邢唷>? ?欹q` 餜彀bjbjqPqP2::郶-???8?D'd:M??"??????馢驤驤驤驤驤驤$諲h>QJK~9??~9~9K??0鬖*C*C*C~9??馢*C~9馢*C*C=HX錓?|' 衞&撲囋??旾(馢 M0:M絀(圦DB圦P錓圦錓 ??*CT1(4V???KK艬d???:M~9~9~9~9d$$ _l蟼w闚乢-Nf[貧NhT脋諎wS(擭)N0桘 NR韜噀 蜰蟢槝@b賬剉A,B,C,D,踁*N 恲?N 慂QgsO 恲qQ15槝 蟢槝2R 醤R30R0 AWelcome to the new and improved Enjoy Rome webpage, the main resource for your Rome travel guide. Enjoy Rome, staffed entirely by English-speakers, is an independent tourist office offering a variety of services to independent travellers in Rome, Italy. Enjoy Rome provides a variety of services. You might start with our online Rome travel tourist office, providing a large amount of information for visitors, everything from how to get to the airport to secrets of how to see the city with less cost. Rome was not built in a day and can抰 be seen in a day. But if you抮e planning on staying for any amount of time, you抣l surely need a place to stay. We can provide free bookings for accommodation in Rome hotels and hostels around the city. We also run some award-winning hotels and hostels of our own. In our Accommodation sections, you can reserve a room online, as well as find out about other options, such as renting apartments. Once you抳e found a place to stay, you抣l want to see the city. But Rome is a giant place with thousands of sight. Where should you start? Our Walking Tours provide the perfect introduction. Several different routes show different sides of the city. Choose the ones that you like. We also provide private Rome tours, Vatican tours, and Pompeii tours. For those who would rather see the city in more peaceful fashion, Enjoy Rome books (through Vastours) bus tours of the city, the countryside and the rest of Italy. For those who need to get to Fiumicino Airport during the hours when public transportation is not running, we now offer a shuttle service, making your trip simpler than ever. And, of course, we provide a page of links where you can look for more information both on and off the web on the city of Rome and its wonders. We are quite popular with visitors. Praise has been showered upon Enjoy Rome by countless guidebooks, including Let抯 Go, Time Out, Rough Guides, Lonely Planet, Guide du Routard, Frommer抯, Rick Steves Europe, the Berkeley Guides, and Cognoscenti. Enjoy Rome can be found at Via Marghera, just north of the main train station, Termini. Exit to the north (the Via Marsala exit), keep going straight for three blocks, we抮e on the left. Our telephone number is +39 06 4451843 (or +39 06 4456890); our fax number is +39 06 4450734.If you抮e unsure how to call internationally, click here for more information. We do, of course, speak English. Email us at info@enjoyrome.com.1. According to the passage, Enjoy Rome can help you in the following ways EXCEPT ______.A. booking bus tours of RomeB. helping your travel outside RomeC. renting apartments for your travel in RomeD. offering a shuttle service when public transportation is busy2. The purpose of the passage is to ______.A. advertise Enjoy Rome B. employ new staffC. attract travelers to Rome D. tell us how to travel in RomeBIn the age of reality television, success isn t the only way to the public eye. Failure can also create fame(T餢), just like William Hung, 21, a native of Hong Kong. Hung recently has made an agreement with US -based entertainment firms Koch Records and fuse Music Network. They will publish a full-length record, titled  The True Idol on April 6. The idol (vP螾) is a civil engineering student at the University of California at Berkeley. He did a version (9e橯,g) of Ricky Martin s  She Bangs on the television show  American Idol 3", on January 27. The Fox TV singing contest searches for pop stars among ordinary people. In the case of Hung, however, his act was so bad that the judges cut him off in mid-act. Hung s response?  