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D£®All he cared about was winning the final£®

½âÎö£ºÌâ¸É´óÒ⣺Ϊʲô½ÌÁ·Ô±¼á³Ö¼ÌÐø±ÈÈü¡£AÑ¡ÏîËÆºõ²»¿ÉÄÜ£¬ÕâÊÇ·´Ó³Ïû¼«µÄÒ»Ãæ£¬½ÌÁ·²»¿ÉÄÜ×Ô˽µ½Èç´Ë³Ì¶È¡£BÑ¡ÏîµÄÖ÷ÓïÊÇ´íÎóµÄ¡£Í¬ÑùµÄµÀÀíÅųýDÑ¡ÏÒòΪAllÊÇÒ»¸ö±í´ïÒâ˼̫¾ø¶ÔµÄ´ÊÓͬʱҲ̫×Ô˽ÁË¡£Äú˵ÄúдһƪÎÄÕ·´Ó³ÕâÑùµÄÁ¢Ò⣬ÐÐÂð£¿ÕâÑùµÄÎÄÕÂÄܹ»ÔÚÈç´Ë¹æ¸ñµÄ¿¼ÊÔÖгöÏÖÂ𣿴ð°¸ÊÇB¡£

34£®What probably caused the defeat of the boy¡¯s opponent in the final? A£®Over-confidence£® B£®Impatience£® C£®Inexperience£® D£®Exhaustion¡£

½âÎö£º´ø×ÅÌâ¸É¹Ø¼ü´Ê£ºthe boy¡¯s opponent £¬Ò»Ä¿Ò»Ðж¨Î»´ð°¸·¶Î§£ºhis opponent made a critical mistake¡£ÒòÎªÇ°ÃæÌá¼°ÕâÊÇÒ»³¡ÊµÁ¦ÐüÊâµÄ±ÈÈühis opponent was bigger, stronger£¬and more experienced. For a while£¬the boy appeared to be overmatched¡£ËùÒÔ¶ÔÊ־ͷ¸ÁËÒ»¸öÖÂÃüµÄ´íÎó£ºÇáµÐ¡£´ð°¸ÊÇA£¬Over-confidence£¨¹ý¶È×ÔÐÅ£©¡£

ÆäʵBÓëCÓëDÑ¡Ï×÷Ϊ²Î¼Ó½õ±êÈüµÄÑ¡ÊÖÀ´Ëµ£¬Ó¦¸Ã²»ÊÇʧ°ÜµÄÔ­Òò¡£ 35£®Why did the master teach the boy only that one move? A£®The boy could not do other moves with only one arm£® B£®It was the only move the master knew well£®

C£®It was the move his opponent would not be good at£®

D£®His opponent would be helpless once he made that move£®

½âÎö£º´ÓСº¢µÄÕâ¾ä»°£ºshouldn¡¯t I be learning more moves?ÎÒÃÇ¿ÉÖªµÀ£¬Ëû»¹Äܹ»Ñ§Ï°¸ü¶àµÄmove£¬ÅųýAÑ¡Ï×÷Ϊ½ÌÁ·Ò²²»¿ÉÄÜÊÇBÑ¡Ïֻ»áÒ»ÕеÄʦ¸µ£©£¬ÅųýBÑ¡Ïͨ¹ýÇ°ÃæÌâÄ¿ÌṩµÄÐÅÏ¢£¨Ð¡º¢Æ¾½è½ÌÁ·µÄÒ»ÕУ¬Ó®µÃÁ˶àÏî±ÈÈü£¬ÄÇô½ÌÁ·¶ÔÕâÒ»ÕÐÊÇÐÅÐÄÂúÂúµÄ£¬ÎÒÃÇÖªµÀÕâ¸ö½ÌÁ·ÊÇһλ¾Ã¾­É³³¡£¬ÔÄÀú·á¸»µÄÖª¼ºÖª±ËµÄ½ÌÁ·£¬Óë֮ƥÅäµÄÑ¡ÏîÊÇD¡£ CÑ¡ÏîÓÃÒ»¸öÇ¿µ÷¾ä£¬±í´ïµÄÒâ˼̫¾ø¶Ô¡£ 36£®What does the passage mainly tell us?

