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科目: 來源:同步題 題型:閱讀理解

閱讀理解。
     MONTREAL (Reuters)-Crossing the US-Canada border (邊界) to go to church on a Sunday cost a US citizen $10,000 for breaking Washington's strict new security(安全) rules.The expensive trip to church was a surprise for Richard Al-bert, who lives right on the Canadian border. Like the other half-dozen
people of Township 15, crossing the border is a daily occurrence for Albert. The nearby Quebec village of St. Pamphile is where they shop, eat and go to church.    
     There are many such situations in these areas along the largely unguarded 5,530 mile border between
Canada and the US which in some cases actually runs down the middle of streets or throughbuildings.    
     As a result, Albert said he did not expect any problems three weeks ago when he returned home to the US after attending church in Canada, as usual. The US customs (海關(guān)) station in this area is closed on
Sundays, so he just drove around the locked gate, as he had done every weekend since the gate appeared last May, following a tightening of border security. Two days later, Albert was told to go to the customs
office, where an officer told him he had been caught on camera crossing the border illegally(非法).    
     Ottawa has given out special passes to some 300 US citizens in that area so they can enter the country when Canadian customs stations are closed, but the US stopped a similar program last May.That forces
the people to a 200 mile detour along hilly roads to get home through another border check point.    
     Albert has requested that the customs office change its decisions on the fine, but he has not attended a Sunday church since. "I feel like I'm living in a prison," he said.
1. We learn from the text that Richard Albert is_______.    
A. an American living in Township 15    
B. a Canadian living in a Quebec village    
C. a Canadian working in a customs station    
D. an American working in a Canadian church
2. Albert was fined because he_______.    
A. failed to obey traffic rules    
B. broke the American security rules    
C. worked in St. Pamphile without a pass    
D. damaged the gate of the customs office
3. The underlined word " detour" in Paragraph 5 means______.    
A. a drive through the town    
B. a race across the fields    
C. a roundabout way of travelling    
D. a journey in the mountain area
4. What would be the best title for the text?   
A. A Cross-country Trip.    
B. A Special Border Pass.    
C. An Unguarded Border.    
D. An Expensive Church Visit.

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科目: 來源:同步題 題型:閱讀理解

閱讀理解。
     LONDON ( Reuters) -Ecotourism (生態(tài)旅游) is  causing  a  lot
of damage to wildlife and may be endangering the survival(生存) of
the very animals people are flocking to see,according to researchers.
        Biologists and conservationists (自然環(huán)境持論者) are worried
because polar bears,dolphins, penguins and other creatures are
getting stressed and losing weight and some are dying.
       "Evidence (證據(jù)) is growing that many animals do not react
well to tourists in their backyard,"New Scientist Magazine said.
      The immediate effects researchers have noticed are changes in
behavior,heart rates,or stress hormone levels but they fear it could
get much worse and over the long term" could endanger the survival
of the very wildlife they want to see. "
      Although money produced through ecotourism,which has been
growing at about 10 - 30 percent a year,has major benefits for poor
countries and people living in rural areas,the Swiss-based World
Conservation Union(IUCN) and some govemments fear not all projects
are audited (審查) and based on environmentally friendly policies,
according to the magazine.
      "Transmission (傳播) of disease to wildlife,or small changes
to wildlife health through disturbance of daily life or increased
stress levels,while not obvious to the casual observer,may translate
to lower survival and breeding," said Philip Seddon,of the University
of Otago in Dunedin,New Zealand.
    Scientists have noticed that bottle-neck dolphins along the
northeastern coast of New Zealand become nervously excited when
tourist boats arrive. Similar changes in behavior have been observed
in polar bears and yellow-eyed penguins in areas visited by ecotourists
that are producing smaller babies.
   Conservationists are now calling for more research into the
effect of ecotourism on animals and say the industry must be developed
carefully, They also want studies done before new ecotourism
projects are started.
      "The animals' welfare should be very important because without
them there will be no ecotourism," said Rochelle Constantine of
the University of Auckland in New Zealand.
1. What's the theme of the text?     
A. Many animals are dying for lack of money.
B. There will be no ecotourism without animals.
C. Ecotourism could endanger the survival of the wildlife people want to see.
D. More research should be done on ecotourism.
2. We may learn from the text that ____  .   
A. ecotourism must be developed properly
B. polar bears are losing weight without enough food
C. all the poor countries have stopped ecotourism
D. money produced through ecotourism should be spent on wild life
3. Which of the following is NOT mentioned in the text?  
A. Many animals do not react well in their backyard.
B. Polar bears in areas visited by ecotourists are producing smaller babies.
C. Ecotourism has been growing at about 10 - 30 percent ayear.
D. Studies should be done before new ecotourism projects are started.
4. What Rochelle Constantine said in the last paragraph implies  that____.
A. if people want to get high income,they must develop ecotourism
B. animals have rights to live their own life
C. animals are people's good friends
D. people should take good care of wildlife

