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¡ª Excuse me£¬could you give me a hand to move these boxes away?

¡ª _____ .

A. With pleasure. B. My pleasure. C. Yes, please. D. Not at all.

A ¡¾½âÎö¡¿¾äÒ⣺¡ª¡ª¶Ô²»Æð£¬ÄãÄܰïÎÒ°ÑÕâЩÏä×Ó°á×ßÂ𣿠¡ª¡ªºÜ¸ßÐË¡£A. With pleasure. Òâ˼ÊÇ¡°·Ç³£ÀÖÒ⣨ЧÀÍ£©¡±£¬³£ÓÃÓÚ¶Ô±ðÈËÇëÇóµÄ»Ø¸´£¬»¹Ã»°ï±ðÈ˰ìÊ£»B. My pleasure. Òâ˼ÊÇÓлú»á°ïÖúÄãÊÇÎÒµÄÈÙÐÒ,ͨ³£°ïÈ˺ó,È˼ÒÖÂл²Å˵¡£C. Yes, please. ºÃµÄ£¬Ç룻D. Not at all. ¸ù±¾²»¡£¸ù¾ÝÓï¾³¿ÉÖªAÕýÈ·¡£
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When I was a teenager growing up in France, I wanted to leave school and have my own life . The only way I could ________ this was to work in the local paper factory in my town , or get married . I was very nervous when I told my ________ I wanted to leave school . I thought he would say , ¡°________ You are going to the college (´óѧ) .¡± I was very ________ when he said, ¡° OK, Let¡¯s go to the paper factory.¡±

Two days later,________ took me to the factory . I imagined everyone to be friends ________ together and have fun . I even imagined there would be music and singing . I________ I had watched too many movies as a teenager.

When we ________ the factory gate , my father spoke to the guard (ÃÅÎÀ) and one minute later we were _______. I walked around the factory looking at the building , the workers , and listening to the noise . It was _______. I ran back to my father and said, ¡° I want to go home.¡±

He asked me, ¡° What do you think of the ________?¡±

¡° Too bad,¡± I answered.

¡°And marriage is even _________!¡± he said

I went back to school the next day thinking about studying hard ________ I could get into a good college . I ________ studying English so I decided to major in (Ö÷ÐÞ) languages at college. Thanks to my father and our_______ to the paper factory , I now work at the United Nations and my father is very proud of me . I married a very good man and my life is much better than it would have been working in the factory!

1.A. say B. do C. receive D. find

2.A. teacher B. friend C. father D. husband

3.A. Yes! B. No! C. Really? D. Ok?

4.A. angry B. tired C. nervous D. surprised

5.A. he B. she C. it D. they

6.A. working B. studying C. singing D. farming

7.A. guess B. mean C. say D. hope

8.A. looked at B. returned to C. arrived at D. left for

9.A. outside B. inside C. back D. away

10.A. terrible B. wonderful C. funny D. special

11.A. workers B. guard C. building D. factory

12.A. better B. harder C. worse D. easier

13.A. but B. if C. so D. or

14.A. enjoyed B. stopped C. disliked D. minded

15.A. way B. idea C. plan D. trip

1.A 2.A 3.D 4.C 5.C 6.D 7.B 8.C 9.D 10.A 11.B 12.C 13.D 14.B 15.A ¡¾½âÎö¡¿ÊÔÌâ·ÖÎö£º×÷ÕßÔÚÕâÆª¶ÌÎÄÖнéÉÜÁËËý×Ô¼ºÔÚСʱºò²»°®ÉÏѧ£¬ºóÀ´¸¸Ç×Ç××Ô´øËýÈ¥¹¤³§²Î¹Û£¬¸Ä±äÁËËýµÄÀËÂþÏë·¨£¬´Ó¶ø¿ªÊ¼Å¬Á¦Ñ§Ï°¡£×îÖÕÔÚÓ¢Óï·½ÃæÈ¡µÃ²»·²µÄ³É¾Í£¬È¥ÁËÁªºÏ¹ú¹¤×÷¡£ ...

