2007年6月英语四级听力原文附字幕
日期:2011-12-12 10:30

(单词翻译:单击)

2007年6月23日大学英语四级考试试卷
Part Ⅲ Listening Comprehension
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 is the best answer.
Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2
with a single line through the centre.
11. W: Did you watch the 7 o'clock program
on channel 2 yesterday evening?
I was about to watch it when someone came to see me.
M: Yeah! It reported some major breakthrough in cancer research.
People over 40 would find that program worth watching.
Q: What do we learn from the conversation about the TV program?
12. W: I won a first prize in the National Writing Contest
and I got this camera as an award.
M: It's a good camera! You can take it when you travel.
I had no idea you were a marvelous writer.
Q: What do we learn from the conversation?
13. M: I wish hadn't thrown away that reading list!
W: I though you might regret it.
That's why I picked it up from the waste paper basket
and left it on the desk.
Q: What do we learn from the conversation?
14. W: Are you still teaching at the junior high school?
M: Not since June. My brother and I opened a restaurant
as soon as he got out of the army.
Q: What do we learn about the man from the conversation?
15. M: Hi, Susan! Have you finished reading the book
Professor Johnson recommended?
W: Oh, I haven't read it through the way I read a novel.
I just read a few chapters which interested me.
Q: What does the woman mean?
16. M: Jane missed the class again, didn't she? I wonder why?
W: Well, I knew she had been absent all week.
So I called her this morning to see if she was sick.
It turned out that her husband was badly injured in a car accident.
Q: What does the woman say about Jane?
17. W: I'm sure the Smiths' new house is somewhere on the street,
but I don't know exactly where it is.
M: But I'm told it's two blocks from their old home.
Q: What do we learn from the conversation?
18. W: I've been waiting here almost half an hour!
How come it took you so long?
M: Sorry, honey! I had to drive two blocks
before I spotted a place to park the car.
Q: What do we learn from the conversation?
Now you'll hear two long conversations.
Conversation One
M: Hello, I have a reservation for tonight.
W: Your name, please.
M: Nelson, Charles Nelson.
W: Ok, Mr. Nelson. That's a room for five and
M: But excuse me, you mean a room for five pounds?
I didn't know the special was so good.
W: No, no, noaccording to our records,
a room for 5 guests was booked under your name.
M: No, nohold on. You must have two guests under the name.
W: Ok, let me check this again. Oh, here we are.
M: Yeah?
W: Charles Nelson, a room for one for the 19th
M: Wait, wait. It's for tonight, not tomorrow night.
W: Em, I don't think we have any rooms for tonight.
There's a conference going on in town and,
let's seeyeah, no rooms.
M: Oh, come on! You must have something, anything!
W: Well, let let me check my computer here Ah!
M: What?
W: There has been a cancellation for this evening.
A honeymoon suite is now available.
M: Great, I'll take it.
W: But, I'll have to charge you 150 pounds for the night.
M: What? I should get a discount for the inconvenience!
W: Well, the best I can give you is a 10% discount
plus a ticket for a free continent breakfast.
M: Hey, isn't the breakfast free anyway?
W: Well, only on weekends.
M: I want to talk to the manager.
W: Wait, wait, wait Mr. Nelson,
I think I can give you an additional 15% discount.
Questions 19 to 22 are based on the conversation you have just heard.
19. What's the man's problem?
20. Why did the hotel clerk say they didn't have any rooms for that night?
21. What did the clerk say about the breakfast in the hotel?
22. What did the man imply he would do at the end of the conversation?
Conversation Two
M: Sarah, you work in the admissions office, don't you?
W: Yes, I'm I've been here ten years as an assistant director.
M: Really? What does that involve?
W: Well, I'm in charge of all the admissions
of postgraduate students in the university.
M: Only postgraduates?
W: Yes, postgraduates only.
I have nothing at all to do with undergraduates.
M: Do you find that you get particularsort ofdifferent national groups?
I mean, do you get large numbers from Latin America or
W: Yes. Well, of all the students enrolled last year,
nearly half were from overseas.
They were from African countries,
the Far East, the Middle East, and Latin America.
M: Em. But have you been doing just that for the last 10 years,
or, have you done other things?
W: Well, I've been doing the same job. Er, before that,
I was secretary of the medical school at Birmingham,
and further back, I worked in the local government.
