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¡¡¡¡Every reader of this passage must spend the whole of his waking life looking at things. Looking, like breathing, is natural; we do it without noticing it. Looking is passive but seeing is active. Once you start seeing things you really begin to wake up. People who see things which others have only looked at, and draw conclusions from what they have seen, can add to man's knowledge and help progress.
¡¡¡¡Someone recently discovered a place where metal had been worked continuously longer than anywhere else in England. He ¡°saw¡± a wall in the Forest of Dean. Thousands of people must have looked at it without really seeing it, but this man noticed that among the usual stones of that place were bits and pieces of a different color; they also felt different to the hand. A closer sight showed that these pieces had been left behind in the fires of ancient £¨¹Å´úµÄ£©peoples who had melted£¨È۽⣩rocks to get metals, looking around, he found more and more information, until the history of what men had done at the place over tens of centuries was known.
(1) ¡°His waking life¡± means _______.
[¡¡¡¡]
A£®all his life
B£®all the time he is awake
C£®all the time he is breathing
D£®the time when he is waking up
(2) The man found a place where ________.
[¡¡¡¡]
A£®men had built some walls of metal tens of centuries before
B£®men had learned to make fire with stones in ancient time
C£®men had melted metal many years ago
D£®men were starting to work metal a thousand years ago
(3) The man who ¡°saw¡± the wall got more and more information _____.
[¡¡¡¡]
A£®from a history book
B£®from the unusual stones of that place
C£®from the usual metals of that place
D£®from thousands of people who had looked at it
(4) According to the passage, which of the following is true?
[¡¡¡¡]
A£®In England men had made things of metal before they learned how to make them of stone.
B£®Metal was melted in the Forest of Dean longer than at any other place in England.
C£®Metal was used in England before any other part of the world.
D£®The people in the Forest of Dean were the cleverest people in the world.
½âÎö£º
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(A)
¡¡¡¡ In 1962, A Russian woman told her doctor that she could see with¡¡¡¡ her fingers. 1 the doctor did not believe it 2 he saw with his own¡¡¡¡ eyes. The doctor 3 her eyes with a large handkerchief and then put¡¡¡¡ colored papers 4 newspapers under her hands. She was able to 5 one¡¡¡¡ color from 6 and read the newspaper by 7 and feeling them. The doctor¡¡¡¡ examined her many times and was 8 with the examination, so he sent 9¡¡¡¡ to Moscow, in which she was further examined by 10. Her unusual powers,¡¡¡¡ in the end, were 11.
¡¡¡¡ The early 12 into these unusual powers has shown that 13 man¡¡¡¡ trusts only his eyes he will 14 be able to see outside the limits of¡¡¡¡ time and into the 15.
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| 6. | ¡¡¡¡A. those¡¡¡¡ | ¡¡¡¡B. that¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡ | ¡¡¡¡C. other¡¡¡¡ | ¡¡¡¡D. another¡¡¡¡ | ¡¡¡¡£Û¡¡¡¡£Ý |
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(B)
(W=woman;P=policeman)
W: Excuse me. I want to buy an English dictionary for my daughter.¡¡¡¡ could you tell me 16 to get it?
P: I think you can get it from the book shop in the center¡¡¡¡ of the 17. There are all kinds of dictionaries there.
W: Thanks. But I don't know the way to the book shop. This is my 18¡¡¡¡ time to come here.
P: Oh, welcome to our city, madam. The book shop is a bit far from¡¡¡¡ here. I think it's 19 to go there by bus. The No. 4 bus will take you¡¡¡¡ there. The bus stop is just on the other side of the street.
W: But I want to 20 the city while I'm walking.
P: OK! Go up the road and turn right at the second 21, walk on until¡¡¡¡ you reach a big bridge. Go across it and take the first turning on¡¡¡¡ the left. Walk 22 the road with some flowers and trees on 23 sides. At the end of the road you'll find the book shop on your right, 24 the¡¡¡¡ museum and the Bank of China. You can't miss it.
W: Oh, it's really a long 25, But it doesn't matter. I like walking.¡¡¡¡ It's very kind of you, young man. Thanks a lot.
P: You're welcome.
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