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tracked him online£®By 9£º00 a£®m£®£¬my eyes were fixed on a dot on a screen that represented my father and his progress£®He was making steady progress on the bike trail until all of£¬a sudden I saw his dot stop moving£®I assumed this was a technical fault£®After all£¬Camp Monroe Was not known for its Wi-Fi£®Actually a gust of wind had caused a huge tent to blow into him£¬knocking him to the roadside£®
At the hospital£¬he discovered he had four broken bones£®While still recovering from his accident£¬he was dealt a second blow£®He was diagnosed(Õï¶Ï)with cancer and£¬although still weak from his injuries£¬had to suffer from accelerated radiation and surgery£®His athletic future was looking more and more bare£®
However£¬as he got better£¬he started to train again£®Soon he was running weekly£¬bounding out of the house with a look of determination that both impressed and worried us£®Much to our surprise£¬he just kept getting stronger£®His desire to return to something he loved was greater than his expectation£®Last summer£¬exactly three years after his accident£¬my father completed the Iron¡ªMan once again£®This time£¬he dashed across the finish line£¬his fist punching the air in celebration£®
Now£¬I believe in the power of determination to beat the odds£¬regardless of the circumstance£®Today£¬because of my dad£¬I believe in setting my own rules£¬and not letting others command what I can or cannot do£®And I believe that life is just like that little dot£»it can be gone in a second£¬so we must make every moment count£®
24£®What prevented Dad from moving on during the match? A£®An accident£® B£®The flat tire£® C£®The technical fault£® D£®Terrible road conditions.
25£®How did the author feel about Dad¡¯s future match while in hospital? A£®Expected£® B£®Doubtful£® C£®Cautious£® 26£®Why did Dad enter the Iron¡ªMan once again? A£®He liked to show off.
B£®He was anxious to win the prize£® C£®He did what he was fond of£® D£®He wanted to challenge to his family£® 27£®What can be learned from Dad? A£®Let masters decide our lives£® B£®Failure is the mother of success£®
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D£®Hopeful£®
C£®Bad beginning makes a bad ending£® D£®Remain true to the original dream£®
C
In the United States£¬a company is working on a project that could change the way we think about public transportation£®Its planned system would move people around in steel tubes£®Those passengers would be traveling at speeds of up to 1,200 kilometers per hour£®
The futuristic steel tube transportation system is called Hyper1oop£®Workers plan to test the system next year in a specially built community called Quay Valley£®The town will be powered entirely by energy from the sun£®
The Hyperloop transport system is the idea of businessman Elon Musk£®Dirk Ahlborn is head of Hyperloop Transportation Technologies£®He says his company has taken Mr£®Musk¡¯s idea and is developing a system that will be safe£¬environmentally friendly and fast£®
¡°It¡¯s 100 percent solar powered¡we¡¯re not going to get up to 760 miles per hour£¬but we believe we can actually break the records that are existing right now£®¡±
This means that a four-hour drive from Los Angeles£¬California to Las Vegas£¬Nevada£¬could someday take only 30 minutes by Hyperloop£®The system involves a series of capsules that float inside a long tube£®These containers would not need to travel along a pathway or track£®The system has been designed to operate above or below ground£®
¡°Inside the tube you create a low pressure environment very similar to an airplane that¡¯s at high altitudes£®So now the capsule travelling inside the tube doesn¡¯t come up against as much resistance£¬and therefore can travel really fast with very little energy£®¡±
Dick Ahlborn and his company will use an eight¡ªkilometer track in Quay Valley to find the best way to set up passenger traffic and repair capsules£®A larger system will cost an estimated six to $10 billion to build£®If Mr£®Ahlborn and his company succeed£¬we may one day see these very fast Hyperloop capsules speeding through tubes around the world£® 28£®Which of the following is True of Hyperloop? A£®It will travel along a pathway or track£®
B£®It will use more energy than current trains£® C£®There is a high pressure inside the tube of it£® D£®A series of experiments on it will be carried on£® 29£®We may learn from the text that
A£®Dirk is worried about the speed of Hyperloop
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B£®Hyperloop has been built in the United States C£®Hyperloop will be powered by energy from the sun D£®Hyperloop has reached to 760 miles per hour