M: Oh, I see.
W: So I've done different types of things.
M: Yes, indeed.
How do you imagine your job might develop in the future?
Can you imagine shifting into a different kind of responsibility
or doing something
W: Oh, yeah, from October 1,
I'll be doing an entirely different job.
There's going to be more committee work.
I mean, more policy work,
and less dealing with students,
unfortunately I'll miss my contact with students.
Questions 23 to 25 are based on the conversation you have just heard.
23. What is the woman's present position?
24. What do we learn about the postgraduates enrolled last year
in the woman's university?
25. What will the woman's new job be like?
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.
Passage One
My mother was born in a small town in northern ltaly.
She was three when her parents immigrated to America in 1926.
They lived in Chicago
when my grandfather worked making ice cream.
Mama thrived in the urban environment.
At 16, she graduated first in her high school class,
went onto secretarial school,
and finally worked as an executive secretary for a railroad company.
She was beautiful too.
When a local photographer used her pictures
in his monthly window display, she felt pleased.
Her favorite portrait showed her sitting by Lake Michigan,
her hair was blown, her gaze reaching toward the horizon.
My parents were married in 1944.
Dad was a quiet and intelligent man.
He was 17 when he left Italy.
Soon after, a hit and run accident left him with a permanent limp.
Dad worked hard selling candy
to Chicago office workers on their break.
He had little formal schooling.
His English was self taught.
Yet he eventually built a small successful wholesale candy business.
Dad was generous and handsome.
Mama was devoted to him.
After she married,
my mother quit her job and gave herself to her family.
In 1950, with three small children,
dad moved the family to a farm 40 miles from Chicago.
He worked land and commuted to the city to run his business.
Mama said goodbye to her parents and friends,
and traded her busy city neighborhood for a more isolated life.
But she never complained.
Questions 26 to 28 are based on the passage you have just heard.
26.What does the speaker tell us about his mother's early childhood?
27.What do we learn about the speaker's father?
28.What does the speaker say about his mother?
Passage Two
During a 1995 roof collapse,
a firefighter named Donald Herbert was left brain damaged.
For ten years, he was unable to speak.
Then, one Saturday morning,
he did something that shocked his family and doctors.
He started speaking.
"I want to talk to my wife."
Donald Herbert said out of the blue.
Staff members of the nursing home
where he has lived for more than seven years,
raced to get Linda Herbert on the phone.
"It was the first of many conversations
the 44 year old patient had with his family and friends
during the 14 hour stretch"
Herbert's uncle Simon Menka said.
"How long have I been away?" Herbert asked.
"We told him almost ten years," the uncle said,
"he thought it was only three months."
Herbert was fighting a house fire on December 29, 1995
when the roof collapsed, burying him underneath.
After going without air for several minutes,
Herbert was unconscious for two and a half months
and has undergone therapy ever since.
News accounts in the days and years after his injury,
described Herbert as blind and with little if any memory.
A video shows him receiving physical therapy
but apparently unable to communicate
and with little awareness of his surroundings.
Menka declined to discuss his nephew's current condition
or whether the apparent progress is continuing.
"The family was seeking privacy
while doctors evaluated Herbert", he said.
As word of Herbert's progress spread,
visitors streamed into the nursing home.
"He's resting comfortably," the uncle told them.
Questions 29 to 32 are based on the passage you have just heard.
29. What happened to Herbert ten years ago?
30. What surprised Donald Herbert's family and doctors one Saturday?
31. How long did Herbert remain unconscious?
32. How did Herbert's family react to the public attention?
Passage Three
Almost all states in America have a state fair.
They last for one, two or three weeks.
The Indiana state fair is one of the largest
and oldest state fairs in the United States.
It is held every summer. It started in 1852.
Its goals were to educate, share ideas,
and present Indiana's best products.
The cost of a single ticket to enter the fair was 20 cents.
During the early 1930's,
officials of the fair ruled that the people could attend
by paying with something other than money.
For example, farmers brought a bag of grain in exchange for a ticket.
With the passage of time,
the fair has grown and changed a lot,
but it's still one of Indiana's most celebrated events.
People from all over Indiana
and from many other states attend the fair.
They can do many things at the fair.
They can watch the judging of the price cows,
pigs, and other animals;
they can see sheep getting their wool cut,
and they can learn how that wool is made into clothing;
they can watch cows giving birth.
