2005年1月8日六级试卷
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) Furnished apartments will
cost more.
B) The apartment can be furnished
easily.
C) The apartment is just what
the man is looking for.
D) She can provide the man with
the apartment he needs.
2. A) Mr. Johnson’s ideas are
nonsense.
B) He quite agrees with Mr.
Johnson’s views.
C) Mr. Johnson is good at expressing
his ideas.
D) He shares the woman’s views
on social welfare.
3. A) Study in a quiet place.
B) Improve her grades gradually.
C) Change the conditions of
her dorm.
D) Avoid distractions while
studying in her dorm.
4. A) It has been put off.
B) It has been cancelled.
C) It will be held in a different
place.
D) It will be rescheduled to
attract more participants.
5. A) Janet loves the beautiful
landscape of Australia very
much.
B) Janet is very much interested
in architecture.
C) Janet admires the Sydney
Opera House very much.
D) Janet thinks it’s a shame
for anyone not to visit Australia.
6. A) It is based on a lot of
research.
B) It can be finished in a few
weeks’ time.
C) It has drawn criticism from
lots of people.
D) It falls short of her supervisor’s
expectations.
7. A) Karen is very forgetful.
B) He knows Karen better now.
C) Karen is sure to pass the
interview.
D) The woman should have reminded
Karen earlier.
8. A) Ask Joe to apologize to
the professor for her.
B) Skip the class to prepare
for the exam.
C) Tell the professor she’s
lost her voice.
D) Attend the lecture with the
man.
9. A) The man will go in for
business right after high school.
B) The woman is not happy with
the man’s decision.
C) The man wants to be a business
manager.
D) The woman is working in a
kindergarten.
10. A) They stay closed until
summer comes.
B) They cater chiefly to tourists.
C) They are busy all the year
round.
D) They provide quality service
to their customers.
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 14 are based
on the passage you have just
heard.
11. A) Classmates.
B) Colleagues.
C) Boss and secretary.
D) PR representative and client.
12. A) He felt his assignment
was tougher than Sue’s.
B) His clients complained about
his service.
C) He thought the boss was unfair
to him.
D) His boss was always finding
fault with his work.
13. A) She is unwilling to undertake
them.
B) She complains about her bad
luck.
C) She always accepts them cheerfully.
D) She takes them on, though
reluctantly.
14. A) Sue got promoted.
B) John had to quit his job.
C) Both John and Sue got a raise.
D) Sue failed to complete her
project.
Passage Two
Questions 15 to 17 are based
on the passage you have just
heard.
15. A) By greeting each other
very politely.
B) By exchanging their views
on public affairs.
C) By displaying their feelings
and emotions.
D) By asking each other some
personal questions.
16. A) Refrain from showing
his feelings.
B) Express his opinion frankly.
C) Argue fiercely.
D) Yell loudly.
17. A) Getting rich quickly.
B) Distinguishing oneself.
C) Respecting individual rights.
D) Doing credit to one’s community.
Passage Three
Questions 18 to 20 are based
on the passage you have just
heard.
18. A) If they don’t involve
any risks.
B) If they produce predictable
side effects.
C) When the urgent need for
them arises.
D) When tests show that they
are relatively safe.
19. A) Because they are not
accustomed to it.
B) Because they are not psychologically
prepared for it.
C) Because their genes differ
from those who have been tested
for it.
D) Because they are less sensitive
to it than those who have been
tested for it.
20. A) They will have to take
ever larger doses.
B) They will become physically
impaired.
C) They will suffer from minor
discomfort.
D) They will experience a very
painful process.
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.
I had an experience some years
ago which taught me something
about the ways in which people
make a bad situation worse by
blaming themselves. One January,
I had to officiate at two funerals
on successive days for two elderly
women in my community. Both
had died “full of years,” as
the Bible would say; both yielded
to the normal wearing out of
the body after a long and full
life. Their homes happened to
be near each other, so I paid
condolence (吊唁) calls on the
two families on the same afternoon.
