选择下列词汇完成下面对话。并在答题卡上将相应的字母编号涂黑.(共5小题,每小题1分)
A. take B. where C. present D. enjoyed E. pleasure F. broke down
A: Hello, Jim!
B: Hello, Wei Hua!
A: Thanks for inviting me to your birthday party yesterday evening. I _______ 1.it very much.
B: Thank you for your nice present!
A: It was my _______ 2.!
B: By the way, _______ 3.are you going?
A: I’m going to see Uncle Wang. My radio _______ 4. last week. I took it to him to repair yesterday. I’m going to get it back.
B: May I go with you?
A: Why not? His home is not far away from here. It’ll _______5. us about ten minutes.
B: OK! Let’s go.
A person has been badly injured in a car accident. It is necessary to give him a transfusion (输血) because he has lost much blood in the accident. However, special care must be taken in selecting new blood for him. If the blood is too different from his own, the transfusion can kill him.
There are four basic blood groups: A, B, AB and O. A single test can tell us a person’s blood group. Everybody is born with one of these four blood groups. People’s blood group, like hair colour, is inherited (继承) from parents.
Because the substances contained in each group are different, transfusion must be given carefully. Basically, A and B cannot be mixed. A and B cannot receive AB, but AB may receive A or B. O can be given to any other group, so it is often called the universal donor. On the contrary, AB is sometimes called the universal recipient (接受者). However, before being given the transfusion, patients usually receive only salt or plasma (血浆) until their blood can be matched as exactly as possible. In this way, it is possible to avoid any bad results of the transfusion.
There is a relationship between our blood groups and our nationalities. Among the Europeans, about 42 percent are blood group A while 45 percent are blood group O. The rarest is blood group AB. However, some American Indian groups are nearly 100 percent blood group O.
1.Which of the following shows the correct relationship in blood transfusion? (→ =" giving" blood to)
2.Usually, before being given a transfusion, ________.
A.a person needs to receive salt or plasma first
B.a person needs to have a good rest
C.a person needs to have a lot of food and water
D.a person needs to find the person with the same blood group as him
3.The third most common blood type among the Europeans is _______.
A.A B.B C.AB D.O
4.Which is NOT right according to the passage?
A. A person’s blood group depends on his parents.
B. There is only one kind of blood group in a person’s body.
C. About 13 percent of the Europeans have blood group AB.
D. Most of American Indians can be universal blood donors.
5.Which is the best title for the passage?
A.Blood transfusion B.Blood groups
C.Car accidents D.Blood group and nationalities
Look at the center circles of Diagram (图) A and Diagram B. Which of the centre circles looks larger?
Take a first look and you probably think that the centre circle in Diagram A is smaller than that in Diagram B. In fact , they are exactly the same size.
Then look at the picture on the right. What do you see? A vase ? Or two faces? Does the picture change quickly from one to the other again and again? Maybe or maybe not, but you can never see them at the same time.
"What's happening? Is something wrong with my eyes?" You may wonder at what you see. Don't worry. Here is how it goes:
When we look at things, our eyes send messages to our brains and then our brains interpret (解读) the information. However, sometimes our brains interpret the received information in a wrong way. It seems that our eyes are playing a joke on us. This often happens and we call it "Visual illusion" (视觉错误).
Movie makers often make use of illusions. They make the objects around actors much smaller or bigger than usual. This makes us believe that the actors are much larger or smaller than they usually are. The movies Jurassic Park and Honey I shrunk the kids just make use of illusions.
1.The centre circle in Diagram A looks smaller than that in Diagram B. That's because .
A. something is wrong with our eyes
B. the two circles are not the same size
C. our brains interpret the information in a wrong way
D. the two pictures change quickly from one to the other
2.What's the right order according to the passage?
a. We look at things with our eyes. b. Our brains interpret the messages.
c. Our brains tell us what we have seen. d. Our eyes send messages to our brains.
A.adbc
B.cabd
C.acdb
D.bcad
3.Movie makers make use of visual illusions to .
A.help the actors look better
B.make the actors much braver
C.help the actors become stronger
D.make the actors seem different in size
4.In the picture on the right, it seems that Line AB is shorter than Line CD, but in fact Line AB is as long as Line CD. Which paragraph can explain what has happened to our eyes?___________
A.The second one.
B.The third one.
C.The fifth one.
D.The sixth one.
5.The text is probably taken from .
A.an advertisement
B.a science book
C.a movie magazine
D.a story book
“I believe you’re the right person to write an advice column (专栏) for the students called Dear Amy!” Jenny, editor of the school newspaper, said to Andy, who finally agreed to accept the job if Jenny promised not to tell it to anyone else.
At first it wasn’t too bad. Most of the letters he received were interesting and quite easy to answer. Then came a letter from a person named Joe.
“Dear Amy,” it began, “I’m in real trouble. I’ve wanted to be a songwriter all my life, but my parents don’t even let me take music lessons. I have a guitar, but they both get angry if I play. I’ve tried explaining, but they didn’t listen. I feel sad. Should I run away from home? Maybe that will make my parents agree.” The letter signed “Joe”.
