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1. The ¡°Monster of Lake Tianchi¡±in the Changbai Mountains in Jilin province, northeast China, is back in the news after several recent sightings.

2. He claims to have seen a round black creature moving quickly through the water.

3. They also think that there might be similar creatures in other lakes around the world.

4. They say that the low- temperature lake is unlikely to be able to support such large living creatures.

5. There have been reports of monsters in Lake Tianchi since the beginning of the last century.

6. Mr Li Xiaohe said that he and his family were able to see the monster clearly because the weather was fine and the lake was calm.

7. Dragons can be friendly or fierce, they can bring good luck or cause death and destruction.

8. In Chinese culture, dragons are generous and wise, although they can be unpredictable.

9. According to popular belief, if you were born in the year of the dragon, you are intelligent, brave, and a nature leader.

10. Why should the dragon have a different character in different parts of the world? Some experts believe it is due to the animals the myths grow out of.

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It was black in the evening. Jason, a 12-year-old boy didn¡¯t want to go outside. But his mother, Branda, was worried about his father and   36  he go.

That evening the man had to  37  his car, a Buick outside their house in the driveway.

38  enough, the wife hadn¡¯t heard a single  39  for at least one hour. ¡°Go and find him,¡± she told Jason.

The kid stepped outside in the darkness and called into the shadows ¡°Dad?¡±

       ¡°Jason?¡±  40  was his father, but his voice sounded  41  . He spoke slowly, in a strange way.

       That evening, when the man had to get   42  the car to fix it, he used a forklift to lift the car.  43  , the man didn¡¯t place the blocks in front of the car¡¯ s front tires to keep it from  44  forward off the forks, which was exactly  45  it did afterwards.

Little Jason saw his dad¡¯s feet  46  out from beneath the car.  47   to take a full breath, Old Jason sank into a sleepy, half-alive  48  .

       ¡°Calm down. It will be OK.¡± The boy  49   his mother. Now he couldn¡¯t afford to be scared.

       He climbed on and started up, the Buick started to come off the ground and 50   in the air.

       Minutes later, 911 policemen arrived. Old Jason 51  beneath the car, still breathing.

       It wasn¡¯t  52  his dad was loaded into an ambulance that the little boy 53   and sobbed.

       Little Jason says one happy change has come out of the 54  : he gets to spend more time with his dad. Old Jason, who hasn¡¯t touched a car  55   the Buick fell on him often spends evenings with his son playing.

A. claimed              B. demanded            C. declared                D. announced

A. clean                     B. buy                     C. fix                D. sell

A. Strangely            B. Interestingly        C. Fortunately           D. Dangerously

A. word                     B. sentence              C. noise                    D. sound

A. He                        B. This                    C. There                   D. It

A. usual                     B. different              C. calm                     D. unhappy

A. into                    B. onto                    C. beneath                 D. above

A. Somehow                  B. Anyhow              C. Somewhat             D. Anyway

A. sinking              B. rolling                       C. driving                 D. running

A. what                    B. how                    C. why                            D. when

A. bringing            B. moving               C. sticking                D. taking

A. Unable             B. Unlikely              C. Likely                  D. Able

A. environment      B. circumstance        C. state                            D. position

A. inspired            B. comforted           C. required              D. persuaded

A. moved                 B. drove                  C. bent                            D. suspended

A. slept                    B. sat                      C. stood                           D. lay

A. until                    B. unless                 C. when                           D. while

A. broke out             B. broke down                C. broke up               D. broke off

A. matter                 B. affair                  C. accident                D. event

A. after                    B. till                       C. when                         D. since

The measure of a man¡¯s real character is what he would do if he knew he would never be found out.

¡ª Thomas Macaulay

Some thirty years ago, I was studying in a public school in New York. One day, Mrs. Nantette O¡¯Neill gave an arithmetic ___1___ to our class. When the papers were ___2___ she discovered that twelve boys had made exactly the ___3___ mistakes throughout the test.

There is nothing really new about ___4___ in exams. Perhaps that was why Mrs. O¡¯Neill ___5___ even say a word about it. She only asked the twelve boys to ___6___ after class. I was one of the twelve.

Mrs. O¡¯Neill asked ___7___ questions, and she did not ___8___ us either. Instead, she wrote on the blackboard the ___9___ words by Thomas Macaulay. She then ordered us to ___10___ these words into our exercise-books one hundred times.

I don¡¯t ___11___ about the other eleven boys. Speaking for ___12___ I can say: it was the most important single ___13___ of my life. Thirty years after being ___14___ to Macaulay¡¯s words, they ___15___ seem to me the best yardstick(×¼Éþ), because they give us a ___16___ to measure ourselves rather than others.

___17___ of us are asked to made ___18___ decisions about nations going to war or armies going to battle. But all of us are called ___19___ daily to make a great many personal decisions. ___20___ the wallet, found in the street, be put into a pocket ___21___ turned over to the policeman? Should the ___22___ change received at the store be forgotten or ___23___? Nobody will know except ___24___. But you have to live with yourself, and it is always ___25___ to live with someone you respect.

