本卷分第一卷(選擇題)和第二卷(非選擇題)兩部分。共150分,考試時間120分鐘。第 一 卷(選擇題 滿分100分)第一部分:聽力(共兩節(jié),滿分30分)第一節(jié)(共5小題)1. What does the woman suggest the man do ?A. Stop eating fast food. B. Eat more fruit. C. Check his weight.2. What will the man do ?A. Lock the cupboard. B. Ask Jim for help. C. Move the cupboard himself.3. Why does the woman hate her roommate ?A. She makes a terrible mess in the house.B. She always wears the woman’s clothes.C. She never washes dishes.4. What are the speakers mainly talking about ?A. Staying at home. B. Reducing air pollution. C. Enjoying fresh air.5. How will the speakers know the way to the Science Museum ?A. By consulting a map. B. By asking others. C. By visiting a website.第二節(jié)(共15小題)聽第6段材料,回答第6至8題。6. Where are the speakers ?[來源:學.科.網(wǎng)Z.X.X.K]A. In Brazil. B. In America. C. In Britain.7. What was the professor doing when the woman arrived ?A. Cooking . B. Having a shower. C. Setting the table.8. When should the woman have arrived at her professor’s house ?A. At about 7:00. B. At about 7:10. C. At about 7:20.聽第7段材料,回答第9至11題。9. What did the woman work for five years ago ?A. The EU B. The BBC. C. The VOA.10. Where did the woman grow up ?A. In America. B. In Britain. C. In Argentina.11. What did the woman go to Argentina for three years ago ?A. Work. B. Pleasure. C. Sightseeing.聽第8段材料,回答第12至14題。12. Where does the conversation take place ?A. In a studio. B. In a travel agency. C. In an Internet café.13. When are calls cheaper in Britain ?A. From 6:00 a.m. to 8: 00 p.m.B. From 8:00 a.m. to 6: 00 p.m.C. From 6:00 p.m. to 8: 00 a.m.14. What does the man say about the youth hotels ?A. Small. B. Clean. C. Expensive.[來源:學科網(wǎng)Z-X-X-K]聽第9段材料,回答第15至17題。[來源:Z-x-x-k.Com
12345678下一頁m]15. What does the boy think is bad with a teenager ?A. He can’t buy what he wants. B. He has to do the housework. C. He needs to do homework.16. How many days does the boy’s mother work a week ?A. Four. B. Five. C. Six.17. What does the boy think of his mother’s life ?A. Busy. B. Boring. C. Wonderful.聽第10段材料,回答第18至20題。18. What time is it now ?A. 8:20 a.m. B. 8:40 a.m. C. 9:00 a.m.19. What was the weather probably like yesterday ?A. Hot. B. Cool. C. Cold.20. What do we know about the movie?A. It will be on at 9:00 p.m. B. It is a new one. C. It is free.第二部分:閱讀理解(共兩節(jié), 滿分40分)AIf you plan on visiting to Fiji, you are probably looking for some fun things to do. Below are four unusual places.The Poseidon ResortThe Poseidon resort is an underwater resort that gives visitors a beautiful view of sea life. This resort covers 255 acres. It’s covered and surrounded by a lagoon (咸水湖) that covers 5,000 acres and is about 90 feet under water, giving you a beautiful view of sea life right before your eyes. This resort even has a hotel for those who would prefer to have the unusual experience of sleeping and waking up to the beautiful scenery all around them.The Sabeto Mud PoolIf you’re looking for something unusual to do, you can’t pass up the mud pool at Sabeto. It is located in a mountain range with a huge group of geothermal (地熱的) pools full of nice, warm mud. Getting down and into the mud in the pool is believed to have benefits for healthy skin. This is unusual, but adults and especially kids will love it.Fire WalkingFire walking in Fiji is believed to have originated on the island of Beau. Fire walking is when you walk on white-hot stones barefoot. To do this, you have to be mentally prepared for it. Trust me; there is a lot of preparation and strict rules that travelers follow in
12345678下一頁order to do this safely.The Fiji MuseumThe Fiji museum is unusual due to all the amazing artifacts you’ll see dating back 3,000-4,000 years. This museum has a certain attraction that makes it funny?a shoe. It’s been said that a man named Thomas Baker was eaten by the locals several centuries ago and the only thing left was his shoe. This unusual museum is a great idea if you bring the whole family to Fiji.21. Visitors who have the unusual experience of sleeping at the Poseidon resort can _________.A. enjoy the excellent service in the hotel B. open windows to see sea life swimmingC. see sea life around them in the room D. only watch videos about sea life22. Why do adults like to get down into the mud pool?A. To float on the warm mud B. To make them strongC. To play with the warm mud D. To keep their skin healthy23. Which of the following things needs more courage and stricter rules?A. Trying fire walking B. Visiting the Poseidon resortC. Getting into the Sabeto Mud Pool D. Visiting the Fiji museum24. The underlined word “artifacts” in Paragraph 5 means___ ____.A. historic things made by man B. things invented not long agoC. things that look very strange D. useful things in people’s daily lifeBCARDIFF, Wales ? Poets, singers and musicians from across the globe gathered in Wales to celebrate the tradition of storytelling.