I'd gone from a tiny village school with a total of 60 students, to a huge school, with thousands of pupils£®I was a little fish in a very big       . I lived too much of my first year        doing anything wrong£®I just decided to be the wallflower when it discussion and answering questions£®I was always the one that         Class        didn't look the teacher in the eye       they asked me to answer£®I listened well, and          everything in, but I always liked to be a spectator£¨ÅÔ¹ÛÕߣ©£®It's hard not t0           what others may think of you when you are speaking in front of many              £®It did take long for me to feel teachers and make friends with classmates£®Some people       with straight into a new learning environment£® 
Some people       straight into a new learning environment.       , most are nervous and feel they don't fit in£®It's completely       , so it should not be a worry to you£®Be            and you will adapt to the new school£®School life is          you make obit£®Some       it; some Iike it£®-But it's only when you leave that you can really appreciate how school       you into the person you become£®
It's so important to       yourself out of your comfort zone£®If you're shy, tell yourself you¡¯ I raise your  _      at least once every lesson; if you're quick-minded, try to give other people a £¨n£©     In time, you will ___it will do you benefit from it .
СÌâ1:
A£®classB£®school C£®lake D£®house
СÌâ2:
A£®in fear ofB£®in favor of C£®in honor ofD£®in danger of
СÌâ3:
A£®got toB£®referred toC£®turned to D£®came to
СÌâ4:
A£®sharplyB£®purposely C£®hopelessly D£®searchingly
СÌâ5:
A£®in caseB£®so that C£®the moment D£®soon after
СÌâ6:
A£®wroteB£®broughtC£®took D£®got
СÌâ7:
A£®doubtB£®apply C£®check D£®care
СÌâ8:
A£®teachersB£®classmates C£®adults D£®friends
СÌâ9:
A£®angryB£®popular C£®disappointed D£®comfortable
СÌâ10:
A£®slideB£®fitC£®change D£®turn
СÌâ11:
A£®Therefore B£®InsteadC£®HoweverD£®Meanwhile
СÌâ12:
A£®normalB£®strange C£®awkwardD£®interesting
СÌâ13:
A£®proudB£®practical C£®privateD£®positive
СÌâ14:
A£®whatB£®how C£®which D£®when
СÌâ15:
A£®likeB£®ignore C£®accept D£®hate
СÌâ16:
A£®forcesB£®develops C£®places D£®teaches
СÌâ17:
A£®pushB£®takeC£®kick D£®remove
СÌâ18:
A£®voiceB£®question C£®hand D£®head
СÌâ19:
A£®answer B£®chance C£®hugD£®smile
СÌâ20:
A£®forgetB£®forgiveC£®realizeD£®remember

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СÌâ14:A
СÌâ15:D
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As she waited at the edge of the ice for her music to start,. Peggy took a quick look at her father standing nearby with a group of parents and teachers. He smiled at her. Then she 1._____ out at the audience, 2._____ to see her mother. These two, Alvert and Doris Flemint, had 3._____ all the way from California more than 2,000 miles away, to see their 4._____ compete in this sports meet in Cleveland, Ohio.
The music 5._____ and Peggy moved onto the ice, letting the music 6._____ her along into her turns, and she began skating with much 7._____ in herself. The cold fear she always had in the 8._____ seconds before skating onto the ice was 9._____. She was feeling the movement of the 10._____ and letting it carry her. She skated easily, 11._____ did some jumps, a final turn and her performance was 12._____.
The crowd loved it and cheered 13._____ she skated off the ice. ¡°Nice job,¡± said one of the other 14._____. It was the remark that 15._____ came after a free-skating performance. But what should the 16._____ say? Standing beside her father, Peggy 17._____ for the scoring to be finished. On all sides were other young skaters, some waiting 18._____ alone, others with a parent. Shortly before 10 o¡¯clock the results were 19._____. The new United States Women¡¯s Figure Skating Champion was Peggy Fleming of Passdena, 20._____.
