邢唷>? pr?o欹_ 鳵弣bjbj8bb疓dddddxxx8TLxlPf"c} $^!$2dccdddd-U`肖xB芍o6Ey0MB$?UB$^$$dU${(?, *: _l蟼w闚乢-Nf[2021J\貧 N駛韹 Nf[gP桍e脋`NAS N0桘t銐AArbeia Roman Fort (蜽!X) and MuseumLocation and HistoryArbeia Roman Fort is situated on Hadrian s Wall. It was the most important structure built by the Romans in Britain, and now it has been a World Heritage Site. Built around AD 160, Arbeia Roman Fort was the military supply base for the soldiers who were stationed along Hadrian抯 Wall. The fort has been gradually uncovered and some original parts have been revealed. There are reconstructions that show how Arbeia Roman Fort would have looked. The ReconstructionsThe reconstructions of the Commanding Officer抯 house and soldiers quarters are strikingly different. The accommodation for soldiers is dark and uncomfortable, while the Commanding Officer抯 house is spacious and luxurious, with courtyards with fountains for him and his family to enjoy.The MuseumVisit the museum and see many objects that were found at Arbeia. They are historically important and show what daily life was really like at that time. You will see weapons, tools, jewellery, and so on. You can also discover how the Romans buried their dead and see tombstones (揦憍) which survive to this day. There is a  hands-on area allowing visitors to dig on a certain site and study their findings with the help of museum staff. You can piece together pottery, or try writing just as the Romans would have done. For children, they can build this ancient Roman fort with building blocks by themselves.Opening Times and Getting ThereApril 1-October 31: Monday to Saturday 10:00am-5:00pm, Sunday 2:00pm-5:00pm. November 1-March 31: Monday to Saturday 11:00am-4:00pm, closed Sunday. (Closed December 25-26 and January 1)Entry is free. Arbeia is only a ten-minute walk from the bus station at South Shields. Free car park nearby.Website: HYPERLINK "http://www.twmuseums.org.uk/arbeia"www.twmuseums.org.uk/arbeia 1. According to the passage, Arbeia Roman Fort ______. A. was related to the military B. got reconstructions around AD 160 C. was built in a small area in Rome D. provided a comfortable life for soldiers2. What can visitors do in the museum? A. See historical objects. B. Build tombstones for the dead. C. Write to ancient Romans. D. Try using old tools and weapons.3. What time does Arbeia Roman Fort close? A. On April 1. B. On October 31. C. On November 1. D. On December 26.BEvery time we get on a plane, we抮e asked to either turn off our phones or change them to flight mode梚t抯 for 搒ecurity reasons? But according to The Conversation website, having to turn our phones off on a plane is 揳 service issue, not a safety one? When we speak on our phones in the air, they can cause interference to the aircraft抯 radios and pilots can hear this interference in their headphones. 揑t抯 the same noise you抣l be familiar with, if you put your mobile too close to a speaker, the Mirror noted. 揑t is not safety-critical, but is annoying for sure. Though speaking on a phone during a flight isn抰 dangerous, from the viewpoint of service, it isn抰 still a good idea.When we make or receive a call on the ground, we connect to a cell tower that deals with all calls within an 80-kilometer radius (JS刜). As we move from place to place we are  handed on to different cell towers. As US scientist Sven Bilen explains, for this system to work, there are  built-in expectations: There shouldn t be too many  handoffs and people shouldn t be traveling faster than car speeds. 揙f course, phone users should be close to the ground. he added. If we were to make phone calls while we flew, however, none of these expectations would be met. And even worse, our cellphones would stop working.But now things are beginning to change. If we still can抰 speak during a flight, we can use other phone functions. For example, Airbus A330 of Emirates Airlines has inflight WiFi to make passengers send and receive short messages in the air. In the future, as Bilen points out, it may be possible for air travelers to make and receive calls freely. The breakthrough could be 損ico cells? which are small cell towers on the plane itself. There would no longer be connections made between phones and the ground and therefore there would be no danger of disruption to phone service.One day, perhaps, we will be chatting in the air as much as we chat on the ground.4. Why are passengers required to turn off their phones on a plane?Because using phones will pose a threat to their safety.Because using phones may cause annoying noise to pilots.Because turning off phones can ensure passengers a better service.Because phones will fail to be connected to the cell tower when in the air.5. How many 揵uild-in expectations are mentioned by Sven Bilen to help make a phone call?A. One. B. Two. C. Three. D. Four.6. What can we infer from the passage?A. People should travel slower than airplane speeds to make a phone call successfully.B. Passengers are likely to make or receive phone calls freely on a plane in the future.C. 