Part I Listening Comprehension (20 minutes)www.test99.com
Section Awww.test99.com
Directions: In this section, you will hear 10 short conversations. At the end of each conversa tion, 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.www.test99.com
Example: You will hear.www.test99.com
You will read:www.test99.com
A) At the office.www.test99.com
B) In the waiting room.www.test99.com
C) At the airport.www.test99.com
D) In a restaurant.www.test99.com
From the conversation we know that the two were talking about some work they had to finish in the evening. This conversation is most likely to have taken place at the office. Therefore, A) At the office is the best answer. You should choose [A] on the Answer Sheet and mark it with a single line through the centre.www.test99.com
Sample Answer [A] [B] [C] [D]www.test99.com
1. A) Mark and the woman had not been in touch for some time.www.test99.com
B) The man saw Mark on the street two months ago.www.test99.com
C) The woman made a phone call to Mark yesterdaywww.test99.com
D) The woman had forgotten Marks phone number.www.test99.com
2. A) The woman is glad to meet Mr. Brown in person.www.test99.com
B) The woman feels sorry that Mr. Brown is unable to come.www.test99.com
C) The man is meeting the woman on behalf of Mr. Brown.www.test99.com
D) The man is late for the trip because he is busy. www.test99.com
3. A) At 10:25. C) At 10:45.www.test99.com
B) At 10:30. D) At 10:40.www.test99.com
4. A) The man refuses to listen to his doctors advice.www.test99.com
B) The man is under pressure from his wife.www.test99.com
C) The man usually follows his wifes advice.www.test99.com
D) The man no longer smokes.www.test99.com
5. A) Become a teacher. C) Move to a big city.www.test99.com
B) Go back to school. D) Work in New York.www.test99.com
6. A) Quit delivering flowers. C) Work at a restaurant.www.test99.com
B) Leave his job to work for her. D) Bring her flowers every day.www.test99.com
7. A) She can find the right person to help the man.www.test99.com
B) She picked up the book from the bus floor.www.test99.com
C) She can help the man out.www.test99.com
D) Shes also in need of a textbook.www.test99.com
8. A) The man cant come for the appointment at 4:15.www.test99.com
B) The man is glad hes got in touch with the doctor.www.test99.com
C) The man wants to change the date of the appointment.www.test99.com
D) The man was confused about the date of the appointment.www.test99.com
9. A) The man is worded about his future.www.test99.com
B) The two speakers are seniors at college.www.test99.com
C) The two speakers are at a loss what to do.www.test99.com
D) The woman regrets spending her time idly.www.test99.com
10. A) She als0 found the plot difficult to follow.www.test99.com
B) She has learned a lot from the novel:www.test99.com
C) She usually has difficulty remembering names.www.test99.com
D) She can recall the names of most characters in the novel.www.test99.com Section B Compound Dictationwww.test99.com
The Library of Congress is America’s national library. It has more than one-hundred-twenty-million books and other objects. It has newspapers, publications and letters of interest. It also has maps, photographs, art , movies, sound recordings and musical .www.test99.com
The Library of Congress is open to the public Monday through Saturday, except for government holidays. Anyone may go there and read anything in the collection. But no one is to take books out of the building. www.test99.com
The Library of Congress was in eighteen-hundred. It started with eleven boxes of books in one room of the Capitol Building. By eighteen-fourteen, the collection had increased to about three-thousand books. They were that year when the Capitol was burned during America’s war with Britain.www.test99.com
To help re-build the library, Congress bought the books of President Thomas Jefferson. Mister Jefferson’s collection included seven-thousand books in seven languages.www.test99.com
. Today, three buildings hold the library’s collection.www.test99.com
The Library of Congress provides books and materials to the United States Congress. . It buys some of its books and gets others as gifts. It also gets materials through its copyright office. . This means the Library of Congress receives almost everything published in the United States. www.test99.com
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Part II Reading Comprehension (35 minutes)www.test99.com
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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.www.test99.com
Passage Onewww.test99.com