I already gave my best, so I have no regrets at all. That s good, because any common person would have found plenty to regret: The off-key singing. The blue Hawaiian shirt worn with pants pulled up too high. The terrible dancing. The hips jerking (GdFd) to a beat that did not belong to the song, maybe not even to this planet. It was, by all accounts, bad. But, it was this very bad act that sold well. Marc Juris, president of Fuse, explained it this way: 揈veryone of us is happily guilty of singing our favorite song at the top of our lungs with complete freedom, completely off-key and completely unworried. That抯 what William did and immediately won the hearts of America.Whatever it is, for the moment it抯 big. Three websites devoted to Hung have gone up on the Internet in the past few weeks. Versions of his performance have been remixed with hip hop and techno music and have made it to the top 10 request list at a Chicago radio station. So, what does Hung think of this? 揟here were all these people saying things about me. A lot were saying I was very courageous and that I was great on the show, but some didn抰 have much respect for me and some were kind of mean. Now he says he s not so sure whether to distance himself from the glamour (E洓R) or to accept it. Returning to normal hasn t been easy. 3. What is the main idea of this passage?ASometimes an idol behaves quite foolishly. BHung's performance attracted the public eye. CHow an unsuccessful person became famous. DSuccess sometimes does not require hard work. 4Hung was popular in America for all the following reasons EXCEPT ________ Ahis hips jerking Bhis off-key singing Chis excellent version Dhis shirt and pants 5What does the underlined word  it in paragraph 6 refer to? AHung's bad act B. William Hung. CHung s website. DThe public s opinion. 6Which of the following shows the correct order of what happened to Hung? aThe entertainment firms made an agreement with Hung. bThe judges cut Hung off in mid-act in the singing contest. cHung became popular among Americans. dHung gave a terrible performance though he tried his best. e. Three websites put Hung s funny performance on the Internet. Aa, c, db, e Bd, b, e, c, a Ca, d, b, c, e Dd, b, a, e, c 7Why was Hung able to win the hearts of America? AHis success was based on his own hard work. BHe attracted people s attention in the contest. CHe was good-looking though he didn t sing well. DHis character was completely different from other idols CThe defeat of Lee Sedol, the world s strongest Go (鬡薶) player, by a Google artificial intelligence (AI) program, looks like another milestone towards a world where computers can do almost anything a human can. It is not. There are uncountable things that only a human can do, and that no computer seems close to. The problem is that the purely human things are not economically useful to anyone. The things that computers can be taught to do are by contrast economically fantastic. But even the most powerful programs are not human, just as a shovel (驍f?. They have no feelings. What they have is power, but this power is growing at a rate that should frighten us all.It might be less frightening if computers were truly intelligent, but even the most powerful networks are less human than monstrous Martians (kpf篘). Their power will be used to make money for the firms that finance their development, and then for others quick and clever enough to take advantage of the new world. It is far more likely that they will increase inequality and still further remove the middle classes as we move towards an hourglass (錘褢睌ega埾憚v) society in which everyone is either very rich or very poor and likely indebted.One of the ill effects of the spread of more intelligent computer networks is, at the same time, the spread of what might be called artificial stupidity. If AI is employed largely to replace unskilled labour, it is most productive when labour is kept unskilled or redefined that way. So much of the work in service industries is now simplified until it might be automated (陙≧S). And robots will never need pensions. AI is slowly reducing skilled work, like some forms of medical diagnosis, at the same time, as older doctors complain that the traditional human skills of diagnosis are falling out of medical training. The belief that everything worthwhile can be measured and then managed is far more damaging to humanity than the threat of artificial intelligence