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It was sunny and warm so Jane and I decide to go for a swim. When we got the beach, Tim, Paul and Mary were already here. We joined them and spent the afternoon swimming. The sea was as smooth as the mirror. I was pleased and Tim and Paul were a little disappointing as they like swimming in huge waves. When we got hungry, we bought hotdogs from a shop closely to the beach. After that, we had enough energies to play football on the sands. Paul and I won the game, in which surprised the others because we had three in their team. We really enjoyed the afternoon.

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Looking out of the window of his Ford truck, Bob Fitzgerald sees large, undesirable plants growing in the fields.¡¾1¡¿(visitor) to his neighborhood in Princess Anne, Maryland ¡¾2¡¿(main) see dying forests and empty farmland.

Fitzgerald says the land¡¾3¡¿(be) in his family for over 3 centuries. ¡°I¡¯d say in the next 20 years. You¡¯re going to lose¡¾4¡¿very high percentage of that land.¡±

The land around the Chesapeake Bay has been sinking for hundreds of years. But climate change is making things¡¾5¡¿(bad). As sea level rises, salt water is entering rivers and other waterways. As a result, the ground is becoming too salty for crops¡¾6¡¿(grow) on.

Maryland¡¯s Eastern Shore is home to some of the oldest farms in North America. Fitzgerald says he has seen big changes during his life.

¡°You just can¡¯t believe¡¾7¡¿it¡¯s been taking things over in the last 15 or 20 years. I can show you land around here that people raised tomatoes on when I was a little boy. And now it¡¯s gone.¡±

Around the world, scientists warn that coastal farms are under¡¾8¡¿(threaten) from rising seas and salt water. A World Bank report estimates rice production in coastal areas of Bangladesh may fall¡¾9¡¿15 percent by the year 2050. Another study found hundreds of millions of people will¡¾10¡¿(force) to move inland because of rising waters.

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿Directions: Read the following passage. Fill in each blank with a proper sentence given below. Each sentence can be used only once. Note that there are two more sentences than you need.

Five-year-old Albert Einstein stared at his hand as if it held magic. Cupped in his palm was a small, round instrument with a glass cover and a jiggling needle. Albert's father called it a compass. Albert called it a mystery. No matter how he moved the compass, the needle always pointed to the north. Quietly Hermann Einstein watched his son. Albert was a chubby little boy with pale, round cheeks and thick, black hair that was usually messy. His bright brown eyes were wide with discovery.

Something was in the room with him, Albert realized¡ªsomething he couldn't see or feel, but that acted on the compass just the same. Deeply attracted, Albert listened to his father explain magnetism, the strange force that made the compass needle point north. ¡¾1¡¿To many children the compass would have been just another toy. To Albert the compass was a miracle he would never forget.

But then Albert had always been different from other children. Born March 14£¬1879, in Ulm, Germany, Albert hadn't been looked like other babies. As she cradled£¨Ò¡£© her new son in her arms, Pauline Einstein thought the back of his head looked strange. ¡¾2¡¿Was something wrong with Albert? Although the doctor told Pauline everything was fine, several weeks passed before the shape of Albert's head began to look right to her.

When Albert was one, his family moved to Munich£¬where his sister, Maja, was born a year later. Looking down at the tiny sleeping bundle, Albert was puzzled. Where were the baby's wheels? Albert had expected a baby sister to be something like a toy, and most of his toys had wheels.

¡¾3¡¿But any response at all would have delighted them. At an age when many children have lots to say, Albert seemed strangely backward. Hermann and Pauline wondered why he was so late in talking. As Albert grew older, he continued to have trouble putting his thoughts into words. Even when he was nine years old, he spoke slowly, if he decided to say anything at all.

But Albert was a good listener and a good thinker. Sometimes when he went hiking with his parents and Maja, he thought about his father's compass and what it had showed to him. The clear, open meadows (²ÝµØ) were filled with more than the wind or the scent of flowers. ¡¾4¡¿The very thought of it quickened Albert's pulse.

A.Other babies didn't have such large, pointed skulls.

B.But nothing his father said made the invisible power seem less mysterious or wonderful.

C.There was so much curiosity about the world that Albert was always by himself thinking hard.

D.They were also filled with magnetism(´ÅÐÔ).

E.Albert was ahead of his peers in different aspects.

F.Albert's parents were amused by his confusion.

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿ My son was playing with a bottle of bubbles. Dip the loop in the bottle, pull it out, and blow it to make bubbles. He understood the principle but was vainly _______ to blow bubbles. He would dip and dip and blow and blow, but alas, no _______. He _______ me the bottle and loop and asked me, ¡°Daddy, can you make bubbles?¡±

I hadn¡¯t blown bubbles in years. I am a _______ by education, fairly well-trained in surfactant (»îÐÔ¼Á) technology. However, all that knowledge is completely _______. I was having no more _______ than my son. I dipped and puffed, _______ no bubbles.