At the first home, the son of
the deceased (已故的) woman said
to me, “If only I had sent my
mother to Florida and gotten
her out of this cold and snow,
she would be alive today. It’s
my fault that she died.” At
the second home, the son of
the other deceased woman said,
“If only I hadn’t insisted on
my mother’s going to Florida,
she would be alive today. That
long airplane ride, the abrupt
change of climate, was more
than she could take. It’s my
fault that she’s dead.”
When things don’t turn out as
we would like them to, it is
very tempting to assume that
had we done things differently,
the story would have had a happier
ending. Priests know that any
time there is a death, the survivors
will feel guilty. Because the
course of action they took turned
out badly, they believe that
the opposite course – keeping
Mother at home, postponing the
operation – would have turned
out better. After all, how could
it have turned out any worse?
There seem to be two elements
involved in our readiness to
feel guilt. The first is our
pressing need to believe that
the world makes sense, that
there is a cause for every effect
and a reason for everything
that happens. That leads us
to find patterns and connections
both where they really exist
and where they exist only in
our minds.
The second element is the notion
that we are the cause of what
happens, especially the bad
things that happen. It seems
to be a short step from believing
that every event has a cause
to believing that every disaster
is our fault. The roots of this
feeling may lie in our childhood.
Psychologists speak of the infantile
myth of omnipotence (万能). A
baby comes to think that the
world exists to meet his needs,
and that he makes everything
happen in it. He wakes up in
the morning and summons the
rest of the world to its tasks.
He cries, and someone comes
to attend to him. When he is
hungry, people feed him, and
when he is wet, people change
him. Very often, we do not completely
outgrow that infantile notion
that our wishes cause things
to happen.
21. What is said about the two
deceased elderly women?
A) They lived out a natural
life.
B) They died of exhaustion after
the long plane ride.
C) They weren’t accustomed to
the change in weather.
D) They died due to lack of
care by family members.
22. The author had to conduct
the two women’s funerals probably
because ________.
A) he wanted to console the
two families
B) he was an official from the
community
C) he had great sympathy for
the deceased
D) he was priest of the local
church
23. People feel guilty for the
deaths of their loved ones because
________.
A) they couldn’t find a better
way to express their grief
B) they believe that they were
responsible
C) they had neglected the natural
course of events
D) they didn’t know things often
turn out in the opposite direction
24. In the context of the passage,
“... the world makes sense”
(Line 2, Para, 4) probably means
that ________.
A) everything in the world is
predetermined
B) the world can be interpreted
in different ways
C) there’s an explanation for
everything in the world
D) we have to be sensible in
order to understand the world
25. People have been made to
believe since infancy that ________.
A) everybody is at their command
B) life and death is an unsolved
mystery
C) every story should have a
happy ending
D) their wishes are the cause
of everything that happens
Passage Two
Questions 26 to 30 are based
on the following passage.
Frustrated with delays in Sacramento,
Bay Area officials said Thursday
they planned to take matters
into their own hands to regulate
the region’s growing pile of
electronic trash.
A San Jose councilwoman and
a San Francisco supervisor said
they would propose local initiatives
aimed at controlling electronic
waste if the California law-making
body fails to act on two bills
stalled in the Assembly. They
are among a growing number of
California cities and counties
that have expressed the same
intention.
Environmentalists and local
governments are increasingly
concerned about the toxic hazard
posed by old electronic devices
and the cost of safely recycling
those products. An estimated
6 million televisions and computers
are stocked in California homes,
and an additional 6,000 to 7,000
computers become outdated every
day. The machines contain high
levels of lead and other hazardous
substances, and are already
banned from California landfills
(垃圾填埋场).
Legislation by Senator Byron
Sher would require consumers
to pay a recycling fee of up
to $30 on every new machine
containing a cathode (阴极) ray
tube. Used in almost all video
monitors and televisions, those
devices contain four to eight
pounds of lead each. The fees
would go toward setting up recycling
programs, providing grants to
non-profit agencies that reuse
the tubes and rewarding manufacturers
that encourage recycling.
A separate bill by Los Angeles-area
Senator Gloria Romero would
require high-tech manufacturers
to develop programs to recycle
so-called e-waste.
If passed, the measures would
put California at the forefront
of national efforts to manage
the refuse of the electronic
age.
