C. the general introduction of the gameª¤
Szh
Szh .searchw Sultry asearch Sultry s Www a Szh g Sultry msearch n Obama t Sultrymatching n Obama isearch search¤
search3 Www &searchbp Szh T Sultrymatching e Szh a
searchs Sultry a Sultry c Sultry o usearcht Szh y Sultry Www Ssearchh search
w Obama Sultry S Sultrymatching h Sultrymatching Sultry S Sultry h Sultry a Obama Sult Sultry y search S Www l Sultry r Szh search W
wSs Sultry asearchcsearchl searchb Sultry ma Obama r Sultrymatching ww Szh Slsearchr Sultry s Obama Szh Sultry rsac Sultrymatching h
Www w aSulsearchry c Sultrymatching e Www rchnsearchObasearcha Sultrymatching u Szh Osearcha Szh a Sultry t Www ul Www r s Sultry a Sultry ch
omsearch Sultry y Www ©__ Sultry _searchª Www ª
A. giving the detailsª¤
B. explaining step by stepª¤
C. offering strong proofsª¤
D. making vivid descriptions ª¤
Now read Text F quickly and mark your answers on your ANSWER SHEET.
Let¡¯s talk about tennis between just two players. You know that the two players hit a ball across the net. One side must hit the ball so that the other player cannot hit it back over the net. The ball must stay within the lines. If the first player can¡¯t do this, the opponent gets a point.ª¥The players always stop when one wins a point. To start play again, one player will serve. He or she throws the ball into the air and hits it. The ball must cross the net without hitting it. The other player must hit the ball back across the net before it hits the ground twice. If the ball doesn¡¯t hit the net or the ground twice, the players keep hitting it over the net. This goes on until someone misses.ª¥A player needs four points to win a game. If both players have three points, then one must get two more points together to win. When one player wins six games, it is called a set. If each side wins five games, then one must win two more games together to win the set. If each player wins six games, they play one more game of seven points. A match usually has three or five sets.ª¤ª¤ª¤
TEXT G
First read the following question.ª¤
34. While at London airports, you have to present your passport at ª©_____ªª.ª¤
A. the carouselª¤
B. the Immigration Hallª¤
C. the customsª¤
D. the Arrivals Hall ª¤
Now read Text G quickly and mark your answer on your ANSWER SHEET.
Arriving at London airports
Just follow these simple steps for a troubleª²free arrival.ª¤
Follow the ARRIVALS sign if you are ending your journey in London or
transferring to a UK domestic flight.ª¤
This will take you to the Immigration Hall where you must present your
passport and any necessary visa/health documentation.ª¤
At HEATHROW airport proceed downstairs to claim your baggage from the
carousel indicating your flight number. At GATEWICK airport proceed
downstairs in the North Terminal to claim your baggage from the carousel
indicating your flight number. Free trolleys are available for your bags.ª¤
To clear customs take the Red Channel if you have goods to declare or the
Green Channel if you have no goods to declare.ª¤
You will then be in the Arrivals Hall. From here you can obtain transport in
to central London; transfer between GATEWICK and HEATHROW airports and
transfer to UK domestic flights.
TEXT H
First read the following questions.ª¤
35. The total amount of cooking time for each vegetable is ª©______ªª.ª¤
A. 4 minutes for the potatoes and 10 minutes for the cucumberª¤
B. 10 minutes for the potatoes and 4 minutes for the cucumberª¤
C. 4 minutes for the cucumber and 14 minutes for the potatoesª¤
D. 14 minutes for the cucumber and 4 minutes for the potatoes ª¤
36. Which of the following statements agrees with the menu directions?ª¤
A. The dish is enough to go round.ª¤
B. Four serving spoons are needed.ª¤
C. The dish is to be shared by four persons.ª¤
D. Four guests can help themselves to the dish. ª¤
37. According to this recipe, ª©_____ªª.ª¤
A. parsley, salt and pepper are to be added by a sprinklerª¤
B. the dish has to be properly seasoned with salt and pepperª¤
C. parsley is used for decorationª¤
D. the dish must be tossed to everybody¡¯s taste ª¤
Now read Text H quickly and mark your answers on your ANSWER SHEET.
