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Dear Silvia£¬
Greetings from China!I am Li Hua£¬a high school student in China£®------
Looking forward to your reply£®
Yours sincerely£¬
Li Hua£®

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½â´ð Dear Silvia£¬
      Greetings from China!I am Li Hua£¬a high school student in China£®During the summer vacation£¬I will study in Kogarah High School for a month£®  How happy I am to learn  that your family will be my host family!£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐÍÒ»£©I'd like to know  more  about  my  stay in Kogarah£®First£¬may I have my own room£¿And it would be great if I could have access to the Internet in my room£®£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐͶþ£©I'm wondering if I could cook some simple Chinese dishes just in case I'm not used to Australian food£®£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐÍÈý£©Besides£¬I'd like to know if there is a bus between your home and the school£®
       Looking forward to your reply£®
                                                                                                                                                                                         Yours sincerely£¬
                                                                                                                                                                                                Li Hua

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15£®To be financially secure and spiritually pleased£¬a man who has an occupation ought to have two or three hobbies£®It tends to make people laugh by saying£º"I will develop hobbies when I am retired£®"Such a promise is like a bubble which will burst in the end£¬leaving pleasure forever beyond£®On the other side£¬if a man is only interested in acquiring knowledge and abilities irrelevant to his daily work£¬it is also hard to get true pleasure in the long run£®
Broadly speaking£¬hobbies for those who have jobs should be practical£®For example£¬it is impractical for a construction worker£¬after a hard week's manual labor£¬to develop the interest of playing football on Saturday afternoon£®It is also unlikely for a politician or a business man£¬who has been working or worrying about serious things for six days£¬to attend drama courses at the weekend£®
It may also be said that laborers are divided into two classes£ºfirst£¬those whose work is work and whose pleasure is pleasure£» and secondly£¬those whose work is everything and pleasure just exists in work£®The former are the majority£®They have their compensations£®The long hours in the office or the factory bring them money£¬not only as the means of livelihood£¬but as a driving force for pleasure beyond their work£®But for the second class£¬the working hours are never long enough£®Each day is enjoyed like a holiday£¬and when real holidays come£¬they see them as interruptions£®To both classes£¬the need of changing the angle of viewing work and pleasure is essential£®Those who find it hard to enjoy their work are not fully enjoying the world they live in£®However£¬it is more urgent for those whose work is their all pleasure to drive the work occasionally off their minds and develop hobbies£®

28£®What can we learn from paragraph 1£¿C
A£®The best choice for a person is having three hobbies
B£®To relax one should broaden his knowledge in other fields
C£®Pleasure is acquired by enjoying work and hobbies
D£®Pleasure lies in how much one is involved in other fields
29£®Which hobby do you recommend to a software programmer£¿D
A£®Playing Chinese chess  
C£®Learning watercolor painting
B£®Writing poems         
D£®Joining in Mobike riding
30£®Which can substitute the underlined word in paragraph 3£¿B
A£®working hours    
B£®real holidays
C£®means of livelihood     
D£®drama courses
31£®What is the best title of the passageA
A£®Work and Pleasure      
C£®Holidays and Interruptions
B£®Hobbies and Relaxation 
D£®Manual Work and Brain Work£®

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2£®One evening years ago in New York£¬I sat on a bench in a park and watched a little boy£¬around 2 years old£¬£¨61£©running £¨run£© freely on the grass as his mother watched from a short distance away£®The boy would fall to the grass£¬£¨62£©get £¨get£© up£¬and without looking back  £¨63£©at  his mother£¬run as fast as he could as if nothing had happened£®
When kids fall down£¬they don't think of the fall as a failure£®Instead£¬they consider£¨64£©it as a learning experience£®They try again and again until they succeed£®While I£¨65£©was touched£¨touch£©by the boy's strong mind£¬I was also touched by the way he ran£®With each attempt£¬he looked so confident and natural£®He only wanted to run freely and to do it as£¨66£©well£¨good£© as he could£®He was just being a child-just being himself-being completely in the moment£®He never gave up£®Each time he£¨67£©fell£¨fall£©£¬he got himself back up again£¬as if he knew that falling down was£¨68£©simply£¨simple£©a part of life£®He was not looking for others'smiles£¬or worrying about£¨69£©whether someone was watching or not£®He only wanted to run and to feel the experience of running fully and freely£®I learned a lot from that experience£¬and have successfully brought that lesson with me in many£¨70£©parts £¨part£© of my life£®

