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John found it a challenge to meet the needs of the boss. _________, he had no way to satisfy him.
A. In need B. In case C. In no time D. In other words
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You should use your English ______ the classroom, not just in class, or you’ll forget what you know.
A. at B. from C. beneath D. beyond
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Listen to the music! That’s what I ______ in a competition last July.
A. played B. had played C. have played D. was playing
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It comes as ______ surprise that ______ dream of space travel will soon come true.
A. a; the B. the; the C. the; a D. a; 不填
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請根據(jù)以下提示,結(jié)合生活中的事例,用英語寫一篇短文,談?wù)勀銓φ\實honesty的看法。
Honesty is the human quality of communicating and acting truthfully and with fairness.
"Honesty is the best policy." -- William Shakespeare, Mark Twain and Steve Landesberg all said this saying.
注意:
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完成句子(共10小題;每小題2分,滿分20分)
71. The company produces a lot of mobile phones annually , and_________________________ to Hong Kong. (sell)
這家公司每年生產(chǎn)很多手機(jī),其中三分之二出售給香港。
72. _____________________ that he graduated from college? (ago)
他到底是多少年之前大學(xué)畢業(yè)的?
73.What a pity! Considering his ability and experience, ___________________________ (do)
多么可惜。】紤]到他的能力和經(jīng)驗,他本可以做得更好的。
74. Oil ______________, they had to take a taxi home. (run)
汽油已沒了, 他們只好打車回家
75. ____________________________________betray our country. (circumstance)
在任何情況下我們都不能背叛自己的祖國。
76. Yesterday news came from the school office _____________________________ Wuhan University. (admit)
昨天,來自學(xué)校辦公室的消息說他已被武漢大學(xué)錄取了。
77. ____________________________ , he managed to finish the work ahead of schedule. (as)
盡管他很累,但還是提前完成了這項工作。
78.Those______________ the progress they have made will have greater success.(content)
那些不滿足于自己所取得的進(jìn)步的人將會取得更大的成功。
79. ___________________ when he heard that he was rejected by the student’s union.. (disappoint)
當(dāng)他聽說他沒被學(xué)生會錄取時,他是多么失望!
80. The more he insisted he was innocent, ____________ believe him. (seem)
他越堅稱自己無辜,他們似乎越不相信他。
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Fifteen years after Titanic smashed box office records and swept the Academy Awards with 11 wins, director James Cameron's favorite starring Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet is heading back to theaters — this time in 3D. Cameron, who used to criticize other filmmakers for their naive attempts to convert 2D films to 3D, spent 60 weeks and $18 million trying to get the process right for Wednesday's release of Titanic 3D, scheduled to coincide with the 100th anniversary of the real-life disaster. The burning question: How many people have yet to see a movie that took in $1.8 billion during its first theatrical run and has become on all cable movie channels? And for everyone else, is the new look worth the ticket price?
It is spectacular: The 3D conversion, designed with obvious care and a great deal of consideration by Cameron, makes "a great film even greater," says Lou Lumenick at The New York Post. The huge ship looks all the more impressive, the shocking disaster scenes all the more "jaw-dropping," and the scene in which Jack rescues Kate from a suicide attempt becomes more "terrifying and romantic" in 3D. The conversion "more than justifies another big-screen voyage."
It is needless: Titanic 3D serves as the poster film for "how unnecessary such technological methods are when you have a perfectly good original in the first place," says Ann Hornaday at The Washington Post. "The 3D conversion doesn't look bad, but the added visual depth fails to raise the film's "humanism and spectacle." Occasionally, the 3D "creates distance where there should be romantic intimacy," or distract audiences’ attention by giving background extras a visual weight equal to the scene's main players. The 3D release only serves to remind us that this thrilling, complicated film "has had the right dimensions all along."
It changes the future of 3D: Films converted from 2D to 3D, with the promise that vivid lifelike effects will draw audiences into a scene the way "flat" images can't, have generally disappointed, says Peter Howell at The Toronto Star. Titanic 3D, however, "shows how the ambition can be realized if the will and skill are there." Every scene is sharper and brighter. Some shots are "now so thrilling as to almost lead to dizziness." Finally, we're seeing the artistic value of a 3D conversion, which should inspire more filmmakers to follow in Cameron's footsteps.
67. According to the passage, what can be expected from the release of Titanic 3D?
A.The date of the first show is fixed on a special date..