Questions 11 to 15 are based on the following passage.www.test99.com
Sign has become a scientific hot button. Only in the past 20 years have specialists in language study realized that signed languages are unique - a speech of the hand. They offer a new way to probe how the brain generates and understands language, and throw new light on an old scientific controversy: whether language, complete with grammar, is something that we are born with, or whether it is a learned behavior. The current interest in sign language has roots in the pioneeringwww.test99.com
work of one rebel teacher at Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C., the worlds only liberal arts university for deaf people.www.test99.com
When Bill Stokoe went to Gallaudet to teach English, the school enrolled him in a course in signing. But Stokoe noticed something odd: among themselves, students signed differently from his classroom teacher.www.test99.com
Stokoe had been taught a sort of gestural code, each movement of the hands representing a word in English. At the time, American Sign Language (ASL) was thought to be no more than a form of pidgin English (混杂英语 ). But Stokoe believed the hand talk his students used looked richer. He wondered: Might deaf people actually have a genuine language? And could that lan-www.test99.com
guage be unlike any other on Earth? It was 1955, when even deaf peopie dismissed their signing as substandard. Stokoes idea was academic heresy (异端邪说 ).www.test99.com
It is 37 years later. Stokoe - now devoting his time to writing and editing books and journals and to producing video materials on ASL and the deaf culture - is having lunch at a caf6 near the Gallaudet campus and explaining how he started a revolution. For decades educators fought his idea that signed languages are natural languages like English, French and Japanese. They assumedwww.test99.com
language must be based on speech, the modulation (调节) of sound. But sign language is based on the movement of hands, the modulation of space. What I said, Stokoe explains, is that language is not mouth stuff- its brain stuff.www.test99.com
11. The study of sign language is thought to bewww.test99.com
A) an approach to simplifying the grammatical structure of a languagewww.test99.com
B) an attempt to clarify misunderstanding about the origin of languagewww.test99.com
C) a challenge to traditional views on the nature of languagewww.test99.com
D) a new way to took at the learning of languagewww.test99.com
12.The present growing interest in sign language was stimulated bywww.test99.com
A) a leading specialist in the study Of liberal artswww.test99.com
B) an English teacer in a university for the deafwww.test99.com
C) Some senior experts in American Sign Languagewww.test99.com
D) a famous Scholar in thestudy of the human brainwww.test99.com
13. According to Stokoe, sign language is www.test99.com
A) an international language C) an artificial languagewww.test99.com
B) a substandard language D) a genuine languagewww.test99.com
14. Most educators objected to Stokoes idea because they thoughtwww.test99.com
A) a language should be easy to use and understandwww.test99.com
B) sign language was tOO artificial to be widely acceptedwww.test99.com
C) a language could only exist in the form of speech soundswww.test99.com
D) sign language was not extensively used even by deaf peoplewww.test99.com
15. Stokoes argument is based on his belief thatwww.test99.com
A) language is a product of the brainwww.test99.com
B) language is a system of meaningful codeswww.test99.com
C) sign language is derived from natural languagewww.test99.com
D) sign language is as efficient as any other languagewww.test99.com
Passage Twowww.test99.com
Questions 16 to 20 are based on the following passage.www.test99.com
A is for always getting to work on time.www.test99.com
B is for being extremely busy.www.test99.com
C is for the conscientious ( 勤勤恳恳的 ) way you do your job.www.test99.com
You may be all these things atthe office, and more. But when it comes to getting ahead, experts Say, the ABcs of business should include a P, for politics, as in office politics.www.test99.com
Dale Carnegie suggested asmuch more than 50 years ag Hard work alone doesnt ensure Career advancemen. You have to be able to sell yourself and your ideas, both publicly and behind thescefies. Yet, despite the ovious rewards Of engaging in office politics - a better job, a raise, praise- many people are still unable or unwilling - to play the game.www.test99.com
