More and more often we heard of people talking about Karaoke (卡拉OK). But what on earth it is about still remains a question for many people. Karaoke is a sort of acoustic (听觉的) equipment which was invented in Japan around the middle of the 1970's. It means "a band without people" in Japanese. In fact, it is just a music tape without words. This equipment first appeared in some public houses and snack bars, and mainly for the customers to enjoy themselves. Most of the music in Karaoke was popular music. Therefore, at times, when anyone felt like it, he might sing songs to the accompaniment (陪伴) of the music that came from the equipment. Shortly after its invention, Karaoke was spread to the whole world. It was introduced to China and was welcomed by many people. Although you are not a good singer, or even sometimes you may sing out of tune, you can always enjoy yourself by singing Karaoke.
In this passage "band" means "group of persons ________."
A.who play games on the sports ground |
B.who play music together |
C.living in the same neighborhood |
D.doing things together under a leader and with a common purpose |
Karaoke is just a ______.
A.cassette tape with only music | B.cassette tape recorder |
C.band from Japan | D.voice recording equipment |
Karaoke was spread to the whole world ________.
A.as soon as it was invented | B.long before |
C.not long after it was invented | D.before long |
In most of the time, I am devoted to my research in the lab with my friend Dave, who loves traveling very much. To make our life colorful and relax ourselves, in July, my friend and I are taking a camping trip. We will travel for four weeks and will tour the United States and part of Canada. We have decided to camp because it does not cost as much as vacationing (度假) in hotels.
We have to plan very carefully in advance. First, the car we are going to drive is very small, so we have decided to take only one small suitcase each and as few camping things as possible. We will take some medicine with us to prevent insects (昆虫) from hurting us, and also food for picnics. Second, there is a lot to see in the United States and Canada, so we have to decide on the direction (方向) we want to drive.
The date we are leaving is July 2, from which day we will have two months off. We want to see and do many things on our camping tour. We want to climb in the mountains, visit famous caves, and swim in cool mountain rivers. We want to visit many cities and talk to many people, which I am sure can enrich our experience greatly. We also want to find a hotel room if it rains at night. We expect to have an exciting trip.
The two friends are going to take a camping trip ________.
A.if they have four weeks’ time off | B.though it will be a long trip |
C.so that they can save money | D.because it will be warm enough in July |
Which of the following statements is possibly true?
A.They are now on the trip | B.They are going to make a tour all over the U.S and Canada. |
C.They are quite rich. | D.July is drawing near. |
We learn from the second paragraph that ________.
A.they must be ill. | B.they will bring a lot in the car. |
C.they must have studied the map carefully. | D.they must have been hurt by insects. |
It is quite clear that ________.
A.there will be no insects at all. | B.they are sure to take some medicine on the trip. |
C.the two friends will take turns to drive. | D.the two friends will share a suitcase. |
If they are caught in the rain , they will ________.
A.talk to their families while it rains. | B.ask others for help. |
C.have to stop climbing. | D.have to stay in a hotel for the night. |
Dear sir,
I read your story (of the 4th February) about the cost of living in the country rather than in the town, and I agree with most of the points that you made. My husband and I lived in the middle of Horlton until two years ago — a seaside town of nearly five hundred thousand people. When my husband stopped working, we moved to our present house in a small village at the foot of Roland Hill, and there is no doubt that our costs are higher now.
I have to do my shopping in small shops, where the food is more expensive than in city supermarkets; it costs more to travel by bus; and because the men who come to mend the television or the washing machine, have to come farther, we have to pay them more.
But it does not cost us much to enjoy what is beautiful in the country; and peace and quiet are cheap. Many people spend a great deal of time and money driving into the country to enjoy the simple things of life; yet we can enjoy them just by going out of the front door. It costs more to live here than it did in Horlton but now life really is worth living.
Yours faithfully.
Edith Randall
What do you know about Horlton?
A.A quiet town not far from the sea. |
B.A middle-sized town until two years ago. |
C.A town with a population of nearly half a million. |
D.A small village at the foot of Roland Hill |
What Mrs Randall really wants to express in the letter is that _____.
A.it cost less to live in the country |
B.it costs more to live in the country |
C.living in the country is no better than in the town |
D.she is quite satisfied with the life in the country |
One can probably find this letter in _____.
