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15£®Gordon was hungry£®He opened the refrigerator£¬£¨25£©wherethere used to be much food before his wife left him£®There must be£¨26£©somethingin here to eat£¬he thought£®Now£¬however£¬there was a single hot dog£®
After £¨27£©taking£¨take£© it out of its package£¬he put a small frying pan onto the stove's gas burner£®He turned on the heat£®Then he poured a little bit of vegetable oil into the pan£®He sliced the hot dog in half lengthwise£®£¨28£©When/Afterthe oil got hot£¬he put the two halves in the pan£®About£¨29£©a/oneminute later£¬he flipped each half over£®After another minute£¬he took the hot dog out of the pan£®
Gordon put two slices of bread into the toaster£®This was tasty and healthy bread£®The first ingredient £¨30£©listed£¨list£© was organic sprouted wheat£®The first ingredient in ordinary bread is usually unbleached flour£®
When the toast popped up£¬he put mustard£¬mayonnaise£¬and ketchup on one slice£®Then he added two slices of onion£®£¨31£©Ontop of the onions£¬he placed the hot dog£®On top of the hot dog£¬he put a couple of slices of apple£®Then he added some bits of hot green chile£¬and then put the top piece of toast onto the chile bits£®P£®F£®Productions
Ahh£¬£¨32£©whata sandwich£¬he thought£¬as he sat down £¨33£©to eat£¨eat£©£®

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½â´ð ´ð°¸£º25£®where ¿¼²éÁ¬´Ê£®¾äÖÐthere used to be much food before his wife left himÐÞÊÎÃû´Êrefrigerator£¬ÊÇÒ»¸ö·ÇÏÞÖÆÐÔ¶¨Óï´Ó¾ä£»´Ó¾ä½á¹¹ÍêÕû£¬ÒªÓùØϵ¸±´Ê£»ÏÈÐдÊrefrigeratorÊDZíʾµØµã£¬ÒªÓÃwhereÀ´Òýµ¼£®  
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29£®a/one ¿¼²éÓï¾³Àí½â£®¾äÖÐminuteÊǵ¥Êý£¬ÇÒºóÃæÓÐanother minute£¬ËµÃ÷¾ä×Ó±í´ïµÄÊÇÒ»·ÖÖÓµÄÒâ˼£¬ÒªÓÃa»òoneÀ´±íʾ£®   
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3£®There was a story many years ago of a school teacher---Mrs£®Thompson£®She told the children on the first day that she loved them all the same£®But that was a lie£®There in the front row was a little boy named Teddy Stoddard£®He didn't play well with the other children and he always needed a bath£®She did not like him£®
Then Mrs£®Thompson got to know that Teddy was actually a very good boy before the death of his mother£®Mrs£®Thompson was ashamed of herself£®She felt even worse when£¬like all her other students£¬Teddy brought her a Christmas present too£®It was his mother's perfume£¨ÏãË®£©£®
Teddy said£¬"Mrs£®Thompson£¬today you smell just like my Mom used to£®"After the children left she cried for at least an hour£®On that very day£¬she stopped teaching reading£¬writing and math£®Instead£¬she began to teach children£®
Mrs£®Thompson paid particular attention to Teddy£®The boy's mind seemed to come alive£®The more she encouraged him£¬the faster he improved£®By the end of the sixth grade£¬Teddy had become one of the smartest children in the class£®
Six years went by before she got a note from Teddy£®He wrote that he had finished high school£¬third in his class£¬and she was still the best teacher he ever had in his whole life£®He went to college£®Mrs£®Thompson got two more letters from him with the last one signed£¬Theodore F£®Stoddard£¬M£®D£®£¨Ò½Ñ§²©Ê¿£©£®
The story doesn't end there£®On his wedding day£¬Dr£®Stoddard whispered in Mrs£®Thompson's ear£¬"Thank you£¬Mrs£®Thompson£¬for believing in me£®You made me feel important and showed me that I could make a difference£®"
Mrs£®Thompson£¬with tears in her eyes£¬whispered back£¬"Teddy£¬you have it all wrong£®You were the one who taught me that I could make a difference£®I didn't know how to teach until I met you£®"
24£®What did Mrs£®Thompson do on the first day of school£¿A
A£®She told the class something untrue about herself£®
B£®She asked the children to play with Teddy£®
C£®She changed Teddy's seat to the front row£®
D£®She made Teddy feel ashamed£®
25£®What did Mrs£®Thompson find out about Teddy£¿B
A£®He often told lies£®
B£®He needed motherly care£®
C£®He was good at math£®
D£®He enjoyed playing with others£®
26£®In what way did Mrs£®Thompson change£¿C
A£®She taught fewer school subjects£®
B£®She became stricter with her students£®
C£®She cared more about educating students£®
D£®She no longer liked her job as a teacher£®
27£®Why did Teddy thank Mrs£®Thompson at his wedding£¿C
A£®She had kept in touch with him£®
B£®She had sent him Christmas presents£®
C£®She had given him encouragement£®
D£®She had taught him how to judge people£®
20£®Every April I am worried-that spring might not occur this year£®The landscape y hills£¬gray sky and gray forest£®I felt upset£¬as they did during an April snowfall when I first came to Maine l5 years ago£®"Just wait£¬"a neighbor said£®"You'll wake up one morning and spring will just be here£®"
[2]Yes!On May 3 that year I awoke to a surprising green£¬as if spring were simply a matter of pressing a switch£®Hills£¬sky and forest grew their purples£¬blues and green£®Then there was the old apple tree£®It sits on an undeveloped area in my neighborhood£®It belongs to no one and therefore to everyone£®Each spring it blooms and the air becomes  filled with the aroma£¨ÏãÆø£©of the flowers£®When I drive by with my windows rolled down£¬it gives me the feeling of moving in another world£®
[3]One day last year£¬I set out with tools to prune£¨ÐÞ¼ô£©the apple tree£®No sooner had I arrived under it than neighbors opened their windows£®These were people I barely knew and seldom spoke to£¬but it was as if I had broken into their gardens£®One of them was the first to speak£®"You're not cutting it down£¬are you£¿''Another neighbor looked a bit angry£®"Don't kill it£¬now£¬"he shouted£®Soon half the neighborhood had joined me under the apple tree£®It struck me that I had lived there for five years and only now was learning these people's names¡­
[4]The apple tree incident turned out to be a good start£®Just the other day I saw one of my neighbors at the local store£®He remarked how this winter had been especially long and regretted not having seen or spoken to anyone in our neighborhood£®And then£¬he looked at me and said£¬"        that apple tree again£®"