In fact, people can learn about the animals
they would never see except at the fair.
The fair provides a chance for the farming communities
to show its skills and farm products.
For example, visitors might see the world's largest apple,
or the tallest sunflower plant.
Today, children and adults at the fair
can play new computer games,
or attend more traditional games of skill.
They can watch performances performed by famous entertainers.
Experts say such fairs are important,
because people need to remember
that they're connected to the earth and its products,
and they depend on animals for many things.
Questions 33 to 35 are based on the passage you have just heard.
33. What was the main goal of the Indiana's state fair when it started?
34. How did some farmers gain entrance to the fair in the early 1930's?
35. Why are state fairs important events in the America?
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.
Students' pressure sometimes comes from their parents.
Most parents are well meaning,
but some of them aren't very helpful
with the problems their sons and daughters have
in adjusting to college,
and a few of them seem to go out of their way
to add to their children's difficulties.
For one thing,
parents are often not aware
of the kinds of problems their children face.
They don't realize that the competition is keener,
that the required standards of work are higher,
and that their children may not be prepared for the change.
Accustomed to seeing A's and B's on high school report cards,
they may be upset
when their children's first semester college grades are below that level.
At their kindest,
they may gently inquire why John or Mary isn't doing better,
whether he or she is trying as hard as he or she should, and so on.
At their worst,
they may threaten to take their children
out of college or cut off funds.
Sometimes parents regard their children
as extensions of themselves,
and think it only right and natural
that they determine what their children do with their lives.
In their involvement and identification with their children,
they forget that everyone is different
and that each person must develop in his or her own way.
They forget that their children, who are now young adults,
must be the ones responsible
for what they do and what they are.
Students' pressure sometimes comes from their parents.
Most parents are well meaning,
but some of them aren't very helpful
with the problems their sons and daughters have
in adjusting to college,
and a few of them seem to go out of their way
to add to their children's difficulties.
For one thing,
parents are often not aware
of the kinds of problems their children face.
They don't realize that the competition is keener,
that the required standards of work are higher,
and that their children may not be prepared for the change.
Accustomed to seeing A's and B's on high school report cards,
they may be upset
when their children's first semester college grades are below that level.
At their kindest,
they may gently inquire why John or Mary isn't doing better,
whether he or she is trying as hard as he or she should, and so on.
At their worst,
they may threaten to take their children
out of college or cut off funds.
Sometimes parents regard their children
as extensions of themselves,
and think it only right and natural
that they determine what their children do with their lives.
In their involvement and identification with their children,
they forget that everyone is different
and that each person must develop in his or her own way.
They forget that their children,
who are now young adults,
must be the ones responsible
for what they do and what they are.
Students' pressure sometimes comes from their parents.
Most parents are well meaning,
but some of them aren't very helpful
with the problems their sons and daughters have
in adjusting to college,
and a few of them seem to go out of their way
to add to their children's difficulties.
For one thing,
parents are often not aware
of the kinds of problems their children face.
They don't realize that the competition is keener,
that the required standards of work are higher,
and that their children may not be prepared for the change.
Accustomed to seeing A's and B's on high school report cards,
they may be upset
when their children's first semester college grades are below that level.
At their kindest,
they may gently inquire why John or Mary isn't doing better,
whether he or she is trying as hard as he or she should, and so on.
At their worst,
they may threaten to take their children
out of college or cut off funds.
Sometimes parents regard their children
as extensions of themselves,
and think it only right and natural
that they determine what their children do with their lives.
In their involvement and identification with their children,
they forget that everyone is different
and that each person must develop in his or her own way.
They forget that their children,
who are now young adults,
must be the ones responsible
for what they do ad what they are.

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重点单词
  • traditionaladj. 传统的
  • therapyn. 疗法,治疗
  • isolatedadj. 分离的,孤立的
  • conferencen. 会议,会谈,讨论会,协商会
  • minutesn. 会议记录,(复数)分钟
  • privacyn. 隐私,隐居,秘密
  • candyn. 糖果 vt. 用糖煮,使结晶为砂糖 vi. 结晶为
  • shiftingn. 转移 adj. 不断改换的 动词shift的现在分
  • identificationn. 身份的证明,视为同一,证明同一,确认
  • havenn. 港口,避难所,安息所 v. 安置 ... 于港中,