ࡱ> [ Rxbjbj<ΐΐ[dZZ84# $/////ccc"""""""$&7)#qcc#//4u$p//"":!4"/qvl! "$0$!R*l*"*"c;|Qccc##dccc$*cccccccccZ i:  *YSN-N2015 2016f[t^^,{Nf[g6k'`hKm ؚ N Q0!h[\g=N0POؚ0-^ss0RKQY0WS w0 _SfsO T0!h[ zfNZ (2015.10.19) ,{IwS ,{NR ,TRqQ$N nR30R ,{NqQ5\k\1.5R nR7.5R 1. Where is the woman going? A. To France. B. To Japan. C. To Spain. 2. What can we learn from the conversation? A. The man will give a speech. B. The woman is worried about the man. C. Peter is nervous about giving a speech. 3. What language can the man speak? A. Japanese and French. B. English and Chinese. C. French and English. 4. How does the man contact his friends abroad? A. By email. B. By phone. C. By letter. 5. What will the speaker do tomorrow? A. Go to the Military Museum. B. Go to the hospital. C. Do exercise. ,{NqQ15\k\1.5R nR22.5R ,T,{6kPge VT{,{6 70 6. What does the new ski area provide for beginners? A. Safe tracks. B. Free equipment. C. A discount. 7. What is the woman worried about? A. The price. B. The distance. C. Safety. ,T,{7kPge VT{,{8 90 8. Where does the woman want to go? A. To the library. B. To the Student Union Building. C. To the university. 9. What can we learn from the conversation? A. The man is new to the university. B. The library is behind the red brick building. C. The library is in building No.16. ,T,{8kPge VT{,{10120 10. What kind of apartment does the man want to rent? A. A one-bedroom one. B. A two-bedroom one. C. A three-bedroom one. 11. How much will the man pay for the rent? A. 400 yuan. B. 390 yuan. C. 309 yuan. 12. What does the man have to do? A. Fix the telephone. B. Contact the power company. C. Contact the house owner. ,T,{9kPge VT{,{13160 13. What does the man do in his spare time? A. Play basketball with his friends. B. Swim with his friends. C. Watch track events. 14. What s the woman s favorite sport? A. Swimming. B. Tennis. C. Skating. 15. What will the woman do tomorrow morning? A. Go to a tennis match. B. Visit the mans school. C. Watch TV. 16. What does the man advise the woman to do? A. Practice playing tennis. B. Watch track events. C. Do more exercise. ,T,{10kPge VT{,{17200 17. How many books of Brooks were published? A. Over ten. B. Over twenty. C. Over thirty. 18. Why did Brooks write about the South Side of Chicago in her poetry? A. The scenery there was beautiful. B. Many Black people live there. C. She once lived there for a long time. 19. When did A Street in Bronzeville get the attention of library experts? A. In 1930. B. In1940. C. In 1945. 20. What can we learn about Brooks? A. She was a black woman. B. She wrote many poems during the 1920s. C. The Bronzeville poems were her last published collection. ,{NR t (qQ$N nR60R) ,{N qQ15\k\3R nR45R  NRwe Nk@b~vV*N yA0B0C0D -N QgsO y v^(WT{aS N\ymў0 A. A new survey conducted by the National Geographic Society (NGS) shows that although consumers in many countries are adopting environmentally-friendly behavior, others live in wasteful cultures of consumption. The 2014 online survey of 18,000 people in 18 countries gauged environmental attitudes and habits and their sustainability when it came to housing, transportation, food and consumer goods. Some consumer behavior is improving. In half the countries surveyed, people acted in more environmentally-friendly ways than they had in 2012. For example, Russians are using more public transportation and British consumers are buying more green electricity. But some countries reported that peoples habits were less sustainable than in the previous survey. Around 68 percent of Germans drink bottled water daily, and Canadians are among the most likely to own at least two cars or trucks. 2. Anxiety about the environment is growing. A slim majority of consumers 51 percent agree that global warming will negatively affect their own lives. Latin Americans are the most concerned, with more than three in four Brazilians convinced that climate change will impact them personally. 3. Americans resist going green. Nearly one in four American households owns four or more TVs. Americans are also among the most likely to avoid paying extra for environmentally-friendly products, and they consume more packaged and processed food than people in most other countries. And since the 2012 survey, more Americans are saying that they view owning a big house as an important goal in their lives. 4. The least green feel the least guilt. As in past surveys, the worst offenders express the least guilt about the size of their environmental footprint. British, German and Swedish consumers not only feel the least regret but also are the most likely say they wont change their ways. 5. Repairing, reusing and recycling are on the rise. Majorities in 17 of the 18 countries say theyd rather repair than replace a broken item, with Chinese and German consumers the most likely to fix something and Japanese consumers the least likely. American and French consumers are the most likely to buy used items; Canadian, British, and Australian consumers are the biggest recyclers. 