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6£®My name is Peter£¬and I use a wheelchair £¨ÂÖÒΣ© to get around£®This year I £¨1£©Cto be in the School Walkathon£®
At the Walkathon last year£¬I helped hand out drinks to the walkers£®The teachers and parents said they couldn't have £¨2£©Dwithout me£®
"Are you going to give out drinks £¨3£©Bthis year£¿"my friend Michael asked£®
"I £¨4£©Aso£¬"I said£®"But I £¨5£©Bwish I could do laps £¨ÅܵÀµÄȦ£© with you£®"
Michael told Mrs Hunt that I wanted to £¨6£©Dthe Walkathon£®Mrs Hunt looked at me£®"It's not a good course for a wheelchair£¬"she said£®"The illy part would be too £¨7£©A£®"
"But I could push Peter over the hard bits£¬"said Michael£®
"I'll  £¨8£©Cit£¬"said Mrs Hunt£®
That afternoon£¬Mrs Hunt called a class meeting£®Michale told everyone about his £¨9£©B£®
"We could all take turns£®That way no one would get too £¨10£©D"said Olivia£®Then everyone said they would take a turn£®
When the Walkathon began£¬I turned my wheels round and round as £¨11£©Aas I could£®When we came to the hilly bit£¬Michael £¨12£©Cto push me up it£®Olivia was waiting halfway up£®"My £¨13£©C now£¬"she said£®With all the help my £¨14£©Bwere giving meI £¨15£©A the first lap and did a second lap-and another£®I was tired in the £¨16£©D£®"It's time to announce the winner of the mystry prize£®It goes to¡­Peter!"Mrs Hunt said£®
I looked at all the things I had £¨71£©C£¬and felt extremely £¨18£©B£®But then I remebered that the whole £¨19£©A had helped me£®
"I want everyone to £¨20£©Athe prize£¬"I said£®"Let's keep all the things in our classroom£®Then we can all have some fun!"
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7£®Two-year-old Harley was asleep with her younger sister in their home in Eden£¬North Carolina£®While their parents were outside welcoming their older sister home from school£¬the wires in the family's laundry room caught fire and before anyone knew what was happening£¬the bedroom next door was consumed in flames£®
Harley's father was able to rescue his two youngest daughters and save their lives£¬but Harley was severely burned on 80percent of her body and her parents were told that she was likely to pass away£®Over the next several months£¬Harley would put up with surgery after surgery and remain hooked up to a ventilator£¨ºôÎü»ú£©at the hospital£®When she was finally released to go home£¬Harley had no idea that the toughest battle had not even begun yet£®
When Harley started school just a few years later£¬she realized for the first time how cruel her peers could be£®Bullied for her appearance and called hateful names£¬she began to consider ending her life while only in Grade 8£®When her friends were getting their first boyfriends and going on their first dates£¬she was sitting at home wondering if she should end her life£®
But in 2013£¬something changed£®It was not something on the outside but something inside Harley£®She made the conscious decision to become more like the carefree£¬laughing£¬joyous little girl that she had not seen since that night in 1997£®So for the first time in her life£¬she put on a blue dress and walked outside into the light of day throwing caution to the wind and daring anyone to try to rain on her parade£®

21£®What was the toughest battle for Harley£¿B
A£®Her sister's death£®
B£®Her peers'discrimination£®
C£®Surgery after surgery£®
D£®Her emotion of jealousy£®
22£®What can be inferred from the passage£¿A
A£®It took Harley about sixteen years to change her attitude to life£®
B£®Harley had tried to end her life many times£®
C£®Harley liked blue dresses and rainy days£®
D£®In 2013£¬Harley changed something inside and outside£®
23£®What can be a suitable title£¿D
A£®Transforming a sad girl into a joyous girl
B£®How to overcome difficulty
C£®A blue dress on rainy days
D£®A girl rose from the dark£®
4£®When Ricochet was just a young pup£¬her owner Judy Fridono hoped the dog might one day become a service dog and help people£®But Ricochet had other plans£¬at least for the first part£®She failed at service dog training£¬but she went on to help millions of people around the world learn how to trust£¬how to love£¬and how to surf£®