But high-tech groups, including
the Silicon Valley Manufacturing
Group and the American Electronics
Association, oppose the measures,
arguing that fees of up to $30
will drive consumers to online,
out-of-state retailers.
“What really needs to occur
is consumer education. Most
consumers are unaware they’re
not supposed to throw computers
in the trash,” said Roxanne
Gould, vice president of government
relations for the electronics
association.
Computer recycling should be
a local effort and part of residential
waste collection programs, she
added.
Recycling electronic waste is
a dangerous and specialized
matter, and environmentalists
maintain the state must support
recycling efforts and ensure
that the job isn’t contracted
to unscrupulous (毫无顾忌的) junk
dealers who send the toxic parts
overseas.
“The graveyard of the high-tech
revolution is ending up in rural
China,” said Ted Smith, director
of the Silicon Valley Toxics
Coalition. His group is pushing
for an amendment to Sher’s bill
that would prevent the export
of e-waste.
26. What step were Bay Area
officials going to take regarding
e-waste disposal?
A) Exert pressure on manufacturers
of electronic devices.
B) Lay down relevant local regulations
themselves.
C) Lobby the lawmakers of the
California Assembly.
D) Rally support to pass the
stalled bills.
27. The two bills stalled in
the California Assembly both
concern ________.
A) regulations on dumping hazardous
substances into landfills
B) the sale of used electronic
devices to foreign countries
C) the funding of local initiatives
to reuse electronic trash
D) the reprocessing of the huge
amounts of electronic waste
in the state
28. Consumers are not supposed
to throw used computers in the
trash because ________.
A) they contain large amounts
of harmful substances
B) this is banned by the California
government
C) some parts may be recycled
for use elsewhere
D) unscrupulous dealers will
retrieve them for profit
29. High-tech groups believe
that if an extra $30 is charged
on every TV or computer purchased
in California, consumers will
_______.
A) abandon online shopping
B) buy them from other states
C) strongly protest against
such a charge
D) hesitate to upgrade their
computers
30. We learn from the passage
that much of California’s electronic
waste has been _______.
A) collected by non-profit agencies
B) dumped into local landfills
C) exported to foreign countries
D) recycled by computer manufacturers
Passage Three
Questions 31 to 35 are based
on the following passage,
Throughout the nation’s more
than 15,000 school districts,
widely differing approaches
to teaching science and math
have emerged. Though there can
be strength in diversity, a
new international analysis suggests
that this variability has instead
contributed to lackluster (平淡的)
achievement scores by U.S. children
relative to their peers in other
developed countries.
Indeed, concludes William H.
Schmidt of Michigan State University,
who led the new analysis, “no
single intellectually coherent
vision dominates U.S. educational
practice in math or science.’’
The reason, he said, “is because
the system is deeply and fundamentally
flawed.”
The new analysis, released this
week by the National Science
Foundation in Arlington, Va.,
is based on data collected from
about 50 nations as part of
the Third International Mathematics
and Science Study.
Not only do approaches to teaching
science and math vary among
individual U.S. communities,
the report finds, but there
appears to be little strategic
focus within a school district’s
curricula, its textbooks, or
its teachers’ activities. This
contrasts sharply with the coordinated
national programs of most other
countries.
On average, U.S. students study
more topics within science and
math than their international
counterparts do. This creates
an educational environment that
“is a mile wide and an inch
deep,” Schmidt notes.
For instance, eighth graders
in the United States cover about
33 topics in math versus just
19 in Japan. Among science courses,
the international gap is even
wider. U.S. curricula for this
age level resemble those of
a small group of countries including
Australia, Thailand, Iceland,
and Bulgaria. Schmidt asks whether
the United States wants to be
classed with these nations,
whose educational systems “share
our pattern of splintered (支离破碎的)
visions” but which are not economic
leaders.
The new report “couldn’t come
at a better time,” says Gerald
Wheeler, executive director
of the National Science Teachers
Association in Arlington. “The
new National Science Education
Standards provide that focused
vision,” including the call
“to do less, but in greater
depth.”
