ÌâÄ¿ÄÚÈÝ

Snooker(̨Çò)is a big sport in China£®It is said that there are 300 million snooker players in China, so it's not surprised that some of the world's best players come from China£®Ding Junhui is one of them£®
When Ding Junhui was eight years old, there were not many snooker clubs£®His father often played with his friends on a table in the street£¬and one day Ding Junhui played with one of his father friends and beat him£®His father£¬a shoe salesman£¬discovered that his son was talented at snooker£®He then took Ding Junhui to China's nation snooker training center in Dongguan£¬Guangdong Province£®There£®they lived in a room of five square meters£®When they ran out of money£®Ding's father phoned his wife and told her to sell their house£®
After years of hard training£¬Ding turned professional in 2003 and became China's No£®1£®In 2005£®more than 100 million people watched Ding Junhui win the 2005 World Snooker China Open£®Since then, snooker has become more and more popular in China£®
¡°When I was a small boy, snooker was not in the top 10 favorite sports in China£¬¡±Ding says£®¡°Table tennis was top, followed by soccer, basketball and badminton£®Now£¬basketball is top£¬but snooker is surely in the top five£®¡±
СÌâ1:Ding Junhui¡¯s father usually played snooker  ---When Ding Junhui was young£®
A£®in a clubB£®in the streetC£®at home D£®in a training center
СÌâ2:Ding Junhui became the best snooker player in China          £®
A£®in 2003B£®in 2005C£®when he was 6 D£®when he was 8
СÌâ3:Ding Junhui and his father lived a_____ life when he was training in Dongguan£®
A£®rich B£®colorfulC£®hard D£®modern
СÌâ4:According to Ding Junhui¡¯s words£¬_________ is the top sport in China now£®
A£®ping-pongB£®soccerC£®snooker D£®basketball
СÌâ5:The passage mainly tells us  ____ £®
A£®how to be a top player in snooker
B£®what is the most popular sport in China
C£®snooker player Ding Junhui's story
D£®the history of snooker in China

СÌâ1:B
СÌâ2:B
СÌâ3:C
СÌâ4:D
СÌâ5:C

ÊÔÌâ·ÖÎö£ºÕâƪ¶ÌÎÄÖ÷Òª½éÉÜÁËÖйúµĄ̈ÇòÑ¡ÊÖ¶¡¿¡ê͵ijɳ¤Àú³Ì.
СÌâ1:¸ù¾ÝµÚ¶þ¶ÎHis father often played with his friends on a table in the street£¬ÃèÊö£¬¿É֪ѡB¡£
СÌâ2:¸ù¾ÝµÚÈý¶Îand became China's No£®1£®In 2005£®ÃèÊö£¬¿É֪ѡB¡£
СÌâ3:¸ù¾ÝµÚÈý¶ÎThere£®they lived in a room of five square meters£®When they ran out of money£®Ding's father phoned his wife and told her to sell their house£®ÃèÊö£¬¿ÉÖªËûÃÇÈÕ×ӺܼèÄÑ£¬¹ÊÑ¡C¡£
СÌâ4:¸ù¾Ý×îºóÒ»¶Î£®Now£¬basketball is top£¬but snooker is surely in the top five£®¡±ÃèÊö£¬¿É֪ѡD¡£
СÌâ5:Õâƪ¶ÌÎÄÖ÷Òª½éÉÜÁËÖйúµĄ̈ÇòÑ¡ÊÖ¶¡¿¡ê͵ijɳ¤Àú³Ì£¬¹ÊÑ¡C¡£
µãÆÀ£º±¾ÎÄdzÏÔÒ׶®£¬²ã´Î·ÖÃ÷£¬Ñ§ÉúºÜÈÝÒ×°ÑÎÕÎÄÕÂÖÐÐÄÄÚÈÝ¡£´ðÌâÖÐ×¢Òâ´ø×ÅÎÊÌâÔĶÁ¶ÌÎÄ£¬Ò»°ã¾ÍÄÜ˳ÀûÕÒ³ö´ðÌâÒÀ¾Ý¡£¶ÔÓÚ²»ÄÜÖ±½ÓÕÒµ½¸ù¾ÝµÄÎÊÌâ×¢ÒâÁªÏµÉÏÏÂÎÄ£¬¸ù¾Ý¶ÌÎÄÖÐÐÄ×ܽá³öÕýÈ·´ð°¸¡£
Á·Ï°²áϵÁдð°¸
Ïà¹ØÌâÄ¿
James Cleveland Owens was the son of a farmer and the grandson of black slaves(Å«Á¥). His family moved to Cleveland when he was 9. There, a school teacher asked the youth his name.
