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In my mind£®I could never fancy how ten second of life could change a person's view for his whole existence£®A few years ago I experience the worst moment in my life£®I was driving home that afternoon£®Unfortunately£¬I didn't make it home as usually because I had a car accident£®While I was driving£¬all of a sudden£¬but the car in front of me stopped£®My car immediately ran into it£®Luckily£¬I wasn't serious hurt£®That accident changed way I drive and they taught me a valuable lesson£®I also came to the conclusion which life needs to be treasuring£®

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½â´ð In my mind£®I could never fancy how ten second of life could change a person's view for his whole existence£®A few years ago I experience the worst moment in my life£®I was driving home that afternoon£®Unfortunately£¬I didn't make it home as usually because I had a car accident£®While I was driving£¬all of a sudden£¬but the car in front of me stopped£®My car immediately ran into it£®Luckily£¬I wasn't serious hurt£®That accident changed¡Äway I drive and they taught me a valuable lesson£®I also came to the conclusion which life needs to be treasuring£®
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6£®serious¸ÄΪseriously ¿¼²é¸±´Ê£®hurtÊǶ¯´Ê£¬ÒªÓø±´ÊÐÞÊΣ¬ÐÎÈÝ´ÊseriousµÄ¸±´ÊÊÇseriously£®
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13£®Interviewer£ºMay I ask you a few questions£¬sir£¿
Jack£ºOf course you can£®
Interviewer£ºThank you£¬sir£®First of all£¬have you ever been here£¿
Jack£ºNo£®This is the first time I£¨71£©have come£¨come£© to India£®
Interviewer£ºOh£®What do you find most impressive about India£¿
Jack£ºThe air is so hot and it is unlike anything £¨72£©thatI have experienced£®
Interviewer£ºWere you pleased with the service at the air port£¿
Jack£ºNot£¨ 73£©really£¨real£©£®After we entered the airport I had been waiting for several hours£¬and I £¨74£©was checked£¨check£© strictly£®
Interviewer£ºWhat else have you noticed£¿
Jack£ºAt first£¬£¨75£©itwas strange to see so many people dressed in white£®Then I remember the fact £¨76£©thatpeople wear the same type of dress in this country£¬so they are Muslims£¬judging £¨77£©fromtheir hats£®
Interviewer£ºYou're right£®Their clothes are typical £¨µäÐ͵ģ©£®
Jack£ºWhat's more£¬as I continued across the lobby £¨´óÌü£©£¬I felt many eyes watching me£®Hurriedly£¬I checked my £¨78£©appearance£¨appear£©£®Nothing felt out of the ordinary£®I had no idea £¨79£©whyeveryone was staring at me£®Then I realized my big mistake because I was wearing shorts in a country £¨80£©wheregirls do not dress according to the weather£®
Interviewer£ºYes£®Thank you for accepting our interview£®I hope you have a good trip£®
Jack£ºMy pleasure£®
11£®How to prepare for exam£¿
Here are some tips you can read with your child£®
The first step in preparing for examination is to set a fixed time each day to study and a schedule to say when to start the revision and for which subject£®The plan should include how many chapters to revise and how many worksheets to work on£®£¨36£©D£®Parents who do not know the  examination  time  schedule  can  search'exam  timetable'to  see  the  official examination schedule£®£¨37£©F£®
The second thing is to decide on the place to study£®Some need total silence in a library before they can concentrate while others like to have some background music like in the cafeteria£®£¨38£©G£®So there is no need to tell your child to change the study place if he is producing the desired results£®
£¨39£©A£®For lessons£¬pupils must participate in lessons and discussions actively£®For exercise£¬work on the simple ones in the textbook£®For theory£¬pupils can use the mind map method to summarize the facts£®
At last£¬study smart£®Focus on chapters that are the core of the subject or difficult chapters£®£¨40£©E£®

