ÌâÄ¿ÄÚÈÝ

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿¼Ù¶¨Ó¢Óï¿ÎÉÏÀÏʦҪÇóͬ×ÀÖ®¼ä½»»»ÐÞ¸Ä×÷ÎÄ£¬ÇëÄãÐÞ¸ÄÄãͬ×ÀдµÄÒÔÏÂ×÷ÎÄ¡£ÎÄÖй²ÓÐ10´¦ÓïÑÔ´íÎó£¬Ã¿¾äÖÐ×î¶àÓÐÁ½´¦¡£Ã¿´¦´íÎó½öÉæ¼°Ò»¸öµ¥´ÊµÄÔö¼Ó¡¢É¾³ý»òÐ޸ġ£

Ôö¼Ó£ºÔÚȱ´Ê´¦¼ÓÒ»¸ö©×Ö·ûºÅ£¨¡Ä£©£¬²¢ÔÚÆäÏÂÃæд³ö¸Ã¼ÓµÄ´Ê¡£

ɾ³ý£º°Ñ¶àÓàµÄ´ÊÓÃбÏߣ¨£Ü£©»®µô¡£

Ð޸ģºÔÚ´íµÄ´ÊÏ»®Ò»ºáÏߣ¬²¢ÔڸôÊÏÂÃæд³öÐ޸ĺóµÄ´Ê¡£

×¢Ò⣺1.ÿ´¦´íÎó¼°ÆäÐ޸ľùÏÞÒ»´Ê;

2.Ö»ÔÊÐíÐÞ¸Ä10´¦£¬¶àÕߣ¨´ÓµÚ11´¦Æ𣩲»¼Æ·Ö¡£

As the saying goes, time is money. But in my opinion, time is even precious than money. Why? Because when money is spent, we still have a chance to earn them back. But when time is wasting, we can never get it back. There is some doubt that time is very limited, and even a minute is of great valuable. We should make full use of time to do that should be done. It¡¯s the pity that a lot of people still didn¡¯t appreciate the value of time. They are wasting their time doing nothing of useful. We should form the good habit of race against time and make a difference in our world.

¡¾´ð°¸¡¿

¡¾½âÎö¡¿ÊÔÌâ·ÖÎö£º±¾ÎĽ²ÊöÁËʱ¼ä±È½ðÇ®»¹¹ó£¬ÎÒÃÇÒªÕäϧʱ¼ä¡£

1.evenºó¼Ómore ¸ù¾Ýthan¿ÉÖª£¬ÓñȽϼ¶£¬¹ÊÔÚevenºó¼Ómore¡£

2.them¡úit ÒòΪmoneyÊDz»¿ÉÊýÃû´Ê£¬¹Ê°ÑºóÃæµÄthem¸ÄΪit¡£

3.wasting¡úwasted ¾äÒ⣺µ±Ê±¼ä±»À˷ѵÄʱºò¡£Ê±¼äÊDZ»ÀË·Ñ£¬¹ÊÒªÓñ»¶¯Óï̬£¬¹Ê°Ñwasting¸ÄΪwasted¡£

4.some¡úno ¹Ì¶¨¾äʽ£ºThere is no doubt that¡­ºÁÎÞÒÉÎÊ¡­¡­¡£¹Ê°Ñsome¸ÄΪno¡£

5.valuable¡úvalue ÒòΪgreatÐÞÊÎÃû´Ê£¬¹Ê°Ñvaluable¸ÄΪvalue¡£

6.that¡úwhat ¾äÒ⣺ÎÒÃÇÓ¦¸Ã³ä·ÖÀûÓÃʱ¼ä×öÓ¦¸Ã×öµÄÊ¡£ÒòΪdoºóÃæµÄ±öÓï´Ó¾äÖУ¬Òýµ¼´ÊÔÚ´Ó¾äÖÐ×÷±öÓ¸ù¾Ý¾äÒ⣬¹Ê°Ñthat¸ÄΪwhat¡£

7.the¡úa ¹Ì¶¨¾äʽ£ºIt is a pity that¡­×ö¡­¡­ÊÇ¿ÉϧµÄ£¬¹Ê°Ñthe¸ÄΪa¡£

8.didn¡¯t¡údon¡¯t ¾äÒ⣺ºÜ¿ÉϧÐí¶àÈËÈÔÈ»²»Õäϧʱ¼ä¡£±íʾ¿Í¹ÛÊÂʵÓÃÒ»°ãÏÖÔÚʱ̬£¬¹Ê°Ñdidn¡¯t¸ÄΪdon¡¯t¡£

