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Tom Selleck Gives a Rare Interview on Fame, Family and Why He Quit ...

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A. She reads more at present than she used to.

B. She doesn't buy books very ofttimes.

C. She reads on the style to work every day.

D. She'southward education her children to read at the moment.

Eastward. She prefers reading books for children.

F. She wants to write a book one day.

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A i The pupils should arrive at the drome one hour before take-off.

1) Truthful 2) Imitation 3) Not stated

ii The flight will last about 4 hours.

one) Truthful 2) False 3) Not stated

A three The pupils will each have their own hotel room in London.

1) True 2) False 3) Not stated

4 The first attraction they are planning to visit is the Tower of London.

1) True 2) Faux 3) Not stated

5 The teacher has taken pupils to London earlier.

ane) True 2) False 3) Not stated

half-dozen Jonathan decides to go on the trip to Kew Gardens.

ane) True ii) False 3) Non stated

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� seven You lot will hear a homo talking nearly mobile phones. How does he feel about them?

i)  He thinks they are unnecessary.

2)  He thinks they are annoying.

iii)  He thinks they cause accidents.

A 8 Y'all will hear a man talking about a mag. Why does he similar it?

1)  Information technology often has interesting interviews.

2)  It explains how to exercise things.

3)  It comes with a costless CD.

A ix You will hear a adult female talking about a wedding. What went wrong?

ane)  Some of the guests got lost.

2)  Some guests didn't receive invitations.

3)  Some people arrived who hadn't been invited.

A x You volition hear a girl talking about learning to drive. How does she feel about it?

i)  She is nervous about taking the driving examination.

ii)  She has bug remembering where to go.

3)  She finds some things very disruptive.

A 11 You lot volition hear an ad for a new game. How exercise y'all win?

iv)  by answering questions correctly

5)  by making other people laugh

vi)  past collecting the most cards

A 12 You will hear a woman talking about her brother. What does she say nigh him?

ane) He never comes to visit her.

2) He never listens to her.

3) He never invites her to stay.

A xiii You will hear a woman talking about her local park. How does she feel nigh it?

1)  She thinks it is attractive.

2)  She thinks it is untidy.

3)  She thinks information technology is unsafe.

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A. CAR RACE C. FAVOURITE TOY East. HELPFUL MACHINE G. UNUSUAL Car

B. REAL PLEASURE D. SERIOUS PROBLEMS F. DIFFERENT TOYS

1. Things boys play with are non similar objects girls play with. Boys often have more liberty to run about and they become guns, train sets, toy trucks and toy cars. Electronic games are very pop amongst immature boys. Toys for girls are much quieter and more than passive. Young girls oftentimes get things like dolls, dresses, and pictures to color.

two. �Teddies� are an important office of British culture. Virtually people in Britain accept a teddy bear when they are young, and virtually people are very fond of their special bear, even when they are 30 or 40 years sometime! Many famous people like picture stars or pop stars or politicians collect �teddies�. These people accept donated their old friends to the teddy acquit museum which is in Stratford-on-Avon in England. Many tourists go to this place, because it is the birthplace of Shakespeare, just they frequently dear the teddy bear museum more than.

3. Computer games are a multimillion dollar industry, but people who actually enjoy games are not satisfied with playing against the computer. They want to play against real people and well-nigh computer games let you lot to do that just past joining upwards with other players on the Internet. Regular players say that this is where their truthful enjoyment of games tin can be found. With some games up to 60 people can take function. It's a good way to meet people and information technology gives you something to talk most.

iv. The big American company General Motors has adult a vehicle that uses the ability of the dominicus instead of petrol. The vehicle is called Sunraycer which means "ray of the lord's day+ra�cer. Sunraycer has just taken part in a race confronting 25 solar-powered vehicles. Sunraycer covered the great distance in 45 hours at a speed of 41 miles an hr at temperatures as loftier as 48�C. It is certainly the car of the future.