A£®Next the most effective way to revise is to use an active approach£®
B£®Making good preparations counts£®
C£®Mind map can help you a lot in your revision work£®
D£®Your child has to be self-disciplined to follow the plan£®
E£®It is not necessary to simply read from first to last page£®
F£®The best time to start revision is one or two months before the examination£®
G£®Both are alright as long as your child is comfortable with it£®
8£®A little girl lived in a simple and poor house on a hill£®Usually she   £¨41£©C play in the small garden£®She could see over the garden fence and across the valley a wonderful house with shining golden windows high on another hill£®£¨42£©B  she loved her parents and her family£¬she desired to live in such a house and  £¨43£©A  all day about how wonderful and exciting  £¨44£©C  must feel to live there£®
At the age when she gained some £¨45£©Dskill and sensibility£¨Ê¶±ðÁ¦£©£¬she £¨46£©Aher mother for a bike ride  £¨47£©Bthe garden£®Her mother finally allowed her to go£¬£¨48£©A  her keeping close to the house and not£¨49£©Ctoo far£®The day was beautiful£®The little girl knew £¨50£©Cwhere she was heading£®£¨51£©B   the hill and across the valley£¬she rode to the  £¨52£©D   of the golden house£®
  £¨53£©B  she got off her bike and put it against the gate post£¬she focused on the path £¨54£©C  to the house and then on the house itself£®She was very disappointed when she  £¨55£©D  that all the windows were  £¨56£©C  and rather dirty£®
So  £¨57£©D and heart-broken£¬she didn't go any further£®She £¨58£©A£¬and all of a sudden she saw an amazing  £¨59£©D£®There on the other side of the valley was a little house and its windows were golden£®Looking at her little home£¬she  £¨60£©Cthat she had been living in her golden house filled with love and care£®Everything she dreamed was right there in front of her house£®
41£®A£®mightB£®shouldC£®wouldD£®must
42£®A£®UnlessB£®AlthoughC£®SinceD£®But
43£®A£®dreamedB£®worriedC£®askedD£®shouted
44£®A£®thisB£®thatC£®itD£®which
45£®A£®differentB£®scientificC£®musicalD£®basic
46£®A£®beggedB£®blamedC£®invitedD£®paid
47£®A£®insideB£®outsideC£®throughD£®along
48£®A£®insisting onB£®relying onC£®arguing aboutD£®wondering about
49£®A£®travelingB£®runningC£®ridingD£®walking
50£®A£®madlyB£®rapidlyC£®exactlyD£®possibly
51£®A£®OverB£®DownC£®AroundD£®Beside
52£®A£®windowsB£®stepsC£®centerD£®gate
53£®A£®UntilB£®AsC£®WhileD£®Because
54£®A£®gettingB£®introducingC£®leadingD£®moving
55£®A£®feltB£®learnedC£®concludedD£®found
56£®A£®transportedB£®brightC£®plainD£®wide
57£®A£®anxiousB£®angryC£®seriousD£®sad
58£®A£®turned aroundB£®cheered upC£®settled downD£®dropped in
59£®A£®hillB£®valleyC£®backgroundD£®sight
60£®A£®imaginedB£®decidedC£®realizedD£®guess
15£®The sharing economy£¬represented by companies like Airbnb or Uber£¬is the latest fashion craze£®But many supporters have overlooked the reality that this new business model is largely based on escaping regulations and breaking the law£®
Airbnb is an Internet-based service that allows people to rent out spare rooms to strangers for short stays£®Uber is an Internet taxi service that allows thousands of people to answer ride requests with their own cars£®There are hundreds of other such services£®
The good thing about the sharing economy is that it promotes the use of underused resources£®Millions of people have houses or apartments with empty rooms£¬and Airbnb allows them to profit from these rooms while allowing guests a place to stay at prices that are often far less than those charged by hotels£®Uber offers prices that are competitive with standard taxi prices and their drivers are often much quicker and more trustworthy£®
But the downside of the sharing economy has gotten much less attention£®Most cities and states both tax and regulate hotels£¬and the tourists who stay in hotels are usually an important source of tax income£®But many of Airbnb's customers are not paying the taxes required under the law£®
Airbnb can also raise issues of safety for its customers and trouble for hosts'neighbors£®Hotels are regularly inspected to ensure that they are not fire traps and that they don't form other risks for visitors£®Airbnb hosts face no such inspections£®
Since Airbnb is allowing people to escape taxes and regulations£¬the company is simply promoting thefts£®Others in the economy will lose by bearing an additional tax burden or being forced to live next to an apartment unit with a never-ending series of noisy visitors£®
The same story may apply with Uber£®Uber is currently in disputes over whether its cars meet the safety and insurance requirements imposed on standard taxis£®Also£¬if Uber and related services flood the market£¬they could harm all taxi drivers'ability to earn a minimum wage£®
This downside of the sharing needs to be taken seriously£¬but that doesn't mean the current tax and regulatory structure is perfect£®