Implementing the new science
standards and their math counterparts
will be the challenge, he and
Schmidt agree, because the decentralized
responsibility for education
in the United States requires
that any reforms be tailored
and instituted one community
at a time.
In fact, Schmidt argues, reforms
such as these proposed national
standards “face an almost impossible
task, because even though they
are intellectually coherent,
each becomes only one more voice
in the babble (嘈杂声).”
31. According to the passage,
the teaching of science and
math in America is ________.
A) focused on tapping students’
potential
B) characterized by its diversity
C) losing its vitality gradually
D) going downhill in recent
years
32. The fundamental flaw of
American school education is
that ________.
A) it lacks a coordinated national
program
B) it sets a very low academic
standard for students
C) it relies heavily on the
initiative of individual teachers
D) it attaches too much importance
to intensive study of school
subjects
33. By saying that the U.S.
educational environment is “a
mile wide and an inch deep”
(Line 2, Para. 5), the author
means U.S. educational practice
________.
A) lays stress on quality at
the expense of quantity
B) offers an environment for
comprehensive education
C) encourages learning both
in depth and in scope
D) scratches the surface of
a wide range of topics
34. The new National Science
Education Standards are good
news in that they will ________.
A) provide depth to school science
education
B) solve most of the problems
in school teaching
C) be able to meet the demands
of the community
D) quickly dominate U.S. educational
practice
35. Putting the new science
and math standards into practice
will prove difficult because
________.
A) there is always controversy
in educational circles
B) not enough educators have
realized the necessity for doing
so
C) school districts are responsible
for making their own decisions
D) many schoolteachers challenge
the acceptability of these standards
Passage Four
Questions 36 to 40 are based
on the following passage.
“I’ve never met a human worth
cloning,” says cloning expert
Mark Westhusin from his lab
at Texas A&M University.
“It’s a stupid endeavor.” That’s
an interesting choice of adjective,
coming from a man who has spent
millions of dollars trying to
clone a 13-year-old dog named
Missy. So far, he and his team
have not succeeded, though they
have cloned two cows and expect
to clone a cat soon. They just
might succeed in cloning Missy
this spring – or perhaps not
for another 5 years. It seems
the reproductive system of man’s
best friend is one of the mysteries
of modern science.
Westhusin’s experience with
cloning animals leaves him upset
by all this talk of human cloning.
In three years of work on the
Missy project, using hundreds
upon hundreds of dog’s eggs,
the A&M team has produced
only a dozen or so embryos (胚胎)
carrying Missy’s DNA. None have
survived the transfer to a surrogate
(代孕的) mother. The wastage of
eggs and the many spontaneously
aborted fetuses (胎) may be acceptable
when you’re dealing with cats
or bulls, he argues, but not
with humans. “Cloning is incredibly
inefficient, and also dangerous,”
he says.
Even so, dog cloning is a commercial
opportunity, with a nice research
payoff. Ever since Dolly the
sheep was cloned in 1997, Westhusin’s
phone has been ringing with
people calling in hopes of duplicating
their cats and dogs, cattle
and horses. “A lot of people
want to clone pets, especially
if the price is right,” says
Westhusin. Cost is no obstacle
for Missy’s mysterious billionaire
owner; he’s put up $3.7 million
so far to fund A&M’s research.
Contrary to some media reports,
Missy is not dead. The owner
wants a twin to carry on Missy’s
fine qualities after she does
die. The prototype is, by all
accounts, athletic, good-natured
and supersmart. Missy’s master
does not expect an exact copy
of her. He knows her clone may
not have her temperament. In
a statement of purpose, Missy’s
owner and the A&M team say
they are “both looking forward
to studying the ways that her
clones differ from Missy.”
Besides cloning a great dog,
the project may contribute insight
into the old question of nature
vs. nurture. It could also lead
to the cloning of special rescue
dogs and many endangered animals.
However, Westhusin is cautious
about his work. He knows that
even if he gets a dog pregnant,
the offspring, should they survive,
will face the problems shown
at birth by other cloned animals:
abnormalities like immature
lungs and heart and weight problems.
“Why would you ever want to
clone humans,” Westhusin asks,
“when we’re not even close to
getting it worked out in animals
yet?”
