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(Ò»)Ãû´Ê±íÖ÷Ìâ¡¡When it comes to the slowing economy, Ellen Spero isn¡¯t biting her nails just yet. But the 47ª²yearª²old manicurist isn¡¯t cutting, filing or polishing as many nails as she¡¯d like to, either. Most of her clients spend ¡ç12 to ¡ç50 weekly, but last month two longtime customers suddenly stopped showing up. Spero blames the softening economy. ¡°I¡¯m a good economic indicator¡±, she says. ¡°I provide a service that people can do without when they¡¯re concerned about saving some dollars.¡± So Spero  is downscaling, shopping at middleª² brow Dillard¡¯s department store near her suburban Cleveland home, instead of Neiman Marcus. ¡°I don¡¯t know if other clients are going to abandon me, too,¡± she says.ÎÄÖеÄÕâЩÃû´ÊΪ¿¼ÉúÌṩÁËÒ»ÌõÖ÷Ïߣ¬¼´Ê¹Ã»ÍêÈ«¶Á¶®£¬µ«Í¨¹ýÕâЩÃû´Ê¿¼ÉúÒ²¿ÉÒÔÈ·¶¨ÕâÊÇһƪÓë¾­¼ÃÓйصÄÎÄÕ£¬Ã¿¾ä»°¶¼Ã»À뿪Õâ¸öÖ÷Ìâ¡£¿ÉÒÔÉèÏëһϣ¬Èç¹û°ÑÆäÖеÄÈκÎÒ»¾äɾȥ£¬È»ºóÈÿ¼ÉúÑ¡Ôñºó²¹ÉÏ£¬ÔÚ×ñÑ­ÒÔ¡°¾­¼Ã¡±ÎªÏßË÷µÄǰÌá϶¼ÊǺÜÈÝÒ×½â¾öµÄ¡£Ò²¾ÍÊÇ˵ÕâЩÃû´Ê±íÃ÷ÁËÕâÆªÎÄÕµÄÖ÷Ìâ¡£
(¶þ)¶¯´Ê±í±ä»¯¡¡All of this caused a crisis of confidence. Americans stopped taking prosperity for granted. They began to believe that their way of doing business was failing, and that their incomes would therefore shortly begin to fall as well. The midª²1980s brought one inquiry after another into the causes of America¡¯s industrial decline. Their sometimes sensational findings were filled with warnings about the growing competition from overseas.¶¯´ÊÊǸ÷Öֱ仯×îÃ÷ÏÔµÄÌåÏÖ£¬Ëü¿ÉÒÔ±íÃ÷ÎÄÖÐËùÊöÇé¿öµÄ±ä»¯¡¢×÷Õß̬¶ÈµÄ±ä»¯ÒÔ¼°Çé¸ÐµÄ±ä»¯µÈ¡£±¾¶ÎÎÄ×ÖÖУ¬ÏȲ»¿´ÆäËüÎÄ×Ö£¬Ö»¿´ÕâЩ¹Ø¼üµÄ¶¯´Ê¡°caused¡±¡¢¡°stopped¡±¡¢¡°began to believe¡±¡¢¡°begin to fall¡±¡¢¡°decline¡±¾Í¿ÉÒÔ±íÃ÷ÕâÊÇÒ»ÖÖÓɺõ½»µ»òÓÉ»µµ½ºÃµÄ±ä»¯£¬ÔÙ½áºÏÆäËû²¿·Ö¿ÉÒÔ¸ü¼Ó¿Ï¶¨ÕâÒ»µã£¬ÒòΪÎÄÖÐËùÊöÕýÊǹØÓÚÃÀ¹ú¾­¼ÃÒý·¢µÄÒ»³¡ÐÅÈÎΣ»ú£¬ÒÔ¼°ÕⳡΣ»ú¸øÈËÃÇ´øÀ´µÄÇé¸Ð¼°¾­¼Ã·½ÃæµÄ±ä»¯¡£
(Èý)ÐÎÈݴʱí̬¶È¡¡Even before Alan Greenspan¡¯s admission that America¡¯s redª² hot economy is cooling, lots of working folks had already seen signs of the slowdown themselves. From car dealerships to Gap outlets, sales have been lagging for months as shoppers temper their spending. For retailers, who last year took in 24 percent of their revenue between Thanksgiving and Christmas, the cautious approach is coming at a crucial time. Already, experts say, holiday sales are off 7 percent from last year¡¯s pace. But don¡¯t sound any alarms just yet. Consumers seem only mildly concerned, not panicked, and many say they remain optimistic about the economy¡¯s  long ª²term prospects even as they do some modest belt tightening .ÔÚÔĶÁÀí½âPart A²¿·Ö¾­³£»áÓöµ½±íÃ÷×÷Õß̬¶ÈµÄÌ⣬ͬÑù£¬ÔÚPart B²¿·ÖÈç¹ûÄÜÃ÷È·°ÑÎÕ×÷ÕßµÄ̬¶È¶Ô½âÌâÒ²ÊǺܹؼüµÄ£¬¶øÐÎÈÝ´ÊÊÇ×îÄÜÌåÏÖ×÷Õß̬¶ÈµÄ¹Ø¼ü´Ê¡£ÒԴ˶ÎΪÀý£¬Ç°°ë²¿·Ö¶¼ÊǹØÓÚÃÀ¹ú¾­¼Ã²»¾°ÆøµÄÃèÊö£¬Èç¹ûÖ»¿´µ½ÕâЩ£¬Ò»¶¨»áÈÏΪÏÂÎÄÒ²Ó¦¸ÃÊÇһЩÏû¼«·½ÃæµÄÃèÊö¡£µ«Æäʵ±¾¶ÎµÄ¹Ø¼üÔÚºóÃæ£¬Ïû·ÑÕߵġ°only mildly concerned¡±ºÍ¡°not panicked¡±ÒÔ¼°×îÃ÷ÏÔµÄÒ»¸öÐÎÈÝ´Ê¡°optimistic¡±¶¼ÓëÇ°ÃæµÄÇé¿öÐγÉÏÊÃ÷µÄ¶Ô±È£¬±íÃ÷ÁË×÷ÕßµÄ̬¶È¡£Èç¹ûÔڴ˶κóÉèÌâ½øÐÐÑ¡Ôñ£¬¿¼Éú¾Í²»µÃ²»¿¼ÂÇÕâЩÒòËØÁË¡£

