A:How are you? B:I'm fine. Thank you. C:How do you do? D:Nice to meet you. 答案: B
4、- David injured his leg playing football yesterday. - Really? _______ A:Who did that?
B:What's wrong with him? C:How did that happen? D:Why was he so careless? 答案: C
5、- Who's speaking? - This is Tom .
A:speaks B:spoken
C:speaking D:saying 答案: C 二、阅读理解
1、 Oil is so important that it is sometimes called \
gold\run our cars and factories and to heat our homes, offices and schools. Many everyday things are made from oil. Your shirt may have oil in the material. The soap you wash your hands with might also be made from oil. Your favorite plastic toy is made from oil.
Oil is hard to find, because it is trapped deep under the earth. Once the only way people knew there was oil
someplace if it leaked out of the ground. Today, however, we have many ways of finding oil. One tool measures the pull of gravity. Places where gravity is weaker are more likely to have oil. Another tool is sound waves. Sound waves travel through different kinds of rocks at different speeds. We can use them to find the rocks that have oil in them.
We need a lot of oil, and we are using up the oil wells we know about. Soon we must find new ways of looking for this \
(1)、From this passage, we can know oil is a source of energy. A:T B:F 答案: A
(2)、According to the passage, we can tell that oil is found only
under water. A:T B:F 答案: B
(3)、Sound waves travel through different kinds of rocks at different speeds. A:T B:F 答案: A
(4)、Many things are made from oil. A:T B:F 答案: A
(5)、The main idea of the whole story is that oil is important for us but hard to find. A:T B:F 答案: A
2、Britain and France are separated by the English Channel, a body of water that can be crossed in as few as 20 minutes. But the cultures of the two countries sometimes
seem to be miles apart.
Last Thursday Britain and France celebrated the 100th anniversary (周年纪念) of the signing of a friendship agreement called the Entente Cordiality. The agreement marked a new beginning for the countries following centuries of wars and love-hate partnership.
But their relationship has been ups and downs over the past century. Just last year, there were fierce disagreements over the Iraq war-which British Prime Minister Tony Blair supported despite French President Jacques Chirac speaking out against it. This discomfort is expressed in Blair and Chirac's body language at international meetings. While the French leader often greets German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder with a hug, Blair just receives a handshake. However, some political experts say the war in Iraq could in fact have helped ties.
The history of divisions may well be because of the very different ways in which the two sides see the world. But this doesn't stop 12 million Britons taking holidays in France each year. However, only 3 million French come in the opposite direction. Surveys show that most French people feel closer to the Germans than they do to the British. And
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