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2020ÄêÆÕͨ¸ßµÈѧУÕÐÉúÈ«¹úͳһ¿¼ÊÔ(Ä£Äâ¾í) Ó¢ Óï ×¢ÒâÊÂÏ 1£®´ð¾íǰ£¬¿¼ÉúÎñ±Ø½«×Ô¼ºµÄÐÕÃû¡¢¿¼ÉúºÅµÈÌîдÔÚ´ðÌ⿨ºÍÊÔ¾íÖ¸¶¨Î»ÖÃÉÏ¡£ 2£®»Ø´ðÑ¡ÔñÌâʱ£¬Ñ¡³öÿСÌâ´ð°¸ºó£¬ÓÃǦ±Ê°Ñ´ðÌ⿨É϶ÔÓ¦ÌâÄ¿µÄ´ð°¸±êºÅÍ¿ºÚ¡£ÈçÐè¸Ä¶¯£¬ÓÃÏðÆ¤²Á¸É¾»ºó£¬ÔÙѡͿÆäËû´ð°¸±êºÅ¡£»Ø´ð·ÇÑ¡ÔñÌâʱ£¬½«´ð°¸Ð´ÔÚ´ðÌ⿨ÉÏ¡£Ð´ÔÚ±¾ÊÔ¾íÉÏÎÞЧ¡£ 3£®¿¼ÊÔ½áÊøºó£¬½«±¾ÊÔ¾íºÍ´ðÌ⿨һ²¢½»»Ø¡£ µÚÒ»²¿·Ö ÔĶÁ(¹²Á½½Ú£¬Âú·Ö50·Ö) µÚÒ»½Ú (¹²15СÌ⣺ÿСÌâ2.5·Ö£¬Âú·Ö37.5·Ö) ÔĶÁÏÂÁжÌÎÄ£¬´ÓÿÌâËù¸øµÄA¡¢B¡¢C¡¢DËĸöÑ¡ÏîÖÐÑ¡³ö×î¼ÑÑ¡Ïî¡£ A Why go to Madrid? There may be a slight chill(º®Àä)in the air£¬with temperatures staying around 15¡æin March£¬but Spain¡¯s handsome capital is slowly starting to warm up£®Even more attractive are the cultural events£® A new exhibition on the living and working spaces of Spain¡¯s greatest artist£¬Picasso£¬has just opened in the studio at the Fundaci¨®n Mapfre at Paseo de Recoletos 23£®It runs until 11 May with rarely seen pieces borrowed from his family£® Later this summer£¬the 400th anniversary of the death of the Renaissance(ÎÄÒÕ¸´ÐË)painter E1 Greco will be marked with an exciting exhibition at the Museo del Prado at Paseo del Prado from 24 June to 5October£® How to go? The widest range of flights is offered by EasyJet¡ªfrom Bristol£¬Edinburgh£¬Gatwick£¬Liverpool and Luton£®British Airways and its sister airline Iberia combine forces from Heathrow and London City£®Ryanair flies from Manchester and Stansted£»Air Europa flies from Gatwick. Barajas airport is 13kin north-east of the city centre and is served by frequent trains on Metro line 8£¬but the shortest underground journey is a bit complex with at least one change at Nuevos Ministerios station and takes about 30 minutes£®The fare to any station in the city centre is €4£®50£®The airport express bus runs every 15 to 35 minutes around the clock£»€5 one way£®It takes 40 minutes to reach the city centre£®A taxi takes half the time£®A flat rate of €30 covers most of central Madrid£® 1£®When will the exhibition about Picasso close? A£®On 23 March£® B£®On 11 May. C£®On 24 June£® D£®On 5 October£® 2£®Which airline operates flights from Manchester to Madrid? A£®EasyJet£® B£®Ryanair£® C£®Air Europa£® D£®British Airways£® 3£®What is the fastest way to reach central Madrid from Barajas airport? A£®Take a taxi£® B£®Take a city bus£® C£®Take Metro line 8£® D£®Take the airport express bus£® B My school appeared on the news last week because we had made all important change in our local area£®Our class had planted a large garden in what was once only a vacant lot£®It was a lot of work but it was all worth it£®I got blisters(Ë®ÅÝ)from digging£¬and we all got insect bites£¬too£® I learned a lot about gardening and collaboration(ºÏ×÷)£¬and then I learned about the media£®Our teacher telephoned the TV station and informed them of what we had