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大学英语六级模拟测试卷:听力

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发表于 2016-7-29 08:44:19 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
  Part II Listening Comprehension (35minutes)
  Section A
  Directions: In this section, you will hear 8 short conversations and 2 long conversations. At the end of each conversation, one or more questions will be asked about what was said. Both the conversation and the questions 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 the best answer is. Then mark the correspond in letter on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre.
  注意:此部分试题请在答题卡2上作答。
  11. A) She will give him the receipt later.
  B) The man should make his own copies.
  C) She has not got the man's copies ready.
  D) The man forgot to make the copies for her.
  12. A) She phoned Fred about the book.
  B) She was late for the appointment.
  C) She ran into Fred on her way here.
  D) She often keeps other people waiting.
  13. A) Mark is not fit to take charge of the Student Union.
  B) Mark is the best candidate for the post of chairman.
  C) It won't be easy for Mark to win the election.
  D) Females are more competitive than males in elections.
  14. A) It failed to arrive at its destination in time.
  B) It got seriously damaged on the way.
  C) It got lost at the airport in Paris.
  D) It was left behind in the hotel.
  15. A) Just make use of whatever information is available.
  B) Put more effort into preparing for the presentation.
  C) Find more relevant information for their work.
  D) Simply raise the issue in their presentation.
  16. A) the man has decided to choose Language Studies as his major.
  B) The woman isn't interested in the psychology of language.
  C) The man is still trying to sign up for the course he is interested in.
  D) The woman isn't qualified to take the course the man mentioned.
  17. A) They are both to blame.
  B) They are both easy to please.
  C) They can manage to get along.
  D) They will make peace in time.
  18. A) They are in desperate need of financial assistance.
  B) They hope to do miracles with limited resources.
  C) They want to borrow a huge sum from the bank.
  D) They plan to buy out their business partners.
  Questions 19 to 22 are based on the conversation you have just heard.
  19. A) We simply cannot help reacting instinctively that way.
  B) We wish to hide our indifference to their misfortune.
  C) We derive some humorous satisfaction from their misfortune.
  D) We think it serves them right for being mean to other people.
  20. A) They want to show their genuine sympathy.
  B) They have had similar personal experiences.
  C) They don't know how to cope with the situation.
  D) They don't want to reveal their own frustration.
  21. A) They themselves would like to do it but don't dare to.
  B) Its an opportunity for relieving their tension.
  C) it’s a rare chance for them to see the boss lose face.
  D) They have seen this many times in old films.
  22. A) to irritate them. B) To teach them a lesson.
  C) To relieve her feelings. D) To show her courage.
  Questions 23 to 25 are based on the conversation you have just heard.
  23. A) Smuggling drugs into Hong Kong.
  B) Having committed armed robbery.
  C) Stealing a fellow passenger's bag.
  D) Bringing a handgun into Hong Kong.
  24. A) He said not a single word during the entire flight.
  B) He took away Kumar's baggage while he was asleep.
  C) He was travelling on a scholarship from Delhi University.
  D) He is suspected of having slipped something in Kumar's bag.
  25. A) Give him a lift. B) Find Alfred Foster.
  C) Check the passenger list. D) Search all suspicious cars.
  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:此部分试题请在答题卡2上作答。
  Passage One
  Questions 26 to 28 are based on the passage you have just heard.
  26. A) they think travel has become a trend.
  B) They think travel gives them their money's worth.
  C) They find many of the banks untrustworthy.
  D) They lack the expertise to make capital investments.
  27. A) Lower their prices to attract more customers.
  B) Introduce travel packages for young travelers.
  C) Design programs targeted at retired couples.
  D) Launch a new program of adventure trips.
  28. A) the role of travel agents. B) The way people travel.
  C) The number of last-minute bookings. D) The prices of polar expeditions.
  Passage Two
  Questions 29 to 31 are based on the passage you have just heard.
  29. A) the old stereotypes about men and women.
  B) The changing roles played by men and women.
  C) The division of labor between men and women.
  D) The widespread prejudice against women.
  30. A) Offer more creative and practical ideas than men.
  B) Ask questions that often lead to controversy.
  C) Speak loudly enough to attract attention.
  D) Raise issues on behalf of women.
  31. A) to prove that she could earn her living as a gardener.
  B) To show that women are more hardworking than men.
  C) To show that women are capable of doing what men do.
  D) To prove that she was really irritated with her husband.
  Passage Three
  Questions 32 to 35 are based on the passage you have just heard.
  32. A) Covering major events of the day in the city.
  B) Reporting criminal offenses in Greenville.
  C) Hunting news for the daily headlines.
  D) Writing articles on family violence.
  33. A) It is a much safer place than it used to be.
  B) Rapes rarely occur in the downtown areas.
