becomes much stronger at older ages£®Meanwhile£¬marital quality has a bigger effect on women's heart health than it does on men's£¬ possibly because women tend to intemalize£¨Ê¹²ØÔÚÐĵף© negative feelings and thus are more likely to feel depressed and develop cardiovascular problems£® Heart disease leads to a decline in marital quality for women£¬ but not for men£® It's common that wives are more likely to provide support and care to sick husbands£¬ while husbands are less likefy to take care of sick wives£®"In this way£¬ a wife's poor health may affect how she assesses her marital quality£¬ but a husband's poor health doesn't hurt his
view of marriage£¬"Liu said£®
63£®The study suggests that £®
A£® elderly couples are less likely to be affected by marital quality
B£® the effect of marital quality on male and female is the same
C£® bad martial quality affects heart health more greatly
D£® marital quality has a positive effect on health
64£® We can infer from the the last paragraph that Liu agrees that £®
A£® marital quality has nothing to do with cardiovascular health
B£® gender or age may affect one's marriage quality
C£® marriage counseling is unnecessary for young couples
D£® husbands will not take care of their sick wives
65£® Why does marital quality have a bigger effect on women£¿
A£® Because women are weak physically£®
B£® Because women have to take care of their sick husband£®
C£® Because women tend to keep their negative feelings to themselves£®
D£® Because women expect too much oftheir marriage£®
66£®According to the passage£¬ who is most likefy to have a heart disease£¿
A£®Marie£¬ 40 years old£¬just got divorced£®
B£®Bill£¬ 66 years old£¬ lives with his wife and grandchildren£®
C£®Justin£¬ 28 years old£¬ got married recently£®
D£®Sophia£¬ 59 years old£¬ often quarrels with her husband£®
E
Energy independence£® It has a nice ring to it£® Doesn't it£¿ If you think so£¬ you're not alone£¬because energy independence has been the dream of American president for decades£¬ and never more so than in the past few years£¬ when the most recent oil price shock has been partly responsible for kicking off the great recession£¨¾¼ÃË¥ÍË£©£®
"Energy independence"and its rhetorical£¨Ð޴ǵģ© companion"energy security"are£¬ however£¬slippery concepts that are rarely though through£® What is it we want independence from£¬ exactly£¿
Most people would probably say that they want to be independent from imported oil£®But there are reasons that we buy all that old from elsewhere£®
The first reason is that we need it to keep our economy running£® Yes£¬ there is a trickle£¨ä¸ä¸Ï¸Á÷£©of biofuel£¨ÉúÎïȼÁÏ£©available£¬ and more may become available£¬ but most biofuels cause economic waste and environmental destruction£®
Second£¬ Americans have basically decided that they don't really want to produce all their own oil£® They value the environmental quality they preserve over their oil imports from abroad£® Vast areas of the United States are off-limits to oil exploration and production in the name of environmental protection£® To what extent are Americans really willing to endure the environmental impacts of domestic energy production in order to cut back imports£¿
Third£¬ there are benefits to trade£® It allows for economic efficiency£¬ and when we buy things from places that have lower production costs than we do£¬ we benefit£® And although you don't read about this much£¬ the United States is also a large exporter of oil products£¬ selling about 2 million barrels of petroleum products per day to about 90 countries£®
There is no question that the United States imports a great deal of energy and£¬ in fact£¬ relies on that steady flow to maintain ite economy£® When that flow is interrupted£¬ we feel the pain in short supplies and higher prices£® At the same time£¬ we derive massive economic benefits when we buy the most affordable energy on the world market and when we engage in energy trade around the world£®
67£® From the passage£¬ we know that biofuels £®
A£® keep America's economy running healthily
B£® prove to be a good alternative to petroleum
C£® do not provide a sustainable energy supply
D£® cause serious damage to the environment
68£® Why does America rely heavily on oil imports£¿
A£® Its own oil production falls short of demand£®
B£® Its own oil reserves are quickly running out£®
C£® It wants to keep Its own environment undamaged£®
D£® It wants to expand its storage of crude oil£®
69£® What can we conclude from the last paragraph£¿
A£® America doesn't have enough oil supplies£®
B£® People can benefit more from importing oil£®
C£® Energy independence is significant for Americans£®
D£® Short of energy may cause economic depression£®
70£® What is the author's purpose in writing the passage£¿