accomplished£®She spoke with the producer£®The producer checked with the directors£¬but they said there were plenty of stories similar to ours£®They wanted to know what was special about our particular garden£¬since many schools plant them£® The teacher explained that£¬after going on the Interact to learn about the prairie(´ó²ÝÔ)£¬we had made a prairie garden£®We had gone to a prairie and gotten seeds from the plants£¬and then we planted them£®We did not water the garden£¬but we did weed it£®We decided to let nature water it with rain£¬since that was how prairies grew in the past£®We sent a picture of the garden to the news station£®In the picture£¬the grass was so high that it stood taller than the fourth grade students£® As a result£¬the producer sent a reporter to our schoo1£®He interviewed the headmaster and asked him many questions about the garden£®After that£¬they interviewed us£¬and we explained to them what we had learned through this project£® That night£¬we watched the news£¬and there we were£®The news reporter told our story£®It was only two minutes long£¬but it was us£®We were famous£®All that work£¬all those blisters£¬it was worth it£®We knew that when we saw the garden every day£¬but now we knew that the whole city thought so£¬too£® 4£®What seemed to be the TV directors¡¯initial reaction to the garden? A£®They were excited£® B£®They were surprised£® C£®They were worried£® D£®They were uninterested£® 5£®What is special about the garden? A£®Weeds were allowed to spread naturally£® B£®The grass grew faster than common grass£® C£®The seeds came from the plants of a prairie£® D£®Underground water was used for the plants£® 6£®What does the underlined word¡°that¡±refer to in the last paragraph? A£®We got blisters on our hands£® B£®Ourhard work was worthwhile£® C£®The gardenwould be famous£® D£®The project would be finished£® 7£®How did the author feel about the project? A£®Annoyed£® B£®Curious£® C£®Proud£® D£®Regretful£® C Heads up!Across the country£¬sports injuries are a safety concern for young athletes£®Now£¬the American Medical Association(AMA)has a new set of guidelines aimed at protecting players from the danger of concussions¡ªserious injuries caused by a blow to the head£® ¡°By raising awareness of the serious risks associated with concussions and ensuring that the appropriate guidelines are in place£¬we can reduce the number of young athletes who may return to the game too soon£¬which can put their health at further risk£¬¡±said AMA Board Member Jack Resneck Jr£®£¬M£®D£®£¬in a statement£® The policy recommends that young athletes who may have a concussion be taken off the field as soon as possible£®Then£¬they are only to return to their sport with a doctor¡¯s written approval£®The policy also sets age-specific rules for health care professionals and athletic