题目内容

Now people like to travel all over the world if they are free. The fastest way of travelling is by ______. But plane tickets are very expensive. Travelling by train is _____ than by plane, but it is cheaper. Modern trains have ______seats and dining cars (餐车). They ______the trip happier.

Some ________ like to travel by ship. There are large ships. Ships are not so _______ as trains or planes, but travelling by ship is a(n) ______way to spend a holiday.

Many people have a car. They like to travel by car. They can make _______own timetable (自己的时间表). They _______ travel to any place they like. They can stop if they want. That is _______travelling by car is popular.

1.A. coach B. train C. underground D. plane

2.A. hotter B. easier C. slower D. worse

3.A. noisy B. comfortable C. strange D. traditional

4.A. think B. keep C. make D. find

5.A. teachers B. workers C. students D. people

6.A. fast B. good C. clean D. small

7.A. interesting B. bad C. safe D. difficult

8.A. his B. their C. her D. its

9.A. must B. can C. should D. need

10.A. when B. how C. why D. where

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Vicky Zhao is from the mainland working in Hong Kong. For her, one thing she can't stand is people standing on the wrong side of the escalator(自动扶梯) in subway stations.

“Escalators help us move faster and save time. It isn't a place to rest,” the 24?year?old says, “I often see tourists blocking(挡住) the way with their heavy suitcases or chatting on the escalators during rush hour. It makes me very angry.”

Agreeing that she is not the patient type, Zhao says things are much better in Hong Kong than in cities on the mainland where people often pay no attention to “stand right, walk left” signs.

The reason behind the rule “stand right, walk left” seems clear. Even though you may want to have a rest and just wait while you're transported up or down, you should still consider others and leave enough space for people in a hurry, so that they can run and take the train.

But the people who stand on escalators will tell the walkers not to be so impatient. In a recent story about the escalator rule, one stander says, “If the person is in such a rush, why not just take the stairs?”

Many cities' escalators, including London's and Beijing's, use the “stand right, walk left” rule to speed up the movement of people. (In Australian cities like Sydney you should stand on the left side instead.) But some cities discourage people from moving on escalators out of safety reasons. In Hong Kong's subway stations people are asked to “stand still” on escalators. Even so, most people keep the “stand right, walk left” rule.

Whatever the escalator rule is in the place you live in or visit, do what most people are doing and always be mindful of others; leave enough space between each other; don't stay at the end of the escalator, and if someone is blocking your way, a simple “excuse me” is enough.

1.According to the passage, Vicky Zhao ________.

A. comes from Hong Kong

B. is a 24?year?old girl

C. wants to be a patient person

D. works in a subway station

2.The passage mentions that people are advised not to move on the escalator in ________.

A. London B. Beijing

C. Sydney D. Hong Kong

3.It can be learnt from the passage that the writer ________.

A. is crazy about taking escalators

B. agrees to the “stay right, walk left” rule

C. tells us to consider other people

D. has been to Hong Kong many times

4.What's the best title of the passage?

A. Get it right B. Help others

C. Take stairs D. Move fast

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