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3²Î¿¼´Ê»ã£ºÅ¼Ïñ¡ªidol; ³ç°Ý¡ªworship Our class have had a discussion about idol worship

¡¾´ð°¸¡¿One possible version Our class have had a discussion about idol worship. Some of my classmates consider that we need idols that have set good examples to us. And our idols¡¯ deeds can inspire us to make efforts to make progress. Besides, not a few famous people have benefited from idol worship since they experienced their roads to be famous.
However, others do not agree. They believe we never need idols and idol worship can do nothing but waste money and time which we should have spent on studies. What¡¯s worse, some unhealthy idol worship may do harm to ourselves as well as others. As for me, I¡¯m not opposed to idol worship, but we must be aware that idol worship can¡¯t take the place of our efforts and our future will and should be created by our own hands.

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There is a workman in America who earns as much as a company director. He is Max Quarterman, a thirty-year-old plasterer (ÄàÍß½³).
Max lives in an upper middle-class housing estate. His 1 are mostly bank managers, business executives, airline pilots and the 2, but Max's seven-bedroom house ¡ª 3 $ 80,000 ¡ª is the largest in the area. 4 outside the house are Max's $ 7000 sports car and his wife's Morris Mini. Indoors is a 150 colour TV set and the family's 5 ¡ª a circular bath with gold-plated taps. There are also many labour£­saving 6 and luxury furniture.
How can a plasterer 7 all this? The answer, says Max, is hard work. In 8 with another plasterer, Max 9 contract plastering jobs for a firm. The owner of the firm 10 them as human machines, the best and quickest in the 11, who can do as much in two days as 12 two-man team can in two weeks.
How do they manage it? Not by working overtime. They work a(n) 13 eight-hour day, five days a week. The secret 14 in Max's hod (Í°) in which he carries the plaster to the site of the job. Max's is a superhod ¡ª it contains double the usual 15 of plaster, and Max, a strong fellow, runs when he carries it. More time is thus 16 to get on with the plastering. Besides, 17 man wastes time smoking, and they 18 their lunch break to a 19 of an hour a day. Now Max earns over $ 800 a week which is four times the average weekly pay in Britain today, and if he gets as 20 as $ 15, it's a disaster.
£¨1£©A.colleagues B.neighbours C.relatives D.friends
£¨2£©A.like B.kind C.class D.same
£¨3£©A.worthy B.spending C.costing D.worth
£¨4£©A.Stopped B.Stopping C.Parked D.Parking
£¨5£©A.property B.honour C.facility D.pride
£¨6£©A.objects B.devices C.articles D.materials
£¨7£©A.acquire B.use C.afford D.provide
£¨8£©A.harmony B.correspondence C.partnership D.terms
£¨9£©A.makes B.does C.takes D.gets
£¨10£©A.tells B.treats C.compares D.describes
£¨11£©A.trade B.job C.area D.walk
£¨12£©A.no B.few C.any D.all
£¨13£©A.unusual B.extra C.ordinary D.normal
£¨14£©A.relies B.lies C.hides D.falls
£¨15£©A.quality B.size C.quantity D.weight
£¨16£©A.left B.needed C.spent D.kept
£¨17£©A.both B.either C.neither D.each
£¨18£©A.have B.cut C.miss D.spend
£¨19£©A.time B.period C.limitation D.total
£¨20£©A.much B.little C.more D.less

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿Steven Jobs£¬who passed away on October 5 ,2011£¬was an American computer enterpriser and inventor. He was co-founder£¬chairman£¬and CEO of Apple Corporation. Jobs also previously served as CEO of Pixar Animation Studios; he became a member of the board of directors of the Walt Disney Company in 2006£¬following the acquisition of Pixar by Disney.

In the late 1970s£¬Jobs-along with Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak£¬Mike Markkula and others-designed£¬developed£¬and marketed one of the first commercially successful lines of personal computers£¬the Apple II series. In the early 1980s£¬Jobs was among the first to see the commercial potential of Xerox PARC's mouse-driven graphical user interface(½çÃæ),which led to the creation of the Macintosh. After losing a power struggle with the board of directors in 1985£¬Jobs resigned from Apple and founded NeXT£¬a computer platform development company specializing in the higher-education and business markets. Apple's 1996 buyout(ÊÕ¹º)of NeXT brought Jobs back to the company he co-founded£¬and he served as its CEO from 1997 until August 2011. In 1986£¬he acquired the computer graphics division of Lucasfilm Ltd£¬which was turned out as Pixar Animation Studios. He remained CEO and majority shareholder at 50. 1 percent until its acquisition by the Walt Disney Company in 2006.Consequently Jobs became Disney's largest individual shareholder at 7 percent and a member of Disney's Board of Directors. On August 24 ,2011 ,Jobs announced his resignation from his role as Apple's CEO. Jobs died in California at age 56£¬seven years after being diagnosed with cancer. At the time of his resignation£¬and again after his death£¬he was widely described as a pioneer and genius-perhaps one of the foremost-in the field of business£¬innovation£¬and product design£¬ and a man who had¡°deeply" changed the face of the modern world£¬revolutionized at least six different industries£¬and an¡°exemplar for all CEOs¡±.His death was widely mourned and considered a loss to the world by reviewers across the globe.