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3£®Jim is a little boy£®And he's only nine years old£®One day he goes to a cinema£®It is the first time for him to do that£®He buys a ticket and goes in£®But after two or three minutes he comes out£¬buys a second ticket£®Two or three minutes after that he comes out and asks for another ticket£®The girl selling tickets asks him£¬"Why do you buy so many tickets£¿How many friends do you meet£¿"Jim answers£¬"No£¬I have no friends here£®But an old woman always stops me at the door and cuts my ticket up£®"
26£®How old is Jim£¿C
A£®He is eleven£®B£®He is seven£®C£®He's nine£®D£®He's ten£®
27£®It is for Jim to go to the cinema£®A
A£®the first time B£®the second time C£®the third time D£®the last time
28£®Jim buysBbefore the girl asks him£®
A£®one ticket B£®three tickets C£®two tickets D£®five tickets
29£®Jim meetsDthat day£®
A£®his parents B£®some friends C£®two boys D£®no friends
30£®The old woman isCin the cinema£®
A£®a driver B£®a teacher C£®a worker D£®a policeman£®

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7£®A German study suggests that people who were too optimistic about their future actually faced greater risk of disability or death within 10 years than those pessimists who expected their future to be worse£®
The paper£¬published this March in Psychology and Aging£¬examined health and welfare surveys from roughly 40£¬000 Germans between ages 18 and 96£®The surveys were conducted every year from 1993 to 2003£®
Survey respondents were asked to estimate their present and future life satisfaction on a scale of 0 to 10£¬among other questions£®
The researchers found that young adults £¨age 18 to 39£©routinely overestimated their future life satisfaction£¬while middle-aged adults £¨age 40 to 64£©more accurately predicted how they would feel in the future£®Adults of 65 and older£¬however£¬were far more likely to underestimate their future life satisfaction£®Not only did they feel more satisfied than they thought they would£¬the older pessimists seemed to suffer a lower ratio of disability and death for the study period£®
"We observed that being too optimistic in predicting a better future than actually observed was associated with a greater risk of disability and a greater risk of death within the following decade£¬"wrote Frieder R£®Lang£¬a professor at the University of Erlangen-Nuremberg£®
Lang and his colleagues believed that people who were pessimistic about their future may be more careful about their actions than people who expected a rosy future£®
"Seeing a dark future may encourage positive evaluations of the actual self and may contribute to taking im proved precautions £¨Ô¤·À´ëÊ©£©£¬"the authors wrote£®
Surprisingly£¬compared with those in poor health or who had low incomes£¬respondents who enjoyed good health or income were associated with expecting a greater decline£®Also£¬the researchers said that higher income was related to a greater risk of disability£®
The authors of the study noted that there were limitations to their conclusions£®Illness£¬medi cal treatment and personal loss could also have driven health outcomes£®
However£¬the researchers said a pattern was clear£®"We found that from early to late adulthood£¬individuals adapt their expectations of future life satisfaction from optimistic£¬to accurate£¬to pessimistic£¬"the authors concluded£®
12£®According to the study£¬who made the most accurate prediction of their future life satisfaction£¿B
 A£®Optimistic adults£®
B£®Middle-aged adults£®
 C£®Adults in poor health£®
D£®Adults of lower income£®
13£®Pessimism may be positive in some way because it causes peopleC£®
A£®to fully enjoy their present life
B£®to estimate their contribution accurately
C£®to take measures against potential risks
D£®to value health more highly than wealth
14£®How do people of higher income see their future£¿A
A£®They will earn less money£®
B£®They will become pessimistic£®
C£®They will suffer mental illness£®
D£®They will have less time to enjoy life£®
15£®What is the clear conclusion of the study£¿D
A£®Pessimism guarantees chances of survival£®
B£®Good financial condition leads to good health£®
C£®Medical treatment determines health outcomes£®
D£®Expectations of future life satisfaction decline with age£®

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