People assume that office politics involves some manipulative (工于心计的) behavior, says Deborah Comer, an assistant professor of management at Hofstra University. But politics derives from the word polite. It can mean lobbying and forming associations. It can mean being kind and helpful, or even trying, to please your superior, and thenexpecting something in return.www.test99.com
In fact, today, experts define office politics as proper behavior used to pursue ones own self-interest in the workplace. In many cases, this involves some form of socializing within the office environment - not just in large companies, but in small workplaces as well.www.test99.com
The first thing people are usually judged on is their ability to perform well on a consistent basis, says Neil P. Lewis, a management psychologist. But if two or three candidates are up for a promotion, each of whom has reasonably similar ability, a manager is going to promote the person he or shelikes best. Its simple human nature.www.test99.com
Yet, psychologists say, many employees and employers have trouble with the concept of politics in the office. Some people, they say, have an idealistic vision of work and what it takes to succeed. Still others associate politics withfiattery 奉承), fearful that, if they speak up for themselves, they may appear to be flattering their boss for favors.www.test99.com
Experts suggest altering this negative picture by recognizing the need for some self-promotion.www.test99.com
16. Office politics (Line 2, Para. 4) is used in the passage to refer towww.test99.com
A) the political views and beliefs of office workerswww.test99.com
B) the interpersonal relationships within a companywww.test99.com
C) the various qualities required for a successful careerwww.test99.com
D) the code of behavior for company staffwww.test99.com
17. To get promoted, one must not only be competent butwww.test99.com
A) avoid being too outstandingwww.test99.com
B) get along well with his colleagueswww.test99.com
C) honest and loyal to his companywww.test99.com
D) give his boss a good impressionwww.test99.com
18. Why are many people unwilling to play the game (Line 4, Para. 5)?www.test99.com
A) They are not good at manipulating colleagues.www.test99.com
B) They feel that such behavior is unprincipled.www.test99.com
C) They think the effort will get them nowhere.www.test99.com
D) They believe that doing so is impractical.www.test99.com
19. The author considers office poetics to be .www.test99.com
A) unwelcome at the workplacewww.test99.com
B) bad for interpersonal relationshipswww.test99.com
C) an important factor for personal advancementwww.test99.com
D) indispensable to the development of company culturewww.test99.com
20. It is the authors view thatwww.test99.com
A) self-promotion does not necessarily mean flatterywww.test99.com
B) hard work contributes Very little to ones promotionwww.test99.com
C) many employees fail to recognize the need of flatterywww.test99.com
D) speaking up for oneself is part of human nature www.test99.com
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Passage Threewww.test99.com
Questions 21 to 25 are based on the following passage.www.test99.com
It came as something of a surprise when Diana, Princess of Wales, made a trip co Angola in 1997, to support the Red Crosss campaign for a total ban on all anti-personnel landmines. Within hours of arriv!ng in Angola, television screens around the world were filled with images of her comforting victims injured in explosions caused by landmines. I knew the statistics, she said. But putting a face to those figures brought the reality home to me; like when I met Sandra, a 13- year-old girl who had lost her leg, and people like her.www.test99.com
The Princess concluded with a simple message: We must stop landmines. And she used every opportunity during her visit to repeat this message.www.test99.com
But, back in London, her views were not shared by some members of the British government, which refused to support a ban on these weapons. Angry politicians launched an attack On the Princess in the press. They described her as very ill-informed and a loose cannon (乱放跑的人)www.test99.com
The Princess responded by brushing aside the Criticisms: This is a distraction ( 干扰) we do not need. All Im trying to do is help.www.test99.com
Opposition parties, the media and the public immediately voiced their Support for the Princess. To make matters worse for the government, it soon emerged that the Princesss trip had been approved by the Foreign Office, and that she was in fact very well-inf0rmed about both the situa-tion in Angola and the British governments policy regarding landmines. The result was a severe embarrassment for the government.www.test99.com
