大学英语四级考试标准模拟与全真试卷参考答案与解析Model Test 8
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大学英语四级分类综合模拟8试卷[模拟] 120Part Ⅰ Writing Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a campaign speech in support of your election to the post of chairman of the student union. You should write at least 120 words following the outline given below in Chinese:1. (1)一些学生赞成讲座式教学;(2)另一些学生偏爱讨论式教学;(3)我的看法。
__________Part ⅡCloze Directions: There are 20 blanks in the following passage. For each blank there are four choices marked A), B), C) and D) on the right side of the paper. You should choose the ONE that best fits into the passage. Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre.People who are hit by lightning and survive often have long-term effects. These may include memory loss, sleep disorders, muscle pain and depression.Experts tell people to___1___the safety of a building or a hard-top vehicle___2___they hear thunder,___3___it is not___4___. They say lightning can___5___as far as sixteen kilometers from any rainfall. Lightning can___6___sideways. And at least ten percent of lightning happens___7___any clouds overhead that you can see.People who are___8___should___9___there are not the___10___thing around. Bend___11___ to the ground, but do not___12___. And do not stand___13___a tree or any tall object.___14___ water and anything___15___metal. A car is safe, but do not touch any metal inside.Safety experts say people in buildings should stay away from___16___with wires or pipes that___17___the outside. The National Weather Service says if you plan to___18___any electronic equipment, do so before the storm arrives. Do not use a wired telephone. Do not use water. All these can___19___electricity.Some people think a person struck by lighting carries an electrical charge afterward. Experts say this is___20___. It is safe to begin emergency treatment.第1题:A.seeB.seekC.findD.look out第2题:A.even ifB.beforeC.any timeD.till第3题:A.even ifB.whenC.ifD.whenever第4题:A.thunderingB.rainingC.cloudyD.windy第5题:A.flashB.shineC.travelD.strike第6题:A.performB.affectC.seeD.travel第7题:A.withB.whenC.withoutD.for第8题:A.abroadB.outdoorsC.indoorsD.home第9题:A.make sureB.believeC.assureD.think第10题:A.slowestB.fastestC.tallestD.lowest第11题:A.lowB.highC.upD.above第12题:A.stand upB.lie downC.stretch upD.travel around第13题:A.away fromB.onC.inD.near第14题:A.Get close toB.Get away fromC.Find way toD.get access to第15题:A.withoutB.made fromC.made ofD.containing第16题:A.whatB.nothingC.somethingD.anything第17题:A.lead toB.introduce toC.travel toD.disconnect with第18题:A.turn onB.connectC.linkD.disconnect第19题:A.get rid ofB.avoidC.carryD.keep第20题:A.possibleB.falseC.reasonableD.truePart Ⅲ Translation Directions: Complete the sentences on Answer Sheet 2 by translating into English the Chinese given in brackets.第21题:We all agree the importance of reading skills, but ___________ (有巨大的差异). as to how they should be taught.第22题:_________ (假如没有反对意见) we will begin the task right now.第23题:Shanghai may not ____________ (是中国典型代表), but at least it will give you some idea of what is going on in China.第24题:The boss talked the clerk ______________ (休假一周).第25题:Don't hesitate to ask for help if you ____________ (解决问题遇到麻烦).。
大学英语四级考试模考参考答案As a person, we must have independent thoughts and personality.大学英语四级考试预测试题答案Part I Writing【范文】Dama square dance culture has generated some controversy recently. In my opinion, square dance has exceptional advantages of enriching senior citizens’ lives.First of all, there is no doubt that Dama square dance can play an important role in improving the elderly’s health. Doing square dance may help cure some chronic diseases, thus lowering the costs of health care for the elderly. Secondly, this group activity has a social function for the lonely and helpless senior citizens, especially those from other cities. It offers a golden opportunity to make friends and communicate with one another. Finally, Damas do not need to spend any money on square dance.In order to avoid disturbing people in the neighborhood, we should impose some restrictions on the “timing” and “music volume” of square dance. For instance, square dance should finish before 7 ., and music volume should be turned down to such an extent so as not to affect other people’s life.Government should also draft relevant regulations as soon as possible.Part II Listening Comprehension1. B2. C3. A4. D5. D6. A7. C8. C9. B 10. D11. A 12. B 13. A 14. A 15. B 16. A 17. B 18. C 19. A 20. B21. D 22. C 23. A 24. D 25. CPart III Reading Comprehension26. E 27. L 28. H 29. N 30. B 31. I 32. C 33. M 34. A 35. K36. D 37. J 38. F 39. A 40. G 41. C42. K 43. B 44. H 45. E46. B 47. D 48. A 49. C 50. B 51. B 52. B 53. D 54. D 55. APart IV Translation【参考译文】Confucius (551 .~479 .) is a great educator, thinker and statesman in China’s history, and the founder of Confucianism as well. He set up private schools, enrolling and educating disciples, and created his own ethics with “benevolence” as the core. It’s said that he had 3,000 disciples and he led some of them to visit various states. His views and dialogues with his disciples were collected and compiled into TheAnalects of Confucius, which has been read through all ages. Since the Han Dynasty, Confucianism has predominated the traditional Chinese culture for more than 2,000 years with a far-reaching impact.。
大学英语四级模拟试题及答案解析 Part One Listening Comprehension Section A Directions: In this section, you will hear 10 short conversations. At the end of each conversation, a question will be asked about what was said - Both the conversation and the question will be spoken only once. After each question there will be pause. During the pause, you must read the four choices marked A), B), C)and D), and decide which is the best answer. Then mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a line through the centre. Example: You will hear: You will read: A) At the office. B) In the waiting room. C) At the airport. D) In a restaurant. From the conversation we know that the two were talking about some work they had to finish in the evening. This is most likely to have taken place at the office. Therefore, A) At the office is the best answer. You should choose [A] on the Answer Sheet and mark it with a single line through the centre. 1. A) She is not interested in the article. B) She has given the man much trouble. C) She would like to have a copy of the article. D) She doesn't want to take the trouble to read the article. 2. A) He saw the big tower he visited on TV~ B) He has visited the TV tower twice. C) He has visited the TV tower once. D) He will visit the TV tower in June. 3. A) The woman has trouble getting along with the professor. B) The woman regrets having taken up much of the professor's time. C) The woman knows the professor has been busy. D) The woman knows the professor has run into trouble. 4. A) He doesn't enjoy business trips as much as he used to. B) He doesn't think he is capable of doing the job. C) He thinks the pay is too low to support his family, D) He wants to spend more time with his family. 5. A) The man thought the essay was easy. B) They both had a hard time writing the essay. C) The woman thought the essay was easy. D) Neither of them has finished the assignment yet. 6. A) In the park. B) Between two buildings C) In his apartment. D) Under a huge tree. 7. A) It's awfully dull. B) It's really exciting. C) it's very exhausting. D) It's quite challenging. 8. A) movie. B) A lecture. C) A play. D) A speech. 9. A) The weather is mild compared to the past years. B) They are having the coldest winter ever. C) The weather will soon get warmer. D) The weather may get even colder. 10. A) The mystery story. B) The hiring of a shop assistant. C) The search for a reliable witness. D) An unsolved case of robbery. Section B Passage One Questions 11 to 14 are based on the passage you have just heard. 11. A) They want to change the way English is taught. B) They learn English to find well-paid jobs. C) They want to have an up-to-date knowledge of English. D) They know clearly what they want to learn. 12. A) Professionals. B) College students. C) Beginners D) Intermediate earners. 13. A) Courses for doctors. B) Courses for businessmen. C) Courses for reporters. D) Courses for lawyers. 14. A) Three groups of learners. B) The importance of business English. C) English for Specific Purposes. D) Features of English for different papacies. Passage Two Questions 15 to 17 are based on the passage you have just heard. 15. A) To show off their wealth. B) To feel good. C) To regain their memory. D) To be different from others. 16. A) To help solve their psychological problems. B) To play games with them. C) To send sham to the hospital. D) To make them aware of its harmfulness. 17. A) They need care and affection. B) They are fond of round-the-world trips. C) They are mostly from broken families. D) They are likely to commit crimes. Passage Three Questions 18 to 20 are based on the passage you have just heard. 18. A) Because it was too heavy. B) Because it did not bend easily. C) Because it did not shoot far. D) Because its string was short. 19. A) It went out of use 300 years ago B) h was invented alter the short how. C) It was discovered before fire and the wheel. D) It's still in use today. 20. A) They are accurate and easy to pull. B) Their shooting range is 40 yards. C) They are usually used indoors. D) They took 100 years to develop. Part II Reading Comprehension (35 minutes) Directions: There are 4 passages in this part. 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 and mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a single line through the center. Passage One Questions 21 to 25 are based on the following passage. Design of all the new tools and implements is based on careful experiments with electronic instruments. First, a human “guinea pig”is tested using a regular tool. Measurements are taken of the amount of work done, and the buildup of heat in the body. Twisted joints and stretched muscles can not perform as well, it has been found, as joints and muscles in their normal positions. The same person is then tested again, using a tool designed according to the suggestions made by Dr. Tichauer. All these tests have shown the great improvement of the new designs over the old. One of the electronic instruments used by Dr. Tichauer, the myograph (肌动记器), makes visible through electrical signals the work done by human muscle. Another machine measures any dangerous features of tools, thus proving information upon which to base a new design. One conclusion of tests made with this machine is that a tripod stepladder is more stable and safer to use than one with four legs. This work has attracted the attention of efficiency experts and time-and-motion-study engineer, but its value goes far beyond that. Dr. Tichauer’s first thought is for the health of the tool user. With the repeated use of the same tool all day long on production lines and in other jobs, even light manual work can put a heavy stress on one small area of the body. In time, such stress can cause a disabling disease. Furthermore, muscle fatigue is a serious safety hazard. Efficiency is the by-product of comfort, Dr. Tichauer believes, and his new designs for traditional tools have proved his point. 21. What are involved in the design of a new tool according to the passage? A) Electronic instruments and a regular tool. B) A human “guinea pig”and a regular tool. C) Electronic instruments and a human “guinea pig”. D) Electronic instruments, a human “guinea pig”and a regular tool. 22. From the passage we know that joints and muscles perform best when __________________. A) they are twisted and stretched B) they are in their normal positions C) they are tested with a human “guinea pig” D) they are tested with electronic instruments 23. A “myograph”(Para. 2, Line 1) is an electronic instrument that ________________. A) is able to design new tools B) measures the amount of energy used C) enable people to see the muscular movements D) visualizes electrical signals 24. It can be inferred from the passage that ________________. A) a stepladder used to have four legs. B) it is dangerous to use tools C) a tripod is safer in a tool design D) workers are safer on production lines 25. Dr. Tichauer started his experiments initially to _________________. A) improve efficiency B) increase production C) reduce work load D) improve comfort Questions 26 to 30 are based on the following passage: More and more, the operations of our businesses, governments, and financial institutions are controlled by information that exists only inside computer memories. Anyone clever enough to modify this information for his own purposes can reap big reward. Even worse, a number of people who have done this and been caught at it have managed to get away without punishment. It’s easy for computer crimes to go undetected if no one checks up on what the computer is doing. But even if the crime is detected, the criminal may walk away not only unpunished but with a glowing recommendation from his former employers. Of course, we have no statistics on crimes that go undetected. But it’s disturbing to note how many of the crimes we do know about were detected by accident, not by systematic inspections or other security procedures. The computer criminals who have been caught may have been the victims of uncommonly bad luck. Unlike other lawbreakers, who must leave the country, commit suicide, or go to jail, computer criminals sometimes escape punishment, demanding not only that they not be charged but that they be given good recommendations and perhaps other benefits. All too often, their demands have been met. Why? Because company executives are afraid of the bad publicity that would result if the public found out that their computer had been misused. They hesitate at the thought of a criminal boasting in open court of how he juggled (诈骗) the most confidential (保密)records right under the noses of the company’s executives, accountants, and security staff. And so another computer criminal departs with just the recommendations he needs to continue his crimes elsewhere. 26. It can be concluded from the passage that _______________. A) it is still impossible to detect computer crimes today B) people commit computer crimes at the request of their company C) computer criminals escape punishment because they can’t be detected D) computer crimes are the most serious problem in the operation of financial institutions 27. It is implied in the third paragraph that _________________. A) most computer criminals who are caught blame their bad luck B) the rapid increase of computer crimes is a troublesome problem C) most computer criminals are smart enough to cover up their crimes D) many more computer crimes go undetected that are discovered 28. Which of the following statements is mentioned in the passage? A) A strict law against computer crimes must be enforced B) Companies usually hesitate to uncover computer crimes to protect their reputation C) Companies will guard against computer crimes to protect their reputation D) Companies need to impose restrictions on confidential information 29. What may happen to computer criminals once they are caught? A) With a bad reputation they can hardly find another job. B) They may walk away and easily find another job. C) They will be denied access to confidential records D) They must leave the country to go to jail. 30. The passage is mainly about _________________. A) why computer criminals are often able to escape punishment B) why computer crimes are difficult to detect by systematic inspections C) how computer criminals mange to get good recommendations from their former employers D) why computer crimes can’t be eliminated Questions 31 to 35 are based on the following passage. In a family where the roles of men and women are not sharply separated and where many household tasks are shared to a greater or lesser extent, notions of male superiority are hard to maintain. The pattern of sharing in tasks and indecision makes for equality and this in turn leads to further sharing. In such a home, the growing boy and girl learn to accept equality more easily than did their parents and to prepare more fully for participation in a world characterized by cooperation rather than by the “battle of the sexes”. If the process goes too far and man’s role is regarded as less important –and that has happened in some cases – we are as badly off as before, only in reverse. It is time to reassess the role of the man in the American family. We are getting a little tired of “Momism”– but we don’t want to exchange it for a “neo-Popism”. What we need, rather, is the recognition that bringing up children involves a partnership of equals. There are signs that psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers, and specialists on the family are becoming more aware of the part men play and that they have decided that women should not receive all the credit – nor the blame. We have almost given up saying that a woman’s place is in the home. We are beginning, however, to analyse man’s place in the home and to insist that he does have a place in it. Nor is that place irrelevant to the healthy development of the child. The family is a co-operative enterprise for which it is difficult to lay down rules, because each family needs to work out its own ways for solving its own problems. Excessive authoritarianism(命令主义)has unhappy consequences, whether it wears skirts or trousers, and the ideal of equal rights and equal responsibilities is pertinent (相关的,切题的)not only to a healthy democracy, but also to a healthy family. 31. The ideal of equal rights and equal responsibilities is _________________. A) fundamental to a sound democracy B) not pertinent to healthy family life C) responsible for Momism D) what we have almost given up 32. The danger in the sharing of household tasks by the mother and the father is that ___________. A) the role of the father may become an inferior one’ B) the role of the mother may become an inferior one C) C) the children will grow up believing that life is a battle of sexes D) sharing leads to constant arguing 33. The author states that bringing up children ________________. A) is mainly the mother’s job B) belongs among the duties of the father C) is the job of schools and churches D) involves a partnership of equals 34. According to the author, the father’s role in the home is ____________________. A) minor because he is an ineffectual parent B) irrelevant to the healthy development of the child C) pertinent to the healthy development of the child D) identical to the role of the child’s mother 35. With which of the following statements would the author be most likely to agree? A) A healthy, co-operative family is a basic ingredient of a healthy society. B) Men are basically opposed to sharing household chores. C) Division of household responsibilities is workable only in theory. D) A woman’s place in the home – now as always. Questions 36 to 40 are based on the following passage: Teaching children to read well from the start is the most important task of elementary schools. But relying on educators to approach this task correctly can be a great mistake. Many schools continue to employ instructional methods that have been proven ineffective. The staying power of the “look-say” or “whole-word” method of teaching beginning reading is perhaps the most flagrant example of this failure to instruct effectively. The whole-word approach to reading stresses the meaning of words over the meaning of letters, thinking over decoding, developing a sight vocabulary of familiar words over developing the ability to unlock the pronunciation of unfamiliar words. It fits in with the self-directed, “learning how to learn”activities recommended by advocates (倡导者)of “open”classrooms and with the concept that children have to be developmentally ready to begin reading. Before 1963, no major publisher put out anything but these “Run-Spot-Run” readers. However, in 1955, Rudolf Flesch touched off what has been called “the great debate”in beginning reading. In his best-seller Why Johnny Can’t Read, Flesch indicted(控诉)the nation’s public schools for miseducating students by using the look-say method. He said – andmore scholarly studies by Jeane Chall and Rovert Dykstra later confirmed –that another approach to beginning reading, founded on phonics(语音学), is far superior. Systematic phonics first teachers children to associate letters and letter combinations with sounds; it then teaches them how to blend these sounds together to make words. Rather than building up a relatively limited vocabulary of memorized words, it imparts a code by which the pronunciations of the vast majority of the most common words in the English language can be learned. Phonics does not devalue the importance of thinking about the meaning of words and sentences; it simply recognizes that decoding is the logical and necessary first step. 36. The author feels that counting on educators to teach reading correctly is _____________. A) only logical and natural B) the expected position C) probably a mistake D) merely effective instruction 37. The author indicts the look-say reading approach because _________________. A) it overlooks decoding B) Rudolf Flesch agrees with him C) he says it is boring D) many schools continue to use this method 38. One major difference between the look-say method of learning reading and the phonics method is _______________. A) look-say is simpler B) Phonics takes longer to learn C) look-say is easier to teach D) phonics gives readers access to far more words 39. The phrase “touch-off”(Para 3, Line 1) most probably means _____________. A) talk about shortly B) start or cause C) compare with D) oppose 40. According to the author, which of the following statements is true? A) Phonics approach regards whole-word method as unimportant. B) The whole-word approach emphasizes decoding. C) In phonics approach, it is necessary and logical to employ decoding. D) Phonics is superior because it stresses the meaning of words thus the vast majority of mostcommon words can be learned. Part Three Vocabulary and Structure Directions: There are 30 incomplete sentences in this part. For each sentence there are four choices marked A), B), C) and D). Choose the ONE answer that best completes the sentence. Then mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a single line through the center. 