1、 A. In a theater. B. In front of a library. C. Outside a bookstore. 3. What does the woman suggest the man do? A. Look for shoes out of town. B. Buy shoes online. C. Give up buying shoes.4. What can we learn from the conversation?A. The man stayed with Jenny yesterday. B. Jenny complained about Sams
2、 birthday party. C. The man has been busy dating Jenny these days. 5. What are the speakers mainly talking about?A. How to get main points. B. How to choose a course. C. How to prepare for a subject. 第二节(共15 小题)听下面5段对话或独白。每段对话或独白后有几个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项,并标在试卷的相应位置。听每段对话前,你将有时间阅读各个小题,每小题5秒钟;听完后,
3、各小题将给出5秒钟的作答时间。每段对话或独白读两遍。听第6段材料,回答第6、7题。6. What does the woman ask the man to do? A. Go on a trip with her. B. Look after her house. C. Go downtown. 7. Which country does the woman hope to visit? A. America. B. Mexico. C. Canada.听第7段材料,回答第8、9题。8. What are the speakers talking about in general? A. J
4、ob plans. B. A camp. C. Trips. 9. What do we know about the woman?A. She intends to have a trip with her sister. B. She plans to get a job at a hotel.C. She wants to go camping.听第8段材料,回答第10至12题。10. Why is the man at the womans house? A. To repair the house. B. To finish his report. C. To pay for the
5、 damage. 11. What happened to the womans house?A. The chimney fell down right on the fence. B. A tree fell down on the wall. C. The roof was damaged.12. How does the woman feel about the service? A. Satisfied. B. Disappointed. C. Angry.听第9段材料,回答第13至16题。13. Why does the man contact the airport? A. To
6、 book a ticket. B. To find his luggage. C. To ask for transport information.14. How long will the man stay in Milton? A. About four weeks. B. About two weeks. C. About one week.15. How will the man travel after arriving at the airport? A. By taxi. B. By subway. C. By car. 16. What does the man say a
7、bout his daughter?A. She will get married next week. B. She always takes the bus to work. C. She will probably be busy when he arrives. 听第10段材料,回答第17至20题 。17. What is regarded as the main secret to wealth? A. Working hard. B. Saving money. C. Making financial plans.18. How many millionaires made the
8、ir fortunes in one generation in America?A. Four-fifths. B. Two-thirds. C. One-fifth.19. How much money does a typical millionaire save per year?A. $130,000. B. $104,000. C. $26,000.20. What do we know about millionaires?A. They look quite different from ordinary people. B. They were not good at stu
9、dying at school. C. One third of them are self-employed.第二部分 阅读理解 (共两节,满分30分) 第一节 (共10小题;每小题2分,满分20分)A For people who are addicted to shopping, the post-Christmas period means only one thingsales! Across the country, prices are reducing sharply on clothing, electronics, home furnishings and more, bu
10、t London is the place for serious shopping, and you can certainly pick up some amazing bargains. The sales start on Boxing Day26th December, and continue for the month of January, but the keenest bargain hunters get there early to be first through the doors. In Oxford Street queues formed outside sh
11、ops ahead of early morning openings for the start of their sales. At Brent Cross, in north London, more than 1,000 people were queuing at 3:30 am for the “Next” clothing stores sale which began at 4 am. Some eager individuals even camped outside the shops to be first in the line. Consumers who hit t
12、he shops were rewarded with discounts of as much as 80% as department stores joined the bargain sales. The shops are very crowded as the sales reached the boiling-point, with more than half a million people gathering on Londons West End. Famous sales include the biggest and most popular shops such a
13、s Harrods, Selfridges, Liberty and John Lewis. Department stores are always a good bet youre likely to find everything you need under one roof, including much-needed food and drinks! Its a good time to stock up on cheap small tools, and theres no better time to invest in some designer clothes. Some
14、people are taking their partners shopping with them, and buying their Christmas presents in the salea practical but unromantic way of making sure you get the gift you really want. For a less exciting but less stressful shopping experience, online sellers are also here, taking part in the act with Ja
15、nuary sales of their own. The most organized of all are those who are already doing their present shopping for next Christmas, in the January sales!21. We can learn from the passage that the sales _.A. actually start before the end of December B. generally last for two monthsC. basically benefit non
16、e of the people D. are a time to buy Christmas gifts in a romantic way22. “Hit the shops” in the third paragraph means to _. A. attack the shops B. arrive at the shops C. affect the shops D. find the shops23. What is the passage mainly about? A. People buy a lot of bargains in the department stores