Recipe
Potatoes and Cucumber with Parsley
2 potatoes, about 3/4 poundª¤
1 cucumber, about 3/4 poundª¤
1 tablespoon butterª¤
1 tablespoon finely chopped parsleyª¤
Salt and pepper to taste
Peel the potatoes. Split them in half lengthwise, then cut into quarters.ª¤
Put the potatoes in a small skillet with water to cover. Bring to the boil and cook about 10 minutes.ª¤
Meanwhile scrape the cucumber. Cut it into 11/2ª²inch lengths. Cut each length in half.ª¤
When the potatoes have cooked 10 minutes, add the cucumbers. Cook about four minutes. Drain.ª¤
Add the butter to the vegetables and toss. Sprinkle with parsley, salt and pepper to taste and serve.ª¤
Yielding: 4 servings.
TEXT I
First read the following questions.ª¤
38. How does a student know what the homework assignments are?
ª¤
A. Prof. Klammer announces them in class.ª¤
B. The student reads the list on the next page.ª¤
C. Prof. Klammer gives a list every week in class.ª¤
D. The student goes to the professor¡¯s office and asks. ª¤
39. If a freshman thinks that he might major in history, what is the maxi
mum length
his paper can be?ª¤
A. Fifteen pages. B. Twentyª²five pages.ª¤
C. Ten pages. D. No maximum. ª¤
40. If a student cannot see Prof. Klammer during her office hours, what should he do?ª¤
A. See her after class.ª¤
B. Call her at home.ª¤
C. Ask another student.ª¤
D. Make an appointment with her. ª¤
Now read Text I quickly and mark your answers on your ANSWER SHEET.
COURSE OUTLINE FOR HISTORY 101, ª¥
DR. JANE KLAMMERª¥
COURSE: History 101 INSTRUCTOR: Dr. Jane Klammerª¥
¡°Introduction to American OFFICE: 305 Marshall Hallª¥
History¡± OFFICE HOURS: ª¤ 11.15¡«12.30 M W Fª¥
CLASS: 363 Marshall Hall 3.35¡«5.00 T Thª¥
10:10¡«11:00 M W F Other times by appointmentª¥
TELEPHONE: 255-4786ª¥
TEXTBOOK: Green, Robert P., The American Tradition: A History of the United States, Charles E. Merrill publishing Co. Columbus, Ohio 1984(available at the College Bookstore) ª¤ª¤
COURSE REQUIREMENTS:
midª²term exam: October 10 20% of the final gradeª¥
final exam: December 10 40% of the final gradeª¥
term paper due: December 15 40% of the final gradeª¥
Attendance is not required, but you are responsible for all the information
given in the class lectures. In the lectures I will talk about the chapters in the textbook and other material that I choose to supplement the course. The exams will cover all this information. Therefore, I advise you to come to the class as much as possible. If you have to miss a class, be sure to get the class notes from another student. ª¥
Your homework assignments are listed on the next page. You are supposed to read the chapter about which I will be lecturing before you come to class. This is to make sure that you understand as much as possible while taking notes in my lectures. Be prepared when you come to class. If there are any changes in the assigned homework readings, I will announce them in class.ª¥
The term paper is 40 percent of your final grade. It should not exceed fifteen pages. (Anyone thinking of majoring in history may write twentyª²five pages.)
Before the midterm exam you will choose the topic for your paper. ª¥
Have a good semester!