41. Word had come from the manager ____________ a new transaction would be concluded. A) who B) that C) which D) when 42. There was a traffic jam, but she ____________ get to the destination in time. A) could B) might C) ought to D) was able to 43. "Do you think ____________ I should attend the lecture?" she asked me. A) that B) whether C) if D) when 44. Their room was on the third floor, its window ____________ the sports ground. A) overlooks B) overlooking C) overlooked D) to overlook 45. On no account ____________ to anyone who works in the company. A) my name must be mentioned B) my name must mention C) must my name be mentioned D) must my name mention 46. Jim knows little of mathematics, ____________ of chemistry. A) and still less B) as well as C) no less than D) and still more 47. The man denied ____________ any thing at the supermarket when he was questioned by the police. A) to have stolen B) to steal C) having stolen D) having been stealing 48. Did he tell you what ____________ if he had a chance? A) was he going to do B) he would do C) be had done D) had to do 49. The results were to ____________ yesterday, but we have heard nothing. A) reveal B) have revealed C) be revealed D) have been revealed 50. Calculations, which are astronomically exact, have been made ____________ with the use of computers. A) possible B) it possible C) possibly D) to be possible 51. To handle the delicate situation, you must ;be____________ A) more than careful B) more carefully C) carefully enough D) enough carefully 52. The governess agreed to teach the temperamental child ____________ she was given complete authority. A) whether B) for C) that D) provided 53. According to the periodic table, ____________ still some elements undiscovered. A) there seem to be B) it seems to be C) it seems that D) here seem 54. The farmer used wood to build a house ____________ to store grain. A) with B) in which C) which D) where 55. A beam of light will not bend round the corners unless ____________ to do so with the help of a reflecting device. A) being done B) made C) to be made D) having made 56. ____________, the more severe the winters are. A) The more north you go B) The farther you go the north C) The more you go north D) The farther north you go 57. Vicky has been sad recently, for her plan to go to college ____________ at the last moment. A) fell out B) fell behind C) fell through D) fell off 58. You had better ____________ teasing these newcomers, for that will hurt their feeling. A) leave out B) leave for C) leave off D) leave behind 59. Don't lose heart! You should _____________ your courage and overcome the difficulty. A) hold up B) set up C) pull up D) pluck up 60. He ____________ a sum of money every month to help the two orphans. A) sets aside B) sets up C) sets along D) sets in 61. His debts had to be _____________ after he committed suicide with his rifle. A) laid off B) written off C) turned off D) put off 62. The gentleman ____________ a cherub with his letter. A) combined B) included C) kept D) enclosed 63. At the meeting both sides exchanged their views on a wide ____________ of topics they were interested in. A) extent B) number C) collection D) range 64. His ____________ has changed but he has kept the fine qualities of a scientific researcher. A) state B) status C) station D) statue 65. She can speak French and German, to ____________ nothing of English. A) say B) speak C) talk D) tell 66. If you play with electricity, you may get an electric ____________ A) strike B) beat C) shock D) knock 67. It was a wonderful play with a ____________ of over fifty actors and actresses. A) list B) group C) bunch D) herd 68. A ____________change in policy is needed if relations are ever to improve. A) strict B) wide C) ever D) radical 69. Please give my best ____________ to your family. A) notice B) attention C) regards D) cares 70. They bought the land with a ____________ to build a new office block. A) purpose B) view C) goal D) reason Part IV Close (15 minutes ) Directions: There are 20 blanks in the following passage, For each blank there are four choices marked A), B), C) and D) on the right side of the paper. You should choose the one that best fits into the passage. Then mark the corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet with a single line through the center. Methods of studying vary; what works__71__ for some students doesn’t work at all for others. The only thing you can do is experiment __72__ you find a system that does work for you. But two things are sure: __73__ else can do your studying for you, and unless you do find a system that works, you won' t although college. Meantime, there are a few rules that__74__ for everybody. The hint is "don't get ___75___ ". The problem of studying, __76__ enough to start with, becomes almost__77__ when you are trying to do __78__ in one weekend. __79__ the fastest readers have trouble __80__ that. And if you are behind in written work that must be __81__, the teacher who accepts it __82__late will probably not give you good credit. Perhaps he may not accept it__83__ . Getting behind in one class because you are spending so much time on another is really no __84__. Feeling pretty virtuous about the seven hours you 'spend on chemistry won' t __85__one bit if the history teacher pops a quiz. And many freshmen do get into trouble by spending too much time on one class at the __86__of the others, either because they like one class much better or because they find it so much harder that they think, they should __87__all their time to it. __88__the reason, going the whole work for one class and neglecting the rest of them is a mistake, if you face this __89__, begin with the shortest and easiest __90__. Get them out of the way and then go to the more difficult, time consuming work. 71. A) good B) easily C) sufficiently D) well 72. A) until B) after C) while D ) so 73. A) somebody B) nobody C) everybody D) anybody 74. A) follow B) go C) operate D) work 75. A) behind B) after C) slow D) later 76. A) hardly B) unpleasant C) hard D) heavy 77. A) improbable B) necessary C) impossible D) inevitable 78. A) three week's work B) three weeks' works C) three weeks' work D) three week' s works 79. A) Even B) Almost C) If D) with 80. A) to do B) doing C) at doing D) with doing 81. A) turned in B) tuned up C) turned out D) given in 82. A) very B) quite C) such D) that 83. A) anyway B) either C) at all D) too 84. A) solution B) method C) answer D) excuse 85. A) help B) encourage C) assist D) improve 86. A) expense B) pay C) debt D) charge 87. A) devote B) put C) spend D) take 88. A) Whichever B) Whatever C) However D) Wherever 89. A) attraction B) decision C) temptation D) dilemma 90. A) arrangements B) way C) assignments D) class Part V Writing Directions: For this part, you are allowed thirty minutes to write a composition on the topic Good Manners. You should write at least 100 words and you should base your composition on the outline(given in Chinese)below: 1世界上的人都看重良好的行为举止. 2在公共场合的一些奶好的行为举止. 3如果每个人都培养起了好的行为举止, 答案及详解 Part One Listening Comprehension Section A 1-10 CCBDB DACDD 11-20 DABCB AACBA Tapescript Section A 1. M: Would you like a copy of professor Smith's article? W: Thanks, if it's not too much trouble. Q: What does the woman imply? 2. W: Did you visit the Television Tower when you had your vacation in Shanghai last summer? M: I couldn't make it last June. But I finally visited it two months later. I plan to visit it again sometime next year. Q: What do we learn about the man? 3. M: Prof. Kennedy has been very busy this semester. As far as I know, he works until mid-night every day. W: I wouldn't have troubled him so much if I had know he was so busy. Q: What do we learn from the conversation? 4. W: If I were you, I would have accepted the job. M: I turned down the offer because it would mean frequent business trips away from my family: Q: Why didn't the man accept the job? 5. M: How are you getting on with your essay, Mary? I'm having a real hard time with mine. W: After two sleepless nights, I'm finally through with it. Q: What do we learn from this conversation? 6. W: Where did you say you found this bag? M: It was lying under a big tree between the park and the apartment building Q: Where did the man find the bag? 7. M: Wouldn't you get bored with the same routine year after year teaching the same things to children? W: I don't think it would be as boring as working in an office. Teaching is mat stimulating. Q: What does the woman imply about office work? 8. M: I was terribly embarrassed when some of the audience got up and left in the middle of the performance. W: Well, some people just can't seem to appreciate real-life drama. Q: What are they talking about? 9. W: Oh, it's so cold. We haven't had such a severe winter for so long, have we? M: Yes, the forecast says it's going to get worse before it warms up. Q: What do we learn from the conversation? 10. M: You were seen hanging about the store on the night when it was robbed, weren't you? W: Me? You must have made a mistake. I was at home that night. Q: What are they talking about? Section B Passage One There are three groups of English learners: beginners, intermediate learners, and learners of special English. Beginners need to learn the basics of English. Students who have reached an intermediate level benefit from learning general English skills. But what about student who want to learn specialist English for their work or professional life? Most students, who fit into this third。
⼤学英语四级考试全真预测试卷 Model Test OnePart I Writing(30 minutes)Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a composition on the topic Choosing an Occupation. You should write at least 120 words following the outline given below in Chinese:1. 选择职业是⼀个⼈要⾯对的众多难题之⼀。
2. 需要花时间去选择职业。
3. 选择职业时可以向多⼈寻求建议和帮助。
Choosing an OccupationPart II Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning)(15 minutes)Directions:In this part, you will have 15 minutes to go over the passage quickly and answer the questions on Answer Sheet 1.For questions 1-7,choose the best answer from the four choices marked[A],[B],[C]and [D]. For questions 8-10,complete the sentences with the information given in the passage.Will We Run Out of Water?Picture a “ghost ship” sinking into the sand, left to rot on dry land by a receding sea. Then imagine dust storms sweeping up toxic pesticides and chemical fertilizers from the dry seabed and spewing them across towns and villages.Seem like a scene from a movie about the end of the world? For people living near the Aral Sea in Central Asia, it’s all too real. Thirty years ago, government planners diverted the rivers that flow into the sea in order to irrigate(provide waterfor)farmland. As a result, the sea has shrunk to half its original size, stranding ships on dry land. The seawater has tripled in salt content and become polluted, killing all 24 native species of fish.Similar large-scale efforts to redirect water in other parts of the world have also ended in ecological crisis, according to numerous environmental groups. But many countries continue to build massive dams and irrigation systems, even though such projects can create more problems than they fix. Why? People in many parts of the world are desperate for water, and more people will need more water in the next century.“Growing populations will worsen problems with water,” says Peter H. Gleick, an environmental scientist at the Pacific Institute for studies in Development, Environment, and Security, a research organization in California. He fears that by the year 2025, as many as one third of the world’s projected 8.3 billion people will suffer from water shortages.Where Water GoesOnly 2.5 percent of all water on Earth is freshwater, water suitable for drinking and growing food, says Sandra Postel, director of the Global Water Policy Project in Amherst, Mass. Two-thirds of this freshwater is locked in glaciers and ice caps.In fact, only a tiny percentage of freshwater is part of the water cycle, in which water evaporates and rises into the atmosphere, then condenses and falls back to Earth as precipitation(rain or snow).Some precipitation runs off land to lakes and oceans, and some becomes groundwater, water that seeps into the earth. Much of this renewable freshwater ends up in remote places like the Amazon river basin in Brazil, where few people live.In fact, the world’s population has access to only 12,500 cubic kilometers of freshwater—about the amount of water in Lake Superior. And people use half of this amount already. “If water demand continues to climb rapidly,” says Postel, “there will be severe shortages and damage to the aquatic environment.”Close to HomeWater woes may seem remote to people living in rich countries like the United States. But Americans could face serious water shortages, too especially in areas that rely on groundwater. Groundwater accumulates in aquifers, layers of sand and gravel that lie between soil and bedrock. (For every liter of surface water, more than 90 liters are hidden underground.)Although the United States has large aquifers, farmers, ranchers, and cities are tapping many of them for water faster than nature can replenish it. In northwest Texas, for example, over pumping has shrunk groundwater supplies by 25 percent, according to Postel.Americans may face even more urgent problems from pollution. Drinking water in the United States is generally safe and meets high standards. Nevertheless, one in five Americans every day unknowingly drinks tap water contaminated withbacteria and chemical wastes, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. In Milwaukee, 400,000 people fell ill in 1993 after drinking tap water tainted with cryptosporidium, a microbe that causes fever, diarrhea and vomiting.The SourceWhere do contaminants come from? In developing countries, people dump raw sewage into the same streams and rivers from which they draw water for drinking and cooking; about 250 million people a year get sick from water borne diseases.In developed countries, manufacturers use 100,000 chemical compounds to make a wide range of products. Toxic chemicals pollute water when released untreated into rivers and lakes. (Certain compounds, such as polychlorinated biphenyls, or PCBs, have been banned in the United States.)But almost everyone contributes to water pollution. People often pour household cleaners, car antifreeze, and paint thinners down the drain; all of these contain hazardous chemicals. Scientists studying water in the San Francisco Bay reported in 1996 that 70 percent of the pollutants could be traced to household waste.Farmers have been criticized for overusing herbicides and pesticides, chemicals that kill weeds and insects but that pollute water as well. Farmers also use nitrates, nitrogen-rich fertilizer that help plants grow but that can wreak havoc on the environment. Nitrates are swept away by surface runoff to lakes and seas. Too many nitrates “over enrich” these bodies of water, encouraging the buildup of algae, or microscopic plants that live on the surface of the water. Algae deprive the water of oxygen that fish need to survive, at times choking off life in an entire body of water.What’s the Solution?Water expert Gleick advocates conservation and local solutions to water-related problems; governments, for instance, would be better off building small-scale dams rather than huge and disruptive projects like the one that ruined the Aral Sea. “More than 1 billion people worldwide don’t have access to basic clean drinking water,” says Gleick. “There has to be a strong push on the part of everyone—governments and ordinary people—to make sure we have a resource so fundamental to life.”1.What caused the Aral Sea to shrink? [A]The rivers flowing into it have been diverted. [B]Farmers used its water to irrigate their farmland. [C]Government planners over-pumped its water. [D]High temperature made its water badly evaporate.2.The construction of massive dams and irrigation projects . [A]does more good than harm [B]solves more problems than what they created [C]does more harm than good [D]brings more water to people than expected3.The chief causes of water shortage include . [A]population growth and water waste [B]water pollution and dry weather [C]water waste and pollution [D]population growth and water pollution4.Americans could suffer from greatly serious water shortages? [A]living in rich areas [B]living in big cities but poor condition [C]depending on groundwater [D]bearing high standards of safe drinking water in mind5.What is the main pollutant in developed countries? [A]Untreated toxic chemicals from manufacturers. [B]Raw sewage into rivers and streams. [C]Herbicides and pesticides used by farmers. [D]Household cleaners poured down the drain.6.How does algae make threats to life of a body of water? [A]By covering the whole surface of the water. [B]By competitively using oxygen life in water needs. [C]By living more rapidly than other life in water . [D]By releasing hazardous chemicals into water.7.According to Gleick, who should be responsible for solving water-related problems? [A]government and housewives.[B]farmers and manufacturers. [C]ordinary people and manufacturers. [D]government and every person.8. According to Peter H. Gleick, by the year 2025, as many as of the world’s people will suffer from water shortages.9.Two thirds of the freshwater on Earth is locked in.10.In developed countries, before toxic chemicals are released into rivers and lakes, they should be treated in order to avoid.。
大学英语四级考试模拟卷八(总分:100.00,做题时间:125分钟)Listening Comprehension(总题数:0,分数:0.00)Section A(总题数:7,分数:0.00).Questions 1 and 2 are based on the news report you have just heard.1.(分数:8.00)A.The degraded farmland.B.The extreme weather in summer.C.The increased number of sequoia trees.D.The decreased rainfall in recent years.√解析:[听力原文]California continues to suffer under a historic drought. The state has received very little rainfall over the past four years. California is famous for its huge sequoia trees. They are among the largest and oldest living things on Earth. But scientists say the trees are suffering because of the lack of water.Now the National Park Service is studying how the drought has affected the sequoias and what can be done to help them survive. Researchers are using scientific equipment in the tree canopies to help measure air temperature and humidity levels. They also are studying sequoia seedlings, information from individual trees and images collected by aircraft to measure the seriousness of the danger. One possible solution would be to cut down less important tree species because other plants compete with the sequoias for water. Scientists say the sequoias will probably survive this drought, unlike many other California trees.What is the problem of California?.Questions 3 and 4 are based on the news report you have just heard.3.(分数:8.00)A.The food is wasted during transportation.B.People there eat everything they buy.C.Half of the food purchased is thrown away.√D.All of the food is wasted.解析:[听力原文]Up to half of the food the world produces is never eaten. It is instead thrown away. Experts say food is wasted in both rich and poor countries, but for different reasons.In poor countries, food is usually lost while it is still in the field or during storage and transportation. That is because food producers there are inefficient. These businesses are unable to operate effectively without wasting materials, time or energy. Once food is sold in developing countries, people usually eat everything they buy. However, people in the United States and other developed countries throw away as much as half of the food they purchase. The British researcher called this custom "a disgrace." One way to solve the problem of wasted food is to take steps to persuade people to stop buying so much food in the first place.What do we know about food in developed countries?.Questions 5 to 7 are based on the news report you have just heard.5.(分数:12.00)A.Rescue dogs are humans' good friends.B.Rescue dogs help people during disasters.√C.People should be kind to their dogs.D.People always get help from their dogs.解析:[听力原文]When devastating earthquakes hit Haiti, Japan and Nepal, rescue dogs were among the first to arrive. American search-and-rescue teams and their specially trained dogs also helped during the US Hurricanes Katrina and Sandy.Ron Sanders and his 6-year-old Labrador, Pryse, were part of a US team to help find survivors in Nepal. Sanders, a retired firefighter, says Pryse and the other special canines are essential to the team. The dogs obviously have a wonderful sense of smell. So they can quickly determine where the scent is coming from and hone in on that location that we need to dig down. The dogs can also navigate quickly through collapsed buildings and squeeze through tight spots to find victims. For the dogs, the job is a fun and playful adventure. They want to go find that person, to play with that person. But becoming a rescue dog is a serious business. To become certified, the dogs train long and hard for six to twelve months. What helps them get there is lots of practice.What is the news report mainly about?Section B(总题数:8,分数:0.00).Questions 8 to 11 are based on the conversation you have just heard.1.(分数:16.00)A.She is not interested in her specialty.B.She doesn't know how to teach her students.√C.She has limited knowledge of history.D.She doesn't know the approach to learning.解析:[听力原文]W: Teaching is a whole new ball of wax for me. I'm not sure how I should approach my subject.M: I know how you're feeling. I felt the same way when I first started teaching. You are teaching history, aren't you?W: Yes. I want my students to learn the subject, but I would also like them to enjoy the process. How do I do that? I know I had teachers in the past that were boring and all I did was go to sleep. I had others that made the subject live for me. Looking back now, I'm not sure how they did it.M: I think you will find that those teachers whose classes you enjoyed were those who loved the subject they were teaching.W: You're right. I remember Mr. Donner, my accounting teacher. I was sure that was going to be the most boring class of the year but it wasn't. He came to the classroom in the first day and told us, "You are here because you have to be here. I'm here because I love it!"M: That's what I mean. If the teacher really enjoys the process of teaching, the students will most likely enjoy the class and learn more.W: I really do enjoy history, so I guess I should just relax and help the students enjoy it.M: It helps to have a comfortable physical environment, but the most important thing is to have a mentally stimulating environment. It doesn't hurt to tell a joke or two to get the students in a relaxed and interested frame of mind.What is the woman's problem?.Questions 12 to 15 are based on the conversation you have just heard.5.(分数:16.00)A.It has the largest market share at present.B.Its products are easy to use and cost-effective.√C.It is superior to its competitors in technology.D.Its productivity is much more effective.解析:[听力原文]W: The market is becoming really more and more competitive.M: Exactly. So we must know how things stand with us and do something to keep our lead.W: We'd better look at the strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats we have. First, it is obvious that our main competitive advantage is our range of products. Our software packages are perceived as the most user-friendly ones on the market, requiring much less training than those of our competitors and representing better value for money. So all in all, we have got an excellent product.M: I think our strength also lies in another thing, which is our staff.W: You mean...M: I mean the after-sales side.W: Yeah, our after-sales team is faster, more qualified and more efficient.M: How do you analyze our weaknesses?W: I think our problem is that we have a strong product but we haven't achieved the sort of market penetration we should have.M: That's because our marketing isn't so effective as our competitors'. We've relied too heavily on product quality, not enough on promotion.W: I agree. So from now on, we have to put more efforts into our advertising. And we actually have the opportunity to dominate the small business user market but we are clearly not taking it.M: We should take effective measures to dominate the market. Look at Collin company. It has got a more impressive dealer network and its promotion is more sophisticated than ours.W: So, we still have a tough job to do.What is one advantage of the speakers' company?Section C(总题数:10,分数:0.00).Questions 16 to 19 are based on the passage you have just heard.1.(分数:16.00)A.It is the time when children are interested in language.B.It determines children's language ability in the future.C.It is an important period for children's physical development.D.It is the critical period for children's language ability.√解析:[听力原文]The first three years of a child's life is the most intensive period of language and speech development. This is the time when the brain is developing. Language and communication skills are believed to develop best in an environment that is rich with sounds and sights. Also, the child should repeatedly hear the speech and language of other people. The National Institutes of Health says evidence suggests there are important periods of speech and language development in children. This means the brain is best able to learn a language during this period. Officials say the ability to learn a language will be more difficult if these periods pass without early contact with a language. The first sign of communication happens during the first few days of life when a baby learns that crying will bring food and attention. Research shows that most children recognize the general sounds of their native language by six months of age. At that time, a baby also usually begins to make sounds. These sounds become a kind of nonsense speech over time. A long-term American study shows the effect of early education on future learning abilities. It found that children who received higher quality care before starting school had better language skills by those ages than children who had lower quality care. Childcare included any care provided by people other than the child's mother that lasted at least ten hours a week. This included any care given by fathers or other family members.What does the speaker say about a child's first three years?.Questions 20 to 22 are based on the passage you have just heard.5.