1. Because Mr. Chang has been busy these days, it's whether he will come to the party



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Day23

一、詞彙:


1. In the keen competition of this international tennis tournament, she won the championship.

(A) privately (B) distantly (C) locally (D) narrowly

2. This company, with its serious financial problems, is no longer .

(A) achievable (B) stretchable (C) repeatable (D) manageable

3. Your desk is crowded with too many unnecessary things. You have to ____ some of them.

(A) remain (B) resist (C) remove (D) renew

4. Most businessmen are more interested in the success of their products than their educational values.

(A) cultural (B) commercial (C) classical (D) criminal

5. The postal special service is very efficient. A package sent can be received in a couple of hours.

(A) delivery (B) directory (C) discovery (D) dormitory


二、文意選填:

I had an extraordinary dream last night. In the dream the cloakroom attendant at a theater stopped me in the lobby and insisted on my 6 my legs behind. I was not surprised, but I was 7 annoyed. I said I had never heard of such a rule at a theater before. The man replied that he was very 8 about it, but people often complained that other people’s legs were always in the 9 . Therefore, it had been decided that people should leave their legs 10 . It seemed to me that the management had gone beyond their legal right in making this order. Under 11 circumstances, I should have disputed it. However, I didn’t want to 12 a disturbance, so I sat down and prepared to obey the rule. I had never before known that the human leg could be taken off. I had always thought it was more 13 fixed. But the man showed me how to undo them, and I found that they 14 off quite easily. The discovery did not surprise me 15 more than the original request that I should take them off. Nothing does surprise one in a dream.

(A) sorry (B) outside (C) leaving (D) securely (E) any

(F) normal (G) quite (H) came (I) make (J) way


三、閱讀測驗:

Believe it or not, America’s favorite snack food is the potato chip. There is a story behind how it was first made. One might think that somewhere a genius thought up the first potato chips, but it didn’t happen that way. Picture an elegant restaurant in Saratoga Springs, New York, in 1853. The Moon Lake Restaurant’s menu included French-fried potatoes, a popular food recipe brought back from France by Thomas Jefferson. These were thickly cut potatoes, fried until golden brown and crisp on the outside. One evening a guest in the dining hall felt that his potatoes were too thick and sent them back to the kitchen. The cook sliced some potatoes thinner than before and prepared them for the complaining guest. He was still not satisfied and sent them back again! By this time the cook was angry and decided to do exactly what the dinner guest wanted: slice the potatoes as thin as possible. Then they would be so crisp that the diner wouldn’t be able to use his fork to eat them. When the paper-thin browned potatoes arrived, the diner was pleased. He was so happy with them that other guests started ordering the new potatoes. The cook’s plan to stop the dinner guest from complaining did not turn out as he had planned. Soon Saratoga Chips appeared on the menu and became so popular that people wanted to take some home. The restaurant started selling small packages of the potato chips. A few years later, they were selling all over the United States. But because the potatoes had to be peeled by hand, it was a time-consuming chore and potato chips were often out of stock. In the 1920s a mechanical potato peeler was invented and soon there were potato chips in abundance. They gradually spread all over the world, and have remained popular ever since.

16. According to this passage, mass production of potato chips was made possible when .

(A) potatoes could be peeled by machines

(B) potatoes were peeled by a large number of cooks

(C) there was a growing demand for them

(D) they first appeared in a Saratoga restaurant

17. According to this passage, the cook of the Moon Lake Restaurant .

(A) enjoyed making potato chips very much

(B) planned to sell potato chips everywhere

(C) wanted to silence a complaining diner

(D) was pleased that other guests liked the chips

18. Potato chips have been popular in the U.S. .

(A) for more than 200 years (B) ever since 1920

(C) for less than 100 years (D) since the 19th century

Day 23


1. DDCBA 6. CGAJB FIDHE 16. ACD

Day24

一、詞彙:


1. Kids don’t learn their native languages ____ , but they become fluent in them within a few years.

(A) previously (B) variously (C) consciously (D) enviously

2. to what you think, our TV program has been enjoyed by a large audience.

