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Dear David£¬
I'm glad to receive your e-mail and happy to know that you are interested in learning Chinese£®
                                                

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¡¾ÁÁµã˵Ã÷¡¿¿ÉÄÜÓõ½µÄ¶ÌÓï´Ê»ã£ºbe interested in ¶Ô¡­¸ÐÐËȤ£»lose confidence to ¶Ô¡­Ê§È¥ÐÅÐÄ£»by no means ¾ø²»¿ÉÄÜ£»on one hand Ò»·½Ã棻on the other hand ÁíÒ»·½Ã棻range from ´Ó¡­µ½¡­£»plunge oneself into ijÈËͶÉíÓÚ£»look forward to ÆÚ´ý
  It is well known that Chinese is difficult to learn£®£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐÍÒ»£©
Making mistakes is a good way to learn how to say things right£®£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐͶþ£©
Third£¬you should spend more time practising listening to and speaking Chinese frequently£®£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐÍÈý£©

½â´ð Dear David£¬
       I'm glad to receive your e-mail and happy to know that you are interested in learning Chinese£®
       It is well known that Chinese is difficult to learn£®£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐÍÒ»£©One can't avoid making a mistake when learning a foreign language£®
       Here are some tips on how to learn Chinese£®First£¬don't be afraid to make mistakes£®Making mistakes is a good way to learn how to say things right£®£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐͶþ£©Second£¬if you know a Chinese friend£¬ask him or her to practise with you£®Third£¬you should spend more time practising listening to and speaking Chinese frequently£®£¨¸ß·Ö¾äÐÍÈý£©
       I wish you succeed in learning Chinese£®I am expecting to hear from you£®At last£¬I welcome you to China£®
                                                                                                                                                                                                   Yours£¬
                                                                                                                                                                                                   Li Hua

µãÆÀ Ó¢Óïд×÷ÊÇÒ»ÏîÖ÷¹ÛÐÔ½ÏÇ¿µÄ²âÊÔÌ⣮Ëü²»½ö¿¼²éѧÉúµÄд×÷»ù´¡¶øÇÒ»¹¿¼²éѧÉúÔÚд×÷¹ý³ÌÖÐ×ÛºÏÔËÓÃÓïÑÔµÄÄÜÁ¦£®ÔÚ׫дʱҪעÒâÖ÷νÓïÒ»Ö£¬Ê±Ì¬ºôÓ¦£¬ÓôÊÌùÇеȣ®ÒªÌá¸ßÓ¢Óïд×÷ˮƽ£¬ÐèÒªÁ½·½ÃæµÄѵÁ·£ºÒ»ÊÇÓïÑÔ»ù´¡·½ÃæµÄѵÁ·£¬ÒªÓÐÔúʵµÄÔì¾ä¡¢·­ÒëµÈ»ù±¾¹¦£¬¼´Óôʷ¨¡¢¾ä·¨µÈ֪ʶÔì³öÕýÈ·ÎÞÎóµÄ¾ä×Ó£»¶þÊÇд×÷֪ʶºÍÄÜÁ¦ ·½ÃæµÄѵÁ·ÒÔÕÆÎÕд×÷·½ÃæµÄ»ù±¾·½·¨ºÍ¼¼ÇÉ£®

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16£®Real-life Room Escape GamesReal-life oom escape games are a type of physical adventure game in which people are locke in a room with other participants and have to use the things in the room to settle a series of puzzles£¬find clues £¨ÏßË÷£©£¬and escape the room within a set time limit£®
The games are based off Escape the Room video games£¬such as Crimson Room and QP-Shot£¬created by TAKAGISM Inc£®by Toshimitsu Takagi in 2005£¬in which the player is locked inside a room and must explore his or her surroundings in order to escape£®£¨36£©GOther inspirations include adventure board games and movies£®Real-life room escape games are becoming popular in the United States£¬Japan£¬and China£®£¨37£©AFor example£¬some games require you escape prison cells while others require you escape space stations£®£¨38£©F
Soon£¬they were exported to North America£¬Asia and Australia£®Exaples include the two pioneer companies Hint Hunt and Adventure Rooms£®
The games were so successful that new locations began opening up across China£¬in cities big and small£¬according to Want China Times£®In the southern city of Shenzhen£¬for example£¬the first esape game location opened last August£®£¨39£©B"These real-life escape games can help those who stay at home on their computers and iPads all day to experiece real social circles£¬"Tian Xiaochuan£¬who owns two room escape game stores in Jinan£¬told Want China Times£®
Earlier this year£¬The South China Morning Post said the real-life escape games are a hit among"highly stressed students and overworked young professionals£®"£¨40£©DSome players get so involved that they tear down equipment or decorations inside their"prisons"£¬as Zhu Yumeng£¬chief operating officer of Beijing room escape game store Taoquan told China Daily£®

A£®Each game adds local themes to settings£®
B£®And seven new game locations quickly followed£®
C£®They should also be brave enough to face their fears£®
D£®Sometimes the excitement becomes a bit much£¬though£®
E£®Weekend or day event escape games have been held in some stores£®
F£®Permanent real life escape games in a fixed location were first opened in Europe£®
G£®Players must be observant and use their critical thinking skills to escape the room£®
14£®On a stormy day last August£¬Tim heard some shouting£®Looking out to the sea carefully£¬he saw a couple of kids in a rowboat were being pulled out to sea£®
Two 12-year-old boys£¬Christian and Jack£¬rowed out a boat to search for a football£®Once they'd
rowed beyond the calm waters£¬a beach umbrella tied to the boat caught the wind and pulled the boat into open water£®The pair panicked and tried to row back to shore£®But they were no match fo it and
the boat was out of control£®
Tim knew it would soon be swallowed by the waves£®"Everything went quiet in my head£¬"Tim
recalls£¨»ØÒ䣩£¬"I'm trying to figure out how to swim to the boys in a straight line£®"
Tim took off his clothes and jumped into the water£®Every 500 yards or so£¬he raised his head to
judge his progress£®"At one point£¬I considered turning back£¬"he says£®"I wondered if I was putting
my life at risk£®"After 30 minutes of struggling£¬he was close enough to yell to the boys£¬"Take down
the umbrella!"
Christian made much effort to take down the umbrella£®Then Tim was able to catch up and climb
aboard the boat£®He took over rowing£¬but the waves were almost too strong for him£®
"Let's aim for the pier£¨ÂëÍ·£©£¬"Jack said£®Tim turned the boat toward it£®Soon afterward£¬
waves crashed over the boat£¬and it beganto sink£®"Can you guys swim£¿"he cried£®"A little bit£¬"the
boys said£®Once they were in the water£¬Tim decided it would be safer and faster for him to pull the boys
toward the pier£®Christian and Jack were wearing life jackets and floated on their backs£®Tim swam
toward land as water washed over the boys'faces£®
"Are we almost there£¿"they asked again and again£®"Yes£¬"Tim told them each time£®
After 30 minutes£¬they reached the pier£®
21£®Why did the two boys go to the sea£¿B
A£®To go boat rowing£®
B£®To get back their football£®
C£®To swim in the open water£®
D£®To test the umbrella as a sail£®
22£®Why did Tim raise his head regularly£¿C
A£®To take in enough fresh air£®
B£®To consider turning back or not£®
C£®To check his distance from the boys£®
D£®To ask the boys to take down the umbrella£®
23£®How can the two boys finally reach the pier£¿A
A£®They were dragged to the pier by Tim£®
B£®They swam to the pier all by themselves£®
C£®They were washed to the pier by the waves£®
D£®They were carried to the pier by Tim on his back£®

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