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There’s been a lot of talk about white-and-blue collar(衣领) workers, and you may have even heard of gold collar workers, but lately a new color of collar is making its way into China’s urban vernacular(土话)—green. Green collars say no when work is life and life is work. They choose to get out of the fast lane(车道), and explore new ways of living “green”.
Living green doesn’t mean someone is working as an environmentalist, biologist or scientist. Instead it is more of a lifestyle choice. A typical green collar is well educated like a white-collar but physically tough like a blue-collar, likely born in the 70s or 80s of the last century and living in one of China’s big cities, with a monthly income well above 5,000 yuan(about US $700).
The life of a green collar may go something like this: Turn off the mobile phone after work, eat only healthy food rich in vitamins, go on hikes every weekend, and like to help the underprivileged.
Green collars even have their own club. In Beijing, the Green Collar Club is for people who share a “be happy, healthy and helpful” spirit. The club often holds charity parties and uses the donations for environmental protection and poverty relief projects in China.
“They are successful in their careers, but do not miss the pleasures in life. They have a lot of money, but do not fall slave to it.” said Zuo Shiguang, one of the founding members of the club.
What is the passage mainly about?

A.Differences between white-and-blue collars and green collars.
B.The increasing awareness(意识) of environmental protection.
C.New trends of life in China’s big cities.
D.The lifestyle of green collars.

Green collars are living green because _________.

A.they have a large income to use
B.they refuse to live an unhealthy life
C.they spend a lot of money and time in the open air
D.they devote themselves to environmental protection

What’s Zuo Shiguang’s attitude towards green collars?

A.Appreciative. B.Doubtful. C.Negative(否定的). D.Neutral(中立的).

The underlined part “the underprivileged” probably refers to those who are_________.

A.in heavy polluted areas
B.in faraway places
C.in a poor state of education
D.in unfavourable(不利的) conditions
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Beaches are not only great for lying on and doing water sports, and in fact one of the best ways of enjoying them is a classic beach walk. Here at iWantSun. Co. Uk, we’ve been searching the globe to find you the world’s best and most glorious beach walks, and here’s our pick of the top.
The Footpath of the Gods, Amalfi Coast, Italy
The name says it all really and you truly do feel up there to walking along this wonderful mountain coastal path, which offers some of the most striking views on the planet. The path begins at town of Bomerano to charming Positano along the UNESCO World Heritage area of the Amalfi Coast. The whole walk will take you approximately four and a half hours to complete and pass over narrow rocky paths, past sheer cliffs and shining blue bays.
Sydney’s Great Coastal Walk, Australia
Sydney’s coastline is one of the most beautiful and diverse in the world. Here you have national parks, historic sites, steep cliffs, sparkling beaches and quiet bays all in one place. Sydney’s Great Walk runs all the way from Barrenjoey in the north to Royal National Park in the south and takes an incredible seven days to complete. However, if you’re not up to doing the full walk, then there are many different parts of the walk that you can do right in the city. Walking from the city’s famous Bondi Beach to the sweeping curve of Bronte Beach takes just an hour, which takes in some top scenery.
Great Ocean Walk, Australia
The Great Ocean Walk stretches 104 km along Victoria’s famous Great Ocean Road, located on the southern coast of Australia, from the resort town Apollo Bay to the magnificent Twelve Apostles. The Twelve Apostles are the area’s famous stone landmarks which stand out like giants from the sea. The walk passes through a range of landscapes and sights, from national parks, famous surfing spots and deserted beaches, to wild coastlines, cascading waterfalls, lush forests, historic lighthouses and ghostly shipwrecks. Day walks and shorter three-hour walks such as the Wreck Beach Walk or the Lighthouse Cemetery and Lookout Walk can also be enjoyed.
So next time when you’re looking for a beach holiday don’t just think about the resorts and the sand, but consider a more active sun holiday, discovering some of the best beaches in the world.
The author intends to tell us ____________.

A.the world’s best places for beach walks
B.the wonderful beaches in the world
C.the ideal tourism resort for health
D.the beautiful beaches in Australia

When you arrive at the Amalfi Coast _______________.

