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Dear Tom,

______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________Yours,

Li Hua

 

 

Dear Tom,

I know you love Chinese paintings. Here is a piece of good news for you. There will be an exhibition of Zhang Daqian¡¯s paintings at the National Art Museum of China from May 10st to 25th. As you know, Mr. Zhang, one of the most famous Chinese painters of the 20th century, was a master at many types of painting, especially landscapes. The coming exhibition will be composed of more than 100 of his masterpieces. I believe it will be a great time for all his fans. Don¡¯t miss it.

If you need further information, just let me know.

Yours,

Li Hua

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¢ÙThere will be an exhibition of Zhang Daqian¡¯s paintings at the National Art Museum of China from May 10st to 25th.

¢ÚAn exhibition of Zhang Daqian¡¯s paintings will be held at the National Art Museum of China from May 10st to 25th.

 

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Sometime in the next century, the familiar early-newspaper on the front porch (ÃÅÀÈ) will disappear. And instead of reading your newspaper, it will read to you. You'll get up and turn on the computer newspaper just like switching on the TV An electronic voice will distribute stories about the latest events, guided by a program that selects the type of news you want. You'll even get to choose the kind of voice you want to hear. Want more information on this brief story? A simple touch makes the entire text appear. Save it in your own personal computer if you like. These are among the predictions from communication experts working on the newspapers of the future. Pictured as part of broader home-based media and entertainment systems, computer newspapers will unite print and broadcast reporting, and offer news and analysis with video images of news events.

Most of the technology is available now, but convincing more people that they don't need to read a newspaper is the next step. But resistance to computer newspapers may be stronger from within journalism. Since it is such a cultural change, it may be that the present generation of journalists and publishers will have to die off before the next generation realizes that the newspaper industry is no longer a newspaper industry. Technology is making the end of ' traditional newspapers unavoidable.

Despite technological advances, it could take decades to replace newsprint with computer screens. It might take 30 t0 40 years to complete the changeover because people need to buy computers and because newspapers have established financial interests in the paper industry.

1. Which of the following is NOT an advantage of computer newspapers?

A. They are cheaper than traditional newspapers.

B. They are more convenient to read.

C. You can choose the kind of voice you want to hear.

D. You can easily save information for future use.

2.Which of the following is a reason why it will take a long time to complete the changeover?

A. The technology is impossible now.

B. Computer newspaper s are too expensive.

C . The popularization of computers needs a long time.

D. Traditional newspapers are easier to read.

3. It can be inferred that journalists are against computer newspapers because _______ .

A.they don't know how to use computers

B. they think computer newspapers take too much time to read

C. they think the new technology is bad

D. they have been trained to write For traditional newspapers

4. We can infer from the passage that

A. all technological changes are good

B. new technologies don't always replace old ones

C. new technologies will eventually replace old ones

D. traditional newspapers are here to stay for another century

5. What is the best title of the passage?

A. Computer newspapers are well liked.

B. Newspapers of the future will be on the computer.

C. Newspapers are out of fashion.

D. New communications technology.

 

What is a six-letter word that immediately comes to mind when you need some information on the Internet? You probably thought of Google. But Google wasn¡¯t always the name of the famous search engine. In fact, the original name was BackRub!

BackRub was the name two graduate students gave to the new search engine they developed in 1996. They called it BackRub because the engine used backlinks to measure the popularity of Web sites. Later, they wanted a better name ¡ª a name that suggests huge quantities of data. They thought of the word googol. (A googol is a number followed by 100 zeros.) When they checked the Internet registry of names to see if googol was already taken, one of the students misspelled the word by mistake, and that¡¯s how Google was born.

