Part 1: Listening Comprehension *o|p)lH
]h
UKuef
Section A (10 P) {U
P_i2`.
Directions: In this section you will hear three passages. Each passage will be read only ONCE. At the end of each passage, there will be a pause. Listen carefully to the passages and then answer the questions that follow. Mark your choices on the Answer Sheet. Fd"WlBYy0
;qT5faKB3J
Passage One 6bJ"$ o
Questions 1 to 3 are based on the passage you have just heard.
?zE<
01. People choose London for post-Christmas shopping because ______. Spc&X72I
5 V rcR=?O
A. shops open early in the morning P6E1^$e
B. shops stay open for longer hours h*l4Y!7
C. they can buy really cheap things XbXgU#%
D. they can shop with their friends &U0WkW
6)+9G_
02. We learn from the passage that ______. 9rWLE6`
d5q4'6o,
A. people are very keen on sales 5{fwlA
B. post-Christmas sales start at 3:30am |Rk37P{
C. post-Christmas sales last for a day S
`wE$so>
D. sales include only a few items >2t
cEz%
K5+!(5V~
03. Which of the following is NOT mentioned in the passage? AYYRxhv_,
A. Some people buy Christmas presents in the sales. ev*c4^z:s
B. Some people shop online during the sales. T*p|'Q`
C. Some people buy presents for next Christmas. o8mo=V4j
D. Online retailers offer better post-Christmas sales. 4&H+hN{3
dgm+U%E
Passage Two *+&z|Pwv[^
Questions 4 to 7 are based on the passage your have just heard. _=)!xnYf
04. Ballroom dancing used to be associated with ______. O<Jwaap
7!mJhgGc
A. TV shows cy9N:MR(c
B. old people Bac?'ypm
C. celebrities 0\QYf0o
D. professional dancers O&F<oM
rkbl/py
05. According to the passage, recent popularity of ballroom dancing is the result of ______. x ru(Le}E
i:\bqK
A. the participation of celebrities 2c!h2$w
B. the designing of colorful costumes GsR-#tV@
C. the benefits it brings gjO
*h3`
D. a TV program WvIK=fdZ$
I4A;
06. Which of the following is NOT mentioned about the TV show? 1w(<0Be
A. Performers have to be formally dressed ol3 the show. ;CLR{t(N#V
B. Each professional dancer dances with a celebrity. :
17ee
C. People on the show perform a different dance every week. BYTXAZLb
D. The show runs for about four months. [B.W1 GL!
07. According to the passage, the TV show has the greatest impact on ______. y-D>xV)n
-t;?P2
A. old people Oz_b3r
B. middle-aged people 7)g;Wd+H
C. kids and young people K'>P!R:El
D. all of the above dOYlI`4
`[w}hFl~q
:-W$PIBe
Passage Three F Bd+=bx,Z
Questions 8 to 10 are based on die passage you have just heard. ju
@%A@s
08. According to New Zealand’s rules about naming children, which of the following names is NOT acceptable? M'pY-/.
BBaHMsr
A. Spiderman. 7Y| Wy
Oq
B. Gandalf. eh8<?(eK
C. 2win {X{01j};8
D. Arsenal #c8"
&utS\-;G
09. According to the passage, unusual names come from ____. A- <.#
/3xFd)|Ds
A. popular culture C.B8 J"T-
B. parents’ invention $i5G7b
C. sports _rWTw+
L
D. all of the above T%z!+/=&^
d#M?lS>
10. All of the following countries have strict rules about naming children EXCEPT ____. 7KYF16A4
?w|\7T.?