¡°J.C.,¡± he replied.
She thought he had said ¡°Jesse¡±, and he had a new name.
Owens ran his first race at the age of 13. After high school, he went to Ohio State University. He had to work part time in order to pay for his education. As a second year student, in the Big Ten games in 1935, he set even more records than he would in the Olympic Games a year later.
A week before the Big Ten games, Owens fell down when he went downstairs. His back hurt so much that he could not exercise all week, and he was helped in and out of the car that drove him to the games. He refused to listen to the suggestions that he should give up and said he would try, event by event. He did try, and the results are in the record book.
The stage was set for Owens¡¯ success at the Olympic Games in Berlin(°ØÁÖ) the next year, and his success would come to be considered as not only athletic but also political(ÕþÖεÄ). Hitler(Ï£ÌØÀÕ) did not give congratulations to any of the black American winners.
¡°It was all right with me,¡± he said years later. ¡°I didn¡¯t go to Berlin to shake hands with him, anyway.¡±
After returning from Berlin, he received no telephone calls from the president of his own country, either. In fact, he was not honored by the United States until 1976, four years before his death.
Owens¡¯ Olympic success made little difference to him. He earned his living by looking after a school playground, and racing against cars and dogs.
¡°Sure, it worried me,¡± he said later. ¡°But at least it was an honest living. I had to eat.¡±
In the end, however, his gold medals changed his life. ¡°They have kept me alive over the years,¡± he once said. ¡°Time has stood still for me. That golden moment dies hard.¡±
СÌâ1:In the Big Ten games, Owens         .
A£®hurt himself in the back
B£®was successful in setting many records
C£®tried every sports event but all failed
D£®had to give up all events
СÌâ2:We can infer from the text that Owens was treated unfairly in the US at that time because         .
A£®he was the grandsonof black slaves
B£®he was the son of a poor farmer
C£®he didn¡¯t shake hands with Hitler
D£®he didn¡¯t talk to the US president on the phone
СÌâ3:When Owens says ¡°They have kept me alive over the years¡±, he means that the medals          .
A£®have been changed for money to help him live on
B£®have made him famous in the US
C£®have encouraged him to face difficulties in life
D£®have kept him busy with all kinds of jobs
СÌâ4:What can be the best title for the text?
A£®Jesse Owens ¡ª A Great American SportsmanB£®The Big Ten Games
C£®Making a Living As a SportsmanD£®How to Be a Successful
Many people have to work on the weekend. Some people do not mind. Others think it is terrible.
¡¡¡¡One man thinks that working on the weekend can be dangerous. He is Graham Coates. Mr Coates works in an office in Brighton, England.
¡¡¡¡On Saturday, May 24, 1986, he went to the office to do some work. When he got on the lift(µçÌÝ), it stopped between floors. Mr Coates could not get out of the lift. He started to shout, but no one heard him. Then Mr. Coats remembered that it was a holiday in England. No one was going to come to work until Tuesday.
¡¡¡¡There was nothing for him to do. He had to wait until one of his workmates came to work and found him. With nothing to eat or drink, Mr Coats ended up sleeping for most of the day.
¡¡¡¡Now Mr. Coates says, "I only use lifts if they have telephones in them."
СÌâ1:Mr. Coates thinks working on the weekend is_____.
A£®interesting B£®terrible C£®happy D£®unhappy
СÌâ2:Mr. Coates stayed in the lift for_____.
A£®about twenty hours B£®nearly two days
C£®one weekD£®more than sixty hours
СÌâ3:When Mr. Coates got out of the lift he_____.
A£®was cold, weak, hungry and tired
B£®wouldn't work there any more
C£®said "I only use lifts if they have telephones in them."
D£®went home at once
СÌâ4:Why could Mr. Coates not get out of the lift? Because _____.
A£®it was broken B£®it was the weekend
C£®it was in an office D£®it was a holiday
СÌâ5:In the lift, there was_________.
