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Have you ever heard the story of the four-minute mile? For years people believed that it is impossible for a human being to  1  a mile in less than four minutes until Roger Banister proved it  2  in 1954£®Within one year, 37 runners  3  the belief barrier£®And the year after that, 300 other runners did the same thing£®
What happens if you put an animal in a  4 ? Any animal, big or small, will swim its way through£®What happens when someone, who does not know how to swim, falls in deep waters? You  5 £®If an animal who has not learned swimming could  6  by swimming, why not you? Because you believe you will drown while the animal does not£®
These  7  show the power of beliefs£®There is no other more  8  force in directing human behavior than belief£®Our beliefs have the power to  9  and to destroy£®
In a way it is our beliefs that determine how much we¡¯ll be able to  10  our potential£®So pay attention to some of your  11 £®Do you believe you are weak in mathematics? Do you believe that other people dislike you£¿Do you believe life is full of  12 £¿
Belief is not  13 , however£®It¡¯s nothing but the generalization of a past incident£®As a kid, if a dog bit you, you believed all dogs to be  14 £®To change certain behavior, identify the beliefs associated with it£®Change those beliefs and a new pattern is  15  created£®
1£®A£®run                       B£®walk                   C£®swim                  D£®jog
2£®A£®right                    B£®wrong                 C£®fake                   D£®true
3£®A£®broke                    B£®built                  C£®faced                 D£®lowered
4£®A£®cage                       B£®desert                    C£®forest                D£®pond
5£®A£®drown                   B£®swim                  C£®float                     D£®sink
6£®A£®struggle                B£®escape                C£®drown                 D£®leave
7£®A£®samples                B£®cases                      C£®situations         D£®periods
8£®A£®terrible                    B£®reasonable             C£®considerable      D£®powerful
9£®A£®damage                 B£®provide              C£®create                D£®withdraw
10£®A£®discover              B£®realize               C£®show                   D£®perform
11£®A£®problems             B£®beliefs               C£®possibilities         D£®subjects
12£®A£®surprises                B£®choices               C£®problems            D£®possibilities
13£®A£®beautiful                B£®changeable         C£®strong                D£®mysterious
14£®A£®safe                    B£®rude                   C£®merciless         D£®dangerous
15£®A£®occasionally       B£®immediately       C£®accidentally           D£®automatically

СÌâ1:A
СÌâ1:B
СÌâ1:A
СÌâ1:D
СÌâ1:A
СÌâ1:B
СÌâ1:B
СÌâ1:D
СÌâ1:C
СÌâ1:B
СÌâ1:B
СÌâ1:C
СÌâ1:D
СÌâ1:D
СÌâ1:D
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When I was a teenager, my dad did everything he could do to advise me against becoming a brewer (Ôì¾ÆÈË). He¡¯d   36  his life brewing beer for local breweries only to make a living, 37   had his father and grandfather before him. He didn¡¯t want me   38  near a vat (Äð¾ÆÓõÄÍ°) of beer. So I did as he asked. I got good   39 , went to Harvard and in 1971 was accepted into a graduate program there that   40  me to study law and business at the same time.
In my second year of graduate school, I began to realize that I¡¯d   41  done anything but go to school. So, at 24 I decided to drop out.   42 , my parents didn¡¯t think this was a great idea. But I felt strongly that you can¡¯t   43  till you¡¯re 65 to do what you want in life.
I packed my stuff into a bus and headed for Colorado to become an instructor at Outward Bound. Three years later, I was ready to go back to   44 . I finished Harvard and got a highly-paid job at the Boston Consulting Group Still, after working there five years, I   45 , ¡°Is this what I want to be doing when I¡¯m 50?¡±  At that time, Americans spent good money on beer in   46   quality. Why not make good beer for   47 ? I thought.
I decided to give up my job to become   48 . When I told Dad, he was   49 , but in the end he   50  me. I called my beer Samuel Adams,   51  the brewer and patriot (°®¹úÕß) who helped to start the Boston Tea Party.   52  I sold the beer direct to beer drinkers to get  the   53  out. Six weeks later, at the Great American Beer Festival, Sam Adams Boston Lager (µ­Æ¡¾Æ) won the top prize for American beer. In the end I was destined (×¢¶¨) to be a brewer. My   54  to the young is simple: Life is very   55 , so don¡¯t rush to make decisions. Life doesn¡¯t let you plan.