“It might seem strange that people still want to listen in age of watching television, but this is an unusual art form whose time has come again,” said David Ambrose, director of Beyond the Border, an international storytelling festival in Wales.“Some of the tales, like those the Inuit from Canada, are thousands of years old. So our storytellers have come from distant lands to connect us with the distance of time,” he said early this month.Two Inuit women, both in their mid 60s, are among the few remaining who can do Kntadjait, or throat singing, which has few words and much sound. Their art is governed
12345678下一頁by the cold of their surroundings, forcing them to say little but listen attentively.Ambrose started the festival in 1993, after several years of working with those reviving storytelling in Wales.“It came out of a group of people who wanted to reconnect with traditions. and as all the Welsh are storytellers, it was in good hands here.” Ambrose said.25. Ambrose believes that the art of storytelling _______.[來源:學*科*網(wǎng)]A. will be more popular than TV B. will be popular againC. started in Wales D. are in the hands of some old people26. From the tales told by the Inuit, people can learn _______.A. about their life as early as thousands of years agoB. why they tell the stories in a throat-singing wayC. how cold it has been where the Inuit liveD. how difficult it is to understand the Inuit27. The underlined phrase “in good hands” means _______.A. controlled by rich people B. grasped by good storytellersC. taken good care of D. protected by kind peopleCThe way we cook is important. In many countries, the two sources of heat used for cooking are natural gas and electric stoves. The World Health Organization(WHO) warns that millions of people are dying every year from indoor air pollution. The WHO finds that poor cooking, heating and lighting technologies are killing millions of people each year.Indoor air pollution results from the use of dangerous fuels and cook stoves in the home. WHO officials say nearly three billion people are unable to use clean fuels and technologies for cooking, heating and lighting. And they say more than seven million people die from exposure to indoor or outdoor air pollution each year. Of that number, the WHO says about 4.3 million people die from household air pollution given off by simple biomass(生物燃料)and coal stoves.These findings show that the home use of poisonous fuels is to blame for many of these deaths. These [來源:學.科.網(wǎng)Z.X.X.K]fuels include wood, coal, animal waste
12345678下一頁and so on. Carlos Dora is Coordinator in the WHO’ s Department of Public Health, Environmental and Social Determinants of Health. He says people should not use unprocessed coal and kerosene(煤油)fuel indoors. He says opening a window or door to let out the harmful air will not correct the situation. It will only pollute the outdoors. “New technologies and clean fuels can rid people of this problem.”The United Nations found that more than 95 percent of families in sub-Saharan Africa depend on solid fuels for cooking. It says huge populations in India, China and Latin American countries, such as Guatemala and Peru, are also at risk.Nigel Bruce is a professor of Public Health at the University of Liverpool. He says researchers are developing good stoves and other equipment to burn fuels in a more efficient way. “There are already many technologies for clean fuels available now. An effective and reasonably low-cost ethanol(酒精)stove that is made by Dometic is now being tested out. Another interesting development is electric induction stoves.” In India, you can buy an induction stove for about $8. And in Africa you can buy a solar lamp for less than $1.28. How is Paragraph 2 mainly developed?A. By making classifications. B. By listing numbers.C. By following time order. D. By describing a process.29. According to Carlos Dora, what is the best solution to indoor air pollution?A. People should use an effective air cleaner.B. People should use new technologies and clean fuels.C. People should open a window or door to let out the harmful air.D. People should prevent themselves from being exposed to harmful air..30. What can we learn from the passage?A. Most of the deaths from indoor pollution are in developing countries.B. Burning solid fuels can help limit indoor air pollution .C. People now can buy ethanol stoves made by Dometic in India.D. There are already two technologies for clean fuels available for use.31. Which would be the best tit
