英语六级口语真题全套

更新时间:2022-12-19 23:16:00 阅读: 评论:0

英语六级真题试卷完整版

同学们又将要面临6月份的英语六级考试,在备战过程中,要适当找一些历年来的真题来多练习一下,下面是整理的英语六级真题试卷完整版,祝大家成功。

Part I Writing (30 minutes)

Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write a short essay on innovation. Your essay should include the importance of innovation and measures to be taken to encourage innovation. You are required to write at least 150 words but no more than 200 words.

PartⅡ Listening Comprehension (30 minutes)

Section A

Directions:In this ction, you will hear two long conversations. At the end of each conversation, you will hear four questions. Both the conversation and the questions will be spoken only once. After you hear a question, you must choo 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 1 to 4 are bad on the conversation you have just heard.

1.A) It tries to predict the possible trends of global climate change.

B) It studies the impacts of global climate change on people’s lives.

C) It links the science of climate change to economic and policy issues.

D) It focus on the efforts countries can make to deal with global warming.

2.A) It will take a long time before a connsus is reached on its impact.

B) It would be more costly to deal with its conquences than to avoid it.

C) It is the most pressing issue confronting all countries.

D) It is bound to cau endless disputes among nations.

3.A) The transition to low-carbon energy systems.

B) The cooperation among world major powers.

C) The signing of a global agreement.

D) The raising of people’s awareness.

4.A) Carry out more rearch on it.

B) Plan well in advance.

C) Cut down energy consumption.

D) Adopt new technology.

Questions 5 to 8 are bad on the conversation you have just heard.

5.A) When luck plays a role.

B) What determines success.

C) Whether practice makes perfect.

D) How important natural talent is.

6.A) It knocks at your door only once in a while.

B) It is something that no one can possibly create.

C) It comes naturally out of one’s lf-confidence.

D) It means being good at izing opportunities.

7.A) Luck rarely contributes to a person’s success.

B) One must have natural talent to be successful.

C) One should always be ready to ize opportunities.

D) Practice is esntial to becoming good at something.

8.A) Putting time and effort into fun things is profitable.

B) People who love what they do care little about money.

C) Being passionate about work can make one wealthy.

D) People in need of money work hard automatically.

Section B

Directions: In this ction, you will hear two 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 choo 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 9 to 12 are bad on the passage you have just heard.

9.A) The stump of a giant tree.

B) A huge piece of rock.

C) The peak of a mountain.

D) A tall chimney.

10.A) Human activity.

B) Wind and water.

C) Chemical process.

D) Fire and fury.

11.A) It is a historical monument.

B) It was built in ancient times.

C) It is Indians’ sacred place for worship.

D) It was created by supernatural powers.

12.A) By sheltering them in a cave.

B) By killing the attacking bears.

C) By lifting them well above the ground.

D) By taking them to the top of a mountain.

Questions 13 to 15 are bad on the passage you have just heard.

13.A)They will buy something from the convenience stores.

B) They will take advantage of the time to rest a while.

C) They will have their vehicles washed or rviced.

D) They will pick up some souvenirs or gift items.

14.A) They can bring only temporary pleasures.

B) They are meant for the extremely wealthy.

C) They should be done away with altogether.

D) They may eventually drive one to bankruptcy.

15.A) A good way to socialize is to have daily lunch with one’s colleagues.

B) Retirement savings should come first in one’s family budgeting.

C) A vacation will be affordable if one saves 20 dollars a week.

D) Small daily savings can make a big difference in one’s life.

Section C

Directions:In this ction, you will hear three recordings of lectures or talks followed by three or four questions. The recordings will be played only once. After you hear a question, you must choo 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 16 to 18 are bad on the recording you have just heard.

16.A) They should be done away with.

B) They are necessary in our lives.

C) They enrich our experience.

D) They are harmful to health.

17.A) They feel stresd out even without any challenges in life.

B) They feel too overwhelmed to deal with life’s problems.

C) They are anxious to free themlves from life’s troubles.

D) They are exhausted even without doing any heavy work.

18.A) They expand our mind.

