Traffic TV
Avoid the jams — see where tailbacks are before you set off and while on the move. Traffic TV is free to use on your personal computer and only £4 per month (see below for other network charges) on your mobile.
How does it work?
Over 7,500 Trafficmaster cameras monitor traffic flow on over 8,000 miles of motorways and roads across the UK, keeping you up to date 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Traffic TV on your mobile
This downloadable application lets you see where jams are building up, the speed of vehicles at hotspots, and live pictures from thousands of roadside cameras.
Traffic TV is £4 a month for Orange mobile customers, after a 30 day free try-out. On other networks Traffic TV is £5 a month, after a 7 day free try-out.
Listen to live traffic news
Don’t want the download? Then simply dial the numbers below from your mobile to hear the latest traffic updates.
*Orange mobile users call 177 (calls cost up to 55p a minute)
*Other mobile users call 1740 (calls cost up to 59p a minute)
Help friends avoid jams
Simply enter your friend’s email address to send them a link to this service.
How can users get live traffic information?
A.By mobile phone or through Internet. | B.By watching a TV programme. |
C.By listening to the radio report. | D.By using Trafficmaster cameras. |
How long may a customer use the service if his/her network is Orange and he/she pays £20?
A.About 120 days. | B.About 127 days. | C.Five months. | D.Six months. |
What is the purpose of this advertisement?
A.To provide readers with live traffic information. |
B.To help Orange customers to avoid traffic jam. |
C.To attract mobile users to buy Traffic TV service. |
D.To explain how Traffic TV and live traffic news work. |
You may read this advertisement most probably ___________.
A.in a travel guide | B.on a web page | C.on a road sign | D.in a newspaper |
There are some differences between American English and British English. Some differences are quite interesting.
When my friend Lily from London used the word “larder”, I didn’t know what it meant. Realizing I didn’t follow her, she used another word. I finally knew she wanted to find something to keep some food. The next word came up when we were planning a lunch date. She jotted down the date and time in her diary, while I marked my calendar. If she called me on the phone, she would ring me up. But if the line was busy, she would say the line was engaged.
Most times, I can know what Lily means. Last week, she regretted sending her boys to watch an early morning tennis game without their fleeces. I thought that she meant without their jackets or something like that. Other times, we have to ask each other. She recently told me a funny tale about a pissed woman. I wondered what had made the lady angry. It turns out that pissed means drunk.
Here is one more example. My British friend Jane was filling out a ticket at the grocery store recently. She asked the young man to help her if he had a rubber. When she noticed he didn’t follow her, she quickly asked for an eraser, which, in England, is often called a rubber.
In order to communicate well with British people, we Americans should learn some words that the British use differently. And I think people who learn English as a second language should also realize that there are differences between American English and British English. When Lily used the word “larder”, she was probably looking for a ______.
A.cup | B.ladder |
C.cupboard | D.cooker |
According to the passage, in British English ______.
A.the word “pissed” means angry |
B.the word “jacket” is often used |
C.the word “engaged” means tired |
D.the word “rubber” means eraser |
What does the underlined phrase “jotted down” in Pragraph2 mean?
A.Wrote down | B.Cared about |
C.Looked for | D.Settled down |
What is the passage mainly about?
A.The British way of using words. |
B.Some new words the writer’s British friends taught her. |
C.The reasons why Americans can’t followed the British at times. |
D.Some words used differently in British English and American English. |
Lisa: My best teacher is my geography teacher in 10th grade. Why? Because we did school projects! Back then I wrote about India and never forgot what I had learned. He brought the culture to life by letting me become part of it. He also listened to us and was always ready with a kind word.
David: My best teacher is my high school social studies and history teacher, Thomas Ladenburg. He respected us, though we were just teenagers. His class was never boring because he often asked us to discuss in class. He used his own materials which made the class very interesting.
Henry: My best ever teacher is my biology teacher in high school. I really liked her class. She explained everything very clearly. She also checked our notebooks to make sure we had written down what she said. Now, many years later, I can still remember a large part of the things she taught!
Susan: The best teacher I have ever had is my 10th grade social studies teacher. She was always in a good mood and kept us laughing. She was really young, so she acted like us teenagers, which made learning fun. If we needed to talk to an adult about a problem, we would always come to her because we knew she could help us.
Tom: My favourite teacher is Mr. Yelle. He taught us math, science and music. He spoke to us “at eye level”, and was very patient and kind. We did great projects for the science fairs. Forty years later, I still remember his lessons very well. By the way, though he was called Mr Yelle, he didn’t yell(喊叫).We learn that when she was in 10th grade, Lisa ________.
A.was always ready with a kind word |
B.often forgot what she had learned very easily |
C.liked doing school projects in the geography class |
D.was interested in India the most in the geography class |
How did David most probably find Thomas Ladenburg’s class?
A.Difficult. | B.Lively. | C.Useless. | D.Long. |
We can learn that Susan’s 10th grade social studies teacher _______.
A.was good at listening to her students’ problems |
B.liked laughing at her students’ problems |
C.was not happy when she had a problem |
D.didn’t like taking her students as friends |
A farmer grew some vegetables in his garden. One day his wife was ill and he had no money. He had to sell some cabbages and carrots in the market. The next morning he took two baskets of vegetables to town, but it was raining hard that afternoon and there were few people in the street. When his vegetables were sold out, it was dark. He bought some medicine and hurried to his village.
On his way home he saw a person lying on the ground. He placed his baskets on the ground and was going to help the person to get up. At that time he found it was a dead man and there was much blood on his body. He was so afraid that he ran away quickly, without taking his baskets.