(分数:12.00)A.The rise of food prices.√B.The lack of the male labor force.C.The low productivity in agriculture.D.The migration to bigger cities.解析:[听力原文]Food prices continue to rise, threatening to push more and more people into poverty and hunger. A new report from the UN food agency says one of the best ways to boost agricultural productivity worldwide would be to remove the barriers women farmers face but their male counterparts do not. Women farmers tend to be less productive than men, but there are good reasons for that, says Susan Stone, an economist with the UN food agency. Her report finds that in many countries, women are half as likely as men to use fertilizers to increase yields. In addition, many of the world's women are raising their children at the same time they're farming, which also may help explain why their productivity is lower than men's. Susan Stone says governments would be wise to back programs which help close the gap for women farmers.But beyond financial support, she adds, in many countries, the policy environment needs to change, too. She insists that it's about time governments came on board and really looked at their laws, which discriminate against women in the area of property, labor force participation and marriage. She believes leveling the playing field has wider benefits beyond the women themselves. That's because studies show when women have financial resources, they are more likely than men to spend them on food, health and educating their children. And that means a better future for the next generation.What causes more people to be poor and hungry?.Questions 23 to 25 are based on the passage you have just heard.8.(分数:12.00)A.The equal rights of black people.B.The political equality of women.C.The better-off life of other people.√D.The political career of herself.解析:[听力原文]Shirley Chisholm is best known as the first black woman elected to the United States Congress and the first black woman to run for president of the United States. However, her life was filled with much more than being the first black woman to do important things. She believed in being a person to fight for changes. All her life, she worked to improve the lives of others. Shirley received a good education from the British school system. She enjoyed the years she lived with her grandmother who believed in education. As a young woman, Shirley decided to become a teacher because she believed she could improve the society by helping children. In 1968, she announced she would run for the United States Congress. She was elected from the newly created Twelfth District of New York City. Shirley Chisholm spoke strongly for the poor and for women. She worked for civil rights for African Americans. She often spoke about cultural and social issues. Because most of the new immigrants are people of color, she believes cultural adjustments must be made by all groups in America if we are to learn to live together as one nation. A reporter once asked Ms. Chisholm how she wanted to be remembered. She said she did not want to be remembered as the nation's first black congresswoman. She wanted to be remembered as a brave person, a person who created changes.What does Shirley Chisholm work for in her life?。
英语专业四级考试真题及答案4TEXT BNowadays, a cellphone service is available to everyone, everywhere. Probably thousands of people have already been using it, but I just discovered it, so I’m going to claim it and also name it: Fake Foning.The technology has been working well for me at the office, but there are infinite applications. Virtually in any public space.Say you work at a big university with lots of talky faculty members buzzing about. Now, say you need to use the restroom. The trip down the hall will take approximately one hour, because a person can’t walk into those talky people without getting pulled aside for a question, a bit of gossip, a new read on a certain line of Paradise Lost.So, a cellphone. Any cellphone. Just pick it up. Don’t d ial. Just hold that phone to your face and start talking. Walk confidently down the hall engaged in fake conversation, making sure to tailor both the topic and content to the person standing before you whom you are trying to evade.For standard colleague avoidance, I suggest fake chatting about fake business:“Yes, I’m glad you called, because we really need to hammer out the details. What’s that? Yes, I read Page 12, but if you look at the bottom of 4, I think you can see the problem begins right t here.”Be animated. Be engaged in your fake fone conversation. Make eyecontact with the people passing, nod to them, gesture keen interest in talking to them at a later time, point to your phone, shrug and move on.Shoppers should consider fake foning anytime they spot a talky neighbor in the produce departmentpinching (用手捏) unripe peaches. Without your phone at your face, you’d be in for a 20-minute speech on how terrible the world is.One important caution about fake foning. The other day I was fake foning my way past a colleague, and he was actually following me to get my attention. I knew he wanted to ask about a project I had not yet finished. I was trying to buy myself some time, so I continued fake foning with my doctor. “So I don’t need the operation? Oh, doctor, that is the best news.”And then: Brrrrrrng! Brrrrrmg! Brrrrrmg! My phone started ringing, right there while it was planted on my face. My colleague looked at me, and I at him, and naturally I gasped. “What is the matter with this thing?”I said, pulling the phone away to look at it, and then putting it back to my ear.“Hello? Are you still there?”Oops.85. Which of the following statements is INCORRECT?A. Cellphone service is popular among people.B. Cellphone has much use in office.C. Fake foning is a new cellphone service.D. Fake foning is a new discovery.86. What is fake foning?A. A strategy to avoid people.B. A device newly produced.C. A service provided everywhere.D. A skill of communication.87. In the author’s opinion, in order to make fake foning look real one has toA. talk about interesting matters.B. behave politely to people passing by.C. hold the phone while walking.D. appear absorbed in conversation.88. What does the last example show?A. One effective way is to fake fone one’s doctor.B. One has to be careful while fake foning.C. Fake foning may not deceive people.D. Fake foning is always quite successful.89. After his phone suddenly began ringing, the authorA. immediately started talking to the caller.B. immediately started talking to his colleague.C. put the phone away and stopped talking.D. continued with his fake conversation.90. What is the tone of the passage?A. Critical.B. Humorous.C. Serious.D. Unclear.。
710 分四级模拟题第八套答案Part I Writing (30 minutes)Employment in Manufacturing and Services in Five Countries The diagram indicates a very striking trend in the five major economies of the developed world. Over the twenty-three year period from 1970 to 1993, in all five economies the number of people employed in manufacturing has decreased, while the number employed in services has increased.The rate of decline of manufacturing jobs has been greatest in Britain and the United States. In Britain employment in manufacturing has decreased from over 35% to around 20% of total employment in two decades. In the US there has been a decline of around 10%. In the other countries ──Germany, Japan and France ── the decrease has been slower, but still clear.The rate of growth of service jobs has been greatest in Europe. In Britain employment in services has increased from just over 50% to nearly 75% of total employment in the same two decades. In France and Germany there has been an increase of around 15%. In the other countries ── Japan and the US ── the increase has also been evident, but it has been more gradual.Part II Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning)1.N2. Y3. Y4. N5. N6. Y7. NG8. exercise 9. two percent / 2 percent10. keeping joints flexible (and) the muscles around the joints strongPart III Listening ComprehensionSection A11. B 12. A 13. C 14. D 15. A 16. B 17. D 18. C 19. C 20. A21. B 22. B 23. D 24. C 25. BSection B26. C 27. A 28. B 29. A 30. A 31. B 32. B 33. D 34. B 35. C Section C36. qualities 37. interesting 38. developed 39. hair 40. signals 41. electrical 42. communication 43. experiment44. During the experiment, two glass fibers were able to carry 672 conversations atthe same time.45. The lightwave communication system has two important advantages.46. Perhaps it can be said that telephone communication has entered the age of light! Part IV Reading Comprehension (Reading in Depth)Section A47 K 48 M 49 I 50 C 51 D 52 A 53 E 54 B 55 F 56 OSection B57 D 58 D 59 B 60 C 61D 62C 63B 64 A 65 C 66APart V Cloze67 A 68D 69 B 70B 71C 72D 73 C 74 C 75 B 76 A77 D 78 A 79 C 80 D 81A 82 D 83 B 84B 85 C 86 AAlternative to Cloze: Error Correction67. nothing 改为everything68. 此处为让步状语从句,去掉because69. nineteen改为nineteenth70. that 改为what71. aroused改为arose72. like改为as73. complicated改为simple74. consisted改为consisted of75. that 改为which76. 去掉notPart VI Translation87. on the contrary, I have a great contempt for some of them.88. only by carrying out the open policy89. Owing to / Because of / due to the great efforts he’s made90. will benefit college students all through their life91. In spite of the great difficultiesAlternative to Translation: Short Answer Questions87. High unemployment exists.88. He wants us to think about the work in a new way.89. The changes in work patterns.90. employment became widespread91. It is possible to create jobs for all.试题讲解Part II Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning)长难句解析1. Instead, the U. S. Surgeon general’s report Physical Activity and Health offers this simple exercise prescription: people who aren’t engaging in regular exercise can reap significant health benefits if they accumulate 30 minutes of moderate-intensity physical activity most days of the week.【译文】相反,美国外科主治医生的一份《体力活动与健康》报告提供了这样一个简单的运动处方:即使不进行有规律的运动,人们如果一周的绝大部分日子每天进行强度适中的体育活动,也可以使健康受益。
第一部分、作文Part V. Writing (30 minutes) Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a poster recruiting volunteers. You should write at Least 120 words following theoutline given below :1.校学生会将组织一次暑假志愿者活动,现招募志愿者2.本次志愿者活动的目的、活动安排等3.报名条件及联系方式Volunteers Needed第二部分、听力PartⅠ Listening Comprehension (20 minutes)Section A1. A) They went a long way to attend the party.B) They didn't think much of the food and drinks.C) They knew none of the other guests at the party.D) They enjoyed the party better than the other guests.2. A) To the bookstore. C) To the market.B) To the dentist's. D) To the post office.3. A) Dr. Andrews has been promoted for his thoroughness.B) She disagrees with Dr. Andrews on many occasions.C) Dr. Andrews used to keep his patients waiting.D) She dislikes Dr. Andrews as much as the new physician.4. A) Tom is usually talkative. C) Tom has dozens of things to attend to.B) Tom has a very bad temper. D) Tom is disliked by his colleagues.5. A) To pickup the woman from the library.B) To make a copy of the schedule for his friend.C) To find out more about the topic for the seminar.D) To get the seminar schedule for the woman.6. A) The woman has to get the textbooks in other ways.B) The woman has sold her used textbooks to the bookstore.C) The man is going to buy his textbooks from a bookstore.D) The man doesn't want to sell his textbooks to the woman.7. A) Attend a conference. C) Meet his lawyer.B) Give a speech. D) Make a business trip.8 A) Jessie always says what she thinks.B) Jessie seems to have a lot on her mind.C) Jessie is wrong to find fault with her boss.D) Jessie should know the marketing director better.9. A) Heien is talkative. C) Helen is sociable.B) Helen is active. D) Helen is quiet.10. A) Jimmy will regret marrying a Frenchwoman.B) Jimmy is not serious in making decisions.C) Jimmy is rich enough to buy a big house.D) Jimmy's words are often not reliable.Section BPassage OneQuestions 11 to 13 are based on the passage you have just heard.11. A) It can be used by farmers to protect large buildings.B) It was brought to the northern USA by Asian farmers.C) It has done more harm than good in the southern USA.D) It was introduced into the USA to kill harmful weeds.12. A) People will have to rely on kudzu for a living.B) They will soon be overgrown with kudzu.C) They will become too hard to plough.D) People will find it hard to protect the soil.13. A) The farmers there have brought it under control.B) The factories there have found a good use for it.C) The climate there is unfavorable to its growth.D) The soil there is not so suitable for the plant.Passage TwoQuestions 14 to 17 are based on the passage you have just heard.14. A) A business corporation.C) A society of legal professionals.B) The universe as a whole.D) An association of teachers and scholars.15. A) Its largest expansion took place during that period.B) Its role in society went through a dramatic change.C) Small universities combined to form bigger ones.D) Provincial colleges were taken over by larger universities.16. A) Private donations.C) Grants from corporations.B) Government funding.D) Fees paid by students.Passage ThreeQuestions 18 to 20 are based on the passage you have just heard.17. A) He was wounded in the Spanish civil war.B) He was interested in the study of wild animals.C) He started the organization Heifer International.D) He sold his cows to many countries in the world.18. A) To help starving families to become self-supporting.B) To make plans for the development of poor communities.C) To teach people how to use new skills to raise animals.D) To distribute food to the poor around the world.19. A) They should help other families the way they have been helped.B) They should offer all baby animals to their poor neighbors.C) They should submit a report of their needs and goals.D) They should provide food for the local communities.20. A) It has improved animal breeding skills all over the world.B) It has helped relieve hunger in some developing countries.C) It has promoted international exchange of farming technology.D) It has bridged the gap between the rich and the poor in America.第三部分、阅读理解PartⅡ Reading Comprehe nsion (35 minutes)Passage oneInterest in pursuing international careers has soared in recent years. enhanced by chronic (长久的 ) personnel shortages that are causing companies to search beyond their home borders for talent.Professionals seek career experience outside of their home countries for a variety of reasons. They may feel the need to recharge their batteries with a new challenge. They may want a position with more responsibility that encourages creativity and initiative. Or they may wish to expose their children to another culture, and the opportunity to learn a second language.When applying for a job, one usually has to submit a resume or curriculum vitae (CV). The two terms generally mean the same thing: a one- or two-page document describing one's educational qualifications and professional experience. However, guidelines for preparing a r6sum6 are constantly changing. The best advice is to find out what is appropriate regarding the corporate (公司) culture, the country culture, and the culture of the person making the hiring decision. The challenge will be to embrace two or more cultures in one document. The following list is a good place to start.● "Educational requirements differ from country to country. In almost every case of 'cross- border' job hunting, just stating the title of your degree will not bean adequate description. Provide the reader with details about your studies and any related experience. " daohangtigong● Pay attention to the resume format you use-chronological or reverse-chronological order. Chronological order means listing your 'oldest' work experience first. Reverse-chronological order means listing your current or most recent experience first. Most countries have preferences about which format is most acceptable. If you find no specific guidelines. the general preference is for the reverse-chronological format. "● If you are submitting your resume in English, find out if the recipient (收件人) uses British English or American English because there are variations between the two versions. For example, university education is often referred to as 'tertiary education' in the United Kingdom, but this term is almost never used in the United States. A reader who is unfamiliar with these variations may assume that your resume contains errors.21. Companies are hiring more foreign employees becauseA) they find foreign employees are usually more talentedB) they need original ideas from employees hired overseasC) they want to expand their business beyond home bordersD) they have difficulty finding qualified personnel at home22. The author believes that an individual who applies to work overseasA) is usually creative and full of initiativeB) aims to improve his foreign language skillsC) is dissatisfied with his own life at homeD) seeks either his own or his children's development23. When it comes to resume writing, it is best toA) take cultural factors into considerationB) learn about the company's hiring processC) follow appropriate guidelines for job huntingD) know the employer's personal likes and dislikes24. When writing about qualifications, applicants are advised toA) stress their academic potential to impress the decision makerB) give the title of the university degree they have earned at homeC) provide a detailed description of their study and work experiencesD) highlight their keen interest in pursuing a 'cross-border' career25. According to the author's last piece of advice, the applicants should be aware ofA) the different educational systems in the US and the UKB) the differences between the varieties of EnglishC) the recipient's preference with regard to the formatD) the distinctive features of American and British culturesQuestions 26 to 30 are based on the following passage:Passage twoEducating girls quite possibly yields a higher rate of return than any other investment available in the developing world. Women's education may be unusual territory for economists, but enhancing women's contribution to development is actually as much an economic as a social issue. And economics, with its emphasis on incentives (激励), provides guideposts that point to an explanation for why so many girls are deprived of an education.Parents in low-income countries fail to invest in their daughters because they do not expect them to make an economic contribution to the family: girls grow up only to marry into somebody else's family and bear children. Girls are thus seen as less valuable than boys and art kept at home to do housework while their brothers are sent to school - the prophecy (预言) becomes self- fulfilling, trapping women in a vicious circle (恶性循环) of neglect.An educated mother, on the other hand, has greater earning abilities outside the home and faces an entirely different set of choices. She is likely to have fewer but healthier children and can insist on the development of all her children, ensuring that her daughters are given a fair chance. The education of her daughters then makes it much more likely that the next generation of girls, as well as of boys, will be educated and healthy. The vicious circle is thus transformed into a virtuous circle.Few will dispute that educating women has great social benefits. But it has enormous economic advantages as well. Most obviously, there is the direct effect of education on the wages of female workers. Wages rise by 10 to 20 per cent for each additional year of schooling. Such big returns are impressive by the standard of other available investments, but they are just the beginning. Educating women also has a significant impact on health practices, including family planning.26. The author argues that educating girls in developing countries isA) troublesome C) rewardingB) labor-saving D) expensive27. By saying "... the prophecy becomes self-fulfilling ..." (Lines 45. Para. 2). the author means thatA) girls will turn out to be less valuable than boysB) girls will be capable of realizing their own dreamsC) girls will eventually find their goals in life beyond reachD) girls will be increasingly discontented with their life at home28. The author believes that a vicious circle can turn into a virtuous circle whenA) women care more about educationB) girls can gain equal access to educationC) a family has fewer but healthier childrenD) parents can afford their daughters' education29. What does the author say about women's education?A) It deserves greater attention than other social issues.B) It is now given top priority in many developing countries.C) It will yield greater returns than other known investments.D) It has aroused the interest of a growing number of economists.30. 7be passage mainly discussesA) unequal treatment of boys and girls in developing countriesB) the potential earning power of well-educated womenC) the major contributions of educated women to societyD) the economic and social benefits of educating womenPassage ThreeSpeeding off in a stolen car, the thief thinks he has got a great catch. But he is in for an unwelcome surprise. The car is fitted with a remote immobiliser (锁止器), and a radio signal from a control centre miles away will ensure that once the thief switches the engine off, he will not be able to start it again.The idea goes like this. A control box fitted to the car contains a mini-cellphone, a micro- processor and memory, and a GPS (全球定位系统) satellite positioning receiver. ff the car is stolen, a coded cellphone signal will tell the control centre to block the vehicle's engine management system and prevent the engine being restarted. daoahngtigongIn the UK, a set of technical fixes is already making life harder for car thieves. 