According to Fridono£¬the dog seemed naturally suited to life as a service dog£®She was great with people£¬especially kids£¬and she had plenty of energy£®But birds were her weakness£®She just couldn't seem to stop running after them£®And that's not a good quality for a service dog that needs to focus on the person she's helping£®
Fridono said at the beginning she was disappointed when Ricochet didn't succeed at service dog schoo1£®But it wasn't long before the Pup let her true skills shine through£®At just 8weeks old£¬Ricochet climbed on to a board that had been left in a children's pool£¬showing her special talent for balance£®
Soon£¬Ricochet was making headlines as the beach-loving dog who could hang ten on a surfboard£®But she wasn't finished showing off her special talents yet£®
"One day at the beach£¬she jumped on a surfboard with a 14-year-old boy who had spinal cord£¨¼¹Ë裩injuries£¬"Fridono said£®"It was at that moment that her life purpose to surf with people who are disabled was realized£®She is just such an inspiration to everyone--she's got such a strong connection to people£¬and we see such improvements in the people who she surfs with£®"
Ricochet now surfs daily with children and adults with special needs£®She specializes in helping military veterans£¨ÍËÎé¾üÈË£©with some diseases and children with autism£¨×Ô±ÕÖ¢£©by connecting with them in ways that no one else can£®

21£®What do we know about Ricochet£¿A
A£®She has been helpful for many people£®
B£®She was taught how to surf£®
C£®She saved thousands of people's lives£®
D£®She learnt special skills at service dog schoo1£®
22£®What was Ricochet's shortcoming when in training school£¿C
A£®Impatience£®  
B£®Great pride£® 
C£®Lack of concentration£®
D£®Not being brave£®
23£®What may have amazed Fridono£¿C
A£®Ricochet's widespread popularity£®
B£®Ricochet's rapid progress£®
C£®Ricochet's extraordinary talents£®
D£®Ricochet's dropping out of schoo1£®
24£®What can we infer from the text£¿C
A£®Ricochet once had a spinal cord injury£®
B£®Fridono made Ricochet's dream come true£®
C£®Ricochet has a unique connection with people having special needs£®
D£®Fridono helped Ricochet develop her skills and talents£®
11£®Every year£¬billions of kilograms of fresh produce are wasted in the United States£®Meanwhile£¬millions of poor Americans go hungry£¬without access to healthy and affordable meals£®
Evan Lutz is enthusiastic about correcting that social injustice£®And he combines that goal with enthusiasm for business£¬Lutz is CEO and founder of Hungry Harvest£¬a business which collects and sells"ugly"produce£®These are fruits and vegetables that most food companies would throw away£®More than six billion pounds are wasted each year due to surface imperfections£®
So I'll give you an example£®"Lutz says£¬"If you go to a grocery store you will see all the produce lineup shiny£¬perfect£¬of the same size and color£®But on a farm£¬everything doesn't grow the same way£®So all that stuff that doesn't grow the same way often gets thrown out£®And what we do is take all that normally gets thrown out because of its odd size or shape£¬box it up and deliver it to our customers once a week£®"
For Evan Lutz£¬giving back to others came from his upbringing£®
"When I was growing up my parents taught me the values of giving back£¬and giving is a lot more powerful than receiving£®We sell produce with a purpose and that doesn't just mean we reduce food from going to waste£®We lire people that were formerly in prison or were formerly injured or sick living in homeless shelters£®They really wanted to get back on their feet for a second chance in life£®"
Evan Lutz is really happy to be realizing great mission that he thinks can really revolutionize the food industry in America£®

25£®The social injustice in Paragraph 2refers to the fact thatB£®
A£®vegetables and fruits that don't taste good get wasted£®
B£®much produce gets wasted while many Americans starve
C£®grocery stores only sell produce of the same size
D£®poor Americans can not afford healthy food
26£®What business does Hungry Harvest mainly do£¿C
A£®Deliver food for free
B£®Raise money for the poor
C£®Collect"ugly"produce and sell it£®
D£®Buy"ugly"produce and process it£®