揚ico cells has been applied by airlines to provide passengers with good phone service.D. Passengers can receive calls on Airbus A330 of Emirates Airlines with the help of inflight WiFi.7. Where is the text most likely from?A. A science fiction. B. A travel journal. C. A guidebook. D. A magazine.C Buying green is now popular with many consumers. We choose environmentally friendly products, and we try to be conscious consumers. However, new research by the University of Arizona has found that it has no positive effect on psychological well-being. It also has a more limited environmental benefit than the other option simply buying less.The study followed 968 young adults over a number of years. Throughout the study, participants responded to online survey questions about their subjunctive well-being, their life satisfaction and their psychological distress (瞏$O), as well as giving information about their levels of materialism and pro-environmental behaviors.The study found that reduced consumption buying less, repairing items instead of replacing them, avoiding impulse purchases and so on was linked to a higher level of personal well-being and a lower level of psychological distress, but green buying did not show such links.Perhaps unsurprisingly, the study also found that young people with more materialistic values were less likely to engage in reduced consumption. This group did, however, engage with buying green activities. Researcher Sabrina Helm suggests that this may be because buying green is still buying so it still satisfies the materialists urge to accumulate new items. These people are called 慻reen materialists?However, green materialists must still deal with the same consumption-related stresses as average materialists. If you buy and own a lot of stuff, it takes up a lot of head space. You have to worry about how to pay for it, and you have to manage all the stuff, worrying about how to keep it safe and how to keep it organized. As Helm notes, 揟he key is to reduce consumption and not just buy green stuff. Having less and buying less can actually make us more satisfied and happier.Understanding how materialistic values affect consumer behaviors, and how those behaviors in turn affect personal well-being, is important. However, Helm acknowledges that for many consumers, changing behaviors to consume less will be challenging. 揥e've been told since childhood that there抯 a product for everything and it抯 OK to buy, and it抯 a good thing because that抯 how the economy works, She Said.8. What is the difference between buying less and buying green?A. Buying less promotes personal well-being.B. Buying less is based on materialistic values.C. Buying green brings more life satisfaction.D. Buying green contributes more to the environment.9. What problem does a green materialist usually have to face?A. The burden of ownership. B. Worries about how to stay safe.C. Stresses from average materialists. D. The difficulty finding green products.10. What does what Helm says in the last paragraph indicate?A. It is natural to buy and sell things. B. It抯 important to be wise consumers.C. It抯 good to buy what is needed. D. It抯 not easy to make people buy less.11. What is the best title for the text?A. Changes in Consumer Culture B. Buying Less for Your HappinessC. Green Consumption: A Choice for the Planet D. How Materialistic Values Affect Consumer BehaviorsDRound and Round They GoSpace is becoming more crowded. Quite a few low-Earth-orbit (LEO) satellites have been launched into the sky, which are designed to move around the Earth only a few hundred kilometres above its surface. SpaceX and OneWeb plan to launch LEO satellites in their thousands, not hundreds, to double the total number of satellites in orbit by 2027.That promises to change things on Earth. LEO satellites can bring Internet connectivity to places where it is still unavailable. This will also be a source of new demand for the space economy. Morgan Stanley, a bank, projects that the space industry will grow from $350 billion in 2016 to more than $1.1 trillion by 2040. New Internet satellites will account for half this increase.For that to happen, however, three worries must be overcome. Debris (巟Gr) is the most familiar concern. When enough satellites were packed into low-Earth orbits, any collision could cause a chain reaction which would eventually destroy all spaceships. One solution is to grab the satellites with problems and pull them down into the Earth抯 atmosphere. Another is to monitor space more closely for debris. But technology is only part of the answer. Rules are needed to deal with old satellites safely from low-Earth orbits. Cyber-security is a second, long-standing worry. Hackers could take control of a satellite and steal intellectual property, redirect data flows or cause a collision. The satellite industry has been slow to respond to such concerns. But as more of the world抯 population comes to rely on the space for access to the Internet, the need for action will intensify. Measures will surely be taken to protect network security.The third issue follows from the first two. If there is a simple mistake or a cyber-attack, it may cause a chain reaction which wipes out hundreds of billions of dollars of investment. Who is responsible for that? Now the plans of firms wishing to operate large numbers of satellites are being studied. But there is a long way to go before the risks are well understood, let alone priced. As space becomes more commercialized, mind-bending prospects open up: packages moved across the planet in minutes by rocket rather than by plane, equipment sent to other small planets, passengers launched into orbit and beyond. All that and more may come, one day. But such activities would raise the same questions as LEO satellites do. They must be answered before the space economy can truly develop. 12. What can we learn about LEO satellites from the passage? A. They are supposed to limit the space economy. B. They are expected to increase in large numbers.C. They are designed to move beyond the Earth as far as possible.D. They are mainly intended to bring Internet connectivity to remote areas. 13. To deal with debris in space, the author suggests _______. A. depending entirely on the modern technologyB. monitoring the movement of spaceships carefully C. strengthening rules to remove old satellites safely D. destroying all the satellites with problems instantly14. What does the underlined word 搃ntensify in Paragraph 4 probably mean? A. Measure. B. Increase. C. Spread. D. Repeat.15. What is the author抯 attitude toward the launch of LEO satellites?A. It should be further confirmed for its ownership. B. It should be continued because of its advantages.C. It should be done carefully to avoid potential risks. D. It should be stopped in face of the space economy.