题目列表(包括答案和解析)
听力(共两节,满分30分)
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。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题。每段对话仅读一遍。
1.What i s Jack' s occupation now?
A.A secretary.
B.A noveli st.
C.A new spaperman.
2.Where doe s thi s conver sation mo st likely take place?
A.In a lab.
B.In a clinic.
C.In a dining hall.
3.How old i s Jane?
A.19.
B.27.
C.35.
4.How often doe s the man go to vi sit hi s teacher?
A.At lea st once a year.
B.Once every two year s.
C.Twice a month.
5.How did the woman feel about the Engli sh program?
A.It' s intere sting.
B.It' s difficult.
C.It' s important.
第二节(共15小题:每小题15分,满分22.5分)
请听下面5段对话。每段对话后有几个小题,从题中所给出的A、B、C三个选项种选出最佳选项。听每段对话前,你将有时间阅读各个小题,每小题5秒钟;听完后,各小题给出5秒钟的作答时间。每段对话读两遍。
听第6段材料,回答第6、7题.
6.How doe s the man seem to feel after thi s job interview?
A.Anxiou s.
B.Hopeful.
C.De sperate.
7.How many interviewee s were able to go to the second interview?
A.4.
B.12.
C.16.
听第7段材料,回答第8、9题。
8.How much will the man pay?
A.15 yuan.
B.55 yuan.
C.50 yuan.
9.How long doe s the Cheaper way take?
A.At lea st two week s.
B.At lea st ten day s.
C.It' s lea st ten week s.
听第8段材料,回答第10至12题。
10.Why doe s the man refu se the fir st flat?
A.It' s too smal1.
B.It' s too expen sive.
C.It' s not on the top floor.
11.Why doe s the woman let the man look at the second flat fir st?
A.He i s clean and quiet.
B.He i s kind and polite.
C.He i s poor and hone st.
12.How much will the man pay before moving in?
A.$100.
B.$50.
C.$30.
听第9段材料,回答第13至16题。
13.What i s Tom doing?
A.Li stening to Engli sh song s.
B.Surfing the Internet.
C.Preparing for a te st.
14.How doe s the woman find studying Engli sh?
A.Intere sting.
B.Boring.
C.Difficult.
15.What doe s the woman sugge st the man do?
A.Play more game s online.
B.Talk with friend s online more often.
C.Learn We stern culture online.
16.What will the woman do next?
A.Go to school.
B.Take an exam.
C.Review le s son s.
听第10段材料,回答第17至20题。
17.Who i s the speaker talking to?
A.People showing intere st in the theater.
B.People working in the building.
C.People vi siting the univer sity.
18.What i s the video showing today?
A.The teacher s of the univer sity.
B.The hi story of the theater.
C.The building s in the city.
19.How soon will people meet again?
A.In an hour and a half.
B.In half an hour.
C.In an hour.
20.What i s the purpo se of the speaker' s talk?
A.To tell people the rule s they should follow.
B.To give people a brief introduction.
C.To show people the direction.
Being less than perfectly well-dressed in a business setting can result in a feeling of discomfort. And the sad truth is that “clothing mismatches” on the job can ruin the day of the person who is wearing the inappropriate attire(着装)—and the people with whom he or she works.
Offices vary when it comes to dress codes. Some businesses have very strict standards for office attire, while others maintain a more relaxed attitude. However, it is always important to remember that no matter what your company’s attitude is, you are working in a business environment and you should dress properly. Certain items may be more appropriate for evening wear than for a business meeting, just as shorts and a T-shirt are better suited for the beach than for an office environment. Your attire should reflect both your environment and your position. A senior president has a different image to maintain than that of a secretary. Like it or not, you will be judged by your appearance.
This is never more apparent than on “dress-down days”, when what you wear can say more about you than any business suit ever could. In fact, people will pay more attention to what you wear on dress-down days than on “business professional ” days. Thus, when dressing in “business casual” clothes, try to put some good taste into your choices, recognize that the “real” definition of business casual is to dress just one notch(等级) down from what you would normally wear on business-professional attire days.
Remember, there are borders between your career and our social life. You should dress one way for play and another way when you mean business. Always ask yourself where you are going and how other people will be dressed when you get there. Is the final destination the opera, the beach, or the office? Dress properly and you will discover the truth in the principle that clothes make the man—and the woman. When you’re in doubt, it’s safe to be on the side of dressing slightly more traditionally than the situation demands.
1.What is the passage mainly about?
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A.How to dress properly in a business setting. |
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B.How to choose appropriate attire. |
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C.Appropriate attire will make a big difference |
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D.Improper dress will make a person uncomfortable. |
2.Which statement best describes “dress-down days”?
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A.You can wear whatever you like. |
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B.People are usually more careful about dressing. |
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C.We can’t judge a person’s taste by his clothes. |
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D.People’s clothes don’t receive much attention. |
3.Which of the following is NOT the rule offered in the passage about business dress?
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A.Dress a bit traditionally if you are not sure about proper dress for an occasion. |
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B.Think about how others will dress if invited to a dinner. |
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C.For a business meeting and a concert, you should dress differently. |
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D.Ask others for advice when you are not sure about what to dress. |
Here’s an idyllic(田园风光的) scene: a small village where the sun always shines, crops always grow and your friends drop by to sweep your yard to the sound of guitar music. Animals do what they are told, there is no disease, and lending folks a helping hand makes you richer and wiser. Welcome to FarmVille — current population 69m and rising fast.