on its own.But no victory in complicated Go games can bring us closer to truly human-like computers.8. By mentioning the defeat of Lee Sedol, the author intends to tell us that ______. A. computers can completely replace humans in everything B. the power of computers is growing at a frightening rate C. humans are of no practical economic values to the society D. AI programs can not compare with humans economically 9. We can learn from Paragraph 2 that the power of computers will ______. A. improve the quality of human life B. promote equality at work places C. widen the gap between the rich and the poorD. make contributions to human development 10. What does 揳rtificial stupidity in Paragraph 3 mean? A. Unskilled workers become stupid. B. AI is ruining medical training. C. Computers don抰 need pensions. D. AI discourages skilled work. D For eighty four days old Santiago had not caught a single fish. At first a young boy, Manolin, had shared his bad fortune, but after the fortieth luckless day the boy's father told his son to go in another燽oat. From that time on, Santiago worked alone. The boy loved the old fisherman and牋always helped爃im with money and food. Usually, they would talk about the fish they had taken in luckier times or about American baseball after supper, while at night, alone in his cottage, Santiago dreamed of lions on the beaches of Africa, where he had gone on a sailing ship years before.燞e no longer dreamed of his dead wife. On the eighty-fifth day, Santiago set off to fish before dawn. Two of his baits (u? were fresh tunas (褢猤|? the boy had given him. Then he set his lines which went straight down into deep dark water. As the sun rose he saw other boats in toward shore. A man of war bird showed him where dolphin were chasing some flying fish. This time Santiago saw tuna jumping in the sunlight. A small one took the hook on his爈ine. Pulling the fish aboard, the old man thought it a good fortune.牋牋Toward noon a marlin, a common fish in the sea, started eating the bait which was one hundred爉eters down. Gently the old man played the fish, a big one, as he knew from the weight on the line. At爈ast he struck to settle the hook. The fish did not come out of the surface. Instead, it began to pull the燽oat to the northwest. The old man followed it.燗lthough he was alone and no longer strong, he had his skill and knew many tricks. He waited patiently for the fish to be tired .牋牋 It became cold after the sunset. Suddenly the marlin leaned, pulling Santiago forward on his face and cutting his cheek. Bydawn his left hand was cramped (絙K{剉). The fish had headed northward; there was no land in sight.Hungry, he cut pieces from the tuna and chewed them slowly. That morning the fish jumped. Seeing it leap, Santiago knew he had hooked the biggest marlin he had爀ver seen. Then the fish went down and turned toward the east. Santiago drank a little water from the bottle during the hot afternoon.燙lose to nightfall a dolphin took the small hook he had baited. He lifted it aboard, careful. After he had rested, he cut meat from the dolphin and kept also the two flying fish he found in its stomach. That爊ight he slept. He awoke to feel the line running through his fingers as the fish jumped. Making the line loose slowly, he tried to tire the marlin. After the fish slowed its run, he washed his cut hands in sea water and燼te one of the flying fish. At sunrise the marlin began to circle. Faint and dizzy, he worked to bring the big fish爊earer with each turn.Almost exhausted, he finally drew his big fish alongside and drove in the harpoon(|溕S).The fish was two feet longer than the boat. No fish like it had ever been seen in Havana harbor.An hour later, he sighted the first shark, a fierce Mako, and it came in fast to chase after the dead爉arlin. The old man struck the shark with his harpoon. The Mako rolled and sank, carrying the harpoon爓ith it and leaving the marlin bloody. He knew the smell would spread. Watching, he saw two sharks燾losing in. He struck at one with his knife and watched it sliding down into deep water. He爇illed the other while it tore at the flesh of the marlin. When the third appeared, he thrust (:R) it with the knife.The other sharks came at sunset. At first he tried to beat them with the tiller (5偰g) from the boat, buthis hands were bleeding and there were too many in the sea. In the darkness, as he steered (宑5?toward theharbor of Havana, he heard them hitting the boat again and again. But the old man thought only of his爏teering and his great tiredness. He had gone out too far and the sharks had beaten him. He knew they爓ould leave him nothing but the stripped skeleton of the big marlin.