'The pattern of vehicle crime has changed,' says Martyn Randall, a security expert. He says it would only take him a few minutes to teach a person how to steal a car, using a bare minimum of tools. But only if the car is more than 10 years old.Modern cars are far tougher to steal, as their engine management computer won't allow them to start unless they receive a unique ID code beamed out by the ignition (点火) key. In the UK, technologies like this have helped achieve a 31% drop in vehicle-related crime since 1997.But determined criminals are still managing to find other ways to steal cars, often by getting bold of the owner's keys. And key theft is responsible for 40% of the thefts of vehicles fitted with a tracking system.If the car travels 100 metres without the driver confirming their ID, the system will send a signal to an operations centre that it has been stolen. The hundred metres minimum avoids false alarms due to inaccuracies in the GPS signal.Staff at the centre will then contact the owner to confirm that the car really is missing, and keep police informed of the vehicle's movements via the car's GPS unit.31. What's the function of the remote immobilizer fitted to a car?A) To help the police make a surprise attack on the car thief.B) To allow the car to lock automatically when stolen.C) To prevent the car thief from restarting it once it stops.D) To prevent car theft by sending a radio signal to the car owner.32. By saying 'The pattern of vehicle crime has changed' (Lines 1-2. Para. 3). Martyn Randall suggests thatA) it takes a longer time for the car thief to do the stealingB) self-prepared tools are no longer enough for car theftC) the thief has to make use of computer technologyD) the thief has lost interest in stealing cars over 10 years old33. What is essential in making a modem car tougher to steal?A) A coded ignition key. C) A special cellphone signal.B) A unique ID card. D) A GPS satellite positioning receiver.34. Why does the tracking system set a 100-metre minimum before sending an alarm to the operations centre?A) To leave time for the operations centre to give an alarm.B) To keep police informed of the car's movements.C) To give the driver time to contact the operations centre.D) To allow for possible errors in the GPS system.35. What will the operations centre do first after receiving an alarm?A) Start the tracking system. C) Block the car engine.B) Contact the car owner. D) Locate the missing car.Passage FourPsychiatrists 精神病专家) who work with older parents say that maturity can be an asset in child rearing - older parents are more thoughtful, use less physical discipline and spend more time with their children. But raising kids takes money and energy. Many older parents find themselves balancing their limited financial resources, declining energy and failing health against the growing demands of an active child. Dying and leaving young children is probably the older parents' biggest, and often unspoken, fear. Having late-life children, says an economics professor. often means parents, particularly fathers, "end up retiring much later." For many, retirement becomes an unobtainable dream.Henry Metcalf. a 54-year-old journalist, knows it takes money to raise kids. But he's also worried that his energy will give out first. Sure, he can still ride bikes with his athletic fifth grader, but he's learned that young at heart doesn't mean young. Lately he's been taking afternoon naps (午睡) daohang to keep up his energy. "My body is aging," says Metcalf. "You can't get away from that."Often, older parents hear the ticking of another kind of biological clock. Therapists who work with middle-aged and older parents say fears about aging are nothing to laugh at. "They worry they'll be mistaken for grandparents, or that they'll need help getting up out of those little chairs in nursery school," says Joann Galst, a New York psychologist. But at the core of those little fears there is often a much bigger one: "that they won't be alive long enough to supportand protect their child," she says.Many late-life parents, though, say their children came at just the right time. After marrying late and undergoing years of fertilily (受孕) treatment, Marilyn Nolen and her husband. Randy, had twins. "We both wanted children," says Marilyn, who was 55 when she gave birth. The twins have given the couple what they desired for years, "a sense of family." Kids of older dads are often smarter, happier and more sociable because their fathers are more involved in their lives. 'The dads are older, more mature," says Dr. Silber, "and more ready to focus on parenting."36. Why do psychiatrists regard maturity as an asset in child rearing?A) Older parents are often better prepared financially.B) Older parents can take better care of their children.C) Older parents are usually more experienced in bringing up their children.D) Older parents can better balance their resources against children's demands.37. What does the author mean by saying "For many, retirement becomes an unobtainable dream" (Lines 7-8, Para. 1)?A) They are reluctant to retire when they reach their retirement age.B) They can't obtain the retirement benefits they have dreamed of.C) They can't get full pension unless they work some extra years.D) They have to go on working beyond their retirement age.38. The author gives the example of Henry Metcalf to show thatA) older parents should exercise more to keep up with their athletic childrenB) many people are young in spirit despite their advanced ageC) older parents tend to be concerned about their aging bodiesD) taking afternoon naps is a good way to maintain energy39. What's the biggest fear of older parents according to New York psychologist Joan Galst?A) Approaching of death. C) Being laughed at by other people.B) Slowing down of their pace of life. D) Being mistaken for grandparents.40. What do we learn about Marilyn and Randy Nolen?A) They thought they were an example of successful fertility treatment.B) Not until they reached middle age did they think of having children.C) Not until they had the twins did they feel they had formed a family.D) They believed that children born of older parents would be smarter.第四部分、词汇Part III Vocabulary (20 minutes)4l. People's expectations about the future may have more influence on their sense ofwell-being than their state does.A) current C) modernB) initial D) primitive42. After working all day, he was so tired that he was in no to go to the party with us.A) taste C) senseB) mood D) emotion43. There is already clear to show that plants and animals are being affected by climateA) witness C) identityB) certification D) evidence44. Many women still feel that they are being by a male culture, particularly in the professional services sector.A) held back C) held onB) held forth D) held out45. The findings paint a unique picture of the shopping habits of customers, plus their motivation andA) privileges C) possessionsB) possibilities D) preferences46. It's good to know that quite a few popular English expressions actually from the Bible.A) acquire C) deriveB) obtain D) result47. Tom, did it ever to you that you would be punished for cheating on exams?A) happen C) reflectB) occur D) strike48. In the US, 88 percent of smokers had started before they were 18, despite the fact that it is to sellcigarettes to anyone under that age.A) liable C) irrationalB) liberal D) illegal49. According to the key witnesses, a peculiarly big nose is the criminal's most memorable facialA) feature C) spotB) hint D) signature50. Brarll's constitution the military use of nuclear energy.A) withdraws C) interruptsB) forbids D) objects51. Some people argue that the death does not necessarily reduce the number of murders.A) plot C) penaltyB) practice D) pattern52. Many personnel managers say it is getting harder and harder to honest applicants from the growing number of dishonest ones.A) distinguish C) dissolveB) disguise D) discount53. A study shows that students living in non-smoking dorms are less likely to the habit of smoking.A) make up C) draw upB) turn up D) pickup54. Almost all job applicants are determined to leave a good on a potential employer.A) illusion C) impressionB) reputation D) reflection55. A special feature of education at MIT is the opportunity for students and faculty toin research activities.A) specialize C) consistB) participate D) involve56. Although they lost their jobs, savings and unemployment benefits allow the couple totheir comfortable home.A) come in for C) look forward toB) catch up with D) hold on to57. Although many experts agree that more children are overweight, there is debate over the best ways tothe problem.A) relate C) fileB) tackle D) attach58. An important factor in determining how well you perform in an examination is the of your mind.A) state C) situationB) case D) circumstance59. Research shows that there is no relationship between how much a person earns and whether he feels good about life.A) successive C)significantB) subsequent D) sincere60. Sadly, as spending on private gardens has , spending on public parks has generally declined. A) heightened C) flownB) lifted D) soared61. Lung cancer, like some other cancers, often doesn't produce until it is too late and has spread beyond the chest to the brain, liver or bones.A) trails C) symptomsB) therapies D) symbols62. With the increasing unemployment rate, workers who are 50 to 60 years old are usually the first to beA) laid off C) laid outB) laid aside D) laid up63. The physical differences between men and women can be directly to our basic n as hunters and child-bearers.A) pursued C) switchedB) traced D) followed64. It is clear that the dog has a much greater of its brain devoted to smell than is the case with humans.A) composition C) percentB) compound D) proportion65. American college students are increasingly with credit card debt and the consequences can be rather serious.A) boosted C) dischargedB) burdened D) dominated66. Numerous studies already link the first meal of the day to better classroomA) performance C) behaviorB) function D) display67. The most successful post-career athletes are those who can take the identity and fife skills the learned in sports and them to another area of life.A) utilize C) applyB) employ D) exert68. The technological advances made it possible for the middle classes to enjoy what had once been only to the very rich.A) manageable C) acceptableB) measurable D) affordable69. Being out of work, lane can no longer friends to dinners and movies as she used to.A) urge C) appealB) treat D) compel70. by the superstars on television, the young athletes trained hard and played intensely.A) Imitated C) InsuredB) Imposed D) Inspired第五部分、完形填空Part IV Cloze (15 minutes)The part of the environmental movement that draws my firm's attention is the design of cities. buildings and products. When we designed America's first so-called "green" office building in New York two decades 71, we felt very alone. But today, thousands of people come to green building conferences, and the 72 that buildings can be good for people and the environment will be increasingly influential in years to 73 .Back in 1984 we discovered that most manufactured products for decoration weren't designed for 74 use. The "energy-efficient" sealed commercial buildings constructed after the 1970s energy crisis 75 indoor air quality problems caused by materials such as paint, wall covering and carpet. So far 20 years. we've been focusing on these materials 76 to the molecules, looking for ways to make them 77 for people and the planet.Home builders can now use materials-such as paints that release significantly _78_ amounts of organic compounds -that don't 79 the quality of the air, water, or soil. Ultimately. 80_, our basic design strategy is focused not simply on being "less bad" but on creating 81 healthful materials that can be either safely returned to the soil _82_ reused by industry again and again. As a matter of _83, the world's largest carpet manufacturer has already _ 84_"_ a carpet that is fully and safely recyclable (可循环用的).Look at it this way: No one __85 out to create a building that destroys the planet. But our current industrial systems are } 86 causing these conditions, whether we like it or not. So 87_ of simply trying to reduce the damage, we are _88_ a positive approach. We're giving people high-quality, healthful products and an opportunity to make choices that have a 89 effect on the world. It's not just the building industry, either. 90_ cities are taking these environmentallypositive approaches to design, planning and building. Portland, Seattle and Boston have said they want to be green cities. Chicago wants to be the greenest city in the world.71. A) ago C) before B) off D) away72. A) practice C) idea B) outlook D) scheme73. A) go C) arrive B) come D) continue74. A) indoor C) relevant B) inward D) flexible75. A) displayed C) exhibited B) discovered D) revealed76. A) back C) next B) down D) near77. A) comfortable C) safe B) cautious D) stable78. A) reduced C) descended B) revised D) delayed79. A) deny C) dissolve B) depress D) destroy80. A) besides C) anyhow B) however D) anyway81. A)partially C) completely B) exactly D) superficially82.A)or C) but B)and D) nor83. A) interest C) principle B) fact D) course84. A) sketched C) researched B) constructed D) developed85. A) starts C) looks B) pulls D) makes86. A) basically C) traditionally B) originally D) inevitably87. A) because C) instead B) out D) regardless88. A) adjusting C) adopting B) admitting D) adapting89. A) functional C) precious B) beneficial D) sensible90. A) Entire C) Full B) Total D) Complete答案第一部分、作文Dear fellow students,Attention, please! We are now recruiting volunteers to participate in (take part in / get involved in) a voluntary program held by the student union during the summer break.The details of our activity are listed as follows. First, this activity is aimed at cultivating (giving a boost to ) your sense of responsibility, broadening your vision and sharpening your edge because, as our economy evolves at an incredible speed, it is becoming increasingly vital for young adults in the Ivory Tower to get in touch with the real world. Second, our activity begins at July 10th and ends at July 20th. . Plus, the schedule involves blood donation, looking after senior citizens and conducting a survey on the city's traffic system to put forward our suggestions.Any full-time or part-time students in our college are welcomed to join our team. For further information, please call us at 135****** or send your email to .。
Model Test 8Part I WritingPart ⅠWriting (30 minutes)Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a composition on the topic Dormitory Life . You should write at least 120 words following the outline given below in Chinese:1. 大学宿舍的集体生活是全新的体验。
2. 宿舍生活与在家生活的不同之处。
3. 宿舍生活利与弊。
Dormitory LifePart II Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning)Directions: In this part, you will have 15 minutes to go over the passage quickly and answer the questions on Answer sheet1.Testing TimesResearchers are working on ways to reduce the need for animal experiments, but new laws may increase the number of experiments needed.The current situationIn an ideal world, people would not perform experiments on animals. For the people, they are expensive. For the animals, they are stressful and often painful.That ideal world, sadly, is still some way away. People need new drugs and vaccines. They want protection from the toxicity of chemicals. The search for basic scientific answers goes on. Indeed, the European Commission is forging ahead with proposals that will increase the number of animal experiments carried out in the European Union, by requiring toxicity tests on every chemical approved for use within the union's borders in the past 25 years.Already, the commission has identified 140,000 chemicals that have not yet been tested. It wants 30,000 of these to be examined right away, and plans to spend between ~ 4 billion — 8 billion ($5 billion—10 billion) doing so. The number of animals used for toxicity testing in Europe will thus, experts reckon, quintuple (翻五倍) from just over lm a year to about 5m, unless they are saved by some dramatic advances in non-animal testing technology. At the moment, roughly 10% of European animal tests are for general toxicity, 35% for basic research, 45% for drugs and vaccines, and the remaining 10% a variety of uses such as diagnosing diseases.Animal experimentation will therefore be around for some time yet. But the search for substitutes continues, and last weekend the Middle European Society for Alternative Methods to Animal Testing met in Linz, Austria, to review progress.A good place to start finding alternatives for toxicity tests is the liver--the organ responsible for breaking toxic chemicals down into safer molecules that can then be excreted. Two firms, one large and one small, told the meeting how they were using human liver cells removed incidentally during surgery to test various substances for long-term toxic effects.One way out of the problemPrimeCyte, the small firm, grows its cells in cultures over a few weeks and doses them regularly with the substance under investigation. The characteristics of the cells are carefully monitored, to look for changes in their microanatomy.Pfizer, the big firm, also doses its cultures regularly, but rather than studying individual cells in detail, it counts cell numbers. If the number of cells in a culture changes after a sample is added, that suggests the chemical in question is bad for the liver.In principle, these techniques could be applied to any chemical. In practice, drugs (and, in the case of PrimeCyte, food supplements) are top of the list. But that might change if the commission has its way: those 140,000 screenings look like a lucrative market, although nobody knows whether the new tests will be ready for use by 2009, when the commission proposes that testing should start.Other tissues, too, can be tested independently of animals. Epithelix, a small firm in Geneva, has developed an artificial version of the lining of the lungs. According to Huang Song, one of Epithelix's researchers, the firm's cultured cells have similar microanatomy to those found in natural lung linings, and respond in the same way to various chemical messengers. Dr. Huang says that they could be used in long-term toxicity tests of airborne chemicals and could also help identify treatments for lung diseases.The immune system can be mimicked and tested, too. ProBioGen, a company based in Berlin, is developing an artificial human lymph node (淋巴结) which, it reckons, could have prevented the neardisastrous consequences of a drag trial held in Britain three months ago, in which (despite the drag having passed animal tests) six men suffered multiple organ failure and nearly died. The drug the men were given made their immune systems hyperactive. Such a response would, the firm's scientists reckon, nave teen identified by their lymph node, which is made from cells that provoke the immune system into a response. ProBioGen's lymph node could thus work better than animal testing.A second alternativeAnother way of cutting the number of animal experiments would be to change the way that vaccines are tested, according to Coenraad Hendriksen of the Netherlands Vaccine Institute. At the moment, all batches of vaccine are subject to the same battery of tests. Dr. Hendriksen argues that this is over-rigorous. When new vaccine cultures are made, belt-and-braces tests obviously need to be applied. But if a batch of vaccine is derived from an existing culture, he suggests that it need be tested only to make sure it is identical to the batch from which it is derived. That would require fewer test animals.All this suggests that though there is still some way to go before drugs, vaccines and other substances can be tested routinely on cells rather than live animals, useful progress is being made. What is harder to see is how the use of animals might be banished from fundamental research.Weighing the balanceIn basic scientific research, where the object is to understand how, say, the brain works rather than to develop a drug to treat brain disease, the whole animal is often necessarily the object of study. Indeed, in some cases, scientific advances are making animal tests more valuable, rather than less. Geneticmodification techniques mean that mice and rats can be remodelled to make them exhibit illnesses that they would not normally suffer from. Also, genes for human proteins can be added to them, so that animal tests will more closely mimic human responses. This offers the opportunity to understand human diseases better, and to screen treatments before human trials begin. However, the very creation of these mutants (突变异种) counts as an animal experiment in its own right, so the number of experiments is increasing once again.What is bad news for rodents, though, could be good news for primates. Apes and monkeys belong to the same group of mammals as humans, and are thus seen as the best subjects for certain sorts of experiment. To the extent that rodents can be "humanised", the number of primate experiments might be reduced.Some people, of course, would like to see them eliminated altogether, regardless of the effect on useful research. On June 6th the British Union for the Abolition of Vivisection, an animal-rights group, called for the use of primates in research to be banned. For great apes, this has already happened. Britain, Austria, the Netherlands, New Zealand and Sweden have ended experiments on chimpanzees, gorillas, bonobos and orang-utans. Experiments on monkeys, though, are still permitted. And some countries have not banned experiments on apes. In America, for example, about 1,000 chimpanzees a year are used in research.This is a difficult area. Great apes are man's closest relatives, having parted company from the human family tree only a few million years ago. Hence it can be (and is) argued that they are indispensable for certain sorts of research. On the other hand, a recent study by Andrew Knight and his colleagues at Animal Consultants International, an animal-advocacy group, casts doubt on the claim that apes are used only for work of vital importance to humanity. Important papers tend to get cited as references in subsequent studies, so Mr. Knight looked into the number of citations received by 749 scientific papers published as a result of invasive experiments on captive chimpanzees. Half had received not a single citation up to ten years after their original publication.That is damning. Animal experiments are needed for the advance of medical science, not to mention people'ssafety. But if scientists are to keep the sympathy of the public, they need to do better than that.1. The passage summarizes harmful effects of animal experiment. However, as animal experiment is indispensable ina number of areas, it might not be stopped or replaced by other alternatives.2. Animal experiments are needed in research to find new drugs and vaccines, and to find ways of protection from the toxicity of chemicals.3. It is predicted by experts that the number of animals used for toxicity testing in Europe will quintuple due to a plan to have a large variety of chemical tested.4. People are trying to find alternatives to animal testing, and they started with liver.5. PrimeCyte and Pfizer began to find alternatives to animal testing because they were advocates of animal protection.6. It is found that tissues from liver, lung, and immune system can all be tested independently of animals.7. Although there is more than one alternative to animal experiment, there is still concern over how to eliminate animal testing in fundamental research.8. In basic scientific research, the object is to understand how, say, the brain works rather than to develop a drug to ______ brain disease.9. Indeed, in some cases, scientific advances are making animal tests ___________10. Recently, an animal-advocacy group casts doubt on the scientists' claim that apes are used only for __________ Part ⅢListening ComprehensionSection ADirections: At the end of each conversation, one or more questions will be asked about what was said. Both the conversation and the questions will be spoken only once. After each question there will be a pause. During the pause, you must rend the four choices marked [A]、[B]、[C] and [D], and decide which is the best answer. Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre.11. [A] She accepts it. [B] She rejects it. [C] She tells him to decide for himself. [D] She will think about it.12. [A] Catch a bus. [B] Demand a telephone number. [C] Cash a check. [D] Make a phone call.13. [A] His relation with the woman comes to an end. [B] He is going to take an air trip.[C] He is expressing his gratefulness. [D] He feels ashamed to ask for excuse.14. [A] She thinks it's too far from her home. [B] She likes new working environment.[C] She doesn't like the company she is working with. [D] She wants to save money for a journey.15. [A] $1.00. [B] $5.00. [C] $0.75. [D] $3.25.16. [A] It is appropriate. [B] It is too informal. [C] It is normal. [D] It is too formal.17. [A] Rose's new husband is a writer. [B] The man shouldn't believe everything he read.[C] Appearances are often deceiving. [D] She likes Rose's new husband's book.18. [A] She saw an ad. in the newspaper. [B] She learned about it from a friend.[C] She heard about it during a television interview. [D] She saw it on a list of job openings.Conversation 119. [A] In a hotel. [B] In a restaurant. [C] In a hospital. [D] In a shop.20. [A] Shampoo. [B] Bath-foam. [C] Shower hat. [D] Comb.21. [A] Remove it. [B] Replace it. [C] Press a button. [D] Not mentioned.22. [A] A book. [B] A remote controller. [C] A mini-bar. [D] A pencil.Conversation 223. [A] In a hotel. [B] In a restaurant. [C] In a hospital. [D] In a shop.24. [A] Because her friend asked her to buy one. [B] Because she wanted to buy one.