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公共英语五级模拟试题及答案解析(1)

公共英语五级模拟试题及答案解析(1)

公共英语五级模拟试题及答案解析(1)(1~10/共10题)Section I Listening ComprehensionDirections:This section is designed to test your ability to understand spoken English. You will hear a selection of recorded materials and you must answer the questions that accompany them. There are three parts in this section, Part A, Part B and Part C.Remember, while you are doing the test ,you should first put down your answers in your test booklet, NOT on the ANSWER SHEET. At the end of the listening comprehension section, you will have 5 minutes to transfer your answers from your test booklet onto ANSWER SHEET 1. If you have any questions, you may raise your hand NOW as you will not be allowed to speak once the test is started. Now look at Part A in your test booklet.Play00:00…VolumeYou now have 60 seconds to read Questions 1 ~10.第1题Dr. Wilson and Mr. Wang have known each other before.A.正确B.错误第2题Wang prefers to live with an English family.A.正确B.错误第3题Wang intends to study how computer is used for language translation.A.正确B.错误第4题Back in his own country, Mr. Wang studied C-language and chemistry.A.正确B.错误第5题Wang has some experience about CAD.A.正确B.错误第6题Dr. Wilson is satisfied with Wang"s past experience.A.正确B.错误第7题Wang has little knowledge of the phonetic processing system.A.正确B.错误第8题Wang decides to take courses and pass exams.A.正确第9题Dr. Wilson suggests that Wang should extend his stay at the university.A.正确B.错误第10题Dr. Wilson asks Wang to do a little more research before deciding on his project.A.正确B.错误下一题(11~13/共10题)Part B You will hear 3 conversations or talks and you must answer the questions by choosing A, B, C or D. You will hear the recording ONLY ONCE.Play00:00…VolumeQuestions 11 ~13 are based on the following talk. You now have 15 seconds to read Questions 11 ~13.第11题When a consumer finds that his purchase has a fault in it, what is the first thing he should do?plain personally to the manager.B.Threaten to take the matter to court.C.Write a firm letter of complaint to the store of purchase.D.Show some written proof of the purchase to the store.第12题If a consumer wants a quick settlement of the problem, whom is it better to complain to?A.A shop assistant.B.The store manager.C.The manufacturer.D.A public organization.第13题How can the most effective complaint be made?A.Showing the fault item to the manager.B.Explaining exactly what is wrong with the item.C.Saying firmly that the item is of poor quality.D.Asking politely to change the item.上一题下一题(14~16/共10题)Part B You will hear 3 conversations or talks and you must answer the questions by choosing A, B, C or D. You will hear the recording ONLY ONCE.Play00:00…VolumeQuestions 14 ~16 are based on the following talk. You now have 15 seconds to read Questions 14 ~16.第14题When was the American Football Association founded?A.In 1913.C.In 1914.D.In 1917.第15题Which of the following records of the US football team is true?A.First place in the 3rd world Cup.B.Second place in the 4th World Cup.C.Third place in the 1st World Cup.D.Fourth place in the 2nd World Cup.第16题Where was the finals of the World Cup in 1994 held?A.In England.B.In the USA.C.In Mexico.D.In France.上一题下一题(17~20/共10题)Part B You will hear 3 conversations or talks and you must answer the questions by choosing A, B, C or D. You will hear the recording ONLY ONCE.Play00:00…VolumeQuestions 17 ~20 are based on the following talk. You now have 20 seconds to read Questions 17 ~20.第17题Who is the speaker?A.A poet.B.A teacher.C.A student.D.An artist.第18题What was the discussion topic of the previous class meeting?A.New England mystery stories.B.Eighteenth-century English criticism.C.A comparison of poems of Dickinson and Whitman.D.The poems of Walt Whitman.第19题How did Emily Dickinson differ from Walt Whitman?A.She published poems frequently.B.She seldom left home.C.She lived in an earlier era.D.She spoke a different language.第20题What will the class do now?A.Hear another report.B.Discuss one of Emily Dickinson"s poems.C.Hear a lecture given by the teacher.D.Discuss poems they have written themselves.上一题下一题(21~30/共10题)Part C You will hear a talk. As you listen, you must answer Questions 21~30 by writing NO MORE THAN THREE words in the space provided on the right. You will hear the talk TWICE. You now have 60 seconds to read Questions 21~30.Play00:00…VolumeYou now have 60 seconds to read Questions 21 ~30.第21题where did rice originate?第22题What kind of grain did most Europeans eat 500 years ago?第23题What kind of grain could be found in American diet 500 years ago?第24题Who gave dairy products to the native Americans?第25题In which year did Columbus take chili pepper to Spain?第26题How long did it take for chili pepper to become popular around the world?第27题Where can"t chili pepper grow according to the talk?第28题What did Europeans think of potatoes?第29题What was potato used for in Europe at first?第30题In what part of the world is potato especially a favorite food?上一题下一题(31~50/共20题)Section ⅡUse of English Read the following text and fill each of the numbered spaces with ONE suitable word. Write your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1."Down-to-earth" means someone or something that is honest, realistic and easy to deal with. It is a pleasure to find 1 who is down-to-earth. A person who is down-to-earth is easy to talk 2 and accepts other people as equals. A down-to-earth person is just the 3 of someone who acts important or proud.Down-to-earth persons may be 4 members of society, of course. But they do not let their importance " 5 to their heads". They do not consider themselves to be better persons than 6 of less importance. Someone who is filled with his own importance and pride, 7 without cause, is said to have "his nose in the air". There is 8 way a person with his nose in the air can be down-to-earth.Americans 9 another expression that means almost the same as "down-to-earth". The expression is "both-feet-on-the-ground". Someone 10 both-feet-on-the-ground is a person with a good understanding 11 reality. He has what is called "common sense, " he may have dreams, 12 hedoes not allow them to block his knowledge of 13 is real.The opposite kind of 14 is one who has his "head-in-the-clouds". A man with his head-in-the- clouds is a dreamer 15 mind is not in the real world.16 , such a dreamer can be brought back to earth. Sharp words from teacher can usually 17 a day-dreaming student down-to-earth.Usually, the person who is down-to-earth is very 18 to have both feet on the ground. 19 we have both our feet on the ground, when we are down-to-earth, we act honestly and openly 20 others. Our fives are like the ground below us, solid and strong.第31题第32题第33题第34题第35题第36题第37题第38题第39题第40题第41题第42题第43题第44题第45题第46题第47题第48题第49题第50题上一题下一题(51~55/共15题)Section ⅢReading ComprehensionPart A Read the following texts and answer the questions which accompany them by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.When it comes to the slowing economy, Ellen Spero isn"t biting her nails just yet. But the 47-year-old manicurist isn"t cutting, tilling or polishing as many nails as she"d like to, either. Most of her clients spend $12 to $ 50 weekly, but last month two longtime customers suddenly stopped showing up. Spero blames the softening economy. "I"m a good economic indicator, " she says, "I provide a service that people can do without when they"re concerned about saving some dollars. " So Spero is downscaling, shopping at middle-brow Dillard"s department store near her suburban Cleveland home, instead of Neiman Marcus. "I don"t know if other clients are going to abandon me, too. " she says.Even before Alan Greenspan"s admission that America"s red-hot economy is cooling, lots of working folks had already seen signs of the slowdown themselves. From car dealerships to gap outlets, sales have been lagging for months as shoppers temper their spending. For retailers, who last year took in 24 percent of their revenue between Thanksgiving and Christmas, the cautiousapproach is coming at a crucial time. Already, experts say, holiday sales are off 7 percent from last year"s pace. But don"t sound any alarms just yet. Consumers seem only concerned, not panicked, and many say they remain optimistic about the economy"s long-term prospects, even as they do some modest belt-tightening.Consumers say they"re not in despair because, despite the dreadful headlines, their own fortunes still feel pretty good. In Manhattan, "there"s a new gold rush happening in the $ 4 million to $ 10 million range, predominantly fed by Wall Street bonuses, " says broker Barbara Corcoran. In San Francisco, prices are still rising even as frenzied overbidding quiets. "Instead of 20 to 30 offers, now maybe you only get two or three, " says John Deadly, a Bay Area real-estate broker. And most folks still feel pretty comfortable about their ability to find and keep a job. Many folks see silver linings to this slowdown. Potential homebuyers would cheer for lower interest rates. Employers wouldn"t mind a little fewer bubbles in the job market. Many consumers seem to have been influenced by stock-market swings, which investors now view as a necessary ingredient to a sustained boom. Diners might see an upside, too. Getting a table at Manhattan"s hot new Alain Ducasse restaurant need to be impossible. Not anymore. For that, Greenspan & Co. may still be worth toasting.第51题By "Ellen Spero isn"t biting her nails just yet" ( Line 1, Paragraph 1 ), the author means ______.A.Spero can hardly maintain her businessB.Spero is too much engaged in her workC.Spero has grown out of her bad habitD.Spero is not in a desperate situation第52题How do the public feel about the current economic situation?______A.Optimistic.B.Confused.C.Carefree.D.Panicked.第53题When mentioning "the $ 4 million to $10 million range" ( Line 2, Paragraph 3 ) the author is talking about ______.A.gold marketB.real estateC.stock exchangeD.venture investment第54题Why can many people see "silver linings" to the economic slowdown?______A.They would benefit in certain ways.B.The stock market shows signs of recovery.C.Such a slowdown usually precedes a boom.D.The purchasing power would be enhanced.第55题To which of the following is the author likely to agree?______A.A now boom, on the horizon.B.Tighten the belt, the single remedy.C.Caution all right, panic not.D.The more ventures, the more chances.上一题下一题(56~60/共15题)Section ⅢReading ComprehensionPart A Read the following texts and answer the questions which accompany them by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.The Village Green in New Milford, Connecticut, is a snapshot of New England charm: a carefully manicured lawn flanked by scrupulously maintained colonial homes. Babysitters dandle kids in the wooden gazebo, waiting for commuter parents to return from New York. On a lazy afternoon last week Caroline Nicholas, 16, had nothing more pressing to do than drink in the early-summer sunshine and discuss the recent events in town. " I don"t think a lot of older people knew there were unhappy kids in New Milford," she said, "I could see it coming. "In a five-day period in early June eight girls were brought to New Milford Hospital after what hospital officials call suicidal gestures. The girls, all between 12 and 17, tried a variety of measures, including heavy doses of alcohol, over-the-counter medicines and cuts or scratches to their wrists. None was successful, and most didn"t require hospitalization ; but at least two attempts, according to the hospital, could have been vital. Their reasons seemed as mundane as the other happen-stances of suburban life. "I was just sick of it all," one told a reporter, "Everything in life." Most alarming, emergency-room doctor Frederick Lohse told a local reporter that several girls said they were part of a suicide pact. The hospital later backed away from this remark. But coming in the wake of at least sixteen suicide at- tempts over the previous few months, this sudden cluster—along with the influx of media—has set this well-groomed suburb of 23, 000 on edge. At a town meeting last Wednesday night, Dr Simon Sobo, chief of psychiatry at the hospital, told more than 200 parents and kids, "We"re talking about a crisis that has really gotten out of hand." Later he added, "There have been more suicide attempts this spring than I have seen in the 13 years I have been here. "Sobo said that the girls he treated didn"t have serious problems at home or school. "Many of these were popular kids," he said, "They got plenty of love, but beneath the reassuring signs, a swath of teens here are not making it." Some say that drugs, Both pot and "real drugs", are commonplace. Kids have shown up with LIFE SUCKS and LONG LIVE DEATH penned on their arms.A few girls casually display scars on their arms where they cut them- selves. "You"d be surprised how many kids try suicide," said one girl, 17. "You don"t want to put pain on other people; you put it on yourself." She said she used to cut herself "just to release the pain".Emily, 15, a friend of three of the girls treated in June, said one was having family problems, one was "upset that day" and the third was "just upset with everything else going on". She said they weren"t really trying to kill themselves—they just needed concern. As Sobo noted, "What"s going on in New Milford is not unique to New Milford. " The same underlying culture of despair could be found in any town. But teen suicide, he added, can be a "contagion". Right now New Milford has the bug—and has it bad.