A£®waterB£®beerC£®telephoneD£®nothing


Ang Lee won the Best Director Oscar for his adventure film Life of Pi at the 85th Academy Awards in Hollywood, California February 24, 2013.
¡¡¡¡Life of Pi shows a young Indian named Pi, who finds the world he knows swept away when his family sells their zoo and sets sail for Canada with a few animals. Only Pi escapes from the storm and floats in a lifeboat with a giant Bengal tiger.
¡¡¡¡¡°I really want to thank you for believing this story and sharing this unbelievablejourney with me,¡± Lee said in his speech. The film also won three other Oscars, for best original music, best cinematography(µçÓ°ÒÕÊõ) and best visual(ÊÓ¾õ) effects. It won more awards than Lincoln and Argo which were also among the hottest nominees.
¡¡¡¡Coming from China's Taiwan, the 58-year-old Lee won an Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film in 2001 for Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon and another for Best Director in 2006 for Brokeback Mountain. He is the only person of Asian to win the directing award and one of the rare people who won that award more than once.
In an after-ceremony interview, Lee said he believed Asian films would come to the main stage of the world sooner or later. "I was born in Asia and grew up with Chinese education. It is natural for me to put Asian thinking into Western things." The film, which cost 120 million U.S. dollars, has earned nearly 600 million dollars worldwide. Lee said most of the earnings came from outside China. Lee said he felt warm that he won the award on the day of the Lantern Festival, a Chinese traditional festival on which families get together to solve puzzles on lanterns and eat Tang Yuan. He wished everyone a happy new year of the snake and everybody gets lucky.
СÌâ1:What kind of film does Life of Pi belong to?
A£®Comedies.B£®Tragedies.
C£®Detective films.D£®Adventure films.
СÌâ2:So far, how many Oscar directing awards has Ang Lee won?
A£®One.B£®Two.
C£®Three.D£®Four.
СÌâ3:How do Chinese people celebrate the Lantern Festival?
A£®Families get together and have rice dumplings.
B£®Children make lanterns out of big orange pumpkins.
C£®People solve puzzles on lanterns and enjoy Tang Yuan.
D£®Children go to the display of lanterns and receive red packets.
СÌâ4:What can we know from the passage?
A£®The 85th Academy Awards was held in Hollywood, California this year.
B£®Pi was a young American who had an adventure trip with a tiger in India.
C£®Lincoln and Argo won more awards than Life of Pi.
D£®Asian films have come to the main stage of the world.
СÌâ5:Which of the following about Life of Pi is true?
A£®It was a great success as it won four Oscars.
B£®It earned nearly 600 million dollars in China.
C£®It describes Pi¡¯s escape from a terrible earthquake.
D£®It is the only successful film Ang Lee has ever made.
A wise man was visiting a village with his students. He found a group of family members shouting in anger at each other. He turned to his students and asked: ¡°Why do people shout in anger at each other?¡±
His students thought for a while, and one of them said: ¡°Because when we lose our calm, we shout.¡±
¡°But, why should you shout when the other person is just next to you? You can just as well tell him what you have to say in a soft manner,¡± said the wise man.
Students gave some other answers but none were any good.
¡°When two people are angry at each other, their hearts become distanced,¡± the wise man explained. ¡°To cover that distance they must shout to be able to hear each other. The angrier they are, the louder they will have to shout to hear each other and cover that great distance.¡±
The wise man then gave an example: ¡°What happens when two people fall in love? They don¡¯t shout at each other but talk softly because their hearts are very close. When they love each other even more, what happens? They don¡¯t need to talk. They only look at each other and that¡¯s all. That is how close two people are when they love each other.¡±
He looked at his students and said: ¡°So when you argue, do not let your hearts get distant. Do not say words that distance you from others. Otherwise, there will come a day when the distance is so great that you will not find the path to return.¡±
СÌâ1:What did they find when a wise man and his students were visiting a village?
A£®A group of people were traveling there.
B£®A group of family members were playing there.
C£®His students were shouting with a group of people.
D£®A group of family members were shouting at each other angrily.
СÌâ2:One of the students thinks family members shout at each other because       .
A£®they are not friends
B£®they don¡¯t like each other
C£®they lose their calm
D£®they are far from each other
СÌâ3:What will happen when two people are angry with each other?
A£®They fight with each other.
B£®Their hearts become distanced.