organizations in evaluating and caring for concussions£® According to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention(CDC)£¬a concussion is a type of traumatic(´´ÉË)brain injury caused by a bump£¬blow£¬or jolt to the head or hit to the body that causes the head and brain to move rapidly back and forth£®This type of movement can cause the brain to bounce around or twist inside the skull(¹Ç)£®It can damage brain cells and create chemical changes in the brain£® The CDC says that between 1£®6 million and 3£®8 million traumatic brain injuries caused by sports and recreation¡ªrelated activities occur in the U£®S£®every year£®A study from the center for Injury Research and Policy showed that as many as 40£¥of high school athletes return to playing before they should£®The AMA¡¯s new guidelines should help to bring those numbers down£® 8£®Why does the AMA set the new guidelines? A£®To raise safety standards of sports£® B£®To protect athletes from concussions£® C£®To set rules for health care evaluation£® D£®To help players return to the game quickly£® 9£®What should young athletes who may have a concussion do? A£®Avoid using the head£® B£®Leave the field forever£® C£®Get treatment in time£® D£®Switch to another sport£® 10£®What is paragraph 4 mainly about? A£®What a concussion is£® B£®What causes damage to brain cells£® C£®How the CDC works£® D£®How a concussion can be prevented£® 11£®Which of the following is the best title for the text? A£®Rules for Safer Play B£®Sports Injuries in the US C£®Advice to Athletes D£®New Policies for Doctors D Organic food is very popular£®It is also expensive£®Some organic food costs twice as much as non-organic food£¬but new parents and pet owners are willing to pay up to 200£¥ more for organic food£®However£¬there are people who think it is a waste of money£® There is one main difference between organic and non-organic food.Organic farms do not use agricultural chemicals£¬such as pesticides(ɱ³æ¼Á)£®In many countries organic foods have special labels£®These guarantee that the products are natural£® Some people think organic means locally grown£®Originally this was true. Over time organic farming became more difficult£®The demand for organic food grew larger than the supply£®Small companies had to sell out to large companies£®There weren¡¯t enough organic ingredients(ÔÁÏ)£¬such as grain and cattle£®This made it difficult for many organic companies to stay in business£®Today£¬many large companies have an organic line of products. Is organic food more nutritious?This is part ofthe debate£®Many farmers and consumers believe it is£®They think agricultural chemicals cause health problems such as cancer£®Many health professionals disagree£®Few studies prove that organic foods prevent health problems. Health specialists worry more about bacteria(²¡¶¾)£¬such