牋牋 All lights were out when he sailed into the little harbor and beached his boat. He could just make out the white backbone and the upstanding tail of the fish.燨nce he fell under their weight and lay patiently爑ntil he could gather his strength to go on.營n his cottage he fell on his bed and went to sleep. 11. According to the text, which statement is NOT true about Manolin?A. The boy left Santiago at last.B. The boy had mercy on Santiago.C. The boy was Santiago's adopted son.D. The boy showed his great concerns to Santiago.12. Why did the man feel that he could be lucky this time?A. Because a lot of sharks followed his boat.B. Because he dreamed about the American lions.C. Because a small tuna took the hook on his line.D. Because he saw many flying fish were chased by the dolphins.13. Why does Santiago let the marlin lead his boat instead of pulling the big fish up?A. He was too tired and hungry to pull the big fish up.B. He wanted to use the marlin as a bait to catch the sharks.C. He wanted to kill the marlin first before he pulled it up to the boat.D. His experience told him not to do so before the fish was tired out.14. Which of the underlined sentences below can be used to best describe Santiago's character?A. "He no longer dreamed of his dead wife." B. "Although he was alone and no longer strong, he had his skill and knew many tricks." C. "Almost exhausted, he finally drew his big fish alongside and drove in the harpoon." D. "Once he fell under their weight and lay patiently until he could gather his strength to go on ." 15. According to the text, what will be talked about next?A. People's reflection when they saw the giant marlin抯 skeleton outside.B. A funeral held by the boy and the local people after his death.C. Santiago s action to realize his dream about the lions.D. Santiago s struggle against sharks .孨09hnc韜噀匭筟 蜰韜噀T剉 恲?N 慂Q齹kXeQzz}vY剉gsO 恲  恲?N g$Ny楘NYYO 恲0 (qQ5\槝 蟢\槝2R 醤R10R0)Everyone knows that fish is good for health. 16 But it seems that many people don t cook fish at home. Americans eat only about fifteen pounds of fish per person per year, but we eat twice as much fish in restaurants as at home. Buying, storing, and cooking fish isn抰 difficult. 17 This text is about how to buy and cook fish in an easy way. 18 Fresh fish should smell sweet: you should feel that you抮e standing at the ocean抯 edge. Any fishy or strong smell means the fish isn抰 fresh. 19 When you have bought a fish and arrive home, you抎 better store the fish in the refrigerator if you don抰 cook it immediately, but fresh fish should be stored in your fridge for only a day or two. Frozen fish isn抰 as tasty as the fresh one.There燼re爉any燾ommon爉ethods爑sed爐o燾ook爁ish.牋 20 First, clean it and season it with your choice of spices (寵e). Put the whole fish on a plate and steam it in a steam pot for 8 to 10 minutes if it weighs about one pound. (A larger one will take more time.) Then, it s ready to serve.A. Do not buy it.B. The easiest is to steam it.C. This is how you can do it.D. It just requires a little knowledge.E. The fish will go bad within hours.F. When buying fish, you should first smell it.G. The fats in fish are thought to help prevent heart disease. N0孾b_kXzzqQ20槝 蟢槝1R 醤R20R0 Hold your head high and face it with a smile, no matter what misfortune you face! I got to know this from a musical soul. The other day I was feeling quite 21 , having just been laid off from my job. With so many 22 to pay, I was wondering what was going to happen to my family. I got off the bus when I heard piano music and singing rising above the noise of the 23 . I walked a bit slower, trying to find out where it was coming from. Through the 24 I saw a young lady sitting at a piano with a box next to her. She was singing songs "&fV j H R } !'25?BVfh~* +\-蹶漭漭咒箱箱箱箱箱箱箱箱箱箱箱箱箱箱箱箱箱箱娩宫」惞 h-who.OJQJaJmHsHho.5丱JQJaJho.5?