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科目: 來源:福建省模擬題 題型:閱讀理解

閱讀理解。
     CCTV images were released today of a suspected rapist who attacked a woman in Glasgow city
center.
     Detectives have issued pictures of a man in a bid to catch the sex attacker who struck last month.
     The man is said to have scars on his forehead and chest and a tattoo() on his right arm.
     The attack took place in the early hours of Saturday, April 18, on waste ground between Carrick
Street and Broomielaw. Although the 27-year-old victim was not injured, she was left badly shaken. Her
attacker was last seen running in Argyle Street near to Cadogan Street.
     The man the police wish to speak to is described as a white male, aged around 20 and 5ft 6in tall. He
has a tanned complexion(黃褐色面膚), short gelled hair, muscular build(肌肉發(fā)達) with a scar on the
right side of his forehead. He is wearing a white T-shirt, light blue jeans with cargo pockets and white
training shoes.
     Detective Inspector Andy Mc William, of Stewart Street CID, said, "Today we're issuing CCTV
images of a male pictured in a city center street in the early hours of Saturday, April 18. He may be able
to assist us in our investigation. I would ask him, or any person who recognizes him, to come forward. I'd
also ask anyone who was in the general areas of Broomielaw or Carrick Street on the night in question
and saw this man or has any information that may assist us to contact me/"
     Anyone who can help should contact Stewart Street CID on 0141 532 3116 or Crime stoppers on
0800 555 111 where anonymity can be maintained.
1. What can the man who offers the information about the sex attacker get in reward?
A. Appearance on television.
B.  Images of some detectives.
C.  Money for his action.
D.  A scar on the forehead.
2. The underlined word in the last paragraph probably means __________.
A. a person who is unwilling to offer his or her personal information
B. a person who can make great contributions to certain affairs
C. a person who wants to get rewards and offers help to the police
D. a person who gives away his friend to get a higher position
3. Why did Andy Mc William say those words in the last but one paragraph?
A. He wished to get help from society.
B. He wanted anyone to have contact with him.
C. He hoped to observe the people watching the TV.
D. He told the society why they were issuing CCTV images.
4. What advantage do you have when you phone the number 0800 555 111?
A. You can contact Stewart Street CID freely.
B. You can communicate with Crime Stoppers.
C. All your information may be exposed to the public.
D. The public will not know anything about your own information.