[C] Because she wanted to give it as a gift to her friend. [D] Because she wanted to apologize to her friend.25. [A] $60.00. [B] $40.00. [C] $48.00. [D] $54.00.Section BDirections: In this section, you will hear 3 short passages. At the end of each passage, you will hear some questions.Both the passage and the questions will be spoken only once. After you hear a question, you must choose the best answer from the four choices marked [A]、[B]、[C] and [D]. Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer sheet 2 with a single line through the centre.Passage One26. [A] 110,000. [B] 1.2 million. [C] One million. [D] Over a thousand.27. [A] Heart disease and lung cancer. [B] Heart disease and increased blood pressure.[C] Increased blood pressure and lung cancer. [D] Increased heart rate and lung cancer.28. [A] It is a powerful and fast-acting drug. [B] It causes the familiar yellow and brown stain.[C] Increased heart rate, and blood disease. [D] Increased heart rate, and blood pressure.Passage Two29. [A] A barber and businessman. [B] A broadcaster.[C] A businessman and broadcaster. [D] A barber and broadcaster.30. [A] He sent her to the University of Tennessee. [B] He got her a job as a broadcaster.[C] He gave her the discipline she needed. [D] He taught her speech and performing arts.31. [A] She was America's first African-American broadcaster. [B] Ordinary people loved her.[C] She dealt with very personal issues in a frank and honest way.[D] She was a star in the film The Color Purple.Passage Three32. [A] Make long road or rail tunnels safer. [B] Make long road or rail tunnels easier.[C] Make long road or rail tunnels quicker. [D] Make long road or rail tunnels more efficient.33. [A] 41. [B] 410. [C] 14. [D] 214.34. [A] It runs on a monorail. [B] It can move on a monorail suspended from the roof of the tunnel.[C] It is in position in the middle of the tunnel, [D] It can take quick action.35. [A] Detect the smoke quickly. [B] Take quick action. [C] Close the tunnel. [D] Install a Robogat.Section CDirections: In this section, you will hear a passage three times. When the passage is read for the first time, you should listen carefully for its general idea. When the passage is read for the second time, you are required to fill in the blanks numbered from 36 to 43 with the exact words you have just heard. For blanks numbered from 44 to 46 you are required to fill in the missing information. For these blanks, you can either use the exact words you have just heard or write down the main points in you own words. Finally, when the passage is read for the third time, you should check what you have written.Language is an amazing phenomenon. Speech — the (36) of sounds to convey meaning — is a kind of human action. Like any other (37) repeated actions, speaking has to be learned. But once it is learned, it becomes a generally (38) and apparently automatic process.As far as we can (39) , human beings do not need to be forced to speak. Most babies seem to (40)a sort of instinctive drive to produce (41) noises. How to speak and what to say are another matter(42) . These actions are learned from file particular society in which the baby is born; so that, like ail conduct and (43) that is learned from a society — from the people around us — speech is a patterned activity.(44) into a few orderly patterns, accepted as meaningful by the people around him.(45) However, a child born into a society with a pattern of language is encouraged o make a small selection of sounds.(46) . Part IV Reading Comprehension (Reading in Depth)Section ADirections: In this section, there is a passage with ten blanks. You are required to select one word for each blank from a list of choices given in a word bank following the passage. Read the passage through carefully before makingyour choices. Each choice in the bank is identified by a letter. Please mark the corresponding letter for each item on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre. You may not use any of the words in the bank more than once.What is suburbanization? If by "suburb" is meant an urban (47) that grows more rapidly than its already developed interior, the process of suburbanization began during the (48) of the industrial city in the second quarter of the 19th century. Before that period the city was a small highly (49) cluster in which people move about on foot and goods were (50) by horse and cart. But the early factories built in the 1830s and 1840s were (51) along waterways and near railheads at the edges of cities, and housing was needed for the thousands of people drawn by the prospect of employment.In time, the factories were (52) by proliferating mill towns of apartments and row houses that abutted the older, main cities. As a defense (53) this encroachment and to enlarge their tax base, the cities appropriated their industrial neighbors. In 1854, for example, the city of Philadelphia (54) most of Philadelphia County. Similar things (55) place in Chicago and in New York. Indeed, most great cities of the United States (56) such status only by annexing the communities along their borders.A) located B) margin C) conveyed D) compact E) center F) emergenceG) spacious H) surrounded I) abandoned J) plummet K) achieved L) tookM) against N) for O) incorporatedSection BDirections: 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 and mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre.Passage OneAs you make your way through the crowded stalls of Beijing's food markets nowadays, you may sometimes be confused as to just what you should be looking for. There is a profusion of fresh vegetables laid out for sale, so much celery, so many Dutch beans, tomatoes, even broccoli and parsley. How different things were only a scant 15 years ago. At that time there was no variety in the selection of vegetables. Today, with bread, jam, milk and eggs available for breakfast instead of porridge, deep-fried dough strips and pickles, more and more people can afford the indulgence of eating whatever they want.It is all the rage for fashionable teenagers to go to a Western restaurant for spaghetti, a hamburger, filed chicken, pizza or a sandwich. Older folks in China have not quite caught on to these trends, as their younger counterparts have, and tend to be more practical, focusing their attention on simple but sensible food. The purpose of eating is not simply to fill one's stomach, they mason, but also to maintain one's mind and body. Products like low-fat foods, vegetables, bean products and "black food" (foods dark in color, believed to be highly nutritious) have all won over many older consumers who would probably blanch at the thought of a McDonald's Happy Meal for lunch.It is an old Chinese tradition to attach great importance and ceremony to the art of dining. When friends come for dinner, they are often treated to a sumptuous banquet, which results in a lot of wasted food. Young people nowadays pay more attention to quality than quantity, though, and innovative contraptions like chafing dishes are starting to appear on Chinese tables instead of the old "eight courses (usually four meat dishes and four vegetable dishes) and one soup" allowing diners to chat while they eat. Some companies are now beginning to treat guests to buffets instead of the traditional big banquet, which helps in turn to cut costs.China is well-known for its food, and that is saying a lot. The famous "eight cuisines" of Chinese kitchens have won accolades from customers as far afield as Capetown and Salt Lake City. But preparing Chinese dishes is no easy job, and it takes one or two hours to serve up one dish with the right flavor, color, taste and shape to satisfy demanding Chinese palates. People of the 1990's just don't have the time any more. Affluence brings more fast food and instant meals in a box, especially frozen food, and the introduction of electric steamers, microwave ovens and electric ranges gives many people an excuse to spend fewer and fewer hours in the kitchen preparing a decent meal.57. What did Chinese people usually have for breakfast 15 years ago?[A] Beans, tomatoes, broccoli and parsley. [B] Bread, jam, milk and eggs.[C] Porridge, deep-filed dough strips and pickles. [D] Bread, milk, porridge and pickles.58. According to the Chinese tradition, dining is not only a way to fill one's stomach but also a[A] revolution [B] trend [C] ceremony [D] waste59. Which of the following is NOT one of the reasons that Chinese people are spending less time in the kitchen now than in the past?[A] They are much busier than before. [B] They care less about eating than before.[C] More fast food and instant meals are available than before.[D] More modem electric appliances are available than before.60. Which of the following statements is TRUE according to the passage?[A] A large variety of foods are available in the Chinese market now.[B] Chinese people like to go to Western restaurants.[C] Traditional Chinese people pay more attention to quantity than to quality.[D] A traditional Chinese dish that presents the right taste, flavor, and color is regarded as an excellent dish.61. What is the author's attitude toward China's gastronomic revolution?[A] In favor of. [B] Indifferent. [C] Against. [D] Holds a balanced view.Passage TwoThe Language Learning Theory course is an option during the third semester of your program. It is an introduction to aspects of Psycholinguistics and Second Language Acquisition Research. The course will deal specifically with those aspects of recent research that are relevant to the comprehension and production of spoken language. Most of the course will, in other words, be spent considering the processes involved in understanding and producing spoken language. At each stage, we shall be relating the implications of recent research and theories to the practice of foreign language teaching. The course aims to provide relevant background for all language teachers who are interested in WHY and HOW current teaching approaches have been developed.The course will be held during the first ten weeks of this semester from 8: 30 to 10: 30 on Tuesday mornings.A handout giving an outline of the topics of each of the ten sessions is available for those who wish to consider the course in more detail.The course will be principally conducted through lecture and seminar. Learners will, at times, be asked to take part in small language experiments. Handouts and worksheets will be distributed each week. Preparatory reading and follow-up reading will be required for each session.Learners' participation in class activities will be taken into consideration. Attendance at classes is essential. There will be four short, assessed assignments during the course. Participation in classes will account for 10% of the final mark. Assignments will account for 60%. The remaining 30% is for the final test—which will be held one week after the end of the course.You may collect the handout (covering the information I have given you today) from me at the end of this session. If you need further details, you are welcome to ask me personally or see the secretary in Room 513. The course code is LLT 96.62. Students who are interested in______ are most UNLIKEL Y to take this course?[A] Linguistics (language studies). [B] Language teaching. [C] Improving oral skills. [D] Psychology.63. According to the passage, when will the final test of the course be given?[A] The 11th week. [B] The 10th week. [C] The 9th week. [D] The 18th week.64. If a student never skips a class and gets an overall mark of 80 (out of 100) for assignments, what is the minimum mark that the student must obtain in the final exam in order to get 85 (out of 100) as the final mark of the course?[A] 80. [B] 85. [C] 90. [D] 95.65. Which of the following is FALSE according to the passage?[A] Language teaching theory is a compulsory course.[B] Each session of this course will last 2 hours.[C] Reading will be required both before and after each session of this course.[D] Students interested in more details about this course may see the speaker in person.66. This passage is the transcript of a speech most probably given by _____.[A] a teaching secretary [B] a teacher [C] a school director [D] a studentPart ⅤClozeDirections: There are 20 blanks in the following passage. For each blank there are four choices marked [A]、[B]、[C] and [D] on the right side of the paper. You should choose the ONE that best fits into the passage. Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre.There are two factors which determine an individual's intelligence. The first is the sort of brain he is born (67) . Human brains differ "considerably, (68) being more capable than others. (69) no matter how good a brain he has to begin with, an individual will have a low order of intelligence unless he has (70) to learn. So the second factor is what (71) to the individual -the sort of environment in which he is brought (72) .If an individual is handicapped (受阻碍) (73) , it is likely that his brain will (74) to develop and he will never (75) the level of intelligence of which he is (76) .The importance of environment in determining an individual's intelligence can be (77) by the case history of the (78) twins, Peter and John. When the twins were three months old, their parents died, and they were placed in (79) fostered (寄养的) homes. Peter was (80) by parents of low intelligence in an (81) community with poor educational opportunities. John, (82) , was educated in the home of well-to-do parents who had been to college. This environmental (83) continued until the twins were (84) their late teens, When they were given tests to (85) their intelligence. John's IQ(智商) was 125, twenty-five, points higher than the (86) and fully forty points higher than his identical brother.67. [A] for [B] by [C] with [D] in68. [A] most [B] some [C] many [D] few69. [A] But [B] For [C] Still [D] And70. [A] necessities [B] realities [C] probabilities [D] opportunities71. [A] refers [B] applies [C] happens [D] concerns72. [A] about [B] up [C] on [D] Out73. [A] relatively [B] intelligently [C] regularly [D] environmentally74. [A] help [B] manage [C] fail [D] perform75. [A] assume [B] attain [C] accomplish [D] accumulate76. [A] capable [B] sensible [C] adequate [D] acceptable77. [A] demonstrated [B] implemented [C] released [D] revealed78. [A] equivalent [B] parallel [C] similar [D] identical79. [A] separate [B] independent [C] remote [D] individual80. [A] grown [B] reared [C] cultivated [D] tamed81. [A] conservative [B] enclosed [C] isolated [D] occupied82. [A] moreover [B] otherwise [C] therefore [D] however83. [A] exception [B] division [C] difference [D] alteration84. [A] in [B] by [C] at [D] for85. [A] estimate [B] evaluate [C] assess [D] measure86. [A] average [B] normal [C] regular [D] ordinaryPart ⅥTranslation (5 minutes)Directions: Complete the sentences by translating into English the Chinese given in the brackets. Please write your translation on Answer Sheet 2.87. He was almost hurt _________________________________(当公共汽车突然停止的时候).88. I didn’t travel much when I was younger, but I’m certainly _____________________________(弥补失去的时间).89. Only those species __________________________________(能适应并应付变化的环境的) survived; theothers died out.90. Chinese Government declares that _______________________________(任何情况下中国都不首先使用)nuclear weapons.91. __________________________ (针对你的呼吁),we have made effective measures to stop such terribleaccident.。
Unit testPart I: Vocabulary and StructureSection A: Complete the sentences using the correct words in the box.erectexhibitloftyindignanthoistopponentinconceivabletranscendsambiguitycontemplatelayoutlogiccriticismstimulateintellectualcomplexityimprovementimplyscopeplaza1.There is absolutely no to her behavior—it's completely random.Your answer Correct answerlogic logic2.The answers he gave had just enough to make me doubt his honesty.Your answer Correct answerambiguity ambiguity3.Sharon was known for her ideals and romantic outlook on life.Your answer Correct answerlofty lofty4.There was a stage set up in the between the buildings for the music festival.Your answer Correct answerplaza plaza5.The the smartest people in the room.Your answer Correct answercomplexity complexity6.Even though I have played chess for years, you still made a very worthy .Your answer Correct answeropponent opponent7.Do you mean to that you agreed with her crazy plan?Your answer Correct answerimply imply8.The review of his new book included a lot of and not much praise.Your answer Correct answercriticism criticism9.Jacob was and angry when he shouted, "How dare you accuse me of sucha crime?"Your answer Correct answerindignant indignant10.We used to be best friends; it's she could do anything to hurt me.Your answer Correct answerinconceivable inconceivable11.Are you familiar with the of this office building?Your answer Correct answerlayout layout12.The committee decided to a statue of the beloved president.Your answer Correct answererect erect13.The of the project is unmatched in the history of this company.Your answer Correct answerscope scope14.In terms of intelligence, this year's Nobel Prize winner everyone else in his field.Your answer Correct answertranscends transcends15.Einstein'sYour answer Correct answerintellectual intellectual16.The museum hosted a special about the age of dinosaurs.Your answer Correct answerexhibit exhibit17.I can't even a life without my children.Your answer Correct answercontemplate contemplate18.There's nothing like a beautiful sunset to my senses and inspire me to get to work.Your answer Correct answerstimulate stimulate19.Come over here and help me up this beam so we can support the ceiling.Your answer Correct answerhoist hoist20.At this point, any change will be a welcomeYour answer Correct answerimprovement improvementSection B: Fill in each of the blanks with a suitable word.21.She made a vow she wouldn't drink coffee anymore.Your answer Correct answerthat that22.The documentary didn't justice to the situation in Africa.Your answer Correct answeron do23.If she can write the recommendation herself, then much the better.Your answer Correct answerso so24.His mother won the Nobel Prize, but he's an award-winning poet his own right.Your answer Correct answerin inDo you still feel any discomfort your dislocated shoulder?Your answer Correct answeron from26.As mayor, I feel a huge sense civic pride in our community.Your answer Correct answerof of27.It may sound unbelievable, but my wife and I experienced love first sight.Your answer Correct answerin at28.We will see a moderate increase salaries this year.Your answer Correct answerfrom in29.The speaker was completely surprised by the outburst emotion from the crowd.Your answer Correct answerof ofBarbara will interpret Miguel since he doesn't speak English.Your answer Correct answerfor forPart II: Banked ClozeQuestions 31 to 40 are based on the following passage.Some people think that Shanghai's (31)far too futuristic and not at all (32)opinion, the futuristic look is precisely why it is so (33)Many modern cities are trying to respect the (34)and "new." For example, they construct skyscrapers that are designed to (35)the existing look and feel of the existing city. There is definitely value to this (36), it is a very difficult thing to do successfully. I think Shanghai deserves a lot of respect for deciding to forge ahead into the future.Shanghai has still managed to retain much of its old city, however. There is a river that winds through the city, and it effectively divides the "old" from the "new." The city's(37) colonial architecture literally stands across the river from the futuristic skyscrapers that announce the city's incredible (38).This divide was (39) part of the city's master development plan, and the city should be applauded for that. It's genuinely amazing how something static—architectureand city design—can (40) the emotions, dreams, and aspirations of an entire people.Your answer Correct answer(31) skyline skyline(32) aesthetically aesthetically(33) picturesque picturesque(34) fragile fragile(35) conform conform(36) sentiment sentiment(37) exquisite exquisite(38) prosperity prosperity(39) presumably presumably(40) interpret interpretPart III: Reading ComprehensionQuestions 41 to 45 are based on the following passage.It's easy to assume that modern architecture is all about being the biggest, tallest, most expensive, most innovative, or some other superlative. Sometimes, it seems as if modern architects have forgotten the roots of groundbreaking architecture and design. Of the relatively few countries noted for their long and productive history of classical architecture, China is one of even fewer that have embraced this history.Most people familiar with the city of Suzhou are also aware of its epithet: "Heaven on Earth." Yet anyone who has visited its famous gardens is all too aware that the beauty is often marred by mobs of parading tour groups. Surprisingly, it's a well kept secret that our very own Shanghai is actually home to five classical gardens (planned and built during the Ming and Qing Dynasties), many of which equal the splendor on display in Suzhou. Spread out over the vastness of the city, visits to the five gardens not only provide a tempting taste of Suzhou close to home but also reveal the varied faces and personalities Shanghai itself has to offer.Nearly every tourist to Shanghai follows their guidebook to Yu Yuan and braves the surrounding onslaught of postcard and antique vendors. It is, without a doubt, the most well-known, easily accessible and expensive of the city's classically designed gardens. For this reason, it is alsothe most impressive. Built in 1559 by wealthy Ming officials, the garden today stands as testament to the poetic extravagance ofChina's dynastic heritage. Lakeside pagodas, enchanting halls, and a mazelike rockery all inhabit this welcome oasis in the heart of modern Shanghai, and it becomes a perfect place to relax and feel the speed of life slow to a crawl.Winning points for its overwhelming feeling of peace, seclusion, and serenity is the Pond of the Drunken Bai. Designed and constructed during the Ming era in honor of Tang poet Bai Juyi, the garden harbors the many splendors of both Suzhou and Yu Yuan without the crowds. Odds are you'll be sharing the considerable expanse of green with only a handful of local gossipy seniors. The winding corridors, shaded pagodas, and still waters will strongly suggest that a scroll painting has come to life for your sole pleasure.With only a brief distance separating them, the next two gardens merit praise for their seemingly perfect marriage of landscaped flora and lazy waterways. The Garden of Ancient Splendor and the Garden of Autumn Clouds were both private gardens during the Ming Dynasty. The rustling bamboo forests, elaborate architecture, and tranquil lotus ponds provide a perfect respite for city-weary souls. Rounding out the list is the smallest and most remote member of the five: the Garden of Meandering Streams. Though it provides beautifully shaded pathways bordered by fragrant blooming wisteria, it nevertheless pales in comparison to its four cousins.Each of Shanghai's gardens was extensively damaged during the succession of wars beginning from the Qing Dynasty, but the 20th century also saw substantial reconstruction and renovation efforts restore much of their original glory; today's nominal admission fees are contributions to this ongoing endeavor.41. This passage would most likely appear in _____.A. a European newspaperB. an architectural journalC. a travel magazineD. a textbook42. This style of writing would best be described as _______.A. expositoryB. argumentativeC. narrativeD. descriptive43. Which of the following summarizes the main idea of this passage?A. Classical architecture is worth traveling great distances to see andappreciate.B. Classical architecture and design are waiting to be discovered in unexpectedplaces.C. A majority of classical architecture has already been destroyed.D. Classical Chinese gardens are a great place to appreciate architecture.44. Which of the following indicates the author's intended message?A. It seems as if modern architects have forgotten the roots of groundbreakingarchitecture and design.B. It's a well kept secret that our very own Shanghai is actually home to fiveclassical gardens.C. The garden today stands as testament to the poetic extravagance of China'sdynastic heritage.D. The 20th century also saw substantial reconstruction and renovation effortsrestore much of their original glory.45. The author of this passage would likely describe classical Chinese gardens as incredibly_____.A. picturesqueB. intellectualC. sumptuousD. utilitarian。