СÌâ1:
A£®lookedB£®watchedC£®foundD£®stepped
СÌâ2:
A£®failingB£®looking forwardC£®wanting . D£®hoping
СÌâ3:
A£®bicycledB£®drivenC£®runD£®walked
СÌâ4:
A£®friend B£®childrenC£®son D£®daughter
СÌâ5:
A£®startedB£®played C£®developed D£®sang
СÌâ6:
A£®allow B£®set out C£®carryD£®support
СÌâ7:
A£®thoughtB£®beliefC£®success D£®design
СÌâ8:
A£®followingB£®last C£®recent D£®past
СÌâ9:
A£®lostB£®presentC£®strong D£®gone
СÌâ10:
A£®music B£®fearC£®ice D£®audiences
СÌâ11:
A£®so B£®or C£®before D£®then
СÌâ12:
A£®satisfied B£®unsatisfactoryC£®finished D£®welcome
СÌâ13:
A£®because B£®until C£®before D£®as
СÌâ14:
A£®skaters B£®parents C£®judgesD£®parents
СÌâ15:
A£®always B£®seldom C£®againD£®hardly
СÌâ16:A players        B. audience               C. judges         D. parents
СÌâ17:
A£®waitedB£®lookedC£®wished D£®asked
СÌâ18:
A£®comfortably B£®hurriedly C£®happilyD£®anxiously
СÌâ19:
A£®cried outB£®let outC£®announced D£®declared
СÌâ20:
A£®England B£®ClevelandC£®OhioD£®California

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Recently, professor of philosophy£¨ÕÜѧ£©in the United States has written a book called Money and the Meaning of Life. He has discovered that how we deal with money in our daily life has more meaning than we usually think. One of the exercises he asked his students to do is to keep a record of every penny they spend for a week. From the way they spend their money, they can see what they really value in life.
He says our relations with others often become clearly defined£¨ÇåÎúµÄ£©when money enters the picture. You might have wonderful relationship with somebody and you think that you are very good friends. But you will know him only when you ask him to lend some money. If he does, it brings something to the relationship that seems stronger than ever before or it can suddenly weaken the relationship if he doesn¡¯t. This person may say that he has a certain feeling, but if it is not carried out in the money world, there is something less real about it.
Since money is so important to us, we consider those who possess a lot of it to be very important. The author interviewed some millionaires in researching his book.
Question: What is the most surprising thing you have discovered about being rich, because you are a self-made man?
Answer: The most surprising thing is how people give me so much respect. I am nothing. I don¡¯t know much. All I am is rich.
People just have an idea of making more and more money, but what is it for? How much do I need for any given purposes in my life? In his book, the professor uncovered an important need in modern society: to bring back the idea that money is an instrument rather than the end. Money plays an important role in the material world, but expecting money to give happiness may be missing the meaning of life.
СÌâ1:According to the first paragraph, people have not realized ______.
A£®how important money is in their daily life
B£®how one spends money shows what is important to him
C£®that money is more important than their philosophy of life
D£®that their understanding of life is more important than money
СÌâ2:The author seems to believe that asking your friend to lend you some  money ________.
A£®is a good way to test your friendship
B£®will do harm to your friendship
C£®will strengthen your friendship
D£®is a good way to break off your friendship
СÌâ3:What does the American professor of philosophy want to explain in his book?
A£®Money is an end£®B£®Money is a means£®
C£®Money is everything£®D£®Money is unimportant
СÌâ4:The underlined phrase ¡°enter the picture¡± in the second paragraph can be replaced by ¡°_________¡±.
A£®is used upB£®is spent on pictures
C£®is paid in the right wayD£®is paid attention to
СÌâ5:What can we learn about the millionaire from his answer in the interview?
A£®He doesn¡¯t feel that he is well educated.
B£®He doesn¡¯t think he is a very important person.
C£®He doesn¡¯t consider himself to be very successful.
D£®He doesn¡¯t think that being rich deserves so much attention.

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Last week I talked with some of my students about what they wanted to do after they graduated, and what kind of job prospects they thought they had.