第56题What is the main subject of the passage?______A.Eight gifts committed suicide in New Milford.B.The village Green is not a charming place.C.Teenager suicide.D.Dr. Simon Sobo"s achievements.第57题In the 3rd sentence of the first paragraph the word "pressing" is closest in meaning to ______.A.urgently importantB.pushingC.invitingD.charming第58题What is NOT true about the eight girls?______A.They are all between 12 and 17.B.They have tried a variety of measures.C.They attend a suicide squad.D.All their attempts to commit suicide are vital.第59题Which of the statements about the teens is NOT true?______A.They are ill-bred students in school.B.Some of them take "real drugs".C.Teens need attention.D.A few casually display scars on their arms.第60题According to the passage, the teens in Village Green can be called ______.A.depressed generationB.cool generationC.attractive generationD.prosperous generation上一题下一题(61~65/共15题)Section ⅢReading ComprehensionPart A Read the following texts and answer the questions which accompany them by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.The history of responses to the work of the artist Sandro Botticelli (1444 - 1510) suggests that widespread appreciation by critics is a relatively recent phenomenon. Writing in 1550, Vasari expressed an unease with Botticelli"s work, admitting that the artist fitted awkwardly into his evolutionary scheme of the history of art. Over the next two centuries, academic art historians defamed Botticelli in favor of his fellows Florentine, Michelangelo. Even when anti-academic art historians of the early nineteenth century rejected many of the standards of evaluation adopted by their predecessors, Botticelli"s work remained outside of accepted taste, pleasing neither amateur observers nor connoisseurs. ( Many of his best paintings, however, remained hidden away in obscure churches and private homes.The primary reason for Botticelli"s unpopularity is not difficult to understand: most observers, up until the mid-nineteenth century, did not consider him to be noteworthy, because his work, for the most part, did not seem to these observers to exhibit the traditional characteristics of the fifteenth-century Florentine art. For example, Botticelli rarely employed the technique of strict perspective and, unlike Michelangelo, never used chiaroscuro.Another reason for Botticelli"s unpopularity may have been that his attitude toward the style of classical art was very different from that of his contemporaries. Although he was thoroughly exposed to classical art, he showed little interest in borrowing from the classical style. Indeed, it is paradoxical that a painter of large-scale classical subjects adopted a style that was only slightly similar to that of classical art.In any case, when viewers began to examine more closely the relationship of Botticelli"s work to the tradition of the fifteenth century Florentine art, his reputation began to grow. Analyses and assessments of Botticelli made between 1850 and 1870 by the artists of the Pre-Raphaelite movement, as well as by the writer Pater ( although he, unfortunately, based his assessment on an incorrect analysis of Botticelli" s personality), inspired a new appreciation of Botticelli throughout the English-speaking world. Yet Botticelli"s work, especially the Sistine frescoes, did not generate worldwide attention until it was finally subjected to a comprehensive and scrupulous analysis by Home in 1908. Home rightly demonstrated that the frescoes shared important features with paintings by other fifteenth-century Florentines—features such as skillful representation of anatomical proportions, and of the human figure in motion. However, Home argued that Botticelli did not treat these qualities as ends in themselves—rather, that he emphasized clear depletion of a story, a unique achievement and one that made the traditional Florentine qualities less central. Because of Home"s emphasis crucial to any study of art, the twentieth century has come to appreciate Botticelli"s achievements.第61题Which of the following would be the best title for the text?______A.The Role of Standard Art Analyses and AppraisalsB.Sandro Botticelli: From Rejection to AppreciationC.The History of Critics" Responses to Art WorksD.Botticelli and Florentine: A Comparative Study第62题We can learn from the text that art critics have a history of ______.A.suppressing painters" art initiativesB.favoring Botticelli" s best paintingsC.rejecting traditional art characteristicsD.undervaluing Botticelli" s achievements第63题The views of Vasari and Home on Botticelli"s products are ______.A.identicalplementaryC.oppositeD.similar第64题The word "connoisseurs" ( Paragraph 1 ) most probably means ______.A.representatives in the Pre-Raphaelite MovementB.people who are in favor of FlorentineC.critics who are likely to make assessmentsD.conservatives clinging to classical art第65题What does the author think of Botticelli"s representation skills?______A.They are to be fully appreciated.B.They evolve from an uncertain source.C.They underlie his personality.D.They conform to the classical style.上一题下一题(66~70/共5题)Part B In the following article, some paragraphs have been removed. For Questions 66~70, choose the most suitable paragraph from the list A~F to fit into each of the numbered gaps. There is ONE paragraph which does not fit in any of the gaps. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.With unfamiliar human beings, when we acknowledge their humanness, we must avoid stating at them, and yet we must also avoid ignoring them. To make them into people rather than objects, we use a deliberate and polite inattention. We look at them long enough to, make it quite clear that we see them, and then we immediately look a- way.1The important thing in such an exchange is that we do not catch the eye of one whom we are recognizing as a person. We look at him without locking glances, and then we immediately look away. Recognition is not permitted.2If you pass someone in the street, you may eye the oncoming person until you are about eight feet apart, then you must look away as you pass. Before the eight-foot distance is reached, each will signal in which direction he will pass. This is done with a brief look in that direction. Each will veer slightly and the passing is done smoothly.3To strengthen this signal, you look directly at the other"s face before looking away.4It becomes impossible to discover just what they are doing. Are they looking at you too long, too intently? Are they looking at you at all? The person wearing the glasses feels protected and assumes that he can stare without being noticed in his staring. However, this is a self-deception. To the other person, dark glasses seem to indicate that the wearer is always staring at him.We often use this look-away technique when we meet famous people. We want to assure them we are respecting their privacy and that we would not dream of staring at them. The same is true of the crippled or physically handicapped. We look brief and then look away before the stare can be said to be a stare.5Of course, the opposite is also true. If we wish to put a person down, we may do so by staring longer than is acceptably polite. Instead of dropping our gazes when we lock glances, we continue to stare. The person who disapproves of interracial marriages or dating will stare rudely at the interracial couple. If he dislikes long hair, short dresses, or beards, he may show it with a longer-than-acceptable stare.A. There are different formulas for the exchange of glances depending on where the meeting takes place.B. In the subway or bus where long rides in very close circumstances are a necessity, we may be hard put to find some way of not staring. We sneak glances, but look away before our eyes canlock. If we look with an unfocused glance that misses the eyes and settles on the head, the mouth, the body for any place but the eyes is an acceptable looking spot for the unfocused glance.C. Actually in this way we are saying, in body language, "I know you are there, " and a moment later we add, "But-I would not dream of intruding on your privacy. "D. It is the technique we use for any unusual situation where too long a stare would be embarrassing. When we see an interracial couple, we also use this technique. We might use it when we see a man with an unusual beard, with extra longhair, with outlandish clothes, or a girl with a minimal miniskirt may attract this look- and-away.E. For this passing encounter Dr. Erving Goffman in behavior in public places says that the quick look and the lowering of the eyes is body language for, "I trust you. I am not afraid of you. "F. Sometimes the rules are hard to follow, particularly if one of the two people wears dark glasses.第66题第67题第68题第69题第70题上一题下一题(71~80/共10题)Part C Answer questions 71 ~80 by referring to the comments on 3 different cars in the following magazine articles. Note: Answer each question by choosing A, B or C and mark it on ANSWER SHEET 1. Some choices may be required more than once.A = Hydro powerB = Nuclear powerC = Solar powerD = Wind powerWhich power (power"s)...·was developed to provide electricity for satellites at the beginning? 1·can promote tourism development? 2·may give off dangerous radioactive pollution into the air? 3·may affect the downstream water quality and have an impact on plant life? 4·stations can increase to full power very quickly? 5·produces small amounts of waste? 6·is a good method of supplying energy to remote areas? 7·provides around 20% of the world"s electricity? 8·can be used to heat your water at home instead of so much gas or electricity? 9·is not renewable? 10A Hydro powerIntroductionWe have used running water as an energy source for thousands of years, mainly to grind corn. The first house in the world to be lit by hydroelectricity was Cragside House, in Northumberland, England, in 1878. In 1882 on the Fox River, in the USA, hydroelectricity produced enough power to light two paper mills and a house.Nowadays there are many hydro-electric power stations, providing around 20% of the world"s electricity. The name comes from "hydro", the Greek word for water.How it worksA dam is built to trap water, usually in a valley where there is an existing lake.Water is allowed to flow through tunnels in the dam, to turn turbines and thus drive generators. AdvantagesOnce the dam is built, the energy is virtually free.No waste or pollution produced.Much more reliable than wind, solar or wave power.Water can be stored above the darn ready to cope with peaks in demand.Hydro-electric power stations can increase to full power very quickly, unlike other power stations. DisadvantagesThe dams are very expensive to build.Building a large dam will flood a very large area upstream, causing problems for animals that used to live there.Finding a suitable site can be difficult—the impact on residents and the environment may be unacceptable.Water quality and quantity downstream can be affected, which can have an impact on plant life. Is it renewable?Hydro-electric power is renewable.The Sun provides the water by evaporation from the sea, and will keep on doing so.B Nuclear powerIntroductionNuclear power is generated using Uranium, which is a metal mined in various parts of the world. The first large-scale nuclear power station opened at Calder Hall in Cambria, England, in 1956. Some military ships and submarines have nuclear power plants for engines.How it worksNuclear power stations work in pretty much the same way as fossil fuel-burning stations, except that a "chain reaction" inside a nuclear reactor makes the heat instead.The reactor uses Uranium rods as fuel, and the heat is generated by nuclear fission. Neutrons smash into the nucleus of the uranium atoms, which split roughly in half and release energy in the form of heat.Carbon dioxide gas is pumped through the reactor to take the heat away, and the hot gas then heats water to make steam.AdvantagesNuclear power costs about the same as coal, so it"s not expensive to make.Does not produce smoke or carbon dioxide, so it does not contribute to the greenhouse effect. Produces huge amounts of energy from small amounts of fuel.Produces small amounts of waste.DisadvantagesAlthough not much waste is produced, it is very, very dangerous.It must be sealed up and buried for many years to allow the radioactivity to die away.Nuclear power is reliable, but a lot of money has to be spent on safety.Is it renewable?Nuclear energy from Uranium is not renewable.Once we"ve dug up all the Earth"s uranium and used it, there isn"t any more.C Solar powerIntroduction。

