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9£®The year was 1932£®Amelia Earhart was flying alone from North America to England in a small single-engined airplane£®At midnight£¬several hours after she had left Newfoundland£¬she ran into bad weather£®To make things worse£¬her altimeter £¨¸ß¶È±í£© failed and she didn't know how high she £¨25£©was flying £¨fly£©£®At night£¬and in a storm£¬a pilot was in great difficulty without an altimeter£®At times£¬her plane nearly plunged into the sea£®
Just before dawn£¬there was further trouble£®Amelia noticed flames coming from the engine£®With all the difficulties£¬Amelia Earhart wasn't sure if she £¨26£©could reach land£®There was nothing to do but keep £¨27£©going £¨go£©£®
In the end£¬Amelia Earhart did reach Ireland£®It was with the great courage £¨28£©that she made the safe landing£®And for the courage she had shown£¬she was warmly welcomed in England and Europe£®When she returned to the United States£¬she £¨29£©was honored £¨honor£© by President Hoover at a special dinner in the White House£®From that time on£¬Amelia Earhart was famous£®
What was so important about her flight£¿Amelia Earhart was the first woman£¨30£©to fly £¨fly£© the Atlantic Ocean alone£¬and she had set a record of fourteen hours and fifty-six minutes£®
In the years that followed£¬Amelia Earhart made several flights across the United States£¬and on each occasion she set a new record for flying time and was £¨31£©more skillful £¨skillful£© than her previous flight£®Amelia Earhart made these flights to show that women had a place in aviation £¨º½¿Õ£© and that air travel was useful£®Her passion for flight lasted in her remaining life £¨32£©until she mysteriously disappeared from public in the year 1937£®

·ÖÎö Ö÷Òª½²ÊöÁËAmelia Earhart£¬ÃÀ¹úÊ׸öµ¥¶À·ÉÐеÄÅ®ÐԵĹÊÊ£¬ËýµÄðÏÕ¾«ÉñµÃµ½ÁËÅ·ÖÞ¹ú¼ÒºÍÃÀ¹úµÄÔÞÑÊܵ½ÈËÃǵÄÈÈÁÒ»¶Ó­£¬Ò²ÊÕµ½ÁËÈÙÓþ£¬ËýÒ²ÊÇÕâ·½ÃæµÄÏÈÇý£¬ÏòÊÀ½çÖ¤Ã÷ÁË£¬Å®ÐÔÒ²ÄܼÝÊ»·É»ú£®

½â´ð 25£®was flying ¿¼²éʱ̬£®¸ù¾Ý¾ä×ӽṹ¿ÉÖª£¬´Ë´¦ÌîνÓﶯ´Ê£¬ÃèÊöµ±Ê±µÄ·ÉÐи߶ȣ¬ËùÒÔÓùýÈ¥½øÐÐʱ£®¹Ê´ð°¸Îªwas flying
26£®could  ¿¼²éÇé̬¶¯´Ê£®´Ë´¦ÊÇÖ¸Ëý²»È·ÐÅ×Ô¼ºÄÜ·ñ׎£®could±íʾ¹ýÈ¥µÄÄÜÁ¦£®¹Ê´ð°¸Îªcould
27£®going   ¿¼²é·ÇνÓﶯ´Ê£®keep doing¼ÌÐø×öijÊ£®¹Ê´ð°¸Îªgoing
28£®that  ¿¼²éÇ¿µ÷¾äÐÍ£®¸ù¾Ý¾ä×ӽṹ¿ÉÖª£¬´Ë¾äÊÇÇ¿µ÷¾ä£¬Æä½á¹¹Îª£ºit is/was+Ç¿µ÷²¿·Ö+that+ÆäËü³É·Ý£¬ËùÒÔÌîthat£®
29£®was honored   ¿¼²éʱ̬ºÍÓï̬£®¸ù¾Ý¾ä×ӽṹ¿ÉÖª´Ë´¦ÌîνÓﶯ´Ê£¬Ö÷ÓïºÍhonorÖ®¼äÊDZ»¶¯¹Øϵ£¬ËùÒÔÓ¦ÓÃÒ»°ã¹ýȥʱµÄ±»¶¯Óï̬£®¹Ê´ð°¸Îªwas honored
30£®to fly   ¿¼²é·ÇνÓﶯ´Ê£®ÐòÊý´ÊºÍ×î¸ß¼¶ºóÃæÓ¦Óö¯´Ê²»¶¨Ê½×÷¶¨Ó¹ÊÌîto fly£®
31£®more skillful   ¿¼²é±È½Ï¼¶£®¸ù¾ÝºáÏߺóÃæµÄthan¿ÉÖª´Ë´¦Ìî±È½Ï¼¶£¬ËùÒÔ´ð°¸Îªmore skillful£®
32£®until   ¿¼²éÁ¬´Ê£®¾äÒ⣺Ëý¶Ô·ÉÐеÄϲ°®³ÖÐøÁ˺ܳ¤Ê±¼äÖ±µ½1937ËýͻȻÉñÃصĴӹ«ÖÚµÄÊÓÏßÖÐÏûʧ£®untilÖ±µ½£¬ËùÒÔÌîuntil£®

