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CET-6听力补充练习答案

作者:金陵翻译院 日期:2006-06-09 15:02:23 浏览次数:4182
 
 
CET-6听力补充练习答案
 

1.       C

2.       C

3.       B

4.       B

5.       B

6.       D

7.       B

8.       B

9.       C

10.   C

11.   C

12.   C

13.   B

14.   C

15.   B

16.   D

17.   A

18.   B

19.   C

20.   D

21.   C

22.   A

23.   B

24.   C

25.   D

26.   D

27.   D

28.   B

29.   D

30.   D

31.   B

32.   D

33.   D

34.   A

35.   D

36.   A

37.   D

38.   D

39.   B

40.   B

41.   A

42.   B

43.   C

44.   C

45.   D

46.   C

47.   A

48.   A

49.   A

50.   A

51.   D

52.   C

53.   C

54.   C

55.   D

56.   D

57.   A

58.   B

59.   B

60.   B

61.   B

62.   C

63.   C

64.   A

65.   A

66.   B

67.   D

68.   A

69.   C

70.   A

71.   C

72.   B

73.   C

74.   C

75.   D

76.   B

77.   D

78.   D

79.   B

80.   B

81.   D

82.   A

83.   B

84.   A

85.   A

86.   A

87.   A

88.   C

89.   A

90.   D

91.   A

92.   A

93.   C

94.   A

95.   D

96.   C

97.   C

98.   D

99.   C

100.            B

101.            D

102.            A

103.            D

104.            C

105.            B

106.            D

107.            C

108.            C

109.            D

110.            D

111.            B

112.            D

113.            D

114.            A

115.            B

116.            C

117.            C

118.            B

119.            B

120.            D

121.            A

122.            B

123.            C

124.            B

125.            D

126.            C

127.            D

128.            B

129.            C

130.            A

131.            B

132.            B

133.            A

134.            C

135.            A

136.            C

137.            B

138.            C

139.            D

140.            C

141.            B

142.            C

143.            C

144.            A

145.            B

146.            A

147.            C

148.            B

149.            D

150.            D

151.            D

152.            D

153.            C

154.            C

155.            A

156.            C

157.            D

158.            C

159.            C

160.            C

161.            A

162.            B

163.            C

164.            D

165.            B

166.            B

167.            B

168.            D

169.            D

170.            D

171.            A

172.            C

173.            C

174.            C

175.            D

176.            C

177.            A

178.            B

179.            A

180.            C

181.            C

182.            D

183.            D

184.            B

185.            C

186.            A

187.            B

188.            D

189.            C

190.            A

191.            B

192.            D

193.            A

194.            D

195.            C

196.            B

197.            A

198.            D

199.            A

200.            A

201.            C

202.            C

203.            D

204.            A

205.            C

206.            D

207.            B

208.            B

209.            B

210.            D

211.            A

212.            D

213.            D

214.            C

215.            D

216.            A

217.            C

218.            A

219.            C

220.            B

221.            A

222.            C

223.            B

224.            D

225.            D

226.            B

227.            C

228.            D

229.            C

230.            C

231.            B

232.            A

233.            C

234.            C

235.            A

236.            B

237.            D

238.            D

239.            C

240.            A

241.            A

242.            B

243.            D

244.            D

245.            B

246.            C

247.            B

248.            D

249.            D

250.            D

 

Passages

1.       C

2.       C

3.       B

4.       D

5.       C

6.       D

7.       A

8.       B

9.       C

10.   A

11.   D

12.   C

13.   C

14.   B

15.   D

16.   D

17.   A

18.   B

19.   C

20.   A

21.   C

22.   A

23.   C

24.   A

25.   D

26.   C

27.   D

28.   A

29.   D

30.   C

31.   C

32.   D

33.   C

34.   C

35.   D

36.   B

37.   D

38.   C

39.   B

40.   B

41.   D

42.   B

43.   C

44.   D

45.   B

46.   C

47.   A

48.   B

49.   B

50.   C

51.   D

52.   B

53.   C

54.   A

55.   B

56.   C

57.   D

58.   D

59.   B

60.   A

61.   D

62.   D

63.   C

64.   C

65.   C

66.   A

67.   D

68.   B

69.   D

70.   A

71.   C

72.   B

73.   A

74.   C

75.   B

76.   D

77.   A

78.   A

79.   B

80.   C

81.   A

82.   B

83.   D

84.   D

85.   A

86.   D

87.   B

88.   C

89.   B

90.   A

91.   C

92.   B

93.   C

94.   A

95.   C

96.   D

97.   B

98.   C

99.   D

100.            A


Passage 1

(S1) accomplished   (S2) headquarters  (S3) interviewing  (S4) scenes

(S5) participants  (S6) access  (S7) verified

(S8) Reporters and editors also scrutinized hundreds of pages of records, including transcripts of radio calls with the four hijacked jets and a log kept by the Federal Aviation Administration.

