2004年6月19日试卷
Part I Listening Comprehension
(20 minutes)
Section A
Directions: In this section, you
will hear 10 short conversations.
At the end of each conversation,
a question will be asked about
what was said. Both the conversation
and the question will be spoken
only once. After each question
there will be a pause. During
the pause, you must read the four
choices marked A), B), C) and
D), and decide which is the best
answer. Then mark the corresponding
letter on the Answer Sheet with
a single line through the center.
Example: You will hear:
You will read:
A) 2 hours.
B) 3 hours.
C) 4 hours.
D) 5 hours.
From the conversation we know
that the two were talking about
some work they will start at
9 o’clock in the morning and
have to finish at 2 in the afternoon.
Therefore, D) “5 hours” is the
correct answer. You should choose
[D] on the Answer Sheet and
mark it with a single line through
the center.
Sample Answer [A] [B] [C] [D]
1. A) Dick's trousers don't
match his jacket.
B) Dick looks funny in that
yellow jacket.
C) The color of Dick's jacket
is too dark.
D) Dick has bad taste in clothes.
2. A) Call the police station.
C) Show the man her family pictures.
B) Get the wallet for the man.
D) Ask to see the man's driver's
license.
3. A) The temperature is not
as high as the man claims.
B) The room will get cool if
the man opens the windows.
C) She is following instructions
not to use the air-conditioning.
D) She is afraid the new epidemic
SARS will soon spread all over
town.
4. A) She lost a lot of weight
in two years.
B) She stopped exercising two
years ago.
C) She had a unique way of staying
healthy.
D) She was never persistent
in anything she did.
5. A) The man is not suitable
for the position.
B) The job has been given to
someone else.
C) She had received only one
application letter.
D) The application arrived a
week earlier than expected.
6. A) He's unwilling to fetch
the laundry.
B) He has already picked up
the laundry.
C) He will go before the laundry
is closed.
D) He thinks his mother should
get the clothes back.
7. A) At a shopping center.
C) At an international trade
fair.
B) At an electronics company.
D) At a DVD counter in a music
store.
8. A) The woman hated the man
talking throughout the movie.
B) The woman saw a comedy instead
of a horror movie.
C) The woman prefers light movies
before sleep.
D) The woman regrets going to
the movie.
9. A) He is the fight man to
get the job done.
B) He is a man with professional
expertise.
C) He is not easy to get along
with.
D) He is not likely to get the
job.
10. A) It is being forced out
of the entertainment industry.
B) It should change its concept
of operation.
C) It should revolutionize its
technology.
D) It is a very good place to
relax.
Section B
Directions: In this section,
you will hear 3 short passages.
At the end of each passage,
you will hear some questions.
Both the passage and the questions
will be spoken only once. After
you hear a question, you must
choose the best answer from
the four choices marked A),
B), C) and D). Then mark the
corresponding letter on the
Answer Sheet with a single line
through the centre.
Passage One
Questions 11 to 13 are based
on the passage you have just
heard.
11. A) He set up the first university
in America.
B) He was one of the earliest
settlers in America.
C) He can best represent the
spirit of early America.
D) He was the most distinguished
diplomat in American history.
12. A) He provided Washington
with a lot of money.
B) He persuaded France to support
Washington.
C) He served as a general in
Washington's army.
D) He represented Washington
in negotiations with Britain.
13. A) As one of the greatest
American scholars.
B) As one of America's most
ingenious inventors.
C) As one of the founding fathers
of the United States.
D) As one of the most famous
activists for human rights.
Passage Two
Questions 14 to 17 are based
on the passage you have just
heard.
14. A) Because we might be offered
a dish of insects.
B) Because nothing but freshly
cooked insects are served
C) Because some yuppies like
to horrify guests with insects
as food.
D) Because we might meet many
successful executives in the
media industry.
15. A) From yuppie clubs. C)
In the supermarket.
B) In the seafood market. D)
On the Internet.
16. A) It's easy to prepare.
C) It's exotic in appearance.
B) It's tasty and healthful.
D) It's safe to eat.
17. A) It will be consumed by
more and more young people.
B) It will become the first
course at dinner parties.
C) It will have to be changed
to suit local tastes.
D) It is unlikely to be enjoyed
by most People.
Passage Three
Questions 18 to 20 are based
on the passage you have just
heard.
18. A) Their business hours
are limited.
B) Their safety measures are
inadequate.