孨07 ?Once eating alone was just that: sitting down in a restaurant on one's own and eating a meal. Everyone did it sometimes, and when they did so, 16________. To eat alone might suggest that you didn't have any friends. There was a kind of shame attached to it. Nowadays, however, there is more and more solitary (靣陙剉) eating for pleasure. 17________. "Foodies" people with a passionate interest in cuisines do it because all they need is the chance to eat good food. They don't want company or conversation, but only the joy of eating some special dish. Other people eat alone because it's simply practical for them to do so. For instance, it's estimated that nearly a third of all the customers of fast-food restaurants eat alone. They are served with their food fast, eat it fast and then leave fast. 18________.牋 But the appeal of eating alone is quite different. 19________? For the hour or so that it takes to have a meal, they can forget all the pressures of their lives. They don't have to deal with their family or job. They can relax and let their mind wander. Maybe they'll bring a book, a newspaper to enjoy a quiet time.牋 David Annand, editor of Conde Nast Traveler magazine, who delights in dining alone, speaks of his pleasure in the "rhythm of a meal in a restaurant its ebb and flow (篘eg篘€_), the periodic arrival and departure of the waiter". 20________.A. It's an experience of freedomB. they might be a little embarrassedC. People choose to eat alone for various reasonsD. none of them would feel bad about themselvesE. Sometimes staying alone is quite cosy when you don't workF. This restaurant rhythm allows him to sit back, observe and thinkG. It saves time if they have a meeting or a child to pick up from school N0孾媁kXzzI come from one of those families where you have to yell at the dinner table to get in a word. Everyone has a strong 21 , and talks at the same time, and no one has a 22 leading to heated arguments. We often talk or even debate with each other on different topics. 23 a family like mine has made me more 24 about the world around me, making me tend to question anything anyone tells me. But it has also made me realize that I抦 not a good listener. And when I say 搇istening? I抦 not 25 to the nodding-your-head-and- 26 -answering-Uh-huh-or-Ooh-I-see variety. I mean the kind of listening where you find yourself deeply 27 with the person you抮e speaking with, when his story becomes so 28 that your world becomes less about you and more about him. No, I was never very good at that.I spent summer in South Africa two years ago. I worked for a good non-profit 29 called Noah, which works 30 on behalf of children affected by AIDS. But 31 you asked me what I really did in South Africa, I抎 tell you one thing: I listened, and I listened. 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I could sit down with anyone and hear their 37 and nod and respond at the 38 time梑ut most of the time I was 39 about the next words out of my own mouth. Ever since my summer in South Africa, I have noticed that it抯 in those moments when my mouth is closed and my 40 is wide open that I抳e learned the most about other people, and perhaps about myself.21. A. qualification B. influence C. opinion D. assumption22. A. commitment B. problem C. schedule D. request23. A. Belonging to B. Believing in C. Bringing up D. Struggling for 24. A. anxious B. curious C. nervous D. adventurous25. A. objecting B. appealing C. turning D. referring 26. A. rudely B. loudly C. politely D. gratefully27. A. identifying B. quarreling C. debating D. competing28. A. vivid B. absurd C. mind-numbing D. time-consuming29. A. school B. organization C. factory D. church30. A. effortlessly B. timelessly C. aimlessly D. tirelessly31. A. unless B. because C. although D. if32. A. applauded B. spoke C. wept D. complained33. A. studying B. traveling C. listening D. working34. A. touching B. frustrating C. astonishing D. fascinating35. A. delay B. course C. journey D. silence36. A. Before B. After C. Except D. Since37. A. needs B. stories C. comments D. cases38. A. valuable B. free C. right D. same39. A. talking B. arguing C. learning D. thinking40. A. sympathy B. spirit C. mind D. family踁0韹誰kXzzResearchers find, not just daily walks or controlling salt in your diet, learning some hula dance steps 41. (be) also helpful in lowering your blood pressure. The hula is a dance developed by the Polynesians who 42. (origin) settled in the Hawaiian Islands.Native Hawaiians who participated in a blood-pressure-lowering programme involving their cultural dance of hula 43. (reduce) their blood pressure more than those who received standard education on diet and exercise. The participants said the hula helped meet their 44. (spirit) and cultural needs. These results may also be applied 45. other groups although the study was conducted in Native Hawaiians. They prove 46. idea that for most people, the best physical activity for their health is one that makes them 47. (breath) a little faster and gets their heart beating a little faster. 48. that's dancing, biking, swimming, or surfing, the key is to move more and more often. While the physical 49. (benefit) of dancing hula are clear, other positive impacts include creating social support and increasing self-confidence. Other similar cultural activities, especially those meeting national guidelines, and social and cultural activities 50. 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