Two parachutists(伞兵)had been flown behind enemy lines early in the morning.They were   1    to gain as much information as possible on a new experimental factory.

The two men destroyed their   2   and they dressed as laborers to avoid being easily     3   . Soon they reached a road.At the roadside, they noticed a deep pit(坑)where rainwater had     4   , with some tools, and a broken-down lorry nearby. The men were making their way   5       towards the lorry when the sound of a truck in the distance made them dash for   6   . At that moment, they had no choice but to jump into the pit, as the countryside was so   7   . There was a great splash(飞溅声), and very soon all was  8   . The water was quite shallow, and the men had to   9  themselves against the sides of the pit wondering if they had attracted the attention of the lorry driver.They   10   anxiously as the truck came nearer and nearer, and hoped it would   11   . But, much to their disappointment, the truck seemed to stop almost directly   12    them. They heard voices and the truck door shut loudly overhead. From their discussion, they   13   that some men in the truck had come to collect the   14   . Suddenly, the men were startled(惊吓)by a piece of wood which was   15   into the pit and which struck the water just behind them.They could do nothing but   16   their breath and wondered what would happen next.Then the sound of the engine started up again, setting them   17   , for they knew as the men were leaving, they had narrowly   18    being captured. But very soon, their joy quickly turned to   19   , because when they looked up, they found that the pit was much    20    than they had thought. Its sides were wet and slippery and there was no way out.

1.A.warned                    B.instructed                C.advised            D.allowed

2.A.parachutes           B.planes               C.papers       D.certificates

3.A.shot                         B.spotted                   C.killed               D.kidnapped (绑架)

4.A.dropped                    B.risen                       C.sunk              D.collected

5.A.carefully                   B.impatiently              C.anxiously         D.hopefully

6.A.water                       B.cover                      C.pleasure           D.rest

7.A.bare                 B.poor             C.dry          D.dangerous

8.A.noisy                        B.still                         C.silent               D.calm

9.A.struggle                   B.push                     C.press             D.find

10.A.listened                B.watched                  C.stood            D.wondered

11.A.stop                        B.pass                       C.explode            D.speed

12.A.near                       B.below                     C.above              D.behind

13.A.understood              B.recognized              C.admitted          D.remembered

14.A.wood               B.sticks                      C.weapons         D.tools

15.A.thrown                   B.poured                    C.filled                D.laid

16.A.take               B.hold                        C.save                D.lose

17.A.at ease (放松)                                       B.at length(长时间地)

C.at leisure (悠闲)                                    D.at work

18.A.kept                       B.escaped                  C.admitted          D.prevented

19.A.expectation          B.anger                      C.regret                     D.sorrow

20.A.wider                            B.bigger                     C.deeper             D.narrower

At one time no one could travel on an English road faster than four miles an hour. That was the law until 1896. A man had to walk in front of a car which could not go faster than the man. At night the man had to carry a red lamp.

Once Charles Rolls brought a car from France to England, but he wanted to drive faster than four miles an hour. In order to have no trouble with the police, he had a talk with some of the police officers, who ordered their policemen to look the other way when the car came along the road. This was a good plan in the country, but not so easy to follow in the busy streets of London.

One night Rolls and some friends started from London on their journey to Cambridge. One of the men walked in front with the red lamp, but he walked as fast as he could. The police became very interested in walls and shop-fronts when they heard the car and not one of them saw it.

They reached a hill, but what a waste of time it was to drive down the hill at four miles an hour! Rolls was getting ready to jump into the car, but then he noticed a policeman who was not looking the other way. The slow car reached him.

“Good evening,” said the policeman, looking at the car.

“Good evening,” said Rolls, holding the lamp.

“One of these horseless things,” said the policeman, looking at it with interest.

“Yes,” said Rolls, and waited.

“I’ve often wanted a ride in one, but of course policemen can’t buy things like that.” He turned and looked hopefully in Rolls’s face.

“Jump in,” said Rolls.

“Thanks,” said the policeman, and did so. “Now,” he said, sitting down, “You can let it go just as you like down this hill. There isn’t another policeman on this road for a mile and a half.”

1.The policemen were told “to look the other way” so that _______.

A.they could watch the car coming from the other direction

B.Rolls’s car could go faster than four miles an hour

C.they could make sure no one was in the way

D.the car would not hit them on the road

2.In what way did the policemen carry out the order from their officers?

A.They greeted Rolls when the car came along.

B.They walked in front of the car with a red lamp.

C.They pretended to be attracted by something else.

D.They stood on duty every 1.5 miles along the road.

3.The policeman who said “Good evening” to Rolls wanted to _______.

A.teach Rolls a lesson                       B.take a free ride home

C.have a talk with Rolls                    D.have a car ride experience

4.After the policeman jumped into the car, Rolls _______.

