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Vocabulary and Structure(10points 1 point each)

¢ñ´ÓÏÂÁи÷¾äËĸöÑ¡ÏîÖÐÑ¡³öÒ»¸ö×î¼Ñ´ð°¸£¬²¢ÔÚ´ðÌâÖ½ÉϽ«ÏàÓ¦µÄ×ÖĸͿºÚ¡£ 1.You may use bikeprovidedyou give it back to me tomorrow morning. A. unless B. provided C. though D. because

2.He could not hold back his tears on hearing that he was not admitted to the university A. hold up B. hold back C. get over D. get through

3.Good parents have the ability to communicate messages of love, trust, and self-worth with their children A. on B. for C. with D. to

4.The teacher required that all errors should be eliminated eliminated before the students turn in their term paper. A. deported B. eliminated C. deprived D. implemented 5.A person is lucky if his career coinciders with his interest and hobby. A. concerns B. competes C. coinciders D. compares

6.Out sleep influences our mood. our mood, in return affects our performance. A. in return B. in vain C. in short D. in turn

7.It wasconsiderate of you not to disturb us while we were sleeping. A. considerate B. considering C. considerable D. considered

8.I'd appreciate it very much if you could make some remarks on my recent article at the conference. A. requests B. references C. remarks D. restrictions

9.He is so absorbed in his own thoughts that he seems unaware of what's going on in the room. A. so B. each C. very D. much

10.No soonerhad I reachedhad I reached home than Michael arrived with Jane in his car. A. did I reach B.I had reached C. had I reached D.I reached

¢ò.Cloze Test(10point,1 point each)

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It is difficult to escape the influence of television. If you fit the statistical messages, by the age of 20 you will have been esposed.to at least 20,000 hours of television. You can add 10,000 hours for each decade you have lived after the age of 20 The only things Americans do more than them watch the television are work an sleep.

Calculate for a moment what could be done with even a part of those hours Five thousand, I am sold, are what a typical college undergraduate spends working in a bachelor¡¯s degree. In 10,000 hours you corded have learned several lauguages fluently, you could be reading Shakespeare in the original,and you could have walked around the world the world and written a book about these hours.

The trouble with television is that it discourages concentrations. Almost anything interesting and rewarding in life requires some constructive effort .The dultest , the least gifted of us can achieve things that seem remarkable to those who never concertrate on anything .But television

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encourages us not to make any effort It makes the time pass without gain.ÕâÊÇÄÑÒÔÌÓÍѵçÊÓµÄÓ°Ïì¡£Èç¹ûÄú·ûºÏͳ¼ÆÐÅÏ¢£¬20ËêµÄÄã»áÒ»Ö±esposed.toÖÁÉÙ20,000СʱµÄµçÊÓ¡£ÃÀ¹úÈË×öµÄ±ÈËûÃǸü¿´µçÊÓÊÇΨһµÄ¶«Î÷£¬ÄãÒѾ­»î¹ý20Ëêºóÿ10Ä깤×÷µÄÒ»¸ö˯Ãß¿ÉÒÔÔö¼Ó1ÍòСʱ¡£ ¼ÆËãÁËÒ»ÏÂÓÐʲô¿ÉÒÔ×ö£¬ÉõÖÁÒ»¸öСʱÎåǧÄêµÄÄÇЩ£¬ÎÒÂôÁË£¬ÊÇÒ»¸öµäÐ͵Ĵóѧ±¾¿Æ»¨·Ñѧʿѧλ¡£ 10,000СʱÉþ£¬ÒÑÕÆÎÕÁËlauguagesÁ÷Àû£¬Äã¿ÉÒÔ¶Áɯʿ±ÈÑÇÔÚÔ­ÓеĺÍÊÀ½çµÄÊÀ½ç£¬Äã¿ÉÒÔËÄ´¦×ß¶¯£¬²¢Ð´ÁËÒ»±¾ÓйØÕâЩСʱ¡£ µçÊÓµÄÂé·³ÊÇ£¬Ëü²»¹ÄÀøÅ¨¶È¡£¼¸ºõËùÓеĶ«Î÷ÓÐȤºÍÓÐÒæµÄÉú»îÖÐÐèҪһЩ½¨ÉèÐÔµÄŬÁ¦¡£dultest£¬ÖÁÉÙÓÐÌ츳µÄ£¬ÎÒÃÇ¿ÉÒÔʵÏÖµÄÊÂÇé£¬ËÆºõÏÔ×ÅÄÇЩ´ÓÀ´Ã»ÓÐË­concertrateÈκζ«Î÷£¬µ«µçÊÓ¹ÄÀøÎÒÃDz»×÷ÈκÎŬÁ¦£¬ÕâÈÃʱ¼ä¹ýµÃÎÞÔöÒæ¡£ 11.A.to B. under C. for D. at 12.A.at B. from C. after D. before 13.A.decades B. hours C. years D. things 14.A.spends B. casts C. takes D. uses 15.A.origin B. beginning C. source D. original 16.A.written B. write C. wrote D. writing 17.A.what B. that C. which D. why 18.A.requests B. asks C. orders D. requires 19.A.what B. whose C. which D. who 20.A.money B. time C. effort D. skill