(A) Intensive (B) Contrary (C) Fortunate (D) Objective

3. There is a to one’s capacity; one should not make oneself overtired.

(A) relaxation (B) contribution (C) hesitation (D) limitation

4. It is necessary for you to this point. We simply cannot understand it.

(A) clarify (B) falsify (C) purify (D) notify

5. Our team will certainly win this baseball game, because all the players are highly .

(A) illustrated (B) estimated (C) motivated (D) dominated

二、克漏字選擇:

Every time we watch apes in their cages we are startled by their manlike behavior. The monkey house has a strange fascination. The visitors would be even more startled 6 they were fully aware of all the existing similarities between them and these animals. These include 7 external behavior, 7 all the organs, the whole skeleton, every single bone and tooth. The brain of a chimpanzee has the same internal structure and on its surface the same pattern of folds as the human brain, which, 8 , is three times as large. The way the mother chimpanzee nurses its young is not unlike 9 of the human mother. These and thousands of other features point to a blood relationship in the truest sense of the word. This can be clearly demonstrated by 10 the genes of chimpanzees and those of humans: the difference between them is just about 2 percent.

6. (A) until (B) if (C) unless (D) as

7. (A) both / and (B) not / but (C) not only / but (D) neither / nor

8. (A) therefore (B) otherwise (C) though (D) however

9. (A) those (B) others (C) that (D) other

10. (A) identifying (B) comparing (C) separating (D) evaluating

三、閱讀測驗:


Every object tells a story. Even the most ordinary objects can present to us powerful images. Sometimes it is the ordinary nature of these objects that actually makes them so extraordinary. Such is the case with an old leather shoe in a museum in Alaska. At first glance it does not look like much. It is a woman’s shoe of a style popular in the 1890s. But what is unique about this shoe is where it was found. It was discovered on the Chilkoot Pass, the famous trail used by the people seeking gold in Alaska. Who it belonged to or why it was left there is not known. Was it perhaps dropped by accident as the woman climbed up the 1,500 stairs carved out of ice? Or did she throw away goods that she didn’t need in order to travel lighter?

Over 100,000 people with “gold fever” made this trip hoping to become millionaires. Few of them understood that on their way they would have to cross a harsh wilderness. Unprepared for such a dangerous journey, many died of starvation and exposure to the cold weather. The Canadian government finally started requiring the gold seekers to bring one ton of supplies with them. This was thought to be enough for a person to survive for one year. They would carry their supplies in backpacks each weighing up to fifty pounds; it usually took at least 40 trips to get everything to the top and over the pass. Whoever dropped the shoe must have been a brave and determined woman. Perhaps she was successful and made it to Alaska. Perhaps she had to turn back in defeat. No one will ever know for sure, but what we do know is that she took part in one of the greatest adventures in the 19th century.

11. The ordinary woman’s leather shoe is considered unusual because .

(A) it was an important clue to life in the past (B) it was found near a famous trail

(C) it at one time belonged to a VIP (D) it was a fashionable shoe at that time

12. According to this passage, many people who went to Alaska .

(A) eventually became millionaires (B) brought with them many shoes

(C) had conflicts with the Eskimos (D) were not properly equipped

13. The Canadian government made gold seekers bring one year’s supplies with them so that .

(A) they would not die of hunger and cold

(B) the army would have enough food for fighting a war

(C) they could trade these goods with the Eskimos

(D) the supplies would make Alaska prosperous

14. No matter what happened to the woman who owned the shoe, .

(A) she must have lived a happy life

(B) she certainly dropped the shoe on purpose

(C) her adventurous spirit is definitely admirable

(D) her other shoes were equally fashionable

15. The author of this passage would like us to remember that .

(A) “gold fever” was not worth the lives of many people

(B) simple objects can stimulate our imagination

(C) lost shoes should be sent to museums for exhibition

(D) Alaska was not a place suitable for making a living
四、篇章結構

What does the typical American or Canadian usually eat? Most people think that the typical North American diet consists of fast foods—hamburgers and French fries __14__--candy, potato chips, cereal with lots of sugar but no vitamins—and so on. This diet is very high in sugar, salt, fat, and cholesterol, and the choice of food is not very nutritious.

However, eating habits are changing. __15__. People are eating less red meat and fewer eggs, and they are eating more chicken and fish. They know that chicken and fish are better for their health than meat and eggs are, because these foods do not contain much fat or cholesterol. __16__.