To try and limit the damage, the Foreign Secretary, Malcolm Rifkidnd, claimed that the Princesss views on landmines were not very different from government policy, and that it was working towards a worldwide ban. The Defence Secretary, Michael Portillo, claimed the matter was a misinterpretation or misunderstanding. -www.test99.com
For the Princess, the trip to this war-torn countrywas an excellent opportunity to use her popularity to show the world how much destruction and suffering landmines can cause. She said that the experience had also given her the chance to get closer to people and their problems.www.test99.com
21. Princess Diana paid a visit to Angola in 1997www.test99.com
A) to clarify the British governments stand on landmineswww.test99.com
B) to establish her image as a friend of landmine victimswww.test99.com
C) to investigate the sufferings of landmine victims therewww.test99.com
D) to voice her support for a total ban of landmineswww.test99.com
22. What did Diana mean when she said ... putting a face tO those figures brought the reality home to me (Line 5, Para. 1)?www.test99.com
A) Meeting the landmine victims in person made her believe the statistics.www.test99.com
B) She just couldnt bear to meet the landmine victims face to face.www.test99.com
C) The actual situation in Angola made her feel like going back home.www.test99.com
D) Seeing the pain of the victims ma&her realize the seriousness of the situation.www.test99.com
23. Some members of the British government criticized Diana becausewww.test99.com
A) she had not consulted the government before the visitwww.test99.com
B) she was ill-informed of the governments policywww.test99.com
C) they were actually opposed to banning landmineswww.test99.com
D) they believed that she had misinterpreted the situation in Angolawww.test99.com
24. How did Diana respond to the criticisms?www.test99.com
A) She made more :appearances on TV.www.test99.com
B) She paid no attention to them.www.test99.com
C) She rose to argue with her opponents.www.test99.com
D) She met the 13-year-old girl as planned.www.test99.com
25. What did Princess Diana think of her visit to Angola?www.test99.com
A) It had caused embarrassment to the British government.www.test99.com
B) It had greatly promoted her popularity.www.test99.com
C) It had brought her closer to the ordinary people.www.test99.com
D) It had affected her relations with the British government.www.test99.com
Passage Fourwww.test99.com
Questions 26 to 30 are based on the following passage.www.test99.com
As soon as it was revealed that a reporter for Progressive magazine had discovered how to make a hydrogen bomb, a group offirearm ( 火器 ) fans formed the National Hydrogen Bomb Association, and they are now lobbying against any legislation to stop Americans from owning one.www.test99.com
The Constitution, said the associations spokesman, gives everyone the right to own arms. It doesnt spell out what kind of arms. But since anyone can now make a hydrogen bomb, the public should be able to buy it to protect themselves.www.test99.com
Dont you think its dangerous to have one in the house, particularly where there are children around?www.test99.com
The National Hydrogen Bomb Association hopes to educate people in the safe handling of this type of weapon. We are instructing owners to keep the bomb in a locked cabinet and the fuse (导火索 ) separately in a drawer.www.test99.com
Some people consider the hydrogen bomb a very fatal weapon which could kill somebody.www.test99.com
The spokesman said, Hydrogen bombs dont kill people - people kill people. The bomb is for self-protection and it also has a deterrent effect. If somebody knows you have a nuclear weapon in your house, theyre going to think twice about breaking in.www.test99.com
But those who want to ban the bomb for American citizens claim that ifyou have one locked in the cabinet, with the fuse in a drawer, you would never be able to assemble it in time to stop an intruder ( 侵入者)www.test99.com
Another argument against allowing people to own a bomb is that at the moment it is very expensive to build one. So what your association is backing is a program which would allow the middle and upper classes to acquire a bomb while poor people will be left defenseless with just handguns.www.test99.com
26. According to the passage, some people started a national association so as towww.test99.com
A) instruct people how to keep the bomb safe at homewww.test99.com
B) coordinate the mass production of the destructive weaponwww.test99.com