C) Their banking procedures
are complicated.
D) They don't have enough service
windows.
19. A) People who are in the
habit of switching from one
bank to another.
B) Young people who are fond
of modern technology.
C) Young people who are wealthy
and well-educated.
D) People who have computers
at home.
20. A) To compete for customers.
B) To reduce the size of their
staff.
C) To provide services for distant
clients.
D) To expand their operations
at a lower cost.
Part II Reading Comprehension
(35 minutes)
Directions: There are 4 passages
in this part. Each passage is
followed by some questions or
unfinished statements. For each
of them there are four choices
marked A), B), C) and D). You
should decide on the best choice
and mark the corresponding letter
on the Answer Sheet with a single
line through the centre.
Passage One
Questions 21 to 25 are based
on the following passage.
It was the worst tragedy in
maritime (航海的) history, six
times more deadly than the Titanic.
When the German cruise ship
Wilhelm Gustloff was hit by
torpedoes (鱼雷) fired from a
Russian submarine in the final
winter of World War II, more
than 10,000 people - mostly
women, children and old people
fleeing the final Red Army push
into Nazi Germany - were packed
aboard. An ice storm had turned
the decks into frozen sheets
that sent hundreds of families
sliding into the sea as the
ship tilted and began to go
down. Others desperately tried
to put lifeboats down. Some
who succeeded fought off those
in the water who had the strength
to try to claw their way aboard.
Most people froze immediately.
Tll never forget the screams,"
says Christa Ntitzmann, 87,
one of the 1,200 survivors.
She recalls watching the ship,
brightly lit, slipping into
its dark grave - and into seeming
nothingness, rarely mentioned
for more than half a century.
Now Germany's Nobel Prize-winning
author Gtinter Grass has revived
the memory of the 9,000 dead,
including more than 4,000 children
- with his latest novel Crab
Walk, published last month.
The book, which will be out
in English next year, doesn't
dwell on the sinking; its heroine
is a pregnant young woman who
survives the catastrophe only
to say later: "Nobody wanted
to hear about it, not here in
the West (of Germany) and not
at all in the East." The
reason was obvious. As Grass
put it in a recent interview
with the weekly Die Woche: "Because
the crimes we Germans are responsible
for were and are so dominant,
we didn't have the energy left
to tell of our own sufferings.''
The long silence about the sinking
of the Wilhelm Gustloff was
probably unavoidable - and necessary.
By unreservedly owning up to
their country's monstrous crimes
in the Second World War, Germans
have managed to win acceptance
abroad, marginalize (使...不得势)
the neo- Nazis at home and make
peace with their neighbors.
Today's unified Germany is more
prosperous and stable than at
any time in its long, troubled
history. For that, a half century
of willful forgetting about
painful memories like the German
Titanic was perhaps a reasonable
price to pay. But even the most
politically correct Germans
believe that they' ye now earned
the right to discuss the full
historical record. Not to equate
German suffering with that of
its victims, but simply to acknowledge
a terrible tragedy.
21. Why does the author say
the sinking of the Wilhelm Gustloff
was the worst tragedy in maritime
history?
A) It was attacked by Russian
torpedoes.
B) Most of its passengers were
frozen to death.
C) Its victims were mostly women
and children.
D) It caused the largest number
of casualties.
22. Hundreds of families dropped
into the sea when
A) a strong ice storm tilted
the ship
B) the cruise ship sank all
of a sudden
C) the badly damaged ship leaned
toward one side
D) the frightened passengers
fought desperately for lifeboats
23. The Wilhelm Gustloff tragedy
was little talked about for
more than half a century because
Germans
A) were eager to win international
acceptance
B) felt guilty for their crimes
in World War II
C) ad been pressured to keep
silent about it
D) were afraid of offending
their neighbors
24. How does Gunter Grass revive
the memory of the Wilhelm Gustloff
tragedy?
A) By presenting the horrible
scene of the torpedo attack.
B) By describing the ship's
sinking in great detail.
C) By giving an interview to
the weekly Die Woche.
D) By depicting the survival
of a young pregnant woman.
25. It can be learned from the
passage that Germans no longer
think that
A) they will be misunderstood
if they talk about the Wilhelm
Gustloff tragedy
B) the Wilhelm Gustloff tragedy
is a reasonable price to pay
for the nation's past misdeeds
C) Germany is responsible for
the horrible crimes it committed
in World War II
D) it is wrong to equate their
sufferings with those of other
countries
Passage Two
Questions 26 to 30 are based
on the following passage.