27£®Why does Evan Lutz hire those people mentioned in Paragraph 5£¿A
A£®To lower labor costs    
B£®To increase productivity
C£®To offer them a job     
D£®To enjoy a better reputation
28£®What can be a suitable title for the passage£¿D
A£®Creating More Jobs for the Less Fortunate
B£®Putting Healthy Food on Dinner Table
C£®Making Profits from Shiny Produce
D£®Giving Unused Produce a Purpose£®
6£®Once again£¬I was in a new school£®So was a girl in my class named Paris£®That's where the£¨1£©Bended£®
I was tall and she was small£®I was one of the oldest in the class while she was the youngest£®I was£¨2£©Aand shy£®She wasn't£®I couldn't£¨3£©Cher£¬considering her my enemy£®But she wanted to be friends£®
One day£¬she invited me over and I said yes-I was too£¨4£©Dto say no£®Actually no one has invited me over to play before£®But this girl£¬who wore the latest£¨5£©C£¬wanted to see me£®
She lived on the fourth floor in a two-room place with her mother£¬her stepfather£¬her two brothers and her sister£®When we got to the room she£¨6£©Bwith her sister£¬she took out a big case of Barbies£¨°Å±ÈÍÞÍÞ£©-which was my next£¨7£©A£®I would have thought she'd outgrown them£®I has never played with them£®But we sat on the floor of a walk-in cupboard laughing as we£¨8£©Dcrazy stories about the Barbies£®That's£¨9£©Dwe found out that we both wanted to be writers when we were older£®We both had wile£¨10£©A£®
We had a great day that afternoon£®Our jaws ached from £¨11£©Cso much£®She showed me her outfits£¬which had£¨12£©Bcome from a designer clothing store down the block£®The woman who owned it used her£¨13£©Aa model sometimes for her newspaper ads and gave her clothes£¨14£©C£®
Paris had the whole neighborhood£¨15£©B£®The bookstore owners lent her fashion magazines£¬the movie theater gave her free£¨16£©Dand the pizza place let her have free slices£®Soon I was£¨17£©Ain her magic world£®We slept over at each other's houses£¬spent every free moment together£®My dark hair grew out and I learned to love being£¨18£©C£®
Paris£¬my first real friend since childhood£¬helped me£¨19£©Dthe through teenage years and taught me an amazing and very surprising thing about making friends£ºyour"worst enemy"can£¨20£©Bto be your best friend£®

1£®A£®differencesB£®similaritiesC£®storyD£®legend
2£®A£®awkwardB£®braveC£®beautifulD£®clever
3£®A£®likeB£®hateC£®standD£®help
4£®A£®happyB£®worriedC£®shamedD£®shocked
5£®A£®clothesB£®shoesC£®fashionsD£®trousers
6£®A£®stayedB£®sharedC£®builtD£®repaired
7£®A£®surpriseB£®puzzleC£®issueD£®question
8£®A£®took upB£®thought upC£®set upD£®made up
9£®A£®whereB£®howC£®whyD£®when
10£®A£®imaginationsB£®imageC£®profileD£®thinking
11£®A£®cryingB£®shoutingC£®smilingD£®doing
12£®A£®hardlyB£®mostlyC£®greatlyD£®rarely
13£®A£®asB£®forC£®ofD£®from
14£®A£®in turnB£®in lineC£®in exchangeD£®in advance
15£®A£®confusedB£®charmedC£®addictedD£®annoyed
16£®A£®permissionB£®priceC£®clothesD£®passes
17£®A£®includedB£®takenC£®controlledD£®closed
18£®A£®shortB£®highC£®tallD£®funny
19£®A£®go throughB£®see throughC£®look throughD£®get through
20£®A£®lookoutB£®tu rnoutC£®watch outD£®work out
13£®Not long ago my daughter's favorite shoes were cut with a knife£®She cried£®I took them to the shoemaker to get them£¨36£©A£®The young apprentice £¨Ñ§Í½£© £¨37£©Bat the cuts quickly and said£¬"I can do £¨38£©Cexcept replace the uppers£®"The master looked at them and said£¬"£¨39£©Byou trust me£¬I will add more cuts to both of the shoes£®"I was £¨40£©Cand asked why£®He £¨41£©B£¬"As if the cuts were made on purpose for special style£®"I didn't fully understand him£¬£¨42£©BI decided to leave the shoes£®
Two days later£¬I went to collect the shoes£®At first£¨43£©AI found there were indeed more cuts on each shoe£¬but all of them were£¨44£©Dwith red thread around£®The shoes looked more unique and interesting than ever£®I couldn't help but praise his £¨45£©C£®
Another time£¬my wife's white skirt had an opening£®My wife checked it£¨46£©Aand said£¬"I'll mend it myself£®"Three days later£¬seeing the skirt again£¬I was shocked£ºthe £¨47£©Dhad been repaired by thin and white thread and it looked like a flower£®I £¨48£©Awith praise£¬"It's just as beautiful as a piece of art!"