5. Computers are a great technological invention of the 20th century. Their advantages are numerous withal much tin be said against them. The principal disadvantage of computers is that looking at a screen for long periods of time is bad for the optics, and sitting on a chair for hours is non salubrious. Likewise, people who use computers take a tendency to become anti-social and stay at home. The strongest argument against the use of computers is that the more than jobs which are washed by computers, the less are done by people.

6. Thirty years agone few people realized that computers were about to become part of our everyday lives. This brusque menstruum of time has seen slap-up changes in business organization, education and public administration. Jobs which took weeks to exercise in by, are now carried out in minutes. Schoolchildren have become as familiar with hardware and software as their parents were with pencils and practise books and they don�t worry well-nigh mistakes having a figurer.

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The monster fish announced itself with iv huge blows of its tail, thrashing against the

net that had trapped it in the Mekong River.

It was a rare giant catfish, 1_____________ .

At 2.seven meters in length and weighing 293 kilogram, it may exist the biggest fresh�water fish always recorded.

But in one of the world's more surprising mysteries, nobody really knows which is the biggest species of fish lurking under the waters of the Mekong or the Ama�zon or the Yangtze or the Congo or the Colorado or Lake Baikal.

When the behemothic catfish was caught in May, a biologist named Zeb S. Hogan

rushed hither to take a look. It was his commencement trophy 2____________ .

Sponsored by the National Geographic Order and the World Wildlife Fund,
three _________ .

He has started with the Mekong, which he said has seven species of behemothic fish,
more than than any other river, along with at least 750 other species. All of them are
threatened -

4_______________ - by overfishing, pollution and development, including

major dam projects.

The Mekong giant catfish may be 5______________ . The few that remain

can be spotted at present simply in central Cambodia and here, just beneath the Golden
Triangle, where northern Thailand, Laos and Myanmar meet.
No one has made a credible merits to top this year's bays, Mr. Hogan said. "I
keep expecting people to transport me photos or records of larger fish,
6.___________ ," Mr. Hogan said. "But that's kind of the indicate of the project. Permit's gather all the information that'southward out at that place and decide which is the largest freshwater fish."

A. similar river fish around the world

B. in a project to identify the earth'south largest freshwater fish in the hope of slowing their extinction

C. merely nobody has

D. and it took v boatmen an hour to pull it in and x men to lift it when they
reached the shore in this remote village in northern Thailand

E. simply nosotros couldn't weigh information technology

F. Mr. Hogan has embarked on an 18-month expedition that will have him to v
continents

Grand. the commencement to disappear from the river, he said

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Ask a hundred comedians what the underground of proficient comedy is, and you're guaranteed that at to the lowest degree ninety-nine of them will come up with the aforementioned response: timing. Although this is undoubtedly truthful, information technology is not the complete answer, equally what exactly proficient one-act is should, surely, involve the concept of making people laugh. Successful politicians likewise have to accept good timing, only most of them would soon face up an empty audition if they ever chose to perform at a comedy social club.

And so what is the undercover of good one-act? There conspicuously isn't ane straight reply, but there's no doubt that much of modern British humour relies on comedy through language, comedians like Charlie Chaplin and Benny Hill and nowadays-twenty-four hours characters similar Mr Bean existence part of a different tradition of 'slapstick' one-act that relies on the physical rather than the verbal.

The joke is the most obvious instance of �language one-act�. With language comedy, how you phrase what you're saying - peculiarly the 'punchline', the final line of a joke that draws the express joy - is more important than what you're proverb. Take this traditional double-deed joke:

Get-go man: I say, I say, I say. My wife'southward gone to the Caribbean.

2nd homo: Jamaica?

First man: No, she went of her own accord.

Ignoring the fact that it's not especially funny to modernistic ears (if information technology e'er was funny), at first sight it appears that the humour rests in the fact that 'Jamaica' is confused for �D'you brand her?�, i. e. 'Did you brand her go to the Caribbean?'. Try putting a unlike final line on the joke, though. 'No, she chose to go.' contains exactly the same meaning just, well, it'southward only not as funny, is it? It's all in the phrasing.

This may exist one of the reasons why British humour doesn't interpret into other languages very well. When i translates, 1 keeps the significant but the phrasing changes, losing the basis of the humor.

