2005年6月18日大学英语六级考试试题
Part ⅠListening 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 centre.
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 are talking about
some work they will start at 9
oclock in the morning and have
to finish by 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 centre.
Sample Answer [A][B][C][D]
1. A) It will reduce government
revenues.
B) It will stimulate business
activities.
C) It will mainly benefit the
wealthy.
D) It will cut the stockholders’
dividends.
2. A) She will do her best if
the job is worth doing.
B) She prefers a life of continued
exploration.
C) She will stick to the job
if the pay is good.
D) She doesn’t think much of
job-hopping.
3. A) Stop thinking about the
matter.
B) Talk the drug user out of
the habit.
C) Be more friendly to his schoolmate.
D) Keep his distance from drug
addicts.
4. A) The son. B) The father.
C) The mother. D) Aunt Louise.
5. A) Stay away for a couple
of weeks.
B) Check the locks every two
weeks.
C) Look after the Johnsons’
house.
D) Move to another place.
6. A) He would like to warm
up for the game.
B) He didn’t want to be held
up in traffic.
C) He didn’t want to miss the
game.
D) He wanted to catch as many
game birds as possible.
7. A) It was burned down. B)
It was robbed.
C) It was blown up. D) It was
closed down.
8. A) She isn’t going to change
her major.
B) She plans to major in tax
law.
C) She studies in the same school
as her brother.
D) She isn’t going to work in
her brother’s firm.
9. A) The man should phone the
hotel for directions.
B) The man can ask the department
store for help.
C) She doesn’t have the hotel’s
phone number.
D) The hotel is just around
the corner.
10. A) she doesn’t expect to
finish all her work in thirty
minutes.
B) She has to do a lot of things
within a short time.
C) She has been overworking
for a long time.
D) She doesn’t know why there
are so many things to do.
Section B Compound Dictation
注意: 听力理解的B节(Section B)为复合式听写(Compound
Dictation),题目在试卷二上,现在请取出试卷二。
Part Ⅱ Reading Comprehension
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 center.
Passage One
Questions 11 to 15 are based
on the following passage.
Low-level slash-and-burn farming
doesn’t harm rainforest. On
the contrary, it helps farmers
and improves forest soils. This
is the unorthodox view of a
German soil scientist who has
shown that burnt clearings in
the Amazon, dating back more
than 1,000 years, helped create
patches of rich, fertile soil
that farmers still benefit from
today.
Most rainforest soils are thin
and poor because they lack minerals
and because the heat and heavy
rainfall destroy most organic
matter in the soils within four
years of it reaching the forest
floor. This means topsoil contains
few of the ingredients needed
for long-term successful farming.
But Bruno Glaser, a soil scientist
of the University of Bayreuth,
has studied unexpected patches
of fertile soils in the central
Amazon. These soils contain
lots of organic matter.
Glaser has shown that most of
this fertile organic matter
comes from “black carbon”-the
organic particles from camp
fires and charred (烧成炭的) wood
left over from thousands of
years of slash-and-burn farming.
”The soils, known as Terra Preta,
contained up to 70times more
black carbon than the surrounding
soil, ”says Glaser.
Unburnt vegetation rots quickly,
but black carbon persists in
the soil for many centuries.
Radiocarbon dating shows that
the charred wood in Terra Preta
soils is typically more than
1,000 years old.
“Slash-and-burn farming can
be good for soils provided it
doesn’t completely burn all
the vegetation, and leaves behind
charred wood,” says Glaser.
“It can be better than manure
(粪肥).” Burning the forest just
once can leave behind enough
black carbon to keep the soil
fertile for thousands of years.
And rainforests easily regrow
after small-scale clearing.
Contrary to the conventional
view that human activities damage
the environment, Glaser says:
”Black carbon combined with
human wastes is responsible
for the richness of Terra Preta
soils.”
Terra Preta soils turn up in
large patches all over the Amazon,
where they are highly prized
by farmers. All the patches
fall within 500 square kilometers
in the central Amazon. Glaser
says the widespread presence
of pottery (陶器) confirms the
soil’s human origins.
The findings add weight to the
theory that large areas of the
Amazon have recovered so well
from past periods of agricultural
use that the regrowth has been
mistaken by generations of biologists
for “virgin” forest.
During the past decade, researchers
have discovered hundreds of
large earth works deep in the
jungle. They are up to 20 meters
high and cover up to a square
kilometer. Glaser claims that
these earth works, built between
AD 400 and 1400, were at the
heart of urban civilizations.
