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o, we?ll live to regret it . our/the Dear Miss Dyson, I?m writing to ask for some help. I am going to take part in an English speech contest to be held in my city next month. I have finished writing my speech, but I am not very confident about it. Are all the sentences in my speech grammatically correct? Are my ideas worth listening to? Will the judges and listeners laugh at me because of my poor language? Therefore, I wonder if you could spare some time to polish it, for which I would be truly grateful. I?m looking forward to your reply. Yours , Li Hua 。 When I was a child, I hoped to live in the city. I think I would be happy there. Now I am living in a city, but I miss my home in countryside. There the air is clean or the mountains are green. Unfortunately, on the development of industrialization, the environment has been polluted. Lots of studies have been shown that global warming has already bee a very seriously problem. The airs we breathe in is getting dirtier and dirtier. Much rare animals are dying out. We must found ways to protect your environment. If we fail to do so, we?ll live to regret it. 第二節(jié) 書面表達(dá) (滿分 25分 ) 假定你是 李華 ,準(zhǔn)備參加你市舉辦的英語演講大賽,已寫好演講稿。 刪除:把多余的詞用斜線( \)劃掉。 Most of the time I do what my parents expect 61 me: I work hard in school 62 I can get into a good college and create a life that others want for me rather than that I think I want. It looks something like 63 ( bee) a doctor, or a lawyer, getting married, having some kids, moving into a nice apartment in the city, preparing my kids 64 ( do) it all over again. Lately, 65 , I?m not sure if this is the life I actually want. I know that I want to be happy, that I want to leave the world 66 ( well) than how I found it, and that I want to feel what I am doing is 67 ( mean) . But I don?t know if this path will get me there. This makes me doubt the way I act, and have always acted, always following many 68 ( rule) . I really like school。 A The Cambridge Science Festival Curiosity Challenge Dare to Take the Curiosity Challenge! The Cambridge Science Festival (CSF) is pleased to inform you of the sixth annual Curiosity Challenge. The challenge invites, even dares school students between the ages of 5 and 14 to create artwork or a piece of writing that shows their curiosity and how it inspires them to explore their world. Students are being dared to draw a picture, rite an article, take a photo or write a poem that shows what they are curious about. To enter the challenge, all artwork or pieces of writing should be sent to the Cambridge Science Festival, MIT Museum, 265 Mass Avenue, Cambridge 02139 by Friday, February 8th. Students who enter the Curiosity Challenge and are selected as winners will be honored at a special ceremony during the CSF on Sunday, April 21st. Guest speakers will also present prizes to the students. Winning entries will be published in a book. Student entries will be exhibited and prizes will be given. Families of those who take part will be included in the celebration and brunch will be served. Between March 10th and March 15th, each winner will be given the specifics of the closing ceremony and the Curiosity Challenge celebration. The program guidelines and other related information are available at: 21. Who can take part in the Curiosity Challenge? A. School students. B. Cambridge locals. C. CSF winners. D. MIT artists. 22. When will the prizegiving ceremony be held? A. On February 8th. B. On March 10th. C. On March 15th. D. On April 21st. 23. What type of writing is this text? A. An exhibition guide. B. An art show review. C. An announcement. D. An official report. B Passenger pigeons (旅鴿 )once flew over much of the United States in unbelievable numbers. Written accounts from the 18th and 19th centuries describes described flocks (群 ) so large that they darkened the sky for hours. It was calculated that when its population reached its highest point, there were more than 3 billion passenger pigeo