We can learn that, while visiting the Thi-Lor-Su waterfall, visitors ______.
Recently many libraries are trying to provide the visitors with a new service: making their catalogs accessible via the Internet.
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Passage 1
Many visitors (1)______ Britain are not fond of English food. They are often heard (2)______ ,"English food is not good, English cooking is (3)______" But they do not really know what they are talking about because they (4)______ get a chance to eat it. (5)______ of the restaurants in large towns have foreign (6)______ and serve foreign food. When visitors are (7)______ to eat in an English home, the hosts often feel they must offer them something (8)______. Those of us (9)______ do know English food understand that at its best it (10)______ be really very good. (11)______, it is true to say that it is (12)______ terrible. Part of the (13)______ is that we are not really interested in food — we eat to live, we do not live to eat. So usually we do not (14)______ the necessary time cooking truly good meals. We like food that is simple and (15)______ to cook, or already prepared food which only needs heating up (16)______ eating.
You can find the best English food in the country (17)______ the large towns, (18)______ life is slower and people are not in such a hurry. (19)______, of course, most visitors who come to London do not come because (20)______ food.
1. A. in B. at C. to D. of
2. A. saying B. asking C. telling D. talking
3. A. wonderful B. nice C. terrible D. special
4. A. always B. never C. seldom D. often
5. A. Many B. Most C. All D. None
6. A. visitors B. owners C. waiters D. guests
7. A. invited B. made C. offered D. asked
8. A. different B. usual C. foreign D. delicious
9. A. whom B. who C. whose D. which
10. A. should B. must C. may D. can
11. A. At the same time B. On the other hand C. For example D. In another word
12. A. some time B. sometime C. sometimes D. some times
13. A. problem B. question C. answer D. time
14. A. take B. waste C. spend D. have
15. A. hard B. hardly C. easy D. easily
16. A. when B. before C. after D. while
17. A. near B. inside C. around D. away from
18. A. when B. where C. which D. that
19. A. But B. And C. So D. If
20. A. on B. in C. of D. to
When is the hospital open to visitors?
In some parks visitors are requested to keep()the grass.
The rescue team must have searched for the missing visitors two days ago, _____?
Many foreign visitors come to stay in Jessica’s hotel in the Florida Keys.
What can visitors see in the Ford Room?
Many visitors to the United Kingdom go straight to London and never set foot outside the capital—which is a pity, for those that do are often surprised at the sheer variety of landscapes 1 within such a small geographical area. 2 you want to see stunning, unspoilt scenery you should 3 spend a few days in one of Britain"s largest areas of protected countryside, a national park. 4 in the second half of the 20 th century after popular pressure for access 5 the country"s wilder places, there are now 15 of them throughout the British Isles. The biggest is the Cairngorms in northern Scotland, named 6 some of the country"s highest mountains and the best place for skiing. Pony-trekking, climbing and fishing are also 7 , along with Scotland"s national game, golf. 8 enthusiasts are well rewarded—this is the home of the red deer, red squirrel and golden eagle, If you don"t like the 9 to the highest point, some 2000 metres 10 sea level, you can take the railway 11 gets you to the summit in less than ten minutes. 12 the west of the park is another popular natural 13 , Loch Ness. The lake is over 200 metres 14 in places, and salmon, trout and eels are in abundance here. Over the border in England is the Lake District, 15 made famous by Romantic poets such as William Wordsworth two hundreds years ago. People have been 16 here en masse since 1847 17 a railway was built to its biggest lake, Windermere. 18 in the past boats plied its waters 19 stone, timber and wood, today"s craft are more likely to carry 20 on pleasure cruises—over a million a year, in fact.
The San Francisco library requires its visitors to take a two-hour course before they can use the library.
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