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    Directions: In the following text, some sentences have been removed. For Questions 41¡ª45, choose the most suitable one from the list A¡ªG to fit into each of the numbered blank. There are two extra choices, which do not fit in any of the gaps. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.(10 points)
    Long before Man lived on the Earth, there were fishes, reptiles, birds, insects, and some mammals. Although some of¡¡these animals were ancestors of kinds living today, others are now extinct, that is, they have no descendants alive now.
    £¨41£©_______. Very occasionally the rocks show impression of skin, so that, apart from color, we can build up a reasonably accurate picture of an animal that died millions of years ago. The kind of rock in which the remains are found tells us much about the nature of the original land, often of the plants that grew on it, and even of its climate.
    £¨42£©_______.Nearly all of the fossils that we know were preserved in rocks formed by water action, and most of these are of animals that lived in or near water. Thus it follows that there must be many kinds of mammals, birds, and insects, of which we know nothing.
    £¨43£©_______.There were also crablike creatures, whose bodies were covered with a horny substance. The body segments each had two pairs of legs, one pair for walking on the sandy bottom, the other for swimming. The head was a kind of shield with a pair of compound eyes, often with thousands of lenses. They were usually an inch or two long but some were 2 feet.
    £¨44£©_______. Of these, the ammonites are very interesting and important. They have a shell composed of many chambers, each representing a temporary home of the animal. As the young grew larger it grew a new chamber and sealed off the previous one. Thousands of these can be seen in the rocks on the Dorset Coast.  
    £¨45£©_______.About 75 million years ago the Age of Reptiles was over and most of the groups died out. The mammals quickly developed, and we can trace the evolution of many familiar animals such as the elephant and horse. Many of the later mammals, though now extinct, were known to primitive man and were featured by him in cave paintings and on bone carvings.
    £ÛA£ÝThe shell gush have a long history in the rock and many different kinds are known.
    £ÛB£ÝNevertheless, we know a great deal about many of them because their bones and shells have been preserved in the rocks as fossils. From them we can tell their size and shape, how they walked, the kind of food they ate.