ª¤
ÖØ µã ´Ê »ã
twoª²lane: Ë«³µµÀ
freight: »õÔË
stagecoach: ¹«¹²Âí³µ
waterborne: Ë®Ô˵Ø, Ë®ÉϵØ
shrink: ÊÕËõ
foreshadow: ³ÉΪǰÕ×; °µÊ¾; Ԥʾ
skepticism: »³ÒÉÂÛ
semiarid: °ë¸ÉºµµÄ
deter: ÖÆÖ¹; ʹ¶ÏÄîÍ·
subsidy:²¹Öú½ð£»½òÌù
bluntly:̹Âʵأ»ÂÊÖ±µØ
unpromising: ÎÞǰ;µÄ
sea cucumber: º£²Î
bizarre: ÆæÒìµÄ
eccentricity: ¹Å¹Ö£»¹Öñ±£»ª¤¹Å¹ÖµÄÐÐΪ
edible: ¿ÉʳÓõΤ
gourmet: ÃÀʳ¼Ò
subsist: Éú´æ£¬´æÔÚ
tentacle: ´¥Ð룻´¥½Ç
crevice: ÁÑ·ì
predator: ÂÓ¶áÕߣ»Ê³È⶯Îï
voracious:ÀÇÍÌ»¢Ñʵģ»Ì°À·µÄ
metabolic: ±ä»¯µÄ£»Ð³´úлµÄ
quiescent:¾²Ö¹µÄ£»²»¶¯µÄ
rateª²feeding: ¹©¸øËÇÁϵÄ
multiply: ·±Ö³
squirt: Åç³ö£¬½¦³ö
silicon crystal: ¹è¾§Ìå
eviscerate: È¡³öÄÚÔࣻȡ³ö¾«»ª²¿·Ö
surf: ³åÀË
altitude: ¸ß¶È
abound£º´óÁ¿´æÔÚ£»³äÂú
accumulation: Àۼƣ»¾Û¼¯Îï
hatch:·õ»¯
larvae:Ó׳æ
serve: ·¢Çò
proceed: ¿ªÊ¼£»½øÐÐÏÂÈ¥
claim: ÈÏÁ죻Ö÷ÕÅ
carousel: (»ú³¡ÖеÄ)ÐÐÀî´«ËÍ´ø£»ÂíÊõ±ÈÈü
to clear customs: ͨ¹Ø
declare:É걨
parsley:Î÷ÇÛ
skillet: ³¤±údz¹ø
scrape: ¹Î£¬²Á
toss: µß³´
sprinkle:È÷
yielding:²ú³ö
supplement: Ôö²¹
ª¤
²Î¿¼´ð°¸¼°Ïê½âª¤
1. A) ´Ë¿ÕËĸöÑ¡Ïî¶¼ÊÇ´ÓÊôÁ¬´Ê£¬µ«ÊÇËüÃǵÄÊôÐÔÊDz»Í¬µÄ£¬ÀýÈ磺althoughÊDZíʾתÕÛ¹ØÏµµÄ£»since£¬because£¬thereforeÊDZíʾÔÒò¹ØÏµµÄ¡£Í¨¹ýÔÄ