The 2nd secret of one-act to my listen is this, I mean the creation of a character, or characters, by the comedian through which the jokes or stories are edy is acting and, like any play, a great script in the wrong easily can be a disaster and a terrible script in an expert'due south easily can be made into something quite special.

I call back as a child watching the comedian Peter Sellers being interviewed on the Parkinson show. Michael Parkinson, the studio audience, and my parents watching with me at dwelling house were crying with laughter at everything that Sellers did or said. I saturday in that location thinking: 'He'south only waving a handkerchief around. Nobody laughs when I do that. Why are they laughing at him?' I now know what I didn't know so - that he was a comic genius, and I'chiliad not. And by that, I hateful that he had the ability to create characters that people institute genuinely funny, whatever they did. He could have sat there in silence and people would still accept been laughing. And -allow's be clear - even though Sellers was appearing on a chat show supposedly equally himself, he was in character. Every bit anyone who'due south read the biography of Peter Sellers by Roger Lewis knows, Sellers off-stage was an incredibly violent and difficult man.

So is it possible to learn to be a comedian, or is it merely a natural talent? At that place may well be people who will never, ever succeed at beingness professional comedians however difficult they effort.

Very few of us will e'er exist an Einstein, Mozart or Shakespeare in our corresponding fields. Withal, all comedians will tell y'all that the more experience yous get, the more experienced, and therefore the better, y'all become. And they're not joking.

A14 In the starting time paragraph, the writer suggests that politicians

ane) ofttimes try humour in their speeches.

2) are only successful if they are funny.

3) are used to facing empty audiences.

4) are no good at making people express mirth.

A15 According to the text, 'slapstick' comedy

one) does not make utilise of language to be funny.

2) is different to the comedy of Benny Colina.

iii) is simply found in modern British humor.

4) does not exist in Britain anymore.

A16 The writer tells the joke virtually Jamaica to

1) demonstrate how many old jokes are non funny today.

2) explain why many jokes need 2 people to tell them.

3) show how the actual words used in a joke are important.

4) bespeak out that some jokes contain disruptive phrases.

A17 Whether a comedy deed is 'a disaster' or 'something quite special' depends on

1)  the quality of the script being performed.

2) the power of the performer to perform.

3) how much the act is like a play.

4)  which grapheme tells which joke.

A18 Watching the Parkinson bear witness, the author did not sympathize why

one) Peter Sellers was doing the things he was doing.

ii) nobody was laughing at him at that moment.

three) Peter Sellers was a comic genius and he wasn't.

4) everyone laughed at Sellers doing ordinary things.

A19 The writer mentions a book by Roger Lewis to

1)  enable people to find out more information nearly Peter Sellers.

2)  bear witness that he hadn't fabricated up the story near Peter Sellers.

3)  make it clear that Peter Sellers oft played unpleasant characters.

4)  emphasize that Peter Sellers was acting during the conversation show.

A20 In the concluding paragraph, the author makes the point that

1)  none of the states can learn to be good comedians.

2)  all comedians' skills better through practice.

3)  it'southward not worth trying to become a professional comedian.

4)  Einstein, Mozart and Shakespeare weren't comedians.

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A Night Visit

"Please, sir, can you lot come with me and see for yourself?" said the retainer.

At once Mr Utterson put on his coat. He quickly

B4 made his way to his___________________house. FRIEND

B5 Untidy, grey clouds past a white moon. Sheet

B6 When he________________________ the foursquare, there was a potent

wind. Reach

B7 He entered a large hall.

A good fire________________there. BURN

B8 The room was total of people - every retainer in the house was

there. They looked like a crowd of_______________children Frighten

"What's all this?" said Mr Utterson. "What are you all doing

here? Your master would not be pleased."

B9 No one_______________________________. SPEAK

B10 a little servant girl began___________________"Serenity! Now Cry

nosotros'll end this business organization at once," said one of the servants.

���������� ���������� ���� �����. ������������ �����, ������������ ���������� ������� ����� ������� B11 � B16 ���, ����� ��� ������������� � ���������� ��������������� ���������� ������. ��������� �������� ����������� �������. ������ ������� ������������� ���������� ������� �� ������ B11 � B16.

