招摇撞骗-殃的拼音
08年6月四级听力真题答案及原文(A卷)
Part III
Listening Comprehension
短对话
11. A)
Give his ankle a good rest.
12. C) In a
theater.
13. A) A tragic accident.
14. D) Focus on the main points of her lectures.
15. D) The woman split coffee on the man’s
skirt.
16. B) Hard to understand.
17. A) Attending every lecture.
18. D) The
new TV program may not provide anything better.
长对话1
19. C) The description of a
thief in disguise.
20. D) Showing them his
ID.
21. C. Not to let anyone in without an
appointment.
22. C. The pension she had
just drawn was stolen.
长对话2
23. A)
Marketing consultancy.
24. D) Being able to
speak Japanese.
25. A) It will bring her
potential into full play.
短文1
26. A)
The lack of time.
27. A) They were just as
busy as people of today.
28. D) To find
effective ways to give employees flexibility.
短文2
29. B) The Great Depression.
30. D) His second wife’s positive
influence.
31. B) Love breeds love.
短文3
32. B) Its owner died of a heart
stroke.
33. C) Putting up a Going Out of
Business sing.
34. C) Developing fresh
business opportunities.
35. A. Owning the
greenhouse one day.
复合式听写
36) labor
37) ingredients
38) vital
39)
individuals
40) engage
41) figures
42) generating
43) Currently
44) will be making decisions in such areas as
product development, quality control,
and
customer satisfaction.
45) to acquire new
skills that will help you keep up with improved
technologies and
procedures
46) Don't
expect the companies to provide you with a
clearly-defined career path.
2008年6月大学英语四级考试听力原文
Section A:
Short
Conversation:
11.
M: Today is a bad day
for me. I fell off a step and twisted my ankle.
W: Don’t worry, usually ankle injuries heal
quickly if you stop regular activities for a
while.
What does the woman suggest the man do?
12.
W: May I see your ticket, please? I
think you’re sitting in my seat.
M: Oh, you’re
right. My seat is in the balcony. I’m terribly
sorry.
Q: Where does conversation most
probably take place?
13.
W: Do you hear
Mr. Smith die in his sleep last night?
M: Yes, it’s very sad. Please let
everybody know that whoever wants to may attend
the funeral.
Q: What are the speakers talking
about?
14.
M: Have you taken Professor
Yang’s exam before? I’ m kind of nervous.
W:
Yes. Just concentrate on the important ideas she’s
talked about in the class and ignore the
details.
Q: How does the women suggest the
man prepare for Professor Yang’s exam?
15.
W: I’m so sorry sir, and you’ll let me pay to
have your jacket cleaned, won’t you?
M: That’s
all right. It could happen to anyone. And I’m sure
that coffee doesn’t leave lasting
marks on
clothing.
Q: What can we infer from the
conversation?
16.
W: Have you seen the
movie The Departed? The plot was so complicated
that I really got lost.
M: Yeah, I felt the
same, but after I saw it a second time, I could
put all the pieces together.
Q: How did the
two speakers find the movie?
17.
M: I’m
really surprised you got an A on the test; you
didn’t seem to have done a lot of reading.
W:
Now you know why I never missed the lecture.
Q: What contributes to the woman’s high score?
18.
W: Have you heard about the new
digital television system? It lets people get
about 500 channels.
M: Yeah. But I doubt
they’ll have anything different from what we watch
now.
Q: What does the man mean?
Long
conversation
Conversation One:
W: Gosh!
Have you seen this, Richard?
M: See what?
W: In the paper. It says, there is a man going
around pretending he’s from the electricity board.
He’s been calling at people’s homes, saying he
is coming to check that all their appliances are
safe.
Then he gets around them to make him a
cup of tea, and while they are out of the room he
steals
their money, handbag whatever and makes
off with it.
M: But you know, Jane, it’s
partly their own fault; you should never let
anyone like that in unless
you’re expecting
them.
W: It’s all very well to say that. But
someone comes to the door, and says electricity or
gas and
you automatically think they are OK,
especially if they flash a card to you
M: Does
this man have an ID then?
W: Yes, that’s just
it. It seems he used to work for the electricity
board at one time according to the
paper the
police are warning people especially pensioners
not to admit anyone unless they have an
appointment. It’s a bit sad. One old lady told
them she’d just been to the post-office to draw
her
pension when he called. She said he must
have followed her home. He stole the whole lot.
M: But what does he look like? Surely they
must have a description.
W: Oh, yes they have.
Let’s see, in his thirties, tall, bushy dark hair,
slight northern accent, sounds
a bit
like you actually.
Questions 19 to 22 are
based on the passage you have just heard.
19.
What does the woman want the man to read in the
newspaper?
20. How did the man mention in the
newspaper try to win further trust from the
victims?
21. What is the warning from the
police?
22. What does the woman speaker tell
us about the old lady?
Conversation Two:
M: Miss Jones, could you tell me more about
your first job with hotel marketing concept?
W: Yes, certainly. I was a marketing
consultant responsible for marketing 10 UK hotels.
They
were all luxury hotels in a leisure
sector all of a very high standard.
M: Which
markets were you responsible for?
W: For
Europe and Japan.
M: I see from your resume
that you speak Japanese. Have you ever been to
Japan?
W: Yes, I have, I spent months in Japan
2006. I met all the key people in the tourist
industry, the
big tour operators and the
tourist organizations. As I speak Japanese I had a
very big advantage.
M: Yes, of course. Have
you had any contact with Japan in your present
job?
W: Yes, I’ve had a lot. Cruises have
become very popular with the Japanese both for
holidays and
for business conferences. In
fact, the market for all types of luxury holidays
for the Japanese has
increased a lot recently.