Given that I teach students who are training to be doctors, I was surprised to find that most thought that they would not be able to get the jobs they wanted without ¡°outside help¡±. ¡°What kind of help is that?¡± I asked, expecting them to tell me that they would need a relative or family friend to help them out.
¡°Surgery(Íâ¿ÆÊÖÊõ)¡±, one replied.
I was pretty alarmed by that response. It seems that the graduates of today are increasingly willing to go under the knife to get ahead of others when it comes to getting a job.
One girl told me that she was considering surgery to increase her height. ¡°They break your legs, put in special extending screws, and slowly expand the gap between the two ends of the bone as it re-grows, you can get at least 5 cm taller!¡±
At that point, I was shocked. I am short, I can¡¯t deny that, but I don¡¯t think I would put myself through months of agony(Í´¿à) just to be a few centimeters taller. I don¡¯t even bother to wear shoes with thick soles, as I¡¯m not trying to hide the fact that I am just not tall!
It seems to me that there is a trend toward wanting ¡°perfection¡±, and that is an ideal that just does not exist in reality.
No one is born perfect, yet magazines, TV shows and movies present images of thin, tall, beautiful people as being the norm. Advertisements for slimming aids, beauty treatments and cosmetic surgery clinics fill the pages of newspapers, further creating an idea that ¡°perfection¡± is a requirement, and that it must be purchased, no matter what the cost.
In my opinion, skills, rather than appearance, should determine how successful a person is in his chosen career.
СÌâ1:We can know from the passage that the author works as ________.
A£®a doctorB£®a modelC£®a teacherD£®a reporter
СÌâ2:Many graduates today turn to cosmetic s surgery to ________.
A£®marry a better man\womanB£®become a model
C£®get an advantage over others in job-huntD£®attract more admirers
СÌâ3:According to the passage, the author believes that ________.
A£®everyone should purchase perfection, whatever the cost
B£®it¡¯s right for graduates to ask for others to help them out in hunting for jobs
C£®it is one¡¯s appearance instead of skills that really matters in one¡¯s career
D£®media are to blame for misleading young people in their seeking for surgery
СÌâ4:The best title for the passage should be ¡°________¡±.
A£®Young Graduates Have Higher Expectation
B£®Young Graduates Look to Surgery for Better Jobs
C£®Young Graduates¡¯ Opinion About Cosmetic Surgery
D£®Young Graduates Face a Different Situation in Job-hunt

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Everyone knows that the French are romantic, the Italians are fashionable and the Germans are serious. Or do they? Are these just stereotypes or is there really such a thing as national character? And if there is, can it affect how a nation succeed or fail?
At least one group of people is certain that it can. A recent survey of the top 500 entrepreneurs (ʵҵ¼Ò) in the UK found that 70 percent felt that their efforts were not appreciated by the British public.
Britain is hostile to success, they said. It has a culture of jealousy (¼µ¶Ê) . As a result, the survey said, entrepreneurs were ¡°unloved, unwanted and misunderstood¡±. Jealousy is sometimes known as the ¡°green-eyed monster¡± and the UK is its home. Scientists at Warwich University in the UK recently tested this idea. They gathered a group of people together and gave each an imaginary amount of money. Some were given a little, others a great deal. Those given a little money were given the chance to destroy the large amounts of money given to others¡ªbut at the cost of losing their own. Two thirds of the people tested agreed to do this.
This seems to prove the entrepreneurs were right to complain. But there is also conflicting evidence. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) recently reported that the UK was now the world¡¯s fourth largest economy. That is not bad for people who are supposed to hate success. People in the UK also work longer hours than anyone else in Europe. So the British people are not lazy, either.
¡°It¡¯s not really success that the British dislike,¡± says Carey Cooper, a Professor of management at the University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology. ¡°It¡¯s people using their success in a way that seems arrogant (°ÁÂý) or unfair or which separates them from their roots.¡±
Perhaps it is the entrepreneurs who are the problem. They set out to do things in their way. They work long hours. By their own efforts they become millionaires. But instead of being happy they complain that nobody loves them. It hardly seems worth following their example. If they were friendlier, people would like them more. And more people want to be like them.