9.È¥µôof ±íʾ¡°×öÎÞÓõÄÊÂÇ顱ÓÃdo nothing useful£¬ofÊǶàÓàµÄ£¬ÐÞÊ⻶¨´ú´Êsomething¡¢nothingµÈÒª·ÅÔÚ²»¶¨´ú´ÊºóÃ棬¹ÊÈ¥µôof¡£

10.race¡úracing ¹Ì¶¨½á¹¹£ºform the good habit of doing sth.Ñø³É×öijʵÄÏ°¹ß£¬¹Ê°Ñrace¸ÄΪracing¡£

Á·Ï°²áϵÁдð°¸
Ïà¹ØÌâÄ¿

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿ÔĶÁÀí½â¡£

The latest Chinese ¡°god song¡± (an Internet term to describe pop songs that spread virally through the Internet) is still stirring up fierce debates between those who view it as a milestone for Chinese pop music going global and those who regard it as a bad image of China.

Last week, Little Apple, written and performed by Chopsticks Brothers, won the AMA International Song Award and the_duo performed the song at the 2014 American Music Awards in Los Angeles. Another Chinese pop singer, Zhang Jie, won the International Artist Award.

But while fans of these singers are thinking highly of the awards and the performance by Chopsticks Brothers at the AMA celebration, there are others who are less excited. They have questioned the value of the awards and what effects it will have on Chinese culture's ¡°going abroad¡±£¬ claiming it may leave foreign audiences with a poor impression of Chinese pop music, and even Chinese culture.

The Little Apple phenomenon, both home and abroad, can be more easily understood and judged if we look at it from a business perspective rather than a cultural perspective. The professional promoters behind the duo have developed a clear strategy to promote the duo and their works, not just this particular song. Little Apple was originally released to promote the duo's film Old Boys: The Way of the Dragon.

From the very beginning a viral marketing strategy was used to promote the song, which immediately went viral on the Internet due to its repetitive rhythm, easytoremember lyrics, simple and funny dance and, most importantly, grass roots nature. The video accumulated more than 1 billion hits on China's major video websites.

Although the song was generally dismissed by music professionals who criticized it as ¡°musical junk food¡±£¬ Little Apple's popularity nationally paved the way for promoting the duo internationally.

¡¾1¡¿The writer's attitude to the song of Little Apple is________.

A£®opposed B£®negative

C£®objective D£®critical

¡¾2¡¿What do the underlined words ¡°the duo¡± refer to?

A£®Little Apple. B£®Chopsticks Brothers.

C£®Zhang Jie. D£®American singers.

¡¾3¡¿We can learn from the passage that ________.

A£®Little Apple's popularity is also a success of the marketing strategy

B£®Little Apple is generally thought worthless by the AMA

C£®Little Apple is really popular with all people in China

D£®Little Apple was originally released as a pop song on the Internet

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿¼Ù¶¨Ó¢Óï¿ÎÉÏÀÏʦҪÇóͬѧÃǽ»»»ÐÞ¸Ä×÷ÎÄ£¬ÇëÄãÐÞ¸ÄÄãͬ×ÀдµÄÒÔÏÂ×÷ÎÄ¡£ÎÄÖй²ÓÐ10´¦ÓïÑÔ´íÎó£¬Ã¿¾äÖÐ×î¶àÓÐÁ½´¦¡£´íÎóÉæ¼°Ò»¸öµ¥´ÊµÄÔö¼Ó¡¢É¾³ý»òÐ޸ġ£

Ôö¼Ó£ºÔÚȱ´Ê´¦¼ÓÒ»¸ö©×Ö·ûºÅ£¨¡Ä£©£¬²¢ÔÚÆäÏÂÃæдÉϸüӵĴʡ£

ɾ³ý£º°Ñ¶àÓàµÄ´ÊÓÃбÏߣ¨\£©»®µô¡£

Ð޸ģºÔÚ´íµÄ´ÊÏ»®Ò»ºáÏߣ¬²¢ÔڸôÊÏÂÃæдÉÏÐ޸ĺóµÄ´Ê¡£

×¢Ò⣺1. ÿ´¦´íÎó¼°ÆäÐ޸ľù½öÏÞÒ»´Ê£»

2. Ö»ÔÊÐíÐÞ¸Ä10´¦£¬¶àÕߣ¨´ÓµÚ11´¦Æ𣩲»¼Æ·Ö¡£

Last week, I received one of the students from the US, which name was Mike. The first day, I went to pick him up at the Capital Airport and we chatted happy along the way. On the second day, we paid a visit with the famous Maoer Hutong, where we had an interesting rickshaw£¨»Æ°ü³µ£©tour. Mike became very exciting about the driver¡¯s introduction to the history of Hutong. The following day, I took him to Mei Lanfang Grand Theatre to watch Beijing Opera. Although he could understand few words, but he was still amazed to seeing the colorful costumes and the unique way of performing. When it was time of him to return to the US, I send him some gifts with Chinese elements, such as a Beijing Opera mask and a Chinese knot. He was very grateful for I had done and said him was really impressed by the rich Chinese culture.