Given the lack of fit between
gifted students and their schools,
it is not surprising that such
students often have little good
to say 'about their school experience.
In one study of 400 adul who
had achieved distinction in
all areas of life, researchers
found that three-fifths of these
individuals either did badly
in school or were unhappy in
school. Few MacArthur Prize
fellows, winners of the MacArthur
Award for creative accomplishment,
had good things to say about
their precollegiate schooling
if they had not been placed
in advanced programs. Anecdotal
(名人轶事) reports support this.
Pablo Picasso, Charles Darwin,
Mark Twain, Oliver Goldsmith,
and William Butler Yeats all
disliked school. So did Winston
Churchill, who almost failed
out of Harrow, an elite British
school. About Oliver Goldsmith,
one of his teachers remarked,
"Never was so dull a boy."
Often these children realize
that they know more than their
teachers, and their teachers
often feel that these children
are arrogant, inattentive, or
unmotivated.
Some of these gifted people
may have done poorly in school
because their, gifts were not
scholastic. Maybe we can account
for Picasso in this way. But
most fared poorly in school
not because they lacked ability
but because they found school
unchallenging and consequently
lost interest. Yeats described
the lack of fit between his
mind and school: "Because
I had found it difficult to
attend to anything less interesting
than my own thoughts, I was
difficult to teach." As
noted earlier, gifted children
of all kinds tend to be strong-willed
nonconformists. Nonconformity
and stubbornness (and Yeats's
level of arrogance and self-absorption)
are likely to lead to Conflicts
with teachers.
When highly gifted students
in any domain talk about what
was important to the development
of their abilities, they are
far more likely to mention their
families than their schools
or teachers. A writing prodigy
(神童) studied by David Feldman
and Lynn Goldsmith was taught
far more about writing by his
journalist father than his English
teacher. High-IQ children, in
Australia studied by Miraca
Gross had much more positive
feelings about their families
than their schools. About half
of the mathematicians studied
by Benjamin Bloom had little
good to say about school. They
all did well in school and took
honors classes when available,
and some skipped grades.
26. The main point the author
is making about schools is that
A) they should satisfy the needs
of students from different family
backgrounds
B) they are often incapable
of catering to the needs of
talented students
C) they should organize their
classes according to the students'
ability
D) they should enroll as many
gifted students as possible
27. The author quotes the remarks
of one of Oliver Goldsmith's
teachers
A) to provide support for his
argument
B) to illustrate the strong
will of some gifted children
C) to explain how dull students
can also be successful
D) to show how poor Oliver's
performance was at school
28. Pablo Picasso is listed
among the many gifted children
who
A) paid no attention to their
teachers in class
B) contradicted their teachers
much too often
C) could not cope with their
studies at school successfully
D) behaved arrogantly and stubbornly
in the presence of their teachers
29. Many gifted people attributed
their success.
A) mainly to parental help and
their education at home
B) both to school instruction
and to their parents' coaching
C) more to their parents' encouragement
than to school training
D) less to their systematic
education than to their talent
30. The root cause of many gifted
students having bad memories
of their school years is that
A) their nonconformity brought
them a lot of trouble
B) they were seldom praised
by their teachers
C) school courses failed to
inspire or motivate them
D) teachers were usually far
stricter than their parents
Passage Three
Questions 31 to 35 are based
on the following passage,
When we worry about who might
be spying on our private lives,
we usually think about the Federal
agents. But the private sector
outdoes the government every
time. It's Linda Tripp, not
the FBI, who is facing charges
under Maryland's laws against
secret telephone taping. It's
our banks, not the Internal
Revenue Service (IRS), that
pass our private financial data
to telemarketing fin'ms.
Consumer activists are pressing
Congress for better privacy
laws without much result so
far. The legislators lean toward
letting business people track
our financial habits virtually
at will.
As an example of what's going
on, consider U.S. Bancorp, which
was recently sued for deceptive
practices by the state of Minnesota.
According to the lawsuit, the
bank supplied a telemarketer
called MemberWorks with sensitive
customer data such as names,,
ph'one numbers, bank-account
and credit-card numbers, Social
Security numbers, account balances
and credit limits.