B) They prolong our lives.

C) They narrow our focus.

D) They lesn our burdens.

Questions 19 to 22 are bad on the conversation you have just heard.

19.A) It is not easily breakable.

B) It came from a 3D printer.

C) It reprents the latest style.

D) It was made by a fashion designer.

20.A) When she had just graduated from her college.

B) When she attended a conference in New York

C) When she was studying at a fashion design school.

D) When she attended a fashion show nine months ago.

21.A) It was difficult to print.

B) It was hard to come by.

C) It was hard and breakable.

D) It was extremely expensive.

22.A)It is the latest model of a 3D printer.

B)It is a plastic widely ud in 3D printing.

C)It gives fashion designers room for imagination.

D)It marks a breakthrough in printing material.

Questions 23 to 25 are bad on the recording you have just heard.

23.A)They ari from the advances in technology.

B)They have not been examined in detail so far.

C)They are easy to solve with modern technology.

D)They can’t be solved without government support.

24.A)It is attractive to entrepreneurs.

B)It demands huge investment.

C)It focus on new products.

D)It is intenly competitive.

25.A)Cooperation with big companies.

B)Recruiting more qualified staff.

C)In-rvice training of IT personnel.

D)Sharing of costs with each other.

Part III Reading Comprehension (40 minutes)

Section A

Directions:In this ction, there is a passage with ten blanks. You are required to lect out one word for each blank from a lot 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. Plea mark the corresponding letter for each item on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre. You may not u any of the words in the bank more than once.

Small communities, with their distinctive character—where life is stable and intenly human—are disappearing. Some have __26____ from the face of the earth, others are dying slowly, but all have ___27___ changes as they have come into contact with an ___28___ machine civilization. The merging of diver peoples into a common mass has produced tension among members of the minorities and the majority alike.

The Old Order Amish, who arrived on American shores in colonial times, have ___29___ in the modern world in distinctive, small communities. They have resisted the homogenization ___30___ more successfully than others. In planting and harvest times one can e their bearded men working the fields with hors and their women hanging out the laundry in neat rows to dry. Many American people have en Amish families with the men wearing broad-brimmed black hats and the women in long dress. In railway or bus ___31___.Although the Amish have lived with ___32___ America for over two and a half centuries. They have moderated its influence on their personal lives, their families, communities, and their values.

The Amish are often ___33___ by other Americans to be relics of the past who live a simple, inflexible life dedicated to inconvenient out-dated customs. They are en as abandoning both modem ___34___ and the American dream of success and progress, But most people have no quarrel with the Amish for doing things the old-fashioned way. Their conscientious objection was tolerated in wartime. For after all. They are good farmers who ___35___ the virtues of work and thrift.

A)accessing I)progress

B)conveniences J)respective

C)destined K)survived

D)expanding L)terminals

E)industrialized M)undergone

F)perceived N)universal

G)practice O)vanished

H)process

Section B

Directions:In this ction, 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 choo a paragraph more than once. Each paragraph is marked with a letter. Answer the questions by marking the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2.

Countries Rush for Upper Hand in Antarctica

A) On a glacier-filled island with fjords(峡湾)and elephant als, Russia has built Antarctica’s first Orthodox church on a bill overlooking its rearch ba. Less than an hour away by snowmobile. Chine laborers have updated the Great Wall Station, a vital part of China’s plan to operate five bass on Antarctica, complete with an indoor b***ton court and sleeping quarters for 150 people. Not to be outdone, India’s futuristic new Bharathi ba, built on stills(桩子)using 134 interlocking shipping containers, rembles a spaceship. Turkey and Iran have announced plans to build bas, too.

B) More than a century has pasd since explorers raced to plant their flags at the bottom of the world, and for decades to come this continent is suppod to be protected as a scientific prerve, shielded from intrusions like military activities and mining . But an array of countries are rushing to asrt greater influence here, with an eye not just towards the day tho protective treaties expire, but also for the strategic and commercial that already exist.