21. The authors purpose in mentioning Germans is __________. A. to say that drinking bottled water is not environmentally-friendly at all B. to point out that bottled water is a less sustainable product C. to emphasize that Germans should change their habits D. to explain that people in some countries have some less sustainable habits 22. Which of the following is TRUE about the survey results? A. Japanese consumers are among the biggest recyclers. B. The majority of Brazilians believe climate change will affect their lives. C. Chinese and Canadian consumers like to repair broken items. D. Used items are popular with French and British consumers. 23. What can we learn about Americans from the passage? A. Three in four American families dont have TV sets. B. Many of them dream of owning a big house. C. They think green products are too expensive. D. They prefer packaged and processed food to health food. B Peer into a smartphone, and all will become clear. Smart Vision Labs, a start-up in New York City, wants to make it easier to diagnose vision problems in developing countries with an iPhone camera add-on. The World Health Organization estimates that 246 million people have poor vision. Of these, about 90 percent live in low-income areas without good access to healthcare or expensive diagnostic machines. To solve this problem Smart Vision Labs has combined two tools often used for eye tests into a single inexpensive and portable device. The first tool, an auto-refractor (ꁨRfIQN), calculates whether someone is short-sighted or long-sighted, and to what extent, by measuring the size and shape of their eye. The second, an aberrometer (P]N), looks for distortions (mbf) in how light reflects off the eye, which could indicate rarer problems such as double vision. This equipment usually costs thousands of dollars, but Smart Vision Labs says it has made a device with the same functions that clips onto an iphone. It can estimate vision problems by taking a handful of pictures of a persons eye and using software to analyze them. The company plans to sell it as part of a low-cost kit for people in developing countries. Earlier this year, Smart Vision Labs sent prototypes (SW) to Haiti and Guatemala through non-profit organization, Volunteer Optometric Services to Humanity. Optometrists tested the device on a few dozen patients in each country, asking them to look into it and focus on a small red dot for several seconds. People who used the device in the field were impressed with it. It was very helpful to have the technology available to us in Haiti, says Elizabeth Groetken, an optometrist from Le Mars, Iowa. I can see the benefit of this tool in countries that do not have eye care readily available. 24. People in developing countries have vision problems mainly because of ____________. A. poor purchasing capacity B. overworking on computers C. neglecting eyesight problems D. poor healthcare and costly diagnostic equipment 25. What is Groetkens attitude towards the Smart Vision Labs device? A. Doubtful. B. Positive. C. Indifferent. D. Tolerant. 26. What can be inferred from the last paragraph? A. Smart Vision Labs is always doing charity activities. B. People in Haiti have more serious eyesight problems. C. The new device will be popular in developing countries. D. Eyesight problems will be easily solved thanks to the device. 27. The purpose of the passage is to ___________. A. advertise a new product for Smart Vision Labs B. call on people to pay attention to eyesight problems C. persuade people to donate vision-testing equipment to poor areas D. tell people about a convenient vision-testing device on an iphone C A few weeks ago, I had a chat with my son Chases teacher. We talked about teaching children and what a sacred trust and responsibility it is. She and I agreed that subjects like maths and reading are not the most important things that are learned in a classroom. We talked about shaping little hearts to become contributors to a large community and our mutual dream that those communities might be made up of individuals who are kind and brave above all. And then she told me this. A few times a year, she asks her students to write on a piece of paper the names of four children with whom theyd like to be teamed up the following semester. Every Friday, she also asks the students to nominate one student who they believe has been an exceptional classroom citizen