Where is Simon going to?A.ChicagoB.New YorkC.The headquarterD.Peter's office
Where is Simon going to?
A.Chicago
B.New York
C.The headquarter
D.Peter's office
Where is Simon going to?
A.Chicago
B.New York
C.The headquarter
D.Peter's office
听力原文:Five. What did Simon do this morning?
Woman: Oh Simon, you haven't even washed the dishes. Have you done anything this morning?
Boy: I've been really busy, Mum. I paid the window cleaner who called and I was going to put away all the shopping you bought yesterday but Pete rang and he kept me talking for ages.
What did Simon do this morning?
A.
B.
C.
Simon; I bought ten kilos of tomatoes at the supermarket today.
Linda; Ten kilos' Why so many? What are you going to do with them?
Simon: I don’t know. ______
Linda; No, thanks. To tell the truth, I' m not crazy about tomatoes.
A.Can you tell me how to make tomato soup?
B.Did you buy something else?
C.Have you got a big basket to put them in?
D.Would you like some of them?
● Write a notice to all your colleagues:
● informing them about the party
● saying when and where the party is
● inviting them to the party.
● Write about 30-40 words on your Answer Sheet.
听力原文:MB Hi, Charlene. Aren't you going to the team meeting today?
WA No. Simon just sent an e-mail saying it's not being held today. There's a crisis in the tech department and they can't afford to give up the time.
MB What's the crisis? Is there anything I can do to help out?
WA I'm afraid not. It's a programming issue. The client just realized that they sent us the wrong data for the computerized reports they want. So now we have to re-do three weeks of coding in three days!
What does the man learn?
A.A meeting has been canceled.
B.Simon has a new e-mail address.
C.A meeting place has been changed.
D.Simon is the new head of programming.
What's the purpose of Simon's calling Peter?
A.To say goodbye to him
B.To give the best wishes to him
C.To get in touch with his secretary
D.To tell Peter his schedule
听力原文: During a 1995 roof collapse, a firefighter named Donald Herbert was left brain damaged. For ten years, he was unable to speak. Then, one Saturday morning, he did something that shocked his family and doctors. He started speaking. "I want to talk to my wife." Donald Herbert said out of the blue. Staff members of the nursing home where he has lived for more than seven years, raced to get Linda Herbert on the telephone. "It was the first of many conversations the 44-year-old patient had with his family and friends during the 14 hour stretch" Herbert's uncle Simon Menka said. "How long have I been away?" Herbert asked. "We told him almost ten years," the uncle said, "he thought it was only three months." Herbert was fighting a house fire on December 29, 1905 when the roof collapsed, burying him underneath. After going without air for several minutes, Herbert was unconscious for two and a half months and has undergone therapy ever since. News accounts in the days and years after his injury, described Herbert as Mind and with little if any memory. A video shows him receiving physical therapy but apparently unable to communicate and with little awareness of his surroundings. Menka declined to discuss his nephew's current condition or whether the apparent progress is continuing. "The family was seeking privacy while doctors evaluated Herbert", he said. As word of Herbert's progress spread, visitors streamed into the nursing home. "He's resting comfortably," the uncle told them.
(33)
A.He suffered a nervous breakdown.
B.He was wrongly diagnosed.
C.He was seriously injured.
D.He developed a strange disease.