36. By “stupid endeavor” (Line
2, Para. 1), Westhusin means
to say that ________.
A) animal cloning is not worth
the effort at all
B) animal cloning is absolutely
impractical
C) human cloning should be done
selectively
D) human cloning is a foolish
undertaking
37. What does the first paragraph
tell us about Westhusin’s dog
cloning project?
A) Its success is already in
sight.
B) Its outcome remains uncertain.
C) It is doomed to utter failure.
D) It is progressing smoothly.
38. By cloning Missy, Mark Westhusin
hopes to ________.
A) study the possibility of
cloning humans
B) search for ways to modify
its temperament
C) examine the reproductive
system of the dog species
D) find out the differences
between Missy and its clones
39. We learn from the passage
that animal clones are likely
to have ________.
A) a bad temper
B) immune deficiency
C) defective organs
D) an abnormal shape
40. It can be seen that present
cloning techniques ________.
A) still have a long way to
go before reaching maturity
B) have been widely used in
saving endangered species
C) provide insight into the
question of nature vs. nurture
D) have proved quite adequate
for the cloning of humans
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. My grandfather, a retired
worker, often ________ the past
with a feeling of longing and
respect.
A) considers C) contrives
B) contemplates D) contacts
42. Medical students are advised
that the wearing of a white
coat ________ the acceptance
of a professional code of conduct
expected of the medical profession.
A) supplements C) signifies
B) simulates D) swears
43. The doctors ________ the
newly approved drug into the
patient when he was critically
ill.
A) injected C) projected
B) ejected D) subjected
44. Apart from philosophical
and legal reasons for respecting
patients’ wishes, there are
several practical reasons why
doctors should ________ to involve
patients in their own medical
care decisions.
A) enforce C) endeavor
B) endow D) enhance
45. This is a long ________
– roughly 13 miles down a beautiful
valley to the little church
below.
A) terrain C) degeneration
B) descent D) tumble
46. She was deeply ________
by the amount of criticism her
play received.
A) deported C) involved
B) deprived D) frustrated
47. Some scientists are dubious
of the claim that organisms
________ with age as an inevitable
outcome of living.
A) depress C) deteriorate
B) default D) degrade
48. Many manufacturers were
accused of concentrating too
heavily on cost reduction, often
at the ________ of the quality
of their products.
A) expense C) expansion
B) exposure D) expectation
49. One witness ________ that
he’d seen the suspect run out
of the bank after it had been
robbed.
A) convicted C) retorted
B) conformed D) testified
50. Nothing Helen says is ever
________. She always thinks
carefully before she speaks.
A) simultaneous C) spontaneous
B) homogenous D) rigorous
51. She gave ________ directions
about the way the rug should
be cleaned.
A) explicit C) transient
B) brisk D) opaque
52. It took a lot of imagination
to come up with such a(n) ________
plan.
A) inherent C) vigorous
B) ingenious D) exotic
53. A ________ official is one
who is irresponsible in his
work.
A) timid C) suspicious
B) tedious D) slack
54. Most mathematicians trust
their ________ in solving problems
and readily admit they would
not be able to function without
it.
A) conception C) intuition
B) perception D) cognition
55. He had an almost irresistible
________ to talk to the crowd
when he entered Hyde Park.
A) impulse C) stimulation
B) instinct D) surge
56. Encouraged by their culture
to voice their opinions freely,
the Canadians are not afraid
to go against the group ________,
and will argue their viewpoints
enthusiastically, though rarely
aggressively.
A) consent C) consensus
B) conscience D) consciousness
57. He still ________ the memory
of his carefree childhood spent
in that small wooden house of
his grandparents’.
A) nourishes C) fancies
B) cherishes D) scans
58. She expressed her strong
determination that nothing could
________ her to give up her
career as a teacher.
A) induce C) reduce
B) deduce D) attract
59. The microscope and telescope,
with their capacity to enlarge,
isolate and probe, demonstrate
how details can be ________
and separated from the whole.
A) radiated C) prolonged
B) extended D) magnified
60. Lighting can be used not
only to create an atmosphere,
but also to ________ features
of the house, such as ornaments
or pictures.