PETS全真模拟卷听力文字稿(10套)

PETS全真模拟卷听力文字稿(10套)

TRANSCRIPTS第一节1. It’s raining today.2. What a lovely toy bear!3. The cake is behind the mineral water.4. I once went to America by air.5. Nov. 16 is my birthday. I will have a big party on that day.6. Your train to Shanghai leaves at 11:20 pm.7. When I knocked at the door he was preparing the supper.8. My telephone number is 88900789.9. I want to be a teacher in the future.10. I like eating vegetables.第二节11. W: It's December 13th. Is it Thursday?M: No. It' s Friday.12. W: The oranges look very good. Would you like to have one?M: No, thanks. I like bananas a lot.13. W: Have you seen Mrs.Smith, John?M: Yes. I saw her on my way home from the shop, but I don't know where she is now.14. W: John, can I talk to you about my work some time?M: Sure. How about Saturday afternoon?15. M: Mary, would you like to have a picnic with us tomorrow?W: Sorry, but my mum asked me to go shopping with her.16. W: Could you tell me if the Shanghai flight will be arriving on time?M: Yes, Madam. It should be arriving in about ten minutes.17. W: Would you mind me opening the window?M: No, go ahead.18. W: Our daughter hasn' t written to us for nearly two months.M: She must be very busy with her studies.19. M: Our class starts at 2 o'clock.W: So we still have ten minutes.20. W: Did you go to the concert yesterday?M: I had to do overtime work in my office.21. W: Have you found your youngest brother. Tom?M: Yes. He was picked up by a policeman.22. W: I understand you' ve got some trouble with one of your teeth.M: Yes, the pain' s killing me.23. M: Ann. who joined your birthday party last week ?W: Oh, all my friends except you. Peter.24. W: Could you tell me how old you are, Tom?M: I' m eight. I' ll be nine this October.25. W: Of the three rooms. Which is the biggest one?M: Room 301 is much bigger than 302 and 303.TRANSCRIPTS第一节1. A dog is lying on the bed.2.Playing tennis is my favorite sport.3.We have no English class on Tuesday.4.My mother gave me a watch as my birthday present.5.Jerry is riding a horse.6.I like travelling by plane because it is much quicker.7.You’d better take an umbrella with you, for it is raining.8.Can I borrow your book for a moment?9.Kate bought a pair of new shoes yesterday.10.I ordered a hamburger when I was in an American restaurant last night.第二节11. W: I think maths is more interesting than English.M: I agree with you.12. W: They are very nice shirts. How much are they?M: 6.50 dollars for each. But 12 dollars for two. They are really nice.13. W: Good afternoon I'd like to keep this book for two more weeks.M: OK, please sign this form.14. W: What would you like, a cup of tea or a glass of coffee?M: Neither. thanks. A cup of water will be OK.15. W: Oh, it’s nine o’clock now. When did you arrive here, Jack?M: I arrived here an hour ago.16. M: Make one copy for me twenty copies from other managers.W: Certainly, sir. As soon as I finish the task, I will go to deal with this.17. M: What a beautiful dress. Did you make it yourself?W: No. I had my mother do it.18. W: Every time I see you, you are wearing a different shirt.M: That’s because I have one for every day of the week.19. W: We are going to cinema tonight.M: Are you? May I join you?20. M:The concert begins at 8:30. Let’s hurry.W:We still have 45 minutes. How do we go there?21. M:Excuse me, Mrs. Wang, can I borrow some money from you? I want to buy something formy mother’s birthday.W:Well, you are a good son.22. W:Did you ring me up last night?M:Yes, I wanted you to come over and meet my cousin who has just come from the UK,but your mother said that you were at evening classes.23. M: What did you think of Mr. Smith’s lecture?W: I can’t understand what he said.24. M: I think you speak excellent English. Are you from England?W: Thank you, sir, but I am from Canada.25. M: Hello, I haven’t seen you for a long time. Where did you go?W: I went to the USA for further study last year.全真模拟卷3TRANSCRIPTS第一节1. It is raining outside.2. We can use mobile phones so send e-mails.3. Mary's father bought her a beautiful hat last Sunday.4. The doctor is examining her leg.5. He drew a dog on the paper.6. My telephone number is 86925831.7. Li Ming's brother is a policeman.8. I want to the bank to deposit 1000 pounds.9. Jack is wearing glasses.10. The Blacks will go to the park this Saturday.第二节11. M: May I use the telephone?W: You’d better not. I am waiting for a call.12. M: What time does the football match start?W: At 9:50. And we have twenty minutes to get there.13. W: I’ll cook the dinner if you wash dishes.M: Why not?14. M: Excuse me, Madame. Do you mind if I smoke here?W: Yes, I do.15. M: You have got a fever. How long have you been like this?W: Er… About three days.16. W: Can I have my watch changed? It’s not working.M: Let me have a check.17. M: Do you know where my ruler is?W: I’m sorry. I don’t know.18. W: You speak excellent English. Are you from England?M: Thank you, but I am from America.19. W: My father is a teacher.M: So is my uncle. He teaches students English.20. W: What can I do for you, sir?M: Get me a bottle of milk and three pieces of bread, please.21. M: Are you free this Sunday?W: Yes. What do you suggest?22. M: Hello, may I speak to Lucy?W: Sorry, she went back home half an hour ago.23. M: Do you know what time does the library open?W: It usually opens at half past seven, but on Saturday it opens one hour later.24. W: Could you tell me how old your sister Jane is, Tom?M: Jane is 10, two years younger than me.25. M: Happy birthday, Joyce. I have a gift for you.W: Thank you very much, Thomas.全真模拟卷4TRANSCRIPTS第一节1. Of all the fruits, I like apple best.2. I want to drink some milk.3. Jack bought a new skirt last Saturday.4. Lily has a pet cat.5. I like playing basketball.6. March the fifteenth is my birthday.7. He returned the books to the library yesterday.8. The flight to London at 9:20 is to board at Gate 8.9. Our room number is 512.10. I enjoy swimming in the summer.第二节11. M: The film isn’t very interesting, is it?W: No, it isn’t.12. W: Excuse me, I didn’t catch what you said.M: I wondered if you could lend me your car.13. W: What would you like to drink, a cup of coffee or a glass of orange juice?M: I prefer orange juice to coffee.14. M: It’s April the first today. Is it Wednesday?W: No. It’s Monday.15. M: Excuse me, Jane. May I borrow your pencil?W: Sorry, I haven’t got a pencil. I remember Jack has got one.16. W: Could you please tell me where the nearest bank?M: Walk along this road, and take the second turning on the right. You can see it.17. W: It’s rather cold here. Do you mind my closing the door?M: Oh, no. Not at all.18. M: I think physics is more interesting than maths.W: I don’t think so. I like maths.19. M: Who is that girl? Do you know her?W: Yes. That’s Jack’s sister.20. W: Hello, may I speak to John?M: Hold on, please. He is answering another call.21. M: I want to buy you a pair of shoes. Which do you like better, the yellow one or the red one?W: Neither. I like the pink pair, Dad.22. W: Do you like the group work in Professor Zhou’s class?M: Yes, I think it is very interesting.23. M: Is this your mobile phone, Merry?W: No, it isn’t mine. It’s Mi24. W: Tickets for the movie are 50 yuan for adult, 30 yuan for children.M: All right, I’d like to 4 tickets for adults and 2 tickets for children.25. M: Morning, Madam. Can I help you?W: Good morning. I’d like to buy a tie for my husband.全真模拟卷5TRANSCRIPTS第一节1. Lily’s father is a doctor2. I do n’t like apples but I like pineapples3. She often teaches us lots of knowledge4. They are talking beside a table5. There are so many good books on the bookcase.6. More and more young people like to keep cats.7. Little Tommy is buying some fruits in a fruit shop.8. I love playing computer games on my laptop.9. In my opinion, Roses are the most beautiful flowers10. It is my first time to take a plane and I feel nervous.第二节11.W: It’s very warm today. You’d better take off the clothes.M: Yes, but I listened to the radio this morning, it’s going to be cold later on.Q: What are they talking about?12.W: Hello, may I speak to Amy please?M: Oh, no. There’s no one called Amy.Q: What does the man mean?13. W: Can I help you?M: Yes, please. I want to borrow the novels by professor Art.W: OK. They are on the shelf over there.Q: Where are they talking?14. W: Who is the boy in red on the bus?M: Oh, he is my good friend, Jack. He is very confident and generous. He often buys us nice gifts. Q: What does Jack often do?15. W: When shall we go to the museum?M: What about a quarter to nine?W: But I won’t be free until ten past nine.W: OK! See you then.Q: What time will they go to the museum?16. W: Excuse me. What's the time, please?M: It's half past three.W. Thank youQ: What's the time now?17. W: May I speak to Mr. Black?M: Sorry, he's not here at the moment. Can I take a message for you?Q: Whom does the woman want to speak to18. W: Would you like to come to my birthday party tomorrow evening?M: I'm sorry, I will be in Beijing then.Q: Why can't the man go to the birthday party?19. W: What will the weather be like tomorrow?M: The radio says there will be a heavy rain.Q: How will the weather be tomorrow?20. W: Do you like your new teacher?M: He's all right. The only problem is that he never stops talking.Q: What do we know about the new teacher?21. W: Let’s go out to play.M: But it’s snowing.Q: What season is it?22. W: Let’s go to the History Museum.M: By metro or by taxi?W: By minibus. It’s cheaper.Q: How are they going to the History Museum?23. W: The oranges from USA are 8 yuan each. The oranges from Hongkong are 5 yuan each. M: I’ll buy the cheaper ones.Q: What oranges are they going to buy?24. W: Where are you going?M: To the supermarket. I’m going to make a cake. I’ve got flour, butter, sugar and milk, but I haven’t got any eggs.Q: What is the girl going to buy?25. W: What do you often do at the weekends?M: I often go to the cinema. Sometimes I play table tennis or go climbing with my friends.Q: What does the boy often do at the weekends?全真模拟卷6TRANSCRIPTS第一节1. Let me see what time it is now? oh It is nearly eight thirty.2. I would like to give my best friend a watch as his birthday present.3. You can never walk along this road when you see this sign.4. My cousin likes to play guitar very much.5. I will leave for Shanghai on the 18th of May.6. Don’t go out. It is raining heavily.7. Liming is blowing out the candles on a big cake.8. I prefer to eat o bowl of rice.9. People celebrate Christmas all over the world.10.Reading in the library is a great experience第二节11. W: where did you go last night?M: I went shopping. I spent 120yuan on my shoes.Q: How much did the man spend?12W:Hello, Is that Liming speaking?M:No, he isn’t at home now, Can I take a message?Q: where is Liming?13. M: Tom, what rules do you have at the school?W: Well, we’re not allowed to use mobile phones.Q: What can’t be used at Tom’s school?14. W: David, could you give my dictionary back?M: Sure. Rose, I’m sorry to have kept it so long.Q: Who lent the dictionary?15. M: Susan, did you use to be afraid of snakes?W: No, I was afraid of dogs.Q: What did Susan use to be afraid of?16. M: Where did you go last summer holiday?W: I went to some beautiful places. What about you?M: I only stayed at home and did my homework.Q: What are they talking about?17. W: Little boy, how long have you been like this?M: Oh, since eight o’clock yesterday evening. I think I’ve got a bad cold.Q: When did the boy fall ill?18. W: Do you miss your mother, Jack?M: Of course. I send her an e-mail once a week. I ring her up once a month.Q: How often does Jack ring his mother up?19. M: Darling, now it’s 8:30. I t’ll take us one hour to arrive at the railway station.W: OK, let’s hurry.Q: What time will they arrive at the railway station?20. W: Hello, what can I do for you?M: I want a bowl of beef noodles and a glass of orange, please.W: Wait a moment, please.Q: Where may the conversation take place?21. M: Which do you think is the most useful invention?W: At first, I thought the TV set and the fridge were the most useful inventions, but now I think it’s the computer.Q: Which does the woman think is the most useful invention?22. M: Hi, Rose. Could you tell me what you do in the organization?W: Certainly. My main job is to help spread the message about protecting animals in my spare time.Q: What does Rose do?23. M: Did you see football match last night?W: No, I didn’t. I was busy doing my homework. What do you think of it?M: It makes me feel excited.Q: What does the man think of the football match?24. M: Boys and girls, we’re going on a trip next Saturday.W: Where are we going, Mr. Yang?M: Mount YunTai.Q: When are they going to Mount YunTai?25. W: What’s the film on Sunday?M: Railway Love.W: Good, I’ll see it with you on Sunday.M: Fine. Let’s meet at the cinema. Bye!Q: What are the two speakers talking about?全真模拟卷7TRANSCRIPTS第一节1. The price of this dictionary is 15.4 yuan.2. I left my schoolbag on the bus.3. She asks for five more apples.4. He was watching TV when I came back.5. Look! There’s a plane in the sky.6. The boy was saved by a policeman.7. Of all the vegetables, I like eating potatoes.8. I ordered a sandwich for lunch.9. Playing table tennis is my favorite sport in my free time.10. It’s going to rain and it’s windy outside.第二节11. Man: How do you like the restaurant?Woman: The food there is very delicious.12. Man: How long can I keep this book?Woman: You can keep it for two weeks.13. Man: How are you getting along with your new workmates?Woman: They are very friendly to me.14. Man: It’s worthy of thirty yuan.Woman: It’s too expensive, or I’ll buy it.15. Man: Mum, I want to go to the park this weekend.Woman: Ok, Your Dad and I will go with you.16. Man: It’s far to ride to the museum.Woman: But there’s no bus to get there.17. Man: It’s five past eight now. Let’s hurry to the classroom.Woman: You needn’t be so nervous. There’s a quarter left.18. Man: Sort out the letters and send them to the offices.Woman: Yes, sir. I’ll have them done as soon as possible.19. Man: Would you please come to my birthday party this Sunday?Woman: I’d like to. It’s a pity I have to go out on business this weekend.20. Man: I’ll take the picture. Here you are! One hundred yuan.Woman: Ok, here’s the change for you. Forty yuan.21. Man: You look so tired. What’s wrong with you?Woman: I stayed up last night and I feel so sleepy.22. Man: Look out! There’s an old lady in front of you.Woman: I noticed it and I have stopped my car.23. Man: I’d like to drink something cold.Woman: You’d better have something hot.24. Man: What would you like to eat for supper?Woman: I like all the food you cooked, but I’m on diet.25. Man: Where’s John? I haven’t seen him the whole day.Woman: I don’t know and he’s been busy preparing for the exam.全真模拟卷8TRANSCRIPTS第一节1. Enough sleep is helpful.2. The cat is running along the wall.3. Xiao Ming is sitting in the front row.4. He is a head taller than the girl.5. She wants to lose weight.6. I’d like to buy my friend a skirt.7. The boy is drinking a bottle of milk.8. The boy reminds me of his father.9. He spent his weekend in the library.10. I saw her dancing in the hall.第二节11. M: It’s cold today. What will the weather be like tomorrow?W: Even colder. Dress more and keep warm.12. W: Look at the map! The park is not far away.M: Ok! There are only three stops left. We will get off soon. 13. M: Ms. Li, Miss Wang is ill and I will take her place.W: Mr. Wu, I think the students will like you.14. M: Could I change a smaller one? It’s too big.W: Sure. Try this one.15. W: Is it your visit for business or pleasure?M: For business. Here’s my passport.16. M: I heard of a beautiful park in front of us.W: Why don’t we walk there to have a rest?17. W: Where did you find your suitcase?M: It’s lying under the chair between the trees in the park.18. M: I’m looking for my notebook. I put it on the desk.W: I kept it in the bookcase. I’ll get it for you.19. W: The exam has passed. Just forget about it!M: It’s easier said than done.20. M: I’m worried about the lessons I missed.W: I’ll try to help you to make up the lessons.21. M: Would you like to try the banana pie?W: Well, but it’s too sweet.22. W: I don’t want to live in the school.M: I know you want to be free.23. M: Look! I bought some books at the bookstore.W: It looks as if you bought the whole bookstore.24. M: Does the play start at 7:10 or 7:15?W: Neither. It starts at 7:30 and ends at 9:10.25. W: Hello! Mr. Smith. What can I do for you?M: I’m always feeling tired and sleepy. I’m afraid there’s something wrong with me.全真模拟卷9TRANSCRIPTS第一节1. I need a piece of paper to take notes.2. Swimming is a kind of good sport.3. What’s the time by your watch?4. Take the medicine and go to bed5. My brother usually goes to work by subway.6. Mike went to London two years ago.7. Hello, this is David speaking.8. Jack is writing a letter9. Tom is a very good football player, do you know?10. There is something behind the door.第二节11. W: Jim, don’t forget your umbrella. It often rains in Hong Kong these days.M: OK, i will take the blue one then.12. W: Excuse me, could you tell me what time the plane arrives in London?M: It arrives in London at 3:15 in the afternoon.13. W: Please turn on the TV.M: I think Billy has turned it on. He has finished his homework14. W: Were you born in America, betty?M: No, I was born in Canada15. M: How do you like these two subjects?W: I prefer science to math.16. W: Where are you going for vacation, peter?M: I am going to visit the Great Wall.17. W: What do you hope to do after you leave school, Gina?M: I want to go the U.S.A. I want to learn more about English.18. W: It’s eight o’clock now. Are you late for the film?M: Oh, sorry. We are half an hour late.19. M: Excuse me, where is the nearest bank, please?W: Go along this street, and turn left. You’ll see the bank next to the post office.20. W: How much is the T-shirt?M: The red T-shirt? 25 dollars for each.21.W: Mary, you are taller than me!M: Yes, tom. But Susan is much taller than we two.22. W: Could you tell me what is wrong?M: Well, nothing serious. Only a cold. Take the medicine and you’ll feel better.23. M: Would you like some dumplings with meat, Miss Zhang?W: no, thanks. I prefer some with seafood.24. W: Look! That car is so nice! Oh, it is SantanaM: Yes, but I prefer BMW.25. W: Have you ever been to Jiaxing, Linda?M: Yes, of course. I’ve been there many times全真模拟卷10TRANSCRIPTSPart11. Mary is doing her homework now2. The girl likes to wear skirt in summer3. How much is the camera?4. Smith has stopped smoking.5. There is something wrong with peter’s left leg.6. My father bought a computer for me.7. Haven’t you read today’s newspaper?8. Tom, look at your dirty shoes!9. He is too old to walk.10. I learned the exciting news on the radio.Part 211.M. Do you have to change planes in Tokyo, Jim?W. Certainly. We arrive there at ten and leave at twelve12.W. Don’t you think Mike’s TV is too noisy?M. Yes, I’ll tell him to turn it down.13.W. What color is your box? Is it red?M. No, it is brown.14.M. More and more people keep cats as their pets.W. Me too. I like them very much.15.M. Are you learning Japanese at school?W. Yes. And we are learning French as second foreign language, too.16.W. What is your brother’s name, mike?M. His name is henry.17.W. Who are you waiting for?M. I’m waiting for my father. He will take me to plant trees.18.W. What is the weather like today?M. It is sunny today, but the radio says it will be rainy on Friday.19.M. Be careful, Lucy!W. Don’t worry, dad. The traffic lights are red.20.W. Tom, look at my kite. It’s bigger than yours.M. Yes, Kate. But yours is smaller than Jim’s.21.M. Darling, shall we go to visit Xi Tang by ship?W. Oh, no. You are joking. I think we should go by bus.22.W. How is everything going, jack?M. Not bad. But last week I was very busy.23.W. Can I help you, sir?M. Yes, I’d like a cup of coffee.24.M. Who is the man over there, Annie?W. I don’t think I’ve seen him before.25.W. How did you and your father like the football game yesterday?M. Oh, they played so badly. And we left at the half time.。

pets5模拟试题

pets5模拟试题

pets5模拟试题
Pets5模拟试题
一、听力理解(共20分)
1. 听下面一段对话,选择正确的答案。

(每题2分,共10分)
A. 去图书馆
B. 去电影院
C. 去公园
D. 去餐厅
对话内容:(此处省略对话录音文本)
2. 听下面一段独白,回答下列问题。

(每题2分,共10分)
问题1:独白中提到了几种宠物?
问题2:独白者最喜欢的宠物是什么?
问题3:独白中提到了宠物的哪些特点?
独白内容:(此处省略独白录音文本)
二、阅读理解(共30分)
1. 阅读下面的文章,选择正确的答案。