__17__. They may eat them without cooking them first, or they might cook them quickly in very little water because they want to keep the vitamins.

The “typical: North American diet now includes food from many different countries. __18__. Foods from Japan, Thailand, Mexico, West Africa, China, and India are very popular.

(A) For health reason, many people are also buying more fresh vegetables.

(B) More ethnic restaurants are opening in big cities in the United States and Canada

(C) North Americans are becoming more interested in good health, and nutrition is an important part of health

(D) Some foods might cause health problems, and people want to stay away from them

(E) It also includes convenience foods, which are usually frozen or canned, “junk food” without much food value.


Day 24

1. CBDAC 6. BCDCB 11 BDACB 14. ECDAB


Day25

一、文意選填:


Amir tied two sacks of salt to the back of his donkey and headed for the market to sell the salt. On 1 , Amir and the donkey passed a stream. The donkey jumped into the stream to cool 2 . As a result, much of the salt melted in the water, ruining the salt for Amir but 3 the load for the donkey. Amir tried to get to the market on the following days, but the donkey 4 the same trick and ruined the salt.

Amir was very much 5 by the donkey’s trick, but did not know what to do. So he stopped going to the market for three days and tried to think of a way to 6 the donkey a lesson. On the third day, he 7 came up with a good idea. The next day, Amir loaded the sacks 8 with salt but with sand. When the donkey jumped into the stream and got the sacks wet, they became much



9 . The donkey was so much weighed down by the wet sand that he could hardly get out of the stream. From then on, the donkey learned the lesson, and 10 carried Amir’s salt to the market without ruining it.

(A) dutifully (B) played (C) heavier (D) the way (E) not

(F) lightening (G) finally (H) himself (I) teach (J) troubled
二、克漏字選擇:

It is a usual sunny afternoon in the village of Midwich, England. It seems not 11 any afternoon in the village, but all of a sudden, people and animals lose consciousness. When they awake, all of the women of child-bearing age have become pregnant.

This is an episode from a 1960 science fiction story. The women in the story give birth to children that have the same appearance. They all have blond hair and “strange eyes.” 12 the children grow, they run around the village in a pack, wearing identical clothing and hairstyles, staring at everyone impolitely. 13 one child learns is also known by the others instantly. Villagers begin to express their belief that the children all have “one mind.” In this story, the children are produced by some unexplained force from outer space. But this story written 40 years ago somehow predicted the arrival of a recent method of genetic engineering—cloning. Cloning is the genetic process of producing copies of an individual. Will the genetic copies of a human really have “one mind” as

14 in this story? This situation is so strange to us that we do not know what will 15 of it. Faced with this new situation, people have yet to find out how to deal with it.

11. (A) unlike (B) dislike (C) like (D) alike

12 (A) If (B) For (C) As (D) So

13. (A) Which (B) While (C) Where (D) What

14. (A) describes (B) described (C) describe (D) describing

15. (A) happen (B) occur (C) appear (D) become


三、閱讀測驗:

[A] George Bernard Shaw and Winston Churchill apparently disliked each other. It is said that the playwright once sent Churchill two tickets for the opening night of one of his plays, together with a card, which said, “Bring a friend (if you have one).”

Churchill, however, managed to get the better of this exchange. He returned the tickets, enclosing a note, which said, “I shall be busy that evening. Please send me two tickets for the second night (if there is one).”

There is no record of whether Shaw ever sent the tickets.

16. What was Shaw trying to say to Churchill on his card?

(A) Churchill should not go to the play alone. (B) Churchill should not bring too many people.

(C) Churchill may have to waste the two tickets. (D) Churchill did not have any friend.

17. Why didn’t Churchill want the tickets for the first night?

(A) He didn’t want to take Shaw’s insult.

(B) The theater would not be as crowded the second night.

(C) He was busy on the first night of the show.

(D) He couldn’t find a friend to go with him the first night.
[B] One day Nasreddin borrowed a big pot from his neighbor Ali. The next day he returned the pot with a small one inside. “That's not mine,” said Ali. “Yes, it is,” said Nasreddin. “While your pot was staying with me, it had a baby.”