¡¾1¡¿Why did Steve Jobs leave Apple Corporation in 1985?

A. He found it was hard to work with his partners.

B. He was defeated in the attempt of controlling Apple Corporation.

C. He wanted to found another company.

D. Apple Corporation will soon be defeated by another company.

¡¾2¡¿We can know from this passage that .

A. People all over the world think highly of Steve Jobs.

B. Steve Jobs was CEO of Pixar Animation Studios in 2007.

C. Steve Jobs retired at the age of 50 because of cancer.

D. Steve Jobs is the Einstein of our times.

¡¾3¡¿What does the underlined word "exemplar" in the last paragraph mean

A. Companion. B. Model.

C. Friend. D. Inventor.

¡¾4¡¿The best title of this passage can be ¡¤

A. Stories of Steve Jobs B. Background of Steve Jobs

C. Life of Steve Jobs D. Death of Steve Jobs

¡¾ÌâÄ¿¡¿ÇëÔĶÁÏÂÁжÌÎÄ£¬´ÓÿÌâËù¸øµÄËĸöÑ¡Ïî(A¡¢B¡¢CºÍD)ÖУ¬Ñ¡³ö×î¼ÑÑ¡Ïî¡£
A
It was unusually quiet in the emergency room on December 25. I didn't think there would be any patients, sighing about having to work on Christmas. Just then five people showed up at my desk, a pale woman and four small children.
¡°Are you all sick?¡± I asked doubtfully.
¡°Yes.¡± she said weakly and lowered her head.
But when it came to descriptions of their presenting problems, things got a little puzzling. Two of the children had headaches, but the headaches weren't accompanied by the normal body language of holding the head or trying to keep it still. Two children had earaches, but only one could tell me which ear was affected. The mother complained of a cough but seemed to work to produce it.
Something was wrong, but I didn¡¯t say anything but explained that it might be a little while before a doctor saw her. She responded. ¡°Take your time; it's warm here.¡±
I checked the chart after the admitting clerk had finished registering the family. No address---they were homeless. The waiting room was warm.
I looked out at the family sitting close to each other by the Christmas tree. The little one was pointing at the television and the oldest one was looking at the decorations on the Christmas tree.
I went back to the nurses' station and mentioned we had a homeless family in the waiting room. The nurses, complaining about working on Christmas, turned to sympathy for a family just trying to get warm on Christmas. The team went into action, much as we do when there's a medical emergency. Only this one was a Christmas emergency.
We were all offered a free meal in the hospital cafeteria on Christmas Day, so we fetched that meal and prepared a large meal for our Christmas guests. Our team worked to meet the needs of a family who just wanted to be warm on Christmas Day.
Later, as the family walked to the door to leave, the four-year-old came running back, gave me a hug and whispered, ¡°Thanks for being our angels today.¡±
£¨1£©From the descriptions of the family's presenting problems, the writer learned that ______.
A.one of the children had a language problem
B.the mother caught a bad cold
C.they were pretending to be sick
D.they got all infectious disease
£¨2£©The author made sure that the family were homeless by _____.
A.asking them some questions
B.listening to their descriptions of problems
C.observing their abnormal body language
D.checking their registered information
£¨3£©What kind of person do you think the writer is?
A.Careful and warmhearted.
B.Hardworking and outgoing.
C.Serious and experienced.
D.Loving and forgiving.
£¨4£©Which of the following is the best title of this passage?
A.Christmas Guests
B.A Homeless Family
C.Beautiful Angels
D.Christmas Emergency

