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The saying that practice makes perfect mean that after you have plenty of practice in what you were doing£¬you will be perfect in it£®If you want improve your study and work£¬remembering that the most important thing is how to put the knowledge you have learned into practice£®For example£¬when learning a language£¬though you can make full use for your talent£¬practice is necessary£®If you only learn grammar rules by the heart and don¡¯t do enough exercise£¬it¡¯s certain that you can¡¯t understand the language perfectly£®But if you real practise a lot£¬maybe you will understand them much better£®In this way£¬you can apply that you have learned better£®

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¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿Facebook is now used by 30 million people in the UK£¬about half the population£®

Joanna Shields£¬vice president of Facebook Europe£¬made the announcement this morning at a media conference in London£®

She said: "We can announce today that we have reached 30 million in the UK£¬which we are really excited about£®"

Globally£¬Facebook has more than 500 million registered users£¬a milestone it hit last summer£®Last July£¬it also revealed that it had 26 million registered UK users£®In the last eight months£¬it has attracted four million extra UK users£¬bringing the UK total to 30 million£¬while in January 2009£¬Facebook had only 150 million registered users£®

Last year£¬Zuckerberg£¬Facebook's founder£¬said it was "almost a guarantee" that the site would hit one billion users£®He explained: "If we succeed in innovating£¬there is a good chance of bringing this to a billion people£®£®£®it will be interesting to see how it comes true£®"

One third of women aged 18 to 34 check Facebook when they first wake up£¬before even going to the toilet£¬according to research£®Twenty-one per cent of women aged between 18 to 34 check Facebook in the middle of the night£¬while 42 per cent of the same group think it is fine to post drunken photos of themselves onto the social network£¬a study by Oxygen Media found£®

Shields was speaking this morning at the Financial Times Digital Media and Broadcasting Conference about the power Facebook's referrals can bring to media sites£¬such as newspapers and TV services£®

She explained that the average Facebook user has 130 friends who they share links to media sites with on a regular basis£®"Media companies which take advantage of that are really seeing the benefits"£¬Shields said£®

Shields refused to say whether Facebook would develop its own mobile phone operating system and also said it was "silly" that Google had recently disabled the feature£¨Ìص㣩which allowed Google users to sync their contacts with Facebook friends£®

¡¾1¡¿What is Joanna Shields content with?

A£®the announcement

B£®media conference

C£®fast growing registered users

D£®the benefits of Facebook

¡¾2¡¿Zuckerberg£¬Facebook's founder£¬take a more view about the future of Facebook£®

A£®negative B£®optimistic

C£®cold D£®pessimistic

¡¾3¡¿What kind of people are more interested in Facebook according to the passage?

A£®teenagers B£®middle-aged people

C£®old people D£®young people

¡¾4¡¿From the passage we know that £®

A£®Facebook would develop its own mobile phone operating system

B£®Google didn't allow its users to sync their contacts with Facebook friends

C£®Shields refused to admit the power Facebook's referrals could bring

D£®Google was always silly

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿A team of scientists from University of Freiburg in Germany are developing a shoe with a sensor to automatically tie its laces(Ь´ø)that could be taken off when users click their heels together£®

It¡¯s been 26 years since we saw them magically tightening Marty McFly¡¯s Nike boots in the film Back to The Future£®

Now£¬self-tying shoelaces could actually become a reality this year£¬proving right one of the film¡¯s fantastical predictions for what 2015 would be like£®

Engineers have designed a shoe that can automatically lace up£¬adjusting itself to the shape of your foot£®

Simply slip the controller on and pressure sensors will tell the ¡®smart shoe¡¯ when your foot is in position£¬triggering(´¥·¢)a tiny motor in the heel that pulls the laces tight.

When you want to take off the shoes£¬you click your heels together twice and the motor will release a spring(µ¯»É)in the shoe¡¯s tongue£¬which loosens the laces enough for you to slip them off£®

And the invention doesn¡¯t even need to be plugged in to charge or have its battery replaced because it runs on power generated by the swing of your foot as you walk.

Engineer K1evis Ylli£¬of the Institute for Micromachining and Information Technology in southern Gemany£¬said the shoes could help a variety of different people.

¡°One focus is that it could be used in shoes for elderly people who have mobility problems£¬¡±he said£®¡°But it could also work for children£¬or as a lifestyle product£®¡±£®

The design£¬which is still in a prototype(³ûÐÎ)stage£¬cleverly gets the energy of the foot¡¯s swing when opposing magnets in each shoe move past each other. It then uses that power to charge a battery£®An hour of walking is enough to tighten the laces once£¬and it requires no energy to undo the shoes because that relies on the spring alone.

¡¾1¡¿Which of the following can be the best title of the text?

A£®A fantastical prediction

B£®A great invention in Germany

C£®A shoe with self-tying laces

D£®A popular lifestyle product

¡¾2¡¿What can we learn about the shoes?