that week. All ballots ( N Thy) are privately submitted to her. And after each ballot, when the students go home, she takes out those slips of paper, places them in front of her and studies them. Who is not getting requested by anyone else? Who never gets noticed enough to be nominated? Who had a million friends last week and none this week? You see, Chases teacher is not really looking for exceptional classroom citizens he is looking for lonely children children who are struggling to connect with their classmates. How long have you been using this system? I asked. Ever since Columbine, she said. This teacher watched what happened at Columbine two students took guns and bombs into their high school and killed 12 students and one teacher  knowing that all brutality kf begins with disconnection. All outward violence begins as inner loneliness. She noticed that children who aren t being noticed may eventually resort to being noticed by any means necessary. And what this brilliant teacher has learned from this system is that everything even love and belonging has a pattern. She finds the patterns, and through those lists she breaks the codes of disconnection. Then she gets lonely students the help they need. 28. According to the first paragraph, the author thinks that _________. A. maths is not important B. her son should pay more attention to reading C. every child should be taught to be kind and brave D. the teacher should give sacred trust to children 29. By watching what happened at Columbine, the teacher learned__________. A. the pattern of love B. inner loneliness ends up in outward violence C. brutality can be avoided D. children need to be noticed 30. The teacher uses the classroom citizen system to __________. A. teach her students to love B. find the children who need to be helped C. give the lonely students a sense of belonging D. help the students who are not good at maths 31. What would be the best title for the passage? A. The outsiders: A Strategy to Stop School Violence at Its Root B. The Aim of Education C. A New Method of Teaching D. Love and Responsibility D A new study has found a link between aggressive breast cancer and stress. But the lead researcher suggests that the findings raise as many questions as they answer. The study covered about 1000 breast cancer patients in Chicago white, black and Latino. Soon after diagnosis, the women were interviewed to assess their level of stress. The researchers, led by Garth H. Rauscher of the University of Illinois at Chicago, compared the stress scores with the race of the patients and the aggressiveness of their cancers. Rauscher found that patients reporting greater stress were more likely to have more aggressive tumours$v . Previous research found that American black and Latino women have, at the time they are diagnosed, more aggressive cancers than white women. But researchers can t decide whether this is because minority women are somehow more susceptible to aggressive tumours, or because, for socio-economic reasons, their cancers are probably not diagnosed until the disease has advanced to a more aggressive stage. So, is having the aggressive disease causing the stress, or is stress causing the aggressive disease? Maybe some third factor is involved. Rauscher admits that he is still a long way from the answer, and says that more research is needed to better understand the relationship between stress and breast cancer. For a lot of reasons, it is probably good to minimize stress in our lives. But he cautions that his research does not mean that people who have had a stressful experience are necessarily at greater risk of aggressive breast cancer. 32. Which of the following shows the process of Rauschers research? A. diagnosis interview analysis conclusion B. interview diagnosis analysis conclusion C. interview analysis diagnosis conclusion D. diagnosis analysis interview conclusion 33. According to the passage, so far research has shown that __________. A. aggressive cancers cause great stress for patients B. there is a relationship between stress and aggressive tumours C. white women in America suffer more aggressive cancers than black women D. economic reasons play a major role in influencing aggressive cancers 34. The underlined words, susceptible to, in the third paragraph probably mean __________. A. afraid of B. careful with C. resistant to D. likely to be affected by 35. What suggestion does Rauscher give to people? A. Do not take more risks. B. Have more experiences. C. Try to reduce stress in daily life. D. Pour out your sadness to others. ,{N qQ 5 \ k\3 R nR15R 9hncweQ[ NweTv y-N QkXeQzz}vYvgsO y0 y-N g$Ny:NYYO y0 Technology has enabled people to connect fast and across vast distances. 