A. Algeria q[We][Nrzb
B. Germany -NI@xJO4(;
C. Japan i&AXPq>`
D. Argentina r;5 AY
btkMY<o7
*o2_EqXL*
Section B (10 P) k_.j%
Directions: In this section you will hear a news report about American people’s attitudes towards drunk driving. While listening focus on the major points and do not forget to take notes. After that, complete the following outline by filling in the blanks numbered from B01 to B20 with key words. The report will be read TWICE, There will be a One Minute pause between the first and the second reading. Then you will have another One Minute to check your work after the second reading. ~h~r]tV*+
`rRg(fCN!M
01. Introduction— B01 B02 for drunk drivers .WPuQZ!
A new survey: more than half of the population supports B03 B04 for those who drive under the influence of alcohol or drugs. /Wta$!X{-
02. B05 B06 B07 B08 —the organization that does the survey C$EFh4
A. Founder: a woman whose child was killed by a drunk driver Xl
'\krz
B. Founding time: in 1980 +q>C}9s3
C. General changes in American people’s attitudes toward drunk driving rUJSzLy
1. In the past: a way of life and death in America jAK`96+D~b
2. Today: a socially unacceptable criminal act a major public health and safety problem. 4'u|L&ow
D. Membership now: about B09 B10 [eTck73
E. Main job: campaigns for preventative education and tougher laws against drunk driving v6,
o/3Ex
F. Achievement: help reduce the number of B11 B12 B13 on American highways. :EmMia-)J
03. Major differences in American people’s attitudes toward drunk driving 4<!}4
A. more than half believe that penalties need to be tougher. Kk"B501
B. more than 90% favor a mandatory anti-drunk driving component in driver’s instruction, B14 B15 and stiffer fines and confiscating repeat offenders’ vehicles. +HVG5l
C. 3/4support immediate B16 of the driver’s license of any driver who B17 B18 B19 a sobriety test at a crash site or whose blood alcohol content is above the legal limit. H#d!
`
04. MADD’s future goal 1QdB`8in
To persuade governments to pass tougher laws to B20 drunk driving and to educate the public. ,
_7tRkn
u8)r
W
Part 2: Structure and Written Expression (20 P) I n%yMH8
Directions: For each question decide which of the four choices given will most suitably complete the sentence if inserted at the place marked. Mark your choices on the Answer Sheet. GCmVmOdKr
'3kL=(
01. Only when faced with overwhelming evidence of being treated differently than the men who surrounded me ___, briefly, with the notion that I was different in gender-related ways from my male colleagues. x[h<3V"
nD{;4$xP`
A. that dealt 1=cfk#
B. I dealt gB'Ah -@,P
C. then I dealt !t
[%'!v
D. did I deal Kps
GQM
Ab|NjY:
02. ___ only one moving soul in the center of all the orbits that is the sun which drives the planets the more vigorously the closer the planet is. #esu@kMU`
%EhU!K#[
A. As exists ?&bVe__
B. Although existing "r(pK@h
C. There exists OKH~Y-%<
D. Where existing yeh adm\
G6g=F+X2
03. The fact is that motherhood makes the heaviest demands in ____ the areas of least experience. loVvr"&g
J##X5'a3*
A. that it might be called NNrZb?
B. what might be called
pt;Sk?-1
C. which might be called ;eSf4_~
D. it might be called {xx;zjt%}}
gKH"f%lK