A) highlight C) activate
B) underline D) upgrade
61. By turning this knob to
the right you can ________ the
sound from the radio.
A) intensify C) enlarge
B) amplify D) reinforce
62. One of the attractive features
of the course was the way the
practical work had been ________
with the theoretical aspects
of the subject.
A) embedded C) integrated
B) embraced D) synthesized
63. They couldn’t see a ________
of hope that they would be saved
by a passing ship.
A) grain C) slice
B) span D) gleam
64. The traditional markets
retain their ________ for the
many Chinese who still prefer
fresh food like live fish, ducks,
chickens over packaged or frozen
goods.
A) appeal C) image
B) pledge D) survival
65. ________ efforts are needed
in order to finish important
but unpleasant tasks.
A) Consecutive C) Perpetual
B) Condensed D) Persistent
66. A number of students ________
in flats, and others live in
the nearby holiday resorts,
where there is a reasonable
supply of competitively priced
accommodation.
A) revive C) gather
B) inhabit D) reside
67. He bought his house on the________
plan, paying a certain amount
of money each month.
A) division C) installment
B) premium D) fluctuation
68. He could not ________ ignorance
as his excuse; he should have
known what was happening in
his department.
A) petition C) resort
B) plead D) reproach
69. Many ecologists believe
that lots of major species in
the world are on the________
of extinction.
A) margin C) verge
B) border D) fringe
70. Any salesperson who sells
more than the weekly ________
will receive a bonus.
A) ratio C) allocation
B) quota D) portion
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.
Example:
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 ______
The World Health Organization
(WHO) says its ten-year
campaign to remove leprosy (麻风病)
as a world health
problem has been successful.
Doctor Brundtland, head of the
WHO, says a number of leprosy
cases around the world has S1.
_____
been cut of ninety percent during
the past ten years. She says
S2. _____
efforts are continuing to complete
end the disease. S3. _____
Leprosy is caused by bacteria
spread through liquid from
the nose and mouth. The disease
mainly effects the skin and
S4. _____
nerves. However, if leprosy
is not treated it can cause
permanent
damage for the skin, nerves,
eyes, arms or legs. S5. _____
In 1999, an international campaign
began to end leprosy.
The WHO, governments of countries
most affected by the
disease, and several other groups
are part of the campaign.
This alliance guarantees that
all leprosy patients, even they
S6. _____
are poor, have a right to the
most modern treatment.
Doctor Brundtland says leprosy
is no longer a disease
that requires life-long treatments
by medical experts. Instead,
patients can take that is called
a multi-drug therapy. This S7.
_____
modern treatment will cure leprosy
in 6 to 12 months,
depend on the form of the disease.
The treatment combines S8. _____
several drugs taken daily or
once a month. The WHO has
given multi-drug therapy to
patients freely for the last
five S9. _____
years. The members of the alliance
against leprosy plan to
target the countries which still
threatened by leprosy. Among
S10. _____
the estimated 600,000 victims
around the world, the WHO
believes about 70% are in India.
The disease also remains a
problem in Africa and South
America.
Part V Writing (30 minutes)
Directions: For this part, you
are allowed 30 minutes to write
an open letter on behalf of
the student union asking people
to give help to a student who
is seriously ill. You should
write at least 150 words following
the outline given:
1. 对病人的简单介绍:目前的病情和家庭情况
2. 目前的困难:无法继续承担医疗费用,需要护理
3. 希望捐助,联系方式
Your Help Needed
2005.1
1-5 D B A A C 6-10 D A B C B
11-15 A C C A D 16-20 A B D
C A
21-25 A D B C D 26-30 B D A
B C 31-35 B A D A C 36-40 D
B D C A
41-45 B C A C B 46-50 D D A
D C 51-55 A B D C A 56-60 C
B A D A
61-65 B C D A D 66-70 D C B
C B
S1. a->the
S2. of->by
S3. complete->completely
S4. effects->affects
S5. for->to
S6. even->even if/even though
S7. that->what
S8. depend->depending
S9. freely->free
S10. which->which are