as E£®coli and salmonella£®These can get into contact with organic and non-organic food£®Doctors recommend washing produce very carefully£®Handling meat carefully is important too£® Most people agree that naturally grown food tastes better£®Is tastier food worth the extra money?This is a matter of opinion£®Whether it is healthier or not may require more research£®However£¬organic consumers argue it is better to be safe than sorry£® 12£®What is probably the major concern of organic food consumers? A£®Price£® B£®Safety£® C£®Freshness£® D£®Variety£® 13£®What is the doctors¡¯suggestion? A£®Grow your own food£® B£®Reduce the use of pesticides£® C£®Make sure the food is clean£® D£®Buy large companies¡¯products£® 14£®Which of the following do most people agree on organic food? A£®It tastes better£® B£®It is easierto grow£® C£®It contains more fat£® D£®It is more nutritious£® 15£®Where does this text probably come from? A£®A recipe book£® B£®A chemistry paper£® C£®A medical report£® D£®A health magazine£® µÚ¶þ½Ú(¹²5СÌ⣻ÓÅÌâËÙÏíÿСÌâ2.5·Ö£¬Âú·Ö12.5·Ö) ÔĶÁÏÂÃæ¶ÌÎÄ£¬´Ó¶ÌÎĺóµÄÑ¡ÏîÖÐÑ¡³ö¿ÉÒÔÌîÈë¿Õ°×´¦µÄ×î¼ÑÑ¡ÏѡÏîÖÐÓÐÁ½Ïî Ϊ¶àÓàÑ¡Ïî¡£ The Hotel Wake-up Call Gets Personal Here¡¯s a wake-up call£ºThe hotel front desk will do one better than ringing your phone inthe morning£®They¡¯11 send an actual human being to your room£®Don¡¯t worry£®They won¡¯t come in and kiss you good morning£® 16 Never mind that most travelers nowadays have smart phones with built-in alarm clocks£® 17 Here are some examples£®At the Wolcott Hotel£¬if a wake-up call is unanswered£¬ they will send an employee to your door£®At Las Vcntanas al Paraiso£¬all employee shows up at your room to wake you up with tea£¬coffee and breakfast bread£®At the Mandarin Oriental£¬a person rather than an automated system will call to wake you up£® 18 Hotels have always taken the wake-up call seriously£® 19 If you don¡¯t get your call within five minutes of the requested time£¬you won¡¯t have to pay for your room£®Travelers£¬ too£¬still want to have all option of a wake¡ªup call£®A study of 285 guests at Crown Plaza found that 53£¥considered a wake-up call very important£® 20 In the late 1980s£¬hotels turned to automated systems£®Then all you¡¯d get was a ring and silence£®In the ever-competitive race for loyal customers£¬however£¬many hotels are now getting creative with the wake-up call£®Some hotels even have recordings of celebrity voices£®And more hotels will go back to the old in-person system of wake up calls£® A£®But they might bring you coffee£® B£®If you don¡¯t answer£¬you¡¯11 get a wake-up knock£® C£®Crown Plaza£¬for instance£¬has a wake-up call guarantee£® D£®But the wake-up call became less personal over the years£® E£®The hotel gets 15 to 30 requests for wake-up calls each day£® F£®The human wake-up call is a way to personalize