¶Á´Ë¿ÕËùÔÚ¾äµÃÖª´ó¸Å¾äÒåΪ£º¡°¾¡¹ÜÕâЩ¿íÀ«µÄÏÖ´ú»¯¹«Â·Í¨³£ºÜƽ̹ÇÒά»¤Á¼ºÃ£¬×ªÍäÒ²ºÜÉÙ£¬µ«ÊÇÒ»Ö±±£³Ö±ÊÖ±µÄ¹«Â·²»×ÜÊÇÁîÈËÉÍÐÄÔÃÄ¿¡±¡£¸ù¾ÝÓïÒåÏßË÷ºÍÓï·¨ÏßË÷¿ÉÖª´Ë¿ÕÓ¦Ìî±íʾתÕÛ¹ØÏµµÄÑ¡ÏîA¡£ª¤
2. C) ¸ù¾Ý´Ê»ãÏßË÷ºÍ´ÊÒå´îÅä¿ÉÖª£¬stable£¬splendidºÍcomplicatedÒ»°ã²»ÄÜÓÃÀ´ÐÞÊÎroads¡£ª¤
3. B)¸ù¾ÝÓïÒåÏßË÷¿ÉÍÆ¶Ï´Ë¿ÕÕýÈ·´ð°¸ÎªÑ¡ÏîB few¡£ª¤
4. C) ¸ù¾ÝÉÏÏÂÎÄ¿ÉÍÆ²â³öÈç¹û¸ßËÙ¹«Â·×ÜÊDZ£³Ö±ÊÖ±£¬¶ÔÓÚ¼ÝÊ»ÕßÀ´ËµÊǷdz£¿ÝÔïµÄ£¬Òò´Ë±¾¿ÕµÄÕýÈ·´ð°¸ÎªC enjoyable¡£ª¤
5. D) ½é´ÊbyÄܺͶ¯´Êpass´îÅ䣬ÒâΪ¡°¾¹ý£¬ÂÓ¹ý¡±¡£ª¤
6. B) ±¾¾äÖеÄÁªÏµ¸±´ÊFurthermore˵Ã÷±¾¾äÊǶÔÉÏÒ»¾äµÄ½øÒ»²½²¹³äºÍÐÅÏ¢µÄÔö¼Ó£¬ÓÉ´Ë¿ÉÍÆ²â±¾¾ä¾äÒåΪ¸ßËÙ¹«Â·²»½ö¾¹ý·ç¾°ÇøºÍÏç´å£¬Í¨³£»¹¡°½«ÅÓ´óµÄ¶¼ÊÐÖÐÐÄÇøÁ¬½ÓÆðÀ´¡±¡£¹ÊÕýÈ·´ð°¸ÎªB¡£ª¤
7. D) ¡°½»Í¨Óµ¼·¡±ÓÃheavy ºÍtraffic´îÅä¡£ª¤
8. A)ͨ¹ý·ÖÎö¿ÉÖª£¬ÕâÀïʹÓõÄÊÇÒ»¸ö·ÇÏÞ¶¨ÐÔ¶¨Óï´Ó¾ä£¬ËĸöÑ¡ÏîÖÐÖ»ÓÐA when ¾ß±¸´ËÓï·¨¹¦ÄÜ¡£ª¤
9. B)¸ù¾ÝÉÏÏÂ¾ä¹ØÏµ¿ÉÍÆ¶Ï´Ë¾äΪÌõ¼þ¾ä£¬¹ÊÑ¡ÏîBΪÕýÈ·´ð°¸¡£
ª¤
10. A)¸ù¾ÝÖ÷¾äÖеġ°older ... roads¡±¿ÉÍÆ¶Ï´Ë¿ÕÐèÒªÌîÒ»¸ö±È½ÏÒâÒåµÄ¸±´Ê£¬ÒÔ¹¹³É¶Ô±È¹ØÏµ£¬¹ÊÑ¡ÏîA relatively¡°ÏàÓ¦µØ£¬Ïà¶ÔµØ¡±ÎªÕýÈ·´ð°¸¡£
ÆäËûÈý´Ê´ÊÒå·Ö±ðΪ£ºregularly¡°ÓйæÂɵأ¬¶¨ÆÚµØ¡±£»respectively¡°¸÷×Եء±£»reasonably¡°ÓÐÀíÓɵء±¡£ª¤
11. B)¸ù¾Ý´Ë¿Õǰºó´Ê¼°½á¹¹¿É¶Ï¶¨´Ë¿ÕӦʹÓñȽϼ¶£¬¹Ê¿ÉÅųýAºÍD¡£ÁíÍâ¸ù¾ÝÉÏÏÂÎÄ¿ÉÍÆ²â´Ë¿ÕӦΪless£¬ÒòΪ¡°more heavily traveled¡±ÒâΪ¡°³µÁ¾Óµ¼·µÄ¡±¹«Â·£¬Ó볣ʶ²»·û¡£ª¤