СÌâ1:
A£®costB£®spentC£®takenD£®paid
СÌâ2:
A£®likeB£®as ifC£®soD£®nor
СÌâ3:
A£®anywhereB£®anywayC£®anyhowD£®somewhere
СÌâ4:
A£®habitsB£®teachersC£®gradesD£®work
СÌâ5:
A£®promisedB£®convincedC£®advisedD£®allowed
СÌâ6:
A£®neverB£®everC£®alwaysD£®hardly
СÌâ7:
A£®FortunatelyB£®ObviouslyC£®PossiblyD£®Surprisingly
СÌâ8:
A£®assureB£®declineC£®denyD£®wait
СÌâ9:
A£®schoolB£®ColoradoC£®my homeD£®my decision
СÌâ10:
A£®thrilledB£®stressedC£®wonderedD£®sneezed
СÌâ11:
A£®cheapB£®expensiveC£®lowD£®high
СÌâ12:
A£®EnglishmenB£®EuropeansC£®the worldD£®Americans
СÌâ13:
A£®a lawyerB£®a brewerC£®an instructorD£®an engineer
СÌâ14:
A£®astonishedB£®satisfiedC£®interestedD£®anxious
СÌâ15:
A£®hatedB£®supportedC£®raisedD£®left
СÌâ16:
A£®forB£®atC£®inD£®after
СÌâ17:
A£®ThereforeB£®OtherwiseC£®AlsoD£®Yet
СÌâ18:
A£®priceB£®nameC£®companyD£®party
СÌâ19:
A£®adviceB£®lifeC£®jobD£®experience
СÌâ20:
A£®hardB£®busyC£®shortD£®long
After a long day at school, I walked home with my heavy schoolbag . By the time I got home, I was sweaty,  16 and hungry. I threw my things on the couch and grabbed something from the kitchen to  17 . I passed by the living room and wished I could watch TV , but I knew my  18   would take me the whole night. I grabbed my schoolbag and went  19 to my room, feeling defeated. I tried to understand chemistry and  20 sleepiness at the same time. I was stressed out and  21 . I wanted something to cheer me up .
Later in the evening , I  22 the sound of the front door opening. And I waited for it¡ªthe sound of my mom singing .  23 she sings off-key (Åܵ÷), it made me excited that she was here. I ran down the stairs to greet my mom. We  24 and I ran back upstairs to do homework again. I like it when my mom was happy. Her  25 flowed down to me and I got the strength to  26  the stress again.
Sometimes, I wonder how my mom can still be  27 after coming back from work. Every weekday, she wakes up  28 in the morning to go to work and spends an hour on the bus before getting downtown . At a  29 factory, she works standing for the whole day and draws patterns for clothes over and over. After work, she gets stuck in  30 for two hours on her way back home. When I  31 my school life with her work life, I should not be the one to  32 . At least I have some fun things to do at school, while one mistake at work can cost my mom her job. I  33   that my mom has a positive attitude and lives her life with a joyous heart even though there may be   34 . Seeing her happy makes me feel  35 , too.