a guest¡¯s stay£® G£®Some guests sleep through the call£¬while others turn their phone ringers off£® µÚ¶þ²¿·Ö ÓïÑÔÔËÓÃ(¹²Á½½Ú£¬Âú·Ö30·Ö) µÚÒ»½Ú(¹²15СÌ⣻ÓÅÌâËÙÏíÿСÌâ1·Ö£¬Âú·Ö15·Ö) ÔĶÁÏÂÃæ¶ÌÎÄ£¬´ÓÿÌâËù¸øµÄA¡¢B¡¢C¡¢DËĸöÑ¡ÏîÖÐÑ¡³ö¿ÉÒÔÌîÈë¿Õ°×´¦µÄ×î¼Ñ Ñ¡Ïî¡£ My name is Miranda Gibson£®I have been at the top of a tree for five months now£®Some people might wonder 21 on earth I would choose to do that£® I have walked through this forest many times£®On 12 December 2011£¬ 22 rolled into the forest and the destruction(´Ý»Ù)began£®I couldn¡¯t 23 the thought that these forests would be 24 forever£®So£¬on 14 December 2011£¬I packed up my life£¬ 25 of my job plans£¬and climbed 60 meters to the top of this tree£®I have been here ever since£® Life in the tree tops can be 26 at times£®I have times when I feel frustrated(¾ÚÉ¥)and wish I could 27 £¬to anywhere£¬just have a 28 of scenery for a minute!There are times too£¬when I feel terribly 29 £®I miss my friends and family£® 30 these times£¬I find myselfloving the 31 £® Living on the tree has been inspiring£®I am willing to 32 up here for as long as it takes£¬ 33 I honestly hope it won¡¯t be too 34 before I can put my feet on the ground below and stand in a forest that will never be 35 £® 21£®A£®why B£®when C£®how D£®where 22£®A£®water B£®animals C£®machinery D£®tourists 23£®A£®bear B£®help C£®keep D£®spare 24£®A£®sold B£®stolen C£®protected D£®1ost 25£®A£®grew out B£®fell short C£®ran out D£®1et go 26£®A£®refreshing B£®risky C£®challenging D£®rewarding £® 27£®A£®get up B£®get away C£®give in D£®give up 28£®A£®change B£®look C£®search D£®touch 29£®A£®confused B£®nervous C£®sorry D£®1onely 30£®A£®Beyond B£®Without C£®Despite D£®Unlike 31£®A£®height B£®experience C£®background D£®position 32£®A£®return B£®stop C£®stay D£®hide 33£®A£®but B£®though C£®because D£®so 34£®A£®soon B£®1ong C£®near D£®bad 35£®A£®moved B£®1ogged C£®burned D£®missed µÚ¶þ½Ú(¹²10СÌ⣻ÿСÌâ1.5·Ö£¬Âú·Ö15·Ö) ÔĶÁÏÂÃæ¶ÌÎÄ£¬ÓÅÌâËÙÏíÔÚ¿Õ°×´¦ÌîÈë1¸öÊʵ±µÄµ¥´Ê»òÀ¨ºÅÄÚµ¥´ÊµÄÕýÈ·ÐÎʽ¡£ On the morning of her grandson¡¯s wedding£¬Peg McCormack received some bad news£®The 91-year-old was in the hospital after a fall when she found out she would be unable to attend the 36 (celebrate)in Madison£¬New Jersey£® Unknown to McCormack£¬her grandson Brian 37 his wife Lauren had made a heartfelt plan 38 (include)her in the day¡¯s activities£® 39 (follow)by a wedding photographer£¬the couple made a surprise visit 40 the hospital before heading to the reception£® ¡°She was so excited to watch 41 (we)get married£¬¡±the bride said£®¡°She was simply lifing for this wedding£®So we brought the wedding to her£®¡± ¡°When we walked into that room£¬she was 42 (obvious)shocked,¡±the photographer said£®¡°Shejust kept 43 (say)¡®I can¡¯t believe you¡¯re here!