  C) Assaults often happen on school campuses.
  D) It has fewer violent crimes than big cities.
  34. A) There are a wide range of cases.
  B) They are very destructive.
  C) There has been a rise in such crimes.
  D) They have aroused fear among the residents.
  35. A) Write about something pleasant. C) Offer help to crime victims.
  B) Do some research on local politics? D) Work as a newspaper editor.
  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:此部分试题请在答题卡2上作答。
  In America, people are faced with more and more decisions every day, whether it's picking one of 31 ice cream (36) _____ or deciding whether and when to get married. That sounds like a great thing. But as a recent study has shown, too many choices can make us (37) _____, unhappy – even paralyzed with indecision.
  That's (38) _____ true when it comes to the workplace, says Barry Schwartz, an author of six books about human (39) _____. Students are graduating with a (40) _____ of skills and interests, but often find themselves (41) _____ when it comes to choosing an ultimate career goal.
  In a study, Schwartz observed decision-making among college students during their (42) _____ year. Based on answers to questions regarding their job-hunting (43) _____ and career decisions, he divided the students into two groups: "maximizers" who consider every possible option, and "satisfiers" who look until they find an option that is good enough.
  You might expect that the students (44) _________________________________. But it turns out that's not true. Schwartz found that while maximizers ended up with better paying jobs than satisfiers on average, they weren't as happy with their decision. The reason (45) _________________________________. When you look at every possible option, you tend to focus more on what was given up than what was gained. After surveying every option, (46) _________________________________.

        
         
         
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发表于 2016-7-29 10:11:02 | 显示全部楼层
  Part III Listening Comprehension
  Section A
  11.
  M: I left 20 pages here to copy. Here is the receipt.
  W: I'm sorry, sir. But we're a little behind. Could you come back in a few minutes?
  Q: What does the woman mean?
  答案:C. She has not got the man's copies ready.
  12.
  W: I hope you're not too put out with me for the delay. I have to stop by friends' home to pick up a book on my way here.
  M: Well, that's not a big deal. But you might at least phone if you know you're going to keep someone waiting.
  Q: What do we learn about the woman from the conversation?
  答案:B. She was late for the appointment.
  13.
  W: Mark is the best candidate for chairman of the student union, isn't he?
  M: Well, that guy won't be able to win the election unless he gets some majority vote from women students. And I'm not sure about that.
  Q: What does the man mean?
  答案:C. It won't be easy for Mark to win the election.
  14.
  M: Sorry to have kept you waiting, Madam. I've located your luggage. It was left behind in Paris and won't arrive until later this evening.
  W: Oh, I can't believe this. Have it deliver to my hotel then , I guess.
  Q: What happened to the woman's luggage?
  答案:A. It failed to arrive at its destination in time.
  15.
  W: I don't think we have enough information for our presentation, but we have to give it tomorrow. There doesn't seem to be much we can do about it.
  M: Yeah, at this point we 'all have to make do with what we've got.
  Q: What does the man suggest they do?
  答案:A. Just make use of whatever information is available.
  16.
  M: I am taking this great course-Psychology of Language, it's really interesting. Since you are a psychology major, you should sign up for it.
  W: Actually I tried to do that, but they told me I have to take language studies first.
  Q: What do we learn from the conversation?
  答案:D. The woman isn't qualified to take the course the man mentioned.
  17.
  W: Can you believe the way Larry was talking to his roommate? No wonder they don't get along.
  M: Well, maybe Larry was just reacting to something his roommate said. There are two sides to every story you know.
  Q: What does the man imply about Larry and his roommate?
  答案:A. They are both to blame.
  18.
  M: We don't have the resources to stop those people from buying us out unless a miracle happens. This may be the end of us.
  W: I still have hope we can get help from the bank. After all we don't need that much money.
  Q: What do we learn about the speakers from the conversation?
  答案:A. They are in desperate need of financial assistance.
  Conversation One
  听力原文
  W: You know I've often wondered why people laugh at the picture of a big belly businessman slipping on a banana skin and falling on his bottom. We are to feel sorry for them.
  M: Actually, Laura, I think we laugh because we are glad it didn't happen to us. But of course there is also a kind of humorous satisfaction in seeing somebody self-important making a fool of themselves.
  W: Yes, and there are a lot of jokes about people who are too fat or physically handicapped, you know, deaf, or short-sighted things like that. After all, it's not really funny to be like that.
  M: Oh, I think that's because we're embarrassed. We don't know how to cope with the situation. Perhaps we are even a bit frightened we may get like that, so we laugh.
  M: What about the custard pie routine?
  W: What do you mean ‘custard pie routine'?
  M: You know, all those old films where someone gets so outraged with his boss, He picks up a custard pie and plasters it all over the other person's face.