大学英语四级模拟试卷8(题后含答案及解析)题型有:1. Writing 2. Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning) 3. Listening Comprehension 4. Reading Comprehension (Reading in Depth) 5. Cloze 6. Error Correction 8. TranslationPart I Writing (30 minutes)1.For this part, you are allowed to write a composition on the topic My View on the Income Gap. You should write at least 120 words and you should base your composition on the outline. 1. 收入悬殊是当前社会的一种现象; 2. 人们对之褒贬不一; 3. 我的看法。
My View on the Income Gap正确答案:My View on the Income Gap Now the income gap is getting wider and wider. In some privately owned firms, joint ventures, or foreign-owned companies, an executive’s yearly income is ten times or even a hundred times as Part II Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning) (15 minutes)Directions: In this part, you will have 15 minutes to go over the passage quickly and answer the questions attached to the passage. For questions 1-7, mark:Y (for YES) if the statement agrees with the information given in the passage;N (for NO) if the statement contradicts the information given in the passage;NG (for NOT GIVEN)if the information is not given in the passage.Cities Guide—Shanghai Business hours Business hours in Shanghai are very much those you would find in the West. Office hours are Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5/6 p.m.(some close for an hour at lunchtime). Some offices also maintain limited Saturday hours. Banks follow similar hours. Department stores typically open every day, 10 a.m.-10 p.m. Chinese restaurants tend to open and close early(11:30 a.m.-2 p.m. and 5-9:30 p.m.), and international restaurants stay open latch Note that dinner in China is usually eaten early, from 5:30 p.m. Eating and drinking Most business entertaining is done over lunch, though a high-profile business deal may be celebrated by a large evening meal in a private room of a restaurant. Unless specifically invited, spouses typically stay at home. The Western custom of after-work drinks is rare, though there is a growing trend for business colleagues to meet for coffee. Try to master chopsticks before you arrive in Shanghai. Chinese food is eaten informally, with everyone serving them selves from several main dishes on a central turntable. In all but the swankiest(漂亮,时髦的) restaurants, messiness is perfectly acceptable. People will happily slurp their soup, toss chicken bones around their plates and spill soy sauce everywhere. Frequent toasts are not unusual. Mao Tai, a fiery 60-70 proof liquor distilled from sorghum, is what you’ll typically drink. If you can’t keep up, join in the toast with beer or else a soft drink. Drinking a lot(and even drunkenness) may earn you respect or trust,since many Chinese believe that alcohol causes harriers to come down and true intentions to be revealed. You may be invited to eat at someone’s home. Always bring a gift(fruit or flowers), and remember to take your shoes off at the threshold. Getting around Public transport If you plan to be in Shanghai for more than a few days, buy a Shanghai Public Transport Card(jiao tong ka), available in any metro station for 30 yuan(refundable when you return it at any metro station). Once you have one, you can put funds on it to use for taxis, the metro, light rail buses and the passenger ferry across the river. Buses Buses are crowded, smelly, hard to understand if you don’t read Chinese characters, but extraordinarily cheap. Most inner-city buses charge 1-2 yuan, no matter how far you’re traveling within the city. Tickets on long-distance buses range between 1-6 yuan. Taxis Taxis in Shanghai axe good value. You will pay 10 yuan for the first two kin, and then 2 yuan per km. The city has about 50,000 taxis. The only time you’ll have trouble finding one is when it’s raining. Most taxi drivers do not speak English, so have someone jot down your destination in Chinese characters and take a business card from your hotel with you so that you can find your way back. Tipping is not customary. Try to avoid hailing a cab at 9:30 a.m. or 4:30 p.m., when drivers swap shifts. Metro Shanghai’s metro is swift and cheap(2 -6 yuan), but has only three main lines. The government has plans for eight more by 2010; Until then, you could end having to walk some distance. The metro is a good way to cross the river during rush hour, when traffic clogs the bridges and the tunnel. When traveling you can just swipe your public transport card over the card-recognition keypads. Otherwise, you will need to tell the assistant at one of the ticketing counters what price zone you are traveling in and he or she will give you a one-trip ticket. Communications Telephone codes Country code: 86 Area code: (0)21 All Chinese area codes begin with a zero, which is dropped when calling China from abroad, and when making local calls. Outgoing international code: 00 + country code Public telephones With the proliferation of mobile phones, there aren’t many public phone booths left. Your best bet is a hotel lobby. Chinese public phones take prepaid phone cards available from convenience stores and street vendors. Local calls are in credibly cheap. International calls cost around 10 yuan per minute. Mobile phones There are two mobile companies in Shanghai: China Mobile and China Unicom. China Mobile is larger but China Unicom has marginally lower rates. Both use the GSM system. China Mobile uses GPRS phones, while China Unicom uses CD MA phones. Check with your home firm to see if your roaming service operates here. Otherwise you can get a SIM card very cheaply, and buy pre-paid cards from streetside stalls or convenience stores. Many hotel business centres will rent you a handset. Courier services Fedex Tel: +86(0) 21 5257-4620 or 800 820 1338 Order before 4 p.m. if you want the delivery to reach its destination before 12 p.m. two days later. DHL Tel: +86(0) 21 6536-2900 or 800 810 8000 Deliveries take three working days. UPS Tel: +86(0) 21 6391-5555 You need to order the pick-up before 1 p.m. to catch that day’s flight. Your parcel will arrive three working days later. Internet cafs Business centers at most good hotels offer Internet access, though prices are high. You’ll also find wireless access atPu Dong International Airport, Starbucks outlets around the city, Element Fresh caf and in the shopping and restaurant district of Xintiandi. You can also try the Shanghai Library at 1557 Huaihai Middle Road(Tel: 6445-2001). Head for the small office on the ground floor, underneath the main entrance. It’s open from 9 a.m. -8:30 p.m. daily and costs 4 yuan per hour. You’ll need to have your passport with you. Post offices Open: daily, 7 a.m.-7 p.m. Overseas letters and postcards require five to ten days for delivery. Shanghai’s main post office(with English-speaking staff) is at Suzhou Beilu at the intersection with Sichuan Lu, just North of Suzhou Creek. There are two other post office branches where employees speak English: one is at the Shanghai Centre, 1376 Nanjing Xilu and the other is at 1337 Huaihai Zhonglu.2.Banks in Shanghai also open from 9 a.m.-5/6 p.m.A.YB.NC.NG正确答案:A解析:详细解答文中Banks follow similar hours表示银行工作时间类似。
Learning SympathyA big part of being human is feeling sympathy, / but how early on in our lives do we learn this? / Scientists find that babies respond to other people / by crying when other babies cry. / However, babies can’t distinguish between themselves and others / until they’re eighteen to twenty months old. / Toddlers start to show concern for others around this time. / Kids also begin to do things like comforting other people. / And by the time they’re three, / most children will try to protect a victim in a fight.SECTION A TALK1. a physical classroom2. a coherent concept3. personalized curriculum4. (more) meaningful practice5.feedback6.collaborating7. question and answer8. fundamental human right9. lifelong learning10. innovationSECTION B CONVERSATIONS1.What’s wrong with the man’s computer?答案:A. It has wiped the data from the flash drive.2.How will the man be compensated if the computer can’t be fixed?答案:C. Get a new computer.3.How did the man feel about the woman’s offer of compensation?答案:D. Dissatisfied.4.When will the service engineer come to fix the computer?答案:B. After 8:30 tomorrow morning.5.What is the man’s phone number?答案:A. 6574-3205.6.What should we do if our neighbors didn’t reach out?答案:B. Introduce ourselves first.7.Which is the best way to handle a noisy neighbor?答案:C. Give him a reason to stop.8.What should we do if we have a nosy neighbor?答案:D. Don’t answer their questions.9.How long do we expect our neighbors to stay?答案:B. Five to ten minutes.10.Where can we get more information on this topic?答案:D. CBS news website.11. B. Whatever12. A. on which13. C. women drivers14. B. present event for tentativeness15. D. make a suggestion16. B. disappointment17. D. would later make18. C. to have been created19. A. would have been...had been20. C. that21. B. characters22. D. ensure23. B. relieve24. A. releases25. C. indicative26. B. eye27. A. critically28. C. on29. D. bound30. A. invariably31.[F]implications32.[N]single33.[B]barely34.[L]online35.[C]demise36.[M]rising37.[I]naturally38.[G]leaf39.[H]lost40.[J]objectSECTION A MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTIONSPASSAGE ONE41. In Para. 4, the phrase “hit the jackpot” means according to the context.答案:B. found the treasure42. It can be concluded from Paras. 5 and 6 that .答案:D. people hold entirely different views on the issue43. How did the author feel about the treasure from the Atocha (Para. 7)?答案:A. She was glad that people can have a chance to see the treasure.PASSAGE TWO44. It can be learned from the beginning that Miriam’s attitude towards love between her and Paul is .答案:C. pessimistic45. The narration in Para.3 tells us that Miriam had all the following feelings EXCEPT .答案:A. delight46. Which of the following statements is CORRECT about the family’s response to Paul’s mockery?答案:B. Every member except Miriam was amused.PASSAGE THREE47. Why does the author give two examples in Para. 2?答案:A. To show that literacy is interpreted in different ways.48. According to the author, the following are some of the defining features of literacy EXCEPT .答案:D. independent49. Which of the following statements about reading and writing is CORRECT?答案:C. Reading often requires more immediate interaction than writing.50.What do the last two paragraphs mainly focus on (Paras. 10 and 11)?答案:B. Effects of illiteracy and associated problems.SECTION B SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONS阐明:简答题答案不唯一,意思对即可。
大学英语四级考试综合分类模拟试卷Part ⅠWritingDirections: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a campaign speech in support of your election to the post of chairman of the student union. You should write at least 120 words following the outline given below in Chinese:1、你认为自己具备了什么条件(能力、性格、爱好)可以胜任学生会主席的工作,(2) 如果当选,你将为本校同学做些什么。
Part ⅡClozeDirections: There are 20 blanks in the following passage. For each blank there are four choices markedA.,B.,C. andD. on the right side of the paper. You should choose the ONE that best fits into the passage. Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre.Street food is food that is prepared, sold and eaten on city streets. Street food is an important part of the 2 of people in developing countries. An 3 2,500 million people worldwide eat street food. This kind of food is 4 in cost, tasty, nutritious and easy to serve, it is designed for the lives of busy people in large cities.But buyers must be careful 5 health risks. Street food sellers in developing countries often 6 the storage, cooking and cooling equipment necessary to 7 the formation of dangerous bacteria. 8 some conditions, a single bacterium can grow into seventeen-million disease-carrying organisms in just eight hours. The lack of clean 9 water and waste removal systems also 10 the risk of infection.The Food and Agriculture Organization is leading an effort to make street food 11 . 12 the past fifteen years, it has helped officials 13 street food in more than twenty cities worldwide. 14 , FAO officials have been working 15 the South African government 16 such a project. The UN agency produced a food safety teaching 17 for public health officials. The guide offers suggestions 18 how to prepare food 19 . A videotape shows 20 producing safe food results in 21 business.2、A. dinners B. diets C. meals D. drinks3、A. investigated B. informed C. estimated D. assumed4、A. low B. high C. good D. poor5、A. for B. about C. on D. of6、A. keep B. prepare C. lack D. need7、A. help B. promote C. stop D. prevent8、A. With B. On C. Under D. For9、A. running B. dripping C. pumping D. flowing10、A. removes B. relieves C. increases D. reduces11、A. poorer B. nicer C. better D. safer12、A. Over B. By C. With D. For13、A. improve B. produce C. reduce D. introduce14、A. Furthermore B. However C. For example D. Consequently15、A. for B. with C. towards D. at16、A. in B. for C. with D. on17、A. guide B. book C. guidance D. paper18、A. to B. on C. of D. with19、A. fast B. deliciously C. safely D. carefully20、A. how B. what C. when D. why21、A. improved B. decreased C. developed D. increasedPart ⅢTranslationDirections: Complete the sentences on Answer Sheet 2 by translating into English the Chinese given in brackets.22、The substance does not dissolve in water ______ (不管是否加热)。
9月26日 TEM4测试参考答案Dictation:Town and Country Life in EnglandThere is a big difference between town life and country life in England. In the country, everybody knows everybody else. They know what time you get up, what time you go to bed and what you have for dinner. If you want to help, you will always get it and you will be glad to help others.In a large town like London, however, it can sometimes happen that you have never seen your next door neighbor and you do not know his name or anything about him. People in London are often very lonely. This is because people go to different places in the evenings and at weekends. If you walk through the streets in the centre of London on Sunday, it is like a town without people. One is sorry for old people living on their own. They could die in their homes and would not be discovered for weeks or even months.SECTION A CONVERSATIONSIn this section you will hear several conversations. Listen to the conversations carefully and then answer the questions that follow.Questions 1 to 3 are based on the.following conversation. At the end of the conversation, youwill be given 15 seconds to answer the questions. Now listen to the conversation.M :Is that Anne suor?W: Yes,speaking .M: Hello,it’s Eric f rom London .W: Hello, Eric, how can I help you .M: I’m fixing up our next project team meeting,and I just want to check some possible dates with you.W: Fine, let me just get my dairy . Ok, which dates are you looking at ?M: I’ve spoken to the others ,a nd they prefer either the third week of May ,or the second week of JuneW: Yes,both of the weeks are pretty clear at the moment except for the eleven of the June .M; Right, I’ve got that.W: So , where is the meeting taking place this time .M: It’s going to be in London ,but I spoke to Caros in Mexico city ,and he suggested Chicago ,he thinks it's would be more convenient for mosr of the team .W: He is probably right, It was certainly be much easier for me ae well ,because I can fly from Toronto ,and I’a m sure you could find the meeting room some where near the airport.M: That’s a good idea . I will check up some hotels in that area ,and get back to you towords the end of the week .W: Fine, but I'm not in the office on Friday .M; Ok ,I’ll call you late r in the afternoon on Thursday .W: No problem ,bye .Questions 4 to 6 are based on the following conversation. At the end of the conversation, you will be given 15 seconds to answer the questions. Now, listen to the conversation.M: We’ll having a deba te on advertising Thursday evening ,and I have to take part .W: That’s interesting ,I should like to hear what people think about advertising.M: What they are to say ? We must have advertising ,must n’t we?W: Why?M: Well,we would not know what their wa s to buy if we didn’t have advertisements.W: Yes ,that’s true. Up to a point ,advertisements provid infotmation that we need .If someone has produce the new article ,naturaly,the sellers once to tell us about it .M: Yes,and advertisements tell us which product is the best.W: Do they ? I don’t think so .Every manufacturer says that his product is the best ,or least tryes to give the impression only one can be the best ,so the others are misleading on they.M: Well , in a way, I suppose .But we don’t have to believe them ,do we ?W: Are you saying that advertisements all ineffective ? I don’t think the intelligent businessman will spend millions of dollars on advertising if no body believe the advertisement, do you?M: Perhaps not ,but after all ,it’s their money that they are spending .W: Is it? I think not, the cost of advertising is add to the prise of article . You and I ,and all the orther people who buy the article pay for the advertising .M: Well , I suppose ,we got something for our money ,some informationW: Yes ,but don't forget it often misleading information and sometimes harmful .M: Harmful?W: What about advertisement design to persuade young people to smokecigarets ,wouldn’t you say them harmful?M: You give me a lot to think about . I'm quite looking forward to the debate ,now.Questions 7 to 10 are based on the following conversation. At the end of the conversation,you will be given 20 seconds to answer the questions. Now, listen to the conversation. W: So, Mr.Brown ,this is your bed , and that you can see there are three other beds in the ward, have you got everything you need ?M: Yes ,nurse , I think so . I follow the hospital’s advise that I only brought a few blongings with me .W: Good , you can see the reasons why we ask you to do that ,the cupboard is really very small .M: Yes , nurse , can you tell me what the visiting hours are ?W: Yes ,of course ,there are in afternoon from 2:30 to 4:30 ,and in the evening from 7to 8. But remember that only two people can see you at the same time .M: I see ,what other rules are there ?W: Yes ,we start pretty early , we wake you at 6:00,and the breakfast is 8:00,lunch is at noon ,there is tea at 3:30 and supper at 6:00.M; Oh ,that’s very different from what I have been used , you’d better t ell me the rest of the rules here.W: Yes ,well.you can see the no smoking sign ,we don’t allow smoking in the wards, and the same goes for alcohol . However,if you do need to smoke , there are special lounges . M: Oh , I don’t smoke ,so it does’t affect t o me.W: Good .SECTION B PASSAGESIn this section, you will hear several passages. Listen to the passages carefully andthenanswer the questions that follow.Questions 11 to 13 are based on the following passage. At the end of the passage, you will be given 15 seconds to answer the questions. Now, listen to the passage.In my opinion ,the most important thing when choosing a hotel for an internetional conference is the meeting room or rooms .For example ,you may need a large room where everyone can be together for keynote speeches and presentations ,and smaller meeting rooms for informal group discussions .Then ,if people are coming from different counties ,you need to find out about rooms for them to stay in ,they should be spacious and comfortable and have facilities for using e-mail and blacktops as people have to keep in touch with their offices or headquarters ,even when in their way .My next point is facilities for hotel guests ,thinks like a bar .A good quality resterant perforberly offering local food and fitness and sports centres .There are important because the delegates need to be able to relax after a long day of meetings and get to know each other in informal situations .Finally , for an international conference where delegates are coming from different counties , it can be very useful to choose a hotel that has good transport connections with the nearest airport and all places of interest ,this can save everybody a lot of time.Questions 14 to 17 are based on the following passage. At the end of the passage, you will be given 20 seconds to answer the questions. Now, listen to the passage.Good morning ,ladies and gentleman ,it was a great pleasure that I recommand of you to the new museum of industrial and royal life , the museum provid us with the unique historical record of industrial and agricultural life in the area .Here ,you’ll find a wonderful collection of industrial and agricultural exhibits . Some of them date back two hundreds years which reflect the history of our area over the last two centuries .Until resently ,the area was mainly agriculture and role industries and traditional were all associated with agriculture the museum is collections bring this heritage back to life with fast leading bland of working and static to splace .From early times ,those communications with the rest of country have led to industrial prosperity for the area .One example of such communications was the Romanroad ,portmistreet which passed nearby .Later can else came to bright new prosperity and then the railways .Good transport systems encourage local industries ,especially those related to agriculture,and the museum has collections of significants from many of these .Local people too,have changd history ,and museum were introduce you to these and other local solabties ,the displays with all item locally collected show where local life used to be like many displays these local items are incontext and show ,for example, painters and public workshops . Whatever you interests ,we hope museum have something for you .Questions 18 to 20 are based on the following passage. At the end of the passage, you will be given 15 seconds to answer the questions. Now, listen to the passage.Good afternoon ,everybody ,thank you very much for inviting me here to talk about safty in dormitory and personal security .First ,a few points to bear in mind ,you noticed the doors of your dorm has two types of locks ,A yell lock and a trap lock .Make sure you double lock your door ,not just one lock ,both of them however long you going out for .Make sure when you go out all the windows are closed .Those of you in the ground and first floor rooms would noticed that you locking windows make sure you use them , lock them everytime you go out . Lockthem at night. If you've got expensive equipment in you room ,first of all ,insured. So many people lose things and have’t got insurance ,make sure you insured .This brings me onto personal security .Whenever possible ,avoid walking alone late at night ,especially girl students ,aviod dark street ,and try to stick in the well –lit .Whereverpossible .Also ,if you know you are going to out late ,make sure you’ve got enough money for a taxi to get home again ,or arrange to stay with friends for the night .It may sound of absurd ,b ut don’t forgot the university actually offerse free self-defenseclasses .I hope it is something that you never have to use ,but ,it’s certainly was going to alone toa few self-defense setionsSECTION C NEWS BROADCASTIn this section, you will hear several news items. Listen to them carefully and then answer the questions that follow.Questions 21 and 22 are based on the following news. At the end of the news item, you will be given 10 seconds to answer the questions. Now. listen to the news.The new year celebration in Thailand were shuted by violence when nine bombs exploded across