¡¯and thanking them for coming to see her£®The way she held their hands£¬ 44 (touch)their faces and just looked at them£¬you could tell they had such a special bond£®I don¡¯t think she released Brian¡¯s hand 45 entire time that we were in the room£® ¡°It meant the world to bring the wedding to her£¬¡±the groom said£®¡°It was such a small portion of the day to trade in for such a special moment£®¡± µÚÈý²¿·Ö д×÷(¹²Á½½Ú£¬Âú·Ö40·Ö) µÚÒ»½Ú(Âú·Ö15·Ö) ¼Ù¶¨ÄãÊÇÀ£¬ÄãµÄÓ¢¹úÅóÓÑJohnÀ´ÐÅѯÎÊÖйúÈë¹ý´º½ÚµÄ·çË×ϰ¹ß¡£ÇëÄã½áºÏ×Ô¼º¼ÒÏçµÄʵ¼ÊÇé¿ö¸øËû»ØÐÅ£¬ÄÚÈݰüÀ¨£º 1£®´º½ÚµÄ¼ò½é£» 2£®¹ý½ÚµÄ·çË×ϰ¹ß£» 3£®ÑûÇëËûÀ´Öйú¹ý´º½Ú¡£ ×¢Ò⣺ 1£®´ÊÊý80×óÓÒ£» 2£®¿ÉÒÔÊʵ±Ôö¼Óϸ½Ú£¬ÒÔʹÐÐÎÄÁ¬¹á£º 3£®ÐŵĿªÍ·ÒÑΪÄãдºÃ¡£ µÚ¶þ½Ú(Âú·Ö25·Ö) ÔĶÁÏÂÃæ²ÄÁÏ£¬¸ù¾ÝÆäÄÚÈݺÍËù¸ø¶ÎÂ俪ͷÓïÐøÐ´Á½¶Î£¬Ê¹Ö®¹¹³ÉһƪÍêÕûµÄ¶ÌÎÄ¡£ ÐøÐ´µÄ´ÊÊýӦΪ150×óÓÒ¡£ Though it is one of the faded memories of my life today£¬there are times when I remember his face clearly£¬especially his eyes£®As he had yellow spots on his eyes we called him Spotty£®He would have been a stray(Á÷ÀË)dog£¬until he came to me£® I was seven years old£®My dad had just got a new job in Nasik£®We had moved into a rented house£®It was raining very heavily on the day we moved£® It was a cold dark night£®We had our meal and went to sleep£®Somehow in the midnight I heard some strange sounds outside the main door£®I gathered courage and looked out through the window and I was really amused with what I saw outside£® There was a small puppy lying on an old doormat which my mother had put outside the door£®It was wet and trembling£®At first it was difficult to see the little one£®It was the yellow spots on its eyes that made me realize its presence£® It was trying to get under the doormat to avoid the cold air outside and it had managed to get in as I could see only its head outside the doormat£®Was it sick or injured? I felt pity for the poor soul£®I went in and came out with an old towel£®I went near the innocent one and held it in my hand and wiped the puppy till he had become dry£®I took him into my room and made a bed for him with a woolen blanket and a small pillow£®He seemed very healthy and comfortable in his new bed as he went to sleep immediately£® The next morning£¬everyone in the family came to know about the unusual guest£®¡°Shall we keep him with us?¡±I questioned my mom£® Like any other parents would£¬my parents first totally refused my idea but my sister and I convinced them to keep Spotty£® Slowly Spotty got on with everyone and became one of the family members£® 2020ÄêÆÕͨ¸ßµÈѧУÕÐÉúÈ«¹úͳһ¿¼ÊÔ(Ä£Äâ¾í) Ó¢ÓïÌýÁ¦(µÚÒ»´Î) ×¢ÒâÊÂÏ 1£®´ð¾íǰ£¬¿¼ÉúÎñ±Ø½«×Ô¼ºµÄÐÕÃû¡¢¿¼ÉúºÅµÈÌîдÔÚ´ðÌ⿨ºÍÊÔ¾íÖ¸¶¨Î»ÖÃÉÏ¡£ 2£®»Ø´ðÑ¡ÔñÌâʱ£¬Ñ¡³öÿСÌâ´ð°¸ºó£¬ÓÃǦ±Ê°Ñ´ðÌ⿨É϶ÔÓ¦ÌâÄ¿µÄ´ð°¸±êºÅÍ¿ ºÚ¡£ÈçÐè¸Ä¶¯£¬ÓÃÏðÆ¤²Á¸É¾»ºó£¬ÔÙѡͿÆäËû´ð°¸±êºÅ¡£ 3£®¿¼ÊÔ½áÊøºó£¬½«±¾ÊÔ¾íºÍ´ðÌ⿨һ²¢½»»Ø¡£ µÚÒ»½Ú(¹²5СÌ⣻ÿСÌâ1.5·Ö£¬Âú·Ö7.5·Ö) ÌýÏÂÃæ5¶Î¶Ô»°¡£ÓÅÌâËÙÏíÿ¶Î¶Ô»°ºóÓÐÒ»¸öСÌ⣬´ÓÌâÖÐËù¸øµÄA¡¢B¡¢CÈý¸öÑ¡ÏîÖÐÑ¡³ö×î¼ÑÑ¡Ïî¡£ÌýÍêÿ¶Î¶Ô»°ºó£¬Äã¶¼ÓÐ10ÃëÖÓµÄʱ¼äÀ´»Ø´ðÓйØÐ¡ÌâºÍÔĶÁÏÂһСÌ⡣ÿ¶Î¶Ô»°½ö¶ÁÒ»±é¡£ Àý£º How much is the shirt? A£®¡ê19£®15£® B£®¡ê9£®18£® C£®¡ê9£®15£® ´ð°¸ÊÇC¡£ 1£®What happened to the man? A£®He was locked out£® B£®He missed the train£® C£®He lost his keys£® 2£®Where are the speakers? A£®At a gym£® B£®At a restaurant£® C£®At a cinema£® 3£®What does the woman dislike about hertrip? A£®The weather£® B£®The traffic£® C£®The scenery£® 4£®When will the conference begin? A£®At 7£º30£® B£®At 8£º30£® C£®At 9£º00£® 5£®What are the speakers talking about? A£®A job position£® B£®A fellow worker£® C£®A new office£® µÚ¶þ½Ú(¹²15СÌ⣻ÿСÌâ1.5·Ö£¬Âú·Ö22.5·Ö) ÌýÏÂÃæ5¶Î¶Ô»°»ò¶À°×¡£Ã¿¶Î¶Ô»°»ò¶À°×ºóÓм¸¸öСÌ⣬´ÓÌâÖÐËù¸øµÄA¡¢B¡¢C Èý¸öÑ¡ÏîÖÐÑ¡³ö×î¼ÑÑ¡Ïî¡£Ìýÿ¶Î¶Ô»°»ò¶À°×ǰ£¬Ä㽫ÓÐʱ¼äÔĶÁ¸÷¸öСÌ⣬ÿСÌâ5 ÃëÖÓ£»ÌýÍêºó£¬¸÷СÌ⽫¸ø³ö5ÃëÖÓµÄ×÷´ðʱ¼ä¡£Ã¿¶Î¶Ô»°»ò¶À°×¶ÁÁ½±é¡£ ÌýµÚ6¶Î²ÄÁÏ£¬»Ø´ðµÚ6¡¢7Ìâ¡£ 6£®What seems to be the man¡¯s problem? A£®He doesn¡¯t sleep well£® B£®He has no more pills£® C£®He can¡¯t focus properly£® 7£®What is the man advised to do? A£®Stay home from work£® B£®Have a check-up£® C£®Stop feeling anxious£® ÌýµÚ7¶Î²ÄÁÏ£¬»Ø´ðµÚ8ÖÁ10Ìâ¡£ 8£®How did the man get to work today? A£®By bike£® B£®By bus£® C£®On foot£® 9£®What is the man¡¯s major concern about driving a car? A£®Expenses£® B£®Health£® C£®Environment£® 10£®What does the woman think ofusing a car? A£®It¡¯s costly£® B£®It¡¯s dangerous£® C£®It¡¯s convenient£® ÌýµÚ8¶Î²ÄÁÏ£¬»Ø´ðµÚ11ÖÁ13Ìâ¡£ 11£®Who reached the top of Mount Qomolangma? A£®Ellen£® B£®Jonathan£® C£®Heather£® 12£®How long did the man spend on his adventure travel? A£®96 days£® B£®Four months£® C£®One year£® 13£®What does the woman think about doing in the future? A£®Walking through a national park£® B£®Cycling along a country road£® C£®Camping out in the mountains£® ÌýµÚ9¶Î²ÄÁÏ£¬»Ø´ðµÚ14ÖÁ17Ìâ¡£ 14£®What is Julian doing? A£®Planning her budget£® B£®Conducting all interview£® C£®Giving advice on studies£® 15£®Which costs Matt most each month? A£®Food£® B£®C1othes£® C£®Books£® 16£®How much does Matt spend on sports a month? A£®About $15£® B£®About $30£® C£®Abom $50£® 17£®What is the probable relationship between the speakers? A£®Strangers£® B£®Schoolmates£® C£®Co-workers£® ÌýµÚ10¶Î²ÄÁÏ£¬»Ø´ðµÚ18ÖÁ20Ìâ¡£ 18£®Which colour is unsuitable for office walls? A£®Green£® B£®Red£® C£®Yellow£® 19£®What effect does natural light have on office workers? A£®It is good for their eyes£® B£®It helps them concentrate£® C£®It makes them feel cheerful£® 20£®Who are most likely to be interested in the talk? A£®Managers£® B£®Painters£® C£®Teachers£® 2020ÄêÆÕͨ¸ßµÈѧУÕÐÉúÈ«¹úͳһ¿¼ÊÔ(Ä£Äâ¾í) Ó¢ÓïÌýÁ¦(µÚ¶þ´Î) ×¢ÒâÊÂÏ 1£®´ð¾íǰ£¬¿¼ÉúÎñ±Ø½«×Ô¼ºµÄÐÕÃû¡¢¿¼ÉúºÅµÈÌîдÔÚ´ðÌ⿨ºÍÊÔ¾íÖ¸¶¨Î»ÖÃÉÏ¡£ 2£®»Ø´ðÑ¡ÔñÌâʱ£¬Ñ¡³öÿСÌâ´ð°¸ºó£¬ÓÃǦ±Ê°Ñ´ðÌ⿨É϶ÔÓ¦ÌâÄ¿µÄ´ð°¸±êºÅÍ¿ ºÚ¡£ÈçÐè¸Ä¶¯£¬ÓÃÏðÆ¤²Á¸É¾»ºó£¬ÔÙѡͿÆäËû´ð°¸±êºÅ¡£ 