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1、首字母填空練習(xí)一Most American families are smaller than the families in o  81   countries. Most American families e   82    have one or two children.C   83    in the US will leave their parents' home when they

2、 grow up. They usually live far f    84    their parents because they want to find good jobs. They often w   85    to their parents or telephone them. And they often go to visit their parents on h   86 

3、60;  .    Parents usually let their children choose their o   87    jobs. Americans think it important for young people to decide on their lives by themselves.    Children are asked to do some work around their hous

4、e. And in many families, children are paid (付錢)for d   88    some housework so that they learn how to make money for their own use.Do you often help y   89    parents do housework? Do you want to live with your parents w 

5、0;90    you grow up ? 二Lofton is a little village 村莊in England. It is not f_81_ from the city of Manchester. Not many families l_82_ around the village, so the people all know each o_83_. Most of them are friendly and helpful.    Though their homes are in

6、 Lofton, many people have jobs in Manchester. S_84_ work in large factories there. A few work in shops o_85_ offices. Most of these people go to work by train. It usually t_86_ _ about half an hour to go from Lofton to Manchester.    In the evening a lot of people like watch

7、ing TV. But if they go to see a film or go to a concert (音樂會(huì)), they have to go to Manchester, because there are n_87_ cinemas in Lofton.    Like many other villages near towns or cities, it is clean and quiet. So life in Lofton may not be so e_88_ as the life in the b_89_ cities,

8、 but it can be just as interesting. That is w_90_ people in Lofton love their village. 三One day I found a little girl sitting in the park sadly. Lots of people passed by but never s 81     to see why she looked so sad. As I got closer I saw that her b

9、0; 82     had a strange shape. Thats a hump (駝背)! Perhaps that was the r  83  why people just passed by and make no effort to help. I sat down beside her and said, “Hello! Then she, in a low voice, said, “Hi. I smiled and she smiled b 

10、 84   , shyly. Then we talked there u  85     it got dark. I asked the girl why she was so sad. She looked at me and said with a sad face, “Because of the hump.    “But, you make me t  86    

11、;of an angel (天使), sweet and friendly, I said. She looked at me and asked, “Really? I said, “Yes, I think you are an angel and you come here to watch over all those people walking by. When she h  87   this, the little girl jumped up. “I am! Im an angel! I was happy beca

12、use she was no sad any m  88  .After that, my life also changed. I learned how to s  89   both happiness and sadness with others. I believe now we give something to others in the s  90   way we get the same.(四)There

13、 was a big earthquake under the India Ocean Area o  81    December 26th 2004 and it c 82    a large tsunami. Tsunamis are great sea waves produced especially by an earthquake.    That morning my classmates and I went to the seasid

14、e and had breakfast when we h  83     a loud noise like bombs. People in the sea ran w   84   to the bank and s   85    , Water is coming! Someone told us to run to a higher place. We ran as q

15、60; 86     as we could.    Since we did not know what happened, we were very f  87   . We looked back and saw a t  88    picture. The water waves were so strong that cars  were made to fall

16、upside down and the flood w 89    away everything on the seaside .We were safe but the n   90   of victims was over 140,000. People call the day Black Sunday.五Man has a big brain. He can think and s  76    languages

17、. Scientists once thought that man isnt the same as animals b   77   man can think and learn. They know now that dogs, monkeys and birds can learn, too.    They are beginning to u   78    that men are different from

18、 animals because they can speak. Animals cant speak. They make much n    79   when they are afraid, or unhappy. Apes(猿) can learn some things more quickly than man. One or two of them have learned a few words. But they cannot join words to make s  80 

19、; . They cannot think l   81   us because they have no language. Language is a wonderful thing. Man has been a   82   to build a modern world because he has language. Every child can speak his own language very w  83 

20、60; when he is four or five, b   84    no animals learn to speak.How do children learn it? Scientists dont really know w   85    happens inside our body when we speak. They only know that man can speak because he has a brain.

21、六Reading books is a good hobby for all kinds of reasons. First, reading books is f  72  . You can always keep yourself interested and help you to have an enjoyable time if you like reading. This is especially u  73   when the weather is bad

22、. It is a relaxing hobby too. You can really become lost in a book. Next, you can read a book a  74  : in a car, in a waiting-room, on a plane, in bed even in the bath. All you n  75   is a book! Reading is a convenient hobby as it is easy

23、to stop and then start again. A  76   good reason for reading books is that it is useful. If you read as a hobby you will get better and better at it. This m  77   that you will read faster and will become better at understanding what you r

24、ead. As your reading improves, you will probably find your schoolwork becomes much e  78  . Many school subjects depend on依賴于 good reading and, as you read, you learn more and more. Some people say that reading is out of date. This is not t  79  

25、;. You have to be able to read to use a computer and, the better you read, the better your computer skills will be. Reading is never out of date! Good readers are most likely to be good w  80  , too. They are usually good at spelling as well, and have more things t