ben crowd around veitnam ,three Thai citizens were killed and more than 30 injured .No terriorist group claim responsibility for the bombings by Tuesday .Some believe the explosions were work of muslims securities .Bombings and shootings occurred almost daily in Thailand three thousands most probences. Yala ,Nratwat and Pertani have a dominant muslim population and have long complain the neglect and descrimination in the largely buddhist nation they have asked for independence and cebrate his long mistakes .Since 2004.The insurgence have carried out numerous attacts in the South and more than 3900 people have been killed. The Thai government has been unable to curbed violence ,though thousands of troops have been send to the Sorth.Questions 23 and 24 are based on the following news. At the end of the news item, you will be given 10 seconds to answer the questions. Now, listen to the news.U.S. president George W Bush was lay out his new policy for Iraq Wednesday night in the TV speech. However ,some details of the policy have been linkes to themedia .National oil law .A day is to be announced fot the release of the national oil law in Iraq .The law could give the Iraqi central government the power to distribute current and future oil revenues to provinces and regions based on the population sizes.The achievement of fare distribute of oil revenues is saying as a corner stone of Iraq security .More troops .The U.S. now has 132.000 troops in Iraq ,the numberof temporarily be increasingly by 20000 .A renewed construction package costes up to one billion U.S.dollars . It’s also to be announced the money is to help create jpbs and boost Iraqi economy . Young Iraqis are to be encouraged to partispate in the country reconstuction by clearing the streets and repairing school .Questions 25 and 26 are based on the following news. At the end of the news item, you will be given 10 seconds to answer the questions. Now, listen to the news.A joint committee will soon seek future coorporation between Egypt and Spain in industry ,trade , investment and science technology .Eygption economic source says the two sides will discuss the possibility of seting up a joint business council when the Egpt and Spain higher committee meet in the first half September in magipt Spain .The business council design to balancing by natural trade by expending trade volume.Question 27 is based on the following news. At the end of the news item, you will be given 5seconds to answer the question. Now, listen to the news.Janpanese teenage women have grow increasingly violent in the last 20 years .A crimenist said yesterday .The racial of women in their teens inflecting boldly injury has risen to more than 20 per 100000 of the total Janpanese population more than 7 times the level 20 years ago ,said Jin suki Kagiyama ,a professor at the Tokyo institute of technology .Janpanese males have shifted increaingly to aggression previously linked with women such as bulling others by schooling them from conversition ,he said .Question 28 is based on the following news. At the end of the news item, you will be given 5seconds to answer the question. Now, listen to the news.Despit reports of intimidation ,some zimbabweans sworms to poll stations on the final day of voting in the most competitive palamentary election in the zimbabweans history . On the first day of voting ,lines of hundreds of voter sneaked around some of countries 4000 polling stations . A total of 120 seats will being condusted and Mugabe appoints another 13 lawmakers giving him a party abilton advantage.Questions 29 and 30 are based on the following news. At the end of the news item, you will be given 10 seconds to answer the questions. Now, listen to the news.About 40,000 indian telecom workers called off their work to rule yesterday ,after reaching an agreement with the government ,officials and union leaders said ,the employees of the department of telecommunication servces launch their action on Friday .In protest against plans to convery department into a company, and the recent pointment of none technical offical as a department head .Banks ,major companies and long distance customers were hit by the work to rule ,which in whole obey main new regulations only so as to slow down the work flow.1-30ADADB DACCA DBBCA DBDBA DACBA DCBBD听力详解见/view/717eb668a98271fe910ef971.html31-45CABDB CACDA CBDCD46-70ACBDA CDBCA BDCAD CABDB CDBAB71-85BDBCD BCADD DACBBText A71. 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大学英语专业四级考试模拟试卷PART ⅠDICTATION1、Listen to the following passage. Altogether the passage will be read to you four times. During the first reading, which will be done at normal speed, listen and try to understand the meaning. For the second and third readings, the passage will be read sentence by sentence, or phrase by phrase, with intervals of 15 seconds. The last reading will be done at normal speed again and during this time you should check your work. You will then be given 2 minutes to check through your work once more.TouchingTactile communication is the use of touch in communication.PART ⅡLISTENING COMPREHENSIONSECTION A TALKIn this section you will hear a talk. You will hear the talk ONCE ONLY. While listening, you may look at the task on ANSWER SHEET ONE and write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each gap. Make sure what you fill in is both grammatically and semantically acceptable. You may use the blank sheet for note-taking.Car Safety1. The focal point of the project: Road Ragee.g. A man hit the driver who had 2 him earlier2. Findings of the survey93% experienced road rage, including 3 had their cars damaged and 79% were being shouted at15% been hit—police only dealt physical violence3. 4 adopted to ensure safetyget key ready before 5 the carleave room for 6lock doors all the time4. Self-protection skills when rage happenspolice interference:—Maryland: hefty 7 as the front line—California: an automated system to 8 the license plateseffective approach: apology—If the driver 9 , the road rager would drop the matter.—If the careless drivers looked 10 , the road rager would teach them a lesson.how to make an apology in the car: a "SORRY" sign—The potential 11 smile when drivers raise a "SORRY" sign to them.SECTION B CONVERSATIONSIn this section you will hear two conversations. At the end of each conversation, five questions will be asked about what was said. Both the conversations and the questions will be spoken ONCE ONLY. After each question there will be a ten-second pause. During the pause, you should read the four choicesof A, B, C and D, and mark the best answer to each question on ANSWER SHEET TWO.You have THIRTY seconds to preview the choices.Now, listen to the conversations.CONVERSATION ONE12、A. The mechanical operation of the body. B. The absence of disease or illness.C. Physical, mental and social well-being.D. Clean water, improved sanitation and housing.13、A. In the late 1940s. B. In the 1970s. C. In the late 1980s. D. In the 1990s.14、 A. Supportive. B. Prejudiced. C. Negative. D. Confused.15、A. In 1980. B. In 1986. C. In 1990. D. In 1996.16、A. Education. B. Sustainable resources.C. Insurance.D. Social justice and equity.CONVERSATION TWO17、A. On the phone. B. In the street.C. In the man's office.D. In the woman's office.18、A. They didn't arrive on time.B. They were all moldy and eaten by bugs.C. 50% of the moldy mushrooms were eaten by bugs.D. Some were half-eaten by bugs and 20% were moldy.19、A. It was not authoritative and the survey result is obscure.B. The mushrooms were not completely moldy before packing.C. The external conditions of goods at the time of survey were all good.D. The mushrooms were not up to the standard for export.20、A. A random selection of 20% of the mushrooms.B. A thorough check of all the mushrooms.C. Full compensation for any loss.D. Free freight.21、A. The man's company. B. The woman's company.C. The insurance company.D. The underwriter.PART ⅢLANGUAGE USAGEThere are twenty sentences in this section. Beneath each sentence there are four options marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that best completes the sentence or answers the question.22、Which of the italicized parts expresses a future tense? ______A. My friend teaches Chemistry in a school.B. I'll give it to you after I return.C. What is the matter with you?D. London stands on the River Thames.23、China, as a developing country, should speed up her ______ developmentand improve the people's life level.A. economicalB. economyC. economicD. economics24、Grandfather had sustained a broken back while working in the mines. ______, he spent the rest of his life in a wheelchair.A. ConsequentlyB. LogicallyC. VariablyD. Doubtfully25、Which of the following sentences is grammatically INCORRECT?A. Ten dollars is not a large sum of money.B. Statistics are a branch of mathematics.C. All the sheep were grazing on the hillside.D. Measles is an infectious disease.26、Everybody understands that the possibility always exists that the world champion may cheat in the game. The italicized part functions as a (n) ______ in the sentence.A. appositive(同位语)B. objectC. adverbialD. complement27、If the building project ______ by the end of this month is delayed, the construction company will be fined.A. to be completedB. is completedC. being completedD. completed28、The employers prepared, with all due ______, for a conference with the Trade Unions.A. cautionB. concernC. certaintyD. consideration29、Many of them are ______ of the original settlers.A. descendantsB. forefathersC. ancestorsD. masters30、Which of the following italicized parts is used as an object? ______A. He wants to tell us when he will leave.B. It has been decided when, the meeting will be held.C. What I want to know is when you can finish the experiment.D. I have no idea when she will be back.31、"I don't have any money with me. Do you?" he asked.He said ______.A. he didn't have any money with him and asked me if I hadB. he doesn't have any money with him and I doC. he didn't have any money with and asked me if I doD. he didn't have money and asked me32、There is no ______ in the world for her children.A. love greater than a motherB. love greater than that of a motherC. love greater as a motherD. great love as that of a mother33、Professor Smith and Professor Brown will ______ in presenting the series of lectures on American literature.A. alterB. alternateC. substituteD. exchange34、The boy has admitted to ______ the window while playing football yesterday.A. breakingB. having been brokenC. breakD. be breaking35、When she arrived at the office, Mr. Smith______, so they had only time for a few words.A.had gone away B.was just going awayC.just went away D.has just gone away36、A huge amount of environmental damage has been brought ______ by the destruction of the rainforests.A. aboutB. backC. upD. forward37、Jack ______ out very early, for he had not shown up at breakfast.A. could have goneB. must have goneC. ought to have goneD. should have gone38、Which of the italicized parts indicates CONDITION AND RESULT?A. Just take a look at that fellow and you'll get sick.B. He has a somewhat swelled head, and I don't like this.C. You can draw a horse in five minute, and you kept me waiting for an hour.D. She has lent us one of her new books, and the latest one in her collection.39、Paper produced every year is four times ______ the weight of the world's production of vehicles.A. /B. that ofC. whichD. of40、Man's never-stopping ______ for knowledge continues to widen our understanding of the earth's atmosphere.A. requestB. questC. investigationD. research41、A hibernating animal needs hardly any food all through the winter, ______?A. need itB. needn't itC. does itD. doesn't itPART ⅣCLOZEDecide which of the words given in the box below would best complete the passage if inserted in the corresponding blank. The words can be used ONCE ONLY. Mark the letter for each word on ANSWER SHEET TWO.A. forB. onC. stressD. profitsE. madeF. connectionG. takeH. indicatingI. benefitsJ. sufficientK. efficient L. habits M. as N. improved O. emphasizing In the recent past, medical research have shown that heart disease is associated with certain factors in our day-to-day lives: with stress, with smoking, with poor nutrition, and with a lack of exercise.Doctors and other health experts have been 42 the fact that we can often reduce the risk of heart disease by paying more attention to these factors.More and more people are realizing that there is a 43 between heart disease and the way they live. As a result of this new awareness, attitudes towards health are changing. In the past, people tend to think that it was 44 for good health to have a good doctor who could be relied on to know exactly what to dowhen they become ill. Now they are realizing that merely receiving the best treatment 45 illness and injury is not enough. They are learning that they must 46 more responsibility for their own health.Today many people are changing their dietary 47 and eating food with less fat and cholesterol. Many are paying more attention to reducing 48 in their lives. The number of smokers in the US is now far below the level of a lot of years ago 49 many people succeed in breaking the habit and as fewer people take it up.More and more are aware of the 50 of regular exercise like walking, running or swimming, some have begun to walk or ride bicycles to work instead of driving. Millions have become members of health clubs and have 51 health club one of the fastest growing businesses in the US today.And now the beneficial effects of these changing attitudes and behaviors are beginning to appear: an encouraging decrease in deaths from heart disease.PART ⅤREADING COMPREHENSIONSECTION A MULTIPLE-CHOICE QUESTIONSIn this section there are several passages followed by ten multiple-choice questions. For each question, there are four suggested answers marked A, B, C and D. Choose the one that you think is the best answer and mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET TWO.PASSAGE ONE"There is very little in my life that is more personal and more important to me than comets." The amateur astronomer David H. Levy told Terence Dickinson in an interview. "Not just discovering them but watching them, learning about them, writing about them, understanding what they do. It makes observing the sky intensely personal. I feel when I find a new comet that a door has been opened and I have seen a slightly new aspect of nature. There is this object in the solar system that —for a few minutes or a few hours—only I know about. It is like trying to pry a secret out of nature. It is a very special feeling."Ever since he was a child, David Levy has been fascinated by the night sky and the wonders it reveals to devoted watchman. He developed a special feeling for comets before he reached his teens, though it was not until 1984—after nineteen years and more than nine hundred hours of combing the sky in search of them—that he discovered his first one, from a small observatory that he had built in his backyard.Since then, he has discovered or co-discovered twenty more, making him one of the world's most important comet hunters. His most celebrated find is periodic comet Shoemaker Levy 9, which he made with the husband-and-wife comet and asteroid hunting team Eugene and Carolyn Shoemaker. The comet's dramatic collision with Jupiter in July 1994, which constituted "the greatest planetary show in recorded history", to quote Malcolm W. Browne of the New York Times, captivated not only professional astronomers, but many amateurs. Although he is "only" an amateur astronomer, he earns his living by lecturing and writing books and by working with project artists. They're projects devoted to introducing astronomy toelementary school children. He has won tremendous respect from his professional colleagues for his success in tracking comets. "David Levy is one of those rare individuals blessed with the gift of discovery," David Hartsel, who serves on the board of directors of the Richland Astronomical Society, in Ohio, has said. "Even rarer is his ability to let others share in the excitement and wonder of those discoveries through his writing and lectures."PASSAGE TWOBeing a man has always been dangerous. There are about 105 males born for every 100 females, but this ratio drops to near balance at the age of maturity, and among 70-year-olds there are twice as many women as men. But the great universal of male mortality is being changed. Now, boy babies survive almost as well as girls do. This means that, for the first time, there will be an excess of boys in those crucial years when they are searching for a mate. More important, another chance for natural selection has been removed. Fifty years ago, the chance of a baby (particularly a boy baby) surviving depended on its weight. A kilogram too light or too heavy meant almost certain death. Today it makes almost no difference. Since much of the variation is due to genes, one more agent of evolution has gone.There is another way to commit evolutionary suicide: stay alive, but have fewer children. Few people are as fertile as in the past. Except in some religious communities, very few women have 15 children. Nowadays the number of births, like the age of death, has become average. Most of us have roughly the same number of offspring. Again, differences between people and the opportunity for natural selection to take advantage of it have diminished. India shows what is happening. The country offers wealth for a few in the great cities and poverty for the remaining tribal peoples. The grand mediocrity of today—everyone being the same in survival and number of offspring—means that natural selection has lost 80 percent of its power in upper-middle-class India compared to the tribes.For us, this means that evolution is over; the biological Utopia has arrived. Strangely, it has involved little physical change. No other species fills so many places in nature. But in the past 100,000 years—even the past 100 years—our lives have been transformed but our bodies have not. We did not evolve, because machines and society did it for us. Darwin had a phrase to describe those ignorant of evolution: They "look at an organic being as a savage looks at a ship, as at something wholly beyond his comprehension". No doubt we will remember a 20th century way of life beyond comprehension for its ugliness. But however amazed our descendants may be at how far from Utopia we were, they will look just like us.PASSAGE THREEBy far the most common difficulty in study is simple failure to get down to regular concentrated work. This difficulty is much greater for those who do not work for a plan and have no regular routine of study. Many students muddle along, doing a bit of this subject or that, as the mood takes them, or letting their set work pile up until the last possible moment.Few students work to a set timetable. They say that if they did construct a timetable for themselves they would not keep to it, or would have to alter itconstantly, since they can never predict from one day to the next what their activities will be.No doubt some temperaments take much more kindly to a regular routine than others. There are many who shy away from the self-regimentation of a weekly timetable, and dislike being tied down to a definite program of work. Many able students claim that they work in cycles. When they become interested in a topic they work on it intensively for three or four days at a time. On other days, they avoid work completely. It has to be confessed that we do not fully understand the complexities of the motivation to work. Most people over 25 years of age have become conditioned to a work routine, and the majority of really productive workers set aside regular hours for the more important aspects of their work. The "tough-minded" school of workers is usually very contemptuous of the idea that good work can only be done spontaneously, under the influence of inspiration.Those who believe that they need only work and study as the fit takes them have a mistaken belief either in their own talent or in the value of "freedom". Freedom from restraint and discipline leads to unhappiness rather than to "self-expression" or "personality development". Our society insists on regular habits, time keeping and punctuality, and whether we like it or not, if we mean to make our way in society we have to comply with its demands.PASSAGE FOUREven just a degree or two of greenhouse warming will have a dramatic impact on water resources across western North America. Teams who have modeled the climate in the area are warning of greatly reduced snow packs and more intense flooding as temperatures inch up during the 21st century.It's the first time that global climate modelers have worked so closely with teams running detailed regional models of snowfall, rain and stream flows to predict exactly what warming will do to the area. The researchers, from the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado, and elsewhere, were surprised by the size of the effect generated by only a small rise in temperature.Assuming business as usual emissions, greenhouse gases will warm the west coast of North America by just one or two degrees Celsius over the next century, and average precipitation won't change much. But in the model, warmer winters raised the snowline, drastically reducing the crucial mountain snow pack, the researchers told the American Geophysical Union in San Francisco. "We realized that huge areas of the snow pack in the Sierra went down to 15 percent of today's values," says Michael Dettinger, a research hydrologist at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, California. That caught everyone's attention.The researchers also predict that by the middle of the century, melting snow will cause streams to reach their annual peak flow up to a month earlier. And with warm rains melting snow or drenching already saturated ground, the risk of extreme floods will rise dramatically. We have to believe in these very warm, very wet storms, says Andrew Wood, a water resources modeler at the University of Washington, Seattle."Since dams can't be filled until the risk of flooding is past, the models predictthey will trap just 70 to 85 percent as much run-off as they do now. This is a particular problem for California, where agriculture, industry, a burgeoning population and environmental needs already clash over limited water supplies. We are taking this extremely seriously," says Jonas Minton, deputy director of the California Department of Water Resources.And observations certainly back up the models. Minton points out that an increasing percentage of California's precipitation over recent decades is falling as rain rather than snow. And Iris Stewart, a climate researcher at the University of California, San Diego, has found that in the last 50 years, run-off peaks in the western US and Canada have been happening earlier and earlier. The cause seems to be a region-wide trend towards warmer winters and springs.Dettinger has little doubt that the models point to a real and immediate problem. "It's upon us," he says, "and it's not clear what the fix is."52、The primary purpose of this passage is to ______.(PASSAGE ONE)A. praise Levy for his contribution to the observation of cometsB. show that an amateur can do things as well as a professionalC. introduce David Levy as an astronomer and his professionD. demonstrate that strong interest can help a person succeed in his life53、All of the following are suggested in this passage as reasons for Levy's success EXCEPT that ______.(PASSAGE ONE)A. he had books and articles published on astronomyB. he worked on projects intended to introduce astronomyC. he was endowed with the gift of the discovery of cometsD. he was highly praised by his colleagues for his unselfishness54、David Hartsel most appreciates Levy's ______.(PASSAGE ONE)A. gifted ability of comet huntingB. way of expressing himselfC. curiosity to the sky and cometsD. spirit of devotion to astronomy55、What does the example of India illustrate?