A£®One can turn a weakness into an advantage£® B£®It is very difficult to have a good teacher£® C£®Even a disabled person can win a match£® D£®Practice makes perfect£® ½âÎö£º´ËÀàÌâÄ¿ÇëÄú¿ÉÒÔ³ä·ÖÀûÓÃÇ°ÃæÌâÄ¿ÌṩµÄÐÅÏ¢£¬¼´³ä·ÖÀûÓñ¾ÍøÐ£µÄ½âÌâ·¨±¦£ºÇÐÌâ½âÌâ·¨¡£×ÛºÏÒÔÉÏÌâÄ¿ÎÒÃÇÖªµÀ£º½ÌÁ·Öª¼ºÖª±Ë£¬¶øÆ¾½èÒ»ÕУ¨°Ù·Ö°ÙµÄÒò²ÄÊ©½Ì£©£¬¶øÈÃСº¢ÂÅÂÅ»ñʤ£¡£¡È«ÎĵÄÖ÷½ÇÊÇÒ»¸öȱʧÓÒ±ÛµÄСº¢ºÍ°ÑÈç´ËÄк¢ÅàÑø³ÉΪ¹Ú¾üµÄ½ÌÁ·¡£

»ù±¾ÉϰÑBÓëDÅųý£¬ÒòΪÕâÁ½¸öÑ¡Ïî¶¼Î´Éæ¼°Ð¡º¢Óë½ÌÁ·¡£CÑ¡Ïîֻɿ¼°ÁËСÄк¢£¬²»ÍêÈ«£¬Ò²¿ÉÅųý¡£AÑ¡ÏîOne can turn a weakness into an advantage£¬OneÖ¸µÄÊÇСÄк¢¡£¶øÄܹ»Ê¹²Ð¼²Ð¡Äк¢³É¹¦µÄÊǽÌÁ·¡£ËùÒԾͰüº¬ÁËÎÄÕµÄÖÐÐÄ¡£

´ð°¸ÊÇA¡£ Passage Two

My five-year- old daughter knew exactly what she wanted for Christmas of 1 977, and told me so£®Yes, she still would like the pin-and-green plastic umbrella, books, long nightgown, slippers---fine. But really£¬there was only one thing that mattered: a Barbie Townhouse£¬with all the accessories£®

This was a surprise£®Rebecca was not a Barbie girl, preferred stuffed animals to dolls, and wasn¡¯t drawn to play in a structured environment£®Always a make-up-the-rules, design-my-own-world£¬do-it-my-way kid£®Maybe, I thought, the point wasn¡¯t Barbie but the house£¬which she could claim for herself ,since we¡¯d already moved five times during her brief 1ife£® Next day£¬I stopped at the mall£®The huge Barbie Townhouse box was there£º¡°3 Floors of High-Styled fun! Elevator Can Stop on All Floors!¡±Some Assembly Required£®Uh-oh£®My track record for assembling things was miserable£®Brooklyn-born£¬I was raised in apartment buildings in a family that didn¡¯t build things£®A few years earlier, I¡¯d spent one week assembling a six-foot-tall jungle gym from a kit containing so many parts£®I spent the first four hours sorting and the last two hours trying to figure out why there were so many pieces£®The day after I finished building it, as if to remind me of my limitations£¬a tornado (Áú¾í·ç) touched down close enough to scatter the jungle gym across an acre of field£®

I assembled the Barbie Townhouse on Christmas Eve£®Making it level£¬keeping the columns from looking like they¡¯d melted and been refrozen£¬and getting that elevator to work were almost more than I could manage£®And building it in curse-free silence so my daughter would continue sleeping- if, in fact£¬she was sleeping¡ªadded a layer of challenge£®By dawn I was done£®