The National Maritime Museum is set in the beautiful surroundings of

Greenwich park.

B11 Within the circuitous of the museum there is a wide __________________ of VARY

objects, displays and paintings.

B12The collections relate to the shipping, astronomy and __________________ NAVIGATE.

B13The museum tells the story of figures of great __________________ to IMPORTANT

Britain�s history, such as Lord Nelson and helm James Cook.

Galleries and exhibitions are often updated to bring back into view

B14__________________ DIFFER

B15 parts of the huge hidden collections of the museum which is ___________ FAME

all over the country.

B16 This visit will exist an __________________ experience. FORGET

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It was in 1947, and Jean and Tom were going to get married. But after the 2d World State of war it was very difficult ___ �21 new apparel in U.k.. �Do not worry�, Jean�s

dad ____ �22 to Tom. �You tin ___ �23 my adjust�. �What shall I wearable?� thought Jean. She ___ �24 an advertisement in her favourite mag, �Picturegoer�: �British Motion-picture show Studios three-day wedding hire services�. They hired out dresses from films. She ___ �25 £3 before the war, and information technology was enough. Jean ___ �26 in the form giving them the size. The dress ___ �27 in time. It was beautiful, and Jean ___ �28 perfect in it. Their wedding day was wonderful. Now they have been married for 53 years. They always ___ �29 the old films now, considering who ___ �30 � they might meet someone ___ �31 Jean�s dress.

�21 1) buying

2) purchase

3) to buy

4) bought

�22 one) said

2) was proverb

iii) says

4) has said

�23 1) take

2) to accept

3) exist taking

4) have taken

�24 1) had remembered

2) remembers

3) has remembered

iv) remembered

�25 1) saved

2) has saved

3) had saved

4) accept saved

�26 i) filled

2) has filled

three) had filled

4) was filling

�27 ane) has arrived

two) had arrived

3) arrives

four) arrived

�28 ane) had looked

two) looked

3) was looking

4) has looked

�29 i) have watched

ii) watch

three) were watching

4) had watched

�30 one) knew

2) is known

three) know

4) knows

�31 ane) wearing

2) wear

iii) wears

4) wore

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������ four. ������

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������ ������� ������.

C1 You have 20 minutes to do this job.

You have received a letter from your English-speaking pen friend Steve who writes

� At schoolhouse nosotros are doing projects on reading habits of people in different countries. Could you tell me what kind of books y'all and the members of your family like reading?

As for the family unit news my sister got married terminal week�

Write a letter of the alphabet to Steve.

In your letter

- tell him about the kind of books you and your relatives like to read

- ask three questions near his sister�s husband

Write 100 � 140 words.

Think the rules of letter writing.

C2 You have 40 minutes to do this task.

Comment on the following statement.

Some people think that science plays the near important function in the evolution of our civilisation, others believe that our world would exist impossible without poetry.

What is your opinion? Which is more important in our lives, science or poetry?

Write 200 � 250 words.

Use the following plan:

- brand an introduction (state the problem)

- express your personal opinion and requite reasons for it

- requite arguments for the other betoken of view and explain why

yous don�t concord with it

- draw a decision

���������� 1

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������� �1

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1 - v � �������������, ������� �
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������ � �������. � ��� ���� 20 ������, ����� ������������ �
��������._______________________________________________________________

Now nosotros are ready to beginning.

Tapescript � B 1

Speaker i: Aye, I do read quite a lot - books and magazines - but if you asked me

what my favourite books are, I'd have to say books for kids! I've got ii kids of

my own, and in one case they've finished reading a book, they laissez passer it on to me.

Children's literature these days is just so practiced! Accept Harry Potter, for example.

Much funnier and more heady than books written for adults.

Speaker two: I've always loved reading - e'er since I was a immature child.

I tin can remember then clearly my mum instruction me to read. I loved every minute of it!

Whether I'll ever actually manage to write a book of my ain in the future, I don't

know. But I'd really beloved to! Information technology must be wonderful to meet your name on the front of

a book in all the bookshops. I'm then jealous of writers!