04. ___ sermons retained their preeminence in religious life daring most of the twentieth century, they are gradually losing that central places as churches devote more energy to social activities. V$%Fs{
aNEy1-/(\
A. As `v+O5
B. For aD`e]K ^L
C. While K>~cY%3^i
D. Although !ZcALtq
v=^)`C6Ma
05. As a result, the mission of the school, along with the culture of the classroom ____. t|XC4:/>T
JO$]t|I
A. was slowly to change ~_\2\6%1^n
B. are slowly changed !a&F:Fbm
C. is slowly changing T1TZ+\
D. have slowly changed aQuy*\$$
@WE$%dr
06. These early clocks, operated by weights, were not particularly accurate, and it was not until the sixteenth century ___. Q%h
o[KU
I!#^F1p1
A. any great reliability attained it _!Q\Xn
B. then attained any great reliability FA GVpO[
C. that any great reliability was attained c8W=Is`
D. when any great reliability attained FCAu%lvZT
eW<hC(
07. I was supposed to go to a concert with your sister the other night, but your sister didn’t turn up. I can’t believe t have been ___. $h
f\ #'J
O&%T_Zk@@
A. given up >b${rgCvQ
B. stood up >U.uRq
C. left up PUo&>
D. taken up t,YAk
?}
@~HD<K
08. In time, the woman was persuaded to try this new form of discipline and to ____ a failure to go to time out by the withdrawal of some privilege. hidweg*7
Q)8t;Kx
A. back off zK;t041e
B. back up v#G ^W
C. back down q>Y[.c-
D. back with 6
U]7V
osI(g'Xb
09. The government will prosecute those individuals who unlawfully possess ____ material. ,B!Q
v3bn
B&D
z(Bs
A. classified 85]UrwlA4
B. bizarre E$
rSrT(
C. personal $T0[
D. legitimate R~([
>i<-rO>kN
10. The structure of the global economy ___ that developing nations put all their efforts into raising cash—usually by exporting whatever virgin resources the industrial world might desire. &n
wg$z{Y
4dAhJjhgD
A. dictates MIJ~j><L
B. regulates $Tza<nA
C. allows ualtIHXK)
D. appeals f
;JSP
}rZp(FG@*
11. U. S. Secretary of State Rice ___ a three-day trip to the Middle East with an agreement from Israeli and Palestinian leaders to hold meetings every two weeks. 2}-W@R
:z7!X.*
A. ended up ?9cy5z[
B. wrapped up JZ
[&:
C. rounded up I(SE)%!%S
D. summed up mUxD.;P
U@WT;:.T
12. Some readers, especially children, find his works among the most ___ books they have ever read. fz*6 B NJ
3 a`-_<
A. captivating Yc}b&
B. captivated ;Xns 9
C. capturable )C[8#Q-:
D. captious (0r6_8e6xv
DWG}}vN:&
13. He never felt that being disabled ___ him of all moral responsibility to himself and his community. ~JJv 2
p5\b&~
g
A. released OB%y'mo7]
B. relieved c<=1,TB"-_
C. removed i \~4W$4I
D. relied n"JrjvS
2rk_ ssvs
14. A ____, he was probably one of the most realistic writers of his day. e=U7w7(s9
qXW5_iX
A. self-confessing romantic chy7hPxC;
B. self-confessed romance LS`Gg7]S
C. self-confessing romance <q|19fH-5
D. self-confessed romantic *-7O|
''
<M=K!k
15. When he was in junior high at fourteen, his intelligence was such that he ___ among undergraduates than among schoolboys. /CP1mn6H
iH2|w
A. would fit better in ^>>Naid
B. would have titled in better KQk;:1hW
C. fitted better in ppxu\a
D. would have tired better p8Pvctc
D_@^XS
16. The ___ manuscripts are still able to tell a lot about the author who charmed the world with his works several hundred years ago. Wl1%BN0>
c7'
Pzb)'
A. extended VGS
e<6Hh
B. intent -C\m'T,1
C. extant )|:|.`H
D. distant mesR)fTI
{w2<;YXj!
