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It was like any other mid-September day£®I was teaching maths, like I typically did each day at 10:00 a£®m£®£®Students were busy working on the 36 I previously asked£®All you could 37 was the sound of pencil tips tapping the desks£®
"Boys and girls, eyes up here please£®" As expected, students focused on me, eager, ready, 38 £®"I need a volunteer to write the answer on the board£®" A silent sea of 39 shot up into the air£®I quickly looked at the hands raised, and tnen 40 my eyes on one hand in particular, a hand different from the rest,£®John Doe¡¯s hand£®
John Doe was a little boy with Cerebral Palsy £¨ÄÔ̱£©. His balance was shaky and he could easily be 41 £®His body was very rigid and his movements were never smooth£®His writing was at most times unreadable, and speaking was difficult for him£®Everything was a£¨ n£© 42 for John Doe£®
However, John loved 43 and would come every day with a smile on his face£®His determination to succeed was remarkable for a child so young who was facing so many 44 in his daily life£®
Getting back to the maths lesson, students were waiting to be called£®One of those 45 hands was John Doe' s£®
"John, come on up and answer the question£®" I called£®
He got out of his seat 46 and walked to the front£®His moving was 47 and with each shaky step, it looked as if the slightest misstep could lead to him falling over£®All eyes were on him£®The class was 48 £®He made it up to the board after spending so much energy to get there£®As I gave him the chalk I thought to myself£® ¡°What have I just done? Did I set him up to 49 ? What if he gives a wrong answer?" I was getting really 50 £®
Grasping the chalk and with great 51 , he wrote down the answer, which looked as if a kindergartener wrote it, but was at least 52 £®Immediately a sense of 53 overcame me£®" Excellent job! John Doe, you are right!" I said 54 .At that very moment, my entire class spontaneously £¨×Ô·¢µÄ£© began clapping for him£®John stood there, smiling the biggest smile£®He was admired for his strong will and 55 .
That moment left an unforgettable mark on my heart£®
36£®A£®story B£®picture C£®question D£®project
37£®A£®hear B£®see C£®tell D£®write
38£®A£®thinking B£®waiting C£®observing D£®discussing
39£®A£®hands B£®books C£®pencils D£®papers
40£®A£®lowered B£®narrowed C£®fixed D£®rolled
41£®A£®turned away B£®knocked over C£®pulled down D£®stepped on
42£®A£®competition B£®experience C£®adventure D£®challenge
43£®A£®maths B£®life C£®school D£®teachers
44£®A£®choices B£®dangers C£®pressures D£®barriers
45£®A£®eager B£®firm C£®shaky D£®powerful
46£®A£®proudly B£®hurriedly C£®nervously D£®slowly
47£®A£®awkward B£®steady C£®cautious D£®unnatural
48£®A£®hopeful B£®silent C£®noisy D£®calm
49£®A£®help B£®regret C£®fail D£®practise
50£®A£®curious B£®worried C£®puzzled D£®annoyed
51£®A£®patience B£®effort C£®courage D£®concern
52£®A£®objective B£®relevant C£®readable D£®creative
53£®A£®honor B£®guilt C£®privilege D£®relief
54£®A£®interestedly B£®anxiously C£®excitedly D£®formally
55£®A£®drive B£®potential C£®diligence D£®talent
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Streit was an experienced safecracker who never used force ¡ª either against people or safes. He was a real 11 of his trade and it took him only 19 minutes to open the most difficult 12 he had ever met. In about 10 years, 13 by his brother Stefan, he took about €33,000,000 ¡ªfrom the safes of 28 banks in Austria. On his last job, he 14 the safe door open and €80,000 behind. With the 15 was a note, ''We don't need all that much''. A witness 16 his car and Streit was caught by the police. Then he was sent to Austria's Stein Prison to serve a six-year 17 . He boasted (´µÐê) at his trial that he would continue 18 the law, ''I'm a thief and I shall use every opportunity.'' In spite of the 19 , prison officials moved Streit to the prison's blacksmith shop. One day during the week before Christmas, Streit 20 . Searchers found all his doors were well locked. Streit had 21 to make a set of keys and let himself out. Not to 22 , though. After crossing into Bavaria, Streit 23 the suspicion (»³ÒÉ) of German customs police on purpose and got himself 24 . ''I want to be in a German prison, ''he 25 to the surprised police. ''As German courts give much milder (κ͵Ä) sentences for 26 like mine and will 27 the time I would otherwise have served in Stein Prison.'' In prison, Streit 28 his keepers to let him telephone his former keeper, Karl Schreiner of Stein Prison. ''I'm sorry 29 I caused trouble. I didn't want to 30 anybody by escaping. Conditions weren't that bad. In fact the food was better than it is here.''