One week later Nasreddin asked Ali to lend him the pot again. Ali gladly agreed and waited to see if Nasreddin would again give him back two pots. One week passed. Then another. In the end, Ali lost patience and went to demand his pot. “I’m sorry, your pot has died,” said Nasreddin. “Died!” said Ali. “How can a pot die?” “Well, you believed me when I told you that your pot had a baby, didn’t you?”

18. Nasreddin gave Ali an extra small pot in the beginning because .

(A) he and Ali were really good friends (B) he had too many pots at home

(C) he wanted to have more baby pots (D) he wanted to trick Ali

19. Why did Ali take Nasreddin’s words that his pot had a baby?

(A) He had no reason to doubt it. (B) He wanted to keep the small pot.

(C) He had seen pots having babies before. (D) He believed in whatever Nasreddin said.

20. It can be inferred that Ali had at the end of the story.

(A) neither of the pots (B) the big pot

(C) the small pot (D) both pots

Day 25


1. DHFBJ IGECA 11. ACDBD 16. DA 18 DBC
Day26

一、字彙:


1. The teacher loved to teach young students, those who were smart.

(A) officially (B) especially (C) popularly (D) similarly

2. Eating dessert before meals may kill your .

(A) energy (B) character (C) quality (D) appetite

3. In Taiwan, some cable TV companies have up to 70 or 80 .

(A) channels (B) events (C) items (D) patterns

4. It was fortunate that John escaped being killed in a traffic accident.

(A) privately (B) locally (C) narrowly (D) distantly

5. Since the typhoon, the basement has been filled with water. We have to the water as soon as possible.

(A) reserve (B) repair (C) retire (D) remove

二、綜合測驗

Halloween is a very special holiday. It always falls on the last day of October. Originally, it came from a Catholic holiday to honor all saints, __6__ the holiday customs are of non-Catholic orign. Today in the United States, Halloween is a __7__ holiday for children and grown-ups. Children dress up in __8__ and go from door to door “trick-or-treat.” Grownups give them a treat of candy, cookies, or money. If the children don’t get a treat, they will sometimes play a trick on you. On this day, it is not unusual to see children __9__ like witches, black cats, devils and skeletons. __10__ custom is to hollow out a pumpkin and make a jack-‘o-lantern. The jack-o’-lantern is then placed in the window with a candle inside. Children and grownups alike go to parties on this holiday.


6. (A) or (B) so (C) but (D) for

7. (A) fun (B) legal (C) initial (D) imaginary

8. (A) chains (B) series (C) programs (D) costumes

9. (A) dressed (B) dressing (C) to dress (D) who dressed

10. (A) The other (B) Other (C) Others (D) Another

三、閱讀測驗:


A linguist is always listening, never off-duty. Once I invited a group of friends round to my house, telling them that I was going to record their speech. I said I was interested in their regional accents, and that it would take only a few minutes. Thus, on one evening, three people turned up at my house and were shown into my front room. When they saw the room they were a bit alarmed, for it was laid out as a studio. In front of each easy chair there was a microphone at head height, with wires leading to a tape-recorder in the middle of the floor. They sat down, rather nervously, and I explained that all I wanted was for them to count from one to twenty. Then we could relax and have a drink.

I turned on the tape-recorder and each in turn solemnly counted from one to twenty in their best accent. When it was over, I turned the tape-recorder off and brought round the drinks. I was sternly criticized for having such an idiotic job, and for the rest of the evening there was general jolly conversation—spoilt only by the fact that I had to take a telephone call in another room, which unfortunately lasted some time.

Or at least that was how it would appear. For, of course, the microphones were not connected to the tape-recorder in the middle of the room at all but to another one, which was turning happily away in the kitchen. The participants, having seen the visible tape-recorder turned off, paid no more attention to the microphones which stayed in front of their chairs, only a few inches from their mouths, thus giving excellent sound quality. And my lengthy absence meant that I was able to obtain as natural a piece of conversation as it would be possible to find.

I should add, perhaps, that I did tell my friends what had happened to them, after the event was over, and gave them the option of destroying the tape. None of them wanted to—though for some years afterwards I was left in no doubt that I was morally obliged to them, in the sense that it always seemed to be my round when it came to the buying of drinks. Linguistic research can be a very expensive business.


11. Why did the author ask his friends to count from one to twenty?

(A) He wanted them to think that was all he wanted to record.

(B) He wanted to record how they pronounced numbers.