¢ó.Reading Comprehension(30point,2points each)

´ÓÏÂÁÐÿƪ¶ÌÎĵÄÎÊÌâºóËù¸øµÄËĸöÑ¡ÏîÖÐÑ¡³öÒ»¸ö×î¼Ñ´ð°¸£¬²¢ÔÚ´ðÌâÖ½ÉϽ«ÏàÓ¦µÄ×ÖĸͿºÚ¡£ Passage one

Questions 21 to 25 are based on the following passage.

Michael Stadtlander set Toronto¡¯s restarant world on fire in the 1980s with his original food, and eastablished a national and international fame. In 1994,however,he decided to leave the city restaurant scene and seek a quiet life in the country, where he has been preparing meals on his farm two hours borth of Toronto and asks guests to bring their own wine.

Not long ago, Stadlander was charged with selling liquer without a licence, He said when a guest asked for wine at a dinner in December, he provided two bottles from his private stock.But the customer turned out to be an undercover Ontario Provincial Police(OPP)officer who returned a few days later along with four armed officers to seize 83 bottles of wine,and to search the farmhouse for records. The punishment could run as high as $100,000 in fines and a year in jail. When Mr and Mrs Smisth arrived at the farm on a weekend befre Christmas, they said that it was their annual celebrstion and asked if they could get some wine.Nobuyo,Stadtlander¡¯s wife,told them the policy was thar guests peovide their own..

Given the occasion, though, Stadtlander agreed to provide a bottle of white wiee from own cellar,at cost,as a favor, Later, Mr Smith asked for a second bottle and a detailed receipt that included the price of thr wine.He turned out to be OPP Detective Paul Smith and ¡°his wife,¡±an assistant who went as a witness.

¡°I was shocked,¡±Nobuyo Stadtlander recalls.¡±How could thy do this to us when we did them a favor?We sold them our wine at our cost.¡±.But Mr.Smith say,¡± No.they made $20.¡±

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Stadtlander is determined to prove his innocence and continue the business.

¡°People who live in the area have been very supportive,¡± he says.¡±And when this is over,I want my wine back.¡±

