2018年12月四级真题第二套.pdf

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1、2018 年年 12 月大学英语四级考试真题(第月大学英语四级考试真题(第 2 套)套) Part I Writing (30minutes) Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a short essay on the challenges of studying abroad. You should write at least120 words but no more than 180 words. _ Part II Listening Comprehension (25 minutes) Sec

2、tion A Directions: In this section, you will hear three news reports. At the end of each news report, you will hear two or three questions. Both the news report 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),

3、 C) and D). Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 1 with a single line through the centre. Questions 1 and 2 are based on the news report you have just heard. 1. A) A man was pulled to safety after a building collapse. B) A beam about ten feet long collapsed to the ground. C) A rescue w

4、orker got trapped in the basement. D) A deserted 100-year-old building caught fire. 2. A) He suffered a fatal injury in an accident. B) He once served in a fire department. C) He was collecting building materials. D) He moved into his neighbors old house. Questions 3 and 4 are based on the news repo

5、rt you have just heard. 3. A) Improve the maths skills of high school teachers. B) Change British peoples negative view of maths. C) Help British people understand their paychecks. D) Launch a campaign to promote maths teaching. 4. A) Children take maths courses at an earlier age. B) The public sees

6、 the value of maths in their life. C) British people know how to do elementary calculations. D) Primary school teachers understand basic maths concepts. Questions 5 to 7 are based on the news report you have just heard. 5. A) He owns a fleet of aircraft. B) He is learning to be a pilot. C) He regard

7、s his royal duties as a burden. D) He held a part-time job for over 20 years. 6. A) He can demonstrate his superior piloting skills. B) He can change his focus of attention and relax. C) He can show his difference from other royalty. D) He can come into closer contact with his people. 7. A) They enj

8、oyed his company. B) They liked him in his uniform. C) They rarely recognised him. D) They were surprised to see him. - 1 - Section B Directions:In this section, you will hear two long conversations. At the end of each conversation, you will hear four questions. Both the conversation and the questio

9、ns 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 1 with a single line through the centre. Questions 8 to 11 are based on the conversation you have just heard. 8.

10、 A) They were skilled carpenters themselves. B) It didnt need much capital to start with. C) Wood supply was plentiful in Romania. D) They saw a business opportunity there. 9. A) Provide quality furniture at affordable prices. B) Attract foreign investment to expand business. C) Enlarge their compan

11、y by hiring more workers. D) Open some more branch companies in Germany. 10. A) They are from her hometown. B) They are imported from Germany. C) They all come from Romania. D) They come from all over the continent. 11. A) All across Europe. B) Throughout the world. C) Mostly in Bucharest. D) In Rom

12、ania only. Questions 12 to 15 are based on the conversation you have just heard. 12. A) Go to a concert with him and his girlfriend. B) Try out a new restaurant together in town. C) Go with him to choose a pearl for Susan. D) Attend the opening of a local restaurant. 13. A) It is sponsored by local

13、restaurants. B) It specializes in food advertizing. C) It is especially popular with the young. D) It provides information on local events. 14. A) They design a special set of menus for themselves. B) They treat themselves to various entertainments. C) They go to eat at different stylish restaurants

14、. D) They participate in a variety of social events. 15. A) More restaurants will join Restaurant Week. B) This years Restaurant Week will start soon. C) Bigger discounts will be offered this Restaurant Week. D) More types of food will be served this Restaurant Week. Section C Directions: In this se

15、ction, you will hear three passages. At the end of each passage, you will hear three or four 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), D). Then mark the corresponding let

16、ter on Answer Sheet 1 with a single line through the centre. Questions 16 to 18 are based on the passage you have just heard. 16. A) Rewarding them for eating vegetables. B) Exposing them to vegetables repeatedly. - 2 -C) Improving the taste of vegetable dishes for them. D) Explaining the benefits o

17、f eating vegetables to them. 17. A) They were disliked most by children. B) They were considered most nutritious. C) They were least used in Belgian cooking. D) They were essential to childrens health. 18. A) Vegetables differ in their nutritional value. B) Childrens eating habits can be changed. C)