C) The newer players are stepping into what they view as a treasure hou of resources. Some of the ventures focus on the Antarctic resources that are already up for grabs, like abundant a life. South Korea, which operates state-of–the-art bas here, is increasing its fishing of krill(磷虾),found in abundance in the Southern Ocean, while Russia recently frustrated efforts to create one of the world’s largest ocean sanctuaries here.

D) Some scientists are examining the potential for harvesting icebergs form Antarctica, which is estimated to have the biggest rerves of fresh water on the planet. Nations are also pressing ahead with space rearch and satellite projects to expand their global navigation abilities.

E) Building on a Soviet-era foothold, Russia is expanding its monitoring stations for Glonass, its version of the Global Positioning System(GPS). At least three Russian stations are already operating in Antarctica, part of its effort to challenge the dominance of the American GPS, and new stations are planned for sites like the Russian ba, in the shadow of the Orthodox Church of the Holy Trinity.

F) Elwhere in Antarctica, Russian rearchers boast of their recent discovery of a freshwater rerve the size of Lake Ontario after drilling through miles of solid ice. “You can e that we’re here to stay,” said Vladimir Cheberdak, 57, chief of the Bellingshaun Station, as he sipped tea under a portrait of Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshaun, a high-ranking officer in the Imperial Russian Navy who explored the Antarctic coast in 1820.

G) Antarctica’s mineral, oil and gas wealth are a longer-term prize. The treaty banning mining here, shielding coveted(令人垂诞的)rerves of iron ore, coal and chromium, comes up for review in 2048. Rearchers recently found kimberlite(金伯利岩) deposits hinting at the existence of diamonds. And while asssments vary widely, geologists estimate that Antarctica holds at least 36 billion barrels of oil and natural gas.

H) Beyond the Antarctic treaties, huge obstacles persist to tapping the resources, like drifting icebergs that could jeopardize offshore platforms. Then there is Antarctic’s remoteness, with some mineral deposits found in windswept locations on a continent that is larger the Europe and where winter temperatures hover around minus 55 degrees Celsius.

I) But advances in technology might make Antarctica a lot more accessible three decades from now. And even before then, scholars warn, the demand for resources in an energy-hungry world could rai pressure to renegotiate Antarctica’s treaties, possibly allowing more commercial endeavours here well before the prohibitions against them expire. The rearch stations on King George lsland offer a glimp into the long game on this ice-blanketed continent as nations asrt themlves, eroding the sway long held by countries like the United States, Britain. Australia and New Zealand.

J) Being stationed in Antarctica involves adapting to life on the planet’s driest, windiest and coldest continent, yet each nation manages to make itlf at home. Bearded Russian priests offer regular rvices at the Orthodox church for the 16 or so Russian speakers who spend the winter at the ba, largely polar scientists in fields like glaciology and meteorology. Their number climbs to about 40 in the warmer summer months. China has arguably the fastest growing operations in Antarctica. It opened its fourth station last year and is pressing ahead with plans to build a fifth. It is building its cond ice-breaking ship and tting up rearch drilling operations on an ice dome 13,422 feet above a level that is one the planet’s coldest places. Chine officials say the expansion in Antarctica prioritis scientific rearch. But they also acknowledge that concerns about “resource curity” influence their moves.

K) China’s newly renovated Great Wall Station on King George lsland makes the Russian and Chilean bas here em outdated. ”We do weather monitoring here and other rearch.” Ning Xu, 53, the chief of the Chine ba, said over tea during a fierce blizzard(暴风雪) in late November. The large ba he leads rembles a snowed-in college campus on holiday break, with the capacity to sleep more than 10 times the 13 people who were staying on through the Antarctic winter. Yong Yu, a Chine microbiologist, showed off the spacious building, with empty desks under an illustrated timeline detailing the rapid growth of China’s Antarctic operations since the 1980s “We now feel equipped to grow,” he said.

L) As some countries expand operations in Antarctica, the United States maintains three year-round stations on the continent with more than 1,000 people during the southern hemisphere’s summer, including tho at the Amundn Scott station, built in 1956 at an elevation of 9,301 feet on a plateau at the South Pole. But US rearchers quietly complain about budget restraints and having far fewer icebreakers the Russia, limiting the reach of the United States in Antarctica.