30£®What does the underlined word¡°containers¡±in Paragraph 5 refer to? A£®Systems£® B£®Capsules£® 31£®What is the best title for the text? A£®Hyperloop Is Closer To Reality
C£®Tubes£® D£®Airplanes£®
B£®Hyperloop Will Test At Quay Valley C£®Elon Musk¡¯s Idea Is Under Discussion D£®Hyperloop Travels Around The World
D
The word¡°diary¡±comes from the Latin word¡°diarium¡±£¬which means¡°daily allowance¡±£®It refers to a book for disconnected writings by date and is used for business notes£¬planning activities£¬keeping track of scheduled appointments£¬or documenting what has already happened£®
In America£¬from the 1940s through the 1980s£¬a diary was thought of mostly as a way to privately express one¡¯s deepest thoughts while keeping marks about the day£®In those times£¬and even continuing on today£¬writing in a diary was like writing to a special friend£®Many times£¬movies would show a teenage girl beginning to write in her diary while she said aloud£¬¡°Dear diary,¡¡±What followed was a brief statement of the day£¬usually filled with emotion£®
Those private reflections may have historical significance long after the author¡¯s death£®A diary kept by a young German Jewish girl by the name of Anne Frank provides us with invaluable lessons about history£¬for she documented her experiences while she hid from the Nazis during their occupation of the Netherlands in the World War II£®Her diary became one of the world¡¯s most widely read books and is the basis for many films£®
Semuel Pepys£¬who lived during the 17th Century£¬is the earliest diary-keeper that is famous today£®His diary is also an important documentation of history£¬for it gives personal insight into London¡¯s Great Plague and the Great Fire£®Pepys took diary writing from the realm of business to the individual£®His diary is being published on the Internet£¬and it's interesting to note that there has been a new entry every day since January of 2003£®It will continue over the course of several years to come£®Reading his diary is fascinating£¬and it makes his life all the more real to us£®
Today¡¯s electronic version of the diary£¬the web log£¬or¡°blog¡±has once again stretched the diary to be much more than a personal account of the day¡¯s events£®There are blogs to document recipes£¬traveling£¬
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movies£¬independent news£¬product announcements£¬photos£¬and anything else that needs to be recorded over time£®Search engines like Technorati£®com have been created to keep track of the more than 112 million blogs that are currently public£®In its newest replacement£¬the diary has become more popular than ever£®
32£®Generally what is a diary used for? A£®Taking business notes£® B£®Planning activities£® C£®Keeping daily happenings£® D£®Confirming the appointments£®
33£®Which of the following can replace the underlined word¡°realm¡±in the fourth paragraph? A£®Kingdom£®
B£®Field£® C£®Department£®
D£®Land£®
34£®Why does the author mention Anne Frank¡¯s diary in the third paragraph? A£®To let us know the popularity of her diary£® B£®To show us the invaluable lessons about the history£®
C£®To present her dramatic and interesting experience during the War£® D£®To emphasis the importance of keeping diaries for historical purposes£® 35£®What can we know about the blog?
A£®It has been more widely accepted by the public£® B£®Technorati is the only search engine created for it£® C£®The diary remains the same form but still popular£® D£®Nothing but the individual daily events can be recorded£® µÚ¶þ½Ú(¹²5СÌ⣺ÿСÌâ2·Ö£¬Âú·Ö10·Ö)
¸ù¾Ý¶ÌÎÄÄÚÈÝ£¬´Ó¶ÌÎĺóµÄÑ¡ÏîÖÐÑ¡³öÄÜÌîÈë¿Õ°×´¦µÄ×î¼ÑÑ¡ÏѡÏîÖÐÓÐÁ½ÏîΪ¶àÓàÑ¡Ïî¡£ Today£¬there are thousands of national parks all over the world£® 36 In that year£¬the United States government gave a large piece of land to the state of California£®They ask the state to create a special park to protect the mountains and forest in the area£®The trees in this area are called sequoias£® 37 They are the tallest living things in the world and are not found anywhere else on Earth£®
Conservationists in other countries saw what happened in California and soon began to do the same£®Today Europe has over 350 national parks£®The first one in France£¬Vanoise National Park£¬was created in 1963 because the government wanted to stop a plan to build a large tourist project there£®The idea of creating a national park was first discussed in the 1940s£¬but people couldn¡¯t agree on what size to make the park£® 38 Ecologists worked with the government to finally agree on a plan that protected the ¡¤8¡¤
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