A£®They can automatically take off£®

B£®They can adjust themselves to your foot£®

C£®They need to be charged once£®

D£®They have been in design for 26 years£®

¡¾3¡¿From the last paragraph we can know ____________£®

A£®the shoes have been put into use

B£®the shoes need power to take off

C£®the shoes promise to be popular

D£®how the shoes work to produce energy

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿Film director James Cameron first became interested in sea exploration when he was a little boy£®His love for the ocean grew after he made the 1989 undersea adventure film The Abyss and the 1997 blockbuster Titanic£¬one of the most successful movies of all time£®Following that big success£¬James Cameron decided to put his film career on hold to become an explorer£®

In 2012£¬James Cameron made a journey to the deepest spot in the Mariana Trench£¬known as Challenger Deep£®And now the great journey has been made into a documentary film£¬named James Cameron¡¯s Deep-sea Challenger 3D£®

In James Cameron¡¯s fantasy films£¬such as Avatar and The Abyss£¬the unexplored areas are decorated in colors and full of danger£®But on his dive into Challenger Deep£¬the reality proved far different: white, deserted and dull£®

¡°I felt like I had gone to another planet,¡±Cameron said after returning from the cold and dark place in the Western Pacific Ocean£¬nearly 7 miles below the surface£®¡°I really have a sense of being separated and realize how tiny I am down in this big, black and unexplored place£®¡±

Cameron captured(»ñÈ¡)the moon-like landscape of the deep sea and documented the sea creatures he observed in the ocean£®

James Cameron¡¯s Deep¡ªsea Challenger 3D tells the story of Cameron¡¯ s journey£®It is a film about determination£¬danger and the ocean¡¯S greatest depths£®The movie shows a unique insight into Cameron¡¯s world when he makes his dream reality and makes history by becoming the first person to travel alone to the deepest point on the planet£®

It¡¯s an exciting film and inspiring reminder that our beautiful planet still has a lot to explore£®

¡¾1¡¿When did James Cameron become interested in the ocean?

A£®When he was in his childhood£®

B£®After his films The Abyss and Titanic£®

C£®After he achieved great Success in movies£®

D£®When he began to explore the deep sea alone£®

¡¾2¡¿What is the unexplored ocean like?

A£®Colorful and dangerous£®

B£®Boring and deserted£®

C£®White and attractive£®

D£®Small and dull£®

¡¾3¡¿What can we know about James Cameron¡¯s Deep-sea Challenger 3D?

A£®It is a film about the exploration of ocean creatures£®

B£®It is a story about Cameron¡¯s film-making dream£®

C£®It aims to attract more people to explore the deep sea£®

D£®It tells us about James¡¯ journey into Challenger Deep£®

¡¾4¡¿What is the best title for this passage?

A£®The great dream of a film director

B£®A film director exploring deep sea

C£®James Cameron and his documentary film

D£®The first person to make films about the deep sea

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿ Dogs are social animals and without proper training, they will behave like wild animals. They will soil your house, destroy your belongings, bark excessively, fight other dogs and even bite you. Nearly all behavior problems are perfectly normal dog activities that occur at the wrong time or place or are directed at the wrong thing. The key to preventing or treating behavior problems is learning to teach the dog to redirect its normal behavior to an outlet that is acceptable in the domestic (ѱÑøµÄ) setting.

One of the best things you can do for your dog and yourself is to train its obedience. Obedience training doesn¡¯t solve all behavior problems, but it is the foundation for solving just about any problem. Training pens up a line of communication between you and your dog. Effective communication is necessary to instruct your dog about what you want it to do.

Training is also an easy way to establish the social rank order. When your dog obeys a simple request of ¡°come here, sit,¡± it is showing obedience and respect for you. It is not necessary to establish yourself as top dog or leader of the pack (Ⱥ) by using extreme measure. You can teach your dog its subordinate (´ÓÊôµÄ) role by teaching it to show submission to you. Most dogs love performing tricks for you to pleasantly accept that you are in charge.

Training should be fun and rewarding for you and your dog. It can enrich your relationship and make living together more enjoyable. A well-trained dog is more confident and can more safely be allowed a greater amount of freedom than an untrained animal.

¡¾1¡¿Behavior problems of dogs are believed to _________.

A. occur when they go wild

B. be just part of their nature

C. get worse in modern society

D. become a threat to the community

¡¾2¡¿The key to solving dogs¡¯ behavior problems is to _________.

A. teach the dog to perform clever tricks

B. make the dog aware of its owner¡¯s authority

C. enable the dog to regain its normal behavior

D. provide the dog with a pattern accepted by its owner

¡¾3¡¿Why do pet dogs love performing tricks for their masters?

A. To avoid being punished.

B. To show their affection for their masters.

C. To win leadership of the dog pack.

D. To show their willingness to obey.

¡¾4¡¿When a dog has received effective obedience training, its owner _________.

A. can give the dog more freedom

B. will enjoy a better family life

C. can give the dog more rewards

D. will have more confidence in himself

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