"I got the£¨49£©Cfrom that shoemaker£®Patches £¨²¹¶¡£© are supposed to be ugly£¬but a skillful person can make it look perfect£®"replied my wife£®
£¨50£©Ashe said set me thinking£ºperfection is £¨51£©Cto achieve in everything£» patches are unavoidable£¨²»¿É±ÜÃâµÄ£©£¬so is human's life£¬which will appear£¨52£©D  the form of injury£¬disability or disease£®£¨53£©Ayou can't change the existence of them£¬all you £¨54£©Bdo and have to do is to deal with the wound by patches and try your best to bloom£¨Ê¢¿ª£©a most beautiful flower on the wound£¬and that is the meaning of £¨55£©A£®

36£®A£®repairedB£®cleanedC£®soldD£®painted
37£®A£®glaredB£®glancedC£®laughedD£®stared
38£®A£®somethingB£®anythingC£®nothingD£®everything
39£®A£®Even ifB£®IfC£®ThoughD£®While
40£®A£®delightedB£®convincedC£®confusedD£®embarrassed
41£®A£®declaredB£®explainedC£®announcedD£®interrupted
42£®A£®andB£®butC£®orD£®so
43£®A£®sightB£®attemptC£®handD£®light
44£®A£®occupiedB£®filledC£®mixedD£®decorated
45£®A£®statusB£®strengthC£®skillD£®sweat
46£®A£®carefullyB£®frequentlyC£®graduallyD£®curiously
47£®A£®cutB£®woundC£®injuryD£®opening
48£®A£®sighedB£®breathedC£®jumpedD£®complained
49£®A£®planB£®truthC£®ideaD£®desire
50£®A£®WhatB£®ThatC£®WhenD£®Where
51£®A£®necessaryB£®unnecessaryC£®impossibleD£®possible
52£®A£®onB£®byC£®atD£®in
53£®A£®Now thatB£®In thatC£®So thatD£®In order that
54£®A£®mustB£®canC£®mayD£®need
55£®A£®lifeB£®studyC£®workD£®education
10£®It's summer in Santa Cruz£¬and that means it's time to get outside and have some adventures!But on days when you can't get the kids out£¬you can keep them from getting bored by giving them one of these fun£¬adventure-filled books£®
Tuesday
    By David Wiesner
    Most of the time£¬days are the same from week to week£¬but this Tuesday is not like other Tuesdays£®On this particular Tuesday evening£¬the frogs find themselves floating above their pond£¬and start flying all over town!Despite the lack of words£¬this is a great book£¬funny with wonderful pictures of flying amphibians£®
Peggy£ºA Brave Chicken on a Big Adventure
    By Anna Walker
    Peggy the chicken lives in a quiet little house and leads a quiet life£¬until one day when a huge gust of wind picks her up and drops her in the middle of the city!Peggy is lost£¬so she goes for a walk£®She's ready for home£¬but where is home and how will she get there£¿
The Boxcar Children
    By Gertrude Chandler Warner
    Henry£¬Jessie£¬Violet£¬and Benny are orphans£¨¹Â¶ù£© who are supposed to live with their grandfather£¬but they're afraid£®They've heard he's mean£®So they run away and they find an old boxcar£¬move in£¬and make it their home£®But is their grandfather really mean£¿And what are those strange noises in the dark£¿These questions and more will be answered in the first of this youth mystery series£®
Mrs Frisby and the Rats of NIMH
    By Robert C£®O'Brien
    Mrs Frisby the mouse£¬together with her small children lives under a farm field£®When her youngest falls ill and word on the farm is that the field is about to plowed under£¬Mrs Frisby must reach out to the only creatures on the farm that can help her-large£¬extremely intelligent rats with a mysterious connection to her husband who passed away£®The story is attractive£®Action and adventure abound£®Readers will tear through this Newbery Award Winner£®
21£®We can infer that Tuesday is probably aA£®
A£®picture book     
B£®romantic poem      
C£®fighting cartoon        
D£®history book
22£®Who is the writer of The Boxcar Children£¿C
A£®David Wiesner£®
B£®Anna Walker    
C£®Gertrude Chandler Warner£®
D£®Robert C£®O'Brien
23£®In the eyes of Henry£¬Jessie£¬Violet£¬and Benny£¬their grandfather isD£®
A£®ugly        B£®skillful       C£®frustrating        D£®unkind
24£®What do you know about Mrs Frisby£¿B
A£®She won the Newbery Award£®
B£®Her husband is dead£®
C£®She lives in a farm house£®
D£®She is an intelligent rat£®

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