СÌâ1:
A£®heavy B£®busy C£®sleepy D£®unlucky
СÌâ2:
A£®keepB£®eatC£®give D£®watch
СÌâ3:
A£®dreamB£®supperC£®homeworkD£®experience
СÌâ4:
A£®aside B£®upstairs C£®outwards D£®nearby
СÌâ5:
A£®put offB£®fight offC£®refer to D£®research into
СÌâ6:
A£®boredB£®shocked C£®worried D£®frightened
СÌâ7:
A£®made B£®recorded C£®imaginedD£®heard
СÌâ8:
A£®UnlessB£®ThoughC£®If D£®As
СÌâ9:
A£®agreed B£®debated C£®hugged D£®celebrated
СÌâ10:
A£®needB£®ideaC£®faithD£®energy
СÌâ11:
A£®faceB£®change C£®accept D£®leave
СÌâ12:
A£®creative B£®carefulC£®positiveD£®professional
СÌâ13:
A£®earlyB£®naturally C£®fastD£®regularly
СÌâ14:
A£®furnitureB£®tobaccoC£®carD£®clothing
СÌâ15:
A£®taskB£®trafficC£®communicationD£®examination
СÌâ16:
A£®replaceB£®exchangeC£®connectD£®compare
СÌâ17:
A£®complainB£®decide C£®studyD£®play
СÌâ18:
A£®achieveB£®noticeC£®appreciate D£®improve
СÌâ19:
A£®liesB£®difficulties C£®confusions D£®accidents
СÌâ20:
A£®successful B£®skillfulC£®good D£®important
Can trees talk? Yes, but not in words. Scientists have reason to believe that trees do communicate (½»¼Ê) with each other. Not long ago, researchers learned some surprising things. First a willow tree attacked in the woods by caterpillars (ë³æ) changed the chemistry of its leaves and made them taste so terrible that they got tired of the leaves and stopped eating them. Then even more astonishing, the tree sent out a special smell---a signal (ÐźÅ) causing its neighbors to change the chemistry of their own leaves and make them less tasty.
Communication, of course, doesn¡¯t need to be in words. We can talk to each other by smiling, raising our shoulders and moving our hands. We know that birds and animals use a whole vocabulary of songs, sounds, and movements. Bees dance their signals, flying in certain patterns that tell other bees where to find nectar (»¨ÃÛ) for honey. So why shouldn¡¯t trees have ways of sending message?
СÌâ1: It can be concluded from the passage that caterpillars do not feed on leaves that ______.
A£®are lying on the groundB£®have an unpleasant taste
C£®bees don¡¯t likeD£®have an unfamiliar shape
СÌâ2:According to the passage, the willow tree was able to communicate with other trees by ______.
¡¡    
A£®waving its branchesB£®giving off a special smell
C£®dropping its leavesD£®changing the colour of its trunk
СÌâ3:According to this passage, bees communicate by ______.
A£®making special movementB£®touching one another
C£®smelling one anotherD£®making unusual sound
Some people are lucky enough to be born with a good sense of direction and even if they have only visited a place once, they will be able to find it again years later.
¡¡¡¡I am one of those unlucky people who have poor sense of direction and I may have visited a place time after time but I still get lost on my way there. When I was young I was so shy that I never dared ask complete strangers the way and so I used to wander round in circles and hope that by some chance I would get to the place I was heading for.
¡¡¡¡I am no longer too shy to ask people for direction, but I often receive replies that puzzle me. Often people do not like to admit£¨³ÐÈÏ£©that they didn¡¯t know their hometown and will insist on telling you the way, even if they do not know it; others, who are anxious to prove that they know their hometown very well, will give you a long list of directions which you can not possibly hope to remember, and still others do not seem to be able to tell between their left and their right and you find in the end that you are going in the opposite£¨Ïà·´µÄ£©direction to that in which you should be going.
¡¡¡¡If anyone ever asks me the way to somewhere, I always tell them I am a stranger to the town in order to avoid giving them wrong direction but even this can have embarrassing results.
¡¡¡¡Once I was on my way to work when I was stopped by a man who asked me if I would direct him the way to the Sunlight Building. I gave my usual reply, but I had not walked on a few steps when I realized that he had asked for directions to my office building. However, at this point, I decide it was too late to turn back and search for him out of the crowd behind me as I was going to meet with someone at the office and I did not want to keep him waiting.
¡¡¡¡Imagine my embarrassment when my secretary showed in the very man who had asked for directions of my office and his astonishment when he recognized me as the person he had asked.
СÌâ1:What is the writer going to do when someone asks him for direction?
¡¡  
A£®He will direct the right way to the person willingly.
¡¡
B£®He will reply to it by the means of being a stranger to the town.
¡¡
C£®He will give the very person long list of direction.
¡¡
D£®He is going to show the man an opposite direction.
СÌâ2:Why did the writer consider himself to be an unlucky dog?
A£®Because of his poor sense of direction.
B£®Because he always forget the way to home.
C£®Because he did not have any friend.