12. D)´ÓÏÂÎĵÄothers¿ÉÖª´Ë¿ÕÕýÈ·´ð°¸ÎªD some¡£ª¤
13. B)¸ù¾ÝÉÏÎĵÄslopesºÍÏÂÎĵÄhillsides¾Í¿ÉÒԶ϶¨ÕâÀïÐèÒªÒ»¸ö±íʾ·¿ö²»ºÃµÄ´Ê£¬Ñ¡ÏîA rocksÒâÒå²»·û£¬¹ÊÖ»ÓÐB cliffs ¡°ÐüÑ¡± ΪÕýÈ·´ð°¸¡£ª¤
14. A)¸ù¾ÝÌâÄ¿ºÍÑ¡Ïî¿É¶Ï¶¨´Ë¿ÕӦΪtownsµÄºóÖö¨ÓÓɴ˿ɲ²â¾äÒåΪ¡°Î»ÓÚÉî¹ÈÖеijÇÕò¡±£¬¡°Î»ÓÚ¡±lieÊDz»¼°Îﶯ´Ê£¬²»ÄÜÒÔ¹ýÈ¥·Ö´ÊµÄÐÎʽ³öÏÖ×÷Ãû´ÊµÄºóÖÃÐÞÊÎÓ¹ÊÕýÈ·´ð°¸ÎªlieµÄÏÖÔÚ·Ö´ÊÐÎʽlying¡£ª¤
15. D)¶¨Óï´Ó¾äÐÞÊÎplacesÓÃwhereÀ´Òýµ¼¡£ª¤
16. B)¸ù¾ÝÎÄÕÂǰÎå¾ä¿ÉÖª£¬ÔÚÊ®¾ÅÊÀ¼ÍÁùÊ®Äê´úÍíÆÚǰÌú·ÔÚÃÀ¹úµÄÓ°ÏìÊÇÓÐÏ޵ġ°limited¡±£¬µ±Ê±Ìú·ֻ´ÓÃÀ¹ú¶«²¿ÐÞµ½ÁËÃÀ¹úÖв¿£¬Ô˵½ÃÀ¹úÎ÷²¿µØÇøµÄ»õÎïÖ»ÓÐÔÚÌú·µÄ¾¡Í·¡°endª²ofª²track¡±¸ÄÓÃÆäËûµÄÔËÊ䷽ʽ£¬±ÈÈ磺Æû´¬¡¢Âí³µµÈ£¬ËüÃǵÄÔËÊäЧÂÊ¿ÉÏë¶øÖª¡£¹ÊÑ¡ÏîBΪÕýÈ·´ð°¸¡£ª¤
17. D)ÕâÊÇÒ»µÀÍÆÂÛÌâ¡£¿ÉÓÃÅųý·¨×ö´ËÌâ¡£¸ù¾ÝÎÄÕµÚÁùÐÐÖÁµÚÆßÐС°rather they became supplements or feeders¡±ºÍµÚÊ®ÐÐÖÁµÚÊ®ÈýÐС°Wagon freighters continued operating throughout the 1870¡¯s and 1880¡¯s and into the 1890¡¯s. Although over constantly shrinking routes, and coaches and wagons continued to crisscross the West wherever the rails had not yet been laid.¡±¿ÉÖªËæ×ÅÌú·ÏߵIJ»¶ÏÑÓÉ죬Âí³µ»õÔ˵Ä·ÏßÈÕÒæ¼õÉÙ£¬ËäÈ»Âí³µ»õÔ˾ӪÕßÃǼÌÐøÔÚÎ÷²¿·¢Õ¹»õÔËÏß·£¬µ«ÊÇËüÃÇÖ»ÊÇÌú·ÔËÊäµÄ²¹³ä¡£Òò´ËÑ¡ÏîA¡°ËûÃÇ·¢Õ¹ÁËÓоºÕùÐÔµÄÏß·¡±¿ÉÒÔÅųý¡£¶øÑ¡ÏîB¡¢CÎÄÖÐ