ÔÚ20ÊÀ¼Í80Äê´ú£¬Âõ¿Ë¶ûStadtlanderÉèÖöàÂ×¶àµÄrestarantµÄÊÀ½çÉϵĻð£¬ÓëËûÔ­À´µÄʳÎ£¬²¢eastablished¹ú¼ÒºÍ¹ú¼ÊÉùÓþ¡£ÔÚ1994Ä꣬Ȼ¶ø£¬Ëû¾ö¶¨À뿪Õâ¸ö³ÇÊвÍÌüÏÖ³¡£¬²¢ÔÚ¹úÄÚѰÇóÒ»¸ö°²¾²µÄÉú»î£¬ËûÒѾ­×¼±¸ÉÅʳ¶ÔËûµÄµÄÅ©³¡2Сʱ²©Ë¼¶àÂ׶࣬Çë¿ÍÈË×Ô´ø¾ÆË®¡£ ²»¾Ãǰ£¬Stadlander±»¿ØÎÞÅÆÏúÊÛliquer£¬Ëû˵£¬µ±Ò»¸ö¿Í»§ÎÊµÄÆÏÌѾÆÍí²Í12Ô£¬ËûÌṩÁËÁ½Æ¿ËûµÄ˽ÈËstock.ButµÄ¹Ë¿Í¾¹È»ÊÇÒ»ÃûÎÔµ×°²Ê¡Ê¡¾¯£¨ OPP£©ÈËÔ±·µ»Ø¼¸Ììºó£¬Ëæ×Å4ÃûÎä×°ÈËԱץס¾Æ83Æ¿£¬²¢ËÑË÷¼Ç¼ũ¼Ò¡£¸ß´ï10ÍòÃÀÔªµÄ·£¿îºÍÒ»ÄêµÄ¼à½ûµÄ´¦·£¿ÉÒÔÔËÐС£ µ±ÏÈÉúºÍ·òÈËSmisthµÄÔÚÅ©³¡ÉϵĵÄÖÜÄ©befreÊ¥µ®½Ú£¬ËûÃÇ˵£¬ÕâÊÇÆäÄê¶Ècelebrstion£¬ÎÊËûÃÇÊÇ·ñ¿ÉÒԵõ½Ò»Ð©wine.Nobuyo£¬StadtlanderµÄÆÞ×Ó£¬¸æËßËûÃǵÄÕþ²ßÊÇËþ¶û¿ÍÈËpeovide×Ô¼º.. Ö®¼Ê£¬StadtlanderͬÒâÌṩһƿµÄ°×É«wiee£¬×Ô¼ºµÄ¾Æ½Ñ£¬Ôڳɱ¾£¬ÊÇÒ»ÖÖ¶÷»Ý£¬ºóÀ´£¬Ê·ÃÜ˹ÏÈÉúÎʵĵڶþ¸öÆ¿×ÓºÍÒ»¸öÏêϸµÄÊվݣ¬ÆäÖаüÀ¨ËÕ°±ËáµÄ¼Û¸ñwine.Heºá¿Õ³öÊÀÊÇOPPÕì̽±£ÂÞ¡¤Ê·ÃÜ˹ºÍËûµÄÆÞ×Ó£¬¡°×÷Ϊ֤È˵ÄÖúÀí¡£ ¡°ÎÒºÜÕ𾪣¬¡±Ì«Ì«Nobuyo Stadtlander»ØÒä˵¡£¡°¿ÉÄÜÄãÈçºÎ×öµ½ÕâÒ»µã¸øÎÒÃÇʱ£¬ÎÒÃǶÔËûÃǵÄæÂð£¿ÎÒÃÇÏúÊÛÎÒÃÇµÄÆÏÌѾÆÔÚÎÒÃǵijɱ¾¡£¡±£¬µ«Ê·ÃÜ˹ÏÈÉú˵£¬¡°No.theyÌá³ö20Ôª¡£¡± Stadtlander¾öÐÄÖ¤Ã÷×Ô¼ºµÄÇå°×£¬¼ÌÐø¾­Óª¡£ ¡°Ë­×¡ÔڸõØÇøµÄÈËÃñÒ»Ö±·Ç³£Ö§³Ö£¬¡±Ëû˵£¬¡°µ±ÕâÒ»Çж¼½áÊø£¬ÎÒÏ£ÍûÎҵľơ£¡±

21.Stadtlander was accused becausebe sold wise to his guests without a license.Stadtlander±»Ö¸¿Ø£¬ÒòΪËûµÄ¿ÍÈËÃÇÃ÷ÖǵÄÎÞÅÆ³öÊÛ¡£ A. be offered too much wine for a guest B. be asked guests to bring their own wine C. be charged too much for the wine offered D. be sold wise to his guests without a license

22.In the 1980s,Stadtlandermade his restaurant well-known around the world.StadtlanderÔÚ20ÊÀ¼Í80Äê´ú£¬ËûµÄÊÀ½ç¸÷µØµÄÖªÃû²ÍÌü¡£ A. threw his original restaurant menu into the fine B. made his restaurant well-known around the world C. sought for a quiet life in the central part of the city D. opened one resyaurant after another home and abroad.

23.IT turned out that Mr. and Mrs. Smith werepolice officersÊÂʵ֤Ã÷£¬Ê·ÃÜ˹ÏÈÉúºÍ·òÈËÊǾ¯²ì

A. two farmers

B. two witnesecs C. hasbend and wife D. police officers

24.Nobuy Studtlander claimed that in the wine case they madeno money Nobuy StudtlanderÉù³Æ£¬ÔھƵÄÇé¿öÏ£¬ËûÃÇûÓÐÇ® A.$1.20 B. no money C.$100,000 D. a lot of money

25.Which of the following could be used as evidence against Stadtlander?A receipt with the wine price.

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