11. A.artist B.dancer C. composer D. musician
12. A.bank B.safe C. prison D. door
13. A. offered B. trained C. helped D.respected
14. A. made B. left C.broke D. removed
15. A. safe B. job C. door D. money
16. A.recognized B. stole C. rode D. broke
17. A.treatment B. holiday C. freedom D. sentence
18. A. obeying B. breaking C.respecting D. destroying
19. A. sentence B. trial C.warning D. suggestion
20. A. disappeared B. starved C.survived D. worked
21. A. tried B. decided C. managed D.expected
22. A. safety B. freedom C. hometown D.prison
23. A. attracted B.offered C. removed D. admitted
24. A. recognized B. relaxed C.arrested D. encouraged
25. A. went B. lied C. negotiated D.explained
26. A. crimes B. robbery C. money D.mistakes
27. A. multiply B. lose C. add D. reduce
28. A. cheated B. persuaded C.expected D. helped
29. A.though B. but C. for D. if
30. A. injure B. steal C. embarrass D. Accuse
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When my family moved to Ohio over the summer, I feared attending another new school and knowing no one because I was able to expect what was coming. I had bright red hair and enormous glasses. In addition, I was 11 and not very sociable.
Boarding the school bus that first day, I felt like all eyes on me. I could hear the
12 ¡°She¡¯s huge!¡± Obviously, the kids on the bus had known each other well. I spent that first bus 13 in silence.
The following day was even 14 . I did not notice that a few boys had tied a shoelace across the aisle (¹ýµÀ) and thus fell face first on the bus, 15 everything I was carrying.
16 I was embarrassingly gathering my supplies, I could hear the laughter, and then the
17 ¡°That felt like an earthquake!¡± Anyway, I 18 to find a seat. Looking out of the window, I held back the tears 19 up in my eyes.
It was then that I sank into myself. I began walking everywhere. I would wander through the woods behind our house. I would also walk to a 20 about two miles down the road, where I would chat silently with God. I began 21 the afternoon school bus on purpose, walking home instead. Then, 22 , I started losing weight. And as I became content with myself, I began making 23 .
One of my newly-found friends also 24 with her weight, wanting to be a ¡°perfect¡± cheerleader. She lived near my neighborhood so we would meet and 25 together. This become a daily activity with talking and laughing 26 the way different from the lonely walks I had taken. My friend said that I didn¡¯t have to be 27 . I just had to be me, and be happy with myself.
While I would not want to 28 that time of loneliness, sadness and embarrassment, I am 29 I made it through. Whenever I am struggling with any other problem in life, I always remember the proverb ¡°This too shall pass.¡± If you can find a path with no obstacles (Õϰ), it probably doesn¡¯t 30 anywhere.
11. A. overweight B. outgoing C. intelligent D. friendly
12. A. shouts B. whistles C. whispers D. laughs
13. A. ride B. lift C. drive D. travel
14. A. funnier B. longer C. worse D. duller
15. A. losing B. dropping C. leaving D. throwing
16. A. Though B. Because C. Since D. While
17. A. opinions B. statements C. discussions D. comments
18. A. determined B. attempted C. managed D. pretended
19. A. growing B. jumping C. welling D. putting
20. A. garden B. market C. library D. church
21. A. escaping B. stopping C. delaying D. missing
22. A. uninterestedly B. unexpectedly C. unfortunately D. uncertainly
23. A. friends B. changes C. efforts D. decisions
24. A. compared B. struggled C. dealt D. lived
25. A. walk B. play C. chat D. run
26. A. in B. by C. across D. along
27. A. perfect B. friendly C. shy D. thin
28. A. remind B. relive C. relate D. rethink
29. A. excited B. upset C. proud D. regretful
30. A. exist B. lead C. stretch D. stay
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My First Job
Jay Leno is a very famous TV host in NBC£®He started his talk show titled The Jay Lena Show in September 2009£®It was a very popular TV programm in America£®Here is the story of his first job£®
I gained a very strong work concept from my parents, both of whom lived through a hard period of time-the Great Depression£¨´óÏôÌõ£©£®They couldn't ___36___ people who didn't work regularly£®I once told my mom that Sylvester Stallone was getting $12 million for ten weeks of work£®"What's he going to do the rest of the _37__?" she asked£®