The next afternoon the farmer was sent to the police station. Having shown the baskets, an officer asked, “Are these yours? ” “Yes, sir. ” The farmer answered timidly(胆怯地). “Have you killed the man?” “No, no, sir.” The farmer said in a hurry. “When did you see the dead man?” “About seven last evening. ” “Did you see who killed the man?” “No, sir. ” The officer brought out a knife and asked, “Have you seen it yet?” “No, sir. ” The officer became angry and told the policemen to beat him up and sent him into prison(监狱)。
That evening the officer went on trying. Pointing to the knife, he asked again, “Have you seen it yet?” “ yes, sir.” The officer was happy and asked, “When and where?” “I saw it here this afternoon, sir.”Why did the farmer decide to sell the vegetables?
A.To go to the market. |
B.To go to see the doctor. |
C.To buy some food for his family. |
D.To buy some medicine for his wife. |
The farmer didn’t sell out his vegetables until the evening because ________.
A.they were too bad |
B.they were very expensive |
C.it rained hard that morning |
D.people wouldn’t go out on such a bad day |
Why did the farmer run quickly?
A.He was afraid to see a dead man. |
B.His wife was waiting for him at home. |
C.The policemen were coming towards him. |
D.It was so late and he had to buy some medicine. |
The officer tried(审讯)the farmer to _______.
A.ask if he had seen the knife |
B.know who had killed the man |
C.ask when he saw the dead man |
D.know if he had seen the dead man |
Still seeking a destination for your weekend break? There are some places which are probably a mere wall away from your college.
King’s Art Centre
A day at the Centre could mean a visit to an exhibition of the work of one of the most interesting contemporary artists on show anywhere. This weekend sees the opening of an exhibition of four local artists.
You could attend a class teaching you how to ‘learn from the masters’ or get more creative with paint – free of charge.
The Centre also runs two life drawing classes for which there is a small fee.
The Botanic Garden
The Garden has over 8,000 plant species; it holds the research and teaching collection of living plants for Cambridge University.
The multi-branched Torch Aloe here is impressive. The African plant produces red flowers above blue-green leaves, and is not one to miss.
Get to the display house to see Dionaea muscipula, a plant more commonly known as the Venus Flytrap that feeds on insects and other small animals.
The Garden is also a place for wildlife-enthusiasts. Look for grass snakes in the lake. A snake called ‘Hissing Sid’ is regularly seen lying in the heat of the warm sun.
Byron’s Pool
Many stories surround Lord Byron’s time as a student of Cambridge University. Arriving in 1805, he wrote a letter complaining that it was a place of “mess and drunkenness”. However, it seems as though Byron did manage to pass the time pleasantly enough. I’m not just talking about the pet bear he kept in his rooms. He spent a great deal of time walking in the village.
It is also said that on occasion Byron swam naked by moonlight in the lake, which is now known as Byron’s Pool. A couple of miles past Grant Chester in the south Cambridge shire countryside, the pool is surrounded by beautiful circular paths around the fields. The cries of invisible birds make the trip a lovely experience and on the way home you can drop into the village for afternoon tea. If you don’t trust me, then perhaps you’ll take it from Virginia Woolf – over a century after Byron, she reportedly took a trip to swim in the same pool.As mentioned in the passage, there is a small charge for ____.
A.attending the masters’ class |
B.working with local artists |
C.learning life drawing |
D.seeing an exhibition |
“Torch Aloe” and “Venus Flytrap” are ____.
A.common insects |
B.impressive plants |
C.rarely-seen snakes |
D.wildlife-enthusiasts |
We can infer from the passage that Byron seemed ____.
A.to fear pet bears |
B.to like walking |
C.to be a heavy drinker |
D.to finish university in 1805 |
In the passage Byron’s Pool is described as a lake ____.
A.surrounded by fields |
B.owned by Lord Byron |
C.located in Grant Chester |
D.discovered by Virginia Woolf |
Like many new graduates, I left university full of hope for the future but with no real idea of what I wanted to do. My degree, with honors, in English literature had not really prepared me for anything practical. I knew I wanted to make a difference in the world somehow, but I had no idea how to do that. That’s when I learned about the Lighthouse Project.
I started my journey as a Lighthouse Project volunteer by reading as much as I could about the experiences of previous volunteers. I knew it would be a lot of hard work, and that I would be away from my family and friends for a very long time. In short, I did not take my decision to apply for the Lighthouse Project lightly. Neither did my family.
Eventually, however, I won the support of my family, and I sent in all the paperwork needed for the application. After countless interviews and presentations, I managed to stand out among the candidates and survive the test alone. Several months later, I finally received a call asking me to report for the duty. I would be going to a small village near Abuja, Nigeria. Where? What? Nigeria? I had no idea. But I was about to find out.
After completing my training, I was sent to the village that was small and desperately in need of proper accommodation. Though the local villagers were poor, they offered their homes, hearts, and food as if I were their own family. I was asked to lead a small team of local people in building a new schoolhouse. For the next year or so, I taught in that same schoolhouse. But I sometimes think I learned more from my students than they did from me.
Sometime during that period, I realized that all those things that had seemed so strange or unusual to me no longer did, though I did not get anywhere with the local language, and I returned to the United States a different man. The Lighthouse Project had changed my life forever.According to the Paragraph 2, it is most likely that the author
A.discussed his decision with his family. |
B.asked previous volunteers about voluntary work |
C.attended special training to perform difficult tasks |
D.felt sad about having to leave his family and friends |
In his application for the volunteer job, the author
A.participated in many discussions |
B.went through some interviews and presentations |
C.wrote quite a few papers on voluntary work |
D.faced strong competition from other candidates |
On arrival at the village, the author was
A.asked to lead a farming team |
B.sent to teach in a schoolhouse |
C.received warmly by local villagers |
D.arranged to live in a separate house. |