With these customer lists in
hand, MemberWorks started dialing
for dollars - selling dental
plans, videogames, computer
software and other products
and services. Customers who
accepted a "free trial
offer" had, 30 days to
cancel. If the deadline passed,
they were charged automatically
through their bank or credit-card
accounts. U.S. Bancorp collected
a share of the revenues.
Customers were doubly deceived,
the lawsuit claims. They. didn't
know that the bank was giving
account numbers to MemberWorks.
And if customers asked, they
were led to think the answer
was no.
The state sued MemberWorks separately
for deceptive selling. Thecompany
de'hies that it did anything
wrong. For its part, U.S. Bancorp
settled without admitting any
mistakes. But it agreed to stop
exposing its customers to nonfinancial
products sold by outside firms.
A few top banks decided to do
the same. Many other banks will
still do business with MemberWorks
and similar firms.
And banks will still be mining
data from your account in order
to sell you financial products,
including things of little value,
such as credit insurance and
credit-card protection plans.
You have almost no protection
from businesses that use your
personal accounts for profit.
For example, no federal law
shields "transaction and
experience" information
- mainly the details of your
bank and credit-card accounts.
Social Security numbers are
for sale by private fa'ms. They've
generally agreed not to sell
to the public. But to businesses,
the numbers are an open book.
Selfregulation doesn't work.
A firm might publish a privacy-protection
policy, but who enforces it?
Take U.S. Bancorp again. Customers
were told, in writing, that
"all personal information
you supply to us will be considered
confidential." Then it
sold your data to MemberWorks.
The bank even claims that it
doesn't "sell" your
data at all. It merely "shares"
it and reaps a profit. Now you
know.
31. Contrary to popular belief,
the author finds that spying
on people's privacy
A) is mainly carried out by
means of secret taping
B) has been intensified with
the help of the IRS
C) is practiced exclusively
by the FBI
D) is more prevalent in business
circles
32. We know from the passage
that
A) legislators are acting to
pass a law to provide better
privacy protection
B) most states are turning a
blind eye to the deceptive practices
of private businesses
C) the state of Minnesota is
considering drawing up laws
to protect private information
D) lawmakers are inclined to
give a free hand to businesses
to inquire into customers' buying
habits
33. When the "free trial"
deadline is over, you'll be
charged without notice for a
product or service if
A) you fail to cancel it within
the specified period
B) you happen to reveal your
credit card number
C) you find the product or service
unsatisfactory
D) you fail to apply for extension
of the deadline
34. Businesses do not regard
information concerning personal
bank accounts as private because
A) its revelation will do no
harm to consumers under the
current protection policy
B) it is considered "transaction
and experience" information
unprotected by law
C) it has always been considered
an open secret by the general
public
D) its sale can be brought under
control through self-regulation
35. We can infer from the passage
that
A) banks will have to change
their ways of doing business
B) privacy protection laws will
soon be enforced
C) consumers' privacy will continue
to be invaded
D) "free trial" practice
will eventually be banned
Passage Four
Questions 36 to 40 are based
on the following passage.
It's hardly news that the immigration
system is a mess. Foreign nationals
have long been slipping across
the border with fake papers,
and visitors who arrive in the
U.S. legitimately often overstay
their legal welcome without
being punished. But since Sept.
11, it's become clear that terrorists
have been shrewdly factoring
the weaknesses of our system
into their plans. In addition
to their mastery of forging
passports, at least three of
the 19 Sept. 11 hijackers (劫机者)
were here on expired visas.
That's been a safe bet until
now. The Immigration and Naturalization
Service (INS) ( 移民归化局 ) lacks
the resources, and apparently
the inclination, to keep track
of the estimated 2 million foreigners
who have intentionally overstayed
their welcome.
But this laxness (马虎) toward
immigration fraud may be about
to change. Congress has already
taken some modest steps. The
U.S.A. Patriot Act, passed in
the wake of the Sept. 11 tragedy,
requires the FBI, the Justice
Department, the State Department
and the INS to share more data,
which will make it easier to
stop watch-listed terrorists
at the border.
But what's really needed, critics
say, is even tougher laws and
more resources aimed at tightening
up border security. Reformers
are calling for a rollback of
rules that hinder law enforcement.They
also want the INS to hire hundreds
more border patrol agents and
investigators to keep illegal
immigrants out and to track
them down once they're here.
Reformers also want to see the
INS set up a database to monitor
whether visa holders actually
leave the country when they
are required to.