1. A. test B. problem     C. paper  D. lesson

2. A. examinedB. completed  C. marked      D. answered

3. A. easy       B. funny  C. same   D. serious

4. A. lying      B. cheating     C. guessing     D. discussing

5. A. didn¡¯t    B. did     C. would D. wouldn¡¯t

6. A. come     B. leave   C. remain       D. apologize

7. A. no  B. certain       C. many  D. more

8. A. excuse    B. reject  C. help    D. scold

9. A. above     B. common     C. following   D. unusual

10. A. repeat   B. get      C. put     D. copy

11. A. worry   B. know  C. hear    D. talk

12. A. myself  B. ourselves    C. themselves  D. herself

13. A. chance  B. incident      C. lesson D. memory

14. A. referred       B. shown C. brought      D. introduced

15. A. even     B. still     C. always       D. almost

16. A. way     B. sentence     C. choice D. reason

17. A. All       B. Few    C. Some  D. None

18. A. quick   B. wise    C. great   D. personal

19. A. out       B. for      C. up      D. upon

20. A. Should B. Must   C. Would D. Need

21. A. and      B. or       C. then    D. but

22. A. extra    B. small  C. some   D. necessary

23. A. paid     B. remembered      C. shared D. returned

24. A. me       B. you     C. us       D. them

25. A. easier   B. more natural      C. better  D. more peaceful

The measure of a man¡¯s real character is what he would do if he knew he would never be found out.

¡ª Thomas Macaulay

Some thirty years ago, I was studying in a public school in New York. One day, Mrs. Nantette O¡¯Neill gave an arithmetic ___1___ to our class. When the papers were ___2___ she discovered that twelve boys had made exactly the ___3___ mistakes throughout the test.

There is nothing really new about ___4___ in exams. Perhaps that was why Mrs. O¡¯Neill ___5___ even say a word about it. She only asked the twelve boys to ___6___ after class. I was one of the twelve.

Mrs. O¡¯Neill asked ___7___ questions, and she did not ___8___ us either. Instead, she wrote on the blackboard the ___9___ words by Thomas Macaulay. She then ordered us to ___10___ these words into our exercise-books one hundred times.

I don¡¯t ___11___ about the other eleven boys. Speaking for ___12___ I can say: it was the most important single ___13___ of my life. Thirty years after being ___14___ to Macaulay¡¯s words, they ___15___ seem to me the best yardstick(×¼Éþ), because they give us a ___16___ to measure ourselves rather than others.

___17___ of us are asked to made ___18___ decisions about nations going to war or armies going to battle. But all of us are called ___19___ daily to make a great many personal decisions. ___20___ the wallet, found in the street, be put into a pocket ___21___ turned over to the policeman? Should the ___22___ change received at the store be forgotten or ___23___? Nobody will know except ___24___. But you have to live with yourself, and it is always ___25___ to live with someone you respect.

