1、C. Indifferent. D. Disapproving.4. A. In January. B. Until winter vacation.C. During Christmas season. D. Right now.5. A. The foundation of the theatre. B. A change to the theatre.C. The removal of the seats. D. The figure of the audience.6. A. It can help to find the patients easilyB. It can record
2、 patients conditions.C. It gives patients medical advice.D. It makes records available to doctors and nurses.7. A. He doesnt want to draw.B. He prefers to make the labor division himself.C. He is good at drawing.D. He is happy because he doesnt have to draw.8. A. The key to the womans success.B. The
3、 changes on the market.C. The management of the womans company.D. The feeling of being a manager.9. A. To paint the doors. B. To paint the ceiling.C. To continue his job. D. To take the job home10. A. Because she is accustomed to the food there.B. Because the food is better there than at the school
4、dining hall.C. Because it is a quiet place.D. Because they cant go to the school dining hall.Section B In Section B, you will hear several passages and longer conversations, after each passage or conversation, you will be asked several questions. The passages and the conversations will be read twice
5、, but the questions will be spoken only once. When you hear a question, read the four possible answers on your paper and decide which one is the best answer to the question you have heard.Questions 11 to 13 are based on the following passage.11. A. Factors determining intelligence.B. A story of iden
6、tical twins.C. The importance of intelligence.D. How to get a higher IQ.12. A. Because only one could enter college.B. Because they were abandoned by their parents.C. Because their parents died when they were only babies.D. Because the psychologists did an experiment researching human intelligence.1
7、3. A. John got a better education than his identical brother. Peter.B. Children growing up in wealthy families are smarter.C. Environment is important to the development of ones intelligence.D. An isolated community has more educational opportunities.Questions 14 through 16 are based on the followin
8、g passage.14. A. Unwrapping a new album.B. Having a newly-bought car.C. Entering a newly-purchased house.D. Having access to an online account.15. A. It is nice to share the account on Amazon.B. The sharing economy makes full use of cars.C. Consumers consider ownership more important than access.D.
9、The sharing economy makes clear relationship between consumers and products.16. A. The sharing economy develops car manufacturing.B. It is good for environment to increase the usage of goods.C. The sharing economy reshapes the market and benefits people.D. In the sharing economy, companies bridge th
10、e gap between people and resources.Questions 17 and 18 are based on the following conversation.17. A. Products.B. Locations.C. Coffee making techniques.D. Staff quality.18. A. She made a questionnaire.B. She talked with customers.C. She wrote a handbook for the employeesD. She applied for a job at S
11、tarbucks.19. A. Customers are especially concerned about the service of a cafe.B. The more expensive the coffee beans and milk, the better the coffee is.C. Customers want more varieties of coffee.D. Customers rely on the brand image when they are making choices.20. A. Because the manual will be the
12、latest version.B. Because it will tell customers detailed product information.C. Because it includes important policies and procedures.D. Because employees enjoy reading it.II. Grammar and Vocabulary After reading the passage below, fill in the blanks to make the passage coherent and grammatically c
13、orrect. For the blanks with a given word, fill in each blank with the proper form of the given word; for the other blanks, use one word that best fits each blank. A ban on distracted walkingYou cant walk down the street without passing so-called “smart-phone zombies(僵尸).” They are too absorbed in th
14、eir screen (21) _ (watch) where they are going. Almost four in ten people admit having suffered a technology-related small accident (22) _ they pay more attention to their electronic device than to the pavement. Now the city of Honolulu, Hawaii, has decided its time to take immediate action and make
15、 it illegal to cross the road while using a mobile phone. Those (23) _ (catch) using phones, tablets or other electronic devices at crossing points could face a fine of up to $ 100.Honolulu is the first major U. S. city to ban (24) _ is called “distracted walking.” It comes after a study found there
16、 (25) _ (be) more than 11,000 injuries in the United States resulting from phone-related distraction while walking in the past few years. To explain the decision, mayor Kirk Caldwell said, “We hold the unfortunate honor of being a major city (26) _ more pedestrians are hit in crosswalks than almost
17、any other city in the country.”Under the fine systems. (27) _ breaks this law for the first time will get a fine of $15 to $35. People breaking the law for a second or third time will get a $99 fine. The law, which is called the Distracted Walking Law, does permit an exception. Pedestrians (28) _ us
18、e such devices in the street to call emergency services and rescue workers, such as firefighters and police officers. If you still want to text while walking, you could avoid (29) _ (fine) in Honolulu by using a voice-controlled digital assistant such as Siri or Google Assistant. Or you could just w
19、ait (30) _ you are again, safely, off the street. Fill in each blank with a proper word chosen from the box. Each word can be used only once. Note that there is one word more than you need. A. parental B. balance C. declined D. deposit E. downloaded F. engaging G. financial H. immediately I. listing
20、 J. deliberately K. purchasesGiving kids allowances in the smart-phoneAllowances are a constant. No matter how much technology interferes with the parent-child relationship, kids still want money and parents still want to impart(赋予)a basic work ethic. But putting stickers on chore(日常事务)charts and dr
21、opping coins in piggy banks dont cut it with the smart-phone generation. Parents in search of more _31_ ways to teach children the value of money are turning to allowance-tracking apps, where kids can see their _32_ rise and fall in real time. Bonnie Koon, a mother of three in Crawfordville, Fla., u
22、sed to post a calendar on her refrigerator _33_ her kids chores, to the embarrassment of her 16-year-old twins. After seeing a Facebook ad for the app Green-light, she _34_ it. Green-light links to parents bank accounts so that the payout can be seamless. Parents can encourage saving by paying inter
23、est on the money that isnt spent _35_ - interest out of the parents own pockets, of course. Its the first taste of _36_ freedom for many kids, and its set in a relatively safe environment. Parents can determine spending limits and choose the retailers(零售商)where a child can make _37_. If a child atte
24、mpts to buy something at an unapproved store or to spend more than the limit, the transaction(交易)is _38_ and parents get a notification. And if a kid loses the card, parents can immediately cancel it from the app. One of Ms. Koons twins. Brenna, works part time at a restaurant. Shes putting half of
25、her pay check into a car-insurance savings fund she set up in the app, whit the goal of saving $450 by July. With each _39_, the app gives Brenna a progress update. Some parents might worry that relying on apps to get kids to do chores only encourages them to be on their phones more. But parents who
26、 have chosen this approach argue that they are meeting their kids where they are and that it takes the _40_ nagging(唠叨)out of the equation. The real-time look at their accounts makes the concepts of saving and spending more tangible than reviewing a bank statement. III. Reading Comprehension For eac
27、h blank in the following passage there are four words or phrases marked A, B, C and D. Fill in each blank with the word or phrase that best fits the context. If you like to take a walk in the woods in the United States or you prefer to decorate a tree at Christmas, you should know that climate chang
28、e is making both of those activities a lot more _41_. Looking at two _42_ and economically important species - the Douglas fir and the Ponderosa pine - scientists found that fires and drought _43_ by climate change make new growth difficult, especially in low-elevation forests, according to a study
29、published Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. Some forests in four regions in California, Colorado, the Northern Rockies and the southwestern part of the United States have crossed “a(n) _44_ climate tipping(转折)point for post-fire tree generation,” the study says. Climate conditions over the past 20 years have _45_ changes that would have taken decades
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