  W: That never makes me laugh much, because you can guess what's going to happen. But a lot of people still find it laughable. It must because of the sort of the thing we'd all love to do once in a while and never quiet have the courage to.
  M: I had an old aunt who used to throw cups of tea at people when she was particularly irritated. She said it relieved her feelings.
  W: It must have come a bit expensive.
  M: Not really. She took care never to throw her best china.
  Questions 19 to 22 are based on the conversation you have just heard.
  19. Why does the man say we laughed when we see some self-important people making fool of themselves?
  答案:C)We derive some humorous satisfaction from their misfortune.
  20. Why do some people joke about those who are fat or handicapped according to the man?
  答案:B) They don't know how to cope with the situation
  21. Why do many people find it funny to see someone throwing a custard pie on their boss's face?
  答案:A) They themselves would like to do it but don't dare to.
  22. Why do the man say she would drop cups of tea at people occasionally?
  答案:C) To relieve her feelings.
  Conversation Two
  听力原文
  W: Your name Sanjay Kumar is that correct?
  M: Yes, madam.
  W: You claim you are traveling on a scholarship from Delhi University.
  M: That's right.
  W: Now it seems that a hand gun was found in your luggage. Do you admit that?
  M: Yes, but…
  W:According to the statement you made, you had never seen the hand gun before it was found in your bag. Do you still maintain that?
  M: But it's true. I swear it.
  W: Mom, you do realize Mr. Kumar that to bring a hand gun into Hong Kong without proper authorization is a serious offense.
  M: But I didn't bring it. I … I mean I didn't know anything about it. It wasn't there when I left Delhi. My bags were searched. It was part of the airport security check.
  W: Maybe so, but someone managed to get that hand gun onto the aircraft or it couldn't have been there.
  M: Someone but not me.
  W: Tell me , where was your personal bag during the flight?
  M: I had it down by my feet between me and the man in the next seat.
  M: He was the only person who could have opened my bag while I was asleep. It must have been him.
  W: I see. Have you any idea who this man was?
  M: He told me his name, Alfred Foster. He was very friendly, after I woke up that is. He hadn't spoken before.
  W: Alfred Foster, we can check that on the passenger list.
  M: He said he had a car coming to meet him. He offered me a lift.
  W: Oh, Why should he do that?
  M: So he can get his handgun back, that's why. Please find him, Madam.
  Questions 23-25 are based on the conversation you have just heard.
  23. What is Sanjay Kumar suspected of?
  答案:D) Bringing a handgun into Hong Kong
  24. What do we know about Alfred Foster?
  答案:D) He is suspected of having slipped something into Kumar's bag
  25. What does Sanjay Kumar ask the woman to do finally?
  答案:B) Find Alfred Foster.
  Section B
  Passage One
  听力原文
  Everyone is looking for a good investment these days. And with stocks, currencies and companies all crashing, some are finding that taking the trip of a lifetime is actually a smart move right now. Prices are good, crowds are fewer and the dividends like expanded worldview, lifelong memories, and the satisfaction of boosting the global economy—can't be easily snatched away. Sylvia and Paul Custer son, a retired couple from Cambridge, England, recently took a 16-day vacation to Namibia, where they went on bird-watching excursions. Later this year, they are planning a trip to Patagonia. "We're using our capital now," says Sylvia, "And why not? We're not getting any interest in the bank. If it's a place we really want to go, then we will go. We may as well travel while we're fit and healthy. "
  Some travel agents are thriving in spite of the economy. "We've had more people booking in the first quarter of this year than last," says Hubert Moniteau, founder of Solana Travel, which is planning to introduce a new program of longer adventure trips, including polar expeditions and cruises in the Galápagos. "We're hearing things like, 'We don't know what the situation will be in six months so let's travel now' ", Ashley Tuft, managing director of the U. K. tour operator Explore has been surprised to see an increase in last-minute bookings of high-priced trips to such places as India, Bhutan and Nepal. "It seems people would rather give up something else than the big trip," he says. Travel has become a necessity. It's just how we travel that is changing.
  Questions 26 to 28 are based on the passage you have just heard.
  26. According to the speaker, why are some people willing to spend their money on travel these days?
  答案:B)They think travel gives them their money's worth.
  27. What is Solana Travel planning to do, according to its founder?
  答案:D) Launch a new program of adventure trips.
  28. According to Ashley Tuft, managing director of Explore, what is changing now with regard to travels?
  答案:B) The way people travel.