32£®What is the positive thing about the sharing economy£¿D
A£®It is a global trend£®
B£®It is beyond regulations£®
C£®It brings in modest profits£®
D£®It takes advantage of spare resources£®
33£®What is the problem with Airbnb customers according to the passage£¿A
A£®They can be noisy to hosts'neighbours£®
B£®They are likely to commit thefts£®
C£®They are allowed not to pay taxes£®
D£®They are not regularly inspected£®
34£®What is the argument over Uber according to the passage£¿B
A£®Whether it provides reliable services£®
B£®Whether it guarantees customers'safety£®
C£®Whether it lowers customers'expenses£®
D£®Whether it can compete with standard taxis£®
35£®What will be talked about in the following paragraphs£¿D
A£®Existing regulations and laws£®
B£®Further development of Airbnb and Uber£®
C£®Necessary improvements of current laws£®
D£®More downsides of Airbnb and Uber£®
12£®Black Friday is the Friday following Thanksgiving Day in the United States£®It has been regarded as the beginning of the holiday shopping season£®Although it's not an official holiday£¬millions of employers give their employees the day off£¬and many people use that day to get a jump-start on their holiday shopping£®A similar day in Canada and
Great Britain is called"Boxing Day"£®
Black Friday has become somewhat of a marketing sensation in recent years£®Since 2005£¬it has been the busiest shopping day of the year£®To lure shoppers£¬retailers £¨ÁãÊÛÉÌ£©routinely open their doors as early as 4a£®m£®and offer special sales and promotions to the shoppers that arrive early£®Some of the special deals offered by stores are only available in limited quantities£®That is why some shoppers intent on getting the best deals often camp out in front of stores overnight so that they'll be the first in line when the doors open£®
But why Black Friday£¿Historians believe the name started in Philadelphia in the mid-1960s£®Bus drivers and police used"Black Friday"to describe the heavy traffic that would block city streets the day after Thanksgiving as shoppers headed to the stores£®
Businesses£¬however£¬didn't like the negative tone associated with the"Black Friday"name£®In the early 1980s£¬a more positive explanation of the name began to circulate£®According to this alternative explanation£¬Black Friday is the day when retailers finally begin to turn a profit for the year£®In accounting terms £¨»á¼ÆÐÐÒµ£©£¬operating at a loss is called being"in the red"because accountants traditionally used red ink to show negative amounts£®Positive amounts were usually shown in black ink£®Thus£¬being"in the black"is a good thing because it means stores are operating at a profit£®
Recently£¬for those who are too busy to shop on Black Friday or who just don't want to fight the crowds£¬the Monday following Black Friday has become known as Cyber Monday £¨ÍøÂçÐÇÆÚÒ»£© for the many online deals£®

28£®On Black Friday£¬the AmericansC£®
A£®don't have to go to work as usual 
B£®look exactly like the Canadians
C£®are usually busy doing shopping 
D£®stay at home and relax themselves
29£®The underlined word"lure"£¨in Paragraph 2£©probably meansB£®
A£®protect B£®attract C£®persuade D£®remind
30£®How do the retailers understand Black Friday£¿D
A£®It is totally different from Boxing Day£®
B£®They usually lose some money on the day£®
C£®It never keeps them very busy£®
D£®It probably brings them more money£®
31£®The author writes this passage in order toC£®
A£®state the development of Cyber Monday
B£®tell the difference between red and black
C£®introduce Black Friday to the readers
D£®explain the meaning of Boxing Day£®

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