After several _______ attempts, I changed strategies. _______ puffing on the loop of soapy water, I just gently breathed on it. My son ________ with delight as a big beautiful bubble formed and ________ away. I explained to him, ¡°Son, you can¡¯t blow hard. You must ever so ________ breathe on the loop to make bubbles.¡± He ________ his urgent desire to make big bubbles by blowing hard and followed my advice. Big bubbles!

There are some things that you can get with ________, but other things only ________ from the gentleness of a soft breath.

¡¾1¡¿A.tryingB.managingC.expectingD.acting

¡¾2¡¿A.changesB.bubblesC.resultsD.drops

¡¾3¡¿A.lentB.handedC.threwD.cast

¡¾4¡¿A.researcherB.professionalC.chemistD.parent

¡¾5¡¿A.out of dateB.of no useC.in doubtD.in trouble

¡¾6¡¿A.trialB.confidenceC.patienceD.success

¡¾7¡¿A.evenB.thusC.somehowD.still

¡¾8¡¿A.fruitlessB.toughC.unwillingD.difficult

¡¾9¡¿A.DespiteB.WithoutC.OnD.Except

¡¾10¡¿A.screamedB.noddedC.rushedD.flew

¡¾11¡¿A.escapedB.floatedC.burstD.bounced

¡¾12¡¿A.silentlyB.slightlyC.eagerlyD.gently

¡¾13¡¿A.freedB.fueledC.containedspan style="width:54.74pt; display:inline-block; -aw-tabstop-align:left; -aw-tabstop-pos:311.45pt">D.reduced

¡¾14¡¿A.brainB.actionC.forceD.science

¡¾15¡¿A.surviveB.separateC.jumpedD.arise

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿¼Ù¶¨Ó¢Óï¿ÎÉÏÀÏʦҪÇóͬ×ÀÖ®¼ä½»»»ÐÞ¸Ä×÷ÎÄ£¬ÇëÄãÐÞ¸ÄÄãͬ×ÀµÄÒÔÏÂ×÷ÎÄ¡£ÎÄÖй²ÓÐ10´¦ÓïÑÔ´íÎó£¬Ã¿¾äÖÐ×î¶àÓÐÁ½´¦¡£Ã¿´¦´íÎó½öÉæ¼°Ò»¸öµ¥´ÊµÄÔö¼Ó¡¢É¾³ý»òÐ޸ġ£

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Ladies and gentlemen,

Good afternoon! My name is Li Zilin and I am 9 years old. I came from Chengdu, capital of southwest Chinas Sichuan Province. Today I am very honor to share with you my understanding of youth power in climate action. After I came here, I hosted an activity at my school about pandas and climate change aware. More students have learned that the climate change is endangering pandas.

For myself, my pledge are ¡°love pandas, love the earth¡±. Since pandas have survived changes on earth for more than a million years and are always thought on as living fossils, we show the bio-diversity of the nature.

The 2020 UN Biodiversity Conference will held in Kunming of China the next year. We sincere welcome you to China, to the Biodiversity Conference, to know about pandas and to see Chinese youth in action.

Thank you very much!

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿ It's October and you know what that means ¡ªthe return of pumpkin Kit Kats, spooky (ÓÄÁé°ãµÄ£¬¹ÖÒìµÄ)costumes for the kids and, of course, homemade Halloween treats. The whole spooky season leads up to tricks on October 31, but Halloween as we know it may be changing.

It's pretty common knowledge that Halloween takes place on October 31. For a lot of parents, it's a night of headaches. Sure enough, parents are fully occupied with an unforgettable Halloween party and have no time to be with the kids. Then the kids have to be dressed and out the door for two hours of trick-or-treating time, which can be tough to manage. Most remarkably, it's hard to pack all the holiday fun into a school night. Eating all that candy right before bed won't make for an easy school day the next morning.

Last year, a nonprofit organization called the Halloween and Costume Association(HCA) began a petition (ÇëÔ¸)to change the date of Halloween. They proposed that Halloween take place on the last Saturday of the month. Thus, parents can have time to celebrate it with their kids.

Though the petition started in 2018, it has really picked up steam this year. Right now, more than 148, 000 people have signed. When a quota(ÏÞ¶î) of 150,000 signatures is met, the petition will be delivered to the President of the States, and the government will be making the final call.

Really, the petition isn't about breaking tradition but about making Halloween more family-friendly. It technically makes Halloween longer, so who wouldn't be taking about all-day spooks? If you'd like to sign the petition and make your voice heard before October, you can find it here.

¡¾1¡¿What troubles parents most on Halloween?

A.They can't find the kids in the night.B.They have little time to prepare for it.

C.It's hard for kids to behave themselves.D.Halloween may take place on a school day.

¡¾2¡¿The petition for Halloween is actually intended to____.

A.help kids gain more freedomB.create more parent-child time

C.allow parents to have a day offD.promote the event to a new level

¡¾3¡¿What can be inferred about the petition?

A.No one desired to sign their name at first.B.It has been put aside by the government.

C.The US president thinks nothing of it.D.It has gained increasing favor.

¡¾4¡¿What is the best title for the text?

A.Break the traditional barriers?B.Make Halloween Much Longer?

C.Celebrate it in another manner?D.Necessary to observe Halloween?

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