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科目: 來源:廣東省模擬題 題型:閱讀理解

閱讀理解。
     SAN FRANCISCO - In the western U.S., Hawaii and elsewhere across the globe, moon watchers
were treated Saturday to a rare celestial phenomenon: a total lunar eclipse (月全食).
     For about 50 minutes starting at 6:06 a.m. PST, the moon was completely blocked by the Earth's
shadow.
     With only some indirect sunlight able to reach it after passing through the Earth's atmosphere, the
moon took on a reddish glow. Since the atmosphere scatters blue light, only red light strikes the moon,
giving it a dark red color.
     Dally Sam, who runs a public relations firm in Hawaii, said it had been cloudy and rainy, but the
weather cleared just in time for the eclipse.
     Around 3 a.m., he awoke, as he usually does, and remembered to step outside the house in time to
catch the eclipse about a half hour later. No one else in the neighborhood was up.
     "It was turning that dark red color," Sayre, 47, said, "I'd better grab a camera. To be able to see it
just right outside our house was really cool."
     At the local observatory in Los Angeles, some 300 people, many clutching coffee cups in the cold
morning air, sat with blankets and chairs on the observatory's great lawn.
    "It's really a celestial festival out here," John Peter, 39, told the Los Angeles Times as he set up his
camera.
     Lying on a slope north of downtown near the Hollywood sign, the place offers clear views of the sky.
Observatory officials alerted the crowd when the eclipse began and spontaneous applause erupted when
the celestial event ended.
     A total lunar eclipse occurs when the moon goes through the long shadow cast by the Earth and is
blocked from the sunlight that brightens it.
     The last total lunar eclipse was on June 15 although that was not visible from the U.S. The next one is
on April 15, 2014, and will be seen in the U.S.
1. What do we know about the lunar eclipse from the passage?
A. The total lunar eclipse began at about 3:30 a.m.
B. The total lunar eclipse ended at about 6:56 a.m.
C. The lunar eclipse ended at about 6:56 in the evening.
D. The lunar eclipse began at about 6:06 in the evening.
2. When a total lunar eclipse occurs, ________.
A. the moon looks blue 
B. the light will hurt our eyes
C. nothing of the moon can be seen except some dark red light around its place
D. another planet comes between the earth and the moon
3. We can infer from paragraph 5 that at 3:30 a.m. Dally Sam ______.
A. found it was still raining heavily
B. saw a total lunar eclipse 
C. went out walking as he usually does
D. still had to wait for a long time to see a total lunar eclipse
4. From the last but one paragraph, the following are true EXCEPT _______.
A. a total lunar eclipse occurs when the moon is blocked by the sun
B. the source of moonlight is from the sun
C. the earth comes between the moon and the sun
D. with the sunlight, the earth casts its shadow over the moon
5. What is the main purpose of the passage? 
A. To inform us of the next total lunar eclipse.
B. To tell us about a rare celestial event.
C. To alert us of the natural disaster.
D. To draw people's attention to the news.

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科目: 來源:江蘇模擬題 題型:閱讀理解

閱讀理解。
     LONDON (Reuters)-New faces given to a Chinese man after a bear tore off part of his face
and a FrenchCaribbean man disfigured by a rare tumor show that such transplants can work and
are not medical oddities (怪異),researchers said.
     The findings give hope to some people with severe facial disfigurement and suggest the transplants
could prove longlasting without major problems.Despite the tissue rejection in the first year after their
transplants,neither men had psychological problems accepting their new faces and have been able to
rejoin society,they reported.
     Only three people have received face transplants.The world's first was carried out on French
woman Isabelle Dinoire in November 2005 after she was disfigured in an attack by her dog.In 2007,
her doctors reported that she had recovered slowly and steadily,overcoming two periods of rejection.
     In 2006,Chinese doctors performed a face transplant on a 30yearold hit by a bear.While there
were some complications with tissue rejection following the operation,two years later the man was
doing well,his doctors said."This case suggests that facial transplantation might be an option for
restoring a severely disfigured face,and could enable patients to bring themselves back into society,"
Shuzhong Guo and colleagues at Xijing Hospital in China wrote.
     A French team described their work on a 29yearold man who suffered from Von Recklinghausen
disease,an illness that changes the shape of his face."The man,who was not named,was given a new
nose,mouth and chin in a 2007 operation.He began to work 13 months after the transplant has more
function in his face and has not rejected the new tissue," his doctors said.
     "Our case confirms that face transplantation is practical and effective for the correction of specific
disfigurement," Dr.Laurent Lantieri and colleagues at the HenriMondor hospital outside Paris wrote.
1.What's the main idea of this passage?
A.Face transplants can work.
B.Face transplants help regain confidence.
C.Three people have received face transplants.
D.Disfigured people need face transplants.
2.What happened to the Chinese patient mentioned in the passage?
A.He got a strange illness when he was young.
B.He received several operations in hospital.
C.He was the first person to receive a face transplant.
D.He was once attacked by an animal.
3.From the passage we can learn that ________.
A.doctors have different opinions on facial disfigurement
B.patients could regain selfconfidence after face transplants
C.the new face of every patient has more functions than expected
D.it is easy for disabled people to be accepted by society
4.The underlined word "restoring" in Paragraph 4 means "________".
A.removing  
B.recovering
C.repairing  
D.rejecting
5.What problem resulted from the facial operations?
A.The patients wouldn't accept the facial change.
B.It was hard for the patients to get along with others.
C.It took some time for the patients to recover from the operation.
D.The patients usually suffered from tissue rejection.