M) Scholars warn that Antarctica’s political drift could blur the distinction between military and civilian activities long before the continent’s treaties come up for renegotiation, especially in parts of Antarctica that are ideal for intercepting(拦截) signals from satellites or retasking satellite systems, potentially enhancing global electronic intelligence operations.

N) Some countries have had a hard time here, Brazil opened a rearch station in 1984, but it was largely destroyed by a fire that killed two members of the navy in 2012, the same year that a diel-laden Brazilian barge sank near the ba. As if that were not enough. a Brazilian C-130 Hercules military transport plane has remained stranded near the runway of Chile’s air ba here since it crash-landed in 2014.

O) However, Brazil’s stretch of misfortune has created opportunities for China, with a Chine company winning the $100 million contract in 2015 to rebuild the Brazilian station.

P) Amid all the changes, Antarctica maintains its allure. South Korea opened its cond Antarctic rearch ba in 2014, describing it as a way to test robots developed by Korean rearchers for u in extreme conditions. With Russia’s help, Belarus is preparing to build this first Antarctic ba. Colombia said this year that it planned to join other South American nations with bas in Antarctica.

Q) “The old days of the Antarctic being dominated by the interests and wishes of white men from European. Australasian and North American states are over.” Said Klaus Dodds, a politics scholar at the University of London who specialis in Antarctica. “The reality is that Antarctica is geopolitically contested.”

36. According to Chine officials, their activities in Antarctica lay greater emphasis on scientific rearch.

37. Efforts to create one of the world’s largest ocean sanctuaries failed becau of Russia’s obstruction.

38. With veral monitoring stations operating in Antarctica, Russia is trying hard to counter America’s dominance in the field of worldwide navigational facilities.

39. According to geologists’ estimates. Antarctica has enormous rerves of oil and natural gas.

40. It is estimated that Antarctica boasts of the richest rerves of fresh water on earth.

41. The demand for energy resources may compel renegotiation of Antarctica’s treaties before their expiration.

42. Many countries are racing against each other to increa their business and strategic influence on Antarctica.

43. Antarctica’s harsh natural conditions constitute huge obstacles to the exploitation of its resources.

44. With competition from many countries, Antarctica is no longer dominated by the traditional white nations.

45. American scientists complain about lack of sufficient money and equipment for their expansion in Antarctica.

Section C

Directions:There are 2 passages in this ction. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A),B),C)and D).You should decide on the best choice and mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre.

Passage one

Questions 46 to 50 are bad on the following passage.

Any veteran nicotine addict will testify that fancy packaging plays no role in the decision to keep smoking. So, it is argued, stripping cartons of their branding will trigger no mass movement to quit.

Naturally, the tobacco industry is violently oppod. No business likes to admit that it lls addictive poison as a lifestyle choice. That is why government has historically intervened, banning advertising, imposing health warnings and punitive (惩罚性的) duties. This approach has led over time to a fall in smoking with numbers having roughly halved since the 1970s. Evidence from Australia suggests plain packaging pushes society further along that road. Since tobacco as one of the biggest caus of premature death in the UK, a measure that tames the habit even by a fraction is worth trying.

So why has it taken so long? The Department of Health declared its intention to consider the move in November 2010 and consulted through 2012. But the plan was suspended in July 2013. It did not escape notice that a lobbying firm t up by Lynton Crosby, David Cameron’s election campaign director, had previously acted for Philip Morris International. (The prime minister denied there was a connection between his news advir’s outside interests and the change in legislative programme.) In November 2013, after an unnecessary round of additional consultation, health minister Jane Ellison said the government was minded to proceed after all. Now we are told Members of Parliament (MPs) will have a free voice before parliament is dissolved in March.