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿For thousands of years comets have been a mystery to man. They travel across the sky very fast and have a bright ¡°tail¡± of burning gas. The comet Tempel 1 has an orbit far outside the orbit of the furthest planet in our solar system, Pluto. It has been there for 4.6 billion years, 133 million kilometers from Earth.Once a little American spacecraft crashed into Tempel 1. The spacecraft had a camera and it took a photograph of the comet every minute before it finally crashed into its surface.

The space mission to Tempel 1 cost $335 million and was called Deep Impact. The spacecraft was traveling at 37,000 kilometers per hour when it hit the comet and the crash completely destroyed the spacecraft. But before it hit the comet, the spacecraft took some amazing photographs. The last one was a closeup picture which the spacecraft took just 3 seconds before it crashed into the comet.

¡°Right now we have lost one spacecraft£¬¡± said a delighted NASA engineer. Deep Impact was like an American Independence Day fireworks display. It took many years to plan and ended in an enormous explosion.

The spacecraft which crashed into the comet was made of copper and was the size of a washing machine. It was dropped from a mothership into the path of the comet and the mothership then photographed the cloud of ice, dust and organic chemicals that rose from the surface of the comet after the crash.

The crash completely destroyed the spacecraft but nothing really happened to the comet: experts believe that the crash slowed the comet down by no more than 1/10,000 of a millimeter a second. The aim of the mission was to study for the first time the interior of a comet.

The mothership was 480 km from the explosion and observed the crash and the explosion with instruments for 800 seconds. Seven satellites, including the Hubble space telescope, watched the moment of drama, and over the next day and night about 50 telescopes on Earth were watching the distant comet.

¡¾1¡¿How many hours did it take for the spacecraft from the earth to touch the comet Tempel 1?

A. About 2,500. B. About 3,500.

C. About 4,500. D. About 5,500.

¡¾2¡¿Which of the following shows the possible orbits and positions of the comet Tempel 1?

S£½Solar¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡P£½Pluto

T£½Tempel 1

A. B.

C. D.

¡¾3¡¿Which of the following is the closest in meaning to the underlined word in Paragraph 5?

A. Position. B. Relation.

C. Inside. D. Distance.

¡¾4¡¿The author¡¯s main purpose in writing the passage is to________.

A. inform people the discovery of a new comet

B. show the power of America in space

C. introduce the knowledge of comets

D. introduce an experiment

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿Your next car could have two seats, three wheels ¡ª two in front and one in the back and a top speed of more than 100 miles per hour. Elio Motors plans to make such a tiny car named the Elio. Its two seats sit front and back instead of side by side. The driver is positioned in the center with the passenger directly behind.

The starting price for the car is just $6,800. It has only one door, on the left side, which cuts a few hundred dollars off the manufacturing costs. Having three wheels also makes it cheaper. It has air conditioning, power windows and door locks and an AM/FM radio. More features can be ordered through Elio's long list of suppliers. Elio will also sell the cars directly through its own stores and not through franchised dealers (ÌØÔ¼¾­ÏúÉÌ).

Paul Elio dreamed as a kid that he would one day own a car company called Elio Motors. In 2008, tired of high gas prices, he started working on a car that burns gas in a more effective way. Equally important to him was creating U.S. manufacturing jobs and making the car inexpensive enough to attract buyers who might otherwise be stuck in their old, unreliable cars. ¡°Whatever matters to you, this can move the needle on it,¡± he said.

Already, more than 27,000 people have reserved (Ô¤¶©) one. Paul hopes to make 250,000 cars a year by 2016. So far, reservation holders are those who will use the Elio as a second or third car for work. Finally, though, he believes the car will interest high school and college students as well as used-car drivers who want something newer and more reliable.

¡¾1¡¿Which of the following shows the design of the Elio?

(¡ð = wheel, ¡õ = seat)

A. B. C. D.

¡¾2¡¿Paragraph 2 shows that the Elio ________.

A. will be available in most stores B. is sold at affordable prices

C. has a fixed temperature D. does no harm to the environment

¡¾3¡¿The underlined words ¡°move the needle¡± in Paragraph 3 probably mean ¡°________¡±.

