¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿¼Ù¶¨ÄãÊÇÕÔÆ½¡£Çë¸øÄãµÄÃÀ¹ú±ÊÓÑ Scott д·âµç×ÓÓʼþ£¬¸æËßËûÄãµÄÊåÊ彫ȥËûËùÔÚµÄ³Ç ÊвμÓÒ»¸ö¹ú¼Ê»áÒ飬˳±ãÉÓÈ¥ËûÉϴεç×ÓÓʼþÖÐίÍÐÄ㹺ÂòµÄÄǼ¸ÕÅÖйúÓÊÆ±£¬Í¬Ê±Ñ¯ÎÊ ËûÊÇ·ñ¿ÉÒÔ½Ó»ú¡£¸æËßËûÄãÊåÊåµÄÏà¹ØÐÅÏ¢£ºÍâÃ²ÌØÕ÷£¨¸ß¸ö×Ó£¬´÷ÑÛ¾µ£©£»º½°àºÅ£¨CA983 £©£» µ½´ïʱ¼ä£¨5 Ô 6 ÈÕÉÏÎç 10:10 £©¡£

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¡¾´ð°¸¡¿Dear Scott,

Thank you for your letter. I am writing to you to tell that my uncle will go to your city for an international conference. He will take the Chinese stamps you entrusted me to buy in your last email. He will get there at 10:00 on May 6. His flight is CA983. I wonder if it's convenient for you to pick up when he arrives. He is tall with glasses. His telephone number is 13764783892. Very appreciated for your supports!

Hope everything goes well with you !

Yours,

Zhao Ping

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±¾ÆªÊDzÄÁÏ×÷ÎÄ,ÒªÇóÒÔÕÔÆ½µÄÉí·Ý¸øÃÀ¹ú±ÊÓÑ Scott д·âµç×ÓÓʼþ£¬ÓʼþÄÚÈݰüÀ¨ÄãµÄÊåÊåµ½´ïµÄʱ¼ä¡¢°à´Î¡¢ÍâÃ²ÌØÕ÷£»Ñ¯ÎÊËûÊÇ·ñ¿ÉÒÔ½Ó»ú¡£

1.Ìâ¸É½â¶Á£º±¾Æª²ÄÁÏ×÷ÎÄÒªÇóÒÔÕÔÆ½µÄÉí·Ý£¬ÓõÚÒ»È˳Ƶķ½Ê½¸øÃÀ¹ú±ÊÓÑScottд·âµç×ÓÓʼþ£¬ÓʼþÄÚÈݰüÀ¨ÄãµÄÊåÊåµ½´ïµÄʱ¼ä¡¢°à´Î¡¢ÍâÃ²ÌØÕ÷£»Ñ¯ÎÊËûÊÇ·ñ¿ÉÒÔ½Ó»ú¡£ÎÄÖÐÉæ¼°½«À´·¢ÉúµÄÊÂÇéÓÃÒ»°ã½«À´Ê±¡£ÊéдʱҪעÒâÓÃÈ«ËùÌṩ²ÄÁÏ£¬Îľäͨ˳£¬ÄÚÈÝÍêÕû¡£

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿ÔĶÁ¶ÌÎÄ, Ñ¡Ôñ·½¿òÀïµÄ´Ê²¢ÓÃÆäÊʵ±µÄÐÎʽÌî¿Õ£¬Ê¹¶ÌÎÄÒâ˼ÍêÕû£¬Í¨Ë³¡££¨Ã¿´ÊÖ»ÄÜÓÃÒ»´Î£¬ÓÐÁ½ ¸öµ¥´ÊÊǶàÓàµÄ£©

move, busy, so, build, two, from, meet, become, write, too, but, careful

George Washington might have been the biggest library fines (·£¿î) in history. On October 5, 1789, the president borrowed two books ¡¾1¡¿ the New York Society Library (NYSL).

But there are no records of the books being returned. At the time, New York city was the US capital. (The capital was ¡¾2¡¿ to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1790 and then to Washington, D.C., in 1800.) The national government was in a ¡¾3¡¿ called Federal Hall. The library was in it, ¡¾4¡¿. Many American presidents borrowed books there, including America¡¯s ¡¾5¡¿ president, John Adams.

Librarians kept handwritten records of every book that was borrowed. Those records have been ¡¾6¡¿ preserved ( ±£´æ). Five months after he ¡¾7¡¿ president, Washington borrowed two books on government. They were due back on November 2, ¡¾8¡¿ there was no return date listed in the records.

That has led to 230 years of wondering: Was Washington too ¡¾9¡¿ running a new country to bring back the books? Or did a librarian forget ¡¾10¡¿ down the return date? Either way, the library has forgiven the fines.

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿¡ªIt's a shame to ask you to lend me more money, but. . .

¡ª ______ . You really need money to keep on with your education.

A.Don't be sillyB.Forget itC.No wayD.Don't mention it

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿ Can plants eat people? Probably not,but there are many plants that eat meat. Some of them are big. And they can eat small animals. One famous meat-eating plant is the Venus flytrap(²¶Ó¬²Ý).

