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Dear James£¬
Thanks for your letter£®I'm delight that you're coming over and we're all looking forward to see you again£®I can understand you are nervous about travelling by your own£®Don't worry!We'll pick you at the airport£®Telling me your flight number and arrival time£¬and we can meet you while you arrive£¬£®Kate wonders if you can bring him some of the wonderful cheeses we eat in your parents'house last month£®She keep talking about whether it should be a problem you will bring it into the country£®Let me know as soon as you book your flight£®

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½â´ð Dear James£¬
Thanks for your letter£®I'm delight that you're coming over and we're all looking forward to see you again£®
I can understand you are nervous about travelling by your own£®Don't worry!We'll pick you¡Äat the airport£®
Telling me your flight number and arrival time£¬and we can meet you while you arrive£®Kate wonders if you
 can bringhim some of the wonderful cheeses we eat in your parents'house last month£®She keep talking about 
whether it should be a problem you will  bring it into the country£®Let me know as soon as you book your flight£®
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14£®David Beckham was born in 1975 in London£¬at a place called Leytonstone£®When he was a young boy£¬his greatest passion was in football£®He played it whenever he had the chance£®Sometimes he would go and watch a game with his friends£®When David Beckham was 12 years old£¬he won the Bobby Charlton Soccer Skills award£®This was an important step forward for this young boy£¬and it led him to go for a visit to a football training camp in Spain£®As a boy he played for schools of Essex and also for his county team£®
In 1991£¬he became a trainee with Manchester United£®This meant that he could practice football as much as he wanted to and play for the highly successful Manchester United Youth Cup team and Under-21 team£®In April£¬1995 he played his first football league game against Leeds Untied£®During 1995 and 1996£¬David became a regular member of the team and Manchester United won in both football seasons£¬with David scoring many goals£®
His goals made him a household name£®In the first game of the 1996-1997 season£¬he scored an surprising goal from beyond the halfway line£» seeing the goalkeeper a little way out of his goal£¬Beckham became famous overnight£®He continued to score astonishing goals£¬especially from free-kicks£®The speed of one of his shots was timed at 157 kph£®He also had the ability to make the ball go from left to right£¬or right to left£¬whenever he chose£®Goalkeepers were never sure where the ball was going£¬and it regularly ended up in the goal£®
21£®Which word can take the place of the underlined word"passion"in Paragraph 1£¿B
A£®success           B£®interest          C£®prize              D£®skill
22£®The unusually surprising way that he scored goalsD£®
A£®helped him to gain many prizes for Essex
B£®kept him playing for Leeds United
C£®offered him the chance to join the national team
D£®made him popular and famous
23£®Which of the following shows the right order of what Beckham experienced£¿D
  a£®Beckham played his first football league game£®
  b£®Beckham won the Bobby Charlton Soccer Skills award£®
  c£®Beckham played for Manchester United Youth Cup team£®
  d£®Beckham went to Spain to join a football training camp£®
  e£®Beckham played for the schools of Essex£®
A£®e£¬d£¬a£¬c£¬b       B£®b£¬e£¬d£¬a£¬c       C£®e£¬b£¬a£¬d£¬c        D£®b£¬d£¬e£¬c£¬a
24£®The passage mainly talks aboutA£®
A£®how Beckham became a successful football player
B£®what abilities Beckham had to score so many goals
C£®when Beckham became famous all over Britain
D£®why Beckham could win in football league games£®
9£®I am a professor of sports and exercise so I often deal with nervousness in my research with sports people£®Actually£¬most people experience nervousness at some time or another£®
If you are feeling anxious£¬my advice is to first find the cause or causes£®Make a list of those things that are making you nervous and work out which ones you can do something about£®Focus all of your efforts on managing the causes that you can control£®
Most people cannot tell the difference between controllable£¨¿É¿ØÖƵģ© and uncontrollable causes£¬so things they can's control become a big reason for nervousness£®Dealing with this is very important if people want to keep a healthy mind£®
Simply try to accept the uncontrollable causes of nervousness£®You might be worried about the weather on a big day£¬an accident or an attack on the train£¬or perhaps just things that other people are doing at work£®The results may be very important but there is still no use worrying because you can't control any of these things£®Accept that you can't control everything£®Once you understand this£¬it becomes easier not to worry£®
If a situation£¬such as swimming£¬is causing you to be anxious£¬try to face it as often as possible so that you can get used to it£®