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A
Outside her cottage, old Mrs. Taylor was hanging out laundry on a wire line, unaware that some children were hiding in a nearby tree watching her every move. They were determined to find out if she really was a witch.£¨Å®Î×£©
They watched nervously as she took a broomstick(³¤±úɨÖ㣩to sweep the dirt from her stone steps. But much to their disappointment, she didn't get on the broomstick and fly off. The old lady only looked up when her hen began to make sounds loudly ¡ªsignaling that she had laid an egg in the nest on the top of the haystack.(¸É²Ý¶Ñ).
The old lady put aside her broomstick and walked to the haystack, followed by Michael, a black cat she had rescued from a fox trap. With only three legs, it was hard for Michael to keep up with his mistress. The cat was proof for the children that only a witch would own a black cat with three legs! Crawling further along the branches, they could clearly see the haystack.
Mrs. Taylor was standing on a wooden box with the new-laid egg in one hand. Placing the egg in her pocket, she readied herself to climb down. Then, without warning, the box broke under her and she crashed to the ground. The children were in horror.
¡°Should we go and help her?¡± asked Mia.
¡°What if it's a trick?¡± replied Patrick. ¡°She probably knows we're here. Witches know things like that!¡±
After thinking for a while, Julia said ¡°Anyway, we should go and check whether she is all right.¡±
Approaching prudently, they could see a wound on the old lady's forehead. She had knocked her head on a stone and was unconscious.
¡°Go and get Dad,¡± Mia yelled to her brothers. ¡°Tell him about the accident.¡±
The boys didn't need another excuse to leave. They ran as fast as they could for help, hoping that Mrs. Taylor would not regain consciousness and turn the girls into frogs.
Later, in the hospital, the old lady smiled her thanks. ¡°I was so lucky that you lovely children happened to be passing when 1 fell. I must have yelled quite loudly.¡±
The children exchanged guilty glances, but were very pleased that she was not a witch after all!
£¨1£©Mrs. Taylor stopped sweeping when _______.
A.her doorstep became very clean
B.she heard the hen making sounds loudly
C.she noticed the children in the tree
D.her cat Michael managed to get her attention
£¨2£©Why was Patrick not willing to help Mrs. Taylor when she fell?
A.He thought that she could be cheating them.
B.He was afraid of the three-legged black cat.
C.He did not think that she was hurt in the fall.
D.He knew he and the others shouldn't have been in her tree.
£¨3£©Which of the definitions is closest in meaning to the underlined word ¡°prudently¡± ?
A.Slowly.
B.Hurriedly.
C.Carefully.
D.Quietly.
£¨4£©Which of these old sayings best summaries the lesson from story?
A.Make hey while the sun shines.
B.Never judge a book by its cover.
C.A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.
D.People in glasshouses shouldn¡¯t throw stones.

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Do some animals have certain mental powers which human beings do not? Of course they have instincts(±¾ÄÜ), but1this, I am sure that they can feel2things which we humans cannot. A personal experience3this to me.
Some years ago, I had a dog named Howard. From the time that he was a baby dog, he was timid, so we named him 'Howard' to4with 'coward' (µ¨Ð¡¹í)! He was especially afraid of5. At the first hint of them, he would run crying into the house and hide under a table. What a hero!
I often went for walks with Howard. 6, as we were walking along a road, it began to rain. I quickly ran to a busstop for7. The busstop had a roof supported by metal poles.Soon after I had got there, Howard caught my8in his teeth and tried to pull me away. 9, I was puzzled and a little angry at his10.
However, I decided to humour him and walked away from the shelter into the rain and11for home.
12I was about two hundred metres away from the shelter, there came a blinding flash of lightning and13, there was a crash of thunder which nearly14me. Howard stopped walking and began crying. Knowing that he was afraid, I15to pick him up.
As I straightened up, I16the bus shelter which we had just left. I was shocked to see that two of the17were bent and the roof was lying on the ground, 18. The shelter had been struck by the lightning. I gave Howard a big hug to express my heartfelt19. He had just saved my life.He was truly my20!
£¨1£©A.for B.besides C.with D.except
£¨2£©A.certain B.few C.several D.great
£¨3£©A.expressed B.conveyed C.proved D.applied
£¨4£©A.rhyme B.meet C.fight D.compete
£¨5£©A.people B.buses C.cats D.thunderstorms
£¨6£©A.However B.Once C.Unfortunately D.Suddenly
£¨7£©A.peace B.relief C.shelter D.comfort
£¨8£©A.collar B.sleeve C.hat D.trousers
£¨9£©A.At first B.At last C.At once D.At present
£¨10£©A.teeth B.behaviour C.courage D.idea
£¨11£©A.looked B.dreamt C.headed D.asked
£¨12£©A.Because B.Since C.When D.As
£¨13£©A.long after B.minutes later C.at the same time D.soon after
£¨14£©A.deafened B.struck C.killed D.defeated
£¨15£©A.went B.bent C.rushed D.turned
£¨16£©A.glared at B.stared at C.glanced at D.aimed at
£¨17£©A.buses B.trees C.walls D.poles
£¨18£©A.broken B.unharmed C.dangerous D.dead
£¨19£©A.happiness B.thanks C.luck D.wish
£¨20£©A.dog B.son C.hero D.friend

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