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科目: 來源:同步題 題型:閱讀理解

閱讀理解。

      In 1933 an unknown American called Clarence Nash went to see the film-maker Walter Disney.
He had an unusual voice and he wanted to work in Disney's cartoon film for children. When Walter
Disney heard Nash's voice, he said, "Stop! That's our duck!"
       The duck was the now-famous Donald Duck, who first appeared in 1934 in the film, The Wise
Little Hen. Donald lived in an old houseboat and worn his sailor jacket and hat. Later that year he
became a star after an eight minute Mickey Mouse film. The cinema audiences liked him because he
was lazy and greedy, and because he lost his temper very easily. And they loved his voice when he
became angry with Mickey's eight nephews. Soon Donald was more popular than Mickey Mouse
himself, probably because he wasn't a goody-goody, like Mickey.
      In the 1930s, 1940s, and 1950s, Donald and his friends Mickey, Goofy and Pluto made hundreds
of Disney cartoons. He also made educational film about the place of the USA in the world, and safety
in the home. Then in 1966 Donald Duck and his voice disappeared-there were no more new cartoons.
      Clarence Nash died in February, 1985. But today's children can still see the old cartoons on the
television and hear that famous voice.

1. Who made Donald Duck cartoons?
A. Mickey Mouse.
B. Clarence Nash.
C. Walter Disney.
D. Pluto
2. When did the first Donald Duck film appear?
A. In 1933  
B. In 1934
C. In 1966  
D. In 1965
3. Who was Clarence Nash?
A. A cartoonist.
B. A writer.
C. A film maker.
D. The man who made the voice for Donald Duck.
4. Where do today's children see Donald Duck cartoons?
A. In new cartoons.
B. At the cinema.
C. On television.
D. In the theatre.
5. Why did people like Donald better than Mickey Mouse?
A. Probably because he was lazy and greedy.
B. Probably because he wasn't a goody-goody like Mickey.
C. Probably because he lost his temper very easily.
D. Probably because he became angry with Mickey's eight nephews.

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科目: 來源:同步題 題型:完形填空

完形填空。

                                          The True Story of Treasure Island
     It was always thought that Treasure Island was the product of Robert Louis Stevenson's
imagination.__1__,recent research has found the true story of this exciting work.
     Stevenson,a Scotsman,had lived __2__ for many years.In 1881 he returned to Scotland for
a __3__.With him were his American wife Fanny and his son __4__.
     Each morning Stevenson would take them out for a long __5__ over the hills.They had been
__6__ this for several days before the weather suddenly took a turn for the worse.Kept indoors
by the heavy rain,Lloyd felt the days __7__.To keep the boy happy,Robert asked the boy to do
some __8__.
     One morning,the boy came to Robert with a beautiful map of an island.Robert __9__ that the
boy had drawn a large cross in the middle of __10__. "What's that?" he asked. "That's the __11__
treasure," said the boy.Robert suddenly __12__ something of an adventure story in the boy's __13__.
While the rain was pouring,Robert sat down by the fire to write a story.He would make the __14__
a twelve year old boy,just like Lloyd.But who would be the pirate(海盜)?
     Robert had a good friend named Henley,who walked around with the __15__ of a wooden leg.
Robert had always wanted to __16__ such a man in a story.__17__ Long John Silver,the pirate with
a wooden leg,was __18__.
     So,thanks to a __19__ September in Scotland,a friend with a wooden leg,and the imagination of
a twelveyearold boy,we have one of the greatest __20__ stories in the English language.

(     )1.A.However    
(     )2.A.alone      
(     )3.A.meeting    
(     )4.A.Lloyd      
(     )5.A.talk        
(     )6.A.attempting  
(     )7.A.quiet      
(     )8.A.cleaning    
(     )9.A.doubted    
(     )10.A.the sea    
(     )11.A.forgotten  
(     )12.A.saw        
(     )13.A.book      
(     )14.A.star      
(     )15.A.help      
(     )16.A.praise    
(     )17.A.Yet        
(     )18.A.read      
(     )19.A.rainy      
(     )20.A.news      
B.Therefore
B.next door
B.story    
B.Robert    
B.rest      
B.missing  
B.dull      
B.writing  
B.noticed  
B.the house
B.buried    
B.drew      
B.reply    
B.hero      
B.problem  
B.produce  
B.Also      
B.born      
B.sunny    
B.love      
C.Besides  
C.a(chǎn)t home  
C.holiday  
C.Henley    
C.walk      
C.planning  
C.busy      
C.drawing  
C.decided  
C.Scotland  
C.discovered
C.made      
C.picture  
C.writer    
C.use      
C.include  
C.But      
C.hired    
C.cool      
C.real-life
D.Finally      
D.a(chǎn)broad      
D.job          
D.John        
D.game        
D.enjoying    
D.cold        
D.exercising  
D.recognized  
D.the island  
D.unexpected  
D.learned      
D.mind        
D.child        
D.bottom      
D.a(chǎn)ccept      
D.Thus        
D.written      
D.windy        
D.a(chǎn)dventure    