It can often help to think about yourself doing the thing that makes you nervous-then close your eyes and imagine it going well£®Imagine how the flight or job interview is going to happen so that you can get used to it£®This will help you understand that the thing you fear most is probably not going to happen£®
51£®Who wrote this passage£¿A
A£®A professor£®
B£®A sportsman£®
C£®A patient£®
D£®A reporter£®
52£®The writer thinks there is no use worrying about some causes of nervousness becauseC£®
A£®most are not very important      
B£®they are not the real causes of the problem
C£®they cannot be controlled by people
D£®it's better to deal with one cause at a time
53£®If swimming makes you nervous£¬what should you do according to the writer£¿A
A£®Go swimming often to get used to it£®
B£®Avoid going to the swimming pool£®
C£®Find a swimming teacher£®
D£®Imagine watching others swim£®
54£®What is true about nervousness according to the passage£¿D
A£®It usually has only one cause£®
B£®It is usually caused by people£®
C£®People can easily manage it£®
D£®Most people suffer from it£®
55£®What is the main purpose of this passage£¿B
A£®To introduce the writer's sports experience£®
B£®To advise on how to deal with nervousness£®
C£®To help people remember their fears£®
D£®To explain the dangers of nervousness£®
13£®Homeschooling is the education of children at home£¬typically by parents but sometimes by tutors£¬rather than in public or private school£®As a matter of fact£¬most childhood education occurred within the family or community£®
Homeschooling is a legal choice for parents in developed countries to provide their children with a learning environment at home£®Parents see many reasons for homeschool£¬including better test results£¬improved instruction£¬to help the public system with fewer kids£¬poor public school environment£¬religious reasons£¬improved character development£¬the expense of private education£¬and objection to what is taught locally in public school£®
Homeschooling can also be a choice for families living in remote £¨Ò£Ô¶µÄ£© locations£¬living abroad£¬and to allow for more traveling£®Also many young athletes and actors are taught at home£¬where a coach £¨½ÌÁ·£© or tutor is with the child for many years and then knows the child very well£®
In some places£¬an approved curriculum £¨¿Î³Ì£© is required if children are to be home-schooled£®In some cases a liberal arts £¨ÎÄ¿Æ£© education is provided£®
¸ù¾Ý¶ÌÎÄÄÚÈÝ£¬´ÓA¡¢B¡¢DËĸöÑ¡ÏîÖÐÑ¡³öÄܻشðËùÌáÎÊÌâ»òÍê³ÉËù¸ø¾ä×ÓµÄ×î¼Ñ´ð°¸
36£®Home-schooled children are usually taught byB£®
A£®teachers or neighbours                        
B£®parents or tutors
C£®coaches or tutors                             
D£®instructions or officials
37£®According to the text£¬some parents choose to homeschool their children beca useC£®
A£®they are tired of taking their children to and from school
B£®their children are too naughty to go to a regular school
C£®they are not satisfied with what is taught at local public schools
D£®they have too many children to feed and educate 
38£®Which of the following is TRUE about home-schooling according to the text£¿D
A£®Home-schooling is still illegal in developed countries£®
B£®Athletes and actors can not be home-schooled£®
C£®There is no curriculum for home-schooled children£®
D£®Some parents have to home-school their children when living abroad£®
14£®AHow many men do housework£¿Recently a European Commission tried to find out people's ideas and reactions to the women's movement£®As part of their survey£¬they asked many men and women the question£¬"Who does the housework£¿"The men answered very differently from the women!
The housework they asked people about were£ºpreparing meals£¬washing dishes£¬cleaning the house and babysitting.48% of British husbands said they did these things.37% of Danish men helped in the house£®But only 15% of Italian men said they did the housework£¬many of them said they never helped at all!
But there was an interesting point of view from the wives£®According to British wives£¬only 38% of their husbands helped in the house£®And Italian wives said that their husbands hardly ever helped£®The Italian and British men did not tell the truth!The Commission found that Danish men were the most trustful husbands£» their answers were the same as their wives'answers£®
Do the men you know help in the house£¿Do you think the survey gives a true picture in your experience£¿Write and tell us what you think£®
1£®The survey was carried out inB£®
A£®Britain 
B£®Europe 
C£®Denmark 
D£®Italy
2£®The subject for the survey isD£®
A£®how many boys do the housework¡¡¡¡
B£®who are more diligent£¬wives or husbands
C£®how many women do the housework
D£®who does the housework at home
3£®From the passage we can see thatC£®
A£®there were more husbands who did the housework than wives
B£®husbands did half of the housework all the time
C£®there were more wives who did the housework than husbands£®
D£®wives did all the housework at home
4£®MoreA husbands help in the house thanA husbands£®
A£®British£» Danish 
B£®Italian£» Danish 
C£®Danish£» British 
D£®Italian£» British£®

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