Now it seems the richness of
the Terra Preta soils may explain
how such civilizations managed
to feed themselves.
11. We learn from the passage
that the traditional view of
slash-and-burn farming is that
.
A) it does no harm to the topsoil
of the rainforest
B) it destroys rainforest soils
C) it helps improve rainforest
soils
D) it diminishes the organic
matter in rainforest soils
12. Most rainforest soils are
thin and poor because .
A) the composition of the topsoil
is rather unstable
B) black carbon is washed away
by heavy rains
C) organic matter is quickly
lost due to heat and rain
D) long-term farming has exhausted
the ingredients essential to
plant growth
13. Glaser made his discovery
by .
A) studying patches of fertile
soils in the central Amazon
B) examining pottery left over
by ancient civilizations
C) test-burning patches of trees
in the central Amazon
D) radiocarbon-dating ingredients
contained in forest soils
14. What does Glaser say about
the regrowth of rainforests?
A) They take centuries to regrow
after being burnt.
B) They cannot recover unless
the vegetation is burnt completely.
C) Their regrowth will be hampered
by human habitation.
D) They can recover easily after
slash-and-burn farming.
15. From the passage it can
be inferred that .
A) human activities will do
grave damage to rainforests
B) Amazon rainforest soils used
to be the richest in the world
C) farming is responsible for
the destruction of the Amazon
rainforests
D) there once existed an urban
civilization in the Amazon rainforests
Passage Two
Questions 16 to 20 are based
on the following passage.
As a wise man once said, we
are all ultimately alone. But
an increasing number of Europeans
are choosing to be so at an
ever earlier age. This isn’t
the stuff of gloomy philosophical
contemplations, but a fact of
Europe’s new economic landscape,
embraced by sociologists, real-estate
developers and ad executives
alike. The shift away from family
life to solo lifestyle, observes
a French sociologist, is part
of the “irresistible momentum
of individualism” over the last
century. The communications
revolution, the shift from a
business culture of stability
to one of mobility and the mass
entry of women into the workforce
have greatly wreaked havoc on(扰乱)
Europeans’ private lives.
Europe’s new economic climate
has largely fostered the trend
toward independence. The current
generation of home-aloners came
of age during Europe’s shift
from social democracy to the
sharper, more individualistic
climate of American style capitalism.
Raised in an era of privatization
and increased consumer choice,
today’s tech-savvy(精通技术的) workers
have embraced a free market
in love as well as economics.
Modern Europeans are rich enough
to afford to live alone, and
temperamentally independent
enough to want to do so.
Once upon a time, people who
lived alone tended to be those
on either side of marriage-twentysomething
professionals or widowed senior
citizens. While pensioners,
particularly elderly women,
make up a large proportion of
those living alone, the newest
crop of singles are high earners
in their 30s and 40s who increasingly
view living alone as a lifestyle
choice. Living alone was conceived
to be negative-dark and cold,
while being together suggested
warmth and light. But then came
along the idea of singles. They
were young, beautiful, strong!
Now, young people want to live
alone.
The booming economy means people
are working harder than ever.
And that doesn’t leave much
room for relationships. Pimpi
Arroyo, a 35-year-old composer
who lives alone in a house in
Paris, says he hasn’t got time
to get lonely because he has
too much work. “I have deadlines
which would make life with someone
else fairly difficult.” Only
an Ideal Woman would make him
change his lifestyle, he says.
Kaufmann, author of a recent
book called “The Single Woman
and Prince Charming,” thinks
this fierce new individualism
means that people expect more
and more of mates, so relationships
don’t last long-if they start
at all. Eppendorf, a blond Berliner
with a deep tan, teaches grade
school in the mornings. In the
afternoon she sunbathes or sleeps,
resting up for going dancing.
Just shy of 50, she says she’d
never have wanted to do what
her mother did-give up a career
to raise a family. Instead,
“I’ve always done what I wanted
to do: live a self-determined
life.”
16. More and more young Europeans
remain single because .
A) they are driven by an overwhelming
sense of individualism
B) they have entered the workforce
at a much earlier age
C) they have embraced a business
culture of stability
D) they are pessimistic about
their economic future
17. What is said about European
society in the passage?
A) It has fostered the trend
towards small families.
B) It is getting closer to American-style
capitalism.
C) It has limited consumer choice
despite a free market.
D) It is being threatened by
irresistible privatization.
18. According to Paragraph 3,
the newest group of singles
are .
