She won’t leave () her friends come back.
A.since
B.until
C.when
A.since
B.until
C.when
A.leave off
B.stop off
C.extend off
D.switch off
A.he thinks she won’t talk to him
B.she’s very attractive and he feels shy
C.he thinks she already has a boyfriend
D.he doesn’t think it’s polite
A.can’t
B.may not
C.must not
D.won't
nt of a public sector labor union with 45,000 members. "() with my employees are probably different from those of male managers () me," she says. "I know what it's like to have to call and say my kid got the () so I won't be coming in. I have a more () style. - not soft, just more understanding." The man who is Monica's () agrees, "She tends to () more and is always looking for a (). People are happy and flourish because they have an input into decisions and they are not mere (); their energies are harnessed. On the other hand, consensus takes longer."
A.leave our
B.carry our
C.fall out
D.work out
Brooke Walker keeps eating junk food(垃圾食品)and already weighs more than Britain's fattest teenager did at the same age .she's been warned by the doctor that they can do no more for her .Next month ,she will begin a healthy eating and exercise plan to save her life.
Brook, who’s too large for girls’ clothes and has to wear boys’ clothes, has been laughed at all her life. She stays indoors much of the time. ”when ”I look in the mirror I feel sad,” she said.
“Doctors have told me that unless I lose weight and exercise I will be very, very sick when I grow up. I have tired really hard to do as the doctors say. But every time I play outside, people stop and look at me and call me “fatso”. I end up crying in my room. ”
Brooke’s weight increased quickly when she developed a love of takeaways and fatty junk food. She often ordered food from shops or restaurant and ate at home. Her daily meal used to be potato chips, chocolates, pizza, and sweet drinks. Brooks’ mum Stacey, a busy single mum, admits Brooke suffered from being dished up with fast food in her early year.
In the first seven days she won’t be able to phone home, but she’s determined to succeed. “I can’t wait to go,” she says. “I am not afraid of going away. My one wish is to lose weight and look like other girls. I am tired of being called fatty and want it to end.”
32、what does the underlined word “diet” most probably mean in the text?()
A.To limit(限制) food
B.To do exercise
C.To see a doctor
D.To go outdoors
33、How does Brooke feel about being fat?()
A.calm
B.sad
C.angry
D.nervous
34、What has caused Brooke’s health problem?()
A.Poor family background
B.bad eating habit
C.lack of exercise equipment
D.little food at home
The ant looked up and saw the young girl sitting in front of a huge pile of seeds.
“Why are you sad?” asked the ant.
“I'm the prisoner of a giant.”the girl told the ant.“He won't let me go until I've made three separate heaps of grain, barley(大麦)and rye(黑麦)out of this huge pile of seeds in which they are all mixed together.”
“That will take you a month!” the ant said, looking at the huge pile of seeds.
“I know,”the girl cried, “and if I haven't finished by tomorrow, the giant will eat me for his supper!”
“Don't cry,”the ant said, “my friends and I will help you.”
Soon thousands of ants were at work, separating the three kinds of seeds.
The next morning, when the giant saw that the work had been done, he let the girl go.
Thus it was one of her tears that saved her life.
6.The ant was playing when it ran here and there.()
A.T
B.F
7.The drop of water fell on the ant when it was nearly dying.()
A.T
B.F
8.The young girl was crying because she wanted to have supper.()
A.T
B.F
9.The giant would eat the girl if she failed to do the work.()
A.T
B.F
10.The ant's friends saved the girl's life.()
A.T
B.F
A.when
B.while
C.for
D.at that time
re they found her had been her home for many years. Her parents were unknown. They left her long ago. At the orphanage, the girl, like all the children there, was taught to read and write. While she was studying at the orphanage,she learned something else-to be independent. At twenty-one,she left the orphanage and began work as a secretary. And then, in 1975, while she was still working as an ordinary secretary, something special
happened. She entered the Miss Hong Kong competition and won it. This was the turning point in her life. Now her name, Mary Cheung, was known to everybody.
Mary entered the competition because she wanted to show that orphanage girls could be something. Winning the competition gave her the chance to start a new life. This led her first into television and then into business as a manager. When she was working as a manager, she had trouble with her reports. "My English just wasn't good enough." she says. Luckily, she had a boyfriend (who later became her husband) to help her. Mary studied management at Hong Kong Polytechnic and graduated in 1980. She started her own business in 1985. But she did not stop developing herself. She then studied at the University of Hong Kong. Since 1987,she had spent a lot of time on photography. She has held several exhibitions of her work in many places-China, New Zealand and Paris. She still found time, however, to work on TV, write for newspapers and bring up her family.
The girl from the street has come a long way, but her journey is not finished yet.()
1. Before Mary Cheung was brought to the orphanage, she had lived in the streets for many years. ()
2. The sentence "orphanage girls could be something" means that orphanage girls could be popular and successful. ()
3. Her life changed in 1985. ()
4. This passage is probably taken from a novel. ()
5. Mary's boyfriend was good at English. ()
A.hardly
B.hard