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Kyra Komac, 28 years old, now has 25 furniture(家具)stores all over the country. The new store, in London's Camden High Street, takes her back to where it all started. She tells us about how the business began.

When I was little, my mother began selling flowers in Camden Market. She couldn't leave me at home on my own, so I had to go to the market with her.

To begin with, I didn't have to do anything. I just sat there, and my mum told me jokes and stories so I didn't get bored. When I got older, I gave my mum a hand and I really enjoyed it.

Then, one year, my grandma gave me a book for Christmas. It was all about making candles and I loved it. I was 14, and I didn't have to go to the market any more because mum could leave me at home on my own. I spent my free time making candles of all shapes and sizes. I made hundreds of them.

One day, my mother was ill so I had to go to the market on my own. I decided to take some candles with me and see if I could sell them. They were sold out in twenty minutes! The next week, my mum gave me some money to buy some wax(蜡)to make more candles. They sold out really quickly, too.

Nine months later, we decided to stop selling flowers. My mum and I couldn't make enough candles during the week, so some of my school friends started to give us a hand. I paid them one pound for every candle, and we used to sell them for three or four times that. It was fun and my friends worked with me in the market.

At the age of 22, my uncle lent me some money and I opened my first shop in Portobello Road. Since then, I've never looked back, even in difficulties. In the first store, we only sold candles, but now we sell everything from furniture to paintings. Oh, and candles, of course.

Answer the following questions with No More Than 8 Words

1.How many furniture stores does Kyra Komac have now?

2. Where did Kyra's mother sell flowers?

3.What did Kyra do in her free time when she was fourteen?

4.Who helped when Kyra and her mum couldn't make enough candles?

5.How did Kyra's uncle help her to open her first shop?

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Perhaps you’ve seen the English letters “WC” in your city. They show public toilets. But do

you know it is far from elegant(优雅的)English? In fact, foreigners from English-speaking countries rarely use the letters.

Workers in our city are changing “WC” signs all over the city. The government is spending much money changing all the bad English on signs and restaurant menus. Many other places in China are following our steps.

“WC, or water closet, is old-fashioned English. It sounds dirty to me,” says Charlie Shifflet, a young man from the US. The old sign will become “Gents/Men” and “Ladies/Women”.

“I see lots of poor English in everyday life, and not only on signs,” he says. “I know what they mean. But they are Chinglish, not real English. For example, when someone says to me ‘My hometown is Henan Province’, I know he should say: ‘My hometown is in Henan Province’. ‘Hometown’ is a smaller place in a province.” The common mistakes he picked up include “Not Entry”, which should be “No Entry”, “Direction of Airport” should be changed to “To the Airport”. And it is “room rate”, not “room price”. And remember to “Keep off the grass”, rather than “Care of the green”.

1.What does the writer think of the use of “WC”?

A. He doesn’t think it means water closet.

B. He doesn’t think it old-fashioned English.

C. He doesn’t think it proper for a sign.

D. He thinks it elegant English.

2.The underlined word “rarely” means ________.

A. sometimes B. seldom C. often D. always

3.Charlie Shifflet ___________.

A. is a Chinese living in America

B. thinks Chinese people are sometimes using incorrect English

C. likes to hear or see Chinglish

D. sometimes uses Chinglish

4.Which of the following signs does NOT use Chinglish?

5.The last paragraph is about _________.

A. why there are so many Chinglish signs

B. examples of Chinglish

C. where Chinglish signs are

D. who uses Chinglish signs

2.Do you know everything that you do leaves a"carbon footprint(碳足迹)"?Foi example,when you travel in a taxi,the car gives off (排放)carbon dioxide (CO2 ) into the air.
Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas (温室气体).Greenhouse gases make the Earth become warm.To protect our environment,we need to leave less of a"carbor footprint".
How big is your carbon footprint?To get an idea,take a look at the following numbers.
Living areas
.TV sets and DVD players produce 723kg of CO2 a year.
.If you turn them off when you're not using them,you can cut that number by 108kg.
Laundry room (洗衣房)
Drying clothes in a dryer produces a lot of CO2 a year.
.If you use your dryer five times a week,you produce 185kg of CO2 a year.
.Dry your clothes in the sun instead.
Bathroom
.If you take an eight-minute shower(淋浴)every day,you produce 616kg oi CO2 a year.
.If you only use six minutes to take a shower,you can cut that number by 154kg a year.

51.Greenhouse gases have a bad effect on the earth temperature.T
52.The more of CO2 we produce,the better environment we have.F
53.It's a good idea to make use of sun energy instead of electricity.T
54.An 8-minute shower produces the same amount of CO2 as a 6-minute shower does.F
55.Small things in our daily life can make a lot of difference to the environment.T.

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