“It reminds me of my childhood,” says one player, Lia Curran, 37, a chemist from London. “Right now I’m growing wheat and poinsettia, I’ve got a small orchard, and I’m keeping some chickens and some cows. I like having the animals. It’s comfortable.”
Curran’s young animals, however, are nothing more than a collection of computer-controlled cartoons. FarmVille is an online computer game built into the social networking site Facebook and is described by its players as “addictive”. Launched last June by Zynga Game Network, FarmVille now has more players than Twiter’s entire user base — or more than the population of the UK. The players are largely women over the age of 35.
Jenny Glyn, 33, a London housewife, started playing in September. “I had a look at a friend’s farm and was hooked,” she says. “My first motivation was to overtake her, but I did that pretty quickly. Now there’s something satisfying about growing crops.”
FarmVille intellectually unites the worlds of social networking and gaming. Players are given a patch of ground with six fields, “cash”, a few seeds and a plough and have to build up wealth, skills and neighbors to create bigger, better, richer farms.
Inviting your online friends to play means you earn more and get free gifts; you rise rapidly through the first levels but, once hooked, have to work harder and harder with no final level or goal in sight.
“It’s very moreish,” says Curran. She hasn’t yet paid real-world money to advance in the game, but her friends do. One buys extra virtual currency at the exchange rate of $240 (£145) in FarmVille for $40 (£24) in the real world.
“I’d expanded on FarmVille as much as I could, but I just wanted a pond and some bushes and trees around it,” says the woman, who is too embarrassed to be named. “I didn’t tell my husband I’d paid real money because he’d think I’m mad. But then he did keep me waiting in the car outside our house while he harvested his raspberries.”
Brian Dudley, chief executive at Broadway Lodge, an addiction treatment centre, warns that this sort of obsessive(令人着魔的) play can lead to an addiction as severe as gambling.
59. What does Curran do in the passage?
A. She is a player. B. She is a farmer who grows wheat and poinsettia.
C. She is a chemist. D. She is a housewife who raises chickens and cows.
60. By FarmVille, the writer means ______.
A. an addictive farm on which live 69 million farmers
B. a London housewife’s farm
C. an online computer game built into the social networking site
D. a farm on which people grow real crops and play as well
61. In the last but one paragraph, the husband kept the woman waiting outside ______.
A. because he was angry at his wife’s being mad about the farm
B. because he himself was busy with his farm
C. in order to punish his wife for her having paid real money
D. so that his wife would wake up from her addiction to the farm
62. According to the passage, which of the following is NOT true?
A. The population of the UK is less than 69 million.
B. This sort of obsessive play can cause very severe addiction.
C. Once hooked, one has to make greater efforts to reach a higher level.
D. Up till now, nobody has yet paid real-world money to advance in the play.
It was unusually quiet in the emergency room on December 25. I was triage nurse (分诊护士) that day. I didn’t _36_many patients, so I was not happy about having to _37_ on Christmas. Just then, five bodies _38_at my desk: a pale woman and four small children.
“Are you all sick?” I asked _39_.“Yes,” the woman said weakly. But when they got to describe their problems, things got a little _40_. Two of the children had headaches, _41_ they weren’t holding their heads like headache sufferers _42_ do. Two children had earaches, but only one could tell me which ear was affected. The mother complained of a cough but seemed to work to _43_ it.
_44_ was wrong, but I didn’t say anything except that it might be a little while before a doctor saw her. She _45_ , “Take your time; it’s _46_ in here.”
Then I checked the chart after the admitting clerk had finished registering the family. No _47_–- they were homeless. The waiting room was warm.
I looked out at the family huddled by the Christmas tree. The smallest one was pointing at the television and exclaiming something to her mother. The oldest one was looking at an ornament on the tree.
I went back to the nurses’ station and mentioned we had a _48_ family in the waiting room. The nurses, irritated about having to work on Christmas, suddenly felt _49_ for a family just trying to get warm on Christmas. The team went into _50_, much as we do when there’s a medical emergency. Only this time it was a Christmas emergency.
We were each entitled to a free meal in the hospital cafeteria on Christmas Day, so we _51_ that meal and prepared a banquet for our Christmas guests. We needed presents. We put together oranges and apples in a basket. From various departments, we _52_candies, crayons and other suitable items. As seriously as we met the physical _53_ of the patients that came to us that day, our team worked to meet the needs, and go beyond the _54_ , of a family who just wanted to be warm on Christmas Day.
Later, as the family walked to the door to _55_, the four-year-old came running back, gave me a hug and whispered, “Thanks for being our angels today.”
1. A.like B.expect C.imagine D.recognize
2. A.work B.wait C.return D.repeat
3. A.turned back B.looked around C.showed up D.showed off
4. A.patiently B.carefully C.jokingly D.doubtfully
5. A.strange B.smooth C.natural D.difficult
6. A.as B.and C.but D.so
7. A.sometimes B.seldom C.never D.usually
8. A.reflect B.produce C.tolerate D.prevent
9. A.Something B.Anything C.Everything D.Nothing
10. A.advised B.added C.explained D.responded
11. A.fun B.warm C.busy D.lucky
12. A.phone B.work C.address D.money
13. A.funny B.friendly C.jobless D.homeless
14. A.care B.duty C.compassion D.dissatisfaction
15. A.panic B.action C.research D.discussion
16. A.claimed B.cooked C.paid D.accepted
17. A.shared B.selected C.discovered D.collected
18. A.problems B.needs C.illnesses D.standards
19. A.power B.control C.expectations D.understanding
20. A.leave B.enter C.thank D.talk
It was the woman ___had been in prison __stole the money.
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A.who; where |
B.that; how |
C.who; who |
D.that; where |
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