In a five-day period in early June eight girls were brought to New Milford Hospital after what hospital officials call suicidal gestures. The girls, all between 12 and 17, tried a variety of measures, including heavy doses of alcohol, o-ver-the-counter medicines and cuts or scratches to their wrists. None was successful, and most didn't require hospitalization; but at least two attempts, according to the hospital, could have been vital. Their reasons seemed as mundane as the other happen-stances of suburban life. " I was just sick of it all, " One told a reporter, " Everything in life. " Most alarming, emergency-room doctor Frederick Lohse told a local reporter that several girls said they were part of a suicide pact. The hospital later backed away from this remark . But coming in the wake of at least sixteen suicide attempts over the previous few months, this sudden cluster—along with the influx of media—has set this well-groomed suburb of 23, 000 on edge. At a town meeting last Wednesday night, Dr Simon Sobo, chief of psychiatry at the hospital, told more than 200 parents and kids, "We're talking about a crisis that has really gotten out of hand. "Later he added, "There have been more suicide attempts this spring than I have seen in the 13 years I have been here. "
Sobo said that the girls he treated didn't have serious problems at home or school. "Many of these were popular kids, " he said, " They got plenty of love, but beneath the reassuring signs, a swath of teens here are not making it. " Some say that drugs, both pot and ' real drugs' , are commonplace. Kids have shown up with LIFE SUCKS and LONG LIVE DEATH penned on their arms. A few girls casually display scars on their arms where they cut themselves . " You'd be surprised how many kids try suicide, " said one girl , 17. " You don't want to put pain on other people; you put it on yourself. "She said she used to cut herself "just to release the pain".
Emily, 15, a friend of three of the girls treated in June, said one was having family problems, one was "upset that day "and the third was "just upset with everything else going on". She said they weren't really trying to kill themselves—they just needed concern. As Sobo noted, "What's going on in New Milford is not unique to New Milford. "The same underlying culture of despair could be found in any town. But teen suicide, he added, can be a "contagion" . Right now New Milford has the bug—and has it bad.
What is the main subject of the passage?
A.Eight girls committed suicide in New Milford.
B.The village Green is not a charming place.
C.Teenager suicide.
D.Dr. Simon Sobo's achievements.
In a five-day period in early June eight girls were brought to New Milford Hospital after what hospital officials call suicidal gestures. The girls, all between 12 and 17, tried a variety of measures, including heavy doses of alcohol. over-the-counter medicines and cuts or scratches to their wrists. None was successful, and most didn't require hospitalization;but at least two attempts, according to the hospital, could have been vital. Their reasons seemed as mundane as the other happen-stances of suburban life. “I was just sick of it all, ”one told a reporter, “Everything in life. ”Most alarming, emergency-room doctor Frederick Lohse told a local reporter that several girls said they were part of a suicide pact. The hospital later backed away from this remark. But coming in the wake of at least sixteen suicide attempts over the previous few months.this sudden cluster—along with the influx of media—has set this well-groomed suburb of 23,000 on edge. At a town meeting last Wednesday night, Dr Simon Sobo, chief of psychiatry at the hospital, told more than 200 parents and kids, “We're talking about a crisis that has really gotten out of hand. ”Later he added,“There have been more suicide attempts this spring than I have seen in the 13 years I have been here. ”
Sobo said that the girls he treated didn't have serious problems at home or school. “Many of these were popular kids, ”he said, “They got plenty of love, but beneath the reassuring signs, a swath of teens here are not making it. ”Some say that drugs, both pot and‘real drugs’, are commonplace. Kids have shown up with LIFE SUCKS and LONG LIVE DEATH penned on their arms. A few girls casually display scars on their arms where they cut themselves. “You'd be surprised how many kids try suicide, ”said one girl, 17. “You don't want to put pain on other people; you put it on yourself. ”She said she used to cut herself“just to release the pain”.
Emily, 15, a friend of three of the girls treated in, June, said one was having family problems, one was“upset that day”and the third was“just upset with everything else going on”. She said they weren't really trying to kill themselves—they just needed concern. As Sobo noted, “What's going on in New Milford is not unique to New Milford. ”The same underlying culture of despair could be found in any town. But teen suicide, he added, can be a“contagion”. Right now New Milford has the bug-and has it bad.
What is the main subject of the passage?
A.Eight girls committed suicide in New Milford.
B.The village Green is not a charming place.
C.Teenager suicide.
D.Dr. Simon Sobo's achievements.
Where are they going?
A.They are going to the cinema.
B.They are going to a concert.
C.They are going to a party.
Where is the man going?
A.He is going home.
B.He is going to school.
C.He is going to his office.