(每题2分,共10分)
文章文章内容:(此处省略文章文本)
问题1:文章中提到宠物对人类有哪些积极影响?
问题2:文章中提到的宠物种类有哪些?
问题3:文章中提到的宠物对环境的影响是什么?
2. 阅读下面的文章,回答问题。

(每题3分,共20分)
文章标题:宠物护理的重要性
文章内容:(此处省略文章文本)
问题1:文章中提到的宠物护理包括哪些方面?
问题2:文章中提到的宠物护理的误区有哪些?
问题3:文章中提到的宠物护理的最佳实践是什么?
三、写作(共50分)
1. 写一篇关于你最喜欢的宠物的短文。

(20分)
要求:描述宠物的外观特征、性格特点以及你和宠物之间的一个小故事。

2. 写一篇关于宠物对人类社会影响的议论文。

(30分)
要求:从社会、经济和环境三个角度分析宠物对人类社会的影响,并提出合理的建议。

请注意:本试题仅供参考,实际考试内容和形式可能有所不同。

考生应以官方发布的考试大纲和样题为准进行复习。

pets5英语听力

pets5英语听力

pets5英语听力Pets are a significant part of many people's lives, providing companionship, emotional support, and evenphysical health benefits. However, there are alsochallenges and responsibilities that come with owning a pet. One common issue that pet owners face is the problem of pet allergies. Allergies to pets can cause a range of symptoms, from mild discomfort to severe respiratory problems. This can be a significant problem for pet owners, as they may have to choose between their own health and the well-beingof their beloved pet.For people who suffer from pet allergies, being around animals can be a constant struggle. The presence of pet dander, saliva, and urine can trigger allergic reactions, causing symptoms such as sneezing, itching, hives, and even difficulty breathing. This can be especially challengingfor individuals who live with pets, as they may have to constantly manage their symptoms in order to coexist with their furry friends. Some people may even have to considerfinding a new home for their pet if their allergies become too severe, which can be a heartbreaking and difficult decision to make.From the perspective of a pet owner, dealing with a pet allergy can be emotionally taxing. Many people form strong bonds with their pets and view them as members of the family. Having to consider giving up a beloved pet due to allergies can be a source of immense guilt and sadness. It can also be a practical challenge, as finding a new homefor a pet can be a complex and time-consuming process. Additionally, the thought of parting with a cherished animal can be emotionally devastating, leading to feelings of loss and grief.On the other hand, from the perspective of someone suffering from pet allergies, the impact can be equally distressing. Allergies can significantly affect a person's quality of life, causing discomfort and potentially putting their health at risk. For individuals who are particularly sensitive to pet allergens, the presence of animals intheir environment can lead to constant symptoms and areduced ability to fully enjoy their own home. This can create a sense of frustration and helplessness, as they may feel like they have limited control over their own living space and well-being.In some cases, people may try to find ways to manage their pet allergies in order to keep their beloved animals. This can involve taking medication, using air purifiers, and regularly cleaning and grooming the pet to minimize allergen exposure. While these measures can help to some extent, they may not completely eliminate the problem, leading to ongoing challenges and compromises for both the pet owner and the allergic individual. This can create a difficult and sometimes exhausting dynamic, as both parties try to find a balance between their love for the pet and the need to manage allergies.Ultimately, the problem of pet allergies highlights the complex and often emotional nature of pet ownership. It forces individuals to navigate difficult decisions and find ways to cope with the challenges that come with loving and caring for an animal. From the perspective of both the petowner and the allergic individual, the experience can be filled with conflicting emotions, practical concerns, and a deep sense of attachment to the animal. As such, finding solutions to the problem of pet allergies requires empathy, understanding, and a willingness to prioritize both human and animal well-being.。

Pets5 全真模拟题3听力原文

Pets5 全真模拟题3听力原文

听力材料:Questions 1 ~ 10 :Hello, everyone. Today I will introduce you the learning chains in Britain. Here the chains refer to schools linked together as part of a group. They can offer students many practical advantages.When people are asked to name a language school, more often than not, they think of one of the large international chains of schools. Some are vast language teaching organizations with schools in many different countries and may teach just one language.One of the main strengths of these chains is the fact that their name isfamiliar to people all over the world. This can be a big advantage in the con-fusing world of language learning. Most students are bewildered by the large choice of schools and courses on offer, both at home and abroad, and so many prefer to choose a school which has a familiar name and an established reputation. Chain schools know this, and part of their success is due to effective marketing and advertising, which helps to keep their name well-known.But chain schools should not be dismissed by serious students just be-cause they use clever marketing techniques. They have other important strengthens which can provide advantages to students. A school is only as good as its teachers and facilities, and many chains offer very high standards in both. More chains require that their teachers have internationally recognized qualifications and a maximum amount of teaching experience. It is important for chains to maintain these standards at all schools, because the reputation of the whole chain can be affected if one school performs badly.Students also benefit from the standardized structure of chains. Most chains use the same text books in all their schools, and often they produce their own coursework materials. They also organize their courses in the same way which means that starting dates and course lengths are usually the same at all schools.For students, one of the main advantages of this standardized structure is simplicity. If you cannot decide whether to study in the U. S. or Britain, for example, most chains allow students to start their language course at one school and continue at another, so they can experience different regions or different countries, as part of the same study trip.Chain schools tend to be larger than single center schools, which can al-so have advantages for students. With larger numbers of students, school administrators can achieve a better mixture of nationalities in classrooms. This means that students can avoid being with other students who speak their language. This gives them the chance to meet students from other countries, and to practice their English with them.Some chains offer students a very simple booking and enrolment procedure which is also useful. Application forms and enrolment procedures are the same for all schools, so students need only supply their details once. Students may find that they can book their course abroad through a representative of a chain school in their own town or city. Other chains offer a centralized booking facility, so students only have to contact one center to make a booking anywhere in the world.Chain schools often operate in different locations, whereas a single school is likely to be based permanently in one building. Many chain schools operate temporary schools, particularly during the summer holidays. In Britain, they often use secondary school premises which are empty during the school holidays.Studying English in an English-speaking country is the most effective way to learn thelanguage, but for many students this is only one stage of their learning career. Most students start learning English in their own country and they will probably want to continue learning once they return from their study trip. An international chain can usually offer you a continuous learning program from one country to the next.Language school chains can offer students high standards of teachingbased on widespread experience. For students it can be a useful way of making learning more flexible.Questions 11 - 13 :M: Now, I' d like to say that I think that this government proposing to build more nuclear power stations in this country is really being stupid. The point about nuclear power is that we haven' t learnt to do away with the waste. We haven' t learnt to cope with the waste from it yet.W: Well, I sometimes think that, you know, they' ve got an impossible job. I mean all the impression I get is that there is no alternative.., well, that' s the impression I get.M: No, no, no I... I don' t agree with that at all. There are plenty of alter-natives. There' s the sun.., solar power.., that is a source that is always there, we always have it.W: I don' t... I don' t quite see what you' re getting at actually, solar power,what' s that?M: Well, the heat from the sun, it can be used in solar panels on the tops of houses for heating, storing up power to heat water and to heat the houses, you know, some solar panels are in operation already and they are saving money...W: That' s a good point actually, but is it really viable, that, I mean becauseI'd...M:Sorry it must be! And the one great advantage is that I can see, if the government set up small units to build solar panels and to install them, it would be creating employment which would improve the unemployment situation and bring terrific advantages.W: I have heard that in England, I mean, there' s not enough sun, is there?For, I mean, solar panels here?M:Yes, well, that' s not quite true. I... there is quite a bit of sun.., youmay not feel the actual heat of it on some occasions.W: No, you are right there !M:But the light power from the sun will...Questions 14 ~ 16 :M : Cigarette?W :No, thank you. I' ve given up, you know.M:Oh.W : It' s ten days ago. Haven' t had one.M : Well, you don' t mind if I had one.W: Well, all right, then... Oh my goodness ! That' s a terrible cough.M: No, no, it' s not. It' s only... I only get it first thing in the morning.W: That' s going to make you very unfit, you know.M : No, it' s all right. It goes in a minute.W:Why don't you try and give up?M : Oh, no. I ought to, but I can' t. It relaxes me, smoking.W: Really?M : It does.W:Well, have you ever thought of just cutting down?M : Oh, no, that' s all very well but... I wouldn' t enjoy it. I depend a biton my smoking. I must say.W:You should do it gradually. I mean.., well, if you tried.., have youthought of just giving up one day?M:Yes, oh well, yes, that is quite a good idea.W:It is.M : But I think I' d lose count or something.W: Oh dear ! Well, it might be an idea if you started eating sweets.M : Oh no, I couldn' t do that. I couldn' t possibly...W:Why?M:Well, it makes you fat.W:Well, do you think that matters? Don' t you think it is better to be fatthan to be unhealthy?M : No, I don' t. I' d rather be fat... Well, I' d rather be thin than fat, certainly.W : Oh dear. Well. Hey ! I' ve got a good idea !M:What' s that?W:Why don't you go to a hypnotist? My sister did!M : Oh, look, you don' t seem to realize that I like smoking. If I gave it up,if I didn' t smoke at all, I' d probably end up attacking people !W : Oh, don' t be so silly ! Of course you wouldn' t !Questions 17 ~ 20 :Farmers usually use plows to prepare their fields for planting crops. Plows cut into the ground, and lift up weeds, and other unwanted plants. However, plowing is blamed for causing severe damage to top soil by removing the plants that protect soil from being blown or washed away. Many farmers in South Asia are now trying a process called Low Till Fanning. Low Till Farming limits the use of plows. In this method of farming, seeds and fertilizer are put into the soil through small cuts made in the surface of the ground. Low Till Agriculture leaves much or all the soil and remains of plants on the ground. They serve as a natural fertilizer and help support the roots of future crops. They take in rain and allow it to flow into the soil in-stead of running off. It has been proved that Low Till Fanning increases har-vests and reduces water use, and this method reduces the need for chemical products because there are fewer unwanted plants. Scientists say Low Till Farming is becoming popular in South Asia, which is facing a severe water shortage. They say the area will become dependent on imported food unless water is saved through methods like Low Till Farming. Currently, more than150 million people in South Asia depend on local rice and wheat crops. Farmers grow rice during wet weather. During the dry season they grow wheat in the same fields. Farmers are using the Low Till Farming method to plant wheat after harvesting rice. Scientists say Low Till Agriculture is one of the best examples in the w0fld of technologies working for both people and the environment.Questions 21 ~ 30 :Today we take it for granted that the mail will be delivered daily at our door. But many years ago it might have been placed in a tree trunk or underneath a rock. In the early days of the mail no one could be sure about where or when it would arrive.At the southern tip of Africa there was once a post office under a rock. In the old days the route from England to India was around the Cape of Good Hope. The journey was stormy and dangerous. It took six long months. Sailors often wished to send mail home, but they seldom met ships bound back to England. So at the cape the sailors would go .ashore. They headed for a certain large stone. On the stone were scratched the words "Look here-under for letters. " They would leave their letters there, knowing that thenext homeward-bound ship would stop and pick them up.There was another post office like this at the southern tip of South America. During the gold rush days, boats sailed around Cape Horn to California. At Cape Horn was a keg nailed to a post. Boats coming from the east coast would send a small boat ashore to this post office. They picked up any letters in the keg. At the same time they mailed letters home that boats sailing east could pick up.In the state of Washington stands the stump of a huge cedar. It, too, was once a post office. Settlers needed a place for the mail carders to leave their letters. Their houses were so widely scattered that the mail carrier could not reach all of them, and the post office was far away over rough roads. So the settlers found a tree that stood where several trails crossed. They cut the tree down ten feet from the ground, hollowed it out, and covered it with a roof. Inside, they nailed a row of wooden boxes. Each box was marked with a family' s name. The mail carder could leave letters there for everyone for miles around.For the first few years after the English colonists came to America, there was no regular postal service. People gave their letters to any traveler who happened to be going in the right direction. Often they gave them to a peddler or a traveling shoemaker. When the traveler reached the town where the letter was going, he might stop at an inn. He would leave the letters there. But there they stayed until the .person they were addressed to happened to come by and stopped at the inn.What about places like Virginia where there were very few inns? People who wished to send letters would leave them at one of the large plantations. The owners of the plantation would then send the letters on to a neighbor. The neighbor would do the same. It was a slow mall system.After many years, regular mail carriers on horseback were hired. They went from one big town to another. Between New York and Boston, for ex-ample, there was one "postrider" a month. He traveled only by day and took two weeks for the trip. often the postrider left all the mail for a whole town at a crossroads store. It still took many weeks for a letter to reach the person it was addressed to.Finally, about two hundred years ago, Benjamin Franklin was made postmaster for all the colonies. His first act was to make a long journey to find out the best routes for carrying the mail. Then he set up a line of post station between the northern and southern colonies. He ordered his postriders to travel by night as well as by day.Franklin' s postriders could carry more letters in a shorter time from one colony to another. The letter service helped the young American colonies learn more about each other. They learned that they were all interested in the same things. This gave them the feeling of unity that later helped them win their independence.In time, the nation set up its own government. But there were still only seventy five post offices in the whole country. Between cities along the coast, mail was sent in sailing boats. But most letters were carried from one post office to another in stagecoaches. Trips were three times aweek in summer and twice a week in winter. The stage stopped in all towns. Large and small. It stopped fifteen minutes in a small town and two hours in a larger one. But still the people of the town might reach the post office too late tocatch the stagecoach. Sometimes, too, the drivers forgot the mall or evenlost it. It still took a week for news to go from Washington D. C. to New York.Today an airmail letter can travel across the world in much less time than that, let alone the e-mail through computers. A modern post office handles more mall in a day than the colonial carders handled in a whole year. You know that the letter you send will go anywhere you want it to go, and whenever.。

