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12£®Communication has always been one of the basic keys to success£®They say great public speakers are born and not made£¬but there are always some tricks of the trade which will help you in becoming a great orator£®£¨36£©DRead£¬Study and Learn
Reading and studying helps you to learn different words and ways to convey your idea£®Watch how other speakers talk£®£¨37£©A Learn from the experts and get tips from them if you can£®
Posture is Important
Who said that communication is just speaking words£¿£¨38£©GIf you stand confidently or if you are sitting up straight£¬it expresses that you are focused on what you're doing and that you know what you are speaking about£®It also shows how much you value their time and attention£®
Show Enthusiasm
£¨39£©C Even a tech novice £¨ÐÂÊÖ£© would get enthusiastic about the new invention when Jobs would present it£®It's because he had that enthusiasm which would spread to other people in a heartbeat£®So you must show enthusiasm in what you are speaking about£¬or it will seem that even you are uninterested in what you have to say£®
Welcome Questions
£¨40£©F Allow your audience some time to ask you questions£®This stage will help you determine if you have effectively shared your knowledge£¬if your audience took notice and listened to you and if there are any parts that you need to discuss again or clarify£®

A£®Pay attention to their facial expressions and hand gestures£®
B£®Communication is not only done orally£®
C£®Have you ever heard the late Steve Jobs holding a speech£¿
D£®Here are some tricks which will help you in becoming a great speaker£®
E£®Once you have gotten used to it£¬your confidence will grow and it will show£®
F£®This is decisive in any speeches that you make£®
G£®How you stand or sit also communicates different ideas to others£®

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Last Sunday afternoon£¬I went shopping with my nephew£®He is a 8yearold boy with big eyes and black hair£®Because his parents was very busy£¬they had no time to take care him£®Therefore£¬they asked me to look after her over the weekend£®We bought some vegetable and fruit in the supermarket£®I also bought him a toy£¬that he loved very much£®On our way back home£¬he offers to help me with the bags£®Seeing this lovely and happy boy£¬and I couldn't help think of my childhood£®How unforgettably a time it was!

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10£®A teenage girl from Zimbabwe is caring for a homeless baby squirrel £¨ËÉÊ󣩠in her hair£®
Abby Putterill£¬l6£¬whose parents run an animal sanctuary £¨±£»¤Çø£© 40km from the capital Harare£¬says that Hammy£¬a squirrel£¬climbed into her tied-up hair one day and decided to stay£®The schoolgirl and her friend have been together for two months£®
Hammy was just about ten days old when he was found on the cold office floor of the Bally Vaughan Wildlife Sanctuary£®Abby's mother£¬Debbie Putterill£¬who co-owns the park with her husband£¬Gordon£¬took the baby back to her home£®To the family's surprise£¬Hammy liked her daughter very much because he climbed onto her head and got into her hair£®
Abby wears her hair in a ponytail £¨Âí⣩ which she usually has tied up at the back£¬making a wonderful home for Hammy£®Except for sleeping and showering£¬the squirrel and the schoolgirl cannot be separated£®
Mrs£®Putterill said£º"He's doing really well and is growing up so quickly£®When we first found him he was lying on the floor of the office£®He must have fallen out of the thatched roof £¨Ã©²ÝÎݶ¥£©£®If we hadn't taken him in£¬he would have died because he was only around ten days old£®
The baby squirrel was nursed back to health on a good diet£¬getting back his strength and quickly becoming a member of the family£®
Mrs£®Putterill added£º"When he was tiny he refused to sleep anywhere else but on the palm of my hand£¬but as he got older he started treating us like trees£¬hiding in our clothes£®But one day he was playing with Abby and he managed to climb into her hair£®He seemed to make himself at home and still does it now£®We've never had a squirrel do this before and it's really quite funny to see but he's happy enough to lie there and watch the world go by£®"
Bally Vaughan Wildlife Sanctuary was founded in the early l980s by Debbie's mother and father£¬fulfilling their dream of caring for sick and injured African wildlife£®

2l£®What is special about Abby Putterill£¿A
A£®She has a squirrel living in her hair£®
B£®She likes squirrels very much£®
C£®Her pet is a homeless squirrel£®
D£®Her hair is always a bit dirty£®
22£®What is Hammy's relationship with the Putterills like£¿D
A£®As he gets older£¬he wants to leave the Putterills£®
B£®He wants to go everywhere with Abby Putterill£¬even when she has a shower£®
C£®He is very comfortable with them£¬especially Mr£®Putterill and Mrs£®Putterill£®
D£®He has become their close friend£¬but he is closest to Abby Putterill£®
23£®At first£¬Hammy made a home for himselfB£®
A£®under the Putterills'clothes
B£®on the palm of Mrs£®Putterill's hand
C£®on the floor of the Putterills'house
D£®on the roof of Mr£®and Mrs£®Putterill's office
24£®Where does this passage probably come from£¿A
A£®A news report£®
B£®A travel magazine£®
C£®A science fiction novel£®
D£®An advertisement£®