C£®They are far away from each other.
D£®They are too angry to say a word.
СÌâ4:What will usually happen to two people at first when they fall in love with each other according to the passage?
A£®They talk softly.
B£®They shout at each other.
C£®They talk more.
D£®They don¡¯t say anything to each other.
СÌâ5:What¡¯s the topic of the passage?
A£®Shouting is bad.
B£®Don¡¯t shout.
C£®Cover the distance with love.
D£®The distance of love.
There is an old tiger in the forest (É­ÁÖ). He doesn¡¯t want to look for (Ñ°ÕÒ) food now. He often lets other animals get him some food to eat.
One day, he sees a monkey (ºï×Ó) and says,¡°I am hungry, monkey. Go and get me something to eat.¡±¡°I can¡¯t do that now, tiger.¡± the monkey says,¡°There is another tiger over there£¨ÄDZߣ©. He doesn¡¯t let me get anything for you to eat. I am afraid of (º¦ÅÂ) him.¡± ¡°What?¡± says the old tiger. ¡°Take me to the tiger. I want to talk to him.¡± The monkey and the tiger go to the bridge(ÇÅ) over the river(ºÓ). ¡°Now look down at the water.¡± says the monkey. ¡°Do you see the tiger?¡± ¡°Yes, I do.¡± says the old tiger. ¡°Let me eat him.¡± Then the tiger jumps(Ìø) into the river.
СÌâ1:How many tigers and monkeys are there in the story?
A£®Two tigers and two monkeys.
B£®Two tigers and one monkey.
C£®One tiger and two monkeys.
D£®One tiger and one monkey.
СÌâ2:Why do other animals get food for the tiger?
A£®Because they are afraid of him.
B£®Because only they can find some food.
C£®Because they are his friends.
D£®Because they like to do that.
СÌâ3:The monkey ________.
A£®goes to get something to eat
B£®goes to the bridge with the tiger
C£®knows there is another tiger
D£®tells the tiger to jump into the water
СÌâ4:Which of the following is right(ÕýÈ·µÄ)?
A£®The tiger is very clever.
B£®The monkey eats the tiger.
C£®The tiger eats another tiger.
D£®The tiger jumps into the water.
One day, a farmer was walking along a road with his son Thomas. The father said, "Look! There's a horseshoe. Pick it up and put it in your bag." Thomas said, 'It isn't worth the trouble." His father said nothing but picked it up himself. When they got to a nearby town, they lad a rest. There the farmer sold the horseshoe and with the few pennies he bought some cherries.
The father and the son continued their way. The sun was well up in the sky, and there wasn't a house or even a tree where they could have a rest. Thomas felt too thirsty to walk on. At this time, his father dropped a cherry on the ground and Thomas picked it up quickly and ate it. After a while, his father dropped another cherry and once again, his son lost some time in picking it up and putting it in his mouth.
And so they went on. The old farmer dropped the cherries and the son picked them up. When Thomas had eaten up all the cherries, his father said to him, "My dear son, if you had bent down earlier to pick up that horseshoe. it would not have been necessary for you to bend so many times for the cherries. Always remember the lesson that anyone who does not worry about the little things will find that he cannot do the great things.
СÌâ1:Who picked up the horseshoe at last?
A£®Thomas.
B£®The old father.
C£®Both the father and the son.
D£®Neither the father nor the son.
СÌâ2:The farmer bought _______ with the money after lie sold the horseshoe.
A£®some food
B£®some water
C£®some cherries
D£®some pennies
СÌâ3:When the son refused to pick up the horseshoe, the father _______.
A£®felt very happy
B£®didn't say anything
C£®beat the son
D£®became a little angry
СÌâ4:The father dropped the cherries one by one, because _______.
A£®he wanted his son to eat them all
B£®he wanted his son to do more exercise
C£®lie wanted to teach his son a lesson
D£®he wanted his son to pick them up
СÌâ5:From the story, we can learn that _______.
A£®cherries are so delicious that most of is like to eat-them
B£®a horseshoe is so expensive that it can bring us a lot of money
C£®if the boy wants to eat cherries, he must pick up the horseshoe
D£®if we want to do some great things, we should start with some small ones
My friend, Dick, has a large police dog. Its name is Jack. Every Saturday afternoon, Dick takes Jack for a long walk in the park. Jack likes these long walks very much.