C) promote the large-scale sale of this newly invented weaponwww.test99.com
D) block any legislation to ban the private possession of the bombwww.test99.com
27. Some people oppose the ownership of H-bombs by individuals on the grounds thatwww.test99.com
A) they may fall into the hands of criminalswww.test99.com
B) peoples lives will be threatened by the weaponwww.test99.com
C) most people dont know how to handle the weaponwww.test99.com
D) the size of the bomb makes it difficult to keep in a drawerwww.test99.com
28. By saying that the bomb also has a deterrent effect the spokesman means that itwww.test99.com
A) can kill those entering others houses by forcewww.test99.com
B) will threaten the safety of the owners as wellwww.test99.com
C) will frighten away any possible intruderswww.test99.com
D) can show the special status of its ownerswww.test99.com
29. According to the passage, opponents of the private ownership of H-bombs are very much worried thatwww.test99.com
A) the cost of the weapon will put citizens on an unequal basiswww.test99.com
B) the wide use of the weapon will push up living expenses tremendouslywww.test99.com
C) poorly-educated Americans will find it difficult to make use of the weaponwww.test99.com
D) the influence of the association is too powerful for the less privileged to overcomewww.test99.com
30. From the tone of the passage we know that the author iswww.test99.com
A) not serious about the private ownership of H-bombswww.test99.com
B) concerned about the spread of nuclear weaponswww.test99.com
C) doubtful about the necessity Of keeping H-bombs at home for safetywww.test99.com
D) unhappy with those who vote against the ownership of H-bombswww.test99.com
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Part III Vocabulary (20 minutes)www.test99.com
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.www.test99.com
31. This is not an economical way to get more water; , it is very expensive.www.test99.com
A) or else C) on the contrarywww.test99.com
B) in short D) on the other handwww.test99.com
32. First published in 1927, the charts remain an source for researchers.www.test99.com
A) intelligent C) inevitablewww.test99.com
B) indispensable D) identicalwww.test99.com
33. You should try to your ambition and be more realistic.www.test99.com
A) restrain C) reservewww.test99.com
B) retain D) replacewww.test99.com
34. There is a of impatience in the tone of his voice.www.test99.com
A) dot C) notionwww.test99.com
B) hint D) phrasewww.test99.com
35. Deserts and high mountains have always been a to the movement of people from place to place.www.test99.com
A) jam C) fencewww.test99.com
B) barrier D) preventionwww.test99.com
36. Joe is not good at sports, but when it mathematics, he is the best in the class.www.test99.com
A) comes up to C) comes towww.test99.com
B) comes around to D) comes on towww.test99.com
37. Please dictionaries when you are not sure of word spelling or meaning.www.test99.com
A) search C) inquirewww.test99.com
B) seek D) consultwww.test99.com
38. Critics believe that the control of television by mass advertising has the quality of the programs.www.test99.com
A) affected C) lessenedwww.test99.com
B) effected D) declinedwww.test99.com
39. She keeps a supply of candles in the house in case of powerwww.test99.com
A) drop C) failurewww.test99.com
B) lack D) absencewww.test99.com
40. For more than 20 years, weve been supporting educational programs that from kindergartens to colleges. www.test99.com
A) spread C) movewww.test99.com
B) shift D) range www.test99.com
41. I was so in todays history lesson. I didn t understand a. thing.www.test99.com
A) confused C) amusedwww.test99.com
B) neglected D) amazedwww.test99.com
42. I must congratulate you the excellent design of the new bridge.www.test99.com
A) with C) onwww.test99.com
B) at D) ofwww.test99.com
43. Now that spring is here, you can these fur coats till you need them again next winter.www.test99.com
A) put over C) put downwww.test99.com
B) put off D) put awaywww.test99.com
44. I went along thinking of nothing only looking at things around me.www.test99.com
A) in brief C) in harmonywww.test99.com
B) in doubt D) in particularwww.test99.com
45. In order to make things convenient for the people, the department is planning to set up some shops in the residential area.www.test99.com
A) flowing C) driftingwww.test99.com
B) mobile D) Unstablewww.test99.com
46. The lecture which lasted about three hours was so that the audience couldnt help yawning.www.test99.com
A) tedious C) boredwww.test99.com
B) clumsy D) tiredwww.test99.com