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17£®Illegally traded endangered species that escape£¬forming secondary populations£¬offer hope to their long-tem survival£¬a study suggests£®"This first came to my attention when I read a news story about the seizure of an illegal shipment of 23 yellow crested cockatoos£¨Ð¡¿û»¨·ïÍ·ðÐðÄ£©£¬"said Luke Gibson£¬a college teacher£®He learned that the species was critically endangered£¬which surprised him£®
This encouraged Dr£®Gibson and his colleague to investigate£¨µ÷²é£©how a critically endangered species had become self-sustaining outside of its natural range£®They discovered 49 cases of a globally threatened species becoming established as a separate population£¬which they hadn't thought of£¬including the yellow-crested cockatoo in their city£®
"This is a species which is primarily threatened by wildlife trade£¬"he told BBC News£®"Poachers£¨ÍµÁÔÕߣ©go out into the forest in its native range in eastern Indonesia and capture the bird and then ship them off£¬usually up to our city where there is a strong demand for pet birds£®This is what has fueled the decline of this species in its native range£®But it's really interesting because that same cause also had another effect£ºsome of the people who were keeping this species here accidentally or intentionally released them£®"As a result of enough of the birds set free£¬it allowed a new self-sustaining population to be established in this city£®
The government in of Dr£®Gibson's city has made it illegal to capture the species£¬even though it is a non-native species£®Because the city is affluent and relatively well educated£¬the cases of people breaking the law are extremely rare£¬explained Dr Gibson£¬unlike in its native range in Indonesia£¬where capturing birds forms a major source of income£®
However£¬there can be downsides£¨È±µã£© to the newly established population of endangered species£¬such as a limited genetic pool£¬and suffering from novel diseases£®It did also present a possible"very interesting"opportunity for conservationists£¬Dr£®Gibson suggested£®This would involve"harvesting"some of the newly established secondary population£¬which may provide a way to help slow global biodiversity loss£®

32£®What was beyond Gibson's expectations according to the first paragraph£¿C
A£®The high rate of wildlife trade£®
B£®The preciousness of the birds£®
C£®The fact that the birds nearly disappear£®
D£®The news that the birds were poached£®
33£®What happened unexpectedly when the birds were shipped abroad£¿A
A£®They formed a separate population£®
B£®They were kept as pet birds£®
C£®They were traded illegally£®
D£®They were killed for research£®
34£®Which can replace the underlined word"affluent"£¿B
A£®Peace-loving 
B£®Rich
C£®Free
D£®Environment-friendly
35£®For what purpose did the author write the passage£¿C
A£®To appeal to everyone to stop the wildlife trade£®
B£®To explain the challenge the wild birds are facing£®
C£®To introduce a creative approach to wildlife conservation£®
D£®To raise people's awareness of protecting endangered species£®

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7£®My fifteen-year-old son has just returned from abroad with rolls of exposed film and a hundred dollars in uncashed traveler's checks£¬and is asleep at the moment£®His blue duffel £¨´ÖÄØ£© bag lies on the floor where he dropped it£®Obviously£¬he postponed as much sleep as he could£ºwhen he walked in and we hugged£¬his electrical system suddenly switched off£¬and he headed directly for the bed£¬where I imagine he beat his old record of sixteen hours£®
It was his first trip overseas£¬so weeks before it£¬I pressed travel books on him£¬and a tape cassette of useful French phrases£» drew up a list of people to visit£» advised him on clothing and other things£®At the luggage store where we went to buy him a suitcase£¬he headed for the duffels£¬saying that suitcases were more for old people£®
During the trip£¬he called home three times£ºfrom London£¬Paris£¬and a village named Ullapool£®Near Ullapool£¬he climbed a mountain in a rainstorm that almost blew him off£®In the village£¬a man spoke to him in Gaelic£¬and£¬too polite to interrupt£¬my son listened to him for ten or fifteen minutes£¬trying to nod in the right places£®The French he learned from the cassette didn't hold water in Paris£®The French he talked to shrugged and walked on£®
When my son called£¬I sat down at the kitchen table and leaned forward and hung on every word£®His voice came through clearly£¬though two of the calls were like ship-to-shore communication£®When I interrupted him with a"Great!"or a"Really£¿"£¬I knocked a little hole in his communication£®So I just sat and listened£®I have never listened to a telephone so attentively and with so much pleasure£®It was wonderful to hear news from him that was so new to me£®In my book£¬he was the first man to land on the moon£¬and I knew that I had no advice to give him and that what I had already given was probably not much help£®
The unused checks are certainly evidence of that£®Youth travels light£®No suitcase£¬not much luggage and a slim expense account£¬and yet he went to the scene£¬and came back safely£®I sit here amazed£®The night when your child returns with dust on his shoes from a country you've never seen is a night you would gladly turn into a week£®

32£®During the trip£¬the author's sonB£®
A£®ran out of money  
B£®had inadequate sleep
C£®forgot to call his mother
 D£®failed to take good pictures
33£®According to the passage£¬which of the following could best describe the author's son£¿C
A£®Polite and careless£®
B£®Creative and stubborn£®
C£®Considerate and independent£®
D£®Self-centered and adventurous£®
34£®What does the underlined word"that"in the last paragraph refer to£¿D
A£®It is important to listen to your child's story£®
B£®It's easy to interrupt the chat with your child£®
C£®The author is proud of her son landing on the moon£®
D£®The son no longer needs much help from his mother£®
35£®What can we infer from the passage£¿D
A£®Good parents should protect their children from potential dangers£®
B£®The world is a book and those who do not travel read only one page£®
C£®Communication between parents and children is extremely important£®
D£®It's a win-win choice to give a child space to experience and explore£®

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Dear Sir or Madam£¬
I am one of your customers
I'm writing to make a complaint about your goods£®
I bought a cell phone from your online store on May 1st£®After using it one week£¬I found some problems£®£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐÍÒ»£©To begin with£¬the battery needs recharging after it is used for only several hours£®It is very upsetting because I have to carry the charger all the time£®In addition£¬the small scratches in the middle of the screen make it difficult to read£®What's worse£¬it often crashes without any warning£®Therefore£¬I would like you to either change the cell phone for a new one that works well or give me a full refund£®£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐͶþ£©
I would appreciate it if you could give due attention to this matter£®£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐÍÈý£©Looking forward to your reply£®
Yours sincerely
Li Hua£®

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