A. take a chance B. stand in the way C. break into pieces D. make a difference

¡¾4¡¿What would be the best title for the text?

A. The history of Elio Motors B. Cool car or stupid vehicle?

C. Paul Elio: a kid with big dreams D. What car to choose: new or used?

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿Nowadays women appear to have a positive image of themselves as safer drivers than men.

In a survey done for insurer MetLife,51% of women said they drive more safely. The evidence is on their side: Men are 3.4 times more likely than women to get a ticket for careless driving and 3.1 times as likely to be punished for drunk driving. ¡°Women are on average less aggressive and more law abiding (ÊØ·¨µÄ) drivers, which leads to fewer accidents£¬¡± the report says. However£¬not all male drivers share the same opinion. Of the men surveyed by MetLife, 39% claimed male drivers were safer. The findings did back them up on one point£ºautomotive knowledge. The report showed that more men are familiar with current safety equipment such as electronic stability control, which helps prevent rollover accidents.

Auto safety unavoidably matters to money. Insurance companies focus on what classes of drivers have the lowest dollar amounts of claims, and for now, that mainly includes women. In general£¬women pay about 9% less for auto insurance than men. A study by the website Insweb also showed that auto insurance rates are lower for women in most states. Among individual states, women get the greatest advantage in Wyoming(where they pay 20% less), South Dakota and Washington£¬D. C. where their insurance costs are 16% lower.

¡°More than 11, 900 male drivers died in U£®S.traffic accidents in 2009£¬compared with just under 4,900 women drivers£¬¡± according to the study. ¡°Based on miles traveled, men died at a rate of 2.5 deaths per 100 million miles traveled, VS 1.7 deaths for women. ¡±

¡¾1¡¿According to the study, female drivers ________.

A. are more aggressive while driving

B. are more interested in auto knowledge

C. are more likely to stick to driving laws

D. are more familiar with safety equipment

¡¾2¡¿Insurance companies focus on female driver clients probably because they ________.

A. cause more accidents on the road

B. pay more money to the insurance companies

C. take the most part of the insurance clients

D. have the lowest amount of money on insurance claims

¡¾3¡¿We can infer from the passage that ________.

A. men are 3.1 times more likely to get tickets than women

B. all women in the USA pay the same for their auto insurance

C. more female drivers die every year than male drivers

D. women are generally safer drivers than the opposite

¡¾4¡¿The writer mainly develops paragraphs by ________.

A. giving examples B. making comparisons

C. drawing a conclusion D. presenting an argument

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿

Communication

People learn and share information through communication. All forms of communication have one thing in common: the sending and receiving of a message. Using different kinds of communication, people can pass along their ideas and feelings to just one person or to millions.

¡¾1¡¿ Animals communicate through sounds, scents (Æøζ), and acts. Computers communicate with other computers through electronic networks.

People communicate through language, both spoken and written. ¡¾2¡¿ Written language includes books, newspapers, and e-mail.

People also communicate without words. Body and face movements show feelings. Deaf people use hand movements called sign language.

The arts are also a form of communication. ¡¾3¡¿

The first modern humans appeared about 200,000 years ago. They likely used sounds, movements, and then speech. About 30,000 years ago humans started making paintings and sculptures on the walls of caves.

Humans invented writing more than 5,000 years ago. The ancient Sumerian people developed the first known script (ÎÄ×Ö), called cuneiform (ШÐÎÎÄ×Ö). Then the ancient Egyptians developed a picture-based writing called hieroglyphics (ÏóÐÎÎÄ×Ö). The invention of the printing press in the 1400s was a major advance in written communication. ¡¾4¡¿

Telecommunication is communication over long distances. In ancient times pigeons carried written messages. Before trains and cars, messengers on foot or on horseback carried letters. ¡¾5¡¿ Since then, telecommunication has become faster thanks to television, telephones, and the Internet.

A. It let printers quickly make copies of a text.

B. Communication is not only a human activity.

C. Public postal services started in the 1500s and 1600s.

D. Spoken language includes conversations and speeches.

E. Spoken communication is dependent on a number of factors.

F. Photographs, paintings, music, and movies can communicate feelings as well as facts.

G. Modern technologies for long-distance communication usually involve electrical technologies.

Î¥·¨ºÍ²»Á¼ÐÅÏ¢¾Ù±¨µç»°£º027-86699610 ¾Ù±¨ÓÊÏ䣺58377363@163.com

¾«Ó¢¼Ò½ÌÍø