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科目: 來源:江蘇期末題 題型:閱讀理解

閱讀理解。
     In a few years, you might be able to speak Chinese, Korean, Japanese, French, and English
and all at the same time. This sounds incredible, but Alex Waibel, a computer science professor
at US's Carnegie
Mellon University (CMU) and Germany's University of Karlsruhe, announced last week that it
may soon be reality. He and his team have invented software and hardware that could make it
far easier for people who speak different languages to understand each other.
     One application, called Lecture Translation, can easily translate a speech from one language
into another. Current translation technologies typically limit speakers to certain topics or a limited
vocabulary. Users also have to be trained how to use the programme.
     Another prototype (雛形機) can send translations of a speech to different listeners depending
on what language they speak. "It is like having a simultaneous translator right next to you but without
disturbing the person next to you," Waibel said.
     Prefer to read? So-called Translation Glasses transcribe (轉(zhuǎn)錄) the translations on a tiny
liquid-crystal(液晶) display (LCD) screen.
     Then there's the Muscle Translator. Electrodes (電極) capture the electrical signals from facial
muscle movements made naturally when a person is mouthing words. The signals are then translated
into speech. The electrodes could be replaced with wireless chips implanted (植入) in a person's face,
according to researchers.
     During a demonstration (演示) held last Thursday in CMU's Pittsburgh campus, a Chinese student
named Stan Jou had 11 tiny electrodes attached to the muscles of his cheeks, neck and throat. Then
he mouthed-without speaking aloud-a few words in Mandarin (普通話) to the audience. A few
seconds later, the phrase was displayed on a computer screen and spoken out by the computer
in English and Spanish: "Let me introduce our new prototype".
     This particular gadget (器械), when fully developed, might allow anyone to speak in any number
of languages or, as Waibel put it, "to switch your mouth to a foreign language". "The idea behind the
university's prototypes is to create 'good enough' bridges for cross-cultural exchanges that are
becoming more common in the world," Waibel said.
     With spontaneous (自發(fā)的) translators, foreign drivers in Germany could listen to traffic
warnings on the radio, tourists in China could read all the signs and talk with local people, and leaders
of different countries could have secret talks without any interpreters there.
1. What kind of prototype did the Chinese student named Stan Jou try?
A. Lecture Translation.            
B. Translation Glasses.
C. Muscle Translator.            
D. We don't know.
2. What is the purpose of inventing the translators? 
A. To help students to learn English easily.
B. To help people to watch foreign TV programs without trouble.
C. To help people travel in foreign countries.
D. To promote cultural exchanges between countries.
3. What is the best title of this text? 
A. Speak different languages at the same time
B. Flow to learn to speak foreign languages
C. New ways to learn foreign languages
D. You're welcome to learn foreign languages