A.a guidebook | B.a newspaper | C.a speech | D.a story book |
According to the passage, which of the following is true?
A.The letter is written by an unknown person. |
B.This letter is a reply to the questions of 4th February. |
C.Living in the country is better than living in the city. |
D.The cost of living in the city is lower than that of the country. |
Most British telephone cards are just plain green, but card collecting is becoming a popular hobby in Britain and collectors even have their own magazine, International Telephone Cards. One reason for their interest is that cards from around the world come in a wide variety of different and often very attractive designs. There are 100, 000 different cards in Japan alone, and there you can put your own design onto a blank card simply by using a photograph or a business card.
The first telephone cards, produced in 1976, were Italian. Five years later the first British card appeared, and now you can buy cards in more than a hundred countries. People usually start collecting cards because they are attractive, small and light , and they do not need much space. It is also a cheap hobby for beginners, although for some people it becomes a serious business. In Paris, for example, there is a market where you can buy only telephone cards, and some French cards cost up to 4, 000 pounds. The first Japanese card has a value of about 28, 000 pounds. Most people only see cards with prices like these in their collectors magazine.
The text is mainly about ________ .
A.the history of phone cards | B.phone card collecting as a hobby |
C.reason for phone card collecting | D.the great variety of phone cards |
When did people in Britain begin to use phone cards?
A.In 1971. | B.In 1975. | C.In 1976. | D.In 1981. |
The main reason for most people to collect phone cards is that ________ .
A.they find the cards beautiful and easy to keep |
B.they like to have something from different countries |
C.they want to make money with cards |
D.they think the cards are convenient to use |
The writer mentions a market in Paris in order to show that ________
A.card collecting is popular among young people |
B.French and Japanese cards are the most valuable |
C.people can make money out of card collecting |
D.card collectors magazines are very useful |
Years ago, I lived in a building in a large city. The building next door was only a few feet away from mine. There was a woman who lived there, whom I had never met, yet I could see her seated by her window each afternoon, sewing or reading.
After several months had gone by, I began to notice that her window was dirty. Everything was unclear through the dirty window. I would say to myself, “I wonder why that woman doesn't wash her window. It really looks terrible.”
One bright morning I decided to clean my flat, including washing the window on the inside. Late in the afternoon when I finished the cleaning, I sat down by the window with a cup of coffee for a rest. What a surprise! Across the way, the woman sitting by her window was clearly visible. Her window was clean!
Then it dawned on me. I had been criticizing her dirty window, but all the time I was watching hers through my own dirty window.
That was quite an important lesson for me. How often had I looked at and criticized others through the dirty window of my heart, through my own shortcomings?
Since then, whenever I wanted to judge someone, I asked myself first, “Am I looking at him through my own dirty window?”
Then I try to clean the window of my own world so that I may see the world about me more clearly.
The writer couldn't see everything clearly through the window because .
A.the woman's window was dirty | B.the writer's window was dirty |
C.the woman lived nearby | D.the writer was near-sighted |
Finishing the cleaning, the writer was surprised that .
A.the woman was sitting by her window | B.the woman's window was clean |
C.the woman did cleaning in the afternoon | D.the woman's window was still terrible |
“…it dawned on me” probably means “ ”.
A.I began to understand it | B.it cheered me up |
C.I knew it grew light | D.it began to get dark |
It’s clear that .
A.the writer had never met the woman before | B.the writer often washed the window |
C.they both worked as cleaners | D.they lived in a small town |
From the passage, we can learn .
A.one shouldn't criticize others very often |
B.one should often make his windows clean |
C.one must judge himself before he judges others |
D.one must look at others through his dirty windows |
It was raining as I got off the train in Nashville, Tennessee. I was tired so I went straight to my hotel.
A big, heavy man was walking up and down in the hotel lobby. Something about the way he moved made me think of a hungry dog looking for a bone. He had a big, fat, red face and a sleepy expression in his eyes. He introduced himself as Wentworth Caswell – Major Wentworth Caswell – from “a fine southern family”. Caswell pulled me into the hotel’s barroom and yelled for a waiter. We ordered drinks. While we drank, he talked continually about himself, his family, his wife and her family. He said his wife was rich. He showed me a handful of silver coins that he pulled from his coat pocket.
By this time, I had decided that I wanted no more of him. I said good night.