The Venus flytrap is a very strange plant. It grows in dry parts of the United States. Its leaves are like the pages of a book. They can open and close very quickly. Inside the leaves,there are three small hairs. If a fly touches one of the hairs,the leaf closes quickly. The fly cannot get out. In about half an hour,the leaf presses the fly until it is dead. Then,the plant covers the fly. Slowly, the plant eats the fly.

Why do plants do it? Most plants get what they need from the sun,the air,and the ground. In some places,the ground is very poor. It doesn¡¯t have all these important things, specially nitrogen(µª). Animal meat has a lot of nitrogen, so some plants eat meat to get what they need. Let¡¯s hope that some of the bigger plants don¡¯t get the same idea!

¡¾1¡¿The Venus flytrap is a kind of_________.

A.plantB.animalC.foodD.meat

¡¾2¡¿The Venus flytrap grows in_________.

A.most parts of the worldB.some parts of Africa

C.dry parts of the United StatesD.wet parts of England

¡¾3¡¿From the passage,we learn that_________.

A.all plants can eat peopleB.all plants can eat animals

C.some plants can eat peopleD.some plants can eat animals

¡¾4¡¿Why do some plants eat animal meat? Because_________.

A.plants are dangerous to animals

B.animals are dangerous to plants

C.plants want to get what they need from animal meat

D.plants want to protect themselves against animals

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿¸ù¾Ý¶ÌÎÄÄÚÈݼ°Ëù¸øÌáʾ£¬²¹È«ÎÄÖе¥´Ê»òÓÃËù¸øµ¥´ÊµÄÕýÈ·ÐÎʽÌî¿Õ¡£

I ¡¾1¡¿(come) to England last year. I have been in England for eleven months. I am going to ¡¾2¡¿ my studies in England soon, and will leave for China next month. At the ¡¾3¡¿it was very difficult for me to communicate¡¾4¡¿other people in English. Now I can speak English m¡¾5¡¿better, and even understand English television, because I have studied hard and my teachers and ¡¾6¡¿(classmate) have helped me a ¡¾7¡¿. I have plenty of English friends now. They are very ¡¾8¡¿(help). They often invited me to¡¾9¡¿(they) houses. Because they are i¡¾10¡¿in learning about China and Chinese people.

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿ Christmas is one of the most important festivals in¡¾1¡¿£¨Î÷·½µÄ£©countries. But what does Christmas mean? Does it just mean having parties, decorating Christmas trees or giving presents to each other? No, not exactly. The true¡¾2¡¿£¨ Òâ Òå £©of Christmas lies behind all these things. Maybe Charles Dickens¡¯ novel, a Christmas Carol, can make you think more of Christmas.

Charles Dickens told us a story about a mean old man who is called Scrooge. Scrooge cares about nothing but his business and money. He treats others¡¾3¡¿£¨ ²» ºÃ £©. Then one Christmas Eve, Scrooge has a dream, in his dream, he meets the ghost of Jacob Marley, one of his partners. Marley was as mean as Scrooge when he was¡¾4¡¿£¨»î×ŵģ©. But after he was dead, he¡¾5¡¿£¨³Í·££©because of his unkindness. He tells Scrooge that three spirits£¨ÓÄÁ飩will visit him soon.

And then the day they have mentioned comes at last. One of them is the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come. The spirit takes Scrooge to see what will¡¾6¡¿£¨ ·¢ Éú £©to him when he is dead. Scrooge is sad and frightened to find that nobody cares about his death. He is so afraid that he¡¾7¡¿£¨ÐÑÀ´£©up and finds out it is just a nightmare.

The dream warns Scrooge to change¡¾8¡¿£¨ Ëû ×Ô ¼º £©and be kind to others. He changes quickly and he celebrates Christmas happily with his¡¾9¡¿£¨Ç×ÆÝ£©by giving gifts. From then on, he treats everyone with kindness and warmth. So what does the story tell us? Yes, it tells us we should show kindness to others by¡¾10¡¿£¨´«²¥£©love and joy.

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿¡ª Could you please tell me________ ?

¡ª If he is invited, he is sure to come.

A.when he will come to the birthday party

B.whether he will come to the birthday party

C.how he comes to the birthday party

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¡¾1¡¿He has already finished his homework. (¸ÄΪ·ñ¶¨¾ä£©

He _________ finished his homework ________.

¡¾2¡¿Jane has learned French since she was eight years old. (¶Ô»®Ïß²¿·ÖÌáÎÊ£©

________ _________ has Jane learned French?

¡¾3¡¿He cannot complete the task within two hours if he has no help. (¸ÄΪͬÒå¾ä£©

He cannot complete the task within two hours ________ _______ ________.

¡¾4¡¿The little boy is so clever that he can work out this difficult maths problem. (¸ÄΪ¼òµ¥¾ä£©

The little boy is ________ ________ to work out this difficult maths problem.

¡¾5¡¿Her parents don¡¯t allow her to stay up too late. (¸ÄΪ±»¶¯Óï̬£©

She ________ ________ to stay up too late by her parents.

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿--Mike likes playing basketball

--

A.So does he.B.So he is

C.So she doesD.So he does

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