D£® Because he used to be shy and dared not ask others the way.
СÌâ3:How did the visitor feel when he was showed into the very room?
A£®He felt strange.B£®He felt embarrassed.
C£®He felt very sad.D£®He felt astonished.
СÌâ4:Who showed the right way to the interviewee according to the passage?
A£®Someone we don¡¯t know.B£®The writer did it for himself.
¡¡
C£®The secretary did so.D£®A warm-hearted old lady did itI.
I believe honesty is one of the greatest gifts. I know they call it a lot of fancy names these days, like (36) and straightforward. And it¡¯s still what £¨37£©a man a good citizen. This is my secret, and I try to live by.
I¡¯ve been in the taxi business for thirty-five years, (38) there is a lot about it that is not so good. Taxi drivers have to be rough and tumble(ÂÒ×÷Ò»ÍÅ) fellows to be able to take it in New York. You¡¯ve got to be (39) to fight the New York traffic eight hours a day.
Because taxi drivers are tough, people get the (40) impression that they are bad. Taxi drivers are just like other people. Most of them will act as (41) fellows. You read in the papers almost every week (42) a taxi driver turns in money or jewels or like that people leave in their (43). If they weren¡¯t honest, you wouldn¡¯t be reading those stories in the papers. One time, I found an emerald£¨ôä´äµÄ£© ring in my car. I remembered helping a lady with a lot of suitcases that day, so I went back to where I had (44). It took me almost two days to wait for her in order to return her (45) to her. I didn¡¯t get as much as ¡°thank you.¡±(46), I felt good because I had done what was right. I think I felt better than she (47).
I was born and raised in Ireland until I was nineteen years old. I came to this country in 1913 where I (48) several jobs to earn a few dollars before joining the army in World War I. After being discharged(ÍËÎé), I bought my own car and have owned one ever since. It hasn¡¯t been too easy (49), but my wife takes care of our money and we have a good bit (50) for a rainy day(һʱ֮Ðè). In all my years of driving a taxi, I have never had (51) with the public, not even with drunks. Even if they get a little headstrong(Íç¹ÌµÄ) once in a while, I just agree with them and then they behave themselves.
People ask me about tips. As far as I know, (52) everyone will give you something, because most Americans are (53) generous. I always try to be nice to everyone, whether they (54) or not. I believe in God and try to be a good member of my parish£¨½ÌÇø£©. I try to act toward others like I think God wants me to act. I have been trying this for a long time, and the (55) I try, the easier it gets.
СÌâ1:
A£®dishonorB£®dishonestyC£®uprightD£®faithful
СÌâ2:
A£®takesB£®becomesC£®makesD£®has
СÌâ3:
A£®knowB£®knownC£®knewD£®knowing
СÌâ4:
A£®generousB£®toughC£®mildD£®warm-hearted
СÌâ5:
A£®rightB£®properC£®badD£®wrong
СÌâ6:
A£®rudeB£®honestC£®goodD£®tough
СÌâ7:
A£®whenB£®whatC£®whichD£®where
СÌâ8:
A£®housesB£®carsC£®pocketsD£®rooms
СÌâ9:
A£®picked her upB£®dropped her offC£®dropped her downD£®pull her down
СÌâ10:
A£®ringB£®suitcaseC£®carD£®emerald
СÌâ11:
A£®SoB£®StillC£®ButD£®Though
СÌâ12:
A£®wasB£®didC£®hasD£®is
СÌâ13:
A£®made B£®putC£®heldD£®took
СÌâ14:
A£®at one timeB£®some timeC£®in no timeD£®at times
СÌâ15:
A£®put offB£®put upC£®put onD£®put away
СÌâ16:
A£®troubleB£®difficultC£®wordD£®anything
СÌâ17:
A£®especiallyB£®speciallyC£®particularlyD£®practically
СÌâ18:
A£®neverB£®seldomC£®ratherD£®fairly
СÌâ19:
A£®tipB£®advisedC£®suggestedD£®ask
СÌâ20:
A£®longerB£®harderC£®betterD£®shorter
When I was growing up, I had an old neighbor£¬a doctor named Gibbs. When Dr. Gibbs wasn¡¯t saving lives, he was   1  trees. His house sat on ten acres(ӢĶ), and his life¡¯s goal was to make it a   2 .