I was born in the south myself. But I live in New York now. I write for a large magazine. My boss had asked me to go to Nashville. The magazine had received some stories and poems from a writer in Nashville, named Azalea Adair. The editor liked her work very much. The publisher asked me to get her to sign an agreement to write only for his magazine.
I left the hotel at nine o’clock the next morning to find Miss Adair. It was still raining. As soon as I stepped outside I met Uncle Caesar. He was a big, old black man with fuzzy gray hair. Uncle Caesar was wearing the strangest coat I had ever seen. It must have been a military officer’s coat. It was very long and when it was new it had been gray. But now rain, sun and age had made it a rainbow of colors. Only one of the buttons was left. It was yellow and as big as a fifty cent coin.
Uncle Caesar stood near a horse and carriage. He opened the carriage door and said softly, “Step right in, sir. I’ll take you anywhere in the city.”
“I want to go to 861 Jasmine Street,” I said, and I started to climb into the carriage. But the old man stopped me. “Why do you want to go there, sir?”
“What business is it of yours?” I said angrily. Uncle Caesar relaxed and smiled. “Nothing, sir. But it’s a lonely part of town. Just step in and I’ll take you there right away.”
861 Jasmine Street had been a fine house once, but now it was old and dying. I got out of the carriage.
“That will be two dollars, sir,” Uncle Caesar said. I gave him two one-dollar bills. As I handed them to him, I noticed that one had been torn in half and fixed with a piece of blue paper. Also, the upper right hand corner was missing.
The narrator (故事的叙述者)got to Nashville probably _______.
A.in the morning | B.at noon | C.in the afternoon | D.in the evening |
The narrator didn’t like Caswell mainly because of ________.
A.his appearance | B.his family | C.the way he talked and behaved | D.his wife |
The publisher told the narrator to go to Nashville ______.
A.to get a writer to sign an agreement for his magazine |
B.to collect some stories and poems from a writer |
C.to look for good writers for his magazine |
D.to visit his old friend Azalea Adair |
Uncle Caesar’s strange coat ________.
A.was worn by a military officer | B.was a new gray coat |
C.was an old yellow raincoat | D.had only one button left |
From the question “Why do you want to go there, sir?”, we guess that Uncle Caesar _______.
A.wanted to know why the narrator wanted to go there |
B.knew the place and was concerned about the narrator |
C.would charge two dollars for taking the narrator there |
D.must have lived in the neighbourhood before |
In the 1880s, people drank John Pemberton’s tonic to cure headaches. It wasn’t a very popular drink, and he sold only about a dozen drinks a day. That’s why Pemberton was willing to sell the rights to his medicinal drink. The buyer, Asa Griggs Candler, paid just $ 2,300 for the rights to Coca-Cola. Today, Coca-Cola (or Coke) is worth billions of dollars. It controls 50 percent of the world market in soft drinks.
How did Coca-Cola become so popular? One answer is that Asa Candler was a very clever businessman. He was one of the first people to use mass marketing. How did he do this? First, he made his product unique. When he bought the rights to Coca-Cola, it came in ordinary bottles. It looked like every other drink on the market. To make Coca-Cola look different, Candler modernized the bottles. He also made an eye-catching logo for his products. When other companies tried to imitate Coca-Cola’s name, Candler took them to court.
In addition to the unique bottle and logo, Candler spent a lot of time and money advertising his product. He used advertising to make a powerful image of Coca-Cola in the minds of his customers. He gave away free bottles of Coke. He put the name of his drink on pencils, trays, Japanese fans, matches, and many other things. Then he gave the things to people for free. He advertised Coca-Cola in the newspaper and painted the words “Drink Coca-Cola” on the sides of buildings and barns. By 1902, Coca-Cola was the best known product in the United States.
Candler was also able to make memorable advertisements. They often had catchy slogans such as “The Pause That Refreshes.” He also used famous athletes to advertise his product. They helped people to think of Coca-Cola as a delicious drink for everyone.
Today, businesses all over the world use mass marketing, but the makers of Coke were the first.
Candler bought the rights to Coca-Cola from _______.
A.the inventor of a medicinal drink | B.a well-known businessman |
C.a doctor | D.a carpenter |
The underlined sentence in paragraph 2 implies that __________.
A.he invited people from other companies to attend a court ball |
B.he shared Coca-Cola’s name with other companies after they went back from the court |
C.he played basketball with people from other companies on the basketball court |
D.he took legal action to those who wanted to copy Coca-Cola’s name |
Candler used slogans to advertise his product. Slogans are _______.