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1£®Below is adapted from an English dictionary
figure/f¨©g ?/noun£¬verb                            
¡ñnoun 1£®[C£¬often pl£®]a number representing particular amount£¬especially one given in official information£ºthe trade/sales figures
2£®[C]a symbol rather than a word representing one of the numbers between 0 and 9£ºa six-figure salary 3£®[pl]£¨informal£© the area of mathematics that deals with adding£¬multiplying£¬etc 4£®a person of the type mentioned£ºGandhi was both a political and a religious figure in Indian history£® 5£®the shape of a person seen from a distance or not clearly 6£®a person or an animal as shown in art or a story£ºa wall with five carved figures in it 7£®[C]the human shape£¬considered from the point of view of being attractively thin£ºdoing exercise to improve one's figure 8£®[C]a pattern or series of movements performed on ice£ºfigure-skating[IDM]be/become a figure of fun£ºbe/become sb£®that others laugh at cut a¡­figure£º£¨of a person£© to have a particular appearance He cut a striking figure in his dinner jacket£®put a figure on sth£®£ºto say the exact price or number of sth£®
s a fine figure of man/woman£ºa tall£¬strong-looking and well-shaped person figure of speech£ºa word or phrase used in a different way from its usual meanings in order to create a particular mental image or effect  figurehead£ºsomeone who is the head or chief in name only £¨with no real power or authority£©¡ñverb 1£®to think or decide that sth£®will happen or is true£ºI figured that if I took the night train£¬I could be in Scotland by morning£® 2£®to be part of a process£¬situation£¬etc£®especially an important part£ºMy opinion of the matter didn't seem to figure at all£® 3£®to calculate an amount or the cost of sth£®£ºWe figured that attendance at 150£¬000£®[PHRV]1£®figure in£ºto include £¨in a sum£©£ºHave you figured in the cost of hotel£¿2£®figure on£ºto plan on£» to expect sth£®to happen£ºI haven't figured on his getting home too late£® 3£®figure out£ºto work out£» understand by thinking£ºHave you figured out how much the trip will cost£¿[IDM]It/That figures!£¨informal£©£ºThat seems reasonable£¬logical and what I expect£®
60£®I didn't really mean my partner is a snake£» it was just aC£®
 A£®figure of eight    B£®figure head     C£®figure of speech    D£®a fine figure
61£®---She was coming late again£®---B!That's typical of her£®
A£®It figures her out                   B£®It figures       
C£®It cuts a poor figure                 D£®She is a figure of fun
62£®What does"watch my figure"in the sentence"Don't tempt me with chocolate£» I am watching my figure£®"mean£¿C
A£®add the numbers   B£®have sports    C£®try not to get fat    D£®watch games£®
14£®Greenwich £¨¸ñÁÖÍþÖΣ©is on the River£¬five miles from the middle of London£¬and its history is two thousand years old£®The first English people were fishermen there£¬and they named the place Greenwich£¬meaning"green village"£®Later the English kings and queens lived at Greenwich in their beautiful places£®
The name of the earliest palace was Placentia£®Henry VIII lived there£®He knew that England must be strong at sea£®So he started two big ship-yards £¨´¬Î룩at Greenwich£®But trouble was coming to Greenwich£®In 1649£¬a war started in England and for eleven years there was no king£®The men who had worked for him at Placentia decided to live the place themselves£®They sold all its beautiful things£®Finally£¬the war ended and King Charles II came back£®But Placentia was falling down£®So King Charles built a new and bigger palace£¬which is now open to the public£®
At this time£¬Charles was worried about losing so many of its ships at sea£ºtheir sailors did not know how to tell exactly where they were£®So in 1675£¬Charles made John Flamsteed£¬the first astronomer £¨ÌìÎÄѧ¼Ò£©in England£¬try to find the answer£®Flamsteed worked in a new building on the high ground in Greenwich Park£®From it with a telescope which he made himself£¬Flamsteed could look all round the sky£®And he did£¬night after night£¬for twenty years£®Carrying on Flamsteed's work a hundred years later£¬an astronomer called Harrison finally made a clock which told the time at sea£¬and helped sailors to know where they were£®You can see Harrison's clock£¬still working£¬in Greenwich's museum of the sea£®Because of Flamsteed's work£¬every country in the world now tells its time by Greenwich Time£®