1. A. test B. problem      C. paper  D. lesson

2. A. examined       B. completed   C. marked      D. answered

3. A. easy       B. funny  C. same   D. serious

4. A. lying      B. cheating     C. guessing     D. discussing

5. A. didn¡¯t     B. did      C. would D. wouldn¡¯t

6. A. come     B. leave   C. remain       D. apologize

7. A. no   B. certain C. many  D. more

8. A. excuse   B. reject  C. help    D. scold

9. A. above     B. common     C. following    D. unusual

10. A. repeat   B. get      C. put     D. copy

11. A. worry   B. know  C. hear    D. talk

12. A. myself  B. ourselves    C. themselves D. herself

13. A. chance B. incident      C. lesson D. memory

14. A. referred       B. shown C. brought      D. introduced

15. A. even     B. still     C. always       D. almost

16. A. way     B. sentence     C. choice D. reason

17. A. All B. Few    C. Some  D. None

18. A. quick    B. wise    C. great   D. personal

19. A. out       B. for      C. up      D. upon

20. A. Should  B. Must   C. Would D. Need

21. A. and      B. or       C. then    D. but

22. A. extra    B. small   C. some  D. necessary

23. A. paid      B. remembered       C. shared D. returned

24. A. me       B. you     C. us       D. them

25. A. easier   B. more natural      C. better  D. more peaceful

We are going on a long train journey. Out of the windows, we can see cars running on nearby highways, children waving at a crossing, cattle grazing£¨³Ô²Ý£© on a distant hillside, smoke pouring from factories, village houses and city skylines.
But   36  in our minds is the final destination£¨Ä¿µÄµØ£©. On a certain day at a certain hour, we will  37  into the station. Bands will be playing and flags   38  . Once we get there, so many wonderful dreams will   39  and the pieces of our lives will fit together like a(n)   40   jigsaw£¨Æ´Í¼£© puzzle. How restlessly we pace the aisles£¨¹ýµÀ£©, damning£¨×çÖ䣩 the minutes for waiting, waiting for the station.
¡°When we reach the  41  , that will be it!¡± We cry ¡°When I am 18.¡± ¡°When I  42  a new 450SL Mercedes Benz!¡± ¡°When I put the   43  kid through college.¡± ¡°When I have   44  off the debts!¡± ¡°When I get a promotion£¨ÌáÉý£©.¡± ¡°When I reach the age of retirement, I shall live   45  ever after!¡±
  46  , we come to realize that there is no such station as we arrive at once and for all. The  47  joy of life is the trip. The station is only a dream. It   48  leaves us behind.
¡°Cherish£¨ÕäÊÓ£© the moment¡± is a good   49  . It is the burdens£¨¸ºµ££© of today that drive us to keep on   50  . And it is the regrets over yesterday that motivate£¨¼¤·¢£© us to overcome the   51  and look forward to the future.
So   52  pacing the aisles and counting the miles.   53  , climb more mountains, eat more ice cream, go barefoot£¨³à½Å£© more   54  , swim more rivers, watch more sunsets, laugh more and cry less. Life must be lived   55  we go along. The station will come soon enough.
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ1¡¿A hidden      B faint      C deep      D buried
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ2¡¿A pull      B get      C approach      D arrive
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ3¡¿ A floating      B waving      C raising      D shaking
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ4¡¿A come up      B come around      C come out      D come true
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ5¡¿A divided      B separated      C completed      D united
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ6¡¿A station     B age      C target      D point
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ7¡¿A borrow      B buy      C order      D rent
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ8¡¿A first      B best      C last      D eldest
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ9¡¿A cut      B left      C taken      D paid
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ10¡¿A happily      B fully      C anxiously      D freely
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ11¡¿A Believe it or not      B Sooner or later      C Once again      D All at once
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ12¡¿A simple      B basic      C true      D final
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ13¡¿A eventually£¨×îºó£©      B accidentally      C instantly      D constantly
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ14¡¿A motto£¨óðÑÔ£©      B sentence      C concept     D slogan£¨±êÓ
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ15¡¿A pushing      B trying      C working      D sticking
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ16¡¿A effort      B mistake      C challenge      D fault
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ17¡¿A consider      B stop      C go on      D plan on
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ18¡¿A Besides      B Thus      C However      D Instead
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ19¡¿A often      B gently      C quickly      D slowly
¡¾Ð¡Ìâ20¡¿A if      B unless      C as      D once

We are going on a long train journey. Out of the windows, we can see cars running on nearby highways, children waving at a crossing, cattle grazing£¨³Ô²Ý£© on a distant hillside, smoke pouring from factories, village houses and city skylines.

But   36   in our minds is the final destination£¨Ä¿µÄµØ£©. On a certain day at a certain hour, we will   37   into the station. Bands will be playing and flags   38   . Once we get there, so many wonderful dreams will   39   and the pieces of our lives will fit together like a(n)   40   jigsaw£¨Æ´Í¼£© puzzle. How restlessly we pace the aisles£¨¹ýµÀ£©, damning£¨×çÖ䣩 the minutes for waiting, waiting for the station.

¡°When we reach the   41   , that will be it!¡± We cry ¡°When I am 18.¡± ¡°When I   42   a new 450SL Mercedes Benz!¡± ¡°When I put the   43   kid through college.¡± ¡°When I have   44   off the debts!¡± ¡°When I get a promotion£¨ÌáÉý£©.¡± ¡°When I reach the age of retirement, I shall live   45   ever after!¡±

   46   , we come to realize that there is no such station as we arrive at once and for all. The   47   joy of life is the trip. The station is only a dream. It   48   leaves us behind.

¡°Cherish£¨ÕäÊÓ£© the moment¡± is a good   49   . It is the burdens£¨¸ºµ££© of today that drive us to keep on   50   . And it is the regrets over yesterday that motivate£¨¼¤·¢£© us to overcome the   51   and look forward to the future.

So   52   pacing the aisles and counting the miles.   53   , climb more mountains, eat more ice cream, go barefoot£¨³à½Å£© more   54   , swim more rivers, watch more sunsets, laugh more and cry less. Life must be lived   55   we go along. The station will come soon enough.

1.A hidden      B faint      C deep      D buried

2.A pull      B get      C approach      D arrive

3. A floating      B waving      C raising      D shaking

4.A come up      B come around      C come out      D come true

5.A divided      B separated      C completed      D united

6.A station      B age      C target      D point

7.A borrow      B buy      C order      D rent

8.A first      B best      C last      D eldest

9.A cut      B left      C taken      D paid

10.A happily      B fully      C anxiously      D freely

11.A Believe it or not      B Sooner or later      C Once again      D All at once

12.A simple      B basic      C true      D final

13.A eventually£¨×îºó£©      B accidentally      C instantly      D constantly

14.A motto£¨óðÑÔ£©      B sentence      C concept      D slogan£¨±êÓ

15.A pushing      B trying      C working      D sticking

16.A effort      B mistake      C challenge      D fault

17.A consider      B stop      C go on      D plan on

18.A Besides      B Thus      C However      D Instead

19.A often      B gently      C quickly      D slowly

20.A if      B unless      C as      D once

 

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