¸ù±¾Ã»ÓÐÌá¼°¡£¹ÊÖ»ÓÐÑ¡ÏîDΪÕýÈ·´ð°¸¡£ª¤
18. D)¸ù¾Ý¡°the Sierra Nevada¡±ËùÔÚ¾ä¿ÉÖª×÷ÕßÌáµ½ËüÊÇÒòΪËüÊÇÐÞ½¨ºá¿ç¶«Î÷Ìú·µÄÒ»¸ö¾Þ´óµÄÕϰ£¬¹ÊDΪÕýÈ·´ð°¸¡£ª¤
19. B)SubsidyÒâΪ¡°²¹Öú½ð£¬½òÌù¡±£¬ÓëfinancingÒâÒåÏà·û¡£ª¤
20. B)ͨ¹ýÔĶÁÎÄÕ¿ÉÒÔÅųýÑ¡ÏîA¡¢C¡¢D£¬ÒòΪÎÄÖÐûÓÐÌá¼°£¬¹ÊÑ¡ÏîBΪÕýÈ·´ð°¸¡£ª¤
21. C)´ËÌâΪ¶ÎÂäÖ÷Ö¼Ì⡣ͨ¹ýÔĶÁµÚËĶοÉÖª×÷Õß¶¼Êǽ²Êöº£²ÎµÄ½øÊ³Ï°¹ß£¬¹ÊÑ¡ÏîCΪÕýÈ·´ð°¸¡£ª¤
22. A)´ËÌâÎªÍÆÂÛÌâ¡£¸ù¾Ý×îºóÒ»¶Î¿ÉÖªº£²ÎÔÚÊܵ½Íâ½ç´Ì¼¤Ê±£¬»á×ö³öÒ»¶¨µÄ·´Ó¦£¬ÕâÒ²·´Ó³³öËüµÄ·ÀÓù»úÖÆ·Ç³£Ãô¸Ð£¬¹ÊAΪÕýÈ·´ð°¸¡£ª¤
23. B)´ËÌâΪϸ½ÚÌâ¡£¸ù¾Ý×îºóÒ»¶Î¿É֪ΩÓÐfood²»»áʹº£²Î½«ÌåÄÚÆ÷¹ÙͳöÀ´£¬¹ÊÆäΪÕýÈ·´ð°¸¡£ª¤
24. D) ÕâÊÇÒ»µÀϸ½ÚÌâ¡£¸ù¾ÝÎÄÕµڶþ¶Îβ¾ä¡°Some scientists say that it was the key to the success of mankind¡±¿ÉÖª¡°stone chip¡±¶ÔÓÚÈËÀàµÄ·¢Õ¹Æðµ½Á˷dz£ÖØÒªµÄ×÷Óã¬ÕâÓëDÕýºÃÏà·û¡£ª¤
25. B)ÔÚÎÄÕÂ×îºóÒ»¶ÎÖÐ×÷Õß˵ÈËÀàÔÚ¹ýÈ¥µÄ¼¸°ÙÍòÄêʱ¼äÀïһֱʹÓá°stone chip¡±£¬ÈËÀàÉç»á·¢ÉúµÄ±ä»¯ºÜС¡£¶øÎÒÃÇʹÓá°silicon chips¡±²Å²»¹ý¼¸Ä꣬Éú»îÈ´·¢ÉúÁ˾޴óµÄ±ä»¯¡£ÓÚÊÇ×÷Õß·¢³öÁËÒÉÎÊ£º¡°¶þÊ®ÄêºóµÄÉú»î»áÊÇʲôÑù×ÓµÄÄØ£¿¡±£¬¡°¶þ°ÙÍòÄêºóµÄÊÀ½çÓÖ»áÊÇʲôÑù×ÓÄØ£¿¡±£¬±íÃ÷½«À´µÄÉú»îÎÞ·¨Ô¤ÁÏ£¬ÕâÓëÑ¡ÏîBÏà·û¡£ª¤
26. C) ÕâÊÇÒ»µÀϸ½ÚÌâ¡£¸ù¾ÝµÚÈý¶ÎËù¸øµÄº£°Î¸ß¶È£¬¿ÉÖªÃÀ¹ú×îµÍµãÔÚdeath valley¡£ª¤
27. D)´ËÌâºÜÈÝÒ×ÎóѡΪC£¬ÕâÊÇÒòΪµÚÈý¶ÎÌáµ½Mount WhitneyµÄº£°Î¸ß¶È£»