One Saturday afternoon, a young man came to visit my friend. He stayed a long time. He talked and talked. Soon it was time for my friend to take Jack for a walk. But the man was still there. Jack became very worried. He walked around the room several times and then sat down in front of the man and looked at him. But the man kept talking. Finally Jack could stand it no longer. He went out of the room and came back a few minutes later. He sat down again in front of the man, but this time he held the man¡¯s hat in his mouth.
СÌâ1:From the story, we know that Jack is ________.
A. Dick¡¯s good friend      B.  a large police dog     C.  a young man
СÌâ2:Where does Dick walk with his dog every Saturday afternoon?
A . In his room           B. In the street          C.  In the park
СÌâ3:Jack became very worried one afternoon because ______.
A. he couldn¡¯t be taken out for a walk at the usual time.
B. a young man came to visit Dick that afternoon.
C. Dick walked around his room several times.
СÌâ4:What does the word ¡°stand¡± mean in the passage?
A Õ¾Á¢         BÀí½â       CÈÌÊÜ
СÌâ5:Why did Jack sit down again in front of the man with the hat in his mouth?
A. Try to take the man laugh.
B. Like the young man very much.
C .Ask the young man to leave.
The greatest saleswoman in the world today doesn¡¯t mind if you call her a girl. That¡¯s because Markita Andrews has got more than eight thousand dollars selling Girl Scout cookies since she was seven years old.
Going door-to-door after school, the terribly shy Markita changed herself into the cookie-selling dynamo£¨¸ßÊÖ£©.
It starts with great wish.
For Markita and her mother, whose husband left them when Markita was eight years old, their dream was to travel the world. ¡°I¡¯ll work hard to make enough money to send you to college,¡± her mother said one day. ¡°When you leave college, you¡¯ll make enough money to take you and me around the world. Okay?¡±
So at the age of 13 when Markita read in her Girl Scout magazine that the Scout£¨Í¯×Ó¾ü£©who sold the most cookies would win a free trip for two around the world, she decided to sell all the Girl Scout cookies she could¡ªmore Girl Scout cookies than anyone in the world, ever.
Wish, however, alone is not enough. To make her dream come true, Markita knew she needed a plan.
¡°When you are doing business, wear your Girl Scout clothes when you go up to people in their building, ¡± her aunt told her. ¡°Always smile, whether they buy something or not and always be nice.¡±
Lots of other Scouts may have wanted that trip around the world, but only Markita went off in her own uniform each day after school, ready to ask¡ªand keep asking¡ªpeople to help in her dream.
Markita sold 3,526 boxes of Girl Scout cookies that year and won her trip around the world. Since then, she has sold more than 42,000 boxes of Girl Scout cookies.
Markita is no cleverer than thousands of other people, with dreams of their own. The difference is that many people fail before they even begin. They fear£¨¿Ö¾å£©that they will be refused. This fear leads many of us to refuse ourselves and prevents us from getting where we have set off for long before anyone else ever has the chance¡ªno matter what we are selling.
¡°It takes courage£¨ÓÂÆø£©to ask for what you want,¡± she said. ¡°Courage is not that you don¡¯t have fear. It means doing what it takes although you have a fear of it¡±.
СÌâ1:From the passage we learn that ________.
A£®a good planning is the most important in the job of selling
B£®Markita took the free trip around the world herself
C£®Markita has a full-time selling job now
D£®to do something successfully, we should do what is needed
СÌâ2:Markita ________.
A£®started to sell Girl Scout cookies when she was 13 years old
B£®has only one parent
C£®whose parents are rich, went to college
D£®sold cookies in different shops
СÌâ3:Which of the following is the best title for the passage?
A£®The Greatest Saleswoman in the World.
B£®A Successful Girl in Selling.
C£®The Secret of Selling.
D£®Girl Scout Cookies.
СÌâ4:The main reason for Markita¡¯s success is that ________.
A£®she asks for what she wants before she is refused
B£®she isn¡¯t afraid to be refused
C£®her aunt has told her how to sell things
D£®she has a good wish

Î¥·¨ºÍ²»Á¼ÐÅÏ¢¾Ù±¨µç»°£º027-86699610 ¾Ù±¨ÓÊÏ䣺58377363@163.com

¾«Ó¢¼Ò½ÌÍø