A.popular music | B.free products | C.memorable phrases | D.simple things |
By using mass marketing, Asa tried many ways EXCEPT _______.
A.making Coca-Cola look different |
B.paying $ 2,300 for the rights to Coca-Cola |
C.advertising Coca-Cola a powerful image in the minds of the customers |
D.using famous athletes to advertise his product |
The passage is mainly to _______.
A.explain that it is easy to use mass marketing |
B.advice people to spend a lot of money and time on mass marketing |
C.tell how Asa changes Coca-Cola into a worldwide business by using mass marketing |
D.describe different ways of using mass marketing |
Americans use many expressions with the word “dog”. People in the United States love their dogs and treat them well. They take their dogs for walks, let them play outside and give them good food and medical care. However, dogs without owners to care for lead a different kind of life. The expression “to lead a dog’s life” describes a person who has an unhappy existence.
Some people say we live in a dog-eat-dog world. That means many people are competing for the same things, like good jobs. They say that to be successful, a person has to work like a dog. This means they have to work very, very hard. Such hard work can make people dog-tired. And, the situation would be even worse if they became sick as a dog.
Still, people say every dog has its day. This means that every person enjoys a successful period during his or her life. To be successful, people often have to learn new skills. Yet, some people say that you can never teach an old dog new tricks. They believe that older people do not like to learn new things and will not change the way they do things.
People who are unkind or uncaring can be described as meaner than a junkyard dog. Junkyard dogs live in places where people throw away things they do not want. Mean dogs are often used to guard this property. They bark or attack people who try to enter the property. However, sometimes a person who appears to be mean and threatening is really not so bad. We say his bark is worse than his bite.
Doghouse provide shelter but they can be cold and lonely in the winter. Husbands and wives use this doghouse term when they are angry at each other. For example, a woman might get angry at her husband for coming home late or forgetting their wedding anniversary. She might tell him that he is in the doghouse. However, the husband may decide that it is best to leave things alone and not create more problems. He might decide to let sleeping dogs lie.
Dog expressions also are used to describe the weather. The dog days of summer are the hottest days of the year. A rainstorm may cool the weather. But we do not want it to rain too hard. We do not want it to rain cats and dogs.
The passage tells us something about________.
A.dogs and their life | B.the expressions that describe dogs |
C.the meaning of expressions with the word “dog” | D.the structures of dog expressions |
By saying _______, we compare people to dogs in bad ways.
A.“meaner than a junkyard dog” | B.“to work like a dog” |
C.“teach an old dog new tricks” | D.“as sick as a dog” |
By saying ________, we mean every person enjoys a successful period in life.
A.“he lives in a dog-eat-dog world” | B.“he leads a dog’s life” |
C.“he is in the doghouse” | D.“every dog has its day” |
If we advise the others to leave things alone and not create more problems, we say_______.
A.“become sick as a dog” | B.“rain cats and dogs” |
C.“let sleeping dogs lie” | D.“stay in the doghouse” |
It has been really hot these days, as _______.
A.it rains cats and dogs | B.we are having the dog days of summer |
C.we’re leading a dog’s life | D.we’re in the dog’s house |
Traffic TV
Avoid the jams — see where tailbacks are before you set off and while on the move. Traffic TV is free to use on your personal computer and only £4 per month (see below for other network charges) on your mobile.
How does it work?
Over 7,500 Trafficmaster cameras monitor traffic flow on over 8,000 miles of motorways and roads across the UK, keeping you up to date 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Traffic TV on your mobile
This downloadable application lets you see where jams are building up, the speed of vehicles at hotspots, and live pictures from thousands of roadside cameras.
Traffic TV is £4 a month for Orange mobile customers, after a 30 day free try-out. On other networks Traffic TV is £5 a month, after a 7 day free try-out.
Listen to live traffic news
Don’t want the download? Then simply dial the numbers below from your mobile to hear the latest traffic updates.
*Orange mobile users call 177 (calls cost up to 55p a minute)
*Other mobile users call 1740 (calls cost up to 59p a minute)
Help friends avoid jams
Simply enter your friend’s email address to send them a link to this service.
How can users get live traffic information?