66£®What's the weather like in April in Maine£¿£¨no more than 5 words£©It's very cold£®/It often snows in April£®
67£®What does the author mean by using"pressing a switch"£¿£¨no more than 6 words£©How suddenly the spring came£®/The spring came unexpectedly£®
68£®Why did neighbors stop the author pruning the apple tree last year£¿£¨no more than l0 words£©Because they misunderstood the author£®/Because they thought he wanted to cut down the tree£®
69£®Why did the author take the apple tree incident as a good start£¿£¨no more than l0  words£©Because neighbours started to know each other thanks to it£®/Because it improved the relationship among the neighbours£®
70£®Fill in the blank in the last paragraph with proper words£®£¨no more than 5 words£©We need to prune/Let's get together under£®
7£®A£®clearly        B£®generalC£®personalities        D£®unique      E£®inspired
F£®participation     G challenges      H£®describe          I£®highly   J£®admit
The ability to overcome obstacles is a highly regarded value in American culture£®Many believe it shows that a person is strong and willing to work hard to achieve goals£®Yet some people are shy about discussing personal £¨41£©G£®In some cultures£¬it may even be seen as a sign of weakness to  £¨42£©Jdifficulties£®
One place where you may be asked to £¨43£©Ha personal obstacle is on a college application essay£®On one part of the application£¬students list the facts£ºacademic grades£¬awards and  £¨44£©F in sports£¬teams£¬clubs and organizations£®In the essay section£¬students have an opportunity to present their £¨45£©C£®This gives an admission committee a chance to know what makes students£¨46£©D  what drives their passions£¬fires their intellect and makes them special and different from everyone else£®
When students write their college essays£¬they usually have to respond to aB£¨47£©¶àÓàµÄ¿Õ question in a personal way£®Successful essays often tell about experiences£¬such as overcoming obstacles£¬that have £¨48£©E the writers or made them grow in some important way£®Applicants are encouraged to discuss the topic£¨49£©Ain their own style£®This could include using stories£¬dialogues£¬humor or image£®
4£®Twenty-year-old Alison works as a gas station assistant£®She is a single mother looking after her son and is finding it a £¨36£©B to support herself and her child on her £¨37£©A salary£®
When she found a lottery£¨²ÊƱ£© card that has three£¨38£©D©†75£¬000square exposed£¬she could have demanded the prize money£®
The thought did £¨39£©C in her mind for a moment£¬like many temptations£¨Óջ󣩠that come in and out of our minds£®But Alison £¨40£©Aby some principles£¬one of them being"honesty is the best policy£®"
She £¨41£©Bnot to keep the winning card£®When she found out the£¨42£©C of the card£¬a man in his 70s£¬was £¨43£©A searching for it£¬she handed the card back to him£®
The man had accidently £¨44£©Dthe card at the gas station on the way to demand his £¨45£©B£®When he discovered his loss£¬he and his daughter went back the way they had come and£¨46£©C returned to the gas station£®
Some people may say that Alison returned the winning card out of £¨47£©Dthat the owner might return to look for it £¨48£©A that the lottery stands would keep an eye on this case£®But many Australians were £¨49£©D by her honesty£®Even the man who found his winning card was so happy that he wanted to£¨50£©C her©†100£®You might say that the amount is too £¨51£©B as a percentage of the winning£¬but do you know that Alison actually£¨52£©Athe©†100£¬saying that it was too much of a reward£®
Alison's £¨53£©B was picked up by the various media£®Some Australians sent her some£¨54£©D to acknowledge her honesty£®Her employer also £¨55£©Csome reward money£®She even got a free holiday to a destination of her choice£®

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