A) warm and lighthearted B)
on either side of marriage
C) negative and gloomy D) healthy
and wealthy
19. The author quotes Eppendorf
to show that .
A) some modern women prefer
a life of individual freedom
B) the family is no longer the
basic unit of society in present-day
Europe
C) some professional people
have too much work to do to
feel lonely
D) most Europeans conceive living
a single life as unacceptable
20. What is the author’s purpose
in writing the passage?
A) To review the impact of women
becoming high earners.
B) To contemplate the philosophy
underlying individualism.
C) To examine the trend of young
people living alone.
D) To stress the rebuilding
of personal relationships.
Passage Three
Questions 21 to 25 are based
on the following passage.
Supporters of the biotech industry
have accused an American scientist
of misconduct after she testified
to the New Zealand government
that a genetically modified(GM)
bacterium could cause serious
damage if released.
The New Zealand Life Sciences
Network, an association of pro-GM
scientists and organisations,
says the view expressed by Elaine
Ingham, a soil biologist at
Oregon State University in Corvallis,
was exaggerated and irresponsible.
It has asked her university
to discipline her.
But Ingham stands by her comments
and says the complaints are
an attempt to silence her. “They’re
trying to cause trouble with
my university and get me fired,”
Ingham told New Scientist.
The controversy began on 1 February,
when Ingham testified before
New Zealand’s Royal Commission
on Genetic Modification, which
will determine how to regulate
GM organisms. Ingham claimed
that a GM version of a common
soil bacterium could spread
and destroy plants if released
into the wild. Other researchers
had previously modified the
bacterium to produce alcohol
from organic waste. But Ingham
says that when she put it in
soil with wheat plants, all
of the plants died within a
week.
“We would lose terrestrial(陆生的)
plants...this is an organism
that is potentially deadly to
the continued survival of human
beings,” she told the commission.
She added that the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency(EPA) canceled
its approval for field tests
using the organism once she
had told them about her research
in 1999.
But last week the New Zealand
Life Sciences Network accused
Ingham of “presenting inaccurate,
careless and exaggerated information”
and “generating speculative
doomsday scenarios(世界末日的局面)
that are not scientifically
supportable”. They say that
her study doesn’t even show
that the bacteria would survive
in the wild, much less kill
massive numbers of plants. What’s
more, the network says that
contrary to Ingham’s claims,
the EPA was never asked to consider
the organism for field trials.
The EPA has not commented on
the dispute. But an e-mail to
the network from Janet Anderson,
director of the EPA’s bio-pesticides(生物杀虫剂)
division, says “there is no
record of a review and/or clearance
to field test” the organism.
Ingham says EPA officials had
told her that the organism was
approved for field tests, but
says she has few details. It’s
also not clear whether the organism,
first engineered by a German
institute for biotechnology,
is still in use.
Whether Ingham is right or wrong,
her supporters say opponents
are trying unfairly to silence
her.
“I think her concerns should
be taken seriously. She shouldn’t
be harassed in this way,” says
Ann Clarke, a plant biologist
at the University of Guelph
in Canada who also testified
before the commission. “It’s
n attempt to silence the opposition.”
21. The passage centers on the
controversy .
A) between American and New
Zealand biologists over genetic
modification
B) as to whether the study of
genetic modification should
be continued
C) over the possible adverse
effect of a GM bacterium on
plants
D) about whether Elaine Ingham
should be fired by her university
22. Ingham insists that her
testimony is based on .
A) evidence provided by the
EPA of the United States
B) the results of an experiment
she conducted herself
C) evidence from her collaborative
research with German biologists
D) the results of extensive
field tests in Corvallis, Oregon
23. According to Janet Anderson,
the EPA .
A) has cancelled its approval
for field tests of the GM organism
B) hasn’t reviewed the findings
of Ingham’s research
C) has approved field tests
using the GM organism
D) hasn’t given permission to
field test the GM organism
24. According to Ann Clarke,
the New Zealand Life Sciences
Network .
A) should gather evidence to
discredit Ingham’s claims
B) should require that the research
by their biologists be regulated
C) shouldn’t demand that Ingham
be disciplined for voicing her
views
D) shouldn’t appease the opposition
in such a quiet way
25. Which of the following statements
about Ingham is TRUE?
A) Her testimony hasn’t been
supported by the EPA.
B) Her credibility as a scientist
hasn’t been undermined.
C) She is firmly supported by
her university.
D) She has made great contributions
to the study of GM bacteria.
Passage Four
Questions 26 to 30 are based
on the following passage.