A.By mobile phone or through Internet. | B.By watching a TV programme. |
C.By listening to the radio report. | D.By using Trafficmaster cameras. |
How long may a customer use the service if his/her network is Orange and he/she pays £20?
A.About 120 days. | B.About 127 days. | C.Five months. | D.Six months. |
What is the purpose of this advertisement?
A.To provide readers with live traffic information. |
B.To help Orange customers to avoid traffic jam. |
C.To attract mobile users to buy Traffic TV service. |
D.To explain how Traffic TV and live traffic news work. |
You may read this advertisement most probably ___________.
A.in a travel guide | B.on a web page | C.on a road sign | D.in a newspaper |
We were on tour a few summers ago, driving through Chicago, when right outside of the city, we got pulled over. A middle-aged policeman came up to the car and was really being troublesome at first. Lecturing us, he said, “You were speeding. Where are you going in such a hurry?” Our guitarist, Tim, told him that we were on our way to Wisconsin to play a show. His way towards us totally changed. He asked, “Oh, so you boys are in a band(乐队)?” We told him that we were. He then asked all the usual band questions about the type of music we played, and how long we had been at it. Suddenly, he stopped and said, “Tim, you want to get out of this ticket, don’t you?” Tim said, “Yes.” So the officer asked him to step out of the car. The rest of us, inside the car, didn’t know what to think as we watched the policeman talk to Tim. Next thing we knew, the policeman was putting Tim in the back of the police car he had parked in front of us. With that, he threw the car into reverse(倒车),stopping a few feet in back of our car. Now we suddenly felt frightened. We didn’t know if we were all going to prison, or if the policeman was going to sell Tim on the black market or something. All of a sudden, the policeman’s voice came over his loudspeaker. He said, “Ladies and gentlemen, for the first time ever, we have Tim here singing on Route 90.” Turns out, the policeman had told Tim that the only way he was getting out of the ticket was if he sang part of one of our songs over the loudspeaker in the police car. Seconds later, Tim started screaming into the receiver. The policeman enjoyed the performance, and sent us on our way without a ticket.
The policeman stopped the boys to .
A.put them into prison | B. give them a ticket |
C.enjoy their performance | D.ask some band questions |
The policeman became friendly to the boys when he knew they .
A.had long been at the band | B.played the music he loved |
C.were driving for a show | D.promised him a performance |
The boys probably felt when they drove off.
A.joyful | B.calm | C.nervous | D.frightened |
Try and see inside your mind a wide open blue sky and a wide green sea far away. Breathe in as you circle your hands high above your head, then bend back a little. Breathe out as you circle your arms back down to your sides..."
Following the yoga teacher's gentle instructions, Bai Yunuo,15, from the High School attached to Beijing Normal University tried to get each of her poses correct.
Bai's school offered 24 elective courses (选修课) for Senor 1 students this term and she chose two. It was her first yoga class.
"I'm happy that I can learn yoga at school. I love dancing but I had some injuries on my knees when I was a kid. So I decide to try something soft. Simply stretching into different poses makes me feel free and quiet. And the music is quite comforting. The class is relaxing after a whole day's work," Bai said.
Liu Zehao,15, found his interest was Junior Achievement (企业经营模拟). The course brought students into the real world of business. In their first class, Liu and his group members named their company "Vision". Liu was elected as CEO of the company.
"Here we learn to think like an adult. We have to make our company get more money. It's new and different from other courses," he said.
Liu and Bai take their elective courses twice a week with students from other classes who share the same interest. The students will get two credits (学分) from each course at the end of this term. They have to achieve eight credit points from electives to graduate from high school.
If you are interested in more about elective courses, please CLICK HERE to register for general elective courses.
What’s the main idea of the first paragraph?
A.Skills for imagination. | B.Learning tips. |
C.Instruction for yoga students. | D.Breathing rules. |
What can be inferred from the passage?
A.Bai does not like dancing. | B.Yoga is softer than dancing. |
C.Students study hard for credits. | D.The elective courses are easy. |
Which of the sentence is NOT true about Liu Zehao?
A.He was interested in Junior Achievement which brought him the real world of business. |
B.He was elected as CEO of the company named "Vision". |
C.He was an adult and he tried to make more money for his company. |
D.He took their Junior Achievement twice a week. |
Where can you possibly find this passage?