17. It was ____ to watch her condition deteriorate day by day. %FwLFo^v
Vry#
A. sympathetic 9 eP @} C6
B. pathetic ^ H'|iju
C. empathic @r#>
-p
D. pathic Ji=E 1R
[Ga9^e$Zv
18. All the mountains are stunningly beautiful, and there are ___ valleys and the smell of peat from every cottage. KNV$9&Z
$v+g3+7
A. wooden b.$Gc!g
B. wooded +_+}^Nf]Y3
C. wooding z*:^*,
D. woods ,#<"VU2 bC
=_,w<
19. She wore long, heavy dresses, clothes that allowed ____ movement. )4j#gHN\
Q|:\
A. minimum of GeE|&popO
B. the minimum for m|'TPy
C. her minimum of ?!Y2fK=h0
D. a minimum of TzVNZDQ`Jl
6zyozJA
20. Hip replacement surgery is ____ joint replacement surgery in the U. S. 8%Pjx7'<
8He^j5
A. the single most frequent *2@Ne[dYEF
B. the most single frequent yt$V<8a
C. the single frequent <jfi"SJu
D. a single frequent koe&7\ _@
U1dz:OG>
]ZZ7j
Part 3: Cloze Test (10 P) pS9CtQqvgy
Directions: Read the following passage carefully and choose ONE best word for each numbered blank. Mark your answers on the Answer Sheet. s(F^P
Ot5
$~
o
The strangest weather of last year was possibly not on Earth, but on the Sun. Every 11 years ____ the Sun goes through a cycle of sunspots-actually magnetic storms erupting across its surface. The number of sunspots ____ its minimum in 2007 and ____ have increased soon afterwards, but the Sun has remained strangely quiet since then. Scientists have been baffled as weeks and sometimes mouths have gone by without a single sunspot, in ____ is thought to be the deepest solar minimum for almost 100 years. "h\{PoG
This ____ of solar activity means that cosmic rays reaching Earth from space have increased and the planet’s ionosphere in the upper atmosphere has sunk in ____ giving less drag on satellites and making collisions between them and space junk more likely. The solar minimum could also be cooling the climate on Earth because of slightly diminished solar irradiance, in fact, the quiet spell on the Sun may be ____ some of the warming effects of greenhouse gases, according to recent research by two US solar scientists. The solar minimum, their study suggests, accounts for the somewhat flat temperature trend of the past decade. But ____ if this solar minimum is offsetting global warming, scientists stress that the overall effect is relatively slight and certainly will not last. BT>8
The Sun has gone into long quiet spells before. From 1645 to 1715 few sunspots were seen during a period called the Little Ice Age, when short summers and savage winters often plagued Northern Europe. Scotland was hit particularly ____ as harvests were ruined in cold, miserable summers, which led to famine, death, migration and huge depopulation. But whether the quiet Sun was entirely to blame for it remains highly ____. tPc '#.
J=5G<
;D
BO
01. ( ) 19h8p>Sx0
A. and so `
Y"Rh[C
B. or so '3aDvV0
C. on so L9&Z?$6J_p
D. so on |v:8^C7
qVx0VR1:
02. ( ) ="z\
A. increased b2duC
B. got r)q6^|~47
C. reduced /\(0@To
D. reached ~"iCx+p
r
%
=br-c
03. ( ) x4Y+?2
A. should 32:q'
B. could `dx+
Qp
C. would ;q59Cr 75
D. might 8S&`
JY~s-jxa
04. ( ) x?VX,9;j
A. which n(0O'nS^
B. that ; P&Ka
C. what %DbL|;z1
D. how D/"[/!
!Z`~=n3bk
05. ( ) .TSj8,
A. much uL1e?
B. lack }b\e2ZK
C. number VX2KE@
D. amount /#GX4&z
&>ii2% 4
06. ( ) Eo!1
WRruF
A. high != _:*U)-'
B. height cO.U*UTmX
C. altitude 6Y>MW 4q
D. space 7
g8SK
;$wS<zp6
07. ( ) *!ZU"q}i
A. making ><mZOTn e;
B. causing .9#4qoM'
C. decreasing U}x2,`P
I
D. masking 3J7TWOJVw
:Ag]^ot
08. ( ) G|Yw
a=
A. even i/2OE&*O[
B. what cpF\^[D
C. in case m"t\@f
D. still <N}UwB&
e#(0af8A
09. ( ) E ~<SEA
A. hard 8p,q9Ey
B. severe gbL99MZ@~
C. harsh zm-j FY ?
D. heavy |\TOSaZ
^>gRK*,
10. ( ) *91iFeKj=
A. certain (cAv :EKpo
B. unlikely {mY<R`Ee
C. likely *v)JX _
D. uncertain Q.7Rv
XNw8
R"Nvnpm
{9vvj
Part 4: Reading Comprehension X
AR~d6iZ
pg1o@^OuL
Passage One \j !JRD+j
Parkinson’s disease, first described in the early 1800s by British physician James Parkinson as “shaking palsy,” is among the most prevalent neurological disorders. According to the United Nations, at least four million people worldwide have it: in North America, estimates run from 500,000 to one million, with about 50,000 diagnosed every year. These figures are expected to double by 2040 as the world’s elderly population grows; indeed, Pakinson’s and other neurodegenerative illness common in the elderly(such as Alzheimer’s and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis) are on their way to overtaking cancer as a leading cause of death. But the disease is not entirely one of the aged: 50 percent of patients acquire it after age 60; the other half are affected before then. Furthermore, better diagnosis has made experts increasingly aware that the disorder can attack those younger than 40. -l8n0P1+
So far researchers and clinicians have found no way to slow, stop or prevent Parkinson’s. Although treatments do exist—including drugs and deep-brain stimulation—these therapies alleviate symptoms, not causes. In recent years, however, several promising developments have occurred. In particular, investigators who study the role proteins play have linked miscreant proteins to genetic underpinnings of the disease. Such findings are feeding optimism that fresh angles of attack can be identified. ;W]
NT4p
As its 19th-century name suggests—and as many people know from the educational efforts of prominent Parkinson’s sufferers such as Janet Reno, Muhammad Ali and Micharl J. Fox—the disease is characterized by movement disorders. Tremor in the hands, arms and elsewhere, limb rigidity, slowness of movement, and impaired balance and coordination are among the disease’s hallmarks. In addition, some patients have trouble walking, talking, sleeping, urinating and performing sexually. ]`0(^)U&
These impairments result from neurons dying. Although the victim cells are many and found throughout the brain, those producing the neurotransmitter dopamine in a region called the substantia nigra areparticularly hard-hit. These dopaminergic nerve cells are key components of the basal ganglia, a complex circuit deep within the brain that fine-turnes and coordinates movement. Initially the brain can function normally as it loses dopaminergic neurons in the substantia nigra, even though it cannot replace the dead cells. But when half or more of these specialized cells disappear, the brain can no longer cover for them. The deficit then produces the same effect that losing air traffic control does at a major airport. Delays, false starts, cancellations and, ultimately, chaos pervade as parts of the brain involved in motor control—the thalamus, basal ganglia and cerebral cortex—no longer function as an integrated and orchestrated unit. zDeh#
>gM|:FG
01. Which of the following statements about Parkinson’s disease can be best supported by the passage? ;ZPAnd:pb
A. Parkinson’s disease will become one of the leading causes of death for the old people. "2;$?*hO#
B. Parkinson’s disease is not entirely one of the aged, as half of the patients are young people. kU
$P?RD
C. Parkinson’s disease first appeared in the 19th century. 7D\#1h
D. Parkinson’s disease is a neurological disorder, but not yet a neurodegenerative illness. ]IMBRZQqb
02. The author of the passage suggests that the developments in the study of Parkinson’s disease can help ___. ^Crl~~Gk`
A. prevent Parkinson’s k<wX ??'
B. alleviate the causes of Parkinson’s XmXp0b7
C. find new avenues for treatment of Parkinson’s $J"}7+
D. cure Parkinson’s >e
:&k p
03. According to the passage, what causes Parkinson’s disease? VJ;n0*/
A. The dopaminergic nerve cells are impaired by the victim cells. 2LGeRw
B. The dopaminergic nerve cells can no longer coordinate movement. '<5Gf1 @|
C. There are tumors in the brain. L$6{{Tw"2
D. There are not enough dopaminergic neurons in the brain. yz8ZY,9
04. Janet Reno and Michael J. Fox are mentioned in the passage because ___. GV#"2{t
j
A. they were experts on Parkinson’s disease 4]0|fi3}>
B. they made great efforts to fight Parkinson’s disease =Y#)c]`
C. they succeeded in fighting Parkinson’s disease ^d Fdw\
D. they were well-known sufferers of Parkinson’s disease unKTa*U^q
05. The primary purpose of this passage is to ___. Ql&5fyW
A. analyze what causes Parkinson’s disease -8;U1 ^#
B. demonstrate how to prevent Parkinson’s disease Ic/D!J{Y
C. warn the young people of the danger of Parkinson’s disease ?.~E:8
D. present new movements in the study of Parkinson’s disease ~K]5`(KV
LPX@oh a
Passage Two 4<fKB&