I took my first job at Wilmington Ford near my homerown of Andover, Massachusetts, when I was 16£®I worked until five or six o'clock on school days and __38____ 12-hour days during the summer as a prepper£¨²ÁÏ´Æû³µµÄС¹¤£©£®This meant washing and polishing the new cars, and making sure the paper floor mats were in __39__£®Another responsibility was taking off the hubcaps (³µÂÖ챸ǣ© at night, so they wouldn't get stolen, and 40 them the next day£®This was 41 work because we had about seven acres of 42 One day, carrying an armful of hubcaps 43 a corner, I almost __44__ our new general manager£®Scared, I dropped them all£®He __45 me on the spot£®
I was too ashamed to tell my parents£®Every day for about two weeks, I stayed __46 until evening£®Then I would go home and say I had a £®__47___ day at work£®
Trying to make a last 48 , I wrote a letter to Henry Ford II and told him what happened£®I said that we were a reliable Ford family and that when I was old enough, I was going to buy a Mustang£® __49__ the owner of the dealership(¾Óªµê£© called£®"I don't know who you know in Detroit£®" he said£®"but if you want your job back, you've 50 it.¡±
Later, during college, I wanted to work at a Roils-Royce dealership, but the owner said there were no openings£®So 1 started washing cars there anyway£®When the ___51__ noticed me, I said I was working until he _52__ me£®He did£®And the second day, I started to work there as a sales clerk£®
It 53 persistence (¼á³Ö£© to succeed£®Attitude 54_ matters£®I have never thought I was better than anyone else, but I have always believed I couldn't be _ 55 £®
36£®A£®see B£®know C£®understand D£®love
37£®A£®day B£®month C£®week D£®year
38£®A£®put in B£®took up C£®gave out D£®stuck to
39£® A£®place B£®need C£®shape D£®fashion
40£®A£®changing B£®selling C£®replacing D£®cleaning
41£®A£®hard B£®normal C£®regular D£®plain
42£®A£®mats B£®cars C£®areas D£®floors
43£®A£®at B£®in C£®beyond D£®around
44£®A£®broke into B£®looked across C£®crashed into D£®came across
45£®A£®fired B£®left C£®punished D£®forgot
46£®A£®calm B£®busy C£®still D£®alone
47£®A£®stressful B£®relaxing C£®bad D£®great
4S£®A£®effort B£®change C£®dialogue D£®decision
49£®A£®Gradually B£®Eventually C£®Temporarily D£®Hopefully
50£®A£®reached B£®passed C£®got D£®caught
51£®A£®prepper B£®owner C£®clerk D£®customer
52£®A£®helped B£®tired C£®hired D£®called
53£®A£®makes B£®shows C£®carries D£®takes
54£®A£®also B£®even C£®never D£®ever
55£®A£®followed B£®scolded C£®defeated D£®interrupted
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I was a publishing director and was looking forward to embracing a new day of work, as always£¬that morning£®
I would always turn to the crossword, but that day it didn't 31 I'd been doing it for 30 odd years, but trying to read this one was like treading through syrup£¨Ìǽ¬£©: 32 slow and hard£® I thought I must be tired£® I said to my assistant£® The 33 colleague contacted my wife, Beth, and she drove me straight to hospital£® There, confirmation came that I'd had a stroke in the part of my brain that 34 communication£® I was now in a condition that means it's difficult or 35 to receive and produce language£® It was the only time I 36 £®
I was back at home a week later, and my goal was to get better and 37 Work in a couple of months£® The way to 38 my language ability was rough£® I'd look at simple pictures and try to describe them as my mind 39 round and round in the darkness, looking for words£®
As the months passed it became 40 that I wasn't going to be able to go back to my old job£® For 25 years, I had 41 myself as a publisher£® I was used to a busy day of meetings£® I enjoyed colleagues and the 42 I'd had£® I didn¡¯t feel ready to say goodbye to my old self£® There were times when I felt incredibly 43 £®
In the darkest months, I devoted myself to 44 £® I couldn't manage novels or newspapers, 45 I tried reading poetry, and found the shorter lines less overwhelming£® My speech came back, and I learned how to read again, though much more slowly£® I also learned the 46 to keep up£® I allowed myself to slow down, and started to enjoy it£®