36 Therefore, it is important to find ways to communicate with more value and be more genuine, while still keeping pace with the demands of the modern day. 1. Cut back on texting. Texting is a good way of keeping in touch and communicating with another person if calling them is not possible. Unless you cant help it, give up the habit of texting while walking, eating or driving because texting is not real communication. 37 Calling is a great way of enhancing conversations because its more direct, with a greater chance of successful communication. 2. 38 We are more willing to spend time on Facebook than actually turn away from our desks and have a conversation with the person working right next to us. A good way of improving real-time communication is to log off the Internet or log out of your social media. 3. Meet people face-to-face. The next time you open Facebook to catch up with a friend, call them up and meet them instead. 39 Take time to meet with the people who matter to you and you will get a kind of communication and relationship that staring at a screen just cant provide. 4. Technology is a tool. It is worth remembering that technology is only a tool we have at our disposal. 40 Use social networks to find people, to reconnect with friends, to support a cause and to contribute to the bigger picture in a more substantive manner. A. Log out. B. Listen more. C. However, it has also created barriers around us. D. Do you find yourself opening it more than necessary? E. Something as casual as coffee or lunch can help you connect and communicate with them. F. Every once in a while, its a good idea to cut back on texting and call people instead. G. We can t escape the virtual world and nor should we try, but we can choose to use it more intelligently. ,{ NR wƋЏ(uqQ$N nR55R ,{N [b_kXzzqQ20\k\2R nR40R  Nbwe NweTT@b~vV*N yA 0B0CTD -N QSNkXeQzz}vYvgsO y v^(WT{aS N\ymў0 0  I failed to protect you. That was the message posted online by Du Yijun s boy friend. He was with the 21-year-old Fudan University student as she died in the crush of the New Year's Eve crowd on the Bund. 00Du was one of the 36 people who died that night when a holiday celebration ____41___ into a terrible tragedy. Authorities say overcrowding and the ____42____ of the police to control the crowds were the main reasons it happened. 00For the last three New Year s Eve celebrations, a light show on the Bund had ____43___ large crowds and a large police presence, but this year the light show was cancelled and there were fewer police on hand. But the crowds came ____44___. About 300,000 people were on the Bund by 8:30 that evening and more kept ____45___until all hell broke loose around 11:30. 00For some unknown reason, on a stairway ____46___ up to the riverfront viewing platform, a sense of ____47____ overtook the crowd and they began to stampede(b).Some people ____48___ on the stairs and were stepped ____49____ to death. More lives would have been ____50___had it not been for a group of brave young men who urged the crowd to ____51___. Crowd ____52___ like the one on the Bund happen all over the world and they are becoming more ____53___.According to one study, human stampedes have more than doubled in the past two decades. In recent years, hundreds of people have died at ____54____ festivals, football games and rock ____55___ all caught in the crush of panicked crowds. In Shanghai, authorities have reacted to the Bund tragedy by cancelling or scaling back big events. But this isn't really necessary. Better ____56___ and better crowd control can ensure safe celebrations. 0468<>BDHLN`bdfhjprxz|侪{{{{{{{{{iYh#&Ihf5CJOJQJaJ#h#&Ihf5CJOJPJQJaJh#&IhfCJOJQJaJo(h#&IhfCJOJQJaJh#&Ihf5CJ OJQJaJ &h#&Ihf5CJ,OJPJQJaJ,o(#h#&Ihf5CJ,OJPJQJaJ,&h#&Ihf5CJ OJPJQJaJ o(#h#&Ihf5CJ OJPJQJaJ h#&Ihf<o(!6LN$ ^ + R }  F l `gdfgdf $dG$a$gdfgdf$ '(5L?@4RT - !!""9:BB5HCHOPQ"Q*CJOJQJaJh#&Ihf5CJOJQJaJh#&Ihf6CJOJQJaJh#&IhfCJOJQJaJo(h#&IhfCJOJQJaJh#&IhfCJOJQJaJ h#&IhfCJOJPJQJaJ4 6 V ( p ,Nd $p 8t(`gdfgdf(r;h &r'(s@Agdf`gdfA4d6 - !!""K$$$%P%%% ^`gdf & Fgdf`gdf$a$gdf`gdfgdf%&`&&&'K'z''''()M,-U11112B222 3B3z3$a$gdfgdf ^`gdf`gdfz333)4[44455679:J::s;; >?Y?w???