Every fall, like clockwork,
Linda Krentz of Beaverton, Oregon,
felt her brain go on strike.
“I just couldn’t get going in
the morning,” she says. “I’d
get depressed and gain 10 pounds
every winter and lose them again
in the spring.” Then she read
about seasonal affective disorder,
a form of depression that occurs
in fall and winter, and she
saw the light-literally. Every
morning now she turns on a specially
constructed light box for half
an hour and sits in front of
it to trick her brain into thinking
it’s still enjoying those long
summer days. It seems to work.
Krentz is not alone. Scientists
estimate that 10 million Americans
suffer from seasonal depression
and 25 million more develop
milder versions. But there’s
never been definitive proof
that treatment with very bright
lights makes a difference. After
all, it’s hard to do a double-blind
test when the subjects can see
for themselves whether or not
the light is on. That’s why
nobody has ever separated the
real effects of light therapy
from placebo(安慰剂) effects.
Until now. In three separate
studies published last month,
researchers report not only
that light therapy works better
than a placebo but that treatment
is usually more effective in
the early morning than in the
evening. In two of the groups,
the placebo problem was resolved
by telling patients they were
comparing light boxes to a new
anti-depressant device that
emits negatively charged ions(离子).
The third used the timing of
light therapy as the control.
Why does light therapy work?
No one really knows. “Our research
suggests it has something to
do with shifting the body’s
internal clock,” says psychiatrist
Dr. Lewey. The body is programmed
to start the day with sunrise,
he explains, and this gets later
as the days get shorter. But
why such subtle shifts make
some people depressed and not
others is a mystery.
That hasn’t stopped thousands
of winter depressives from trying
to heal themselves. Light boxes
for that purpose are available
without a doctor’s prescription.
That bothers psychologist Michael
Terman of Columbia University.
He is worried that the boxes
may be tried by patients who
suffer from mental illness that
can’t be treated with light.
Terman has developed a questionnaire
to help determine whether expert
care is needed.
In any event, you should choose
a reputable manufacturer. Whatever
product you use should emit
only visible light, because
ultraviolet light damages the
eyes. If you are photosensitive(对光敏感的),
you may develop a rash. Otherwise,
the main drawback is having
to sit in front of the light
for 30 to 60 minutes in the
morning. That’s an inconvenience
many winter depressives can
live with.
26. What is the probable cause
of Krentz’s problem?
A) An unexpected gain in body
weight.
B) Unexplained impairment of
her nervous system.
C) Weakening of her eyesight
with the setting in of winter.
D) Poor adjustment of her body
clock to seasonal changes.
27. By saying that Linda Krentz
“saw the light”(Line 4, Para.
1), the author means that she
“ ”.
A) learned how to lose weight
B) realized what her problem
was
C) came to see the importance
of light
D) became light-hearted and
cheerful
28. What is the CURRENT view
concerning the treatment of
seasonal depression with bright
lights?
A) Its effect remains to be
seen.
B) It serves as a kind of placebo.
C) It proves to be an effective
therapy.
D) It hardly produces any effects.
29. What is psychologist Michael
Terman’s major concern?
A) Winter depressives will be
addicted to using light boxes.
B) No mental patients would
bother to consult psychiatrists.
C) Inferior light boxes will
emit harmful ultraviolet lights.
D) Light therapy could be misused
by certain mental patients.
30. Which of the following statements
is TRUE?
A) Winter depressives prefer
light therapy in spite of its
inconvenience.
B) Light therapy increases the
patient’s photosensitivity.
C) Eye damage is a side effect
of light therapy.
D) Light boxes can be programmed
to correspond to shifts in the
body clock.
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 NOE answer that
best completes the sentence.
Then mark the corresponding
letter on the Answer Sheet with
a single line through the centre.
31. Susan has the elbows of
her son’s jacket with leather
patches to make it more durable.
A) reinforced B) sustained
C) steadied D) confirmed
32. Although we tried to concentrate
on the lecture, we were by the
noise form the next room.
A) distracted B) displaced
C) dispersed D) discarded
33. The reason why so many children
like to eat this new brand of
biscuit is that it is particularly
sweet and .
A) fragile B) feeble
C) brisk D) crisp
34. Don’t trust the speaker
any more, since the remarks
he made in his lectures are
never with the facts.
A) symmetrical B) comparative
C) compatible D) harmonious
35. They had to eat a(n) meal,
or they would be too late for
the concert.