All these proposed changes were
part of a new border-security
bill that passed the House of
Representatives but died in
the Senate last week. Before
Sept. 11, legislation of this
kind had been blocked by two
powerful lobbies: universities,
which rely on tuition from foreign
students who could be kept out
by the new law, and business,
which relies on foreigners for
cheap labor. Since the attacks,
they've backed off. The bill
would have passed this time
but for congressional maneuverings
and is expected to be reintroduced
and to pass next year.
Also on the agenda for next
year: a proposal, backed by
some influential law-makers,
to split the INS into two agencies
- a good cop that would tend
to service functions like processing
citizenship papers and a bad
cop that would concentrate on
border inspections, deportation
and other functions. One reason
for the division, supporters
say, is that the INS has in
recent years become too focused
on serving tourists and immigrants.
After the Sept. l 1 tragedy,
the INS should pay more attention
to serving the millions of ordinary
Americans who rely on the nation's
border security to protect them
from terrorist attacks.
36. Terrorists have obviously
taken advantage of
A) the legal privileges granted
to foreigners
B) the excessive hospitality
of the American people
C) the irresponsibility of the
officials at border checkpoints
D) the low efficiency of the
Immigration and Naturalization
Service
37. We learn from the passage
that coordinated efforts will
be made by various U.S. government
agencies to
A) refuse the renewing of expired
visas
B) ward off terrorist suspects
at the border
C) prevent the forgery of immigration
papers
D). limit the number Of immigrants
to the U.S.
38. It can be inferred from
the passage that before Sept.
11, aliens with expired visas
A) might have them extended
without trouble
B) would be closely watched
by FBI agents
C) might stay on for as long
as [hey wished
D) would live in constant fear
of deportation
39. It is believed by many that
all these years the INS
A) has been serving two contradictory
functions
B) has been too liberal in granting
visas to tourists and immigrants
indiscriminately
C) has over-emphasized its service
functions at the expense of
the nation's security
D) has ignored the pleas of
the two powerful lobbies
40. Before Sept. 11, the U.S.
Congress had been unable to
pass stricter immigration laws
because
A) they might have kept away
foreign students and cheap labor
B) it was difficult to coordinate
the efforts of the congressmen
C) education and business circles
cared little about national
security
D) resources were not available
for their enforcement
Part III Vocabulary (20 minutes)
Directions: There are 30 incomplete
sentences in this part. For
each sentence there are four
choices marked A), B), C) and
D). Choose the ONE answer that
best completes the sentence.
Then mark the corresponding
letter on the Answer Sheet with
a single line through the centre.
41. It is generally known that
New York is a city for and a
center for odd bits of information.
A) veterans C) pedestrians
B) victims D) eccentrics
42. High grades are supposed
to academic ability, but John's
actual performance did not confirm
this.
A) certify C) classify
B) clarify D) notify
43. In spite of the , it seemed
that many of the invited guests
would still show up.
A) deviation C) controversy
B) distinction D) comparison
44. The relatives of those killed
in the crash got together to
seek
A) premium C) repayment
B) compensation D) refund
45. At first everything went
well with the project but recently
we have had a number of with
the machinery.
A) disturbances C) outputs
B) setbacks D) distortions
46. He tried to hide his patch
by sweeping his hair over to
one side.
A) barren C) bald
B) bare D) bleak
47. The old couple now still
for their beloved son, 30 years
after his death.
A) cherish C) immerse
B) groan D) mourn
48. Coffee is the of this district
and brings local farmers a lot
of money.
A) majority C) spice
B) staple D) elite
49. Before we move, we should
______ some of the old furniture,
so that we can have more room
in the new house.
A) discard C) cancel
B) dissipate D) conceal
50. You cannot imagine how I
feel with my duties sometimes.
A) overflowed C) overwhelmed
B) overthrown D) overturned
51. Anyone not paying the registration
fee by the end of this month
will be to have withdrawn from
the program.
A) contemplated C) acknowledged
B) deemed D) anticipated
52. Although he was on a diet,
the delicious food him enormously.
A) distracted C) inspired
B) stimulated D) tempted t
53. The police are trying to
what really happened.
A) ascertain C) avert
B) assert D) ascribe
54. Hesaid that ending the agreement
would the future of small or
family-run shops, lead to fewer
books being published and increase
prices of all but a few bestsellers.