26、o write about. Reading books is a wonderful hobby, one of the best. W  81   other hobby could be more useful, or more enjoyable?七M(jìn)ichel is a young girl who works for the police as a handwriting expert(專家). She has helpedc 72   many criminals by using her

27、special talents. When she was fourteen, Michel was already quite i 73   in the differences in her friends handwriting that she would spend hours on them. After f 74   college she went to France for a special two-year class in handwriting at the School of

28、Police Science. Michel says that it is i 75   for people to hide their handwriting. She can discover most ofw 76   she needs to know just by looking at the writing with her own eyes. She also has machines t 77    help her make out diff

29、erent kinds of paper and ink. This knowledge is o 78    great help to the police. Michel believes that handwriting is a good sign of what kind of person the w 79   is. “I wouldnt go out with a fellow i 80 I didnt like his handwriting. She s

30、ays. And she adds she fell in l 81   with her future husband, a young policeman after she studied his handwriting. It is later proved to be all right, however.八Water and its importance to human life were the centre of the worlds attention last week. March 22nd was World Wate

31、r Day and had the theme “Water for Life. There are more than one billion people in the world who live w    67      safe drinking water. The United Nations h    68      to cut this numbe

32、r in half by 2015. Solving s    69      a big problem seems like an unreal challenge挑戰(zhàn). But e    70     ,even teenagers, can do something to help. A teenage girl in the U.S. has set an examp

33、le to others of her age around the world. Rene Haggerty, 13, was awarded the 2004 Gloria Barron Prize for her work collecting waste batteries which p_71_ water.  In 2003, Haggerty went on a field trip to the Great Lakes Science Centre in Ohio. There, she saw an exhibition about h

34、ow chemicals in old batteries h_72       the water of Lake Erie. Haggerty learnt that recycling the batteries was an easy way to solve the problem. “I think everybody can do it, because everyone u    73    

35、0; batteries, and it can make a big difference. With these words, she began her action in her area. She talked to the government and school. She got permission to start a recycling programmme in the school as well as the public libraries, hospitals and churches. With the help from her family, f

36、riends and l_74_ officers, she gathered, transported and made an educational video. Over the past two years, she collected four tons噸of batteries. When she was asked if she felt like that she was a hero, Haggerty was q_75_ modest. “Not really. Well, maybe for the fish I saved! Every year t

37、he Gloria Barron Prize honours young Americans aged 8 to 18 who have organized and led a service activity that has clearly done good to other people. Each year, ten w_76_ will receive U.S. $2000 each, to help with their education costs or their public service work. 九.Bedtime stories are on

38、e of the delights喜悅 of early childhood. But a_1 to Dr. Julie Spreadbury from Queensland, parents s_2 not speed up reading to their children after they entered primary school. She says listening to, reading and d_3 the stories help children's relaxation. My theory 理論 is that when children can rea

39、d t_4, most parents stop reading to them, Dr. Spreadbury says. That may be at the end of the Year 1, which is far too informal.Dr. Spreadbury says bedtime reading n_5 only gives children a good b_6 at school, but also brings parents and their children closer. This makes it funnier for them to open u

40、p and talk to parents about things that are worrying them, o_7 things they are reading in their everyday life. (十). British Milkman Steve Leech saved some shops and flats公寓 with milk and won a National Bravery Awaid. Leech, 35 years old, said that when he was sending out milk as u_1 along Pine Stree

41、t, he s_2 heard a loud, strange sound behind him and then he saw smoke coming out of a shop in Cornwall, southern England. "That must be a fire, I t_3," Leech said."Then I quickly d_4 to do something. So I p_5 the door in and then I s_6 for the people inside. Then I started pouring mi

42、lk e_7。 "He used 320 pints of milk to stop the fire. When fire-fighters r_8 the shop, the fire was under control.Leech helped save the 1_ 9 of eight people in the flats above the shops. "It was hard work o_10 all those bottles. But it was even harder trying to tell my boss where all the mi

43、lk had gone," Leech said jokingly.十一We have been in Australia for three days. Were having a g time here. Australia is the sixth largest country in the world. There is so m to see that it is impossible for me to tell you everything. Sydney is a beautiful city. There are many big t and beautiful

44、flowers around the houses and they l _ really beautiful. There are also some special a in Australia, such as kangaroos and koalas. They are really lovely.During the past three days weve visited many p of interest around Sydney. Id like to spend more time here. But we will f to another city, Cairns,

45、to see coral beds (珊瑚礁) tomorrow. It is said that words cannot d _ the beauty of the colourful corals. Many famous cartoon films were made there. Now we are b packing our bags so that we will not lose time when we leave. We can enjoy o in Cairns this time tomorrow, Im looking forward to going there!