СÌâ1:What does the underlined ¡°it¡± in the second paragraph refer to__________?
A£®One group of peopleB£®A great surveyC£®A nation D£®National character
СÌâ2:Most entrepreneurs surveyed believe that       .
A£®the British public are hardworking
B£®they are not popular simply because they are successful
C£®love of success is Britain¡¯s national character
D£®they are considered as ¡°green-eyed monsters¡±
СÌâ3:What does the result of the Warwich University test show_________?
A£®Most people would rather fail than see others succeed
B£®Two thirds of the people tested didn¡¯t love money
C£®An imaginary amount of money does not attract people
D£®Most people are willing to enjoy success with others
СÌâ4:The writer of the passage seems to suggest that        .
A£®jealousy is Britain¡¯s national character
B£®British entrepreneurs are not fairly treated
C£®the British dislike the entrepreneurs because they do not behave properly
D£®the scientists at Warwich University did a successful test
СÌâ5:Which of the following statements is true according to the passage?
A£®Everyone knows that the French are romantic, the Germans are fashionable and the Italians are serious.
B£®About 350 entrepreneurs in the UK felt that their efforts were not appreciated by the British public.
C£®The British people are not lazy and they work longer hours than anyone else in the world.
D£®Carey Cooper said that the British really dislike success.

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Italy is one country where beauty is prized more than any other virtue. That is, except in the small town of Piobbico, the self-declared World Capital of Ugly People. The road sign at the edge of the town even warns visitors that they are entering the ugly zone. People who consider themselves ugly have been gathering in Piobbico since the 1960s. That¡¯s when Ugly Club president Telesforo Lacobelli established a dating agency for women who believed they were too ugly to attract husbands. Lacobelli believes that he is ugly himself because he has a short nose in a country where long or large noses have always been considered beautiful.
People from around the world travel to Piobbico to tell their sad stories of ugliness. During the annual Festival of the Ugly, which occurs on the first Sunday of every September, hundreds of people gather in Piobbico¡¯s town square to elect the president of the Ugly Club. Lacobelli wins the election every year. The Ugly Club has over 20, 000 members. They carry ID cards that grade their ugliness from bearable to extreme. A prize is awarded to Ugly Club members who qualify as extremely ugly.
The Ugly Club president insists that ugliness is a virtue. Since beautiful people get a lot of attention for their beauty alone, they have to work hard to prove their other virtues. Ugly people, on the other hand, are genuine and do not have to prove anything to anybody, according to Lacobelli.
Lacobelli is a spokesperson for ugly people everywhere. He believes that the uglier one is, the better life can be. Though the club enjoys making fun of beauty, especially beauty contests, Lacobelli has a serious side as well. He believes that too many people suffer from financial and emotional pressures because they don¡¯t meet society¡¯s standards of beauty. The fact that beautiful people are more successful in the workforce is a problem that Lacobelli has attempted to bring forward to the Italian public and government.
СÌâ1:Piobbico is rather special in that     .
A£®it is a very small townB£®it is home to ugly people
C£®it receives no visitorsD£®it is the capital of Italy
СÌâ2:Why is Lacobelli elected the president of the Ugly Club every year?
A£®Because he is the ugliest person in the whole world.
B£®Because his ugliness is always graded as bearable.
C£®Because he is a spokesperson for ugly people everywhere.
D£®Because he has won the members¡¯ trust and admiration.
СÌâ3:Which of the following is true according to the passage?
A£®Ugly people are most respected in Italy.
B£®The Festival of the Ugly is held every two years.
C£®Ugly people are unfairly treated in society.
D£®The uglier one is, the better life he or she lives.
СÌâ4:Which of the following would be the best title for the passage?