A) temporary B) hasty
C) immediate D) urgent
36. Having a(n) attitude towards
people with different ideas
is an indication that one has
been well educated.
A) analytical B) bearable
C) elastic D) tolerant
37. No form of government in
the world is ; each system reflects
the history and present needs
of the region or the nation.
A) dominant B) influential
C) integral D) drastic
38. In spite of the economic
forecast, manufacturing output
has risen slightly.
A) faint B) dizzy
C) gloomy D) opaque
39. Too often Dr. Johnson’s
lectures how to protect the
doctor rather than how to cure
the patient.
A) look to B) dwell on
C) permeate into D) shrug off
40. Located in Washington D.C.,
the Library of Congress contains
an impressive of books on every
conceivable subject.
A) flock B) configuration
C) pile D) array
41. Some felt that they were
hurrying into an epoch of unprecedented
enlightenment, in which better
education and beneficial technology
would wealth and leisure for
all.
A) maintain B) ensure
C) certify D) console
42. Fiberoptic cables can carry
hundreds of telephone conversations
.
A) homogeneously B) spontaneously
C) simultaneously D) ingeniously
43. Excellent films are those
which national and cultural
barriers.
A) transcend B) traverse
C) abolish D) suppress
44. The law of supply and demand
will eventually take care of
a shortage or of dentists.
A) surge B) surplus
C) flush D) fluctuation
45. One third of the Chinese
in the United States live in
California, in the San Francisco
area.
A) remarkably B) severely
C) drastically D) predominantly
46. After the terrible accident,
I discovered that my ear was
becoming less .
A) sensible B) sensitive
C) sentimental D) sensational
47. Now the cheers and applause
in a single sustained roar.
A) mingled B) tangled
C) baffled D) huddled
48. Among all the public holidays,
National Day seems to be the
most joyful to the people of
the country; on that day the
whole country is in a festival
atmosphere.
A) trapped B) sunk
C) soaked D) immersed
49. The wooden cases must be
secured by overall metal strapping
so that they can be strong enough
to stand rough handling during
.
A) transit B) motion
C) shift D) traffic
50. Nowadays many rural people
flock to the city to look for
jobs on the assumption that
the streets there are with gold.
A) overwhelmed B) stocked
C) paved D) overlapped
51. It is a wellknown fact
that the cat family lions and
tigers.
A) enriches B) accommodates
C) adopts D) embraces
52. My boss has failed me so
many times that I no longer
place any on what he promises.
A) assurance B) probability
C) reliance D) conformity
53. The English language contains
a of words which are comparatively
seldom used in ordinary conversation.
A) latitude B) multitude
C) magnitude D) longitude
54. It was such a(n) when Pat
and Mike met each other in Tokyo.
Each thought that the other
was still in Hong Kong.
A) occurrence B) coincidence
C) fancy D) destiny
55. Parents have to learn how
to follow a bodys behavior
and adapt the tone of their
to the badys capabilities.
A) perceptions B) consultations
C) interactions D) interruptions
56. Governments today play an
increasingly larger role in
the of welfare, economics, and
education.
A) scopes B) ranges
C) ranks D) domains
57. If businessmen are taxed
too much, they will no longer
be to work hard, with the result
that tax revenues might actually
shrink.
A) cultivated B) licensed
C) motivated D) innovated
58. Jack is not very decisive,
and he always finds himself
in a as if he doesn’t know what
he really wants to do.
A) fantasy B) dilemma
C) contradiction D) conflict
59. He is a promising young
man who is now studying at our
graduate school. As his supervisor,
I would like to him to your
notice.
A) commend B) decree
C) presume D) articulate
60. It was a wonderful occasion
which we will for many years
to come.
A) conceive B) clutch
C) contrive D) cherish
Part Ⅳ Cloze (15 minutes)
Directions: There are 20 blanks
in the following passage. For
each blank there are four choices
marked A), B), C) and D) on
the right side of the paper.
You should choose the ONE that
best fits into the passage.
Then mark the corresponding
letter on the Answer Sheet with
a single line through the centre.
Although there are many skillful
Braille readers, thousands of
other blind people find it difficult
to learn that system. They are
thereby shut 61 from the world
of books and newspapers, having
to 62 on friends to read aloud
to them.
A young scientist named Raymond
Kurzweil has now designed a
computer which is a major 63
in providing aid to the 64 .
His machine, Cyclops, has a
camera that 65 any page, interprets
the print into sounds, and then
delivers them orally in a robot-like
66 through a speaker. By pressing
the appropriate buttons 67 Cyclops’s
keyboard, a blind person can
“read” any 68 document in the
English language.