35£®The first English people living in the"green village"wereC£®
A£®sailors                  B£®King Charles and his family
C£®fishermen               D£®The families of kings and queens
36£®What kind of trouble came to Greenwich in 1649£¿D
A£®Placentia was destroyed£®B£®King Henry died£®
C£®Ship-yards were built£®D£®A war started in England£®
37£®Charles made John Flamsteed try to findB£®
A£®how to build strong ships            B£®how to tell sailors'positions at sea
C£®how to tell the exact time            D£®a place to set up a telescope
38£®Who made the first clock which could tell the time at sea£¿A
A£®Harrison    B£®Flamsteed    C£®Henry    D£®Charles£®
18£®If you had a strange sound in your ear£¬what would you do£¿One man in Wales who thought he had a fly in his ear called 999£¬the emergency services number in Britain£®And so did a woman who was worried about her green potatoes£®Could she make chips with them£¿Were they poisonous£¿She didn't hesitate about calling the local ambulance service to ask£®According to a recent report£¬more than 3 1£¬000non-urgent calls were made to the Welsh Ambulance Service in the last year£®
Inappropriate calls are a headache for health professionals everywhere£®In the US£¬prank calls to 911happen on a daily basis£®Many callers use apps which hide their identity£®But those who try to be funny shouldn't be surprised if the police have the last laugh£®One man from Colorado was arrested for making more than 1£¬2 00prank calls£¬according to a report on the US television station KOAA-TV£®
People who take these calls are trained to stay calm and keep a straight face£¬no matter how strange the call sounds£®"There's no way for us to know whether the call is real£¬accidental or a prank call£¬"said a public safety worker interviewed by the American TV channel£®
The Head of Clinical Services at the Welsh Ambulance Service£¬Richard Lee£¬has a warning for prank callers£®He says£º"When people misuse the service it means our precious  time is being taken away from someone who really does need our help£®"Indeed£¬these  hotlines are supposed to help the seriously ill or those with a life-threatening injury£®You  never know£¬one day£¬the person who needs assistance could be you or someone in your  family£®
28£®How does the author introduce the topic of the text£¿A
A£®By giving examples£®
B£®By telling a story£®
C£®By listing figures£®
D£®By making a comparison£®
29£®According to the text£¬prank calls are usuallyD£®
A£®meant to be helpful
B£®dealt with in time
C£®thought highly of
D£®made to play tricks
30£®What does the underlined phrase"have the last laugh"in Paragraph 2probably mean£¿A
A£®Win at last£®
B£®Never find them£®
C£®Laugh at them£®
D£®Know nothing£®
31£®What does the author intend to suggest in the text£¿C
A£®Prank calls are usually easy to identify£®
B£®Operators feel annoyed by strange callers£®
C£®Prank calls may cause serious results£®
D£®Prank callers should be punished by law£®

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