A) venture C) jeopardize
B) expose D) legalize
55. As we know, computers are
used to store and information
efficiently.
A) reclaim C) reassure
B) reconcile D) retrieve
56. His illness first itself
as severe stomach pains and
headaches.
A) expressed C) reflected
B) manifested D) displayed
57. The they felt for each other
was obvious to everyone who
saw them.
A) affection C) sensibility
B) adherence D) sensitivity
58. When construction can begin
depends on how soon the of the
route is completed.
A) conviction C) orientation
B) identity D) survey
59. The government a heavy tax
on tobacco, which aroused opposition
from the tobacco industry.
A) pronounced C) complied
B) imposed D) prescribed
60. Years after the accident
he was still by images of death
and destruction.
A) twisted C) haunted
B) dipped D) submerged
61. The boxer and almost fell
when his opponent hit him.
A) staggered C) scattered
B) shattered D) stamped
62. In mountainous regions,
much of the snow that falls
is into ice.
A) dispersed C) compiled
B) embodied D) compacted
63. These continual in temperature
make it impossible to decide
what to wear.
A) transitions C) exchanges
B) transformations D) fluctuations
64. The post-World War II baby
resulted in a 43 percent increase
in the number of teenagers in
the 1960s and 1970s.
A) boost C) production
B) boom D) prosperity
65. Elisabeth did not enter
the museum at once, but ______
in the courtyard.
A) resided C) lingered
B) dwelled D) delayed
66. Henry went through the documents
again carefully for fear of
any important data.
A) relaying C) deleting
B) overlooking D) revealing
67. The bank is offering a to
anyone who can give information
about the robbery.
A) reward C) prize
B) bonus D) compliment
68. It is a(n) ________ that
the French eat so much rich
food and yet have a relatively
low rate of heart disease.
A) analogy C) correlation
B) paradox D) illusion
69. For many years the Japanese
have the car market.
A) presided C) operated
B) occupied D) dominated
70. The subject of safety must
be placed at the top of the
________.
A) agenda C) routine
B) bulletin D) timetable
Part IV Error Correction (15
minutes)
Directions: This part consists
of a short passage. In this
passage, there are altogether
10 mistakes, one in each numbered
line. You may have to change
a word, add a word or delete
a word. Mark out the mistakes
and put the corrections in the
blanks provided. If you change
a word, cross it out and write
the correct word in the corresponding
blank. If you add a word, put
an insertion mark (∧) in the
right place and write the missing
word in the blank. If you delete
a word, cross it out and put
a slash (/) in the blank.
Television is rapidly becoming
the literatures of our periods.
1. time/times/period
Many of the arguments having
used for the study of literature.
2. /___________
As a school subject are valid
for ∧ study of television. 3.
the___________
Culture refers to the social
heritage of a people - the learned
patterns for thinking, feeling
and acting that characterize
a
population or society, include
the expression of these pattems
in S1. __________
material things. Culture is
compose of nonmaterial culture
- S2. __________
abstract creations like values,
beliefs, customs and institutional
arrangements - and material
culture - physical object like
S3. __________
cooking pots, computers and
bathtubs. In sum, culture reflects
S4. __________
both the ideas we share or everything
we make. In ordinary
speech, a person of culture
is the individual can speak
another S5. __________
language - the person who is
unfamiliar with the arts, music,
S6. __________
literature, philosophy, or history.
But to sociologists, to be
human is to be cultured, because
of culture is the common world
S7. __________
of experience we share with
other members of our group.
Culture is essentially to our
humanness. It provides a kind
S8. __________
of map for relating to others.
Consider how you fred your way
about social life. How do you
know how to act in a classroom,
or a department store, or toward
a person who smiles or laugh
S9. __________
at you? Your culture supplies
you by broad, standardized,
S10. __________
ready-made answers for dealing
with each of these situations.
Therefore, if we know a person's
culture, we can understand
and even predict a good deal
of his behavior.
Part V Writing (30 minutes)
Directions: For this part, you
are allowed 30 minutes to write
a letter to the editor of a
newspaper complaining about
the poor service of a bookstore.
You should write at least 150
words according to the guidelines
given below in Chinese.
设想你买了一本英文词典,发现有这样那样的质量问题,书店的服务态度又不好,因此给报社编辑写信。信中必须包括以下内容:
事情的起因
与书店交涉的经过
呼吁服务行业必须提高服务质量
A Letter to the Editor of a
Newspaper