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Friendship is very importance. Everyone needs friendship. In all our lives we can¡¯t live without friendship just as we can¡¯t live without air and water. Friendship makes us getting on well with one another to go ahead under different kind of difficulties in the front of us. But real friendship is not easy to come by. True friendship must be sincerely and be based on understand each other but not on benefits of each other. A good friend can always be a good teacher to us. By his advices we are persuading to go the right way. Therefore more friends we have, the better we can improve ourselves.

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possible---possibly£» simple---simply; gentle---gently; terrible---terribly; true---truly; flexible---flexibly

immediate--- immediately; brave---bravely; wise---wisely£»active---actively£»sincerely ---sincere

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿To develop one¡¯s taste in English£¬the most effective way is to read English books extensively. However, one may be at a loss to choose the appropriate books£¬especially as a beginner.I would like to share some of my experience.

My first English novel was Jane Austen¡¯s Pride and Prejudice£¬recommended by many English teachers and professors as an ideal book for English learners. But I had great difficulty in understanding the novel£¬let alone enjoying it. It¡¯s not the vocabulary that troubled me£¬but rather the way Austen constructs sentences£¬and her way of thinking£¬which seemed too remote to me at that time. My fading enthusiasm was much recovered after reading Hemingway¡¯s novel Farewell to Arms. I particularly liked his brief and lively style. So my first suggestion is£¬as a beginner, you¡¯d better choose contemporary novels instead of classical ones.

However£¬reading novels is not the only way to improve your English. English essays can at once inform you£¬entertain you, and improve your taste in English. The best example is Bertrand Russell¡¯s work. Its language is plain, yet you cannot help feeling the elegance and the unique sense of humor. His simple language enables his philosophy(ÕÜÀí) within the reach of ordinary people. Here comes my second suggestion¡ªessays are indispensable.

Never follow other¡¯s opinions blindly£¬however famous or influential the person might be. As a saying goes£¬one man¡¯s meat is another man¡¯s poison. With that in mind£¬we are sure to find out our favorite writers through reading and develop our fine taste in English.

¡¾1¡¿What made the author¡¯s first English novel hard to understand?

A. Complex conversations.

B. Not knowing the social background.

C. The old-fashioned vocabulary.

D. Sentences and Austen¡¯s thinking pattern.

¡¾2¡¿Which can best replace the underlined word¡° indispensable¡±?

A. necessary B. challenging

C. related D. inspired

¡¾3¡¿What advice does the author give in the last paragraph?

A. Choose books that challenging us most.

B. Read books that are instructive.

C. Don¡¯t be affected by other¡¯s choices.

D. Compare books before buying.

¡¾4¡¿What is the author¡¯s purpose of writing the passage?

A. Give comments on literature works.

B. Tell beginners how to choose English books.

C. Encourage people to read more English books.

D. Recommend first-class books to English learners.

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿My dearest son and daughter,

The story of New Jersey high school student Rachel Canning suing (ÆðËß) her parents for child support and high school education inspired me to write you a little letter. Let me just put this out there: the only way I expect to see you in a court is as a lawyer or a judge.

There are two things about this case that seem to be disaster.

First, it¡¯s natural for parents and children to argue. I can guarantee that we will disagree. One or both of you will, at some point, scream at the top of your lungs the various ways you hate me. And I won¡¯t always like you, either. But I will always love you and do everything I can to keep your best interests as my focus, even when I¡¯m so angry. We are family. That means we are as much a part of one another as the flesh, blood and bones in our body. And we all should think about it very deeply instead of breaking that bond.

Second, I¡¯ll be honest, no matter how far apart we are on your life choices, your father and I will most certainly pay everything we can for your higher education. But that doesn¡¯t mean you deserve it. To be clear, that is a privilege we happily extend (¸øÓè) to you¡ªnot a right you are born with. And you will have to work hard to earn that privilege. Growing up is hard work.

If I do my job properly as your mother¡ªand you do yours as my children¡ªyou would sooner get a job or two, and find a way to make your dreams come true than go to trial over what you think you have the right to.

Love always,

Mom

¡¾1¡¿The mother writes this letter because she wants her children to ______.

A. be prepared for education

B. learn a lesson from the case

C. take up the legal profession

D. remember Rachel Canning

¡¾2¡¿When in disagreement, the mother expects her children not to ______.

A. guarantee anything

B. scream out their anger

C. break the family bond

D. forget their best interests

¡¾3¡¿The mother thinks of parents¡¯ paying for their children¡¯s higher education as ______.

A. a way in which children realize their dreams

B. a test of whether parents love their children

C. a privilege that children should earn

D. a right that parents are born with

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