Parliament has in fact already authorid the government to tame the tobacco trade. MPs voted overwhelmingly in favour of Labour amendments to the children and families bill last February that included the power to regulate for plain packaging. With sufficient will in Downing Street this would have been done already. But strength of will is the missing ingredient where Mr. Cameron and public health are concerned. His attitude to state intervention has looked confud ever since his bizarre 2006lament (叹息) that chocolate oranges placed ductively at supermarket check-outs fueled obesity.

The government has moved reluctantly into a nsible public health policy, but with such obvious over-cautiousness that any political credit due belongs to the opposition. Without sustained external pressure it ems certain Mr. Cameron would still be hooked on the interests of big tobacco companies.

46. What do chain smokers think of cigarette packaging?

A) Fancy packaging can help to engage new smokers.

B) It has little to do with the quality or taste of cigarettes.

C) Plain packaging discourages non-smokers from taking up smoking.

D) It has little impact on their decision whether or not to quit smoking.

47. What has the UK government agreed to do concerning tobacco packaging?

A) Pass a law to standardi cigarette packaging.

B) Rid cigarette cartons of all advertiments.

C) Subsidi companies to adopt plain packaging.

D) Reclassify cigarettes according to packaging.

48. What has happened in Australia where plain packaging is implemented?

A) Premature death rates resulting from smoking have declined.

B) The number of smokers has dropped more sharply than in the UK.

C) The sales of tobacco substitutes have incread considerably.

D) Cigarette sales have been falling far more quickly than in the UK.

49. Why it taken so long for the UK government to consider plain packaging?

A) Prime Minister Cameron has been reluctant to take action.

B) There is strong opposition from veteran nicotine addicts.

C) Many Members of Parliament are addicted to smoking.

D) Pressure from tobacco manufacturers remains strong.

50. What did Cameron say about chocolate oranges at supermarket checkouts?

A) They fueled a lot of controversy.

B) They made more British people obe.

C) They attracted a lot of smokers.

D) They had certain ingredients missing.

Passage Two

Questions 51 to 55 are bad on the following passage.

What a waste of money!In return for an averageof44,000 of debt,students get an average of only 14 hours of lecture and tutorial time a week in Britain. Annual fees have rin from1,000 to $9,000 in the last decade. But contact time at university has barely rin at all. And graduating doesn’t even provide any guarantee of a decent job:sixin ten graduates today are in non-graduate jobs.

No wonder it has become fashionable to denounce many universities as little more that elaboratecom-tricks(骗术). There’s a lotfor students to complain about the repayment threshold for paying back loans will be frozen for five years, meaning that lower-paid graduals have to start repaying their loans, and maintenance grants have been replaced by loans meaning that students from poorer backgrounds face higher debt than tho with wealthier parents.

Yet it still pays to go to university. If going to university doesn’t work out, students pay very little—if any—of their tuition fees back, you only start repaying when you are earning 21, 000 a year. Almost half of graduates—tho who go on to earn less—will have a portion of their debt written off. It’s not just the lectures and tutorials that are important. Education is the sum of what students teach each other in between lectures and minars. Students do not merely benefit while at university, studies show they go on to be healthier and happier than non-graduates, and also far more likely to vote.

Whatever your talents, it is extraordinarily difficult to get a leading job in most fields without having been to university. Recruiters circle elite universities like vulturous(兀鹰). Many top firms will not even look at applications from tho who lack a 2.1, i.e., an upper-cond class degree, from an elite university. Students at university also meet tho likely to be in leading jobs in the future, forming contacts for life. This might not be right, but school-leavers who fail to acknowledge as much risk making the wrong decision about going to university.

Perhaps the reason why so many universities offer their students so little is they know studying at a top university remains a brilliant investment even if you don’t learn anything .Studying at university will only become less attractive if employers shift their focus away from where someone went to university—and there is no sign of that happening anytime soon. School-leavers may moan, but they have little choice but to embrace university and the student debt that comes with it.

51. What is the author’s opinion of going to university?

A) It is worthwhile after all.

B) It is simply a waste of time.

C) It is hard to say whether it is good or bad.

D) It is too expensive for most young people.

52. What does the author say about the employment situation of British university graduates?

A) Few of them are satisfied with the jobs they are offered.