This remarkable invention represents
a tremendous 69 forward in the
education of the handicapped.
At present, Cyclops costs $50,000.
70 , Mr. Kurzweil and his associates
are preparing a smaller 71 improved
version that will sell 72 less
than half that price. Within
a few years, Kurzweil 73 the
price range will be low enough
for every school and library
to 74 one. Michael Hingson,
Director of the National Federation
for the Blind, hopes that 75
will be able to buy home 76
of Cyclops for the price of
a good television set.
Mr. Hingson’s organization purchased
five machines and is now testing
them in Maryland, Colorado,
Iowa, California, and New York.
Blind people have been 77 in
those tests, making lots of
78 suggestions to the engineers
who helped to produce Cyclops.
“This is the first time that
blind people have ever done
individual studies 79 a product
was put on the market,” Hingson
said. “Most manufacturers believed
that having the blind help the
blind was like telling disabled
people to teach other disabled
people. In that 80 , the manufacturers
have been the blind ones.”
61. A) up B) down C) in D) off
62. A) dwell B) rely C) press
D) urge
63. A) execution B) distinction
C) breakthrough D) process
64. A) paralyzed B) uneducated
C) invisible D) sightless
65. A) scans B) enlarges C)
sketches D) projects
66. A) behavior B) expression
C) movement D) voice
67. A) on B) at C) in D) from
68. A) visual B) printed C)
virtual D) spoken
69. A) stride B) trail C) haul
D) footprint
70. A) Likewise B) Moreover
C) However D) Though
71. A) but B) than C) or D)
then
72. A) on B) for C) through
D) to
73. A) estimates B) considers
C) counts D) determines
74. A) settle B) own C) invest
D) retain
75. A) schools B) children C)
families D) companies
76. A) models B) modes C) cases
D) collections
77. A) producing B) researching
C) ascertaining D) assisting
78. A) true B) valuable C) authentic
D) pleasant
79. A) after B) when C) before
D) as
80. A) occasion B) moment C)
sense D) event
Section B Compound Dictation
Certain phrases one commonly
hears among Americans capture
their devotion to individualism:
“Do you own thing.” ”I did it
my way.” ”You’ll have to decided
that for yourself.” “You made
your bed, now (S1) in it.” “if
you don’t look out for yourself,
no one else will.” “Look out
for number one.”
Closely (S2) with the value
they place on indi8vidualism
is the importance Americans
(S3) to privacy. Americans assume
that people need some time to
themselves or some time alone
to think about things or recover
their (S4) psychological energy.
Americans have great (S5) understanding
foreigners who always want to
be with another person who dislike
being alone.
If the parents can (S6) it,
each child will have his or
her own bedroom. Having one’s
own bedroom, her books, her
books and so on. These things
will be hers and no one else’s.
Americans assumer that (S9).
Doctors, lawyers, psychologists,
and others have rules governing
confidentiality that are intended
to prevent information about
their clients’ personal situations
form becoming known to others.
American’s attitude about privacy
can be hard for foreigners to
understand. (10) . When those
boundaries are crossed , an
American’s body will visibly
stiffen and his manner will
become cool and aloof.
Part Ⅴ Writing
In this part, you are allowed
30 minutes to write a short
essay entitled Say No to Pirated
Products.
1. 目前盗版的现象比较严重
2. 造成这种现象的原因及危害
3. 我们应该怎么做?
盗版 piracy (n.) 盗版产品 pirated
products 知识产权 intellectual property
rights 侵犯版权 infringe sb’s copyright;
copyright infringement
Say No to Pirated Products
参考答案
1-5.CBDCA 6-10.CBDAB
11-15.BCADD 16-20.ABDAC
21-25.CBBCA 26-30.DBCDA
31-35.AADCB 36-40.DACBD
41-45.BCABD 46-50.BADAC
51-55.DCBBA 56-60.DCBAD
61-65.DBCDA 66-70.DABAC
71-75.ABABC 76-80.ADBCC
复合式听写
S1. lie S2 associated S3. assign
S4. spent S5. difficulty S6.
afford S7 infant
S8. she is entitled to a place
of her own where she can be
by herself, and keep her possessions
S9. people will have their private
thoughts that might never be
shared with anyone
S10. American’s houses, yards
and even offices can seem open
and inviting. Yet in the minds
of Americans, there are boundaries
that other people are simply
not supposed to cross.