六级考试冲刺模拟试题.
18. A) A trip he has already taken.
B) A city in which he used to work.
C) A restaurant at which he likes to eat.
D) A monument he has visited.
Conversation One
19. A) Go to summer camp. B) Take a summer vacation.
C) Stay at home. D) Earn some money.
20. A) They hired someone to stay in their home.
B) They left their pets with their relatives.
C) They rented their house to a student.
D) They asked their secretaries to watch their home.
21. A) Walking the dog. B) Cutting the grass.
C) Taking care of the children. D) Feeding the fish.
22. A) They attend a house-sitter’s party.
B) They check a house-sitter’s references.
C) They interview a house-sitter’s friends.
D) They look at a house-sitter’s transcripts.
Conversation Two
23. A) What the man’s plans are for tonight.
B) Why the man does not want to play tennis.
C) Why they do not have time to play tennis after class today.
D) What time they can meet in the library.
24. A) Yesterday before dinner. B) Two days ago.
C) Last weekend. D) One week ago.
25. A) Let him win a tennis game.
B) Help him finish his anthropology project.
C) Give him some medicine for his stomach.
D) Lend him her anthropology book
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 Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre.
注意:此部分试题在答题卡2上作答。
Passage One
Questions 26 to 29 are based on the passage you have just heard.
26. A) Eliminating the original vegetation from the building site.
B) Making the houses in an area similar to one another.
C) Deciding where a house will be built.
D) Surrounding a building with wildflowers and plants.
27. A) They are changed to make the site more interesting.
B) They are expanded to limit the amount of construction.
C) They are integrated into the design of the building.
D) They are removed for construction.
28. A) Because many architects studied with Wright.
B) Because Wright started the practice of “landscaping”.
C) Because Wright used elements of Envelope Building.
D) Because most of the houses Wright built were made of stone.
Passage Two
Questions 29 to 31 are based on the passage you have just heard.
29. A) They cure patients by using traditional medicine.
B) Their treatments are often successful.
C) They cure patients both physically and mentally.
D) They are usually more patient than modern physicians.
30. A) The anger of a relative, friend or enemy.
B) The stone hidden inside the patient’s throat, arm, leg, stomach, etc.
C) The attack from neighboring enemies.
D) The diseases that enter the body of a person.
31. A) They are scientific. B) They are too complicated.
C) They should be banned. D) They are not truthful, but effective.
Passage Three
Questions 32 to 35 are based on the passage you have just heard.
32. A) Hot during the day and cold at night.
B) Cold during the day and hot at night.
C) Hot day and night.
D) Cold day and night.
33. A) There are neither rivers nor streams.
B) There is no grass all the year round.
C) It is mainly bare rock with little grass.
D) There are a few streams and big rivers.
34. A) With the help of his friends.
B) By following the tracks of animals.
C) By using a compass.
D) With the help of the guide.
35. A) 19 years old. B) 16 years old. C) 35 years old. D) 25 years old.
Section C
Directions: In this section, you will hear a passage three times. When the passage is read for the first time, you should listen carefully for its general idea. When the passage is read for the second time, you are required to fill in the blanks numbered from 36 to 43 with the exact words you have just heard. For blanks numbered from 44 to 46 you are required to fill in the missing information. For these blanks, you can either use the exact words you have just heard or write down the main points in your own words. Finally, when the passage is read for the third time, you should check what you have written.
注意:此部分试题在答题卡2上;请在答题卡2上作答。
Part Ⅳ Reading Comprehension (Reading in Depth) (25 minutes)
Section A
Directions:In this section,there is a short passage with 5 questions or incomplete statements. Read the passage carefully. Then answer the questions or complete the statements in the fewest possible words on Answer Sheet 2.
Questions 47 to 51 are based on the following passage.
For most people, shopping is still a matter of wandering down the high street or loading a cart in a shopping mall. Soon, that will change. Electronic commerce is growing fast and will soon bring people more choice. There will, however, be a cost: protecting the consumer from fraud will be harder. Many governments therefore want to extend highstreet regulations to the electronic world. But politicians would be wiser to see cyberspace as a basis for a new era of corporate self-regulation.