B) It usually takes a long time for them to find a decent job.

C) Graduates from elite universities usually can get decent jobs.

D) Most of them take jobs which don’t require a college degree.

53. What does the author say is important for university students besides classroom instruction?

A) Making sure to obtain an upper-cond class degree.

B) Practical skills they will need in their future careers.

C) Interactions among themlves outside the classroom.

D) Developing independent and creative thinking abilities.

54. What is said to be an advantage of going to university?

A) Learning how to take risks in an ever-changing world.

B) Meeting people who will be helpful to you in the future.

C) Having opportunities of playing a leading role in society.

D) Gaining up-to-date knowledge in science and technology.

55. What can we infer from the last paragraph?

A) It is natural for students to make complaints about university education.

B) Few students are willing to bear the burden of debt incurred at university.

C) University education is becoming attractive to students who can afford it.

D) The prestige of the university influences employers’ recruitment decisions.

Part IV Translation (30minutes)

Directions:For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to translate a passage from Chine into English. You should write your answer on Answer Sheet 2.

随着生活水平的提高,度假在中国人生活中的作用越来越重要。过去,中国人的时间主要花在谋生上,很少有机会外出旅行。然而,近年来中国旅游业发展迅速。经济的繁荣和富裕中产阶级的出现,引发了一个前所未有的旅游热潮。中国人不仅在国内旅游,出国旅游也越来越普遍。2016年国庆节假日期间,旅游消费总计超过4000亿元。据世界贸易组织估计,2020年中国将成为世界上最大的旅游国,在未来几年里将成为处境旅游支出增长最快的国家。

英语六级考试

六级考试相对于四级考试来说,还是有一定的难度的。所以说如果大家能在时间上合理安排考试的.做题顺序,那么考试一定能够按时完成,再加上大家努力复习了,成绩定然不会差到哪里去的。

其实考场上英语六级试卷发下来之后,大家可以这么去做。如果大家可以按照下面的试题顺序进行答题,就一定能够做完,希望以下的建议对大家有用哦!

六级考试时间安排

六级考试总时间15:00——17:25

①14:40——15:00试音时间,总20分钟;

②15:00——15:10阅读注意事项,发卷,贴条形码,填考号等,总10分钟;

③15:10——15:40作文考试阶段,总30分钟;

④15:40——16:10听力考试阶段,总30分钟;

⑤16:10——16:15收答题卡1(即作文和听力),总5分钟;

⑥16:15——17:25完成阅读和翻译,总70分钟,全部考试结束。

英语六级试卷做题顺序

①写作文和听力考试。这两个是考试硬性规定的时间无法改变,但这里要注意的是如果作文没写完,要立即停笔进行听力考试,如果继续写作文会打乱你的听力考试,导致写作文的时候很慌,听力不知道听到哪里了,结果全盘皆输。

②阅读分值比例大,所以应多花时间。长篇阅读题量很大,应该保证10分钟;仔细阅读一篇不要超过15分钟,总共两篇,要提高该部分的准确率。这样长篇阅读和仔细阅读就花了40分钟。

③考试大纲建议翻译时间是30分钟,实际上基础差的同学一般用不了这么多时间。关于翻译,能做多少是多少吧!

④关于选词填空,你会发现所选单词很多都不认识,而且分值很低,所以没必要去纠结,会做多少是多少。当然你剩余时间比较多,就可以多花点时间琢磨这道试题。

其实英语六级试卷发下来,大家可以按照先易后难的顺序做题,先做自己擅长的部分,这个每个人的具体情况不同,大家可以根据自己的情况调整。

但是这里想说的是无论如何,大家一定要做好前期的复习准备才是。建议大家先夯实基础,再学习解题技巧。关于复习资料,如果说你基础不好,可以看看巨微英语《四级真题/逐句精解》,书中一句句注解阅读文章中的词汇和语法知识,此外,书中的答案解析还可以学习和总结解题技巧。对于基础较好的人来说,复习就可以多刷刷题,那么华研系列、星火系列以及新东方的书就都很不错的啦!

祝大家考试顺利!

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