《大学英语四级模拟题十一(共6页).doc》由会员分享,可在线阅读,更多相关《大学英语四级模拟题十一(共6页).doc(6页珍藏版)》请在taowenge.com淘文阁网|工程机械CAD图纸|机械工程制图|CAD装配图下载|SolidWorks_CaTia_CAD_UG_PROE_设计图分享下载上搜索。
1、精选优质文档-倾情为你奉上大学英语四级模拟题十一Part I Writing (15%)Directions: For this part, you are required to write a short essay based on the picture below. You should start your essay with a brief account of the picture below and then elaborate the importance of exercise for human beings. You should write at least 1
2、20 words but no more than 180.Part II Listening Comprehension (35%)Section ADirections: 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 wil
3、l 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 with a single line through the center. 1. A) Something went wrong with
4、his bus.B) He took someone to the hospital.C) His car was out of work. D) He bought a new car.2. A) They want to go to downtown.B) He wants to go to the park, but she doesnt.C) He wants to find out where the park is.D) He doesnt know where to park the car.3. A) I can help solve problems.B) It will m
5、ost likely to be inefficient.C) It is a new weapon.D) It will help detect all kinds of liars.4. A) She thinks it is too difficult.B) She thinks the book is interesting.C) She hasnt read it.D) She hasnt decided whether to read it.5. A) Because he has got an appointment.B) Because he doesnt want to.C)
6、 Because he has to work.D) Because he wants to eat in a new restaurant.6. A) Company president.B) Personal secretary.C) Air hostess.D) President of a country.7. A) 15 miles.B) 25 miles.C) 20 miles.D) 40 miles.8. A) Wife-husband.B) Daughter-father.C) Student-teacher.D) Patient-doctor.Conversation One
7、Question 9 to 12 are based on the conversation you have just heard.9. A) Accountant.B) Translator.C) Salesman.D) Human resources manager.10. A) Because the salary is too low.B) Because the company is facing bankrupt.C) Because the man is looking forward to some change in his job.D) Because the compa
8、ny is going to cut the number of the employees. 11. A) $1400.B) $1500.C) $1600.D) $1700.12. A) The exact time he can start his new job.B) How many days of paid vacations he can get.C) If the company offers as many extra benefits as other companies do.D) If people hired in the company have chances fo
9、r advancement.Conversation TwoQuestion 13 to 15 are based on the conversation you have just heard.13. A) 200 and 400 million years ago.B) 300 and 500 million years ago.C) 200 and 500 million years ago.D) 300 and 400 million years ago.14. A) Because they have huge shells.B) Because they lost their sh
10、ells.C) Because they could live for a very long time.D) Because their shells evolved too.15. A) The squids(鱿鱼)are monsters.B) People are less intelligent than them.C) They can easily get away from human.D) Human could not swim fast enough.Section BDirections: In this section, youll hear 3 short pass
11、ages. 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 with a single lin
12、e through the center.Passage OneQuestion 16 to 18 are based on the conversation you have just heard.16. A) Coins.B) Salt.C) Animals.D) Cows.17. A) Romans.B) Americans.C) Indians.D) Chinese.18. A) Today most coins are round.B) Things highly valued by everybody could serve us.C) We know very little ab
13、out money.D) How coins came into use.Passage TwoQuestion 19 to 21 are based on the conversation you have just heard.19. A) When they dont have a car.B) When they live in a huge country.C) When they dont use planes.D) When they have a car.20. A) The United States is huge.B) Public transportation is n
14、ot so good.C) Americans like to be independent.D) Americans like to move around.21. A) A new kind of car.B) Public transportation.C) The gas shortage.D) Poor people.Passage ThreeQuestion 22 to 25 are based on the conversation you have just heard.22. A) Work gets a lot easier after the age of 40.B) M
15、ost of ones work is done before the age of 40.C) There isnt much work to do after the age of 40.D) Work gets more difficult after the age of 40.23. A) Generally speaking, work gets much easier after 40.B) Generally speaking, work gets much harder after 40.C) Age and work has nothing to do with each
16、other. D) The writer doesnt say.24. A) The ability to work long hours.B) Experience.C) Judgment.D) Profession skills.25. A) Know your strength.B) Keep learning.C) Know who you are.D) Live the right style.Section C: Directions: In this section, you will hear a passage three times. When the passage is
17、 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 with the exact words you have just heard. Finally, when the passage is read for the third time, you should check what you have written.(答案请