18、 Parents watch closely what children eat. D) Childrens choices of food vary greatly. Questions 19 to 21 are based on the passage you have just heard. 19. A) Space exploration has serous consequences. B) India has many space exploration programs. C) There is quite a lot to learn about the moon. D) A

19、lot of garbage has been left on the moon. 20. A) It is costly to bring back. B) It is risky to destroy. C) It is of no use on Earth. D) It is damaged by radiation. 21. A) Record details of space exploration. B) Monitor the change of lunar weather. C) Study the effect of radiation and vacuum on its m

20、aterials. D) Explore the possibility of human settlement on the moon. Questions 22 to 25 are based on the passage you have just heard. 22. A) It is likely to remain a means of business communication. B) It is likely to be a competitor of various messaging apps. C) It will gradually be replaced by so

21、cial media. D) It will have to be governed by specific rules. 23. A) Save the message in their file. B) Make a timely response. C) Examine the information carefully. D) See is any action needs to be taken. 24. A) It is to be passed on. B) It is mostly junk. C) It requires no reply. D) It causes no c

22、oncern. 25. A) Make it as short as possible. B) Use simple and clear language. C) Adopt an informal style of writing. D) Avoid using capitals for emphasis. Part Reading Comprehension ( 40 minutes ) Section A Directions: In this section, there is a passage with ten blanks. You are required to select

23、one word for each blank from a list of choices given in a word bank following the passage. Read the passage through carefully before making your choices. Each choice in the bank is identified by a letter. Please mark the corresponding letter for each item on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through

24、 the centre. You may not use any of the words in the bank more than once. Questions 26 to 35 are based on the following passage. - 3 -Have you ever used email to apologize to a colleague? Delivered a 26 to a subordinate (下属) with a voice-mail message? Flown by plane across the country just to delive

25、r important news in person? The various communication options at our fingertips today can be good for 27 and productivityand at the same time very troublesome. With so many ways to communicate, how should a manager choose the one thats best 28 when the message to be delivered is bad or unwelcome new

26、s for the recipient? Weve 29 business communication consultants and etiquette (礼仪) experts to come up with the following guidelines for 30 using the alternative ways of delivering difficult messages. First of all, choose how personal you want to be. A face-to-face communication is the most 31 . Othe

27、r choices, in descending order of personalization, are: a real-time phone call, a voice-mail message, a handwritten note, a typewritten letter, and the most 32 is email. Some of these may change order according to the 33 situation or your own preferences; for example, a handwritten note might seem m

28、ore personal than voice-mail. How do you decide on the best choice for the difficult message youve got to deliver? “My 34 concern is: How can I soften or civilize this message?” says etiquette expert Dana Casperson. “So when I apologize, I usually choose in-person first, or a phone conversation as m

29、y top alternative, and maybe a handwritten note next. Apologizing by email is something I now totally 35 .” A) avoid I) reward B) convenience J) silent C) effectively D) escape K) specific E) intimate L) surveyed F) particularly M) unfriendly G) primary N) warning H) prompt O) witnessed Section B Di

30、rections: 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 may choose a paragraph more than once. Each paragraph is marked with a

31、letter. Answer the questions by marking the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2. How a Poor, Abandoned Parisian Boy Became a Top Chef A) The busy streets in Paris were uneven and caked in thick mud, but there was always a breathtaking sight to see in the shop windows of Patisserie de la Rue de la

32、 Paix. By 1814, people crowded outside the bakery, straining for a glimpse of the latest sweet food created by the young chef who worked inside. B)His name was Marie-Antoine Car me, and he had appeared, one day, almost out of nowhere. But in his short lifetime, which ended exactly 184 years ago toda

33、y, he would forever revolutionize French gourmet food (美食), write best-selling cook books and think up magical dishes for royals and other important people. C)Car mes childhood was one part tragedy, equal part mystery. Born the 16th child to poor parents in Paris in either 1783 or 1784, a young Car

34、me was suddenly abandoned at the height of the French Revolution. At 8 years old, he worked as a kitchen boy for a restaurant in Paris in exchange for room and board. By age 15, he had become an apprentice (学徒) to Sylvain Bailly, a well-known dessert chef with a successful bakery in one of Pariss mo