A.A textbook | B.A newspaper | C.A magazine | D.The internet |
Suppose you work in a big firm and find English very important for your job because you often deal with foreign businessmen. Now you are looking for a place where you can improve your English, especially your spoken English.
Here are some advertisements about English language training from newspapers.
You may find the information you need.
★Global English Center
*General English in all four skills: listening, speaking, reading, and writing.
*3-month(700yuan), 6-month(1200yuan) and one-year(2000yuan) courses.
*Choice of morning or evening classes, 3 hours per day. Mon-Fri.
*Experienced college English teachers.
*Close to city center and bus stops.
Tel: 67605272 Add: 105 Zhongshan Road, 100082.
★Modern Language School
Special courses in English for business. traveling , banking , hotel management and office skills.
*Small classes(12-16 students) on Sat.&Sun. From 2:00-5:00pm.
*Native English teachers from Canada and USA.
*Language lab and computers supplied.
*3-month course: 1,050yuan; 6-month course: 1,850yuan.
Write or phone: Modern Language School, 675Park Road.100056
Tel: 67353019
★ The 21st Century English raining Center
*We specialize in effective teaching at all levels.
*We offer morning or afternoon classes, both of which last three months and a half at
a cost of 800yuan.
*We also have a six-week TOEFL preparation class during winter and summer holidays.
*Entrance exams: June 1 and Dec.1.
*Only 15-minute walk from city center.
Call 67801642 for more information.
★ The International House of English
*Three/Six-month English courses for students of all levels at very low cost: 60yuan for 13 hours per week; convenient class hours: 9:00-12:00am and 2:00-5:00pm.
*A four-month evening program for developing speaking skills( same cost as day classes).
*Well-trained Chinese and foreign teachers experienced in teaching English as a second/foreign language. Free sightseeing and social activities. Very close to Central Park.
For further information call 67432308.
You work from 9:00am to 4:00pm every day. Which schools will you choose?
A.Global English Center and Modern Language School |
B.Global English Center and The International House of English |
C.Modern Language School and the 21st Century English Training Center |
D.The 21st Century English Training Center and The International House of English |
You will probably prefer to go to the International House because it _____.
A.has native English teachers |
B.has special course in spoken English |
C.costs less than the other schools |
D.offers free sightseeing and social activities |
If you want to apply for a university in the USA, you may attend _____.
A.The 21st Century English Training Center |
B.The International House of English |
C.Modern Language School |
D.Global English Center |
If you take the evening program at the International House, you will pay about _____.
A.60 yuan | B.240 yuan | C.720 yuan | D.1,000 yuan |
It seems that some people go out of their way to get into trouble. That’s more or less what happened the night that Nashville Police Officer Floyd Hyde was on duty.
“I was on the way to a personal-injury accident in West Nashville. As I got onto Highway 40, blue lights and sirens (警笛) going, I fell in behind a gold Pontiac Firebird that suddenly seemed to take off quickly down the highway. The driver somehow panicked at the sight of me. He was going more than a hundred miles an hour and began passing cars on the shoulder. ”
But Hyde couldn’t go after him. Taking care of injured people is always more important than worrying about speeders, so the officer had to stay on his way to the accident. But he did try to keep the Firebird in sight as he drove, hoping another nearby unit would be able to step in and stop the speeding car. As it turned out, keeping the Firebird in sight was not that difficult. Every turn the Pontiac made was the very turn the officer needed to get to the accident scene.
Hyde followed the Pontiac all the way to his destination. At that point he found another unit had already arrived at the accident scene. His help wasn’t needed. Now he was free to try to stop the driver of the Firebird, who by this time had developed something new to panic about.
“Just about that time,” Hyde says, “I saw fire coming out from under that car, with blue smoke and oil going everywhere. He’d blown his engine. Now he had to stop. ”
“After I arrested him, I asked him why he was running. He told me he didn’t have a driver’s license.”
That accident cost the driver of the Firebird plenty — a thousand dollars for the new engine — not to mention the charges for driving without a license, attempting to run away, and dangerous driving.
Why did the driver of the Firebird suddenly speed down the highway?
A.Because he was racing with another driver on the road. |
B.Because he realized he had to hurry to the accident scene. |
C.Because he wanted to overtake other cars on the shoulder. |
D.Because he thought the police officer wanted to stop him. |
Which of the following statements is true?