18、写在答题纸上)Three years ago, a study of overfishing led to a sharp debate. It (26) _ that the worlds ocean fish could be almost gone by the middle of the century. Now, a new study offers more hope. It shows that the (27) _ of fisheries collapse has recently decreased in some areas - some, but not all. Bo
19、ris Worm at Dalhousie University in Canada and Ray Hilborn at the University of Washington in Seattle were lead (28) _ of the new study.They led a team that studied ten areas. In five of them, the rate at which fish are being (29) _ the sea has dropped to a level that should let the populations reco
20、ver. Three areas still had overfishing, but corrective measures have begun. Yet, in all, almost (30) _ of fish populations studied worldwide still need rebuilding. Only two areas did not have an overfishing problem in either the new study or the earlier one. They are New Zealand and the American (31
21、) _ of Alaska. The findings from two years of (32) _ appear in the journal Science.Using nets that let smaller fish (33) _ and agreeing not to fish in certain areas can help reduce overfishing. The study showed that these measures helped fish populations grow in Kenya.But one of the authors of the s
22、tudy, Tim McClanahan from the Wildlife Conservation Society, says fisheries in Africa face another threat. Most countries in Africa, he says, are selling fishing rights to industrialized nations which catch large (34) _ seafood.The study shows what happened when industrialized nations increased rest
23、rictions on fishing in their own waters. Seafood companies moved their boats to (35) _countries with fewer restrictions.Part II Reading Comprehension (30%)Section A Directions: In this section, there is a passage with ten blanks. You are required to select one word for each blank from a list of choi
24、ces given in a word bank following the passage. Read the passage through carefully before making your choices. Each choice in bank is identified by a letter. Please write the corresponding letter for each item on the Answer Sheet. You may not use any of the words in the bank more than once.(答案请写在答题纸
25、上)A bookless life is an incomplete life. Books influence the depth and breadth of life. They meet the natural (36) _ for freedom, for expression, for creativity and beauty of life. Learners, therefore, must have books, and the right type of book, for the satisfaction of their need. Readers turn (37)
26、 _ to books because their curiosity concerning all manners of things, their eagerness to share in the experiences of others and their need to (38) _ from their own limited environment lead them to find in books food for the mind and the spirit. Through their reading they find a deeper significance t
27、o life as books acquaint them with life in the world as it was and it is now. They are presented with a (39) _ of human experiences and come to (40) _ other ways of thought and living. And while (41) _ their own relationships and responses to life, the readers often find that the (42) _in their stor
28、ies are going through similar adjustments, which help to clarify and give significance to their own.Books provide (43) _ material for readers imagination to grow. Imagination is a valuable quality and a motivating power, and stimulates achievement. While enriching their imagination, books (44) _ the
29、ir outlook, develop a fact-finding attitude and train them to use leisure (45) _. The social and educational significance of the readers books cannot be overestimated in an academic library.A) abundantB) charactersC) communicatingD) completelyE) deriveF) desireG) diversityH) escapeI) establishingJ)
30、narrowK) naturallyL) personalM) properlyN) respectO) widen Section BDirections: In this section, you are going to read a passage with ten statements attached to it. Each statement contains information given in one of the paragraphs. Identify the paragraph from which the information is derived. You m
31、ay choose a paragraph more than once. Each paragraph is marked with a letter. Answer the questions by writing a corresponding letter on the Answer Sheet.(答案请写在答题纸上)Boomerang Children(归巢族)A) Jennifer Bliss was no inexperienced lawyer when she moved back in with her parents. At 39, she had burned thro
32、ugh her retirement funds after losing her law-firm job in July 2007. She gave the bank the keys to the home she was unable to sell in Grand Rapids, Mich., and last November, she packed up her two Great Danes and moved about 60 miles, to Lansing, to live with her mother and stepfather. “This has been