A£®The Ugly Capital of the WorldB£®The Ugliest Person of the World
C£®Festival of the UglyD£®Beauty Contests Should be Banned

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Micro bloggers£ºhave you ever compared the number of fans on your Sina Weibo or Tencent micro blog with those of your friends ?Don¡¯t imagine you have more fans just because your number is bigger¡ª¡ªsome of them might be ¡°zombie fans¡±£¬or fake(¼ÙµÄ)followers£®
That¡¯s what Chen Chuanliang £¬creator of Leijian Network£¬found when he bet against his friend several months ago£®Chen£¬who used to do data mining for Microsoft Asia Research Institute£¬discovered that there were far more invalid(ÎÞЧµÄ)micro blog accounts than he had imagined£®
Later Chen picked 1 0 users on Sina Weibo and analyzed their statistics£®Kai-Fu Lee£¬the former CEO of Google China£¬who¡¯s on Chen¡¯s list of research£¬posted a message on his micro blog after he found out that he had more than 1 million fake fans(out of about 5 million)£¬joking¡°I have 1 million zombie fans ?If united£¬we can finally defeat those plants£®¡±
According to a report by S Weekly in March£¬zombie fans on micro blogs are defined as invalid accounts signed up by network companies for the purpose of increasing the number of fans for certain users and getting them more attention£®
And this kind of fake followers are also very much alive on Western social networks such as Twitter and Facebook £®
The Financial Times reported in August£¬that Newt Gingrich£¬a Republican candidate in the US presidential election£¬bought about 80 percent of his 1£®3 million Twitter followers and tried to use them as help in his campaign£®
Now there are also business deals through which users can get hundreds of thousands of fans for their micro blog accounts£¬by paying a small amount of money£®
¡°We have been working to find ways to block or delete those invalid accounts£¬¡±Mao Taotao£¬a spokesperson for Sina Weibo told S Weekly.
¡°But as the fake accounts grow so fast£¬they¡¯re going to be here for a while£®
СÌâ1:Which of the following might be the best title for the passage?
A£®Micro BloggersB£®Blog Accounts
C£®Zombie FansD£®Micro Blog Fans
СÌâ2:Users get zombie fans for their micro blog accounts by________.
A£®making friends with people
B£®paying a little money
C£®helping their weibo followers
D£®doing search on the Internet
СÌâ3:It can be learnt from the passage that________.
A£®there are more fake fans in America than in China
B£®invalid accounts for micro blogs will be deleted in no time
C£®there exist many fake fans on western social networks as well
D£®Newt Gingrich had 1£®3 millions followers in his presidential election
СÌâ4:The underlined word¡°their¡± in the passage refers to
A£®deals¡¯B£®fans¡¯C£®campaigns¡¯D£®users¡¯

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Men are spending more and more time in the kitchen encouraged by celebrity (ÃûÈË) chefs like Gordon Ramsay and Jamie Oliver, according to a report from Oxford University.
The effect of the celebrity role models, who have given cooking a more manly picture, has combined with a more general drive towards sexual equality and men now spend more than twice the amount of time preparing meals than they did in 1961.
According to the research by Prof. Jonatahn Gershuny, who runs the Centre for Time Research at Oxford, men now spend more than half an hour a day cooking, up from just 12 minutes a day in 1961.
Prof. Gershuny said, ¡°The man in the kitchen is part of a much wider social trend. There has been 40 years of sexual equality, but there is another 40 years probably to come.¡±
Women, who a generation ago spent nearly two hours a day cooking, now spend just one hour and seven minutes¡ªa great fall, but they still spend far more time in the kitchen than men.
Some experts have named these men in aprons as ¡°Gastrosexuals (men using cooking skills to impress friends)¡±, who have been inspired to pick up a kitchen knife by the success of Ramsay, Oliver as well as other male celebrity chefs such as Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall, Marco Pierre White and Keith Floyd.