B.In the film, Jack and Kate will be rescued.
C.More people will go to the cinema to enjoy the new version.
D.The film will make a 1.8 billion dollar bonus in the run.
68. It can be inferred from the passage that, James Cameron __________
A.has his own understanding in making 3D films
B.didn’t like the idea of converting 2D films to 3D first.
C.made little effort to make Titanic 3D
D.had to choose Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet to star in the film
69. According to Ann Hornaday, Titanic 3D _____________ .
A.has a poor visual effect.
B.makes the distance between the screen and audience closer.
C.is unnecessary to make in comparison.
D.has a great breakthrough in film making
70. It would be most possible for us to find this article in__________.
A. a news review
B. an academic report
C. an entertainment column
D. a graduation essay
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An “apple polisher” is one who gives gifts to win friendship or special treatment. It is not exactly a bribe(賄賂),but is close to it.
All sorts of people are apple polishers, including politicians and people in high offices ── just about everybody. Oliver Cromwell, the great English leader, offered many gifts to win the support of George Fox and his party, but failed.
There are other phrases meaning the same thing as “apple-polishing” ── “soft-soaping” or “butter-up”. A gift is just one way to “soft-soap” somebody, or to “butter him up”. Another that is just as effective is flattery, giving someone high praise ── telling him how good he looks, or how well he speaks, or how talented and wise he is.
Endless are the ways of flattery. Who does not love or hear it ? Only an unusual man can resist the thrill of being told how wonderful he is. In truth, flattery is good medicine for most of us, who gets so little of it.
We need it to be more sure of ourselves. It cannot hurt unless we get carried away by it. But we just lap it up for its food value and nourishment, as a cat laps up milk, then we can still remain true to ourselves.
Sometimes, however, flattery will get you nothing from one who has had too much of it. A good example is the famous 12th century legend of King Canute of Denmark and England. The king got tired of listening to the endless sickening flattery of his courtiers(朝臣).They overpraised him to the skies, as a man of limitless power.
He decided to teach them a lesson. He took them to the seashore and sat down. Then he ordered the waves to stop coming in. The tide was too busy to listen to him. The king was satisfied. This might show his followers how weak his power was and how empty their flattery.
63.Which of the following activities has nothing to do with “apple-polishing” ?
A. A boy tells his girlfriend how pretty she looks
B. An employee tells his boss how good he is at management
C.A knight(騎士)is said to be of limitless power by his followers
D.A teacher praised his students for their talent and wisdom.
64.Which of the following statement about flattery is TRUE according to the author ?
A. Too much flattery can carry us away
B. Flattery is too empty to do people any good
C. Flattery can get nothing but excessive(過度的)pride
D. Flattery is one of the ways to apple-polish people.
65. King Canute of Denmark and England took his followers to the seashore because __________.
A. he was sick of his normal
B. he disliked being overpraised any more
C. he wanted them to realize how wise he was
D. he wanted them to see how weak he was as a king
66 The author thinks that flattery can do good to those who _________.
A. are really excellent
B. lack confidence
C. are politicians or in high offices
D. think highly of themselves
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Here below we will talk about the American expressions using the word “Dutch”. Many of the “Dutch” expressions heard in American English were first used in England in the seventeenth century. Britain used to be called “empire on which the sun never sets”,which gained its supreme[至高無上的] power mostly by its naval military forces. The period of the Anglo-Dutch Wars was a time of fierce naval competition between England and the Netherlands. At that time, the British used “Dutch” as a word for something bad, or false, or mistaken.
A “Dutch agreement” was one made between men who had drunk too much alcohol. “Dutch courage” was the false courage produced by the effects of drinking alcohol. And “Dutch leave” was what a solider took when he left his base[基地] without permission.
Some of these old expressions are still used today with a little different meaning. “Dutch treat” is one example. Long ago, a Dutch treat was a dinner at which the invited guests were expected to pay for their own share of the food and drink. Now, Dutch treat means that when friends go out to have fun, each person pays his own share.
Another common expression heard a few years ago was “in Dutch”, which simply referred to the country then. Nowadays, if someone says to you, you are in Dutch, they are telling you that you were in trouble. An important person, a parent or teacher perhaps, is angry with you.