(S9) USA TODAY compiled and analyzed data from several sources.

(S10) commercial jets, private planes, cargo jets and military aircraft.

 

 

Passage 2

(S1) usually        (S2) eighties  (S3) album  (S4) recording

(S5) extremely  (S6) describe  (S7) acting

(S8) As a young man, Muhammad Ali won a gold medal in the Olympics as a boxer.

(S9) Before long, he was known as one of the most famous boxers in sports history.

(S10) But like the stars in the sky, a superstar fades from the sight as time passes, many young people, for example, know little about Muhammad Ali these days.

 

 

Passage 3

(S1) achievements  (S2) prevention   (S3) hospitals   (S4) facilities

(S5) excellence  (S6) available  (S7) employee 

(S8) They pay some money each month to insurance companies, which then pay for medical expenses when they are needed.

(S9) Then when they need medical treatment, they go to then hospital without paying more money.

(S10) These programs make medical care available to those without their own health insurance.

 

 

Passage 4

(S1) academic  (S2) book-stock  (S3) postgraduate  (S4) functions

(S5) advanced  (S6) particularly  (S7) unique

(S8) They are supplemented by the ready availability of microform copies of similar materials, the originals of which are held in other libraries or record offices.

(S9) In addition to providing access to its own collections of printed and other information formats, the University Library offers extensive support services.

(S10) The Main Library houses the principal collections and services for the humanities, social sciences, sciences and engineering.

 

 

Passage 5

(S1) traveling   (S2) fasten (S3) up  (S4) mistaken

(S5) beauty  (S6) official  (S7) suitcases

(S8) They asked me to show them my passport, my ticket, and my baggage check. Then I was requested to open the suitcase and to spread out its contents on the table.

(S9) The moment I placed a battery-powered alarm clock I bought for my father on the table, the two officials looked at each other and smiled.

(S10) hearing the clock ticking away merrily, I suddenly understood. Someone must have heard the ticking noise coming from my suitcase and thought there was a time bomb hidden in it.

 

 

Passage 6

(S1) expected  (S2) prominent  (S3) volume  (S4) subjected

(S5) scrutiny  (S6) render  (S7) faults

(S8) in a period like the present when we are more than usually critical of everything in American life we are prone to condemn all banks, all businesses and industries, all schools and colleges, all motion pictures, all newspapers.

(S9) All these criticisms of the press do not apply equally to all newspapers.

(S10) Undoubtedly critics of American journalism would be willing o admit that there are notable exceptions among newspapers to which most , if not all, of their criticisms are inapplicable.

 

 

Passage 7

(S1) location  (S2) run  (S3) operation  (S4) concept

(S5) tips  (S6) remarkable  (S7) sticking

(S8) The self-service restaurant was so popular that the brothers had allowed ten copies of their restaurant to be opened.

(S9) Kroc was a salesman who met the McDonald brothers in 1954, when he was selling mild shake-mixing machines. He quickly saw the unique appeal of the brother’s fast-food restaurants and bought the right to duplicate other copies of their restaurants.

(S10) Its names for its sandwiches have come to mean hamburger in the decades since the Ray Kroc watched people rush up to order fifteen-cent hamburgers.

 

 

Passage 8

(S1) involvement  (S2) individual  (S3) fatal  (S4) variable 

(S5) duration  (S6) likely  (S7) productive 

(S8) However, he is always saddened by the death of a child, or young adult, for any reason.

(S9) The doctor cannot help feeling disturbed if he has to ask himself whether the patient’s death was related to his treatment or lack of it.

(S10) On the other hand, when death follows an operation, the surgeon usually gives at least a passing thought to the possibility that his patient might have been kept alive if he had not been treated with such an operation.

 

 

Passage 9

(S1) minority  (S2) Recent  (S3) continued (S4) concentration

(S5) withdrawal  (S6) overdose (S7) span 

(S8) Once addicted, they may become even more involved with crime because it costs so much to support the heroin habit.

(S9) Turning to crime is usually the only way to get that much money. The addict’s crimes are nearly always thefts or other crimes against property.

(S10) The Act provides that illegal possession of narcotics is punishable by fines and/or imprisonment. Sentences can range from 2 to 10 years for the first offense, 5 to 20 years for the second, and 10 to 20 years for further offenses.

 

 

Passage 10

(S1) version  (S2) generate  (S3) promotional (S4) respectively

(S5) publication  (S6) revenues  (S7) audience 

(S8) Compared with the above reasons, to reduce printing and distribution costs was much less important to online publishers.

(S9) The availability of a large number of readers world wide was the most important reason given by the respondents for choosing the Web over other electronic publishing platforms.

(S10) More national papers than local dailies chose the Web because of the availability of world wide readers. On the other hand, more local dailies than national papers considered the superior graphical presentation as the first reason for choosing the Web.

 

 

 

 

 



 
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