3£®¿¼ÊÔ½áÊøºó£¬½«±¾ÊÔ¾íºÍ´ðÌ⿨һ²¢½»»Ø¡£ µÚÒ»½Ú(¹²5СÌ⣻ÿСÌâ1.5·Ö£¬Âú·Ö7.5·Ö) ÌýÏÂÃæ5¶Î¶Ô»°¡£Ã¿¶Î¶Ô»°ºóÓÐÒ»¸öСÌ⣬´ÓÌâÖÐËù¸øµÄA¡¢B¡¢CÈý¸öÑ¡ÏîÖÐÑ¡³ö×î¼ÑÑ¡Ïî¡£ÌýÍêÿ¶Î¶Ô»°ºó£¬ÓÅÌâËÙÏíÄã¶¼ÓÐ10ÃëÖÓµÄʱ¼äÀ´»Ø´ðÓйØÐ¡ÌâºÍÔĶÁÏÂһСÌ⡣ÿ¶Î¶Ô»°½ö¶ÁÒ»±é¡£ Àý£º How much is the shirt? A£®¡ê19£®15£® B£®¡ê9£®18£® C£®¡ê9£®15£® ´ð°¸ÊÇC¡£ 1£®What is the speakers¡¯destination? A£®The park£® B£®The beach£® C£®The hotel£® 2£®What is Nancy¡¯s plan for Christmas? A£®To have dinner at home£® B£®To do volunteer work£® C£®To visit some friends£® 3£®What is wrong with the man¡¯S watch? A£®It¡¯s fast£® B£®It¡¯s stopped£® C£®It¡¯s slow£® 4£®Where is the bookstore now? A£®On Lear Road£® B£®On Nelson Street£® C£®On Huntington Road£® 5£®What is the man going to do? A£®Do some shopping£® B£®Give the woman a ride£® C£®Make breakfast£® µÚ¶þ½Ú(¹²15СÌ⣻ÿСÌâ1.5·Ö£¬Âú·Ö22.5·Ö) ÌýÏÂÃæ5¶Î¶Ô»°»ò¶À°×¡£Ã¿¶Î¶Ô»°»ò¶À°×ºóÓм¸¸öСÌ⣬´ÓÌâÖÐËù¸øµÄA¡¢B¡¢C Èý¸öÑ¡ÏîÖÐÑ¡³ö×î¼ÑÑ¡Ïî¡£ÓÅÌâËÙÏíÌýÿ¶Î¶Ô»°»ò¶À°×ǰ£¬Ä㽫ÓÐʱ¼äÔĶÁ¸÷¸öСÌ⣬ÿСÌâ5 ÃëÖÓ£»ÌýÍêºó£¬¸÷СÌ⽫¸ø³ö5ÃëÖÓµÄ×÷´ðʱ¼ä¡£Ã¿¶Î¶Ô»°»ò¶À°×¶ÁÁ½±é¡£ ÌýµÚ6¶Î²ÄÁÏ£¬»Ø´ðµÚ6¡¢7Ìâ¡£ 6£®Why does the woman charge the man? A£®He¡¯s returned a book late£® B£®He¡¯s damaged a book£® C£®He¡¯s lost a book£® 7£®How does the man feel about the fine? A£®It¡¯s acceptable£® B£®It¡¯s too much£® C£®It¡¯s unnecessary£® ÌýµÚ7¶Î²ÄÁÏ£¬»Ø´ðµÚ8ÖÁ10Ìâ¡£ 8£®What is special about the teacups? A£®They are finely decorated£® B£®They are sold with candies£® C£®They are shaped like hearts£® 9£®Why does the man take the apple-tree-to-be gift? A£®It looks attractive£® B£®It provides instructions£® C£®It will be a pleasant memory£® 10£®How much will the man pay for the gift? A£®$24£®95£® B£®$26£®99£® C£®$56£®90£® ÌýµÚ8¶Î²ÄÁÏ£¬»Ø´ðµÚ11ÖÁ13Ìâ¡£ 11£®What does Karl need according to Susan? A£®A holiday£® B£®A promotion£® C£®A Pay raise£® 12£®What does Karl think his company should do? A£®Offer paid vacations£® B£®Keep costs down£® C£®Employ more people£® 13£®What does Susan agree to do for Karl? A£®Watch for job openings£® B£®Post an advertisement£® C£®Talk to his manager£® ÌýµÚ9¶Î²ÄÁÏ£¬»Ø´ðµÚ14ÖÁ17Ìâ¡£ 14£®What is the woman¡¯s original plan for tonight? A£®Have a good rest£® B£®Study for an exam£® C£®Celebrate her birthday£® 15£®What does the man intend to do with friends at 6£º30? A£®Have dinner£® B£®Watch a movie£® C£®Have a party£® 16£®When will the party probably end? A£®At 10£º00£® B£®At 10£º30£® C£®At 11£º00£® 17£®How does the man sound? A£®Enthusiastic£® B£®Impatient£® C£®Hesitant£® ÌýµÚ10¶Î²ÄÁÏ£¬»Ø´ðµÚ18ÖÁ20Ìâ¡£ 18£®What is the talk mainly about? A£®Disease contro1£® B£®Local events£® C£®Government service£® 19£®What is prohibited at present in Oxton? A£®Watering gardens£® B£®Smoking outdoors£® C£®Washing cars£® 20£®What does the speaker say about the fire? A£®It destroyed a building£® B£®It caused serious injuries£® C£®It was quickly put out£® |