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Smell the flowers before you go to sleep...

Smell the flowers before you go to sleep, and you may just ________sweet dreams.

A. keep up with    B. put up with    C. end up with    D. catch up with

 

C 【解析】 C [keep up with 保持;put up with 忍受;end up with 以……为结束;catch up with 赶上。]  
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I hear Iron Man III is on recently. Let’s set off for the cinema to appreciate it now.

________ It’s about 10 PM. I’m so tired that I must go to bed.

A. Let’s find some of the action.    B. How do you find it?

C. It’s entirely up to you.    D. You can’t be serious.

 

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短文填空,每空一词。

Once upon a time, there lived a young boy named Hans Christian Andersen. He was very poor and had a long, ugly nose. All the other children t1. him. But when little Hans grew up, he became an internationally recognized writer. All over the world people of v2. ages and backgrounds know his classic fairy tales.

Nearly 200 years ago, Hans was born in Odense, Denmark. His father was poor but he loved literature and the theater. He often took Hans to the theater with him.

When Hans was only 11 years old, his father died. Hans had to q3. school and work in a tailor’s shop to support his family.

Hans was a very lonely child. He did not play with the other children. When he wasn’t working, he stayed at home, reading books and writing his own stories and plays.

When he was 14 years old, Hans moved to Copenhagen to try to begin a c4. as a singer or actor. The next three years p5. to be very painful and unbearable. He nearly starved to death trying to make a living.

At age 17, he met Jonas Collin, director of the Royal Theater. Collin read one of Hans’ plays and recognized his talent in s6. of Hans’ poor spelling. He helped Hans by getting a scholarship from the king to continue the boy’s schooling.

When he was 23 years old, Hans began his university studies. In 1835, he began writing his famous fairy tales. A7. from the “The Ugly Duckling” and “The Emperor’s New Clothes”, there were still a lot more. His stories are often surprisingly clever and contain deep moral teachings, therefore making him a s8.storyteller all over the world.

 

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完成句子。(请根据中文提示,用适当的词组完成下列句子)。

1.坦率地说,很难理解他正在说什么。

_________________, it is difficult to make out what he is saying.

2.你最好把电话号码写下来以防万一你忘记了。

You’d better write down the telephone number ____________you forget it.

3.这家公司三分之二的工人在经济衰退期间被裁员了。

Two thirds of the workers in the company ______________________ during the economic depression.

4.我不知道你在做这个项目的过程中如何忍受了这么多的艰难困苦。

I don’t know how you ____________________ so much hardship during the course of the project.

5.小行星1802 张衡是第一颗以中国人命名的小行星。

The little planet called 1802 Zhang Heng is the first one ______________________ a Chinese person.

 

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单词拼写, 每空一词。

1.Of the two possibilities, the f___________ is more likely than the latter.

2.Our English teacher often ___________(指导)us to improve English by listening to Studio Classroom and reading English books.

3.People in that mountainous area had no a___________ to education, so few children there could go to school.

4.The frown(皱眉) on his face showed that he didn’t a_________ of the plan.

5.They were in a  ___________ (尤其地,特别地) good mood because all their efforts had paid off.

6.Flying across the Atlantic for the first time was an ___________ (令人钦佩的) achievement for such a young man.

7.It suddenly o___________ to me that we could use computers to do this task.

8.I feel deep ___________ (同情) for those who lost their lives in the tsunami (海啸) in Indonesia.

9.People find that the ___________(简化)application forms are less complicated and much easier to fill in.

10.The police are expecting w___________ of the accident to come forward to provide more information.

 

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If you don’t have a college degree, you’re at greater risk of developing memory problems or even Alzheimer’s (老年痴呆). Education plays a key role in lifelong memory performance and risk for mental disorder, and it's well documented that those with a college degree possess a cognitive(认知的) advantage over their less educated counterparts in middle and old age.

Now, a large national study from Brandeis University published in the American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry shows that those with less schooling can significantly make up for poorer education by frequently engaging in mental exercises such as word games, puzzles, reading, and lectures.

“The lifelong benefits of higher education for memory in later life are quite impressive, but we do not clearly understand how and why these effects last so long,” said lead author Margie Lachman, a psychologist. She suggested that higher education may encourage lifelong interest in cognitive efforts, while those with less education may not engage as frequently in mental exercises that help keep the memory agile (敏捷地).

But education early in adulthood does not appear to be the only route to maintain your memory. The study found that intellectual activities undertaken regularly made a difference. “Among individuals with low education, those who are engaged in reading, writing, attending lectures, doing word games or puzzles once a week or more had memory scores similar to people with more education,” said Lachman.

The study, called Midlife in the United States, assessed 3,343 men and women between the ages of 32 and 84 with a mean age of 56 years. Almost 40 percent of the participants had at least a 4-year college degree. The researchers evaluated how the participants performed in two cognitive areas, verbal memory and executive function --- brain processes involved in planning, abstract thinking and cognitive flexibility. Participants were given a battery of tests, including tests of verbal fluency, word recall, and backward counting.

As expected, those with higher education said they engaged in cognitive activities more often and also did better on the memory tests, but some with lower education also did well, explained Lachman.

“The findings are promising because they suggest there may be ways to level the playing field for those with lower educational achievement, and protect those at greatest risk for memory declines,” said Lachman. “Although we can not rule out the possibility that those who have better memories are the ones who take on more activities, the evidence is consistent with cognitive plasticity (可塑性), and suggests some degree of personal control over cognitive functioning in adulthood by adopting an intellectually active lifestyle.”

1.What is the text mainly about?

A. Higher education has a better cognitive advantage.

B. Better memories result from college degree.

C. Cognitive activity does a mind good.

D. Poor education has more risk of memory declines.

2.According to the result of Margie Lachman’s study, we can conclude that ________.

A. education is responsible for the lifelong memory performance and risk for mental disorder

B. education early in adulthood can be the only route to maintain your memory

C. those with higher education did better on the memory tests than those with lower education

D. an intellectually active lifestyle does help to maintain your memory

3.What do we know about the study called Midlife?

A. Participants each were given a battery to test their memory.

B. The average age of the participants are 56 years old.

C. Participants had to perform in one of the two cognitive areas.

D. One in four of the participants had a 4-year college degree.

4.Why are the findings of the Lachman’s study promising?

A. The lower educated may have the same opportunities to keep up memory.

B. We may have ways to cure the people who have memory declines.

C. Adopting a different lifestyle can control over cognitive functioning.

D. We can find out the possibility to have better memories.

 

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