*OJQJaJho.OJQJaJho.6丅*aJphho.6乤Jho.5乤Jho.aJo( ho.aJh,`5丆JaJo(ho.5丆JaJo(4"V H B U;5N8Uy($劋dhG$H$`劋a$劋dhG$H$WD`劋dhG$H$ $dhG$H$a$惏臧`# G !#b#$$???Z&?6'?6(?()|)?凔dhG$H$VD^凔dhG$H$勔dhG$H$WDd`勔凔dhG$H$WD`凔?~* +v+?>,?-\-??l;披<W<朁拯=]=匌?荦凔勁dhG$H$WDj^凔`勁dhG$H$劋dhG$H$WD`劋dhG$H$凔dhG$H$WD`凔荦 >C>嶠轧筑佝HA朇闐蠪U:V€V腣隫WXW哤禬閃)X乆筙鱔 $dhG$H$a$dhG$H$凔dhG$H$WD`凔\- > >筑!ABMF燜N癗V:V;VWW)X*X圷塝-[.[癨碶0]奭怾抅歖禴筤篰綹鸮^_揰朹梍沖縛耟胉莁bb`c蹰踣僳僳僳僳慧慧慧慧慧瑹棊儙棊儙棊儙棊儙棊儙梱ho.PJQJaJho.>*PJaJo(ho.>*PJaJho.PJaJho.OJQJ^JaJo(ho.OJQJ\乛JaJo(ho.aJfHo(q ho.>*aJfHq ho.aJfHq ho.B*aJo(phho.B*aJph/鱔AY圷鏨ZmZ芞-[h[瞇鮗`\癨0]鸮巂`c刢耤Nd歞鷇xe猠劋dhG$H$WD`劋dhG$H$凔dhG$H$WD`凔`cxe琫萫襡ffrftfvfxf甪癴瞗磃JgLgNgPg╣| |"|$|&|u|w|y|{|軀迀鄚鈢l}n}p}r}詝謢貆趠殈瀪$(,0€€€€)€+€-€/€U€W€Y€[€磤秬竴簚鎬鑰陘靲prtu蕘虂蝸衼麃齺W鲲轱轱殁兮殁兮殁兮殁兮樽殁兮殁兮殁兮殁兮殁兮殁兮殁兮殁兮殁兮殁兮殁兮殁兮殁兮殁兮殁兮Uho.>*aJo(ho.>*aJ ho.aJho.aJo(ho.KHPJaJU猠Pf鬴鏶脇}葈B~b8€垁蟺靵T緜鮽$_杻蕛7b爠蹌 & FdhG$H$ 劤dhG$H$`劤dhG$H$ 劋dhG$H$`劋 about love and her sweet voice 25 me a bit. Then I stood there watching her playing, thinking that it must take 26 to perform on her own in front of hundreds of people she didn抰 know. She might have felt my 27 for she occasionally looked in my direction. By now I was telling myself that I could at least tell her how good she sounded. I walked 28 and put some money in her box and she expressed her thanks with a smile on her face.I asked her 29 , 揥hy are you playing the piano in the middle of this crowded place? She explained to me that she sees so many 30 people in the world that she is trying to relieve the pain by 31 motivational(纎盧剉)music. Instead of continuing my way home, I said to her,  I have been going through a 32 time lately, but you抳e made me 33 again. 揑抦 happy that I could be 34 to you, she replied. 揥hy are you so sad? I told her my story and said, 揑抦 not so 35 about what to do? 揧ou see, here抯 the 36 , she responded. 揥hen you were walking, your head was down. She looked me in the eyes and went on, 揇on抰 look defeated, because 37 comes in different ways and if your head is down you might never see it. You should 38 more lift your head up. I was really 39 by what she said! I did hold my head up and soon got through the difficult time. So 40 in trouble, just face it bravely and you are sure to overcome your difficulty sooner or later. A. awful B. relaxed C. lonely D. breathlessA. fees B. bills C. fines D. prices A. listeners B. background C. instrument D. traffic A. trees B. street C. crowd D. buildings A. shocked B. excited C. comforted D. amusedA. technique B. energy C. patience D. courage A. presence B. mood C. thought D. appreciationA. aside B. down C. over D. off A. quietly B. curiously C. deliberately D. seriously A. elderly B. unhealthy C. unconscious D. negative A. creating B. enjoying C. sharing D. teachingA. rough B. wonderful C. tense D. crazyA. enthusiastic B. hopeful C. energetic D. emotional A. available B. essential C. helpful D. superior A. ashamed B. sure C. particular D. anxious A. condition B. situation C. conflict D. problem A. opportunity B. success C. aid D. happinessA. concentrate B. look C. fight D. smile A. occupied B. inspired C. moved D. satisfied A. however B. whenever C. whoever D. wherever US 悩qQ15槝 蟢槝1R qQ15R0 The unforgettable time______ we spent in the beautiful village will remain in our mind forever.where B. that C. when D. during which  You have not been to Beijing, have you?   _______  and I visited the Summer Palace.No, I haven抰 B. Yes, I have C. No, I didn抰 D. Yes, I didOur plan to travel to Europe last summer ______ where we were unable to save enough money.broke out B. broke up C. fell out D. fell throughWe stayed in a quiet hotel, and __________.next to it stood a temple B. next to which stood a templeC. next to it a temple stood D. next to which a temple stoodThe manager had no plan to travel abroad with many problems ______being solved B. to solve C. to be unsolved D. unsolving In less than two months, the world _____ the UAE Asian Cup. was watching B. watched C. will be watching D. has been watchingThese years ______ great changes in economic development in China.witness B. witnessed C. have witnessed D. has witnessed________ can we split Taiwan off China. ( Which one is not correct? )In no case B. At no time C.In no time D. By no means揥hen I take a step back and look at _____ we are today, as compared to a year ago, he says, 搕he numbers indicate that our economy is becoming better.when B. where C. why D. whatChinese Dream is a dream brought up by President Xi, _____ dream that can be realized by hard work. the B. a C. one D. that A modern city has been set up ______ it used to be a wasteland ten years ago.which B. what C. where D. in whatGovernment standards for airplane seat strength require that the seat_____ for a passenger _______ 170 pounds.is made, weighing B. be made, weighing C. should make, weighs D. be made, weighs The seat is not likely to behave ______ during a crash.as intended B. as is intended C. as intend D. as intending Li Na returned to Wuhan after the Games, _______ as is known to us, she had been brought up in.where B. which C. that D. in whichTom抯 sister insist that she ______ right and he ______ her advice.was followed B. be, follow C. was, follow D. be, followed擭0韹誰kXzzqQ10槝 蟢槝1.5R qQ15R0 In much of Asia, especially the so-called  rice bowl cultures of China, Japan, Korea, 56 Vietnam, food is usually eaten with chopsticks.Chopsticks are usually two long, thin pieces of wood or bamboo. They can also be made of plastic, animal bone or metal. Sometimes chopsticks are quite artistic. Truly elegant chopsticks might 57 (make) of gold and silver with Chinese characters. Skilled workers also combine various hardwoods and metal 58 (create) special designs.The Chinese have used chopsticks for five thousand years. People probably cooked their food in large pots, 59 (use) twigs (h漡) to remove it. Over time, 60 the population grew, people began cutting food into small pieces so it would cook more quickly. Food in small pieces could be eaten easily with twigs which 61 (gradual) turned into chopsticks.Some people think that the great Chinese scholar Confucius, 62 lived from roughly 551 to 479 B.C., influenced the 63 (develop) of chopsticks. Confucius believed knives would remind people of killings and 64 (be) too violent for use at the table.Chopsticks are not used everywhere in Asia. In India, for example, most people traditionally eat 65 their hands.WY[]噧垉蕛瓌畡獏珔簠粎蠀袇飬鶇JL垎妴BTXZ^jpr膰茋鷩)*髰魨-.$%剴笒flpv珨當皵硵 #%(畷睍硶稌忾亻忾忾忾忾忾忾忾忾忾忾忾忾忾忾忾忾忾忾忾馄镜镜镜镜ho.>*PJaJo(ho.>*PJaJho.PJaJ"ho.B*OJQJ^JaJo(phho.aJmH sH ho.aJo( ho.aJho.>*aJo(ho.>*aJA蹌@}竻韰N竼巼鼑&鎴@攭驂=槉諍@ & FdhG$H$ & FdhG$H$ & FdhG$H$dhG$H$ & FdhG$H$ & FdhG$H$ & FdhG$H$@儖茓E悓訉Y晬/S笌賻'S聫 & FdhG$H$ & F dhG$H$ & F dhG$H$ & F dhG$H$ & F dhG$H$ & FdhG$H$ & FdhG$H$ & FdhG$H$ ?dhG$H$^?聫饛T枑鰫!e剴笒v謸C跅鯓zz劋dhG$H$WD`劋凔dhG$H$WD`凔dhG$H$ 刪dhG$H$^刪 8dhG$H$ & FdhG$H$ & FdhG$H$ & FdhG$H$ & FdhG$H$ ?dhG$H$^? & FdhG$H$:@DJ剹寳帡敆)-.1eijm艠蓸蕵蜆VY[^VZ^困魔jn $湬牘灙ⅹLP娅戢bd啲姮垃卢FHJ\^鲱遐孱遐孱遐孱遐孱遐孱遐孱叵攘捍捍捍捍捍捍捍捍捍捍捍捍酣洍h-wh-w5丱JQJaJo(ho.B*aJo(ph ho.aJho.aJo(ho.5乤Jho.\乤Jho.\乤Jo(Uho.>*PJaJo(ho.>*PJaJho.PJaJho.PJQJaJ:鯓lZ困j 湬灙L娅啲HJT^敪腑霏&4 $dpa$gd-w刬dhWD2`刬gd-wdhgd-wdhG$H$gd-wdhG$H$劋dhG$H$WD`劋mQ09hnc@b賬-N噀蕬INb枡W[蚹kXzz 蟢zzkX橯N蛬0qQ10\槝蟢\槝1R 醤R10R  66. A musical evening is held every Saturday, with the whole family g_______ round the piano.67. Keep your d________ from that drunken man ---- you should protect yourself well.68. He thought that his son b________badly at school and he decided to punish him. 69. When hearing that there was an e________, the doctor rushed to the operation theatre. 70. Students are absolutely f________ from smoking in school.71. A large number of students who come from other countries to study in the UK wish to stay and work there after ________(誯N). 72. ________(昩eQ)most of your time to study, you ll surely enter your ideal university.73. It was Chaucer who really turned English into a ________ (噀f[剉) language.74. Some women do not have jobs because their husbands do not a________ of it. 75. 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