Pets5全真模拟题5听力原文

Pets5全真模拟题5听力原文

听力材料Questions 1 ~ 10 :Every year there are reports of people dying as the result of extremely hot weather. Many of the victims are old persons, whose hearts or breathing systems decline. But many die from lack of water.Water is necessary for life and good health. We often forget this fact when we think about the other building blocks of life such as vitamins, minerals and proteins. We can live for many days without eating, but two or three days without water usually leads to death.The human body may look solid, but most of it is water. New born babies are as much as 85% water. Women are about 65% water and men a-bout 75%. Women usually have less water than men because women, in general, have more fat cells, and fat cells hold less water than other kinds of ceils. 'Water does many different things to keep us healthy, It carries hormones, antibodies and foods through the body, and carries away waste materials. That is why different parts of the body contain different amounts of water. For example, blood is 83% water, muscles are 75% water, the brain is 74%, and bones are 25%.Water is also necessary for cooling the body under hot weather and when we are working hard or exercising, water carries body heat to the surface of the skin, where the heat is lost through perspiration. Researchers say cool liquids cool us faster than warm liquids, because cold liquids take up more heat inside the body and carry it away faster. They say, however, that cold sweet drinks do not work well because the sugar slows the liquid from getting into the blood-stream.Researchers also note that fat cells block body heat from escaping quickly. Fat cells under the skin act like warm clothing to keep body heat inside. This is why overweight people have a more easy time staying cool than thin people.The body loses water every day through perspiration and urine. If we lose too much, we will become sick. A 10% drop in body water can cause the blood system to fail. A 15% ~ 20% drop usually leads to death. To re-place what is lost, health experts say growing persons should drink about 2liters of liquids each day, and more in hot weather. They say we can also get some of the water we need in the foods we eat. Most fruits and vegetables are more than 80% water. Meats are 50% -60% water. And even bread is about 33% water. Water may be one of the most simple of all chemical sub-stances, but it is the most important substance that we put into our bodies.Questions 11 - 13 :Right, everybody. Welcome to Central College library services. My name's Kathy Jenkins. I'll give you a brief introduction to the library. We have a well-stocked bank of resources which are located in three main places: the library itself, with books and periodicals; the self-access language centre, with audio and video material; and the micro-computer lab. I'll start with the micro-computer lab, or micro-lab as we call it. It is fitted with 24personal computers.If you are a member of the library, you may borrow CALL discs inFrench, German, Italian, Spanish and Russian as well as English, by me way, CALL stands for computer aided language learning: C-A-double L,"CALL", for short. Youmay also borrow a range of word processing and desktop publishing packages. All disks are, of course, strictly for use in the micro-lab only. If you wish to print anything you should use one of the five machines around the outside of the room. Four are connected to dot man-ix printers, one is connected to the laser printer. If you want a better quality printout from the laser printer, come and see me or any of the library staff.[Dot-matrix printouts are free but there is a charge for using the laser printer. There is always a queue to get to the terminals towards the end of term. Come in and get to know how to use the computers early in the term and use them regularly, rather than just before exams and essay deadlines, in order to avoid delay or disappointment. Training sessions are held on a regular basis, on the first and third Thursday of each month, and are free to full-time students of the college. See you there. Now, any questions?Questions 14 ~ 16 :M: So you really believe that clothes carry a kind of message for other people and that what we put on is in some way a reflection of what we feel?W: Oh yes, very much so. Now people are beginning to take seriously the idea of a kind of psychology of clothing, to believe that there is not just individual taste in our clothes but also a thinking behind what we wear which is trying to express something we may not even be aware of our-selves.M:But surely this has always been the case. We all dress up when we want to impress someone, such as for a job interview with a prospective employer; we then make an effort and put on something smart.W:True, but that's a conscious act. What I am talking about is more of asubconscious thing. Take for example the student who is away from home at college or university: if he tends to wrap himself up more than the others, this is because he is probably feeling homesick. Similarly, a general feeling of insecurity can sometimes take the form of over dressing in warmer clothes than necessary.M:Can you give any other examples'?W : Yes. I think people who are sociable and outgoing tend to dress in an extroverted way, preferring brighter or more dazzling colors yellows, bright reds, and so on. In the same way, what might be seen as a parallel with the animal kingdom, aggressive clothes might indicate an aggressive personality or attitude to life. Think about the threat displays used by animals when they want to warn off opponents.M:Do you think the care or lack of it over the way we actually wear ourclothes has anything to tell us'?W:Yes, indeed. The length, for example, of a man's trousers speaks volrunes about his awareness of his own image. Or, if his trousers are too short or hanging loosely, this probably means he's absorbed by other things.Questions 17 ~ 20 :The human nose has given to the languages of the world many interesting expressions. Of course, this is not surprising. Without the nose, we could not breathe nor smell. It is a part of the face that gives a person special character. Cyrano de Bergerac said that a large nose showed a great man courageous, courteous, manly, and intellectual.A famous woman poet wished that she had two noses to smell a rose! Blaise Pascal, a French philosopher, made an interesting comment about Cleopatra's nose. If it had been shorter, he said, it would have changed the whole face of the word!Historically, man's nose has had a principal role in his imagination. Man has referred to the nose in many ways to express his emotions. Expressions concerning the nose refer to human weakness :anger, pride, jealousy and revenge. In English there are a number of phrases about the nose. For example, to hold up one's nose expresses a basic human feeling--pride. People can hold up their noses at people, things, and places.The phrase, to be led around by the nose, shows man's weakness. A person who is led around by the nose lets other people control him. On the other hand, a person who follows his nose lets his instinct guide him.For the human emotion of rejection, the phrase to have one's nose putout of joint is very descriptive. The expression applies to persons who have been turned aside because of a rival. Their pride is hurt and they feel rejected. This expression is not new. It was used by Erasmus in 1542.This is only a sampling of expressions in English dealing with the nose. There are a number of others. However, it should be as plain as the nose on your face that the nose is more than an organ for breathing and smelling!Questions 21 ~ 30 :Last time we started looking at the question of management and wondering what the term actually meant. Then we took a brief look at the concept of scientific management. You remember, we decided it was useful but not enough on its own. So today we're going to look at another aspect--behavioral management. You may not really have come across this word "behavioral" before, though I'm sure you are familiar with the word "behavior". Behavioral simply means having to do with behavior. And that is our starting point for today: We are going to start by realizing that the activity of any organization is human activity, designed to achieve human goals. So we are really talking about human behavior.Any business concern does two things. First, it provides either goods orservices that the customer needs. That is, it either makes things or does things for other people in exchange for money. Second, it provides people with work--and most of us have to work in order to make a living.Work, much as we may sometimes wish we didn't have to do it, or not quite so much of it, has in fact two advantages. First--and I spoke about this last time--it can give us satisfaction. We can be proud of what we are doing--like a craftsman making something beautiful, or a doctor of a nurse helping people who are ill or in pain. This is what I called job satisfaction, and without it I am sure work can become an awful burden. And on a more basic level, work earns us money, which we can use to buy the things we need in order to live, like food and somewhere to live, as well as all the lux-uries we could probably do without but still like to have.Behavioral management is based on a research of how people behave at work. It uses the findings of psychologists and sociologists, and so on. These make a study of individuals and groups to see what things influence the way they behave indifferent conditions. The results can then be used to de-sign the best conditions in which people will perform--or behave--in the way that a manager wants them to in order to make a business more efficient and to achieve its goals. They have collected a lot of evidence and formulated a lot of theories to help the manager, and there is no doubt that properly understood and applied, this can be very useful.But still we return to the fact that people are individuals, all different from each other, and all--as we say--with minds of their own. So no matter what the manager knows about the way people behave in groups and so on, he has really to treat everyone on his staff as an individual in his own right. Of course, he can be helped in this by knowing how to encourage people to do things, how to stimulate them to behave in a certain way, and so on. A manager can himself be taught how to do this, but however unscientific this may sound, it is more likely that a good manager is born rather than trained. He has some natural ability to recognize what people are likely to do, what abilities they have, and other things like that. Realizing this, and then applying what he has learned about human behavior, is what makes someone a good manager.So behavioral management is management based on an assessment of an individual and the application of what is known about how people in general tend to behave. Like scientific management, it is undoubtedly useful, but not, the complete answer.相关推荐:。