35、st fashionable neighborhoods. D)Car me was quick at learning in the kitchen. Bailly encouraged his young apprentice to learn to read and write. Car me would often spend his free afternoons at the nearby National Library reading books on art and architecture. In the back room of the little bakery, hi

36、s interest in design and his baking talent combined to work wondershe shaped delicious masterpieces out of flour, butter and sugar. - 4 -E)In his teenage years, Car me fashioned eatable copies of the late 18th centurys most famous buildingscookies in the shape of ruins of ancient Athens and pies in

37、the shape of ancient Chinese palaces and temples. Sylvain Bailly, his master, displayed these luxuriant creationsoften as large as 4 feet tallin his bakery windows. F)Car mes creations soon captured the discriminating eye of a French diplomat, Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-P rigord. Around 1804, Tal

38、leyrand challenged Car me to produce a full menu for his personal castle, instructing the young baker to use local, seasonal fruits and vegetables and to avoid repeating main dishes over the course of an entire year. The experiment was a grand success and Talleyrands association with French nobility

39、 would prove a profitable connection for Car me. G) French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte was known to be unimpressed by the declining taste of early 18th century cooking, but under pressure to entertain Pariss high society, he too called Car me to his kitchen at Tuileries Palace. In 1810, Car me design

40、ed the extraordinary cake for the wedding of Napoleon and his second bride, Marie-Louise of Austria. He became one of the first modern chefs to focus on the appearance of his table, not just the flavor of his dishes. “I want order and taste. A well-displayed meal is enhanced one hundred percent in m

41、y eyes,” he later wrote in one of his cook books. H)In 1816, Car me began a culinary (烹饪的) journey which would forever mark his place as historys first top chef. He voyaged to England to cook in the modern Great Kitchen of the prince regent (摄政王), George , and crossed continents to prepare grand ban

42、quets for the tables of Tsar Alexander of Russia. Never afraid to talk up his own accomplishments, a boastful Car me made a fortune as wealthy families with social ambitions invited him to their kitchens. Later, in his cook books, he would often include a sketch of himself, so that people on the str

43、eet would be able to recognizeand admirehim. I)Car mes cooking displays became the symbol of fine French dining; they were plentiful, beautiful and imposing. Guests would fall silent in wonder as servants carried Car mes fancy creations into the dining hall. For a banquet celebrating the Grand Duke

44、Nicholas of Russias visit to George s Brighton Pavillion on Jan. 18, 1817, the menu featured 120 different dishes, highlighting eight different soups, 40 main courses, and 32 desserts. J)As he traveled through the homes of early 19th century nobility, Car me forged the new art of French gourmet food

45、. Locked in hot kitchens, Carme created his four “mother sauces.” These saucesb chamel, velout , espagnole and allemandeformed the central building blocks for many French main courses. He also perfected the souffl a baked egg dish, and introduced the standard chefs uniformthe same double-breasted wh

46、ite coat and tall white hat still worn by many chefs today. The white clothing conveyed an image of cleanliness, according to Car meand in his realm, appearance was everything. K)Between meals, Car me wrote cook books that would be used in European kitchens for the next century. His manuals includin

47、g The Royal Parisian Baker and the massive five-volume Art of French Cooking Series (1833-1847, completed after his death) first systematized many basic principles of cooking, complete with drawings and step-by-step directions. Long before television cooking shows, Car me walked readers through comm

48、on kitchen tasks, instructing them to “try this for yourself, at home” as famous American Chef Julia Child might do, many years later. L)In the end, however, it was the kitchen that did Car me in. Decades of working over coal fires in tight, closed spaces with little fresh air (to ensure his dishes

49、would not get cold) had fatally damaged his lungs. On Jan. 12, 1833, Car me died just before he turned 50. M) But in his lifetime, Car me, ever confident, could see beyond his short domination in the kitchen. He wanted to “set the standard for beauty in classical and modern cooking, and prove to the

50、 distant future that the French chefs of the 19th century were the most famous in the world,” as he wrote in his papers. N)Decades later, chef Auguste Escoffier would build upon Car mes concept of French cuisine (烹饪). But in the very beginning, there was just Car me, the top chef who elevated dining

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