    £ÛC£ÝThe first animals with true backbones were the fishes, first known in the rocks of 375 million years ago. About 300 million years ago the amphibians, the animals able to live both on land and in water, appeared. They were giant, sometimes 8 feet long, and many of them lived in the swampy pools in which our coal seam, or layer, or formed. The amphibians gave rise to the reptiles and for nearly 150 million years these were the principal forms of life on land, in the sea, and in the air.
    £ÛD£ÝThe best index fossils tend to be marine creatures. These animals evolved rapidly and spread over large areas of the world.
    £ÛE£ÝThe earliest animals whose remains have been found were all very simple kinds and lived in the sea. Later forms are more complex, and among these are the sallies , relations of the starfishes, which had long arms and were attached by a long stalk to the sea bed, or to rocks.
    £ÛF£ÝWhen an animal dies the body, its bones, or shell, may often be carried away by streams into lakes or the sea and there get covered up by mud. If the animal lived in the sea its body would probably sink and be covered with mud. More and more mud would fall upon it until the bones or shell become embedded and preserved
    £ÛG£ÝMany factors can influence how fossils are preserved in rocks. Remains of an organism may be replaced by minerals, dissolved by an acidic solution to leave only their impression, or simply reduced to a more stable form.
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Passage 1
    It was a cold, rainy and wholly miserable afternoon in Washington, and a hot muggy night in Miami. It was Sunday, and three games were played in the two cities. The people playing them and the people watching them tell us much about the ever-changing ethnic structure of the United States.
    Professional football in the United States is almost wholly played by native-born American citizens, mostly very large and very strong, many of them black. It is a game of physical strength. Linemen routinely weigh more than 300 pounds. Players are valued for their weigh and muscles, for how fast they can run, and how hard they can hit each other. Football draws the biggest crowds, but the teams play only once a week, because they get so battered.
    The 67,204 fans were in Miami for the final game of the baseball World Series. Baseball was once America's favorite game, but has lost that claim to basketball.
    Baseball is a game that requires strength, but not hugeness. Agility, quickness, perfect vision and quick reaction are more important than pure strength. Baseball was once a purely American game, but has spread around much of the New World. In that Sunday's final, the final hit of the extra inning game was delivered by a native of Columbia. The Most Valuable Player in the game was a native of Columbia. The rosters of both teams were awash with Hispanic names, as is Miami, which now claims the World Championship is a game that may be losing popularity in America, but has gained it in much of the rest of the world. Baseball in America has taken on a strong Hispanic flavor, with a dash of Japanese added for seasoning.
    Soccer, which many countries just call football, is the most widely enjoyed sport in the world. In soccer, which many countries just call football, the ethnic tide has been the reverse of baseball. Until recently, professional soccer in the United States has largely been an import, played by South Americans and Europeans. Now, American citizens in large numbers are finally taking up the most popular game in the world.
    Basketball, an American invention increasingly played around the world, these days draws large crowds back home. Likewise, hockey, a game largely imported to the United States from neighboring Canada. Lacrosse, a version of which was played by Native Americans before the Europeans arrived, is also gaining a keen national following.
    Sports of all kinds are winning support from American armchair enthusiasts from a variety of ethnic backgrounds.
1.Which of the following can reflect the ever-changing ethnic structure of America?
[A] Sportsman.¡¡ [B] Audience.¡¡ [C] Both of them. ¡¡[D] None of them.
2.Who play professional football in the United States?.
[A] Native-born  American citizens.¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡[B] Europeans.
[C] South Americans. ¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡[D] Both B and C.
3.What is America's favorite game?
[A] Baseball.  [B] Basketball.  [C] Professional football.  [D] Soccer.
4.Which of the following statements about soccer is true?
[A] In soccer and basketball, the ethnic tide is different.
[B] Until recently, soccer becomes an important game, so many native Americans play it.
[C] It is the most popular game in the world, so many American citizens take up it.
[D] Although soccer is the most popular game in the world, American citizens in large numbers do not like first.
5.The author of the passage wants to tell us that ____¡¡.
[A] Americans like sports and sports reveal much about the changing ethnic structure of the United States.
[B] In Washington, several games are played in one day.
[C] Americans like all kinds of games.
[D] The American games are watched by native-Americans and played by people from different countries.
¡¡¡¡Keys to Passage 1
¡¡¡¡C A D B A
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