  Passage Two
  听力原文
  Somehow the old male and female stereotypes no longer fit. Men and women in this country haven't been fulfilling their traditional roles for some time now. And there seem to be fewer and fewer differences between the sexes. For instance, even though more women than men are still homemakers without paying jobs, women have been taking over more responsibility in the business world, earning higher salaries than ever before and entering fields of work that used to be exclusively male areas. At office meetings and in group discussions, they might speak up more often, express strong opinions and come up with more creative and practical ideas than their male colleagues. Several days ago, my 23-year-old daughter came to me with some important news. Not only had she found the highest paying job of her career, but she'd also accepted a date with the most charming men she'd ever met.
  “Really?” I responded,” tell me about them.”
  “Receptionist in an attorney's office and a welder at a construction site.” She answered in a matter-of-fact way. The interesting thing is my daughter's date is the receptionist and my daughter is the welder. The old stereotypes of men's and women's work have been changing more quickly than ever before, except perhaps in my own marriage.
  “Who's going to mow the lawn?” I asked my husband this morning.
  “Oh, I will,” he answered politely. ”That's men's work.”
  “What?” Irritated, I raised my voice. “That's a ridiculous stereotype. I'll show you who can do the best job on the lawn.”
  The work took 3 hours and I did it all myself.
  Questions 29 to 32 are based on the passage you have just heard.
  29. What is the speaker mainly talking about?
  答案:B) The changing roles played by men and women.
  30. What might women do at office meetings nowadays according to the speaker?
  答案:A) Offer more creative and practical ideas than men.
  31. Why did the speaker mow the lawn herself that morning?
  答案:C) To show that women are capable of doing what men do.
  Passage Three
  听力原文
  Florence Hayes is a journalist for the Green Ville Journal, the daily newspaper in town. Specifically she covers crime in the Green Ville area. This responsibility takes her too many different places every week——the police station, the court and the hospital. Most of the crimes that she writes about fall into two groups: violent crimes and crimes against property. There isn't much violent crime in a small town like Green Ville, or at least not as much as in the large urban areas. But assaults often occur on Friday and Saturday nights, near the bars downtown. There're also one or two rapes on campus every semester. Florence is very interested in this type of crime and tries to write a long article about each one. She expects that this will make women more careful when they walk around Green Ville alone at night
  Fortunately, there were usually no murders in Green Ville. Crimes against property make up most of Miss Heyse' reporting. They range from minor cases of deliberate damaging of things to much more serious offenses, such as car accidents involving drunk drivers or bank robberies but Florence has to report all of these violations from the thief who took typewriters from every unlock room in the dormitory to the thief who stole one million dollars worth of art work from the university museum. Miss Hayes enjoys working for a newspaper but she sometimes gets unhappy about all the crime she has to report. She would prefer to start writing about something more interesting and less unpleasant such as local news or politics, maybe next year
  Florence Hayes
  Green Ville
  Questions 32 to 35 are based on the passage you have just heard.
  32. What is Florence Hayes' main responsibility as a journalist?
  答案:B: Reporting criminal offenses in Grenville.
  33. What does the speaker say about security in Greenville?
  答案:D: It has fewer violent crimes than big cities.
  34. What do we learn about crimes against property in the Greenville area?
  答案:A: There are a wide range of cases.
  35. What would Florence Hayes prefer to do?
  答案:A. Write about something pleasant.
  Section C Compound Dictation
  听力原文
  In America, people are faced with more and more decisions every day, whether it's picking one of thirty-one ice cream flavors, or deciding whether and when to get married. That sounds like a great thing, but as a recent study has shown, too many choices can make us confused, unhappy, even paralyzed with indecision. ‘That's particularly true when it comes to the work place', says Barry Schwartz, an author of six books about human behavior. Students are graduating with a variety of skills and interests, but often find themselves overwhelmed when it comes to choosing an ultimate career goal. In a study, Schwartz observed decision-making among college students during their senior year. Based on answers to questions regarding their job hunting strategies and career decisions, he divided the students into two groups:Maximizers, who consider every possible option, and satisfiers who look until they find an option that is good enough. You might expect that the student who had undertaken the most exhausted search would be the most satisfied with their final decision, but it turns out that's not true. Schwartz found that while maximizers ended up with better-paying jobs than satisfiers on average, they weren't as happy with their decision. The reason why these people feel less satisfied is that a world of possibilities may also be a world of missed opportunities. When you look at every possible option, you tend to focus more on what was given up than what was gained. After surveying every option, a person is more acutely aware of the opportunities they had to turn down to pursue just one career.
  36. flavors
  37. confused
  38. particularly
  39 . behavior
  40. variety
  41. overwhelmed
  42 . senior
  43 . strategies
  44 . who had undertaken the most exhausted search would be the most satisfied with their final decision
  45 . why these people feel less satisfied is that a world of possibilities may also be a world of missed opportunities.
  46 . a person are more acutely aware of the opportunities they had to turn down to pursue just one career.
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