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科目: 來源:安徽省月考題 題型:閱讀理解

閱讀理解。
     "A good book for children should simply be a good book in its own right," says Mollie Hunter. Born
and brought up near Edinburgh, Mollie has devoted her talents to writing primarily for young people. She
firmly believes that there is always and should always be a wider audience for any good book whatever its main market is. In Mollie's opinion it is necessary to make   full use of language and   she  enjoys  telling a
story, which is what every writer should be doing. "If you aren't telling a story, you're a very dead writer indeed," she says. With the chief function of a writer being to entertain (讓人愉快), Mollie is indeed an entertainer. "I have this great love of not only the meaning of language but of the music of language," she says. "
This love goes back to early childhood. I've told stories all my life. I had a school teacher who used to ask us what we would like to be when we grew up and, because my family always had dogs, and I was very
good at handling them, I said I wanted to work with dogs, and the teacher always said 'Nonsense, Mollie, dear, you'll be a writer.' So finally I thought that this woman must have something, since she was a good
teacher and I decided when I was nine that I would be a writer."
     This childhood intention is described in her novel, A Sound of Chariots, which although written in  the
third person is clearly autobiographical (自傳體的) and gives a picture both of Mollie's ambition  (理想)
and her struggle towards its achievement. Thoughts of her childhood inevitably(不可避免地) brought
thoughts of the time when her home was still a village with buttercup meadows(草地) and strawberry fields-sadly now covered with modern houses. "I was once taken back to see it and I felt that somebody had
lain dirty hands all over my childhood. I'll never go back,"she said. "Never.""When I set one of my books
in Scotland,"she said,"I can recall my romantic (浪漫的) feelings as a child playing in those fields, or
watching the village blacksmith at work. And that's important, because children now know so much so
early that romance can't exist for them, as it did for us."
1. In Mollie Hunter's opinion, which of the following is one sign of a poor writer? 
A. Being poor in life experience.     
B. Being short of writing skills.
C. The weakness of description.         
D. The absence of a story.
2. What do we learn about Mollie Hunter as a young child? 
A. She didn't expect to become a writer.
B. She didn't enjoy writing stories.
C. She didn't have any particular ambitions.
D. She didn't respect her teacher's views.
3. In comparison with children of earlier years, Mollie feels that modern children are     
A. more intelligent(聰明的)               
B. better informed(見多識廣的)
C. less eager to learn                     
D. less interested in reality
4. What's the writer's purpose in this text? 
A. To describe Mollie Hunter's most successful books.   
B. To share her enjoyment of Mollie Hunter's books.
C. To introduce Mollie Hunter's work to a wider audience.
D. To provide information for Mollie Hunter's existing readers

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科目: 來源:廣東省同步題 題型:完形填空

完形填空。

     Every summer, hundreds of thousands of students travel to other countries looking for work and
adventure. Most of the opportunities are in   1   work. The pay is usually poor, but most people work
  2   for the thrill of travel. You can pick grapes in France, entertain kids on American summer camps,
and, of course,
there are always   3   in hotels and restaurants.    
     But it is not as easy as it used to be to find work. Unless you speak the language of the country well,
there will be very   4   openings. For example, when you arrive to wash dishes in a restaurant in Paris,
the owner will   5   you to speak French. British students only have a language   6   for jobs in the USA
and Australia.
     Not every one   7   the experience. Sarah James was once responsible for forty American children
in Europe. During the   8  , one child lost his passport; four children were lost in Madrid for a whole day;
the whole group was thrown out of one hotel because of the   9   they made. Sarah says, "It really was
a 24-hour-a-day job since the kids never   10  ! And the pay was awful. It wasn't worth it."
     The trouble is that   11   expect to have an easy time of it. After all, they see it as a   12  . In practice,
though, they have to work hard. At the same time, all vacation work is casual work, and jobs are   13  
only when the hotel, the restaurant, or the campsite is busy. But students have few employment   14  .
As soon as the holiday season finishes, companies will get rid of them. And if their employer doesn't like
them, they'll be   15  , too.

(     )1. A. seasonal
(     )2. A. hard  
(     )3. A. customers
(     )4. A. good  
(     )5. A. teach
(     )6. A. program
(     )7. A. has  
(     )8. A. trip  
(     )9. A. promise
(     )10. A. cried  
(     )11. A. children
(     )12. A. job  
(     )13. A. countless
(     )14. A. experiences
(     )15. A. dismissed
B. mental  
B. voluntarily
B. visitors
B. new  
B. expect  
B. lesson  
B. enjoys  
B. flight  
B. progress  
B. studied
B. students
B. lesson  
B. available
B. rules  
B. charged
C. professional
C. abroad
C. jobs
C. attractive
C. allow
C. advantage
C. forgets
C. discussion
C. complaint
C. slept
C. employers
C. holiday
C. interesting
C. plans
C. fined
D. formal      
D. continuously
D. parties    
D. few        
D. forbid      
D. exam        
D. remembers  
D. ceremony    
D. noise      
D. helped      
D. parents    
D. shame      
D. boring      
D. rights      
D. punished    

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