(C) He had to check whether his tape-recorder was working.

(D) He wanted to discover who had the best accent.
12. Why did the author leave the room in the middle of the evening?

(A) He had to make a phone call to order some drinks.

(B) He didn’t like to be criticized for being idiotic.

(C) He wanted to turn off a tape recorder in another room.

(D) He wanted the others to have a conversation without him.
13. How did the author have the conversation recorded?

(A) On the tape-recorder in the middle of the floor.

(B) Through hidden microphones.

(C) On a tape-recorder in another room.

(D) In a studio.
14. How did his friends react when the author told them what he had done?

(A) They wanted him to destroy the recordings he had made.

(B) They didn’t really feel offended.

(C) They were upset because they felt he had cheated them.

(D) They made him pay them for the recordings.

Day 26


1. BDACD 6. CADAD 11.ADCB


Day27

一、字彙:


1. Some waste from nuclear power plants is buried in containers.

(A) crashed (B) paved (C) risked (D) sealed

2. A human body usually has a temperature of about 37 degrees C.

(A) steady (B) various (C) gradual (D) precious

3. If you expect to have quick of the goods, it is better to have them airmailed.

(A) discovery (B) directory (C) delivery (D) dormitory

4. This project is mainly for scientific research. It doesn’t have any value at all.

(A) commercial (B) reluctant (C) opposite (D) inferior

5. These two countries are trying to trade and cultural exchanges between them.

(A) notify (B) intensify (C) personify (D) signify


二、克漏字選擇:

Now that you are planning to go to college, how can you select an ideal college for yourself? By its reputation or the test scores it requires for admission? In fact, it is not 6 simple as that. College education is far more complicated than just the reputation of a college or the test scores it requires. In addition to these two factors, you should also have 7 important information. Finding out which college suits you involves time and energy, but no more than those you might spend on buying a motorcycle or a computer.

Here are some tips 8 choosing an ideal one from a number of colleges.

1. Visit the websites of these colleges and find out which college has departments 9 courses that interest you or will help you prepare for your future career.

2. Are the professors in the departments you plan to get into experts in their own fields?

3. Do the colleges allow you to 10 activities that will help you develop yourself intellectually and emotionally?

I hope the above advice is helpful to you in selecting the right college.

6. (A) as (B) too (C) still (D) quite

7. (A) many (B) even (C) other (D) few

8. (A) of (B) on (C) to (D) from

9. (A) offer (B) offers (C) offered (D) offering

10. (A) work out (B) participate in (C) come across (D) take over

三、閱讀測驗:
I wandered lonely as a cloud

That floats on high o'er vales and hills,

When all at once I saw a crowd,

A host, of golden daffodils,

Beside the lake, beneath the trees,

Fluttering and dancing in the breeze.

Continuous as the stars that shine

And twinkle on the Milky Way,

They stretched in never-ending line

Along the margin of a bay:

Ten thousand saw I at a glance,

Tossing their heads in sprightly dance.


11. Where was the poet?

(A) In a garden.

(B) In a dance hall.

(C) In the countryside.

(D) In a space ship.
12. Which of the following is most likely true about the poet?

(A) He was a great dancer.

(B) He liked to be close to Nature.

(C) He enjoyed the company of people.

(D) He was a very lonely person.

四、篇章結構
Chocolate-making is an art. The dark chocolate we eat contains cocoa liquor, extra cocoa butter and some sugar. 15____ In fact, it takes more than just tossing all the ingredients in a bowl. The first step to making dark chocolate is to put these ingredients through a process called conching. ___16____ By doing this, the sugar crystals and cocoa solids are broken up into very fine particles. ___17___ The next step is to temper the chocolate. This step ensures the fats crystallize in the right way. ____18___ But only one of them makes for good eating. The next time you enjoy dark chocolate, think of all the effort put into making it and you’ll enjoy it even more.


15. _____ 16. _____ 17. _____ 18. _____

A. This helps make the chocolate taste absolutely smooth.

B. In the conching machine, all the ingredients are mashed over and over again by big heavy rollers.

C. Because these ingredients are simple, people often think it’s easy to make dark chocolate.

D. Potentially, the fats can crystallize in six different ways.
Day 27

1. DACAB 6. ACBDB 11. CB 15 CBAD




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