A£® To justify America's dependence on oil imports£®
B£® To stress the importance of energy conservation£®
C£® To arouse Americans' awareness of the energy crisis£®
D£® To explain the increase of international oil trade£®
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71£® Last year£¬it was the 'Liyuan Style'£¬ which means the fashion style of Peng Liyuan£¬ the first lady of China£¬ the eyes of the Chinese fashion world£®£¨attract£©
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73£®With in just a couple of hours£¬I hadn't the time to worry about such matter£®£¨ begin£©
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my £®£¨treasure£©
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75£® Although the number of new Ebola cases in West Africa is under control£¬ the United Nations more international help to fight the deadly virus£®£¨ call£©
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76£® For 3 weeks£¬I held both jobs£¬ working from eight in the morning till midnight£® Never in my life____£®£¨happy£©
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77£® The students the speech given by the professor£» they're laughing their heads off£® £¨enjoy£©
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78£® The man stole a ride home by hitching a shopping trolley to the back of a train£¬ only two miles to his death before it was able to stop£®£¨ drag£©
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night¡££¨ take£©
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difficult things easily£® Friedrich Schiller
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Text 1
M£º Only two days left until summer break£¡ What are your plans£¬ Jessica£¿
W£º I¡¯m off to Canada for a camping trip£® What about you£¬ Sam£¿
M£º I think I¡¯ll stay here and relax£®
Text 2
W£º What are you guys laughing at£¿
M£º It¡¯s this new movie called The Internship£® It¡¯s very funny£®
Text 3
M£º I¡¯m afraid we¡¯ll have to cancel the trip£¬ Grace£®
W£º Yeah£¬ this is much more important£® You¡¯ll have to go to the funeral£® He was your uncle£®
Text 4
W£º Benjamin promised to come for our party if he has time£®
M£º He often does it£¬ but he never seems to have time£® So you had better not take his words seriously£¬ otherwise you will get disappointed later£®
Text 5
W£º I often mistake Mark for Tom in class£® Can you tell them apart£¿
M£º No£® They are twins£¬ and many teachers make the same mistake like us£® It is really a little embarrassing to make mistakes all the time in face of so many students£®
Text 6
M£º Kathy£¬ you¡¯ve been a little quiet since you came in£® Is anything wrong£¿
W£º Oh£¬ I¡¯ve just been thinking about my classmate Don£®
M£º What¡¯s the matter£¿
W£º He failed the midterms£¬ but his father expected to see good grades£®
M£º I see£® So he couldn¡¯t deal with the pressure£¿
W£º Right£® His father expected nothing but good grades£® It¡¯s really too bad£® In fact£¬ Don had tried hard£®
M£º I¡¯m glad my parents have never pressured me that way£®
W£º Don said that his father never stopped giving him pressure£® He was constantly making comments like ¡°You¡¯d better study harder¡±£®
M£º It makes things really tough£®
Text 7
M£º Look at this place£¡ If I didn¡¯t know it was the city I grew up in£¬ I¡¯d swear I was somewhere else£¡
W£º Yeah¡so many houses are empty or broken down£® It wasn¡¯t like this when we were kids£®
M£º We used to play ball in the streets all the time£¬ but it looks so dangerous now£®
W£º And ugly£® Look at all that trash in the streets£® The wind just pushes it along£® What a lonely place£¡
M£º This used to be a great city£® People came from miles around to work in the shops and eat in the restaurants£® What a sad sight£¡ I guess when the glass making industry decided to move across the country where it¡¯s cheaper£¬ the quality of life here went away£¬ too£®
W£º Yeah£¬ let¡¯s go£® There¡¯s nothing left for us here£® I¡¯m getting depressed£®
Text 8
M£º Hi£¬ Cindy£® I¡¯ve got two tickets for the new modern art exhibit downtown£® Do you want to go with me£¿ I know you have finished your final paper£®
W£º But I don¡¯t know anything about modern art£¬ and I¡¯m no artist£®
M£º You don¡¯t have to be an artist to enjoy a good art show£¡ Besides£¬ at least it¡¯s something different from studying£®
W£º You¡¯re right£® Have you seen this exhibit yet£¿
M£º No£¬ but I¡¯ve heard that it¡¯s great£® The exhibit was in New York last summer and in Chicago after that£® And next week it will go to San Francisco£®
W£º Oh£® Well£¬ it ought to be good then£®
M£º And£¬ besides£¬ next door to the modern art museum is a new Asian art museum£® So we could hit both of them if you¡¯re up for it£®
W£º OK£® You¡¯ve talked me into it£® Do you want to go this afternoon£¿
M£º If you have time£® I¡¯m ready£®