A.Someone else was taking care of the injured person. |
B.The Pontiac reached its destination at the accident scene. |
C.Hyde knew where he was going by following the right car. |
D.The policeman was running after a speeder on Highway 40. |
The driver of the Firebird _____.
A.took a wrong turn on the way | B.had some trouble with his car |
C.was stopped by the police officer | D.paid for the expenses of the accident |
What is probably the best title for the article?
A.Losing His Way? | B.Fun All the Way? |
C.Going My Way? | D.Help on the Way? |
One in five American families will move every year. Moving is one of the most stress-producing events a family has to go through. Experts say it can be harder for children. How do you help your child adjust to the changes?
The Ricardos moved from their old house to a new home. Same family, same dog-but it was harder for 9-year-old Elena. She hated the room, the house and everything. She hated leaving her friends the most.
“ I was so emotional. I mean, saying goodbye to all my friends…..my very close friends, who was my neighbor, made me so sad,” says Elena.
For some children, the emotional stress of moving is not much more different from the emotions when someone has died.
“There’s that sense that, ‘I’ve lost my friends, my friends, my base, my school, my teachers-everything I knew that made me feel safe is all gone now. I have to start over,” says Dr. Tim Jordan.
Starting over is exactly Dr. Tim Jordan’s advice. Make new friends, enter the new school and enter the new neighborhood. And here are some other pieces of advice.
● Explain clearly to the children why the move is necessary.
● Familiarize(使熟悉) the children as much as possible with the new area with maps, photographs or the daily newspaper.
● After the move, got the children to join in activities in the place.
● Help the children keep in touch with friends from the neighborhood before through telephone, letters, e-mail, and personal visits.
Which of the following is useful to reduce the children’s stress before the move?
A.Let doctors give children some advice. |
B.Try letting children accept the fact of moving. |
C.Let children keep in touch with their former friends. |
D.Copy the new environment in the old home. |
What can we know from the passage?
A.Most American children can get used to the changes in moving. |
B.Dr. Tim Jordan lost his family, friends, teachers after moving. |
C.The emotional stress of moving is the same in some way as that of knowing someone’s death. |
D.the Ricardos lost their dogs after moving to their new house. |
The passage mainly wants to _____
A.tell parents the reasons of moving. | B.explain the reasons of stress. |
C.give parents some advice on moving. | D.teach parents how to move. |
Most of us use the telephone several times a day to talk with friends or make social arrangements(安排). These calls are usually quite easy and require little planning.
Using the telephone for business purpose is different. In any organization the person on the telephone represents the company and gives an impression of the firm to the outside world.
If you want to ensure good public relations, you need to master effective telephone techniques.
You should try to give an impression of an efficient, friendly, progressive company eager to give good service.
Before calling
Choose the right time. Consider the cost, urgency and convenience. When calling overseas, you need to consider the time difference.
Check the number. A great deal of money is wasted each year on dialing wrong numbers.
Plan your call. Make a list of points and questions to be raised.
Be prepared. Gather any files, papers or information that may be needed during the call. It is unprofessional to have to say “Hold on while I look for that.”
If you have to ask a caller to hold on, keep going back and assuring him/her that you will be as quick as possible.
Avoid interruptions. Call at a time when you are unlikely to be distracted(分心).
During the call
Be courteous, polite. Make time for suitable greetings like “How are you today, Jim?” and “Did you enjoy your holiday”?
Put a smile in your voice. Remember, your caller can not see you, so use intonation to good effect and try to sound confident, decisive, helpful, and interested.
Check your notes. Look back at your notes to ensure that you have covered everything and quote figures and other data correctly.
Get feedback. Make sure the caller understands the message correctly, especially deadlines and actions that are involved.
Be courteous. Finish by thanking the caller for his or her time and trouble.
After the call
Make notes. Let it become a habit to make notes of the call and place them in an appropriate file.
Take actions. If you need to send a letter of confirmation or inform someone in your organization about any details of the call, do it immediately so that you do not forget important points.
Before calling, you have to _____.
A.stay at your company only | B.learn important data and figures by heart |
C.get things ready for the communication | D.choose the right time and place |
During the call, it is unsuitable to _____.
A.be decisive | B.be heard in low spirits | C.check your notes | D.get feedback |
What does the underlined word “courteous” in the passage mean?
A.Polite. | B.Active. | C.Effective. | D.Correct. |