@g@@A;`;gdf$a$gdfgdf`gdfAEAgAAAA0BxBBBBBCFHoIKHK|KKKLaLLL,M$a$gdf;`;gdf$a$gdf`gdfgdf,MwMMM\NNJOOO,PP,RSTUVWWHWWWW x ^x` gdf x;^x`;gdf`gdf`gdfgdf $;`;a$gdf$a$gdfWpX"YLYNY|YY:Z[]B_abce~~~~~~ $Ifgd76`gdfgdfv`vgdf`gdf00____57___, if you're going to a place where there will be a big crowd, you should take notice of where the exits are and, if the crowd becomes large, ____58____ away from the center. And most ____59___, if the crowd seems too big and makes you feel uncomfortable, just leave. No celebration is ____60___ losing your life. 41.A. made B. got C. turned D. broke42.A. justice B. failure C. exchangeD. disappearance43.A. attractedB. invented C. removed D. promised44.A. anyway B. always C. ever D. sometimes45.A. pushingB. callingC. arrivingD. occurring46.A. causingB. leadingC. servingD. reaching47.A. shameB. lossC. securityD. panic48.A. hitB. droppedC. buriedD. fell49.A. completelyB. heavilyC. publiclyD. incorrectly50.A. complainedB. removedC. lostD. passed51.A. run awayB. stand upC. put awayD. calm down52.A. campaignsB. disastersC. atmospheres D. damages53.A. frequent B. major C. enormous D. vast54.A. quiet B. nervous C. religious D. serious 55.A. music B. galleryC. concertsD. locations56.A. governing B. forecasting C. measuring D. planning57.A. Therefore B. However C. Thus D. Moreover58.A. moveB. jump C. push D. slide 59.A. absolutelyB. hopefullyC. sadly D. importantly60.A. worthB. equal C. valuableD. popular,{IIwS laNy (u0.5ks|ўr{v~{W[{\T{HhQ(WT{aS N0Q(W,gՋwS NeHe0 ,{ NR wƋЏ(uqQ$N nR55R ,{N qQ10\k\1.5R nR15R  NbPge (Wzz}vYkXeQS_vQ[N*N͋ bbSQUS͋vcknxb__0 The Chinese president put forth China's "Six 100s" initiative!P , in which China will make available to other developing countries in the next five years 100 poverty reduction programs, 100 ____61____(agriculture) cooperation projects, 100 trade promotion and aid programs, 100 environmental protection and climate change programs, 100 hospitals and clinics, and 100 schools and vocational training____62____(center).  China is aware of the difficulties ____63____ (face) the South-South countries. said Mohamed Farahat, a political analyst from Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies. "Xi's ____64____ (announce) will also increase China's credibility among the developing countries. The initiative represented ____65____developing trend of a new era, and paved a way for the community of common destiny for mankind." China also has several ____66____initiatives such as the Belt and Road initiative and the establishment of the New Development Bank of the emerging-market bloc of BRICS. China's ongoing initiatives proved that they are far from just being a slogan, ____67____embodied China's responsibility of promoting equitable development, Farahat added. Meanwhile, Diaa al-Fiqqy, secretary general of Chinese-Egyptian commerce chamber board of directors, agreed with Farahat ____68____saying that the aids announced by Xi ____69_____ (prove) Beijing's will in helping the developing countries. "China's actions aren't isolated from its statements and initiatives," he said. The Chinese aids will push other countries to take their responsibilities, ____70____will by the end pour in the interests of the developing countries, he added. ,{VR Q\OqQ$N nR35R ,{N we9eqQ10\k\1R nR10R GPk[ N^Bl TLhKNNbcO9e\Oe `OO9e`O TLhQvN N\Oe0e-NqQ g10Y kS-NgY g$NY0kYNmSN*NUS͋vXR0 RdbO9e0 XR(W:͋YRN*NoW[&{S('") v^(WvQ NbQQ勠Rv͋0 RdbYYOv͋(u(<)Rc0 O9e(Wv͋ N;uN*j~ v^(W͋ NbQQO9eTv͋0 la1 kYSvQO9eGWNPN͋ 2 SAQO9e10Y YN,{11Yw NR0 My hometown, that stands beside a wide river, is a beautiful place. There are about fifty thousands people in it. The streets are wide and straight, and there are many new houses and shops along it. But at one time my hometown was very poor. Life was good for a few rich family. But most of the people had not enough food to eat and houses to live. Everything has changed now. They have been put up factories, theaters, schools or flats. They have also built a modern hospital and the large hall which can seat two thousand people. On the river, boats busy come and go day and night. They carried the products to all parts of the world. ,{N fNbhnR25R GP[`O/fNgNS `OvV gSPeteregOT`OT⋂YUOMbf[}Y-Ne0`O9hncpQ\VO0 Q[p 1.SR-Nef[`Ns 2. w-NefN R05uƉ 3.f[1U-NeLkf 4.N-NV gS0 la 1.͋pe100]S 2.SS_XR~0 ,TR 1-5 BCCAB 6-10 ACABA 11-15 BBABC 16-20 CBBCA  21~25 DBBDB 26~27 CD 36~40 CFAEG [b_ 41-45CBAAC 46-50 BDDBC 51-55DBACC 56-60 DBADA l 61. agricultural 62. centers 63. facing 64. announcement 65. the 66. other 67. but 68. by 69. proved 70.which 9e that 9e:N which thousands 9e:N thousand it 9e:N them family 9e:Nfamilies live TR in Rcbeen or9e:N and the 9e:Na busy9e:Nbusily carried 9e:N carry Se DearPeter, I mgladtoreceiveyourletteraskingformyadviceonhowtolearnChinesewell.Herearea fewsuggestions.First,itisimportanttotakeaChinesecourse,asyou llbeabletolearnfromthe teacherandpracticewithyourfellowstudents.Then,italsohelpstowatchTVandreadbooks, newspapersandmagazinesinChinesewheneverpossible.Besides,itshouldbeagoodideato learnandsingChinesesongs,becausebydoingsoyou lllearnandrememberChinesewords easily.YoucanalsomakemoreChinesefriends.TheywilltellyoualotaboutChinaandhelpyoulearnChinese. TryandwritemeinChinesenexttime. 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