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A girl called Jennifer left home three days before£®She wandered about in the streets, tiring and hungry£®She could no longer bear it, but she made up her mind to return home£®On her way back to home, she was wondering how her parents would react after the three day of her disappearance£®Returned home, she saw note lying on the table in the kitchen room£®Her father sat in the sofa£®Her mother was so tired that she slept soundly£®Instead of waking her, Jennifer lay beside her mother and go to sleep soon£®When she was awake, she found she wasn¡¯t in her mother¡¯s room and her old and dirty clothes was gone£®She was in her own comfortable and warm bed in his sleeping clothes£®
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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿Why do people feel so rushed? Part of this is a perception (ÈÏÖª) problem. Generally, people in rich countries have more free time than they used to. This is particularly true in Europe, but even in America free time has been inching up. Women's paid work has risen a lot over this period£¬but their time in unpaid work£¬like cooking and cleaning, has fallen even more significantly, thanks in part to dishwashers, washing machines and microwaves, and also to the fact that men shift themselves a little more around the house than they used to.
The problem, then, is less how much time people have than how they see it. Ever since a clock was first used at a workplace to record labor hours in the 18th century, time has been understood in relation to money. Once hours are financially quantified (Á¿»¯), people worry more about wasting, but tend to save or use them more profitably. When economies grow and incomes rise, everyone's time becomes more valuable. And the more valuable something becomes, the rarer it seems.
Once seeing their time in terms of money, people often________the former to maximize the latter. Workers who are paid by the hour volunteer less of their time and tend to feel more upset when they are not working.
The relationship between time, money and anxiety is something Gary Becker noticed in America's post-war boom years. "If anything, time is used more carefully today than a century ago," he noted in 1965. He found that when people are paid more to work, they tend to work longer hours, because working becomes a more profitable use of time. So the rising value of work time puts pressure on all time. Leisure time starts to seem more stressful, as people are forced to use it wisely or not at all.
¡¾1¡¿Women's time in unpaid work has fallen partly because ______.
A. men's ability to support a family has been improved
B. men's involvement in housework has increased
C. women's leisure time was taken up by heavy housework
D. women become more skilled at household equipment
¡¾2¡¿From the second paragraph, we learn that ______.
A. labor hours were recorded with a clock
B. people haven't realized the value of time
C. more work hours bring in more money
D. The rise of incomes makes time less valuable
¡¾3¡¿The underlined phrasegrow stingy withcan probably be replaced by "______".
A. refuses to delay B. intend to kill
C. try to accumulate D. hesitate to spend
¡¾4¡¿According to Gary Becker, what causes people feel anxious about time?
A. The wrong way of time being spent.
B. People's willingness to work hard.
C. The increasing value of work time.
D. More and more leisure time.
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Though British people sometimes have a little difficult understanding Americans, some experts believe that the two variety are moving closer together. For more than century communications across the Atlantic have developed steady. Since the 1980s, with satellite TV and the internet, it has been possible listen to British and American English on the flick of a switch. This non-stop communication has made that easier for British people and Americans to understand each other. But it has also lead to lots of American words and structures pass into British English, so that some people now believe that British English will be disappear.
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Dear Tom,
How is everything going?
_ _________________________________________________
_ _________________________________________________
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Looking forward to your reply.
Yours truly,
Li Hua
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If you go out to the fields at night in spring or summer, you can hear frogs singing¡¾1¡¿(happy) here and there. It seems as if they were performing a field group singing.
The frog is a good and useful creature that benefits human beings. They can catch fast-moving¡¾2¡¿(insect). Each frog eats a large number of pests that are harmful to crops. This little creature is regarded¡¾3¡¿¡°the natural enemy of pests¡±.
But now frogs¡¾4¡¿(get) fewer and fewer. This is because they are killed and put¡¾5¡¿the table as a delicious dish by their chief enemy, human beings. It is a shameless and cruel act, isn¡¯t it?
The cause responsible for the rapid¡¾6¡¿(reduce) of frogs is that farmers use insect killer to kill pests and frogs get killed as a result of drinking poisoned water while¡¾7¡¿(eat) poison-killed insects.
Something must be done without delay¡¾8¡¿(save) frogs. If we don¡¯t punish those¡¾9¡¿sell and kill frogs to make money, then one day all of us¡¾10¡¿(punish) by nature for failing to keep them.
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Dear Tom,
I¡¯m glad to know that you are going to be a senior high school student this September in China£®________________________ ________________
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Yours sincerely
Li Hua
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In the United States, there were 222 people __¡¾1¡¿__ (report) to be billionaires (ÒÚÍò¸»ÎÌ) in 2003. The __¡¾2¡¿__ (rich) of these is Bill Gates, worth _¡¾3¡¿__ least $ 41 billion, who made his money __¡¾4¡¿__ starting the company Microsoft. Mr. Gates was only 21 years old _¡¾5¡¿__ he first helped to set up the company in 1976. He was a billionaire by the time he was 31.
__¡¾6¡¿__, there are still some other people who have made lots of money at even __¡¾7¡¿__ (young) ages. Other young people who have struck it rich include Jackie Coogan and Shirley Temple. _¡¾8¡¿__ of these child actors made over a million dollars _¡¾9¡¿_ (act) in movies before they were 14. But __¡¾10¡¿__ youngest billionaire is Albert von Thurn und Taxis of Germany, who, in 2001, inherited (¼Ì³Ð) a billion dollars when he turned 18!
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Dear Editor,
_____________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________
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Yours faithfully,
Li Hua
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