公共英语五级模拟3

公共英语五级模拟3

[模拟] 公共英语五级模拟3Section I Listening Comprehension Directions:This sectionis designed to test your ability to understand spoken English. You will hear a selection of recorded materials and you must answer the questions that accompany them. There are three parts in this section, Part A, Part B and Part C. Remember, while you are doing the test ,you should first put down your answers in your test booklet, NOT on the ANSWER SHEET. At the end of the listening comprehension section, you will have 5 minutes to transfer your answers from your test booklet onto ANSWER SHEET 1. If you have any questions, you may raise your hand NOW as you will not be allowed to speak once the test is started. Now look at Part A in your test booklet.[听力原文]Questions 1 ~ 10:When you close your eyes and try to think of the shape of your own body, what you imagine ( or, rather, what you feel)is quite different from what you see when you open your eyes and look in the mirror. The image you feel is much vaguer than the one you see. And if you lie still, it is quite hard to imagine your-self as having any particular size or shape.When you move, when you feel the weight of your arms and legs andthe natural resistance of the objects around you, the "felt image" of yourself starts to become clearer. It is almost as if it were createdby your own actions and the sensations they cause.The image you make for yourself has rather strange proportions: certain parts feel much larger than they look. If you poke your tongue into a hole in one of your teeth, it feels enormous; you are often surprised by how small it looks when you inspect it in the mirror.But although the "felt image" may not have the exact shape you seein the mirror, it is much more important. It is the image through which you recognize your physical existence in the world. In spite of its strange proportions, it is all one piece, and since it has a consistentright and left and top and bottom, it allows you to locate new sensations when they occur. It allows you to find your nose in the dark, scratch itches and point to a pain.If the felt image is damaged for any reason—if it is cut in half or lost, as it often is after certain strokes which wipe out recognition of one entire side—these tasks become almost impossible. What is more, it becomes hard to make sense of one's own visual appearance. If one half of the felt image is wiped out or injured,the patient stops recognizing the affected part of his body. It is hard for him to find the location of sensation on that side, and, although he feels the doctor's touch, he locates it as being on the undamaged side.He loses his ability to accept the affected side as part of his body even when he can see it. If you throw him a pair of gloves and ask him to put them on, he will only glove one hand and leave the other bare. And yet he had to use the left hand in order to glove the fight. The fact that he can see the ungloved hand doesn't seem to help him, and there is no reason why it should. He can no longer reconcile what he sees with what he feels the ungloved object lying on the left may look like a hand, but, since there is no felt image corresponding to it ,why should he claim the object as his?第1题:Mirror images is often different from the" felt images."A.YesB.No参考答案:A答案解析:第2题:The" felt image" is much more important because it helps you to be more confident.A.YesB.No参考答案:B答案解析:第3题:If you poke your tongue into a hole of your teeth, it feels very ting and slim.A.YesB.No参考答案:B答案解析:第4题:The" felt image" lets you recognize your physical existence in the world.A.YesB.No参考答案:A答案解析:第5题:You can find your nose in the darkness because of your "felt image."A.YesB.No参考答案:A答案解析:第6题:Strokes may sometimes destroy all of the mirror image.A.YesB.No参考答案:B答案解析:第7题:If a man loses the ability to recognize his left side he will lose feeling on his both sides.A.YesB.No参考答案:B答案解析:第8题:Stroke victims sometimes refuse to regard their injured sides asparts of their bodies because they are unwilling to admit their disabilities.A.YesB.No参考答案:B答案解析:第9题:A stroke victim can put gloves on both his hands.A.YesB.No参考答案:B答案解析:第10题:The talk is mainly about the importance of "felt images".A.YesB.No参考答案:A答案解析:Part B You will hear 3 conversations or talks and you must answer the questions by choosing A, B, C or D. You will hear the recording ONLY ONCE.[听力原文]Questions 11 ~ 13:W: Jim, thank goodness you've arrived. The class presentation started half an hour ago, and I was just beginning to panic.M: I'm sorry for being late, Alice. This morning has been a real mess, I didn't think I was going to make it here at all.W: Why are you late? Our presentation depends on those graphs you areholding.M: Yes, I know. I'll tell you about it later. First, let's see how we are doing for time. Two groups are still ahead of us, aren't they? The presentations on thefights of the consumer and the analysis of the stock market. That means I've got twenty minutes to sort out.W: You look cold. What happened?M: I've been standing outside in arctic temperatures for over an hour waiting for a bus.W: Over an hour. But I thought your apartment was only a ten minute bus ride to campus.M: In normal conditions, but the bus was delayed because of the weather, and when I stopped in a drug store to call home for a ride, the bus went by. Asluck would have it there was no one at home, so I had to wait another forty-five minutes for the next bus.W: That's Murphy's Law, isn't it? What did it say? If anything can go wrong, it will. Well, we've still got twenty minutes to get our wits together.第11题:What is the woman's tone of voice when she first sees the man?A.Frustrated.B.Relieved.C.Sarcastic.D.Apologetic.参考答案:B答案解析:第12题:What are the students doing when the man arrives in class?A.Taking an examination.B.Drawing graphs.C.Giving presentations.D.Having a class of discussion.参考答案:C答案解析:第13题:How much time do the man and the woman have before they address the class?A.Less than ten minutes.B.About twenty minutes.C.Forty-five minutes.D.Over an hour.参考答案:B答案解析:[听力原文]Questions 14 ~ 16:During the Christmas shopping rush in London, the intriguing story was reported of a tramp who, apparently through no fault of his own, found himself locked in a well-known chain store late on Christmas Eve. No doubt the store was filled with last-minute Christmas shoppers and the staff were dead beating and longing to get home. Presumably all the proper security checks were made before the store was locked and they left to enjoy the three-day holiday untroubled by customers desperate to get last-minute Christmas presents.However that may be, our tramp found himself alone in the store and decided to make the best of it. There was food, drink, bedding and camping equipment, of which he made good use. There must also have been television sets and radios. Though it was not reported if he took advantage of these facilities, when the shop re-opened, he was discovered in bed with a large number of empty bottles beside him. He seems to have been a man of good humour and philosophic temperament—asindeed vagrants very commonly are. Everyone else was enjoying Christmas,so he saw no good reason why he should not do the same. He submitted,cheerfully enough, to being taken away by the police. Perhaps he had a better Christmas than usual. He was put into prison for seven days. The judge awarded no compensation to the chain store for the food and drink our tramp had consumed. They had, in his opinion, already received valuable free publicity from the coverage the story received in the newspapers and on television. Perhaps the judge had a good Christmas too.第14题:The tramp was locked in the storeA.for his own mistakes.B.due to a misunderstanding.C.by accident.D.through an error of judgment.参考答案:C答案解析:第15题:What action did the tramp take? HeA.looted the store.B.made himself at home.C.went to sleep for 2 days.D.had a Christmas party.参考答案:B答案解析:第16题:When the tramp was arrested, heughed at the police.B.looked forward to going to prison.C.took his bottles with him.D.didn't make any fuss.参考答案:D答案解析:[听力原文]Questions 17 ~ 20:M: Do you think women are generally better at certain things than men? W: Well, it seems to me women are much better at dealing with more than one thing at a time. I don't know whether this has to do with the difference in their(工团)brain or whether it's just how they have to cope more often with more than one thing. For example, it is usually women who work, have babies, look after the babies and take the main responsibility for looking after the home. Andmaybe it's practicing all that makes women be better able to do more than one thing at a time. Men, it seems to me, can only concentrate on one thing at a time, including boring domestic things like washing the dishes. If a friend of mine who is a man washes the dishes he'll find it quite difficult to conduct a conversation at the same time, whereas if I'm doing the dishes I'm alwaystalking to someone, probably cooking something as well, and finding that nottoo stressful.M: Do you think women are more interested in personal relationships than men?W: Generally, yes, though again I don't know if this is because that from an early age they are taught to please other people, whereas men are always taught to please themselves. I think relationships are more central to most women's lives. For example, I think men don't have very good conversations with each other, whereas women do. If you listen to women talking, often they will be having, after a relatively short time of knowing each other, fairly personal and truthful conversations, whereas men have conversations not about what I'd call real things. They will talk about their work in a very superficial way, or their interests in a very superficial way, for example, and football is the-um-,just a sort of way for men to relate to each other without actually saying anything important, it appears to me.第17题:According to the woman, why women are much better at dealing with more than one thing at a time?A.She doesn't know the reason exactly.B.Because women are smarter than men.C.Because women have more things to deal with than men.D.Because men always refuse to deal with more than one thing at the same time.参考答案:A答案解析:第18题:Why are women much better at dealing with more than one thing at a time, but men are not as good?A.Because women have better abilities.B.Because men are not used to housework.C.Because men lack practice.D.Because men find it easy to concentrate on only one thing.参考答案:A答案解析:第19题:What do we know about the difference between men and women in termsof personal relationships?A.It is easier to get along with women than with men.B.Women tend to reveal their feelings more easily.C.Personal relationships are more central to most men's lives.D.It's easier to establish personal relationships with women than with men.参考答案:D答案解析:第20题:Why does the woman refer to football?A.To illustrate men's interest.B.To illustrate that men usually do not touch upon anything important in talking about their work and interest.C.To prove men are mostly football fans.D.To show that men intentionally try to avoid talking about their true feelings.参考答案:B答案解析:Part C You will hear a talk. As you listen, you must answer Questions 21~30 by writing NO MORE THAN THREE words in the space provided on the right. You will hear the talk TWICE. You now have 60 seconds to read Questions 21~30.[听力原文]Questions 21 ~ 30:The ten years of the 1960s was a period of profound change in manyparts of the world. In the United States, beginning with the Civil Rights Movement in the early 1960s, and extending through the Vietnam War, millions of Americans began to challenge established authority. These movements were initially political. Young Americans demanded that governmental policies in race relations and international relations correspond to the ideals of justice contained in the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States. By the end of the decade, however, challenges to authority were carried far beyond political issues and were directed at the social order and deeply rooted cultural patterns of the country.The generation that came of age in the 1960s, the Baby Boom generation, sought change in almost every aspect of life in the United States. For example,they experimented with cooperative economic institutions and communal living arrangements, broke sexual taboos, altered the process of education, explored non-Western spiritual traditions, developed a strong respect for the environment, and transformed popular culture. As a whole, these changes stood for a different set ofcultural values that provided a thorough critique of American society as it existed at that time. Although many" alternative lifestyles" were short-lived, cultural changesthat began in that period have had a continuing effect on much of American life ,particularly in attitudes toward male-female relations.All cultures are complex. They are a combination of closely related patterns of social interaction. As a result, changes in an important aspect of a particular culture will usually produce changes throughout the society. The Women's Movement that began in the United States during the 1960s is a typical example of this phenomenon. From the beginning, the Women' s Movement was influenced by cultural changes that had occurred earlier in the decade. The Civil Rights Movement for racial equality and the development of the birth control pill were particularly important—the Civil Rights Movement because women involved in the effort for racial justice began to see themselves as victims of social injustice, and the birth control pill because it gave women reliable control over reproduction.Social, economic, and legal equality and reproductive rights continue to be the basic principles of the Women's Movement. As some of these goals have been achieved, major changes have occurred in broader cultural patterns such as the economy and the family. At the present time, most of American women are employed. Employment is no longer confined to such traditional female occupations as teacher, nurse, or secretary. Women are now found in every occupation and at all levels of responsibility and authority. Participation in the economy has given many women an independence that has allowed them tochoose whether, when,and how to form a family. Working women within families now are part of an economic partnership with men in which both adults provide support for the family unit and are responsible for the quality of life.The Women's Movement has affected the relationship between men and women in the family in other ways as well. Women have challenged traditional sex roles in the household. Men are now expected to participate in child-raising and domestic activities to a much greater extent than in the past. Childbearing is now a matter of family choice, with women having the final decision in family planning.All of these cultural changes are strengthened in both the media and in the educational system. Children are growing up with self-images and expectations far different from those of earlier generations. Young men and women who have been influenced by the changes brought about by the Women's Movement over the past 25 years will carry those changes to the next generation.第21题:What does the lecture mainly concern? _________参考答案:Cultural changes.详细解答:第22题:The changes in the U. S. A. in the 1960s began with the __________ Right Movement.参考答案:Civil.详细解答:第23题:Why did Americans have these movements in the early 1960s?________参考答案:Challenge established authority.详细解答:第24题:What was the name given to the generation that came of age during the 1960s? _________参考答案:Baby Boom generation.详细解答:第25题:When did the Women's Movement begin in the U. S. A.__________参考答案:During the 1960s.详细解答:第26题:What are the basic principles of the women's movement?_________参考答案:Equality reproductive rights.详细解答:第27题:List three traditional female occupations mentioned in thetalk.__________参考答案:Teachers,nurses,secretaries.详细解答:第28题:Why have women had an independence?___________参考答案:Participation in economy.详细解答:第29题:What is the effect of the Women's Movement? __________参考答案:Male-and-female relationship changed.详细解答:第30题:In what aspects does the speaker think all of these cultural changesare strengthened?____________参考答案:Media educational system.详细解答:Section Ⅱ Use of English Read the following text andfill each of the numbered spaces with ONE suitable word. Write your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.Impatience characterizes young intellectual workers. They want to make their mark___31___So it's important to get___32___ to them ina challenging manner the idea___33___big achievements rarely come easily and quickly. Point out that the little successes are essential. Show that they___34___turn become the foundation on___35___reputationsare built and from which more important tasks can be accomplished.A variety of job assignments, including job or project rotation, also keep a job___36___becoming dull. Whereas it's natural for some individuals to want to move ahead immediately to more difficult assignments,___37___proper guidance they can continue to learn and to gain versatility by working on a number of jobs that are essentially___38___the same complexity. This way they gain breadth, ifnot depth.Probably the greatest offense to guard___39___when dealing with younger specialists is to reject ideas out of hand. You must listen—and listen objectively—to their suggestions. Avoid___40___overcritical. You want to nurture an inquiring mind witha fresh approach. You'll frustrate it quickly if you revert toooften___41___"We've tried that before and it won't ___42___here."One sure way to disenchant___43___college graduates is flagrantly misusing their talents. Expect them to do some routine work, of course. But don't make their___44___work just one long series of errands. This includes such break-in assignments ___45___performing routine calculations, digging up___46___material,___47___operating reproduction equipment. One large manufacturing company recently interviewed a number of___48___engineers who had left them. The company found that the overwhelming complaint was that the company not only did not offer work that___49___challenging but also expected___50___too little from them in the way of performance.第31题:参考答案:fast详细解答:由上一句句意“不耐心代表了年轻的脑力工作者们的特点。

全国英语等级考试(PETS5)模拟练习题及答案

全国英语等级考试(PETS5)模拟练习题及答案

全国英语等级考试(PETS5)模拟练习题及答案2016年全国英语等级考试(PETS5)模拟练习题及答案REPEAT THE TEXTYou now have 3 minutes to check your answers to Questions 1 - 10.That is the end of Part C. You now have 5 minutes to transfer all your answers from your test booklet to ANSWER SHEET 1.That is the end of Listening Comprehension.SECTION II: Use of EnglishRead the following text and fill each of the numbered spaces with ONE suitable word. Write your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.Children who grip their pens too close to the writing point are likely to be at a disadvantage in examinations,(1) _____ to the first serious investigation into the way in which writing technique can dramatically affect educational achievement.The survey of 643 children and adults, aged from pre-school to 40-plus, also suggests(2) _____ pen-holding techniques have deteriorated sharply over one generation, with teachers now paying far(3) ______ attention to correct pen grip and handwriting style.Stephanie Thomas, a learning support teacher(4) ______ findings have been published, was inspired to investigate this area(5) _______ she noticed that those pupils who had the most trouble with spelling(6) ______ had a poor pen grip. While Ms. Thomas could not establish a significant statistical link(7) ______ pen-holding style and accuracy in spelling, she(8) ______ find huge differences in technique between theyoung children and the mature adults, and a definite(9) ________ between near-point gripping and slow, illegible writing.People who(10) ______ their pens at the writing point also show other characteristics(11) ______ inhibit learning,(12) _______ as poor posture, leaning too(13) ______ to the desk, using four fingers to grip the pen(14) ______ than three, and clumsy positioning of the thumb (which can obscure(15) ______ is being written.Ms. Thomas believes that the(16) ______ between older and younger writers is(17) ________ too dramatic to be accounted for simply by the possibility that people get better at writing as they grow(18) ________. She attributes it to a failure to teach the most effective methods, pointing out that the differences between(19) _______ groups coincides with the abandonment of formal handwriting instruction in classrooms in the sixties. "The 30-year-olds showed a huge range of grips,(20) ________ the over 40s group all had a uniform 'tripod' grip."SECTION III: Reading ComprehensionPart ARead the following texts and answer the questions which accompany them by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.Text 1In recent years, there has been a steady assault on salt from the doctors: salt is bad for you ? regardless of your health. Politicians also got on board. "There is a direct relationship," US congressman Neal Smith noted, "between the amount of sodiuma person consumes and heart disease, circulatory disorders, stroke and even early death."Frightening, if true! But many doctors and medical researchers are now beginning to feel the salt scare has gone too far. "All this hue and cry about eating salt is unnecessary," Dr. Dustan insists. "For most of us it probably doesn't make much difference how much salt we eat." Dustan's most recent short-term study of 150 people showed that those with normal blood pressure experienced no change at all when placed on an extremely low-salt diet, or later when salt was reintroduced. Of the hypertensive subjects, however, half of those on the low-salt diet did experience a drop in blood pressure, which returned to its previous level when salt was reintroduced."An adequate to somewhat excessive salt intake has probably saved many more lives than it has cost in the general population," notes Dr. John H. Laragh. "So a recommendation that the whole population should avoid salt makes no sense."Medical experts agree that everyone should practice reasonable "moderation" in salt consumption. For the average person, a moderate amount might run from four to ten grams a day, or roughly 1/2 to 1/3 of a teaspoon. The equivalent of one to two grams of this salt allowance would come from the natural sodium in food. The rest would be added in processing, preparation or at the table.Those with kidney, liver or heart problems may have to limit dietary salt, if their doctor advises. But even the very vocal "low salt" exponent, Dr. Arthur Hull Hayes, Jr. admits that "we do not know whether increased sodium consumption causes hypertension." In fact, there is growing scientific evidence that other factors may be involved: deficiencies in calcium, potassium, perhaps magnesium; obesity (much more dangerous than sodium); genetic predisposition;stress."It is not your enemy," says Dr. Laragh. "Salt is the No. 1 natural component of all human tissue, and the idea that you don't need it is wrong. Unless your doctor has proven that you have a salt-related health problem, there is no reason to give it up."【2016年全国英语等级考试(PETS5)模拟练习题及答案】。

