What does the woman need?
A. Someone to change the fish tank.
B. Someone to water the garden.
C. Someone to change the water.
Why does the man ask the woman to stop the car?
A. They have engine trouble.
B. They need some gas.
C. They have a flat tire.
What does the man want to do?
A. Find an animal doctor.
B. Buy medicine for dogs.
C. Let the woman check his dogs.
When Spencer West was just five years old, he had a serious disease that resulted in the amputation(截肢)of both his legs. However, the young Canadian has never let his disability get in his way. He has shown that he could do anything a person with two legs could do, including climbing the world’s highest snowcovered mountain—Mt. Kilimanjaro!
Spencer’s great adventure to get to the top of the 19,341foothigh peak began on June 13th from the small village of Naro Moru in Kenya. The team included his best friends David Johnson and Alex Meers.
For the first few days, Spencer walked 80 percent of the rocky road using his hands. Only when it became impossible would he use the wheel chair. As would be expected, the nights were very terrible—The ground underneath was rocky and the temperatures were lower than they expected.
Hard as it was, Spencer did not surrender the goal even once. However, as the road started becoming steeper(陡峭的) and rockier, his friends became worried about him—Even though
Spencer had spent over a year training for this event with his hands, they worried that he would have some serious injuries if he continued. They decided that in the last two days Spencer West would cut back his independent climb to half day and be carried the other half.
Things got more and more difficult as they got closer to the top. As the air got thinner, they suffered from sickness and the shortage of energy so that they stopped any talk—They needed all their energy to keep going. The only thought in their minds was to get to the top.
But, it was all worth it—Finally, Spencer West climbed Africa’s highest peak!
1.With whom did Spencer West climb Mt. Kilimanjaro? (no more than 5 words)
___________________________
2.What does the underlined word “surrender” mean? (2 words)
___________________________
3.What did Spencer West’s friends worry about according to Paragraph 4? (no more than 8 words)
___________________________
4.Why did the three climbers stop any talk when they got closer to the top? (no more than 10 words)
___________________________
5.Please explain how you are inspired by Spencer West. (no more than 20 words)
___________________________
1.The present educational s_______(体系)in our country really needs to be changed.
2.Miss Li is r_______(尊敬)by all the students in our class for her patience and seriousness.
3.We have i_______(面试)20 people for this job by now.
4.The car was found a_________(遗弃)beside the road.
5.All of us should try our best to protect wild animals from being s________(射杀).
6.A recent s______________ (调查)showed that more than 85% of the students were interested in the new plan.
7.I am e__________________(尴尬的)to admit that I made many mistakes in this investigation.
8.She shows a very positive a_____________(态度)towards her work.
9.Madam, I’m sorry to b_____________(打扰)you, but can you show me the way to the nearest post office?
10.What c_____________(结论)do you draw from the evidence? Please tell me at once.
Can you believe everything that you read? It seems as if every day, some new articles come out about a new discovery about this or that. For example, water is bad for you, or good for you. The answer depends on which scientific study has just come out. People cannot decide which food items are healthy, how pyramids were constructed, and why dinosaurs disappeared. When we look for answers we sometimes can believe persuasive researches and scientists. But how trustworthy are they really? Here are two examples of scientific hoaxes (骗局).
As far back as 1726, Johann Beringer was fooled by his fellow scientists into thinking he had made an amazing discovery. The fossils of spiders, lizards, and even birds with the name of God written on them in Hebrew were unlike anything that had been found before. He wrote several papers on them and was famous for those only to have it revealed that they were planted by jealous colleagues to ruin his reputation.
When an early human being was discovered in 1912, scientists at this time were wild with excitement over the meaning it had for the theory of evolution. There were hundreds of papers about this Piltdown man over the next fifty years until it was finally discovered to be a complex hoax. The skull (头骨) of a man had been mixed with the jawbone of an orangutan (猩猩) to make the ape (猿) man.
The next time you read the exciting new findings of a study of the best scientist, do not automatically assume that it is true. Even qualified people can get it wrong. Though we certainly should not ignore scientific research, we do need to take it with a grain of salt. Just because it is accepted as the truth today does not mean it will still be trustworthy tomorrow.
1.What is the reason why Johann Beringer was fooled?
A. His fellow scientists wanted to make fun of him.
B. His workmates are eager to become famous too.
C. These scientists made a mistake because of carelessness.
D. His colleagues was jealous of him and did so to destroy his fame.
2.The excited scientists thought that this Piltdown man .
A. was in fact a complex hoax
B. was a great scientific invention
C. contributed to the theory of evolution
D. had the skull like that of an ape
3.What can we learn from the passage?
A. Hebrew is probably a kind of language.
B. Truths of science will never be out of time.
C. People believe scientists because they are persuasive.
D. We are advised to believe famous scientists.