(PASSAGE TWO)A. Wealthy people tend to have fewer children than poor people.B. Natural selection hardly works among the rich and the poor.C. The middle class population is 80 percent smaller than that of the tribes.D. India is one of the countries with a very high birth rate.56、The author argues that our bodies have stopped evolving because ______.(PASSAGE TWO)A. life has been improved by technological advanceB. the number of female babies has been decliningC. our species has reached the highest stage of evolutionD. the difference between wealth and poverty is disappearing57、Which of the following would be the best title for the passage?(PASSAGE TWO)A. Sex Ratio Changes in Human EvolutionB. Ways of Continuing Man's EvolutionC. The Evolutionary Future of NatureD. Human Evolution Going Nowhere58、The following are reasons to explain why many students do not work to a fixed schedule EXCEPT that ______.(PASSAGE THREE)A. they cannot keep to a timetableB. they can never foresee what their activities will beC. they are not competent to construct a timetableD. they will change their timetable frequently59、Which of the following statements is true according to Paragraph 3 of the passage?(PASSAGE THREE)A. The motivation to work is too complex to be fully understood.B. Few productive workers set aside fixed hours for important work.C. Temperaments do not influence workers' keeping to a routine.D. Many capable students avoid working in cycles when studying various topics.60、Researchers predict all of the following EXCEPT that ______.(PASSAGE FOUR)A. a small rise in temperature will procure disasterB. greenhouse gases will warm the west coast of North America by one or two degreesC. melting snow will give rise to streams and make them reach their annual peak earlierD. dams will trap just 70 to 85 percent as much run-off as they do now61、What kind of phenomenon caught everyone's attention?(PASSAGE FOUR)A. Average precipitation.B. Greenhouse gases.C. Decreasing snow pack in Sierra.D. The increase of the snowline.62、SECTION B SHORT ANSWER QUESTIONSIn this section there are five short answer questions based on the passages in SECTION A. Answer the questions with NO MORE THAN TEN words in the space provided on ANSWER SHEET TWO.According to the passage, when did Levy achieve his fame?(PASSAGE ONE)63、What used to be the danger of being a man according to the first paragraph?(PASSAGE TWO)64、What is the author's opinion on freedom without discipline?(PASSAGE THREE)65、What is the meaning of the word "burgeoning" in the fifth paragraph?(PASSAGE FOUR)66、What does the passage mainly tell us?(PASSAGE FOUR)PART ⅥWRITING67、Read carefully the following excerpt, and then write your response in NO LESS THAN 200 words, in which you should:●summarize the main message of the excerpt, and then●comment on whether science and art education should be divided in high schoolYou should support yourself with information from the excerpt.Marks will be awarded for content relevance, content sufficiency, organizationand language quality. Failure to follow the above instructions may result in a loss of marks.Separating no science and arts educationSince 2009, with the issue of the China's Medium and Long Term Education Reform and Development, there ushered in the heated discussion of "the necessity and the feasibility to abolish science and art division in high school".It heralded 2015-2016's Gaokao Reform in many provinces to drop the previous rigorous division of science and art like Shanxi, Changsha, Tianjing, Fujian... etc.The main reasons are as follows:The NPC Standing Committee member Zhu Yongxin said in an interview with Southern Weekend, "the severe of science and art does conspicuous damage to students' intelligence and knowledge." He also said that the previous education strategy stifled the potential of students by restricting them too early in science or art and they should be given choices until maturity.The headmaster of Guangxi TVU He Zubing, "there is definitive categorization in knowledge like science and art but life has no such categorization."According to a poll done by Southern Weekend, there is a pervasive prejudice of art education. The students in science are endeared while those in art are often snuffed at in everyday society.It is early for students to receive art-science separate education; students should learn art or science separately in college but not high school.答案:PART ⅠDICTATION1、[听力原文]TouchingTactile communication is the use of touch in communication./ Touch may be viewed as the most extreme form of invasion of personal space./ Nonetheless, touch is essential to our growth and development./ An insufficient amount of touching can result in health disorders such as allergies, speech problems and problems with symbolic recognition./ Researches have found that untouched babies and small children grow increasingly ill./Touch is one of the most powerful ways we have of communicating with others./ The pleasure touch causes originates in infancy./ For most people, touching is positive and enjoyable./ People who are comfortable with touch tend to be satisfied with themselves, their lives and their childhoods./ They are self-confident, assertive, display a socially acceptable self-presentation, and active rather than passive ways of dealing with problems./In most cultures, touch is associated with positive attitudes./ It is one of the clearest indications that we like and accept others and they like and accept us.PART ⅡLISTENING COMPREHENSIONSECTION A TALK2、overtaken/surpassed[听力原文]Car SafetyWell, good afternoon. In today's session I will be sharing some of the findings of my project from last term. I had been interested and horrified by several newspaper reports on what people call "road rage". For example the famous incident of a man getting out of his car in a car park and hitting the driver of a van who had overtaken him earlier. So I decided to make this the focus of the project.For our research we depended mainly on talking to individuals, asking them questions rather than using written questionnaires. Well, we found 93% of respondents had had some kind of problem. A surprisingly large percentage—24% had their car damaged in some way, but the main type of incident was being shouted at—79% had experienced that. The police tended only to be informed when there was physical violence involved.So what strategies had people developed to ensure their own safety? We found that both sexes made the point that it's much safer to get keys out well in advance as you go towards your car. Men were very aware that muggers or whatever might be concealed behind the car. They also made the point that you should leave plenty of room when you park your car so you can make a quick getaway if you need to. Finally, locking doors at all times.Besides self-protection skills, when road rage does happen at the very moment, something needs to be done. Maryland, like many other states, is working on the problem by stepping up efforts to crack down on aggressive drivers. Hefty fines for dangerous drivers and speeders are on the front line against road rage. California is approaching the problem with technology. A new automated system being installed by the state automatically takes photographs of the license plates of vehicles that run red lights. It even captures accident scenes for police review. A key factor in reversing the process is an apology. A road rager can become upset because you accidentally cut in front of him or her, or for other reasons that were not intentional. Over 85% of road ragers said that they would drop the matter if the other "careless" driver simply apologized. Instead, road ragers claim, the "careless" driver seems to be unconcerned about what they just did and, therefore, needs to be taught a lesson. In a ear, only one method is effective in conveying an apology: A sign. We have found that it is very effective in warding off anger. In fact, many drivers actually smile when we raise a "SORRY" sign to them after we have accidentally done something wrong. We keep a "SORRY" sign in the map holder on the driver's door and the passenger's door. It could also be kept under the sun visor if it is fastened with a clip or rubber band so that it doesn't hit you in the face when the visor comes down.To sum up, I have described the phenomenon of road rage, explained the findings of the survey, and presented the strategies to ensure safety and self-protection skills. That's it for today.[解析] 细节题。
Model Test 8--Family Holidays[12:00.71]Students in Britain often have the opportunity to travel abroad. [12:05.58]Sometimes they go on a day trip across the Channel in France. [12:10.68]Some have been on longer school journeys,[12:13.83]perhaps to Austria in the summer or skiing in Italy in the winter. [12:19.50]People used to spend their summer holidays at British resorts [12:23.85]but nowadays more families prefer to go abroad.[12:28.22]A camping holiday is often the cheapest[12:30.86]and easiest kind of holiday[12:32.91]for a family with children[12:35.24]and many Britons choose this.[12:38.54]The hotels and travel agents in many resorts abroad[12:42.71]keep themselves busy in the winter[12:45.20]by offering cheaper package holidays,[12:48.17]which include a flight and staying in a hotel.[12:52.12]Some offer a specially reduced holiday passage[12:55.87]for the elderly people.[12:58.25]It is said that it costs the same amount[13:00.86]to go to Spain for the month of February[13:03.67]as it does to stay in Britain.1CDCBD 6ADBCD 11CBDDA16DCBDA21DBDCD 26CDCBD]PART II LISTENING COMPREHENSION[15:33.40]SECTION A CONVERSA TIONS[15:47.21]Questions 1 to 3 are based on the following conversation.[16:01.52]M: Hello, is that Shirley?[16:03.75]W: Y es, who's this? George?[16:06.92]M: That is right.[16:08.12]W: Well, you are up bright and early this morning![16:12.24]M: The early bird catches the worm![16:14.83]W: That's what they say! So what are your plans for today? [16:19.49]M: Well, I thought perhaps we could all go shopping together. [16:24.16]And then we might have lunch together.[16:27.06]W: Wonderful idea. I will try and drag James and Michael along [16:32.55]if they get up in time.[16:34.53]M: What? Are they still not up yet?[16:37.98]W: A wful, isn't it? But they were up till late last night,[16:43.03]playing cards. I'll see if I can get them up in a few minutes. [16:48.09]M: Good luck! What are James' plans for today?[16:52.18]W: I think he's booked his boat trip for this afternoon.[16:56.49]I'll have to check with him, but I think it's around three.[17:02.34]M: Has he got enough time for lunch with us?[17:05.16]W: Oh yes, I think so.[17:08.14]M: Well, then, what time shall we meet?[17:11.13]W: How about eleven?[17:14.25]M: But don't you need to check with James and Michael first? [17:18.70]W: All right, I will call you back to confirm the time and place.[17:39.19]Q uestions 4 to 6 are based on the following conversation.[17:51.88]M: Hey Linda, did you get that letter about the new options [17:56.21]for food service next year?[17:58.94]W: Not yet. Are there a lot of changes?[18:02.37]M: There sure are. Instead of paying one fee[18:06.04]to cover all meals for the whole school year,[18:09.71]we are now able to choose how many meals a week we want. [18:14.20]W: That's a big change Tom.[18:16.88]So what's the deal for those who do eat at school all time? [18:22.63]M: It's better for them too.[18:24.81]Because the more meals you contract, the cheaper each one is. [18:30.10]W: I see.[18:31.56]M: I decided to go with the ten-meal plan.[18:35.23]I never eat breakfast and I often go away on weekends. [18:40.21]So the ten-meal plan gives me lunch and dinner[18:43.72]every weekday at a fairly low price.[18:47.33]W: And what about the weekends when you are on campus? [18:51.87]M: well, there are often guests on campus at weekends. [18:56.52]So they allow you to buy single meals on a walk-in basis [19:00.94]on Saturdays. The price per meal is much higher that way, [19:05.57]but it is still favourable generally.[19:08.47]W: Oh, I guess I'll have to sit down and figure out[19:12.62]my eating pattern so I can get the best deal.[19:32.11]Ques tions 7 to 10 are b ased on the following conversation.[19:44.91]M: Hi, Mary. Do you want to start writing a lab report [19:48.91]after we finish this experiment?[19:51.68]W: I can't. In fact I need to finish early[19:55.60]because I'm going over to the psychology department[19:58.92]to talk to Professor Smith about a job opening.[20:03.47]M: Y ou mean a job on campus?[20:05.89]W: Y eah. And it sounds pretty interesting.[20:09.42]It involves helping with your study on learning style.[20:14.15]M: Y eah. I know that's an area of expertise.[20:18.27]W: Right. Anyway for her study[20:21.35]she's taking some high school students[20:23.67]who aren't doing very well in their classes[20:26.45]and testing them to find out what their learning styles are.[20:30.74]Then tutors, people like me, will work with them[20:34.82]and present materials to them in their particular learning style. [20:39.69]M: Are you getting paid for this?[20:42.02]W: I'm sure we'll get something though, probably not much.[20:47.39]Anyway it doesn't matter to me;[20:50.56]I just want to have some hands-on experience.[20:54.38]M: Y eah. Do you have any idea what the schedule is like?[20:59.42]W: Late afternoon for tutoring. After all,[21:03.30]the kids are in regular classes until three thirty.[21:07.50]M: Actually that's perfect for me.[21:10.67]W: Then come along. We will save the lab report for later.[21:15.61]But we'd better make sure[21:17.08]we do a good job on our experiment first.[21:20.89]M: Y eah. First thing's first.[21:44.80]SECTION B PASSAGES[21:57.38]Quest ions 11 to 13 are based on the following passage.[22:10.89]In our system of education today, examination is a common feature. [22:16.52]Our present education system has often been criticized[22:19.95]as too examination-oriented. However, one must remember that [22:25.89]in offices and other areas of work, examinations still feature clearly. [22:32.54]There is no doubt that the dread and influence of examinations [22:37.21]cause much preparation work. So it therefore appears that[22:41.98]examinations whether considered good or bad would stay for a while. [22:48.27]Examinations are means to test a person on how much he knows [22:52.92]or how much he has learnt from a particular course.[22:57.16]It is designed to make students study.[23:00.93]In our competitive world of today,[23:04.01]examinations have a highly selecting or filtering role.[23:09.11]In Universities, students have to pass annual examinations[23:13.60]before they are allowed to continue, or study harder courses. [23:18.70]Moreover, for entrance into university,[23:22.40]pre-university examination results would provide a guide as to [23:27.19]whether a student has the minimum qualifications necessary. [23:31.95]This is because the number of seats in universities is limited[23:36.18]and only deserving, hard-working students should be given a place. [23:42.34]In offices, whether government or private ones,[23:46.22]examination results show clearly[23:49.08]whether a person is fit for promotion.[23:52.36]The results indicate how much he knows about his work.[24:12.90]Ques tions 14 to 17 are based on the following passage.[24:25.26]In 1907, a young German schoolmaster had an idea.[24:30.89]He decided to turn his little school house into a dormitory[24:35.21]for the summer holidays. Anyone who brought his sleeping bag [24:40.07]and cooking equipment along could stay there[24:43.21]at a very small amount of money. The idea was a success.[24:49.57]A few years later, a dormitory was set up in an old castle nearby. [24:56.75]This was the first Y outh Hostel.[25:00.05]Today, young students and workers of every country[25:04.34]can meet in hostels and get to know each other.[25:07.78]When young people arrived at a hostel,[25:10.84]they have only to show their card of membership[25:14.15]in a hostel organization in their own country.[25:18.85]This card will permit them to use the facilities of hostels[25:23.47]all over the world at a minimum price.[25:27.08]Since the end of World War II,[25:30.04]hostels have been opened in Africa and Asia.[25:34.66]Today, there are thousands of centers[25:37.52]in 62 countries on five continents.[25:42.61]These hostels have facilities for[25:44.78]more than 250,000 young people[25:48.59]who can travel to different parts of[25:50.52]their own country or the world,[25:53.45]without spending a lot of money.[26:16.07]Questions 18 to 20 are based on the following passage.[26:28.37]American visitors to Eastern Asia are often surprised[26:31.92]and puzzled by how Asian cultures and customs[26:35.28]differ from those in the United States.[26:38.63]For example, people from some Eastern Asian countries[26:42.80]may begin a conversation with a stranger[26:45.76]by asking personal questions[26:47.70]about family, home or work.[26:51.12]Such questions are thought to be friendly in these countries, [26:54.79]whereas they might be considered offensive in the United States. [26:59.21]On the other hand, people in most Asian cultures are far more [27:03.95]guarded about expressing their feelings publicly[27:07.38]than most Americans are.[27:10.36]Openly displaying annoyance or anger, yelling, arguing loudly [27:15.56]and so forth are considered ill-mannered in countries such as Japan.[27:21.19]Many Eastern Asians prefer to hold their emotions in check [27:25.25]and instead express themselves with great politeness.[27:29.72]They try not to be blunt and avoid making direct criticisms. [27:35.04]In fact, they often keep their differences of opinion to themselves [27:39.93]and merely smile and remain silent rather than[27:43.10]engage in a confrontation.[27:46.35]By comparison, Americans are often frank about[27:50.02]displaying both positive and negative emotions on the street [27:54.08]and in other public places. Americans visiting Asia[27:59.51]should keep in mind that such behavior may cause offense. [28:04.02]A major difference between Americans culture[28:07.00]and most Asian cultures is that in Asia,[28:10.75]the community is more important than the individual.[28:15.12]Most Americans are considered a success[28:17.74]when they make a name for themselves.[28:35.42]SECTION C NEWS BROADCAST[28:48.14]Questions 21 and 22 are based on the following news.[29:01.34]Scientists say that nighttime flights are much more damaging [29:05.93]to the environment than daytime air travel.[29:10.13]In new research published in journal Nature,[29:13.48]they say vapor trails produced by aircrafts do far more damage [29:17.67]during the night. The reason is condensation water vapor[29:23.02]emitted from hot engine of aircraft condensing into trailing clouds. [29:29.27]Our science reporter M. G. has more.[29:33.34]"The scientists say that in daylight the trails act like mini-clouds. [29:39.13]They are good for the environment because the white color [29:42.64]deflects the Sun's rays and reduce temperature.[29:47.50]At night from the sun goes down this positive benefit is lost. [29:53.38]The impact of night travel is surprisingly large.[29:58.29]In the United Kingdom only a quarter of flight[30:01.48]takes place in darkness.[30:04.22]But this accounts for up to 80% of[30:07.33]greenhouse effect from condensation."[30:21.30]Question 23 is based on the following news.[30:33.64]A twenty-two-year-old student here may have solved[30:36.53]one of the great enigmas of mathematics.[30:40.40]Elin Oxenhielm of Stockholm University's solution of[30:44.33]part of Hilbert's sixteenth problem will be published next week. [30:49.70]In 1900, German mathematician David Hilbert presented[30:54.06]a set of 23 unsolved problems to a congress in Paris.[30:58.78]Three remain unsolved today: numbers six, eight, and sixteen. [31:04.32]The sixteenth problem calls for the creation of a topology [31:08.32]of real algebraic curves and surfaces.[31:12.98]The solution for the second part of the problem[31:15.44]is being published in the journal, Nonlinear Analysis.[31:25.81]Ques tions 24 and 25 are based on the following news.[31:38.33]China's rapid economic growth in recent years[31:42.16]has to a large extent bee n fueled by business investmen t [31:46.51]in new factories and other commercial premises,[31:50.26]many of them producing low-cost manufactured goods. [31:56.11]The new figures underline the extent to which[31:58.91]that process is continuing. The worry is that[32:03.14]it might just be happening too fast.[32:06.94]With very high levels of investment there is more risk that [32:11.17]some projects might turn out to be unprofitable[32:15.15]and lead to business failures, job losses[32:18.79]and perhaps serious problems for the banks which[32:21.83]have lent money to finance the investment.[32:25.97]A senior official in the Chinese central bank said they will, [32:30.08]as he put it, "remove fuel from the fire", to reduce the risk. [32:36.11]The idea is to constrain commercial banks' lending.[32:40.37]Banks that lend too much may be required to[32:43.67]buy low interest financial assets, reducing the amount [32:48.60]they have available to lend to business.[33:02.85]Qu estion 26 is b ased on the following news.[33:15.19]Scientists have borrowed a technique from biology[33:17.88]to calculate the age of our mother tongue.[33:21.38]They say the Indo-European languages emerged[33:24.39]more than 9,000 years ago.[33:27.25]Languages evolve much as animals do,[33:30.42]words gradually change over time[33:33.03]just as gene evolves in the living beings.[33:36.70]So a biologist in New Zealand decided to[33:39.15]use the mathematical tools developed to estimate[33:42.59]the age of living species[33:44.95]to study the evolution of our mother tongue.[33:48.93]He and a colleague studied 2,400 words[33:53.22]in more than 80 so-called Indo-European languages.[33:58.08]The researchers now report in Nature that[34:01.20]these languages started out as a common tongue[34:04.56]more than 9,000 years ago.[34:08.05]That's consistent with other research dating our root language. [34:12.52]According to that hypothesis,[34:14.70]Indo-Europeans started out in Anatolia,[34:18.57]which is present-day Turkey,[34:20.58]and spread through Europe as farmers settled the land.[34:30.04]Questions 27 and 28 a re based on the following news.[34:42.80]Sony and Bertelsmann AG have agreed to merge their music units. [34:48.02]It's a deal that puts hot icons,[34:51.09]like Britney Spears-heard here-and Beyonce[34:55.27]under the same label in a combination first announced[34:59.07]on November 6. Now the agreement has been finalized.[35:05.04]The only step left here:[35:07.28]antitrust regulators have to give their final approval.[35:12.29]The new combined music company, known as Sony BMG, [35:18.13]will be based in New Y ork City.[35:21.57]It comes as the music industry faces continual challenges[35:26.05]for the fourth straight year, from piracy to falling music sales. [35:31.90]The London-based market-research company Informa Group [35:35.88]says it looked for another decline in recorded music sales[35:39.74]in the year 2004 to the tune of 8.9 percent.[35:46.16]That means that the contracting music industry[35:49.97]could have less than $28 billion in sales[35:54.65]when all is said and done.[36:08.17]Questio ns 29 and 30 a re based on the following news.[36:20.71]NASA's brightest investigators have toiled for six months [36:24.46]to find out what caused the shuttle disaster.[36:28.08]The leading theory was that[36:29.78]a block of foam fell from the external tank, damaging a wing [36:34.38]so severely that Columbia could not survive reentry.[36:39.82]Today, in the most dramatic test so far,[36:43.43]NASA simulated the forces at play.[36:47.58]The foam, fired at 500 miles an hour[36:51.26]into the reinforced carbon tunnel of a shuttle wing.[36:56.25]The results left investigators astonished but also relieved.[37:01.48]They now believe they've proved their theory of[37:04.11]what caused Columbia to disintegrate high above Texas[37:07.72]on the morning of February 1st[37:10.58]with the loss of all seven astronauts aboard.[37:25.13]This is the end of listening comprehension. 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