17、in London after Christmas. B. People buy their Christmas presents in the sales in London. C. People are prepared to do their shopping for next Christmas. D. People take part in the January sales to do business online. B Scientists study the natural world by using “scientific method”. When a scientis
18、t observes some phenomenon in nature, he develops an idea, called a theory or hypothesis(假设), about what is happening. Then he does an experiment to test his theory. If the results are as expected, then the experiment proves the hypothesis which makes it more likely that the theory is correct. If th
19、e experiment fails and the results are not as expected, then the scientist must come up with a new theory that he can test. In ancient times great thinkers came up with complicated theories to explain nature, but they did not always prove them by experiment. For example, the great Greek thinker Aris
20、totle, had a theory that heavy objects would fall faster than light objects. People believed this until the scientist Galileo performed an experiment and found it was wrong. Heres an experiment that you can use to prove or disprove a common-sense theory: Step 1: Get an empty bottle with a small neck
21、. A diameter (直径)of 1/2 inch should be ideal. Step 2: Cut a sheet of paper to a square 5 inches on each side. Step 3: Crumple (压皱) the paper into a tight wad (块状物). Step 4: Lay the bottle on its side and place the paper so it lies loosely in the neck of the bottle. Construct a theory about what will
22、 happen if you put your mouth about a half inch from the neck of the bottle and blow hard towards it. A common-sense theory might be that the wad would be blown into the bottle by the force of the breath. Now do your experiment to see what really happens. If your theory was that the wad would be blo
23、wn by the force of the air into the bottle, the experiment gave you unexpected results. In most cases the wad is blown out of the neck of the bottle in the opposite direction. A new theory might be that the air being blown into the bottle creates a whirlwind (旋风) of air currents (气流) in the closed s
24、pace which push the wad out.24. The writer mentions Aristotles theory to show_.A. he was a greater thinker in ancient times B. he was less successful than GalileoC. objects of different weights fall at the same speedD. experiments are necessary to support theories25. According to the passage, what i
25、s not required in the fourstep experiment?A. A pair of scissors. B. A piece of paper. C. A bottle. D. A strong breath.26. Whats the best title for the passage?A. Come to Nature with Scientists B. Make up a New TheoryC. Experiment with Breath in a Bottle D. Watch Out for Common Sense CHeat might expl
26、ain why we lost our fur and now strike an upright and slim pose(姿势). If our ancestors lived somewhere really hot, the theory goes, it would have made sense for us to lose body hair, start sweating more, become slender(修长的) and even walk uprightto create distance between our bodies and the hot ground
27、. A new study supports the theory that heat helped drive human evolution(进化), by showing that a key source of human evolution in East Africa has indeed been really hot for at least four million years. “Its something thats been hard to get at,” said Ben Passey, a geochemist(地球化学家) at Johns Hopkins Un
28、iversity in Baltimore. “Its nice to say that these body features would be advantageous to live in hot and open environments. But was it actually hot and open?”To find out, Passey and his colleagues analyzed dated soil examples from the Turkana Basin, a well-studied region in Kenya and Ethiopia that
29、contains lots of fossils(化石) from our human and pre-human ancestors. In particular, they looked at weighted carbon and oxygen atoms, called isotopes(同位素). Their results, published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, showed that dirt in the Turkana Basin has remained above about 8
30、5 degrees Fahrenheit with spikes(尖状物) above 95 degrees Fahrenheit over the past four million years. Since soil absorbs heat from the air, it means that the region has been really hot for a really long time. “There is no question that the results are fascinating,” said Harvard anthropologist(人类学家), D
31、aniel Lieberman, who studies how and why the human body looks the way it does.For one thing, at some point we developed a unique ability to control our body temperature while running, which might have helped people catch prey (猎物) in hot and dry conditions. “The hotter it is, the more humans have an advantage over other mammals, especially when running.”“No one knows for sure when we lost
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