W£º OK£® Let¡¯s meet after lunch£® I¡¯m starving now£® I¡¯ve got to go back home first£®
Text 9
M£º Mom£¬ I haven¡¯t been able to stop thinking about the food in India£® Ever since I got back from my trip£¬ I¡¯ve been dying for some real Indian food£® But there¡¯s nothing around here£® No restaurants serve the kinds of dishes I ate there£® I¡¯d have to go to a big city to find anything that comes close£® In our town£¬ they don¡¯t even make spicy food£¡
W£º Well£¬ Drew£¬ why don¡¯t you try making your own£¿
M£º I wish I could£¡ But I wouldn¡¯t know where to start£®
W£º I¡¯ll help you look online for some recipes£®
M£º How will we know which ones are good£¿
W£º We¡¯ll try them£¬ of course£¡ After some practice£¬ we¡¯ll be able to tell which ones we¡¯ll like best£®
M£º But I doubt we¡¯ll find everything we need in the grocery stores£® I¡¯m sure they use many unusual spices in India£®
W£º We will start simply£® I know I¡¯ve seen some Thai spices at the market ¡ª maybe some of them will be useful£® If we find that those aren¡¯t enough£¬ we can order some online£® There must be Indian grocery stores somewhere in America that will ship them£® If worse comes to worst£¬ I¡¯ll ask my brother in New York to look around£® He should be able to find a place that sells Indian spices£¡
M£º Thanks£¬ Mom£¡ This is gonna be fun£¡ I can¡¯t wait to start cooking£¡
Text 10
Hello£¬ manager£® I am David Robertson£® I am making this tape to report your poor service£® Thank you for listening£®
Last Thursday£¬ I traveled on the 8£º40 am train from Glasgow to London King¡¯s Cross Station and I was very unhappy with the service provided by your company£®
The train was forty minutes late leaving Glasgow£¬ and although the guard apologized£¬ we were not given any reason for the delay£® We then had further delays when the train crew changed at Preston and had to wait thirty more minutes£® As a result£¬ I missed my flight from London Heathrow Airport to Frankfurt and had to wait for several hours£®
What¡¯s more£¬ the service on the train was also very poor£® The trip took over five hours£® Unluckily£¬ there was no restaurant on the train and there was only a bar with soft drinks£® Worst of all£¬ the air conditioning broke down half way through the trip and it got hotter and hotter in the train£® However£¬ there was no apology for this£¬ and before we reached King¡¯s Cross£¬ the temperature was almost 40˚C£®
I would be very grateful if you could make up for my loss£¬ and make me feel more psychologically comfortable£® Thank you£®
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When it comes to the key to success£¬ the most important thing lies in doing every simple thing well£® Doing simple things may help us develop good qualities needed in undertaking difficult and important task£¬ which lay a solid foundation for our future development£®
When I was young£¬ I was under the impression that mother always nagged me how to do some housework well£¬ like making beds£¬ emptying rubbish or cleaning my room£¬ which I was almost fed up with£® One day£¬ after I finished washing dishes in the kitchen£¬ mother criticized me for my doing a bad job£¬ saying that if you don¡¯t do such a simple thing like washing dishes perfectly£¬ it is impossible for you to undertake any difficult task£® Although I felt very wronged£¬ my later life reminded me mother was right£® It was by doing simple things well that I gained many fine qualities to do something difficult£¬ of which the most important one was patience£®
From my perspective£¬ under no circumstances should we undervalue the power of doing simple things£® Instead we should regard them as the sources of experience£¬ skills and requirement of success£®¡°Great achievement only belongs to those who have the patience to do simple things perfectly£®¡±just as Friedrich Schiller used to say£®£¨words 215£©
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When I was young£¬ I was under the impression that mother always nagged me how to do some housework well£¬ which I was almost fed up with£® One day£¬ after I finished washing dishes in the kitchen£¬ mother criticized me for my doing a bad job£¬ saying that if you don¡¯t do such a simple thing like washing dishes perfectly£¬ it is impossible for you to undertake any difficult task£® Although I felt very wronged£¬ my later life reminded me mother was right£® It was by doing something simple well that I gained many fine qualities to do something difficult£¬ of which the most important one was patience£®
From my perspective£¬ under no circumstances should we undervalue the power of doing simple things£® which is the sources of skills and requirement of success£®£¨words 133£©
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