The good doctor had some interesting   3  concerning planting trees. He never  4  his new trees. Once I asked why. ¡°Watering plants will   5  them.¡± He said, ¡°If you water them, each younger generation will grow   6 . So you have to make things  7  for them.¡±
He talked about how watering trees 8  shallow roots, and how trees that weren¡¯t watered had to grow  9  roots in search of water. He¡¯d planted an oak and,   10  watering it every morning, he¡¯d   11  it with a rolled-up newspaper. I asked him why he did that, and he said it was to get the tree¡¯s   12 .
Dr. Gibbs died a couple of years after I left home. Every now and again, I returned and walked by his  13  and looked at the trees that I¡¯d watched him plant some twenty-five years ago. They¡¯re incredibly   14  now.
Every night before I go to bed, I check on my two   15 . I stand over them and pray for them.   16  I pray that their lives will be easy. But lately I¡¯ve been thinking that it¡¯s time to change my   17.
I know my children are going to encounter hardship. Life is tough, whether we want it to be or not. Too many times we pray for   18 , but that¡¯s a prayer seldom met. What we need to do is pray for   19  that reach deep into the earth  20  they won¡¯t be swept apart when the rains fall and the winds blow.
СÌâ1:
A£®plantingB£®examiningC£®watchingD£®cutting
СÌâ2:
A£®hospitalB£®forest C£®parkD£®garden
СÌâ3:
A£®instructionsB£®experiencesC£®theoriesD£®experiments
СÌâ4:
A£®coveredB£®shookC£®wateredD£®pulled
СÌâ5:
A£®strengthenB£®enlargeC£®drownD£®spoil
СÌâ6:
A£®taller and tallerB£®faster and faster
C£®smaller and smallerD£®weaker and weaker
СÌâ7:
A£®roughB£®easyC£®smoothD£®pleasant
СÌâ8:
A£®set asideB£®made forC£®put awayD£®break down
СÌâ9:
A£®countlessB£®numerousC£®deepD£®limited
СÌâ10:
A£®thanks toB£®along withC£®apart fromD£®instead of
СÌâ11:
A£®protectB£®fastenC£®appreciateD£®beat
СÌâ12:
A£®patienceB£®growthC£®attentionD£®movement
СÌâ13:
A£®laboratoryB£®houseC£®officeD£®clinic
СÌâ14:
A£®deadB£®brokenC£®weakD£®strong
СÌâ15:
A£®treesB£®sonsC£®worksD£®houses
СÌâ16:
A£®MostlyB£®Occasionally C£®ScarcelyD£®Loudly
СÌâ17:
A£®mindB£®decisionC£®directionD£®prayer
СÌâ18:
A£®giftsB£®reunionC£®easeD£®freedom
СÌâ19:
A£®branchesB£®leavesC£®topsD£®roots
СÌâ20:
A£®so thatB£®even thoughC£®now thatD£®in case
A man found a cocoon of a moth. He took it home so that he could    31   the moth come out of the cocoon. On that day a small    32   appeared, he sat and watched the moth for several hours as the moth struggled to    33   the body through that little hole.
Soon it seemed to stop making any progress. It appeared as if it had    34  as far as it could and it could go no farther. It just seemed to be stuck. So the man, out of his kindness, decided to help the moth. He took a pair of scissors and cut off the    35   bit of the cocoon. The    36   then came out easily. But it had a swollen body and small, shriven£¨ÎÞÓõģ© wings. The man continued to watch the moth because he expected that, at any moment, the wings would enlarge and    37   to be able to support the    38  , which would get smaller in time. Neither happened! In fact, the little moth spent the rest of its life    39   around with a small, swollen body and shriveled wings. It was    40   able to fly.
What the man in his kindness    41    was that the small cocoon and the    42   of the moth to get through the    43   opening was a way to push fluid(ÒºÌå)   44   the body of moth  45   its wings so that it would be ready to fly    46   it got out of the cocoon. Freedom and  47   would come only after the struggle. By taking the moth of a struggle away, he also took away the moth¡¯s health.