Andy thought about this letter for a long time. Should he advise someone to run away from home? Probably not. But didn’t Joe have a right to be a songwriter if he wanted to? Andy thought hard, but couldn’t think out a good answer. Andy couldn’t sleep. He just worried about poor Joe.
At a bar a few days later, Eleanor, a girl in Andy’s maths class, sat down next to him and asked, “ What’s wrong with you? You look a little worried.”
“I guess I do,” said Andy.
“If you get a problem, why don’t you try writing to Dear Amy about it?” asked Eleanor.
Andy sighed. But Eleanor continued, “In fact, I guess Dear Amy is rather busy with other problems. She still hasn’t answered the phony letter I wrote her last week. You’d better read it — it may even make the most hard-hearted person cry! It was supposed to be from a songwriter named Joe.”
1.Andy might be ______.
A.an editor of the school newspaper
B.a songwriter
C.a maths teacher
D.a doctor in the school
2.It’s clear that Dear Amy ______.
A.helps students who want to run away from home
B.answers letters from the students
C.writes songs for the students
D.meets readers at a bar
3.It seemed to be easy for Andy to do the job until _____.
A.he changed his name
B.he received a letter signed “Joe”
C.he met Eleanor at a bar
D.his name was well-known
4.In the letter Joe says that ______.
A.his parents don’t know about music
B.his classmates don’t understand him
C.he would stay away from his parents
D.he would obey his parents
5.The underlined word “phony” means “______”.
A.unreal B.boyish C.popular D.favourite
The nine-year-old Marc Yu is called Little Mozart. He is too short to reach the pedals (踏板) of a piano. Marc, from California, USA, says, “The problem is that my legs aren’t straight enough, so I have to get very close to the piano.”
Marc’s 34-year-old mother played Beethoven’s CDs to him when she was pregnant . Marc started playing the piano at a birthday party when he was only two. While the other children were singing “twinkle, twinkle, little star …”, he walked over to the piano and started playing the song. It astonished his mother, because that was the first time he’d been near a piano. Marc gave his first public performance, playing Beethoven, at six, the same age as Mozart. After that concert, Marc won a £225,000 university scholarship.
At present he practices the piano eight hours a day. He also studies part-time at the famous Colbum Music School in Los Angeles, and flies once a month to China for lessons at Shanghai Music School. Marc says, “I like playing the piano because it makes me have a lot of different feelings —sadness, excitement, happiness and so on. I like playing difficult pieces, especially those that my teacher says I shouldn’t.”
1.The nine-year-old Marc Yu is from .
A.China B.France C.Canada D.the United States
2.Marc played the piano at the age of for the first time.
A.two B.five C.six D.nine
3.According to the passage, the underlined word “astonished” means “ ” in Chinese.
A.使……理解 B.使……担心
C.使……惊奇 D.使……难过
4.At present Marc practices playing the piano .
A.once a month B.eight hours a day
C.in his free time D.only on weekends
5.What Marc says in the last paragraph tells us that .
A.he likes challenges B.he doesn’t like challenges
C.he is afraid of challenges D.he wants to be happy and famous.
There is one word you must learn before you visit the USA. That is “Freeze”. Remember it has a special meaning besides the usual one. It means “stand still and don’t move”. Often policemen use it when they are ready to use their guns. If one doesn’t obey the order and moves, he or she will be shot to death.
One evening in Los Angeles, someone rang the bell of a house. It was a dangerous area at night, so the owner of the house took his gun with him when he answered the door. He opened the door and saw a strange man. But the man turned round and started walking away from the house. The owner cried: “Freeze”, but the young man went on walking without obeying the owner’s order. The owner thought he was trying to run away, so he shot at the young man and he was killed.
Later, police found that the dead man was a Japanese student who was studying in Los Angeles University. He went to visit a friend, but unluckily could not remember the number of the house. When he realized he went to the wrong house he turned round and left. He didn’t know much English and so didn’t understand the word “Freeze”. What a lesson we should get for this!
1.According to the article, what does the word “Freeze” mean?
A.It means “be covered with ice”. B.It means “very cold”.
C.It means “dangerous”. D.It means “Stand still, or I will shoot you”.
2.The meaning of the word “owner” here means _________.
A.a policeman B.a man with a gun
C.a person who possesses something D.a dog of a house
3.Which of the following is right?
A.When you hear the police or someone say “Freeze” in the USA, you must stop moving.
B.Don’t ring the bell of anyone’s house in the USA at night.
C.At last, the police found the dead man was a thief.
D.The owner of the house was put into prison.
4.Which of the following is NOT true according to the article?
A.Police say “Freeze” when they are going to use their guns.
B.The story happened in Los Angeles in the morning.
C.The dead man was a Japanese student.
D.The dead man couldn’t understand the meaning of “Freeze”.
5.What’s the best title of the article?
A.A Japanese Student B.American Police
C.Freeze D.The Owner of a House