Speaker iii: Well, I've got two twins, Sammy and Denise, and they're both three

years erstwhile now, so they're learning how to read right now. We read every solar day. I

read to them kickoff, and then I try to get them to read the words back to me. I retrieve

Denise is a niggling better than Sammy so far, but they're very competitive then I'm

sure that'll change!

Speaker 4: I've got hundreds of books at dwelling house, nearly of which I haven't read yet,

to exist honest. And that's the trouble. Time. When you're a kid there seems to be

loads of fourth dimension for reading, but it's not the same when you're an adult. The merely

time I have is on the train into piece of work each morning. Information technology's well-nigh a one-half-hr journey,

then I always take a volume with me. It's a nice start to the 24-hour interval. I'thou normally also tired to

read on the way home, though!

Speaker 5: I'm definitely what yous would call a lover of books, and I studied

literature at academy, actually, so I do like to think of myself every bit a bit of an expert.

But, and this will surprise y'all, I almost never go into bookshops. It's not that I

don't read - I do! Simply we've got a fantastic library in the boondocks centre then I get my

books from at that place. I mean, what's the point of buying books when you can borrow

them from a library for free?

You accept 15 seconds to complete the task. (Intermission 15 seconds.) Now you will hear the texts over again. (Echo.)

This is the end of the task. You at present take 15 seconds to check your answers.

������� A1 � A6

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������, ����� ������������ � ���������.

Now we are ready to start.

Tapescript � A ane- vi

Instructor: Hello, Jonathan. You wanted to come across me about the school trip.

Jonathan: Yes, miss. I wanted to cheque some of the details with you.

Teacher: Ah, yes. You lot were absent-minded when I went through the trip with

the residue of the class, weren't you? Okay.

What do you want to know?

Jonathan: Well, I know we're flight to London next Fri at half dozen, only

I'thousand not sure when to be at the aerodrome.

Teacher: That's right. We'll be taking off at half-dozen, if we're not delayed. They say y'all

should be at that place ii hours earlier your flight to requite you plenty of time

to check in. Since we'll be checking in equally a large grouping, we probably

won't need so long. Let'southward say ninety minutes before.

Jonathan: Iv xxx?

Instructor: Yes, that'll exist fine. We should exist in London about

four hours later, although there'south a three-hour fourth dimension

departure, so we'll be arriving at seven in the morn, local time.

Jonathan: Correct. So information technology'll still be early morning time. Will we be going straight

to the hotel?

Teacher: That'south right. We're all staying at the aforementioned hotel,

the Capital Park Hotel. One time nosotros've collected

our numberless from the airport, a mini-bus will take us to the hotel.

When we get there, I'll tell you all who y'all're sharing a room

with and I'll give you the keys.

Jonathan: Will we be spending long at the hotel?

Teacher: I wait we'll all desire to relax a piffling and maybe have a shower,

so we'll be staying at the hotel for a couple of hours, I imagine.

Jonathan: And then tin can nosotros do what we like?

Teacher: Er...no. I don't think that'south a very good idea. I've really planned

what we're going to do quite advisedly. We'll be taking information technology easy

the commencement day, so I've simply planned two visits:

Madame Tussaud'southward later lunch, and before that, in the morning,

the Belfry of London.

Jonathan: Are y'all sure at that place volition be enough to exercise at those places?

Teacher: Well, the other groups of students who accept been in that location with me

in the by always enjoyed it, then I don't call back you demand

to worry about being bored! If anything, we might not have fourth dimension

to encounter everything.

Jonathan: Okay. And and so the next twenty-four hour period?

Teacher: Well, I don't have time to go through each day in particular, but come

to see me at lunchtime and I'll give you a re-create of the complete

timetable. Oh, there is 1 thing you can do. On the Tuesday, at that place

will exist a selection of activity - either Kew Gardens with me or

the Natural History Museum with Mr Madinsky.

Jonathan : Erm ...I don't know anything about them.

Teacher: The Natural History Museum is one of the earth's best nature museums and Kew Gardens has displays of all kinds of plants from around the world.