Consumers in rich countries have grown used to the idea that the government takes responsibility for everything from the stability of the banks to the safety of the drugs, or their rights to refund(退款) when goods are faulty. But governments cannot enforce national laws on businesses whose only presence in their country is on the screen. Other countries have regulators, but the rules of consumer protection differ, as does enforcement. Even where a clear right to compensation exists, the online catalogue customer in Tokyo, say, can hardly go to New York to extract a refund for a dud purchase.
One answer is for governments to cooperate more: to recognize each other’s rules. But that requires years of work and volumes of detailed rules. And plenty of countries have rules too fanciful for sober states to accept. There is, however, an alternative. Let the electronic businesses do the “regulation” themselves. They do, after all, have a self-interest in doing so.
In electronic commerce, a reputation for honest dealing will be a valuable competitive asset. Governments, too, may compete to be trusted. For instance, customers ordering medicines online may prefer to buy from the United States because they trust the rigorous screening of the Food and Drug Administration; or they may decide that the FDA’s rules are too strict, and buy from Switzerland instead.
Consumers will need to use their judgment. But precisely because the technology is new, electronic shoppers are likely for a while to be a lot more cautious than consumers of the normal sort---and the new technology will also make it easier for them to complain noisily when a company lets them down. In this way, at least, the advent of cyberspace may argue for fewer consumer protection laws, not more.
注意:此部分试题请在答题卡2上作答。
47. What can people benefit from the fast-growing development of electronic commerce?
48. When goods are faulty, consumers in rich countries tend to think that it is ______________ who takes responsibility for everything.
49. In the author’s view, why do businesses place a high premium on honest dealing in the electronic world?
50. We can infer from the passage that in licensing new drugs the FDA in the United States is _______________.
51. We can learn from the passage that _____________are probably more cautious than consumers of the normal sort when buying things.
Section B
Directions:There are 2 passages in this section. 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 Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the center.
注意:此部分试题请在答题卡2上作答。
Passage One
Questions 52 to 56 are based on the following passage.
Opinion poll surveys show that the public see scientists in a rather unflattering light.
Commonly, the scientist is also seen as being male. It is true that most scientists are male, but the picture of science as a male activity may be a major reason why fewer girls than boys opt for science, except when it comes to biology, which is seen as “female.”
The image most people have of science and scientists comes from their own experience of school science, and from the mass media. Science teachers themselves see it as a problem that so many school pupils find school science an unsatisfying experience, though over the last few years more and more pupils, including girls, have opted for science subjects.
In spite of excellent documentaries, and some good popular science magazines, scientific stories in the media still usually alternate between miracle and scientific threat. The popular stereotype of science is like the magic of fairy tales: it has potential for enormous good or awful harm. Popular fiction is full of “good” scientists saving the world, and “mad” scientists trying to destroy it.
From all the many scientific stories which might be given media treatment, those which are chosen are usually those which can be framed in terms of the usual news angles: novelty, threat, conflict or the bizarre. The routine and often tedious work of the scientist slips from view, to be replaced with a picture of scientists forever offending public moral sensibilities (as in embryo research), threatening public health (as in weapons research), or fighting it out with each other (in giving evidence at public enquiries such as those held on the issues connected with nuclear power).
The mass media also tends to over-personalize scientific work, depicting it as the product of individual genius, while neglecting the social organization which makes scientific work possible. A further effect of this is that science comes to be seen as a thing in itself: a kind of unpredictable force; a tide of scientific progress.
It is no such thing, of course. Science is what scientists do; what they do is what a particular kind of society facilitates, and what is done with their work depends very much on who has the power to turn their discoveries into technology, and what their interests are.
52. According to the passage, ordinary people have a poor opinion of science and scientists partly because ______.
A) of the misleading of the media
B) opinion polls are unflattering
C) scientists are shown negatively in the media
D) science is considered to be dangerous
53. Fewer girls than boys study science because ______.
A) they think that science is too difficult
B) they are often unsuccessful in science at school
C) science is seen as a man’s job
D) science is considered to be tedious
54. Media treatment of science tends to concentrate on _____.
A) the routine, everyday work of scientists
B) discoveries that the public will understand
C) the more sensational aspects of science
D) the satisfactions of scientific work