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Nowadays in China, either in the morning nor after dinner, people, especial elderly women, gather in squares to dance to popular music. More and more young people are also participating the square dance now.

There are many reasons for their popularity. First of all, China has made a great progress in the social and economic development in the past decades, and people had more time and energy to enjoy their lives. Besides, do the square dance is a good way for people to get fit.

However, dancers play loud music and occupy lots of public places, where makes many people annoying. Maybe square dancers need to make some change.

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿ My daughter, now 20, is studying to be an opera singer. She¡¯s already _________ her way into the world¡¯s best conservatories (ÒôÀÖѧԺ) and studios. _________, some people disagree on her choice. They are _________ fond of telling her, ¡°Ohhh£¬that¡¯s a really _________ career. It¡¯s almost _________ to make a living. Not many people _________ it.¡±

A few months ago, I was with her when a neighbour asked what she was _________ in. My daughter answered and got the usual _________ , not contrary to her expectations. She listened _________ to the prediction of her __________ and financial ruin, then said, ¡°Well, if opera doesn¡¯t __________, I¡¯ll do something else.¡±

I was so proud of my __________. Truth told, I was even more proud of myself, her mid-life-career-changing mom. I was also on-my-knees __________ to my mother. Because of her example, I¡¯d given my child the gift of __________ herself-and not in a silly usual way, like, adaptability and industry. Even at her tender age, with her frankly very privileged upbringing, she understands that circumstances can change and that __________ can, too.

¡¾1¡¿A.beatenB.earnedC.eatenD.lost

¡¾2¡¿A.FurthermoreB.ThereforeC.HoweverD.Thus

¡¾3¡¿A.strangelyB.excitedlyC.sadlyD.randomly

¡¾4¡¿A.excellentB.boringC.admirableD.hard

¡¾5¡¿A.necessaryB.dishonorableC.impossibleD.important

¡¾6¡¿A.makeB.hitC.findD.put

¡¾7¡¿A.takingB.callingC.majoringD.joining

¡¾8¡¿A.awardB.encouragementC.judgmentD.response

¡¾9¡¿A.rudelyB.politelyC.impatientlyD.carefully

¡¾10¡¿A.dangerB.failureC.successD.luck

¡¾11¡¿A.figure outB.pick outC.work outD.pick out

¡¾12¡¿A.neighborB.motherC.teacherD.daughter

¡¾13¡¿A.similarB.indifferentC.gratefulD.familiar

¡¾14¡¿A.adapting toB.believing inC.giving upD.learning from

¡¾15¡¿A.powerB.theoryC.memoryD.dreams

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿ÔĶÁÏÂÃæ¶ÌÎÄ£¬ÔÚ¿Õ°×´¦ÌîÈë1¸öÊʵ±µÄµ¥´Ê»òÀ¨ºÅÄÚµ¥´ÊµÄÕýÈ·ÐÎʽ¡£

Many high school students in the United States get training in construction skills by building real houses. The project ¡¾1¡¿ (run) by the Waterloo Career Center. The center offers students different programs designed ¡¾2¡¿ (prepare) them for careers in technical fields.

Students from the Waterloo Community School District ¡¾3¡¿ (recent) took part in construction training that centered on the skill of masonry (שʯ½¨Öþ)¡ªwork done with stone, brick or concrete materials. The students spent five days at their school learning ¡¾4¡¿ experienced workers from the Masonry Institute of Iowa, a ¡¾5¡¿(profession) organization. The workers taught the students ¡¾6¡¿ to mix mortar (É°½¬)and build walls with bricks and blocks. The students moved the mortar onto ¡¾7¡¿ (piece) of wood and then added bricks and blocks to form walls.

Chris Busch helped oversee the students¡¯ efforts. As the students worked, Busch ¡¾8¡¿(offer) them an important piece of advice. He told the students to be sure to use a leveling tool to check that the wall stands straight and level. West High student Nathan Elliott told the Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier newspaper that this kind of learning was much better ¡¾9¡¿ sitting at a computer. Other students also said it got them ¡¾10¡¿(excite) about future careers in construction.

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿How to Make Your Email Really Secure

Email is the most used communications medium for business and for many of us at home too, but few people outside IT know how to truly secure their email. Here's a quick look at some of the ways you can carry on encrypted(¼ÓÃܵÄ) conversations.¡¾1¡¿

Your Gmail messages being sent are encrypted. However, unless the receiver is reading email using a Google browser(ä¯ÀÀÆ÷) or Gmail app, they don't stay encrypted. And, of course, Google itself freely admits that its software reads all of your email for advertising purposes. Some programs, like the paid version of Outlook, offer an encryption feature. ¡¾2¡¿ It requires that you and your receiver exchange something called a digital signature.

¡¾3¡¿ The disadvantage¡ªand you knew there would be one¡ªis that your receiver must also subscribe to that service, or enter a password to open each message you send. They're fine if your only secure conversations are with one or two people. ¡¾4¡¿

Another option for those wishing to send secure text correspondence: Don't use email at all. ¡¾5¡¿ These apps encrypt your messages on both ends and throughout their sending. Here again, though, they limit your communication to people who also have and use those same apps.

A.Protect the machine you use email on.

B.Free accounts limit the size of your messages and attachments.

C.But setting it up takes much trouble, and surely not for the masses.

D.Instead, use a chat program like CryptoCat, ChatSecure, or PQChat.

E.But you're never going to persuade the whole world to sign up to get your emails.

F.Email providers like Tutanota, and Protonmail automatically encrypt all the mail you send.

G.The concern that your words could be stolen and used against you someday will be solved.

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿ Dou Kou, a Chinese boy, is called ¡°the youngest writer in the world¡±. He has written three books till now. Dou Kou was born in Jiangsu in 1994. When he was 7 months old, his parents started working in over 30 different cities, such as Xi¡¯an and Shenzhen. This kind of life gave him things to think and write about. When he was 9 months old, he could speak and at the age of one, he could say five to six hundred words. At three, he could look up words in the dictionary. At four, his father taught him how to learn by himself. His parents like reading very much. So does he. At the age of 5, he began writing fairy tales. At the age of 6, he wrote a novel about his life in different cities with his parents. His fairy tales are all from his life. One day, he found many mice in the house. They not only ate their food but also hurt his mother¡¯s hand. So he thought, ¡°If we give mice the stomachs of cows, they will eat grass and they will be helpful to people.¡± This was his first fairy tale Change Stomachs for Mice. Now he studies well in a middle school. He has written his third book, the novel called Eyes of Children. He says,¡°I am not different from other children, I just wrote several books.¡±

¡¾1¡¿How many books has Dou Kou written?

A.Three.B.Four.

C.Five.D.Six.

¡¾2¡¿Thanks to his_____, Dou Kou could write his books.

A.MotherB.father

C.school lifeD.life in different cities

¡¾3¡¿When did Dou Kou begin to use a dictionary?

A.When he wrote fairy tales.

B.Before his father taught him how to learn by himself.

C.After he went to school.

D.After his mother taught him how to learn by himself.

¡¾4¡¿What does the underlined sentence mean?

A.Dou Kou is different from other children.B.Dou Kou doesn¡¯t tell the truth.

C.Dou Kou is the same as other children.D.Dou Kou likes his books.

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