47. It you to at least 50% off the regular price of either frames or lenses when you buy both.www.test99.com
A) credits C) presentswww.test99.com
B) entitles D) tipswww.test99.com
48. When carbon is added to iron in proper the result is steel.www.test99.com
A) rates C) proportionswww.test99.com
B) densities D) thicknesseswww.test99.com
49. There is a fully health center on the ground floor of the main office building.www.test99.com
A) equipped C) providedwww.test99.com
B) projected D) installed www.test99.com
50. Nancy is only a sort of of her husbands opinion and has no ideas of her own.www.test99.com
A) shadow C) reproductionwww.test99.com
B) sample D) echowww.test99.com
51. Mr. Smith says: The media are very good at sensing a mood and then it.www.test99.com
A) exaggerating C) wideningwww.test99.com
B) overtaking D) enlargingwww.test99.com
52. The at the military academy is so rigid that students can hardly bear it.www.test99.com
A) confinement C) disciplinewww.test99.com
B) convention D) principlewww.test99.com
53. Doctors warned against chewing tobacco as a. for smoking.www.test99.com
A) succession C) revivalwww.test99.com
B) substitute D) reliefwww.test99.com
54. It was the first time that such a had to be taken at a British nuclear power station.www.test99.com
A) presentation C) predictionwww.test99.com
B) preparation D) precautionwww.test99.com
55. The board of the company has decided to its operations to include all aspects of the clothing business.www.test99.com
A) multiply C) lengthenwww.test99.com
B) stretch D) expandwww.test99.com
56. The test results are beyond ; they have been repeated in labs all over the world.www.test99.com
A) conflict C) bargainwww.test99.com
B) dispute D) negotiationwww.test99.com
57. The group of technicians are engaged in a study which all aspects Of urban planning.www.test99.com
A) embraces C) insertswww.test99.com
B) performs D) gripswww.test99.com
58. that he wasnt happy with the arrangements, I tried to book a different hotel.www.test99.com
A) Puzzling C) Perceivingwww.test99.com
B) Penetrating D) Preservingwww.test99.com
59. His business, was very successful, but it was at the of his family life.www.test99.com
A) exhaustion C) creditwww.test99.com
B) consumption D) expensewww.test99.com
60. At yesterdays party, Elizabeths boyfriend amused us by Charlie Chaplin.www.test99.com
A) modeling C) followingwww.test99.com
B) imitating D) copyingwww.test99.com
Part IV Cloze (15 minutes)www.test99.com
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.www.test99.com
Historians tend to tell the same joke when theywww.test99.com
are describing history education in America. Its thewww.test99.com
one __61 the teacher standing in the schoolroom 61. A) in C) forwww.test99.com
B) by D) aboutwww.test99.com
door 62 goodbye to students for the summer 62. A) waving C) shakingwww.test99.com
B) nodding D)speakingwww.test99.com
and calling __ 63 . them, By the way, we won 63. A) in C) afterwww.test99.com
World War II B) up D) forwww.test99.com
The problem with the joke, of course, is www.test99.com
that its 64 _ funny. The recent surveys on 64. A) not C) sowww.test99.com
B) too D) rarelywww.test99.com
65 _ illiteracy (无知 ) are beginning to numb 65. A) political C) educationalwww.test99.com
(令人震惊): nearly one third of American 17-year- B) cultural D) historicalwww.test99.com
olds cannot even ~ 66 which countries the 66. A) convey C) acknowledgewww.test99.com
B) identify D) distinguishwww.test99.com
United States 67 against in that war. One third 67. A) struck C) foughtwww.test99.com
B) attacked D) defeated have no _ 68 _ when the Declaration oflndepen- 68. A) doubt C) reasonwww.test99.com
B) idea D) sensewww.test99.com
dence was 69 . One third thought Columbus 69. A) signed C) markedwww.test99.com
reached the New World after 1750. Two thirds can- B) edited D) printedwww.test99.com
not correctly 70 the Civil War between 1850 70. A) get C) placewww.test99.com
B) judge D) 10ckwww.test99.com
and 1900. 71 when they get the answers right, 71. A) Thus C) Thoughwww.test99.com
B) So D) Evenwww.test99.com
some are 72 guessing. 72. A)just C) stillwww.test99.com
Unlike math or science, ignorance of history B) ever D) hardlywww.test99.com
cannot be 73 connected to loss of interna- 73. A) shortly C) exclusivelywww.test99.com
B) directly D) practicallywww.test99.com
tional 74 . But it does affect our future 74. A) community C) comprehensionwww.test99.com
B) commitmentD)competitivenesswww.test99.com
75 . a democratic nation and as individuals. 75. A) with C) aswww.test99.com
B) for D) ofwww.test99.com