A.dared not drive the car faster than he was allowed to

B.could drive as fast as he wished within a certain distance

C.could drive on any road he liked for the rest of the journey

D.drove his car as fast as he could down the hill to Cambridge

A modern-day love story of a man spotting the girl of his dreams across a New York subway train and tracking her down over the Internet has failed to have a fairytale ending with the relationship over.

For Web designer Patrick Moberg, then 21, from Brooklyn, it was love at first sight when he spotted a woman on a Manthttan train last November. But he lost her in the crowd so he set up a website with a sketch to find her — www. Nygirlofmydreams.com.

Unbelievably in a city of 8 million people, it only took Moberg 48 hours to track down the woman, with his phone ringing non-stop and email box overflowing as usually cynical New Yorkers took sympathy on the subway Romeo and joined his hunt.

The mysterious girl was named as Camille Hayton, from Melbourne, Australia, who was working at the magazine Black Book and also lived in Brooklyn. One of her friends spotted the sketched picture on the Web site and recognized her.

But after finding each other, appearing on TV and getting international press, the couple took their romance out of the public eye, with Moberg closing down the Web site and with both refusing to make any more comments — until now.

Hayton told Australian newspaper The Sunday Telegraph that she dated Moberg for about two months but it just didn’t work out.

“I say we dated for a while but now we’re just friends,” Hayton, now 23, told the newspaper. Hayton said she is still recognized about three times a week on the streets of Manhattan as “that girl” and the question is always the same:“So what happened?”

“I think the situation was so intense that it linked us,” she said, adding, “it linked us in a way that you could mistake, I guess, for being more romantic than it was. I don’t know. But I wanted to give it a go so I didn’t wonder what if, what if?”

Hayton told The Suday Telegraph that she is enjoying single life in New York, keeping busy with acting classes, working in two clothing stores. Last week she had a small role as a waitress in the long-running daytime soap As the World Turns.

“I just can’t believe it happened. It feels like a long time ago,” said Hayton. Moberg, however, was still refusing to comment on the relationship.

1.After Moborg lost the girl in the crowd, he set up a website with         .

A.a pretty notice to find her                      B.a rough drawing to discover her

C.an exciting program to attract her              D.an inspiring story to move her

2.Moberg found the girl in a short time because         .

A.he phoned everybody in the city               B.he e-mailed everybody in the city

C.he continued his hunt day and night            D.he got help from the net citizens

3.What has happened to Hayton after the subway romance?

A.She has become a superstar in the city.

B.She has become a journalist in Australia.

C.She still gets noticed in the streets in New York.

D.She is out of work and is looking for a new job.

4.The best title for this passage may be         .

A.NY subway romance hits end 

B.NY subway romance causes debate

C.NY — a romantic city for the young couple  

D.NY — a heartbreaking city for the young couple

Do you want to live forever? By the year 2050, you might actually get your wish — if you are willing to leave your biological body and live in silicon circuits (半导体电路). But long before then, perhaps as early as 2010, some measures will begin offering a semblance of immortality (虚拟的永生).

Researchers are confident that technology will soon be able to track every waking moment of your life. Whatever you see and hear, all that you say and write, can be recorded, analyzed and added to your personal chronicles (履历). By the 2030, it may be possible to catch your nervous (神经) systems through electrical activities, which would also keep your thoughts and emotions. Researchers at the laboratories of British Telecommunications have given the name of this idea as Soul Catcher.

Small electronic equipment will make preparation for Soul Catcher. It would use a wearable supercomputer, perhaps in a wristwatch, with wireless links to micro sensors under your scalp (头皮) and in the nerves that carry all five sensory signals. So wearing a video camera would no longer be required.

At first, the Soul Catcher’s companion system — the Soul Reader — might have trouble copying your thoughts in complete details. Even in 2030, we may still be struggling to understand how the brain is working inside, so reading your thoughts and understanding your emotions might not be possible. But these signals could be kept for the day when they can be transferred to silicon circuits to revitalize minds everlasting entities (永生实体). Researchers can only wonder what it will be like to wake up one day and find yourself alive inside a machine.

For people who choose not to live in silicon, semblance of immortality would not be as useless as they thought. People would know their lives would not be forgotten, but would be kept a record of the human race forever. And future generations would have a much fuller understanding of the past. History would not be controlled by just the rich and powerful, Hollywood stars, and a few thinkers in the upper society.

1.The main idea of this passage is that               .

A.human beings long for living forever

B.there are many difficulties in making the Soul Catcher

C.people can live forever as technology develops

D.the invention of Soul Catcher has great importance

2.According to this passage, a Soul Catcher will be           .

A.a new machine on which research measures have already been made

B.a new invention in order to catch and keep human’s thoughts

C.made by British scientists to offer something that looks like living forever

D.made of silicon circuits which can catch people’s nervous activity

3.We can infer from the passage that semblance of immortality is            .

A.to be a reality sooner or later                               B.far from certain

C.just an idea that couldn’t t be realized at all           D.a fading hope

4.The meaning of the underlined word “revitalize” in the fourth paragraph is close to             .

A.make dead              B.make famous           C.make known           D.make active

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