A.you must be disappointed at the footpath
B.you will be fascinated by the scenery
C.you can start walking from Positano
D.you may be trapped in narrow rocky paths

What is special about Sydney’s Great Coastal Walk?

A.It takes about more than five hours to complete.
B.It starts from Royal National Park in the north.
C.It provides visitors a variety of great landscapes.
D.It really has the longest coastline in the world.

According to the fourth paragraph we can know that __________________.

A.Apollo Bay is at the end of the Great Ocean Walk
B.the Twelve Apostles exists below the surface of the sea
C.the Wreck Beach Walk can also give visitors pleasure
D.most visitors can finish the 104 km walk in three hours

Christian Eijkman, a Dutch doctor, left the Netherlands for the island of Java. Many people on the island had a disease called beri-beri. He was going there to try and find a cure.
At first, Eijkman thought some kind of germ (细菌) caused beri-beri. He raised some chickens. He didn’t eat them, but made experiments on them. The local people were quite surprised at that. One day he noticed that his chickens became sick when they were fed the food most Javanese ate — refined white rice (精炼米). When he fed them with unrefined rice, also known as brown rice, they recovered. Eijkman realized that he had made an important discovery — that some things in food could prevent disease. These things were named vitamins. The Javanese were not getting enough vitamins because they had actually removed the part that contains vitamins. Later, other diseases were also found to be caused by the lack of vitamins in a person’s food.
Today many people know the importance of vitamins and they make sure they have enough vitamins from the food they eat. If they don’t, they can also take vitamin pills.
Christian Eijkman went to the island of Java to ______.

A.help the Javanese with their illness
B.find ways to grow better crops
C.do some research about the island
D.spend his holiday

Why did Christian Eijkman raise some chickens?

A.To eat them.
B.To make money by selling them.
C.To give the Javanese a surprise.
D.To carry out his experiments.

If a person doesn’t get enough vitamins in his diet, he’d better ______.

A.eat more rice B.eat vitamin pills
C.eat some chicken D.eat more meat

In the Internet age, speed reading is a necessary and important skill. We skim over articles and e-mails to try to get key words and the main idea of the text. With so much information through our electronic devices (电子设备), it would be impossible to get through everything if we read word by word, line by line. However, a new trend calls on people to enjoy reading slowly.
A recent story from The Wall Street Journal reported on a book club in Wellington, New Zealand, where members meet in a café and turn off their smartphones. They sit back in comfortable chairs and read in silence for an hour.
Unlike typical book clubs, the point of the slow reading club isn’t to exchange ideas about certain books, but to get away from electronic devices and read in a quiet, relaxed environment. According to the story, the Wellington book club is just one example of a movement started by book lovers who miss the traditional way of reading.
Traditional readers, like Maura Kelly, say a regular reading habit sharpens the mind, improves concentration, reduces stress levels and deepens the ability to understand others. Some of these benefits have been backed up by science. For example, a study of 300 elderly people published by the journal Neurology last year showed that adults who take part in activities that use their brain, such as reading, suffer less memory loss as they get older. Another study published last year in Science showed that reading novels helps people understand others’ mental states and beliefs — a key skill in building relationships.
Yet technology has made us less careful readers. Computer and phone screens have changed our reading patterns from the top-to-bottom, left-to-right reading order we traditionally used, to a wild skimming pattern as we hunt for important words and information. Reading text online that has many links to other web pages also leads to weaker comprehension than reading plain text. The Internet may have made us stupider, says British journalist Patrick Kingsley, only half joking. Because of the Internet, he says we have become very good at collecting a wide range of factual tidbits (花边新闻), but we are also gradually forgetting how to sit back, think and connect all these facts with each other.
Speed reading is a necessary and important skill in the Internet age because people ______.

A.no longer read word by word, line by line
B.have to get the meaning faster
C.have much more information to read
D.must use their smartphones more frequently

Members of the Wellington book club are expected to ______.

A.make coffee for the other members
B.read peacefully for an hour
C.regularly exchange ideas about books
D.turn off their smartphones for sleeping

According to the Neurology study, who is most likely to suffer memory loss?