The 76 news is that there is growing 76. A) good C) surprisingwww.test99.com
B) fine D) nicewww.test99.com
agreement 77 what is wrong with the 77. A)of C) onwww.test99.com
B) to D) withwww.test99.com
78 of history and what needs to be 78. A) coaching C) consultingwww.test99.com
B) teaching D) instructingwww.test99.com
79 to fix it. The steps are tentative (尝试性的 79. A) dealt C) metwww.test99.com
B) done D) reache) www.test99.com
80 yet to be felt in most classrooms. 80. A) and C) aswww.test99.com
B) or D) thereforewww.test99.com
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本站提供丁晓钟和谢忠明的四级AB卷参考答案 www.test99.com
其中打*号的题目丁晓钟和谢忠明的不一样www.test99.com
丁晓钟 四级a卷答案 www.test99.com
第一部分:听力 www.test99.com
1. D Mark and the woman had not been in touch for some time www.test99.com
2. C The man is meeting the women on behalf of MR. Brown www.test99.com
3. C at 10:40 www.test99.com
4. A The man no longer smokes www.test99.com
5. B Become a teacher www.test99.com
6. D Leave his job to work for her www.test99.com
7. B She can help the man out www.test99.com
*8. A The man was confused about the date of the appointment.www.test99.com
9. C The two speakers are seniors at college www.test99.com
*10. B She als0 found the plot difficult to follow.www.test99.com
S1. popular www.test99.com
S2. historical www.test99.com
S3. prints www.test99.com
S4. instruments www.test99.com
S5. permitted www.test99.com
S6. established www.test99.com
S7. destroyed www.test99.com
S8. In 1897, the library moved into its own building across the street from the Capitol www.test99.com
S9. The library provides books and materials to the US Congress and also lends books to other American libraries, government agencies and foreign libraries. www.test99.com
S10. Anyone who wants copyright protection for a publication in the US must send two copies to the library. www.test99.com
第二部分:阅读理解 www.test99.com
11. C the interpersonal relationships within a company www.test99.com
12. A give his boss a good impression www.test99.com
13. B They feel that such behavior is unprincipled www.test99.com
14. D an important factor for personal advancement www.test99.com
15. B self-promotion does not necessarily mean flattery www.test99.com
16. A block any legislation to ban the private possession of the bomb www.test99.com
17. C peoples lives will be threatened by the weapon www.test99.com
18. A will frighten away any possible intruders www.test99.com
19. D the cost of the weapon will put citizens on an unequal basis www.test99.com
20. D concerned about the spread of nuclear weapons www.test99.com
*21. B a challenge to traditional views on the nature of languagewww.test99.com
22. C an English teacher in a university for the deaf www.test99.com
23. B a genuine language www.test99.com
24. D a language could only exist in the form of speech sounds www.test99.com
25. D language is a product of the brain www.test99.com
26. A to voice her support for a total ban of landmines www.test99.com
27. D Seeing the pain of the victims made her realize the seriousness of the situation www.test99.com
28. B they were actually opposed to banning landmines www.test99.com
29. A She paid no attention to them www.test99.com
30. B It had brought her closer to the ordinary people www.test99.com
第三部分:词汇 www.test99.com
31. A in particular 32. C affected 33. D on 34. B equipped 35. C range www.test99.com
36. D discipline 37. D dispute 38.C confused 39. B entitles 40. A barrier www.test99.com
41.C mobile 42.D exaggerating 43.B on the contrary 44.B precaution 45.A Perceiving www.test99.com
46.C expand 47. D expense 48.B indispensable 49.A comes to 50.C substitute www.test99.com
51.C proportions 52.B restrain 53.D echo 54.B put away 55.A hint www.test99.com
56 D consult 57. C imitating 58.A failure 59.D embraces 60.A tedious www.test99.com
第四部分:完型填空 www.test99.com
61.A about 62. B waving 63.B after 64.D not 65.A historical www.test99.com
66.C identify 67.C fought 68.D idea 69.B signed 70.A place www.test99.com
71. A Even 72.B just 73. D directly 74. A competitiveness 75.D as www.test99.com
76. D good 77.C on 78. C teaching 79. A done 80.D as www.test99.com
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四级 B 卷 www.test99.com
第一部分:听力 www.test99.com
1-5 ACDDA www.test99.com
6-10 BCDBAwww.test99.com
S1. popular www.test99.com
S2. historical www.test99.com
S3. prints www.test99.com
S4. instruments www.test99.com
S5. permitted www.test99.com
S6. established www.test99.com
S7. destroyed www.test99.com
S8. In 1897, the library moved into its own building across the street from the Capitol www.test99.com