2021年公共英语五级考试全真模拟试题三

2021年公共英语五级考试全真模拟试题三

2021年公共英语五级考试全真模拟试题三Part AYou will hear a talk.As you listen.answer Questions 1 to 10 by circling True or False.You will hear the talk ONLY ONCE.1、听录音:点击播放回答1-10题:All international chain schools teach many different languages.TRUE/FALSE2、One of the advantages of chain schools is that they are famous all over the world.TRUE /FALSE3、The success of chain schools is to some extent because of their marketing and advertising.TRUE /FALSE4、Chains don' t produce their own course book material.TRUE/FALSE5、All chains can offer students the same type of course in different places.TRUE/FALSE6、Students can enjoy a simple booking and enrolment procedure in some chains.TRUE/FALSE7、Chain schools often change their locations.TRUE/FALSE8、Studying in an English-speaking country is a very effective way to learn English.TRUE /FALSE9、Chains don' t offer students the chance to pursue their study from one country to another.TRUE /FALSE10、Chains make learning flexible.TRUE/FALSEPart BYou will hear 3 conversations or talks and you must answer the questions by choosing A,B,C or D.You will hear the recording ONLY ONCE.11、听录音,回答以下问题。

全国公共英语等级考试(PETS)五级模拟题

全国公共英语等级考试(PETS)五级模拟题

全国公共英语等级考试(PETS)五级模拟题全国公共英语等级考试(PETS)五级模拟题第一部分听力第一节听下面5段对话。

每段对话后有一个小题,从题中所给的[A]、[B]、[C]三个选项中选出最佳选项,并标在试卷的相应位置。

听完每段对话后,你都有10秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题。

每段对话仅读一遍。

例如,你将听到以下内容:M:Excuse me.Can you tell me how much the shirt is?W:Yes,it’s nine fifteen.请看选项:How much is the shirt?[A]£19.15.[B]£9.15.[C]£9.18.衬衫的价格为9镑15便士,所以你选择[B]项,并在试卷上将其标出。

Answer:[A][B]■[C]1. Where are they talking?[A]In a post office.[B]In a restaurant.[C]In a bank.2. What does the man want to do?[A]To have tea.[B]T o see father.[C]To talk to Ella.3. For whom is the man making tea and coffee?[A]Lucy.[B]The man himself.[C]Some guests.4. What are the two speakers talking about?[A]A tea house.[B]A hotel.[C]A restaurant.5. What’s the man going to do?[A]Buy some bread.[B]Go back home.[C]Ask for directions.第二节听下面5段对话或独白。

每段对话或独白后有几个小题,从题中所给的[A]、[B]、[C]三个选项中选出最佳选项,并标在试卷的相应位置。

下半年英语等级考试pets5模拟试题及答案

下半年英语等级考试pets5模拟试题及答案

下半年英语等级考试pets5模拟试题及答案2017年下半年英语等级考试pets5模拟试题及答案人不光是靠他生来就拥有一切,而是靠他从学习中所得到的一切来造就自己。

以下是店铺为大家搜索整理的2017年下半年英语等级考试pets5模拟试题及答案,希望对正在关注的您有所帮助!Section m Reading Comprehension( 50 minutes)Part ARead the following texts and answer the questions which accompany them by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.Text 1Not long ago, a mysterious Christmas card dropped through our mail slot. The envelope was addressed to a man named Raoul, who, I was relatively certain, did not live with us. The envelope wash' t sealed, so I. opened it. The inside of the card was blank. Ed, my husband, explained that the card was both from and to the newspaper deliveryman. His name was apparently Raoul, and Raoul wanted a holiday tip. We were meant to put a check inside the card and then drop the envelope in the mail. When your services are rendered at 4 a. m. , you can' t simply hang around, like a hotel bellboy expecting a tip. You have to be direct.So I wrote a nice holiday greeting to this man who, in my imagination, fires The New York Times from his bike aimed at our front door, casing more noise with mere newsprint than most people manage with sophisticated black market fireworks.With a start, I realized that perhaps the reason for the 4 a.m. wake-up noise was not ordinary rudeness but carefully executed spite: I had not tipped Raoul in Christmases past. I honestlyhadn't realized I was supposed to. This was the first time he'd used the card tactic. So I got out my checkbook. Somewhere along the line, holiday tipping went from an optional thank-you for a year of services to a Mafia-style protection racket (收取保护费的组织).Several days later, I was bringing our garbage bins back from the curb when I noticed an envelope taped to one of the lids. The outside of the envelope said MICKEY. It had to be another tip request, this time from our garbage collector. Unlike Raoul, Mickey hadn't enclosed his own Christmas card from me. In a way, I appreciated the directness. "I know you don' t care how merry my Christmas is, and that' s fine, " the gesture said. "I want $ 30, or I'll ‘ forget' to empty your garbage bin some hot summer day. "I put a check in the envelope and taped it back to the bin. The next morning, Ed noticed that the envelope was gone, though the trash hadn't yet been picked up: "Someone stole Mickey' s tip !" Ed was quite certain. He made me call the bank and cancel the check.But Ed had been wrong. Two weeks later, Mickey left a letter from the bank on our steps. The letter informed Mickey that the check, which he had tried to cash, had been cancelled. The following Tuesday morning, when Ed saw a truck outside, he ran out with his wallet. “Are you Mickey?”The man looked at him with scorn. "Mickey is the garbageman. I am the recycling. " Not only had Ed insul- ted this man by hinting that he was a garbageman, but he had obviously neglected to tip him. Ed ran back inside for more funds. Then he noticed that the driver of the truck had been watching the whole transaction. He peeled off an- other twenty and looked around,waving bills in the air. "Anyone else?"Had we consulted the website of the Emily Post Institute, this embarrassing broach of etiquette (礼节) could have been avoided. Under "trash/recycling collectors" in the institute' s Holiday Tipping Guidelines, it says, " $10 to $30 each. " You may or may not wish to know that your pet groomer, hairdresser, mailman and UPS guy all expect a holiday tip.51. The newspaper deliveryman put a blank card inside the envelope because __A. he forgot to write a few words on itB. he wanted the couple to send it backC. he used it to ask for a Christmas tipD.he was afraid of asking for a tip in person52. From the passage, we learn that the author __A. didn' t like Raoul' s way of delivering the paperB. didn' t realize why Raoul delivered the paper that wayC. didn' t know that Raoul came very early in the morningD. didn' t feel it necessary to meet Raoul when he came53. According to the passage, the author felt __ to give Raoula holiday tip.A. excitedB. delightedC. embarrassedD. forced54. Which of the following is CORRECT about Mickey, the garbage collector?A. He wrote a letter to the couple afterwards.B. He failed to collect the money from the bank.C. He wanted the couple to send him a Christmas card.D. He collected both the cheek and the garbage that day.55. Ed's encounter with the recycling team shows that __A. Ed was desperate to correct his mistake.B. Ed only wanted to give money to Raoul.C. Ed was unwilling to tip the truck driver.D.Ed no longer wanted to give them money.Text 2At 18, Ashanthi DeSilva of suburban Cleveland is a living symbol of one of the great intellectual achievements of the 20th century. Born with an extremely rare and usually fatal disorder that left her without a functioning immune system (the "bubble-boy disease", named after an earlier victim who was kept alive for years in a sterile plastictent), she was treated beginning in 1990 with a revolutionary new therapy that sought to correct the defect at its verysource, in the genes of her white blood cells. It worked. Although her last gene-therapy treatment was in 1992, she is completely healthy with normal immune function, according to one of the doctors who treated her, W. French Anderson of the University of Southern California. Researchers have long dreamed of treating diseases from hemophilia to cancer by replacing mutant genes with normal ones. And the dreaming may continue for decades more."there will be a gene-based treatment for essentially every disease, " Anderson says, "within 50 years. "It' s not entirely clear why medicine has been so slow to build on Anderson' s early success. The National Insti- tutes of Health budget office estimates it will spend $ 432 million on gene-therapy research in 2005, and there is no shortage of promising leads. The therapeutic genes are usually delivered through viruses that don' t cause human disease. "The virus is sort of likea Trojan horse, " says Ronald Crystal of New York Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical College. "The cargo is the gene. "At the University of Pennsylvania' s Abramson Cancer Center, immunologist Carl June recently treated HIV patients with a gene intended to help their cells resist the infection. At Cornell University. researchers are pursuing gene-based therapies for Parkinson' s disease and a rare hereditary disorder that destroys children" s brain cells. At Stanford University and the Children' s Hospital of Philadelphia, researchers are trying to figure out bow to help pa- tients with hemophilia who today must inject themselves with expensive clotting drugs for life. Animal experiments have shown great promise.But somehow, things get lost in the translation from laboratory to patient. In human trials of the hemophilia treatment, patients show a response at first, but it fades over time. And the field has still not recovered from the set- back it suffered in 1999, when Jesse Gelsinger, an 18-year-old with a rare metabolic disorder, died after receiving an experimental gene therapy at the University of Pennsylvania. Some experts worry that the field will be tarnished fur- ther if the next people to benefit are not patients but athletes seeking an edge. This summer, researchers at the Salk Institute in San Diego said they had created a "marathon mouse" by implanting a gene that enhances running ability;already, officials at the World Anti-Doping Agency are preparing to test athletes for signs of "gene doping". But the principle is the same, whether you' re trying to help a healthy runner run faster or allow a muscular-dystrophy patient to walk. "Everybody recognizes that gene therapy is a very good idea, " says Crystal. "And eventually it' s going to work. ""56. The case of Ashanthi Desilva is mentioned in the text toA. show the promise of gene-therapyB. give an example of modern treatment for fatal diseasesC. introduce the achievement of Anderson and his teamD. explain how gene-based treatment works57. Anderson' s early success has ____A. greatly speeded the development of medicineB. brought no immediate progress in the research of gene-therapyC. promised a cure to every diseaseD. made him a national hero58. Which of the following is true according to the text?A. Ashanthi needs to receive gene-therapy treatment constantly.B. Despite the huge funding, gene researches have shown few promises.C. Therapeutic genes are carded by harmless viruses.D. Gene-doping is encouraged by world agencies to help athletes get better scores.59. The word "tarnish" (line 4, paragraph 4) most probably means __A. affectB. warnC. troubleD. stain6O. From the text we can see that the author seemsA. optimisticB. pessimisticC. troubledD. uncertainText 3Shortages of flu vaccine are nothing new in America, but this year' s is a whopper. Until last week, it appeared that 100 million Americans would have access to flu shots this fall. Then British authorities, concerned about quality-control problems at a production plant in Liverpool, barred all further shipments by the Chiron Corp. Overnight, the U. S. vaccine supply dwindled by nearly half and federal health officials found themselves making an unusual plea. Instead of beseeching us all to get vaccinated, they' re now urging most healthy people between the ages of 2 and 64 not to. "This reemphasizes the fragility of our vaccine supply, " says Dr. Martin Myers of the National Network for Immunization Information, "and the lack of redundancy in our system.Why is such a basic health service so easily knocked out? Mainly because private companies have had little in. centive to pursue it. To create a single dose of flu vaccine, a manufacturer has to grow live virus in a 2-week-old fertilized chicken egg, then crack the egg, harvest the virus and extract the proteins used to provoke an immune response. Profit margins are narrow, demand is fickle and, because each year' s flu virus is different, any tettover vaccine goes to waste. As a result, the United States now has only two major suppliers ( Chiron and Aventis Pas- teur)--and when one of them runs inla trouble, there isn' t much the other can do about it. "A vaccine maker can" t just call up and order 40 million more fertilized eggs, " says Manon Cox, of Connecticut-based Protein Sciences Corp. "There' s a whole industry that' s scheduled to produce a certain number of eggs at a certain time. "Sleeker technologies are now in the works, and experts arehoping that this year' s fiasco will speed the pace of innovation. The main challenge is to shift production from eggs into cell cultures--a medium already used to make most other vaccines. Flu vaccines are harder than most to produce this way, but several biotech companies are now pursuing this strategy, and one culture-based product ( Solvay Pharmaceuticals' Invivac) has been cleared for marketing in Europe.For Americans, the immediate challenge is to make the most of a limited supply. The government estimates that 95 million people still qualify for shots under the voluntary restrictions announced last week. That' s nearly twice the number of doses that clinics will have on hand, but only 60 million Americans seek out shots in a normal year. In fact, many experts are hoping the shortage will serve as an awareness campaign--encouraging the people who really need a flu shot to get one.61. Shortages of flue vaccine show that'A. America relies too much cn foreign suppliersB. the demand of flu vaccines is high this yearC. quality problem is a serious problem in flu vaccine productionD. the supply of flu vaccines is rather weak and America has no back-up measures to make it up62. The word "cleared" ( Line 4, Paragraph 3) might meanA. permittedB. removedC. provedD. produced63. Private companies have little interest in producing flu vaccines because of _____A. complicated process, high cost, low profit and high riskB. shortages of fertilized chicken eggsC. difficulty in growing live virusD. fast changing of flu virus64. From the last paragraph we can infer that _A. the government hopes to solve the problem by way of volunteer restrictionsB. more than 47 million Americans who are qualified to get flu vaccine shots can not get them this yearC. America has to deal with a limited supply of flu vaccines this yearD. normally only a small percentage of American population gets flu vaccine shots each year65. According to the passage, which of the following is TRUE?A. All Americans are persuaded not to get vaccinated this year.B. The big problem in innovating flu vaccine producing technique is how to grow virus in a new way.C. More flu vaccines can not be produced in a short time because private companies refuse to produce more.D. Flu vaccines are easier than most vaccines to produce through cell cultures.Section III Reaaing Comprehension(共计35分,权重35%)PartA(每小题1分,共计l5分)Textl短文赏析本文讲的是卡片战术的故事。

PETS5考试(wsk)模拟完整试题及答案(三)

PETS5考试(wsk)模拟完整试题及答案(三)

