考试采取多题多卷模式,试题顺序不统一,请依据试题进行核对。
Part III Listening Comprehension
Section B
Passage 1
Since I started working part-time at a grocery store, I have learned that a customer is more than someone who buy something. To me, a customer is a person whose memory fails entirely once he or she starts to push a shopping card. One of the first things customers forget is how to count. There is no other way to explain how so many people get in their express line, which is clearly marked 15 items or less, with 20, 25 or even a cart load of items. Customers also forget why they came to the store in the first place. Just as I finish ringing up an order, a customer will say, Oops, I forgot to pick up a fresh loaf of bread. I hope you dont mind waiting while I go get it。 Five minutes later, hes back with the bread, a bottle of milk, and three rolls of paper towels. Strange is that seems customers also seem to forget that they have to pay for their groceries. Instead of writing a check or looking for a credit card while I am ringing up the groceries, my customers will wait until I announce the total. Then, in surprise, she says, Oh no, what did I do with my check book? After 5 minutes of digging through her purse, she borrows my pen because shes forgotten hers. But I have to be tolerant of customers because they pay my salary, and thats something I cant afford to forget。
Q26. What does the speaker say about customers entering the grocery A scientific team is studying the thinking ability of eleven and half month old children. The test is a simple one. The baby watches a sort of show on a small stage. In Act One of the show, a yellow cube is lifted from a blue box, and moved across the stage. Then it is returned to the box. This is repeated 6 times. Act Two is similar except that the yellow cube is smaller. Baby boys do not react at all to the difference and the size of the cube. But girls immediately become excited. The scientists interpret the girls excitement as meaning they are trying to understand what they have just seen. They are wondering why Act Two is odd and how it differs from Act One. In other words, the little girls are reasoning. This experiment certainly does not definitely prove that girls start to reason before boys, but it provides a clue that scientists would like to study more carefully. Already it is known that bones, muscles and nerves develop faster in baby girls. Perhaps it is early nerve development that makes some infant girls show more intelligence than infant boys. Scientists have also found that nature seems to give another boost to girls. Baby girls usually talk at an earlier age than boys do. Scientists think that there is a physical reason for this. They believe that the nerve endings in the left side of the brain develop faster in girls than in boys, and it is this side of the brain that strongly influences an individuals ability to use language and remember things。
Q26. What is the difference between Act One and Act Two in the test?
Q27. How do the scientists interpret their observation from the experiment?
Q28. What does the speaker say about the experiment?
Q29. According to scientists, what is another advantage given to girls by nature?
Passage 2
A super attendant of the city municipal building, Dillia Adorno, was responsible for presenting its new security plan to the public. City employees, citizens and reporters gathered in the hall to hear her describe the plan. After outlining the main points she would cover, she assured the audience that she would be happy to answer questions at the end of her presentation. Dillia realized the plan was expensive and potentially controversial. So she was not surprised to see a number of hands go up as soon as she finished speaking. An employ asked, Would the new system create long lines to get into the building like the line in the airport security checks? Dillia had anticipated this question and had an answer ready. After repeating the question, she explained that the sufficient number of security guards would be working at peak hours to speed things along. The next question was more confrontational。Where was the money come from to pay for all of this?The journalists who ask the question seem hostile. But Dillia was careful not to adopt the defensive tone. She stated that the money would come from the citys general budget. I know these are tide times, she added, But everyone agrees on the importance of safe guarding our employees and members of the public who come into the building。 Near the end of the 25 minutes she has said, Dillia said she would take two more questions. When those were finished, she concluded the session with a brief restatement of how the new system will improve security and peace of mind in the municipal building。
Question 30 to 32 are based on the passage you have just heard。
30. What is the focus of Dillia Adornos presentation?
31. What question had Dillia Adorno anticipated?
32. What did the speakers think of the question from the journalist?
Passage 3
Despite unemployment and the lost of her home, Andrea Clark considers herself a blessed and happy woman. Why the cheerful attitude? Her troubles have brought her closer to her family. Last year, Andreas husband, Rick, a miner in Nevada was laid off. Though Andrea kept her job as a school bus driver, she knew that they couldnt pay their bill and support their youngest of five children, Zack, age nine, on one income. At first their church helped out, but you cant keep that up forever, Andrea says. Then Michal, their eldest of her four adult children suggested they move in with his family. For almost three months, seven Clarks lived under one roof. Andrea, Rick and Zack stayed in the basement department, sharing laundry and single bathroom with Michal, his wife and their two children。
The change cut their expenditures in half, but the new living arrangement proved too challenging. When Andrea found a job with a school district closer to her mothers home in west Jorden, Utah, the family decided to move on. Packing up again with no picnic, Zack had to switch schools for the second time and space is even tighter. Andrea says that the moves themselves are exhausting and Rick is still looking for a job。
The recession has certainly come with more problems than Andrea anticipated, but she remains unfailingly optimistic. She is excited to spend more time with her mother. Another plus, rents are lower in Utah than in Nevada. So Andrea thinks theyll be able to save up and move out in less than 6 months。
QUESTIONS 33-35 ARE BASED ON THE PASSAGE YOU HAVE JUST HEARD。
Q33 What do we learn about Andreas husband?
Q34 Why did Andrea move to live in her eldest sons home?
Q35 What is Andreas attitude toward the hardships brought by the economic recession?
中国钢材销往欧洲 英国百年钢厂倒闭
007《金手指》女演员:别再叫我们邦女郎
逛完商场出现“宿醉反应”?
苹果携手富士康投资清洁能源减少碳排放
中国政府债券市场投资前景光明
习大大点名《唐顿庄园》 英伦古风再次来袭
汇丰可能将总部迁至美国
向着第一个“百年目标”迈进
针对亚裔美国人的隐形歧视
暖心经典《小王子》中国行人气爆棚
《爱情故事》主演45年后再携手合作新戏
即使远离网络 也难摆脱黑客攻击
如何投资中国消费热潮
赛百味将配尺测量三明治尺寸确保“足斤足两”
科学家的另类艺术:细菌作画
欧洲央行暗示或加大量化宽松火力
监狱餐厅入选英国十佳就餐地 由犯人服务的餐厅你会去吗?
方星海将担任中国证监会副主席
苹果下架众多应用程序 被指涉及用户隐私
小米想要成为中国的亚马逊?
克雷格表态不再饰演邦德 卷福会成为继任者?
新修图软件实时移除镜头中移动物体 拯救被路人毁掉的照片
中英联合宣言双语全文
小贝出演BBC纪录片 将在七大洲踢七场足球赛
中资机构首单“绿色债券”伦敦上市
习大大访英 外媒怎么看(双语)
司机冒充赵薇老公卖掉豪宅
库克首次回应苹果造车报道 汽车业巨变将至
苹果CEO库克表示Apple music已有650万付费用户
安吉丽娜·朱莉和布拉德·皮特婚姻告急?
| 不限 |
| 英语教案 |
| 英语课件 |
| 英语试题 |
| 不限 |
| 不限 |
| 上册 |
| 下册 |
| 不限 |