46、十二Advertisements are everywhere! Theyre on the r_ and TV, in newspapers and magazines. on buses and buildings. Theyre on websites and mobile phones. Companies g_ their products to film stars, pop stars and sports stars to u_ so that fans will buy them in order to copy the stars. Advertisements have

47、become so common(常見的) that they arent w_ any more. We dont like advertisements. so we try not to see them. We turn o_ the advertisements on computers. We refuse(拒絕) to watch them on TV, or read them in magazines. We no longer pay attention to the posters all around us. We dont copy the stars b_ we k

48、now they dont really like the things they advertise. This means that advertising companies need a new w_ to sell. They cant make their products “cool by advertising. Advertisements arent cool, and teenagers wont buy the things in advertisements J_ because the advertisements say they are fashionable.

49、 The latest way to advertise is not to advertise. I_ of using stars, companies are using teenagers. They pay them to tell their friends about new products. Teenagers dont want to dress like everyone else and buy the things that everyone else has. They want to look d_ and create their own style. Teen

50、agers dont think its cool to copy the stars or buy things theyve seen in advertisements. 十三In many big cities in the world, the overuse of cars is thought to be one of the major causes of air pollution. What will cars be 1_-in the future?Some experts think that today's cars are in trouble b _ th

51、ey use too much petrol( 汽油 ). They say the car of the future will be much, much smaller. The car of tomorrow will be m _ without a motor or air conditioning. It'll have no radio and no lights. Tomorrow's car will be an o_ air car with no doors or windows. It needn't have a pollution cont

52、rol system because it w _ use petrol. In fact, this new car will be pushed by the driver's feet. Very few people will be killed in accidents, because the top s_ will be five miles per hour. However, we are also warned not to ask for pretty c_ , because the cars will come in grey only.Other car e

53、xperts do not hold the same idea. They are s _ that the future will be happier. They think that all our problems will soon be solved by car companies with the production of the Supercar. Tomorrow's car will be bigger, faster, and more comfortable than b_ . The Supercar will have four rooms, TVs,

54、 running water, heat, air conditioning, and maybe a swimming pool. Large families will travel on 1 _ trips comfortably. If petrol is in short supply ( 供應(yīng)) , the Supercar will run on water.十四When the Great Library of Alexandria burned, the story goes that one book was saved. But nobody thought it was

55、 a v_ book. A poor man, who could read a little, bought it for a few coins.The book wasnt very interesting, but between its pages there was something very interesting i_. It was a thin strip of vellum(羊皮紙) on which was written the secret of the “Touch stone!The touchstone was a small pebble(卵石) that

56、 could t_ any common metal into pure gold. The writing e_ that it was lying among thousands of other pebbles that looked exactly like it. But the secret was that the real stone would feel w_, while ordinary pebbles were cold.So the man camped on the seashore and began testing pebbles. He knew that i

57、f he picked up ordinary pebbles and threw them down again b_ they were cold, he might pick up the same pebble hundreds of t_. So, when he felt one that was cold, he threw it into the sea. He spent a whole day doing this but none of them was the touchstone. Y_ he went on and on this way.十五You may ope

58、n your electronic mail and find information about how to buy medicine, cheap airline tickets, books and, of course, computers and computer products(產(chǎn)品). But the use of electronic spam(垃圾郵件) to s_ products has become a major problem to many people as it makes computer c_ more difficult.Many computers

59、 who want to send a lot of advertising may u_ the services of “spammer. A spammer is a p_ or company that uses computers to send out millions of copies of the same sales information. Spammers find e-mail a_ from websites, news groups and “chat room, where people send m_ to each other. Most spam is s

60、ent by companies that try to get you to buy their products. Some of these are h_ companies that offer good products for fair prices. These companies can offer their products for a l_ price than you might find in a store. However, much of the spam on the Internet is sent by criminals trying to sell p

61、roducts that do not exist or offer things they will not p_. They are only interested in stealing your money. One country in Africa has become famous for the criminals who try every known trick to cheat people.十六As we know, museums are buildings where many valuable and important objects are kept so t

62、hat people can go and see them. For examples, art museums are places where people can learn about v_ cultures. More and more popular “design museums that are opening today, however, perform quite a different role. U_ most art museums, the design museum shows objects that are easily found in our dail

63、y life, such as fridges and washing machines.The a_ of design museums is that they are places where people feel familiar with the exhibits(展品). Being different from the art museum visitors, design museums visitors s_ feel frightened or puzzled. This is partly because design museums clearly show how

64、and why mass-products(批量生產(chǎn)) work and look as they do, and how design has i_ the quality of our lives. Art museum exhibits, on the other hand, would most probably fill visitors with a feeling that there is something b_ their understanding.Several new design museums have opened their doors in r_ years. Each of these museums has tried to satisfy(滿足) the publics growing interest in the field with new i_. Londons Design Museums, for example, shows a collection of mass-produced objects from electric type

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