47 , I rid of my old skin£® I grieved the past, its passing and its absence, and started to 48 it£® Now, 10 years later, I look after my grandson a day a week, and my relationship with my family is deeper than ever£® If you'd asked me 15 years ago to 49 the importance of the things in my life I might have said work, but now I'm no longer a high-achieving publisher£® I'm a 50 man£®
31£®A£® wear off B£® make any sense C£® count up D£® pay off
32£®A£® temporarily B£® scarcely C£® incredibly D£® savagely
33£®A£® curious B£® reserved C£® rigid D£® concerned
34£®A£® calls for B£® deals with C£® suffers from D£® responds to
35£®A£® practical B£® absurd C£® impossible D£® innocent
36£®A£® prayed B£® cried C£® failed D£® withdrew
37£®A£® contribute to B£® agree to C£® return to D£® appeal to
38£®A£® obtaining B£® rebuilding C£® revealing D£® improving
39£®A£® slipped B£® doubted C£® wandered D£® reckoned
40£®A£® messy B£® flexible C£® straightforward D£® self-evident
41£® A£® informed B£® estimated C£® reflected D£® defined
42£®A£® extinction B£® reward C£® agenda D£® status
43£®A£® angry B£® acute C£® prejudiced D£® merciless
44£®A£® speaking B£® trying C£® writing D£® managing
45£®A£® since B£® until C£® SO D£® as
46£®A£® favor B£® patience C£® coincidence D£® comfort
47£®A£® Gradually B£®Hopefully C£® Narrowly D£® Annually
48£®A£® keep up with B£® come to terms with C£® get around to D£® live up to
49£®A£® arrange B£® compare C£® rank D£® declare
50£®A£® genius B£® community C£® dignity D£® family
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¡°Can I see my baby?¡± the happy new mother asked. When the baby was placed in her arms and she was 36 . The baby had been born without ears.
Time 37 that the baby¡¯s hearing was perfect. It was only his 38 that was damaged. When he rushed home from school one day and 39 himself into his mother¡¯s arms, she sighed, 40 that he would have many heartbreaks in his life.
He grew up and became a 41 with his classmates. He might 42 have been class president, but for that. The boy¡¯s father 43 with the family physician in secret. ¡°Could 44 be done?¡± the father asked. ¡°I believed I could 45 on a pair of outer ears, if they could be got,¡± the doctor answered. So the 46 began for a person who would make such a 47 for a young man.
Two years went by. Then the father said, ¡°You are going to the hospital, son. Mother and I have someone who will give the ears you need. 48 it¡¯s a secret,¡± said the father. The operation was very 49 , and a new person appeared. ¡°But I must know!¡± he urged his father. ¡°Who 50 so much for me? I could never do enough for him.¡± ¡°I do not believe you could.¡± said the father.
The secret was 51 for years till he stood with his father over his mother¡¯s coffin. Slowly and 52 , his father raised his mother¡¯s thick brown hair to 53 that his mother had no outer ears. ¡°Mother said she was 54 she never let her hair be cut,¡± he whispered gently, ¡°and nobody ever thought she was less 55 , did they?¡±
36£®A£®angry B£®surprised C£®disappointed D£®curious
37£®A£®told B£®seemed C£®proved D£®saw
38£®A£®figure B£®face C£®ear D£®appearance
39£®A£®put B£®got C£®sent D£®took
40£®A£®knowing B£®guessing C£®doubting D£®wondering
41£®A£®enemy B£®favorite C£®stranger D£®friend
42£®A£®ever B£®even C£®also D£®still
43£®A£®asked B£®chatted C£®spoke D£®said
44£®A£®something B£®everything C£®anything D£®nothing
45£®A£®transplant B£®operate C£®set D£®fix
46£®A£®operation B£®interview C£®search D£®examination
47£®A£®devotion B£®sacrifice C£®effort D£®contribution
48£®A£®Therefore B£®Though C£®But D£®Otherwise
49£®A£®normal B£®useful C£®difficult D£®successful
50£®A£®changed B£®worked C£®gave D£®did
51£®A£®discussed B£®hidden C£®spread D£®kept
52£®A£®carefully B£®sadly C£®tenderly D£®excitedly
53£®A£®see B£®find C£®tell D£®show
54£®A£®proud B£®glad C£®worried D£®regretful
55£®A£®respectable B£®ugly C£®beautiful D£®fashionable
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2.11-15 ABCBD 16-20 ADBCA 21-25 CBACD 26-30 ADBDC
3.11-15 ACACB 16-20 DDCCD 21-25 DBABA 26-30 DABCB
4.36-40 CDAAC 41-45 ABDCA 46-50 BDABC 51-55 BCDAC
5.31¡ª35 BCDBC 36¡ª40 BCBCD 41¡ª45 DDABC 46¡ª50 BABCD
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