Jane Austen ever popular

This summer, the UK will honor its favorite writers, Jane Austen (1775-1817), by making her the face of the new £10 note. In the 200 years since her death, Austen has been getting more and more popular all over the world.

And yet Austen¡¯s works are so English that it¡¯s rather strange she should be so popular all over the world. Her novels are so of their time that it¡¯s strange that she¡¯s still enjoyed in this very different age. Her most famous works including Pride and Prejudice, the one which she is most known for are about the world of the English gentry(¹ó×å½×²ã)in the late 18th century.

Most of her works is about young women of that time. Women of the gentry could not work so their chances of happiness or even basic living depended upon finding a husband. This is a very serious subject matter, of course, but the joy of Austen¡¯s stories is her ability to make wonderful, but also touching, comedy out of something so serious.

Take Pride and Prejudice as an example. Elizabeth Bennet is one of six daughters in a family that struggles with money problems. Her mother wants to marry off as many of them as possible. Mrs Bennet is one of the great comic characters of English literature.

The novel is developed by the love-hate relationship between Elizabeth and Mr Darcy. The pleasure of the novel is reading how these obstacles(Õϰ­) are overcome and how the comical and unexpected ending is achieved.

If we think about this story, it¡¯s clear why Jane Austen is still popular 200 years after her death, and why readers can still identify with characters from the long dead world of the 18th century English gentry. Although there have been many changes since that time, it¡¯s still the greatest challenge in life for men and women to find the partner of their dreams.

1.From Paragraph 2 we can know that the writer ______.

A. believes Jane Austen¡¯s works were ahead of their time

B. thinks that everyone should read Jane Austen¡¯s books

C. is surprised that Jane Austen¡¯s books are still so famous

D. doubts if Jane Austen is still popular all over the world

2.According to the passage, Pride and Prejudice __________.

A. has a sad and unexpected ending

B. deals with a serious social problem in a lighthearted way

C. is mainly about poor people¡¯s struggles in the 18th century

D. tells readers that everyone can succeed through hard work

3.According to the passage, Jane Austen remains popular today because______.

A. readers enjoy reading love stories about wealthy people

B. her works are developed by the love-hate relationship

C. readers can always find something new from her novels

D. her works deal with problems many of today¡¯s readers still face

4.The passage is mainly written to ______.

A. explain why Jane Austen is still popular today

B. introduce the story of Pride and Prejudice

C. introduce Jane Austen¡¯s creative writing style

D. explain why Jane Austen was chosen to be on the new £10 note

1.C 2.B 3.D 4.A ¡¾½âÎö¡¿ ±¾ÎĽéÉÜÁ˼ò°Â˹¶¡µÄ×÷ƷΪʲôÔÚËýËÀºó200Ä꣬ÈÔÈ»»¹Èç´ËÊÜ»¶Ó­¡£ÔÚÎÄÖÐÖØµã½éÉÜÁË¡¶°ÁÂýÓëÆ«¼û¡·µÄ¹ÊÊÂÇé½Ú¡£ 1.Ö÷Ö¼´óÒâÌâ¡£´ÓµÚ¶þ¶ÎµÄÄÚÈÝ¿ÉÖª£¬¼ò°Â˹¶¡µÄ×÷ƷΪʲôÔÚµ±´úÈç´ËµÄ»¹ÊÜ»¶Ó­¡£ÌرðÊÇ¡¶°ÁÂýÓëÆ«¼û¡·¡£Ñ¡ÏîCÊÇ˵£¬´ÓµÚ2¶ÎÎÒÃÇ¿ÉÒÔÖªµÀ£¬×÷Õß¾ªÑÈÓÚ¼ò°Â˹¶¡µÄÊéÈÔÈ»Èç´Ë³öÃû¡£¹ÊÑ¡C¡£ 2.Ö÷Ö¼´óÒâÌâ¡£Óɾä×ÓThis ...

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