Google is just one example of a name change in the business world. Many other companies have decided to change their names or the names of their products. Here are some more examples:

Jerry Yang and David Filo, two young computer specialists, developed a guide to Internet content in 1994. They called it ¡°Jerry and David¡¯s Guide to World Wide Web.¡± But they soon realized that this wasn¡¯t a very catchy name, so they searched through a dictionary and found a better one: ¡°Yahoo.¡±

Sometimes companies change their names because of the popularity of one of their products. In 1962, a young runner named Phil Knight started a company called Blue Ribbon Sports. In 1971, Knight decided to design and manufacture his own brand of shoes. He named the shoes after the Greek goddess of victory ¡ª Nike. Nike shoes became so well known that Knight changed the name of the whole company to Nike.

1.According to the text, Google .

A. has been famous since 1996 B. is a result of a spelling mistake

C. means a number followed by 100 zeros

D. is the original name of the search engine

2.Jerry and David changed the guide¡¯s name to Yahoo because the original name .

A. had been registeredB. had been forgotten

C. was not attractiveD. was too short

3. The company Nike got its name from .

A. its foundersB. its customers

C. its popular productsD. its advanced techniques

4.Which of the following can be the best title for the text?

A. The name changesB. The history of Google

C. How to choose a name?D. Why are names important?

 

The adolescent girl from Tennessee was standing on the stage of a drama summer camp in New York£®But the girl didn¡¯t feel joyful£®She was not the leggy£¬attractive Hollywood type£®In fact£¬she described herself as stupid£®

This girl was Reese Witherspoon£¬who had wanted to be a country singer and admired and respected Dolly Patton very much£®

That day at the end of the camp her coaches told her to forget about singing£®They suggested she think about another career£®She took their words to heart£®After all£¬why shouldn¡¯t she believe the professionals?

But back at home in Nashville£¬her mother¡ªa funny£¬happy£¬optimistic woman¡ªwouldn¡¯t let her feel depressed£®Her father£¬a physician£¬encouraged her to achieve in schoo1£®So she worked hard at everything and was accepted at Stanford University£®

And at 1 9£¬she got a part in a low-budget movie called Freeway, which prepared for her role in the movie Pleasantville£®But her big break came with Legally Blonde£®

¡°If you can¡¯t sing and you aren¡¯t charming£¬play to your strengths£®If you¡¯re going to make it in this business£¬better focus on what you¡¯re good at£¬¡±she told the interviewer later£®

And then came the offer that took her back to her Nashville¡ªplaying the wife of a country star Johnny Cash£¬a singing role£®

All of a sudden the old fears learned on that summer stage were back£®She was so nervous on the stage£®But she didn¡¯t give up on the movie or herself£®She spent 6 months taking singing lessons again£®She learned to play the Autoharp£®And the hard work built up her confidence£®

Last March£¬Reese Witherspoon walked up on another stage£¬the Kodak Theatre in Hollywood£¬and accepted the Oscar as Best Actress for her heartbreaking£¬heartwarming singing role as June Carter Cash in Walk the Line£®

1.Why was Reese Witherspoon sad that day?

A£®The experts advised her to give up singing£®

B£®Dolly Parton told her to leave the stage£®

C£®The coaches described her as foolish£®

D£®The professionals considered her ignorant£®

2.What can be inferred from Paragraph 4?

A£®Reese was an optimistic girl£®

B£®Her parents supported her a lot£®

C£®Her parents were disappointed with her£®

D£®Reese blamed herself all day long£®

3.Which of the following is true according to the passage?

A£®Reese¡¯s mother was a physician£®

B£®Freeway was Reese¡¯s big break£®

C£®Reese won the Oscar for Walk the Line£®

D£®New York was Reese¡¯s home town£®

4.How did Reese succeed in playing the singing role?

A£®She did her best to make herself leggy and attractive£®

B£®She tried hard to forget about that summer stage£®

C£®She practised Autoharp lessons for more than 6 months£®

D£®She regained her confidence through hard work£®

5.What can we learn from Reese¡¯s experience?

A£®Two heads are better than one£®

B£®When in Rome£¬do as the Romans do£®

C£®Where there is a will£¬there is a way£®

D£®Hope for the best£¬and prepare for the worst£®

 

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