¡°I was married in 1974. When my father came to visit me a few weeks later, I was wearing an apron when I opened the door. He laughed,¡± said Prof. Gershuny. ¡°That would never happen now.¡±
Two-thirds of adults say that they come together to share at least three times a week, even if it is not necessarily around a kitchen or dining room table. Prof. Gershuny pointed out that the family meal was now rarely eaten by all of its members around a table¡ªwith many ¡°family meals¡± in fact taken on the sofa in the sitting room, and shared by family members. ¡°The family meal has changed a lot, and few of us eat¡ªas I did when I was a child¡ªat least two meals a day together as a family. But it has survived in a different format.¡± 
СÌâ1:What is one reason behind the trend that men spend more time cooking than before?
A£®The improvement of cooks¡¯ status.
B£®The influence of popular female chefs.
C£®The change of female¡¯s view on cooking.
D£®The development of sexual equality campaign.
СÌâ2:What does the author think about the time men and women spend on cooking?
A£®Men spend more time cooking than women nowadays.
B£®Women spend much less time on cooking than before.
C£®It will take 40 years before men spend more time at the stove than women.
D£®There is a sharp decline in the time men spend on cooking compared with 1961.
СÌâ3:How did Prof. Gershuny see the family meal according to the passage?
A£®It has become a thing of the past.
B£®It is very different from what it used to be.
C£®It shouldn¡¯t be advocated in modern times.
D£®It is beneficial to the stability of the family.
СÌâ4:Which is the best title for the passage?
A£®The Changes of Family Meals
B£®Equality between Men and Women
C£®Cooking into a New Trend for Men
D£®Cooking¡ªa Thing of the Past for Women

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If you live in America in the 21st century you'll probably have to listen to a lot of people tell you how busy they are. It's become the default response when you ask anyone how they are doing: ¡°Busy!¡± ¡°Crazy busy!¡±. It is, pretty obviously, a boast disguised as a complaint. And the common response is a kind of congratulation:¡° That's a good problem to have, ¡±or¡° Better than the opposite.¡±
Notice it isn't generally people pulling back-to-back shifts in the ICU or commuting by bus to three minimum-wage jobs who tell you how busy they are. What those people are is not busy but tired. Exhausted! Dead on their feet. It's almost always people whose busyness is purely self-imposed work and obligations they've taken on voluntarily, classes and activities they've ¡°encouraged¡± their kids to participate in. They're busy because of their own ambition or drive or anxiety, because they're addicted to busyness and dread that they might have to face in its absence.
Almost everyone I know is busy. They feel anxious and guilty when they aren't either working or doing something to promote their work. It's something they have chosen. Busyness serves as a kind of existential reassurance(ÁîÈ˰²Ðĵı£Ö¤£©£¬a measure against emptiness, obviously your life cannot possibly be silly or tiny or meaningless if you are so busy, completely booked, in demand every hour of the day.
Idleness is not just a vacation. It is as necessary to the brain as vitamin D is to the body, and deprived of it we suffer a mental affliction as ugly as rickets. The space and quiet that idleness provides is a necessary condition for standing back from life and seeing it whole, for making unexpected connections and waiting for the wild summer lightning strikes of inspiration.¡± Idle dreaming is often the essence of what we do¡±, wrote Thomas Pynchon. Archimedes' ¡°Eureka¡± in the bath, Newton's apple :history is full of stories of inspirations that come in idle moments.
СÌâ1:When many Americans say ¡°Crazy busy¡±, they mean______.
A£®they are really tired of their present situation
B£®they are really proud of their present life
C£®they are complaining about their current work
D£®their life are full of all kinds of problems
СÌâ2:The writer mentions Archimedes'¡°Eureka¡± and Newton's apple to show that________.
A£®history is full of interesting stories
B£®Archimedes and Newton were very busy, so they made great discoveries
C£®people may get inspiration when they are idle
D£®inspirations come from hard work
СÌâ3:The word ¡°its¡± in the second paragraph refers to_________________.
ambition      B. anxiety         C. busyness        D. dread
СÌâ4:From the article, we can infer that ___________________.
A£®generally people pulling back-to-back shifts in the ICU tell you they are busy
B£®¡°Dead on their feet¡± means ¡°being tired out¡±
C£®all the kids are self-imposed due to the drive and motivation
D£®The author seems to agree that idleness is better than busyness

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