M: Really, I’m interested to hear more about
that, but first tell me have you ever traveled on
the
luxury train, the Orient Express, for
example?
W: No, I haven’t. But I’ve traveled
on the Glacial Express through Switzerland and I
traveled
across China by train about 8 years
ago. I love train travel. That’s why I’m very
interested in this
job.
23. What did the
woman do in her first job?
24. What give the
woman an advantage during her business trip in
Japan?
25. Why is the woman applying for the
new job?
Passage 1
Time. I think a
lot about time and not just because it's the name
of the news organization I work
for. Like most
working people, I find time, or the lack of it,
and never-ending frustration and an
unwinnable
battle. My every day is a race against the clock
that I never ever seem to win. This is
hardly
a lonesome complaint. According to the families
and work institutes, national study of the
changing workforce, 55 percent of employees
say they don't have enough time for themselves, 63
percent don't have enough time for their
spouses or partners, and 67 percent don't have
enough
time for their children. It's also not
a new complaint. I bet our ancestors returned home
from
hunting wild animals and gathering nuts
and complained about how little time they had to
paint
battle scenes on their cave walls. The
difference is that the boss of animal hunting and
the head of
nut gathering probably told them
to shut up or no survival for you. Today's workers
are still
demanding control over their time.
The difference is today's bosses are listening.
I've been reading
a report issued today called
up to find and warn the employers who employ
the most creative and most effective ways to give
their workers flexibility. I found this report
worth reading and suggest every boss should read
it
for ideas.
Questions 26 to 28
are based on the passage you have just heard.
Question 26. What is the speaker complaining
about?
Question 27. What does the speaker say
about our ancestors?
Question 28. Why does the
speaker suggest all bosses read the report by the
three organizations?
Passage 2
Loving a
child is a circular business. The more you give,
the more you get, the more you want to
give,
*** said. What she said proves to be true of my
blended family. I was born in 1931. As the
youngest of six children, I learned to share
my parents' love. Raising six children during the
difficult times of the Great Depression took
its toll on my parents' relationship and resulted
in their
divorce when I was 18 years old.
Daddy never had very close relationships with his
children and
drifted even farther away from us
after the divorce. Several years later, a
wonderful woman came
into his life and they
were married. She had two sons, one of them still
at home. Under her
influence, we became a
blended family and a good relationship developed
between the two
families. She always treated
us as if we were her own children. It was because
of our other mother,
Daddy's second wife, that
he became closer to his own children. They shared
over 25 years
together before our father
passed away. At the time of his death, the
question came up of my
mother, Daddy's first
wife, attending his funeral. I will never forget
the unconditional love shown
by my step
mother. When I asked her if she would object to
mother attending Daddy's funeral,
without
giving it a second thought, she immediately
replied. course not, honey. She is the
mother
of my children.
Questions 29 to 31 are based on
the passage you have just heard.
Question 29.
According to the speaker, what contributed to her
parents' divorce?
Question 30. What brought
the father closer to his own children?
Question 31. What message does the speaker
want to convey in this talk?
Passage 3
In February last year, my wife lost her job.
Just as suddenly, the owner of the Green House
where I
worked as manager died of a heart
attack. His family announced that they were going
to close the
business because no one in the
family wanted to run it. Things looked pretty
gloomy. My wife and
I read the want ads each
day. Then one morning, as I was hanging a
the
green house, the door opened and in walked a
customer. She was an office manager whose
company had just moved into the new office
park on the edge of the town. She was looking for
potted plants(盆栽)to place in the reception
areas in offices.
she said, am sure in a few
weeks, they'll all be dead.” While I was helping
her select her
purchases, my mind was racing.
Perhaps as many as a dozen firms that recently
opened offices in
the new office park and
there were several hundred more acres with
construction under way. That
afternoon, I
drove up to the office park. By 6 o'clock that
evening, I had signed contacts with 7
companies to rent plants from me and pay me a
fee to maintain them. Within a week, I had worked
down to an agreement to lease the Green House
from the owner's family. Business is now
increasing rapidly. And one day we hope to be
the proud owners of the Green House.
Questions
32 to 35 are based on the passage you have just
heard.
Question 32. What do we learn about the
green house?
Question 33. What was the speaker
doing when the customer walked in one morning?
Question 34. What did the speaker think
of when serving the office manager?
Question
35. When was the speaker's hope for the future?
复合式听写
We are now witnessing
the emergence of an advanced economy based on
information and
technology. Physical labor,
raw materials, and capital are no longer the key
ingredients in the
creation of wealth. Now the
vital raw material in our economy is knowledge.
Tomorrow's wealth
depends on the development
and exchange of knowledge. And individuals
entering the workforce
offer their knowledge
not their muscles. Knowledge workers get paid for
their education and their
ability to learn.
Knowledge workers engage in mind work. They deal
with symbols, words, figures,
and data. What
does all this mean for you? As a future knowledge
worker, you can expect to be
generating,
processing as well as exchanging information.
Currently three out of 4 jobs involve
some
form of mind work. And that number will increase
sharply in the future. Management and
employees alike will be making decisions in
such areas as product development, quality
control,
and customer satisfaction. in the new
world of work, you can look forward to be in
constant
training to acquire new skills that
will help you keep up with improved technologies
and
procedures. You can also expect to be
taking greater control of your career. Gone are
the
nine-to-five jobs, life-time security,
predictable promotions and even a conventional
workplace as
you are familiar with. Don't
expect the companies to provide you with a
clearly-defined career
path and don't wait for
someone to empower you. You have to empower
yourself。
迷魂凼-尔的成语
y是什么意思-多运动的英文
库仑滴定法-萧索什么意思
假乳房-persuasion
瞽叟-考研培训班的费用
maintenance-displayout
砭的拼音-也许反义词
tidy什么意思-冰激凌英语怎么读
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