Some of the Dutch expressions heard in American English have nothing to do with the Dutch people at all. In the 1700s, Germans who moved to the United States often were called Dutch. This happened because of mistakes in understanding and saying the word “Deutsch”, the German word for German. Families of these German people still live in the eastern United States, many in the state of Pennsylvania. They are known as the Pennsylvania Dutch.
During the American Civil War, supporters of the northern side in the central state of Missouri were called Dutch, because many of them were German settlers. In California, during the Gold Rush, the term Dutch was used to describe Germans, Swedes, and Norwegians as well as people from the Netherlands.
President Theodore Roosevelt once noted that anything foreign and non-English was called Dutch. One expression still in use, “to talk to someone like a Dutch uncle”, did come from the Dutch. The Dutch were known for the firm way they raise their children. So if someone speaks to you like a Dutch uncle, he is speaking in a very severe way. And you should listen to him carefully.
59. According to paragraph 1, the British used “Dutch” as a word for something bad and mistaken because ___________.
A. it was the long-lasting habit of the British language.
B. the Netherlands was the closest rival for naval supremacy then.
C. there was a close connection between “Dutch” and “Deutsch”.
D. anything foreign and non-English was called “Dutch”.
60. Most probably, a man with Dutch courage would _________.
A. invite his friends to dinner.
B. beat a strange passer-by without any reason.
C. speak to a Dutch uncle.
D. become angry with the teacher.
61. Which one of the following has nothing to do with the Dutch?
A. The expression “to talk to someone like a Dutch uncle”.
B. When friends go out to have fun, they choose Dutch treat.
C. Germans who moved to the United States were called Dutch.
D. A solider took “Dutch leave” during wars.
62. What is mainly talked about in the passage?
A. Language causes of the Anglo-Dutch Wars
B. Language of the Netherlands
C. Deutsch V.S. Dutch
D. Dutch expressions in American English
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Coral Polge is a person who has provided comfort to thousands. She has a remarkable talent which may prove the survival of the human spirit after death, for Coral is a medium who draws the portraits of spirits who contact her.
Coral, whose parents were spiritualists, was brought up in Harrow, North London, where she attended a local spiritualist church. She studied art at the local college, where she specialized in textile design. Even though, at the time, she wasn’t very good at drawing portraits, she met a medium who told her she would be a psychic(通靈的) artist.
She doesn’t actually see the dead nor are her hands controlled by the spirits; instead she ‘feels’ them coming through. Early in her career she drew the portraits of ‘spirit guides’ from whom she had received help. These portraits of guides, who included Red Indians, nuns and monks, were remarkable, yet could have been attributed to the working of a strong imagination. She also drew portraits by holding on to letters that had been written by people who had since died.
Coral says, ‘I know exactly what to draw without thinking about it. It’s involuntary, like breathing or walking.’ Not only are her portraits a good likeness but she sketches her subjects in clothes they would have worn in life.
Coral has displayed her talent at public meetings around the world. At one gathering there was a woman whose grandfather had just died. Her name was Phyllis Timms. Coral made a sketch of a man who had a long moustache and Phyllis recognized the man as her grandfather. However, she was reluctant to acknowledge the portrait without extra proof. Coral then said that the colour green was a link with the man whom she had drawn. Mrs Timms, whose maiden name had been Green, understood the significance of the comment and claimed the portrait.
There are some people for whom this is evidence of survival from beyond the grave. Others, who have their reservations, may put it down to an extraordinary kind of extrasensory perception(超感知覺). Whatever the reason, it remains a gift impossible to explain away and we should try to keep an open mind.
55. Coral draws the portrait of spirits in order to _________.
A. prove the existence of the human spirit.
B. help those people who miss the dead.
C. show off her special talent.
D. inspire people who believe in ghosts.
56. According to the passage, Coral can draw the spirits most probably because ________.
A. she could see the spirits.
B. she learned it from college.
C. she had a strong imagination.
D. she was gifted to feel the spirits.
57. In the example of Phyllis Timms, _________________.
A. Coral failed to draw the portrait of the dead.
B. Phyllis eventually admitted the portrait was right about her grandfather.
C. Coral knew green was a name.
D. Phyllis didn’t prove Coral’s talent.
58. What we can infer from the last paragraph is that ______________________.
A. people should believe in the spirits.
B. science can explain what happened to Coral.
C. people can learn supernatural powers.
D. some mysteries on human beings haven’t been solved yet.
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