Sometimes struggles are exactly what we need in our life. If we were to    48   our lives without any difficulties, we would be disabled. We would not be as    49   as what we could have been. Give every opportunity a chance, leave no room for    50  .                
1
A, help
B. protect      
C. watch      
D. see
2
A. opening 
B. line            
C. moth    
D. butterfly
3
A. push
B. draw           
C. make  
D. force
4
A. got
B. done
C. tried
D. struggled
5
A. covering
B. remaining
C. shell
D. skin
6
A. moth
B. butterfly
C. cocoon
D. worm
7
A. lessen
B. widen
C. expand
D. shorten
8
A standing
B. flight
C. themselves
D. body
9
A flying 
B. crawling
C. walking
D. lying
0
A already
B. certainly  
C. never      
D. seldom
11
A shouldn¡¯t do    
B. thought
C. did
D. didn¡¯t understand
12
A crawling
B. struggle      
C. fight
D. force
13
A tiny
B. beginning
C. right
D. above
14
A in
B. on           
C. by
D. from
15
A into
B. to
C. in
D. onto
16
A after
B. once
C. before
D. until
17
A courage
B. hope
C. flight 
D. survival
18
A stand on
B. get on
C. go through
D. live
19
A great
B. determined
C. brave
D. strong
20
A regrets
B. death
C. failure
D. wishes
Anger is good for you, as long as you control it, according to new psychology research. A new study from Carnegie Mellon University shows anger may help people reduce the negative impacts of stress and help you become healthier.
¡°Here getting emotional is not bad for you if you look at the case of anger,¡± said Jennifer Lerner of Carnegie Mellon. ¡°The more people display anger, the lower their stress responses.¡±
Lerner studied 92 UCLA students by asking them to count back from 6,200. They must say out loud every thirteenth number. Researchers disturbed them by asking them to count faster or ask them other questions. If they made any mistakes, they had to restart from the very beginning. Many students felt depressed about making so many mistakes or got angry.
Lerner used a hidden video camera and recorded all their facial expressions during the test. The researchers describe their reactions as fear, anger and disgust.
Other researchers recorded the students¡¯ blood pressure, pulse and production of a high-stress hormone£¨ºÉ¶ûÃÉ£©called cortisol. People whose faces showed more fear during the experiment had higher blood pressure and higher levels of the hormone. Both can have lasting effects such as diabetes£¨ÌÇÄò²¡£©, heart disease, depression and extra weight gain.
When people feel fear, negative impacts increase, but when they get angry, those negatives go down, according to the study.
¡°Having that sense of anger leads people to actually feel some power in what otherwise is a maddening£¨ÁîÈË·¢¿ñµÄ£©situation,¡± Lerner said.
Lerner previously studied Americans¡¯ emotional response to the 9/11 terrorist attacks two months after the incident. She found people who reacted with anger were more optimistic. These people are healthier compared with those who were frightened during the event. So in maddening situations, anger is not a bad thing to have. It¡¯s a healthier response than fear.
СÌâ1: What is the story mainly about?
A£®The findings of new psychology research.
B£®What you can do with anger in certain cases.
C£®Different effects produced by anger and fear.
D£®Healthier responses in maddening situations.
СÌâ2:Which statement will Jennifer Lerner agree with?
A£®It¡¯s better to be angry than to be frightened.
B£®Different reactions reflect different outlooks on life.
C£®Don¡¯t control your anger and it makes you powerful.
D£®Pessimistic people are generally healthier than optimistic people.
СÌâ3:What does the underlined word ¡°both¡± refer to according to the passage?
A£®Fear and anger.B£®Blood pressure and pulse.
C£®Blood pressure and cortiso1.
D£®Higher blood pressure and higher levels of the hormone.
СÌâ4: In what ways can anger be beneficial to people?
A£®By showing their optimistic side.B£®By reducing their stress.
C£®By reducing high blood pressure.D£®By taking the place of fear.
СÌâ5:The researchers irritated£¨¼¤Å­£©the students by __________.
A£®recording their performance secretly
B£®asking them to count to 6, 200 again and again
C£®disturbing them and making them start all over again
D£®criticizing them when they made mistakes

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