33、 awful,” says Bliss, who has sent out some 600 resumes nationwide looking for legal work or a managerial position in another field. “I went to law school to have a solid profession so that I wouldnt wind up in a situation like this.”B) The term boomerang children used to refer to young adults moving
34、 back in with their parents, but the recession is forcing people in their 30s and 40s and older-often with a spouse and kids in tow-to stay with the parents until they regain their financial footing. Since the recession began in December 2007, the US has lost 3.6 million jobs. An AARP survey release
35、d in May found that more than a third of retirees have had to help a child pay bills in the last year. And the number of multigenerational households has increased from 5 million in 2000 to 6.2 million in 2008, according to AARP. Crowded quarters, wounded pride and general anxiety about the global e
36、conomic crisis do not make the most pleasant living situation. But there are ways to ease the transition.Talk about ExpectationsC) And be sure to discuss one anothers needs up front, says Brian Carpenter, a psychology professor at Washington University in St. Louis, Mo. Failure to do so can lead to
37、a lot of conflicts. Thats what happened when Michael Gallagher, 40, moved in with his mother in Los Angeles in October 2007 after he was fired from his job as an audio engineer. “When he came home to live, I was thinking family, and he was thinking roommate,” says BJ Gallagher, 59, an author and a v
38、ideo producer. “I would feel bad when he wouldnt say hello when he walked in the door.” At the same time, her son felt she was checking up on him and “lurking”(潜伏)around, she says. “We both ended up disappointed and annoyed until we discussed it and dealt with it.”D) Donna Butts, executive director
39、of Generations United, an intergenerational advocacy group based in Washington, says its a good idea to create an approximate timetable for achieving specific goals, such as “get a job”, “move out”.Build in PrivacyE) If possible, everyone should have at least some space of his or her own. For instan
40、ce, when Michael Gallagher took over the part of his mothers house that she had been using as an office, she moved her computer and video equipment into a much smaller room adjoining her bedroom. “We each needed our own space. There was no way around that,” BJ says of the rearranging she had to acco
41、mmodate her son.Share Household ExpensesF) Pay parents rent, or help with bills, and take over housework like mowing the lawn. “This way, everyone is helping in some way, and no one feels taken advantage of,” says Elizabeth Carll, a psychologist in Huntington, N. Y., who is an expert on dealing with
42、 stress. Bliss does all the cooking and cleaning. Michael Gallagher buys his own food, and beyond that, his mother says, he has “paid in trade” by persuading her to have the hip replacement she had needed for a while and by taking care of her after the operation.G) In late 2006, John Kreuzer, 30, an
43、d his wife moved from Portland, Ore., into his in-laws house in San Jose, Calif., because he got a public relation job in Silicon Valley. They decided to keep staying there-with their two little kids-because Kreuzers father-in-law was laid off. As the job market got tighter, it just made sense for e
44、veryone to share living expenses in such a high-cost area, Kreuzer says.H) Along the way, there have been differences of opinion when it comes to bringing up children. Kreuzer has explained to his children that they must abide by their grandparents rules, e.g., no roughhousing(打闹的)indoors. “My in-la
45、ws really help out with the kids while my wife and I are working,” he says. “I know that once we move out, my children will miss their time together with Grandma and Pop-pop.” Once we move out? That brings up one last point.Be RealisticI) The economy has to turn around someday, and in the meantime,
46、rents are falling. In March, Kreuzer and his family are moving into a nearby town house with rent so cheap, he can continue to help his in-laws pay their monthly bills. Michael Gallagher also found a killer deal on a rental. He moved out of his moms place in November, but she has yet to rearrange he
47、r stuff. “Im not moving anything back just yet,” she says. “With this awful economy, he could boomerang(回来)right back in here.”46. Failure to discuss each others needs can result in a lot of conflicts.47. Michael Gallagher helped his mother by caring for her after her surgery.48. Michael Gallaghers mother moved her computer into a smaller room in order to providepersonal space for her son.49