A.A 79-year-old woman who reads regularly.
B.A 17-year-old middle school student who seldom reads.
C.A healthy 24-year-old university graduate who often plays games.
D.A 65-year-old man who rarely reads.

The last paragraph is written to ______.

A.explain the secrets of others’ minds
B.describe the problems caused by electronic reading
C.call on people to read more about science
D.encourage people to read as slowly as possible

Great white sharks! Just hearing that name makes many people’s hair stand on end. In reality, these big fish have more to fear from us than we do from them. For many years, people killed countless great white sharks in the waters around the United States.
But thanks to conservation (保护) efforts, great whites are making a comeback in the U.S. Two recent studies show that the population of these sharks is rising along the east and west coast.
Why is the growing population of a killer fish something to celebrate? “When you fish too many of them, you start to lose balance in the environment,” says shark researcher Tobey Curtis. As the biggest killer, sharks help keep the populations of fish, seals, and other creatures they eat from growing too large.
In spite of their importance, great white sharks had long been hunted for their meat and their fins (鳍). Then, in 1997, the U.S. government passed a law that didn’t allow the hunting of great whites. Afterwards, the numbers of these sharks in the U.S. waters started to increase.
The law wasn’t the only thing that has helped great whites. Conservationists have also played a part in the sharks’ comeback. The research group OCEARCH is using a method called tagging (加标签) to help change people’s attitudes about great white. They let the public follow each shark as it travels the world’s oceans. OCEARCH also gives each tagged shark a name to help people form a closer connection with the big fish.
The group’s most well-known shark is named Katharine. She was tagged last year near Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Since then, thousands of people have tracked Katharine’s movements on Twitter and the OCEARCH website.
This helps people see sharks in a new way. Chris Fischer, the founder of OCEARCH believes learning to appreciate great whites will encourage people to do more to protect them.
The underlined part “makes many people’s hair stand on end” in Paragraph 1 can best be replaced by______.

A.worries many people B.bores many people
C.frightens many people D.interests many people

The law passed in 1997 ______.

A.seemed very helpful
B.let scientists down
C.needed to be changed
D.made people like great whites

Katharine’s example is used to show that ______.

A.great whites are in fact lovely animals
B.the OCEARCH website has a lot of visitors
C.the number of great whites is growing quickly
D.OCEARCH help people get closer to great whites

The main purpose of the passage is to ______.

A.introduce an experiment result
B.make an advertisement for OCEARCH
C.remind us that big killers are dying out
D.inform us that great whites are making a comeback

The worst days of any summer are the rainy ones. We spend all year looking forward to nice weather and long, hot days. In winter, with its cloudy days and bitter cold, we dream of those days at the beach, lying on the sand and enjoying the bright and burning sun. And then, summer comes, and it rains.
As a child, I would wake up to rainy summer days and come close to crying. It wasn’t fair. We suffered through months of school and experienced bad weather for those short ten weeks of freedom.
On those rainy summer days, I had nothing fun to do and could only sit inside, staring out at the rain like a bird in a cage. I was an only child, so there was no one else to play with. My father worked from home, so I was not truly alone, but he could not actively play with me since he was at work. It was those days that I would watch whatever was on television or read any books that I could find lying around. I’d pray each night that the rain would not be there the next day.
As an adult, though, my opinion of summer rain has changed. When you have to work every day, summer is not as exciting. Everything seems uninteresting. Such a mindset makes you cheer for anything new or different. I spend the winter dreaming of summer and the summer dreaming of winter. When summer comes, I hate how hot it is. And then I look forward to the rain, because the rain brings with it a cold front, which makes me comfortable. Rainy days are still the worst days of the summer, but summer rain today means positively beautiful — and quite cooler — weather tomorrow.
When the author was a child, he ______.

A.liked staying indoors B.hated rainy days
C.dreamed on summer days D.preferred cooler weather

We can learn from the passage that the author ______.

A.could enjoy the brilliant sun in winter
B.preferred reading to playing outside
C.had no brothers or sisters
D.was often left alone at home

As an adult, the author views summer rain differently because ______.

A.rain makes the weather cooler
B.his summer holiday is very short
C.he knows it won’t last long
D.he can better deal with his spare time

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