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A.They were frightened and distressed.B.They swam away when the speaker was turned on.

A. They were frightened and distressed.
B. They swam away when the speaker was turned on.
C. They swam closer to "examine" the speaker when it was turned off.
D. They didn't seem to be frightened and kept swimming near the speaker.

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In the happiness pie chart, error factors account for 10 percent.

A. Y
B. N
C. NG

A.He would like to go shopping with Nick.B.He has to finish an article today.C.He is a

A. He would like to go shopping with Nick.
B. He has to finish an article today.
C. He is asked to take photos of Steve.
D. He supplies some photos information to Steve.

Section B
Directions: There are 2 passages in this section. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. You should decide on the best choice.
News that police in Leeds are looking for an American in their search for the man who murdered one of their colleagues on Boxing Day fits with the way that gun crime has changed over the past decade. The pattern of offences involving guns looks more and more like that in America: random, careless shootings have replaced the carefully-planned bank robberies of old.
Improvements in technology such as tracking devices, hidden cameras have hardened banks, vans and other traditionally lucrative(有利的) targets so much that pulling on a mask scarcely seems worthwhile. This year, England and Wales saw just 250 bank and building society robberies-down from 1400 in 2001. These days, most armed robberies take place on the street and in shops. In this new environment, old tools and techniques are of little use. Sawn-off(锯短了的) shotguns are handy for robbing banks, mostly for reasons of presentation: they make a terrific noise when fired at the ceiling or floor, and are menacing enough to project a threat through bulletproof glass. They are less useful for robbing today's "soft" targets, though, so they have mostly been discarded. Sawn-off shotguns were used in just 201 robberies last year-a third the figure of a decade ago-while almost 3841 jobs were done with handguns.
Roger Matthews, professor of criminology(犯罪学) at Middlesex University, says that armed robbery is becoming Americanized, both in the sense that Britain is moving towards late-night convenience store robberies, and also in the sense that anyone can do it. The rise of unskilled robbery-criminals with guns and no previous experience-is bad news for shop workers, who are less well trained in dealing with guns than are bank tellers; it is also bad for the police, who tend to find ill-thought-out crimes harder to solve than planned ones.
For the most part, old dogs disdain the new tricks. Officers in the Flying Squad-the arm of the London Metropolitan Police that deals with armed robbery-say that professional robber tend to follow defined tracks. Betting shop specialists will rarely rob post offices.
With their chosen targets now out of reach, most of the men who terrified Britain's cities in the 1980s have simply left the business. But not all have gone clean. To repeat Willie Sutton, a legendary American robber, people used to hold up banks because that's where the money was. These days it is in the international drugs trade, so they gave up robbing. This trade is where many of the old-timers have gone.
Which of the following is a right description of the gun murder on Boxing Day?

A. It is a well-organized deliberate robbery.
B. It is a careless shooting without any planning.
C. It is a gun crime carried out in traditional way.
D. It is a gun crime involving very advanced guns.

A.The man watched the movie last night.B.The man missed reading the paper of yesterday

A. The man watched the movie last night.
B. The man missed reading the paper of yesterday.
C. The man wasn't interested in the TV program.
D. The man went shopping with Meg yesterday.

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