S9. The library provides books and materials to the US Congress and also lends books to other American libraries, government agencies and foreign libraries. www.test99.com
S10. Anyone who wants copyright protection for a publication in the US must send two copies to the library. www.test99.com
第二部分:阅读理解 www.test99.com
11-15 CBDCA www.test99.com
16-20 BDBCA www.test99.com
21-25 DDCBC www.test99.com
26-30 DBCAB www.test99.com
第三部分:词汇 www.test99.com
31-35 CBABB www.test99.com
36-40 CDACD www.test99.com
41-45 ACDDB www.test99.com
46-50 ABCAD www.test99.com
51-55 ACBDD www.test99.com
56-60 BACDB www.test99.com
第四部分:完形填空 www.test99.com
61-65 DACAD www.test99.com
66-70 BCBAC www.test99.com
71-75 DABDC www.test99.com
76-80 DCBBC www.test99.com
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谢忠明四级答案 Awww.test99.com
第一部分:听力www.test99.com
1. D Mark and the woman had not been in touch for some time www.test99.com
2. C The man is meeting the women on behalf of MR. Brownwww.test99.com
3. C at 10:40www.test99.com
4. A The man no longer smokeswww.test99.com
5. B Become a teacherwww.test99.com
6. D Leave his job to work for her www.test99.com
7. B She can help the man out www.test99.com
*8.C The man is glad hes got in touch with the doctor www.test99.com
9. C The two speakers are seniors at collegewww.test99.com
*10. C She usually has difficulty remembering nameswww.test99.com
S1. popularwww.test99.com
S2. historicalwww.test99.com
S3. printswww.test99.com
S4. instrumentswww.test99.com
S5. permittedwww.test99.com
S6. establishedwww.test99.com
S7. destroyedwww.test99.com
S8. In 1897, the library moved into its own building across the street from the Capitolwww.test99.com
S9. The library provides books and materials to the US Congress and also lends books to other American libraries, government agencies and foreign libraries.www.test99.com
S10. Anyone who wants copyright protection for a publication in the US must send two copies to the library.www.test99.com
第二部分:阅读理解www.test99.com
11. C the interpersonal relationships within a companywww.test99.com
12. A give his boss a good impressionwww.test99.com
13. B They feel that such behavior is unprincipled www.test99.com
14. D an important factor for personal advancement www.test99.com
15. B self-promotion does not necessarily mean flattery www.test99.com
16. A block any legislation to ban the private possession of the bombwww.test99.com
17. C peoples lives will be threatened by the weapon www.test99.com
18. A will frighten away any possible intruders www.test99.com
19. D the cost of the weapon will put citizens on an unequal basis www.test99.com
20. D concerned about the spread of nuclear weapons www.test99.com
*21. A a new way to look at the learning of language www.test99.com
22. C an English teacher in a university for the deaf www.test99.com
23. B a genuine language www.test99.com
24. D a language could only exist in the form of speech sounds www.test99.com
25. D language is a product of the brain www.test99.com
26. A to voice her support for a total ban of landmines www.test99.com
27. D Seeing the pain of the victims made her realize the seriousness of the situationwww.test99.com
28. B they were actually opposed to banning landmineswww.test99.com
29. A She paid no attention to them www.test99.com
30. B It had brought her closer to the ordinary peoplewww.test99.com
第三部分:词汇www.test99.com
31. A in particularwww.test99.com
32. C affectedwww.test99.com
33. D onwww.test99.com
34. B equippedwww.test99.com
35. C range www.test99.com
36. D disciplinewww.test99.com
37. D disputewww.test99.com
38.C confusedwww.test99.com
39. B entitleswww.test99.com
40. A barrier www.test99.com
41.C mobilewww.test99.com
42.D exaggeratingwww.test99.com
43.B on the contrarywww.test99.com
44.B precautionwww.test99.com
45.A Perceivingwww.test99.com
46.C expandwww.test99.com
47. D expensewww.test99.com
48.B indispensablewww.test99.com
49.A comes towww.test99.com
50.C substitutewww.test99.com
51.C proportionswww.test99.com
52.B restrainwww.test99.com
53.D echowww.test99.com
54.B put awaywww.test99.com
55.A hint www.test99.com
56 D consultwww.test99.com
57. C imitatingwww.test99.com
58.A failurewww.test99.com
59.D embraceswww.test99.com
60.A tediouswww.test99.com
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第四部分:完型填空www.test99.com
61.A about 62. B waving 63.B after 64.D not 65.A historical www.test99.com
66.C identify 67.C fought 68.D idea 69.B signed 70.A placewww.test99.com
71. A Even 72.B just 73. D directly 74. A competitiveness 75.D as www.test99.com
76. D good 77.C on 78. C teaching 79. A done 80.D aswww.test99.com