Shortly thereafter, my daughter walked into the living room£®Her surprise may not be real£¬but her delight was utterly genuine and moves me to this day£¬34 years later£®Rebecca had spurred me to do something. I didn't think I could do£®It was for her£¬and¡ªlike so much of the privilege of being her fatherÒ»it brought me further outside myself and let me overcome doubts about my capacities£® 37£®In the author¡¯s eyes£¬his little daughter was £® A£®obedient B£®unstable C£®original D£®Stubborn ½âÎö£ºÒ»Ä¿Ò»Ðж¨Î»´ð°¸·¶Î§£ºµÚ¶þ¶Î¡£¸ù¾ÝÕâ¾ä»°£¬Always a make-up-the-rules, design-my-own-world£¬do-it-my-way kid£¬ÇëÄú¿ì¿ìÑ¡ÔñCÑ¡Ïîoriginal ¡°¶À´´µÄ¡±×÷ΪÕýÈ·´ð°¸°É¡£

obedient ˳´ÓµÄ£»unstable²»Îȶ¨µÄ¡úÒ×±äµÄ£»Stubborn Íç¹ÌµÄ¡£

38£®The author thought that his daughter¡¯s choice of the Barbie Townhouse £® A£®was natural for a five-year-old girl

B£®was influenced by her life experience C£®reflected the change in her taste D£®brought her back to normal

½âÎö£º¸ù¾ÝµÚһСÌâÌṩµÄÐÅÏ¢£¬ÎÒÃÇÖªµÀ×÷ÕßµÄÅ®¶ù¿É²»¼òµ¥£¬ÊÇÒ»¸öAlways a make-up-the-rules, design-my-own-world£¬do-it-my-way kidʲôÊÂÇé¶¼ÒªÓÐÐÂÒâµÄÈË¡£ËùÒÔÎÒÃÇÓ¦¸Ã·¢ÏÖAÓëDÑ¡ÏÊDz»·ûºÏÕâ¸öСŮº¢µÄ·ç¸ñµÄ¡£µÚ¶þ¶ÎµÚ¶þ¾ä»°ºÍ×îºóÒ»¾ä»°Rebecca was not a Barbie girl£¬already moved five times during her brief 1ife£¬ËùÒÔËýµÄÉú»î¾­ÀúÊÇ¿²¿ÀµÄ¡£Óë֮ƥÅäµÄÑ¡ÏîÊÇB¡£ 39. For the author£¬ assembling things_______?

A. was largely in his blood B. was a challenge he enjoyed C. was always his weak point D. was part of his family education

½âÎö£º´ø×ÅÌâ¸É¹Ø¼ü´Ê£ºassembling thingsһĿһÐж¨Î»´ð°¸·¶Î§£ºµÚÈý¶ÎµÚÈý¾ä»°£ºMy track record for assembling things was miserable£®Óë֮ƥÅäµÄÑ¡ÏîÊÇC¡£ 40. Assembling the Barbie Townhouse________. A. brought out the author's potentials B. turned out to be easier than expected C. actually drove the author crazy. D. was a bad memory for the author

½âÎö£ºÒ»Ä¿Ò»ÐÐä¯ÀÀ×îºóÒ»×ÔÈ»¶Î£¬×÷ÕßÈÏΪÊÇÅ®¶ùÈÃ×Ô¼º×öÁË×Ô¼º²»Äܹ»×öµÄÊÂÇ飬 let me overcome doubts about my capacities(Å®¶ùÈÃ×Ô¼º¿Ë·þÁ˶Ô×Ô¼ºÄÜÁ¦µÄ»³ÒÉ)¡£ËùÒÔÓë֮ƥÅäµÄÑ¡ÏîÊÇA£¨¼¤·¢ÁË×÷ÕßµÄDZÄÜ£©£® 41. In the last paragraph the author mainly expressed______ A. his pride in being a father. B. his gratitude to his daughter