12345678下一頁le for the passage?A. The way we cook is changing. B. Types of indoor air pollution.C. The development of electric stoves. D. Indoor air pollution kills millions each year.DThinking is something you choose to do as a fish chooses to live in water. To be human is to think. But thinking may come naturally without your knowing how you do it. Thinking about thinking is the key to critical thinking. When you think critically, you take control of your thinking processes. Otherwise, you might be controlled by the ideas of others. Indeed, critical thinking is the heart of education.The word “critical” here has a special meaning. It does not mean taking one against another view, as when someone criticizes another person for doing something wrong. The nature of critical thinking is thinking beyond the easily seen-beyond the pictures on TV, the untrue reports in the newspapers, and the faulty reasoning.Critical thinking is an attitude as much as an activity. If you are curious about life and desire to dig deeper into it, you are a critical thinker. If you find pleasure in deep thinking about different ideas, characters, and facts, you are a critical thinker.Activities of the mind and higher-order reasoning are processes of deep and careful consideration. They take time, and do not go hand in hand with the fast speed in today’s world: fast foods, instant coffee, and self-developed film. If you are among the people who believe that speed is a measure of intelligence, you may learn something new from a story about Albert Einstein. The first time Banesh Hoffman, a scientist, was to discuss his work with Albert Einstein, Hoffman was too nervous to speak. But Einstein immediately put Hoffman at ease by saying, “ Please go slowly. I don’t understand things quickly.”32. Critical thinking is important to us because if we do not think critically, _______.A. it will be hard for us to think naturally and fastB. we might be controlled by other people’s ideas
12345678下一頁C. we will follow the ideas of others naturallyD. we might be fooled by other people’s ideas33. If you are a critical thinker, you will ______.A. think deeply about different ideas B. trust the reports in the newspapersC. take one view against another view D. criticize other people for their mistakes34. In the last paragraph, “something new” suggests that ______.A. the smarter you are, the faster you do thingsB. the faster you do things, the smarter you becomeC. speed can improve intelligenceD. intelligence is not decided by speed35. What would be the best title for the passage?A. Thinking and Critical Thinking B. Understanding Critical ThinkingC. Thinking Is Natural and Human D. Thinking Fast Means Intelligence第二節(jié):(共5小題,每小題2分,滿分10分)根據(jù)短文內(nèi)容,從短文后的選項中選出能填入空白處的最佳選項。選項中有兩項為多余選項。We all wish we had just a bit more time. Just think what you could do with an extra hour or two each day: you could finally stick to an exercise routine, or spring ¬clean the house, or write your novel, or learn the guitar and so on. 36 But I can help you find more hours in your day for the things that really matter.1. Get Out of Bed EarlierIf you normally get up at 7:30 a.m., try getting up at 7:00 a.m. That half ¬hour might not sound like much, but it could be time that you use to exercise, to read that book you've been meaning to finish. 372. Do the Important Tasks FirstOnce you get to work, get the important ones done first (not the easy ones, or even the urgent ones). You can afford to spend at least an hour working on big, important tasks rather than on all those little urgent ones. 38 The urgent tasks will still get done, and you won't miss the important ones.3. Reduce InterruptionsIf colleagues have a habit of hanging around your desk to chat, or if the phone is constantly ringing, you might find that it takes you half the day to finish a simple task like writing a letter. Constantinterruptions don't just e
12345678下一頁at up time, they also break your concentration.When you've got a big task to focus on, let your calls go to voicemail. 39 Wearing headphones makes it less likely that people will try to strike up a conversation.4. 40A few minutes' chatting, browsing the web, and so on, can easily turn into hours of wasted time over the course of a day. When you're working, work. If your concentration is slipping, take a proper break: go and get a glass of water, or stretch your legs a bit. And if you're facing a difficult task, try breaking it into small steps or stages so that it's easier to deal with.A.Stay Focused on Your WorkB.Take Breaks When NecessaryC.If you have an office door, close it.D.If you work like this, you'll usually save time.E.Would you want me to make your day longer?F.I can't magically make all your days 25 hours long.G.Or simply to get your day off to a calm and organized start
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