Text 2The caterpillar’s inventor,Norihiko Saga of Akita Prefectural University in Japan,will demonstrate his new method of locomotion at a conference on magnetic materials in Seattle.In addition to lights and cameras,a search caterpillar could be equipped with an array of sensors to measure other factors--such as radioactivity or oxygen levels—that could tell human rescuers if an area is safe to enter.The magnetic caterpillar is amazingly simple.It moves by a process similar to peristalsis,the rhythmic contraction that moves food down your intestine.Saga made the caterpillar from a series of rubber capsules filled with a magnetic fluid consisting of iron particles,water,and a detergent—like surfactant,which reduces the surface tension of the fluid:Each capsule is linked to the next by a pair of rubber rods.The caterpillar’s guts are wrapped in a clear,flexible polymer tube that protects it from the environment.To make the caterpillar move forwards,Saga moves a magnetic field backwards along the caterpillar.Inside the caterpillar’s“head”capsule.magnetic fluid surges towards the attractive magnetic field,causing the capsule to bulge out to the sides and draw its front and rear potions up.As the magnetic field passes to the next capsule,the In'st breaks free and springs forward and the next capsule bunches up.In this way,the caterpillar Call reach speeds of 4 centimeters per second as it crawls along.Moving the magnetic field faster can make it traverse the caterpillar before all the capsules have sprung back to their original shapes.The segments then all spring back,almost but not quite simultaneously. Saga plans to automate the movement of the caterpillar by placing electromagnets at regular intervals along the inside of its polymer tube.By phasing the current flow to the electromagnets,he’ll be able to control it wirelessly via remote control.He also needs to find a new type of robber for the magnetic capsules,because the one he’s using at the minute eventually begins to leak.But crawling is not the most efficient form of locomotion for robots,says Roben Full of the University of Cali—fomia at Berkeley.an expert in animal motion who occasionally advises robotics designers.“If you look at the ener- getic cost of crawling,compared to walkig,swimming or flying,crawling is very expensive,”he says.Walking,on the other every step,energy is conserved in the foot and then released to help the foot spring up. Saga acknowledges this inefficiency but says his caterpillar is far more stable than one that walks,rolls on wheels or flies.It has no moving parts save for a few fluid—filled rubber capsules.Biped robots and wheeled robots require a smooth surface and are difficult to miniaturize,and flying rob6ts have too many moving parts. “My peri- staltic crawling robot is simple and it works,”he says.56.From this passage,we can learn that_____.[A]a robotic caterpillar can crawl by a pair of rubber rods[B]when a caterpillar moves,the magnetic field movies backwards along it[C]the environment couldn’t influence a robotic caterpillar’s guts,which are wrapped in a capsule[D]crawling is very stable and efficient,and when it moves,only a few elements are needed57.According to this passage,which is not true about the construction of the robotic caterpillar?[A]A robotic caterpillar is made from a series of rubber capsules filled with a magneti fluid.[B]Iron particles,water,and a detergent-like surfactant form a magnetic fluid.[C]Each capsule filled with a magnetic fluid is linked to the next by a pair of rubber rods.[D]In order to keep stable condition,the caterpillar’s guts are wrapped in a clear,flexible polymer tube.58.The meaning of the word“peristalsis”in Paragraph 3 is similar to_____.[A]swimming[B]flying[C]crawling[D]walkingparing the robotic caterpillar and the other robots,which of the following is not true?[A]A smooth surface is indispensable to biped robots and wheeled robots.[B]Flying robots are very inconvenient when moving,because they have too many moving parts.[C]The robotic caterpillar only has rubber capsules filled with a magnetic fluid.[D]It’s incapable for wheeled robots to locate trapped people because they are impossible to miniaturize.60.The passage is mainly about______.[A]why a robotic caterpillar Call find trapped people[B]how a robotic caterpillar works[C]the instruction of the magnetic caterpillar[D]how a robotic caterpillar crawlsText 2短文赏析困在砂砾中的地震幸存者将来可能会被日本秋田县立大学的Saga发明的一种新型的履带装置机器人拯救。

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听力材料:Questions 1 ~ 10 :Hello, everyone. Today I will introduce you the learning chains in Britain. Here the chains refer to schools linked together as part of a group. They can offer students many practical advantages.When people are asked to name a language school, more often than not, they think of one of the large international chains of schools. Some are vast language teaching organizations with schools in many different countries and may teach just one language.One of the main strengths of these chains is the fact that their name isfamiliar to people all over the world. This can be a big advantage in the con-fusing world of language learning. Most students are bewildered by the large choice of schools and courses on offer, both at home and abroad, and so many prefer to choose a school which has a familiar name and an established reputation. Chain schools know this, and part of their success is due to effective marketing and advertising, which helps to keep their name well-known.But chain schools should not be dismissed by serious students just be-cause they use clever marketing techniques. They have other important strengthens which can provide advantages to students. A school is only as good as its teachers and facilities, and many chains offer very high standards in both. More chains require that their teachers have internationally recognized qualifications and a maximum amount of teaching experience. It is important for chains to maintain these standards at all schools, because the reputation of the whole chain can be affected if one school performs badly.Students also benefit from the standardized structure of chains. Most chains use the same text books in all their schools, and often they produce their own coursework materials. They also organize their courses in the same way which means that starting dates and course lengths are usually the same at all schools.For students, one of the main advantages of this standardized structure is simplicity. If you cannot decide whether to study in the U. S. or Britain, for example, most chains allow students to start their language course at one school and continue at another, so they can experience different regions or different countries, as part of the same study trip.Chain schools tend to be larger than single center schools, which can al-so have advantages for students. With larger numbers of students, school administrators can achieve a better mixture of nationalities in classrooms. This means that students can avoid being with other students who speak their language. This gives them the chance to meet students from other countries, and to practice their English with them.Some chains offer students a very simple booking and enrolment procedure which is also useful. Application forms and enrolment procedures are the same for all schools, so students need only supply their details once. Students may find that they can book their course abroad through a representative of a chain school in their own town or city. Other chains offer a centralized booking facility, so students only have to contact one center to make a booking anywhere in the world.Chain schools often operate in different locations, whereas a single school is likely to be based permanently in one building. Many chain schools operate temporary schools, particularly during the summer holidays. In Britain, they often use secondary school premises which are empty during the school holidays.Studying English in an English-speaking country is the most effective way to learn thelanguage, but for many students this is only one stage of their learning career. Most students start learning English in their own country and they will probably want to continue learning once they return from their study trip. An international chain can usually offer you a continuous learning program from one country to the next.Language school chains can offer students high standards of teachingbased on widespread experience. For students it can be a useful way of making learning more flexible.Questions 11 - 13 :M: Now, I' d like to say that I think that this government proposing to build more nuclear power stations in this country is really being stupid. The point about nuclear power is that we haven' t learnt to do away with the waste. We haven' t learnt to cope with the waste from it yet.W: Well, I sometimes think that, you know, they' ve got an impossible job. I mean all the impression I get is that there is no alternative.., well, that' s the impression I get.M: No, no, no I... I don' t agree with that at all. There are plenty of alter-natives. There' s the sun.., solar power.., that is a source that is always there, we always have it.W: I don' t... I don' t quite see what you' re getting at actually, solar power,what' s that?M: Well, the heat from the sun, it can be used in solar panels on the tops of houses for heating, storing up power to heat water and to heat the houses, you know, some solar panels are in operation already and they are saving money...W: That' s a good point actually, but is it really viable, that, I mean becauseI'd...M:Sorry it must be! And the one great advantage is that I can see, if the government set up small units to build solar panels and to install them, it would be creating employment which would improve the unemployment situation and bring terrific advantages.W: I have heard that in England, I mean, there' s not enough sun, is there?For, I mean, solar panels here?M:Yes, well, that' s not quite true. I... there is quite a bit of sun.., youmay not feel the actual heat of it on some occasions.W: No, you are right there !M:But the light power from the sun will...Questions 14 ~ 16 :M : Cigarette?W :No, thank you. I' ve given up, you know.M:Oh.W : It' s ten days ago. Haven' t had one.M : Well, you don' t mind if I had one.W: Well, all right, then... Oh my goodness ! That' s a terrible cough.M: No, no, it' s not. It' s only... I only get it first thing in the morning.W: That' s going to make you very unfit, you know.M : No, it' s all right. It goes in a minute.W:Why don't you try and give up?M : Oh, no. I ought to, but I can' t. It relaxes me, smoking.W: Really?M : It does.W:Well, have you ever thought of just cutting down?M : Oh, no, that' s all very well but... I wouldn' t enjoy it. I depend a biton my smoking. I must say.W:You should do it gradually. I mean.., well, if you tried.., have youthought of just giving up one day?M:Yes, oh well, yes, that is quite a good idea.W:It is.M : But I think I' d lose count or something.W: Oh dear ! Well, it might be an idea if you started eating sweets.M : Oh no, I couldn' t do that. I couldn' t possibly...W:Why?M:Well, it makes you fat.W:Well, do you think that matters? Don' t you think it is better to be fatthan to be unhealthy?M : No, I don' t. I' d rather be fat... Well, I' d rather be thin than fat, certainly.W : Oh dear. Well. Hey ! I' ve got a good idea !M:What' s that?W:Why don't you go to a hypnotist? My sister did!M : Oh, look, you don' t seem to realize that I like smoking. If I gave it up,if I didn' t smoke at all, I' d probably end up attacking people !W : Oh, don' t be so silly ! Of course you wouldn' t !Questions 17 ~ 20 :Farmers usually use plows to prepare their fields for planting crops. Plows cut into the ground, and lift up weeds, and other unwanted plants. However, plowing is blamed for causing severe damage to top soil by removing the plants that protect soil from being blown or washed away. Many farmers in South Asia are now trying a process called Low Till Fanning. Low Till Farming limits the use of plows. In this method of farming, seeds and fertilizer are put into the soil through small cuts made in the surface of the ground. Low Till Agriculture leaves much or all the soil and remains of plants on the ground. They serve as a natural fertilizer and help support the roots of future crops. They take in rain and allow it to flow into the soil in-stead of running off. It has been proved that Low Till Fanning increases har-vests and reduces water use, and this method reduces the need for chemical products because there are fewer unwanted plants. Scientists say Low Till Farming is becoming popular in South Asia, which is facing a severe water shortage. They say the area will become dependent on imported food unless water is saved through methods like Low Till Farming. Currently, more than150 million people in South Asia depend on local rice and wheat crops. Farmers grow rice during wet weather. During the dry season they grow wheat in the same fields. Farmers are using the Low Till Farming method to plant wheat after harvesting rice. Scientists say Low Till Agriculture is one of the best examples in the w0fld of technologies working for both people and the environment.Questions 21 ~ 30 :Today we take it for granted that the mail will be delivered daily at our door. But many years ago it might have been placed in a tree trunk or underneath a rock. In the early days of the mail no one could be sure about where or when it would arrive.At the southern tip of Africa there was once a post office under a rock. In the old days the route from England to India was around the Cape of Good Hope. The journey was stormy and dangerous. It took six long months. Sailors often wished to send mail home, but they seldom met ships bound back to England. So at the cape the sailors would go .ashore. They headed for a certain large stone. On the stone were scratched the words "Look here-under for letters. " They would leave their letters there, knowing that thenext homeward-bound ship would stop and pick them up.There was another post office like this at the southern tip of South America. During the gold rush days, boats sailed around Cape Horn to California. At Cape Horn was a keg nailed to a post. Boats coming from the east coast would send a small boat ashore to this post office. They picked up any letters in the keg. At the same time they mailed letters home that boats sailing east could pick up.In the state of Washington stands the stump of a huge cedar. It, too, was once a post office. Settlers needed a place for the mail carders to leave their letters. Their houses were so widely scattered that the mail carrier could not reach all of them, and the post office was far away over rough roads. So the settlers found a tree that stood where several trails crossed. They cut the tree down ten feet from the ground, hollowed it out, and covered it with a roof. Inside, they nailed a row of wooden boxes. Each box was marked with a family' s name. The mail carder could leave letters there for everyone for miles around.For the first few years after the English colonists came to America, there was no regular postal service. People gave their letters to any traveler who happened to be going in the right direction. Often they gave them to a peddler or a traveling shoemaker. When the traveler reached the town where the letter was going, he might stop at an inn. He would leave the letters there. But there they stayed until the .person they were addressed to happened to come by and stopped at the inn.What about places like Virginia where there were very few inns? People who wished to send letters would leave them at one of the large plantations. The owners of the plantation would then send the letters on to a neighbor. The neighbor would do the same. It was a slow mall system.After many years, regular mail carriers on horseback were hired. They went from one big town to another. Between New York and Boston, for ex-ample, there was one "postrider" a month. He traveled only by day and took two weeks for the trip. often the postrider left all the mail for a whole town at a crossroads store. It still took many weeks for a letter to reach the person it was addressed to.Finally, about two hundred years ago, Benjamin Franklin was made postmaster for all the colonies. His first act was to make a long journey to find out the best routes for carrying the mail. Then he set up a line of post station between the northern and southern colonies. He ordered his postriders to travel by night as well as by day.Franklin' s postriders could carry more letters in a shorter time from one colony to another. The letter service helped the young American colonies learn more about each other. They learned that they were all interested in the same things. This gave them the feeling of unity that later helped them win their independence.In time, the nation set up its own government. But there were still only seventy five post offices in the whole country. Between cities along the coast, mail was sent in sailing boats. But most letters were carried from one post office to another in stagecoaches. Trips were three times aweek in summer and twice a week in winter. The stage stopped in all towns. Large and small. It stopped fifteen minutes in a small town and two hours in a larger one. But still the people of the town might reach the post office too late tocatch the stagecoach. Sometimes, too, the drivers forgot the mall or evenlost it. It still took a week for news to go from Washington D. C. to New York.Today an airmail letter can travel across the world in much less time than that, let alone the e-mail through computers. A modern post office handles more mall in a day than the colonial carders handled in a whole year. You know that the letter you send will go anywhere you want it to go, and whenever.。

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