C. his concern about his capability D. his delight in helping his daughter

½âÎö£ºÍ¨¹ýÇ°ÃæÒ»ÌâÄ¿µÄÍê³É£¬ÎÒÃÇһĿһÐÐä¯ÀÀ×îºóÒ»¶Î£¬ÎÒÃÇÈ·¶¨´ð°¸ÊÇB¡£ÊÇѽ£¬Rebecca had spurred me to do something. I didn't think I could do£®It was for her£¬and¡ªlike so much of the privilege of being her fatherÒ»it brought me further outside myself and let me overcome doubts about my capacities£®Å®¶ùÈÃ×Ô¼º×öÁË×Ô¼ºÈÏΪ²»Äܹ»Íê³ÉµÄÊÂÇ飬Ҳ¿Ë·þÁË»³ÒÉ×Ô¼ºÄÜÁ¦µÄȱµã¡£ËùÒÔ×÷Õß¶ÔÅ®¶ùÊǸм¤µÄ£¬´ð°¸ÊÇB¡£

42. What can be learned about the relationship between the author and his daughter?

A. They are on good terms with each other. B. They barely speak to each other.

C. They are polite but cold to each other. D. They keep secrets from each other.

½âÎö£ºÍ¨¹ýÇ°ÃæÌâÄ¿ÌṩµÄÐÅÏ¢ÎÒÃÇÖªµÀ£¬×÷ÕߺÍÅ®¶ùµÄ¹ØÏµ£¬Ò»¶¨ÊǷdz£ÈÚÇ¢µÄ£¬ËùÒÔÎÒÃÇ¿ÉÒÔºÁ²»ÓÌÔ¥ÅųýBÓëCÓëDÑ¡Ïî¡£´ð°¸ÊÇA£¬ They are on good

terms with each other£¨ËûÃǵĽ»Çé²»´í£©¡£ Passage Three

It is all very well to blame traffic jam, the cost of petrol and the fast pace of modem life£¬ but manners on the roads are becoming deplorable. Everybody knows that the nicest men become monsters behind the wheel. It is all very well, again ,to have a tiger in the tank£¬ but to have one in the driver's seat is another matter. You might tolerate the odd road-hog(Õ¼µÀÕß)£¬ but nowadays the well-mannered motorist is the exception to the rule. Perhaps the situation calls for a \Kind to Other Drivers\£¬ otherwise it may get completely out of hand.

Road courtesy is not only good manners, but good sense too. It takes the most good-tempered of drivers to resist the temptation to hit back when subjected to uncivilized behavior. A friendly nod or a wave of acknowledgement in response to an act of courtesy helps to create an atmosphere of goodwill and tolerance so necessary in modem traffic conditions. But such acknowledgements of courtesy are all too rare today. Many drivers nowadays don't even seem able to recognize courtesy when they see it.

Contrary to general opinion, young drivers have better manners than their seniors. But this is short-lived in the world of modern driving where many drivers neither expect nor give any mercy. This may be encouraged on the battlefield but is out of place on the roads.

Lorry drivers say they have almost abandoned the practice of signaling cars to overtake when the road is clear, because many of the cars took too long to pass. They couldn't be bothered to select a lower gear. The car drivers, after overtaking, slowed down again and hogged the road. Again, a motoring magazine has recently drawn attention to the increasing number of drivers who never wait for gaps.\manufacture them by force£¬ using their direction indicators as a threat rather than a warning.\´òȺ¼Ü)are quite common. It can't be long before we hear of pistols and knives being used.

Driving is essentially a state of mind. However technically skilled a driver may be£¬he can't be an advanced motorist if he is always arrogant and aggressive. 43. The author is most concerned about .

A. traffic jam B. road manners C. fast pace of life D. high cost of petrol ½âÎö£º´ËÌâÄ¿ÎÒÃÇ¿ÉÒÔ´ø×ÅÑ¡ÏîµÄÄÚÈÝȥһĿһÐж¨Î»´ð°¸·¶Î§£ºµÚÒ»¶ÎµÚÒ»¾ä»°¡£It is all very well to blame traffic jam, the cost of petrol and the fast pace of modem life£¬ but manners on the roads are becoming deplorable. ButºóÃæµÄ¾ä×Ó¾Í°ÑÆäÓàÈý¸öÑ¡ÏîÅųýÁË£¬´ð°¸ÊÇB¡£

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