Jonathan: I'one thousand more interested in animals, so I guess I'd rather go to

the museum.

Teacher: Okay. I'll make a notation of it. Now, don't forget to come back

at lunchtime for the timetable.

Jonathan: I won't. Thanks, miss.

You have 15 seconds to complete the task. (Pause 15 seconds.)

Now yous'll hear the text again. (Repeat.)

This is the end of the chore. You now have 15 seconds to check your answers.

������� A7 - A13

�� �������� ������������ ����� � ���� ��������� ���������.

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Now nosotros are ready to start.

Tapescript � A7-xiii

Situation i

Man: Like everyone else, I've got a mobile, and I really don't know how anyone

lives without one. It can be really abrasive when y'all leave home and forget to

take your mobile with you. I never apply mine when I'm driving, though. At that place have

been too many cases where people haven't been concentrating on the road and

have been chatting and the next thing you know, bang. You lot really should stop to

make a call.

Situation 2

Human: It's called Digital Music and it comes out once a month. I never miss an

result. I similar writing my own music on my figurer, and I even make my ain CDs

to give abroad to friends. Well, Digital Music is all about that. They have cracking

articles by experts on how to get the most out of your programs. I think that's why

I become it, because I never read any of the interviews with musicians.

State of affairs 3

Adult female: I went to Mary and Paul's nuptials last month. Oh, what a disaster! Well,

the nuptials itself was lovely. Mary was so beautiful in her apparel and people had

come from all over the country to be there. Anyhow, some of us were invited to a

meal subsequently the wedding. We all got into our cars and drove to the eatery, and

we had been therefore 20 minutes when we realized that Paul'southward parents

didn't know the mode. It took them two hours to detect united states of america. They weren't happy, I can

tell you.

Situation four

Girl: I've been having lessons for a few months now, and my exam is in another

calendar month. I was quite nervous at starting time, but you soon get used to it. My difficulty is the

road signs. In that location are so many to remember, and they just get mixed upwards in my

mind. I've got pictures of them on my bedroom wall to help me call up. I just

hope I become it right on the day.

Situation five

Human being: Crevice Up is the peachy new game that everyone'southward playing! Simply take ane of

the Crack Up cards and do what information technology tells you. If you can get everyone laughing at

your hilarious actions, you lot could exist Cleft Up champion! The question is, can y'all

exercise it without laughing yourself? Fissure Upward is for anybody, from eight to eighty!

Play Cleft Upwardly today.

Situation 6

Woman: I've got one brother, Terry, who'southward two years older than me. He went to

live in America near x years ago. I've been out to run into him a couple of times,

and we try to speak on the phone about one time a month. Information technology would be dainty if he

could come here and run into how I alive, but he always seems to exist working. We

were really close as children, merely then you each accept to live your own life.

Situation 7

Woman: Do y'all know the park round the corner? Well, I used to exist frightened to

go in at that place at night and information technology was always such a mess, with rubbish everywhere.

They've done it up and put some flower beds in and more lights and it doesn't

look too bad at present. Perchance local people will start to use it once again.

You have fifteen seconds to complete the task. (Interruption fifteen seconds.)

Now you lot will hear the text once more. (Repeat.)

This is the end of the task. Y'all at present have 15 seconds to cheque your answers.

This is the end of the Listening test.

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�1

B

�xiv

two

�22

i

�2

A

�xv

iv

�23

1

A3

A

�sixteen

1

�24

iv

�4

A

�17

2

�25

3

�5

B

�xviii

4

�26

one

�6

A

�xix

2

�27

4

�7

three

�twenty

ane

�28

2

�8

2

�21

iii

A29

2

�9

i

A30

four

�x

3

A31

i

�xi

two

�12

ane

�13

1

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Due east EFDCB

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friend�s

� B 5

They are sailing ��� sailed

� B half dozen

reached

� B seven

was burning

� B eight

frightened

� B ix

spoke ��� was speaking

� B 10

to weep ��� crying

� B 11

multifariousness

� B 12

navigation

�13

Importance

�xiv

different

�15

famous

� B 16

unforgettable

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