18—B—1
Part 1 Listening Comprehension 50%
Section A
1. A)Traveler and stranger. B)Conductor and pasnger.
C)Guide and visitor. D)Vendor and newcomer.
2. A)Give Marsha a check for the bookshelf she sold him.
B)Ask Marsha where she wants to put the bookshelf.
C)Check for the book on Marsha’s shelf.
D)Ask Marsha if she has an extra bookshelf.
3. A)Fifteen minutes. B)Twenty minutes.
C)Thirty minutes. D)Twenty to Thirty minutes.
4. A)7:30. B)Eight o’clock. C)Seven o’clock. D)6:30.
5. A)Her daughter plays tennis better than she does.
B)Her daughter is not so enthusiastic about her studies.
C)She wishes her daughter could learn tennis better.
D)Her daughter could do better on the tennis court.
6. A)Peter’s cretary works harder than the man’s.
B)The woman’s cretary works harder than the man’s.
C)Peter’s cretary works harder than the woman’s.
D)Peter’s cretary doesn’t work so hard as the man’s.
7. A)The man should shut the window tightly.
B)The man should put some screws in the wood.
C)The man should stick to his work.
D)The man should u a tool to open the window.
8. A)By plane. B)By car. C)By bus. D)By train.
Question 9 to 11 are bad on the conversation you just heard
9. A)At a party. B)In the restaurant. C)In someone’s home. D)At a meeting.
10. A)She wants to invite her friends to dinner.
B)She forgets to take her wallet.
C)She cannot find her friends.
D)She didn’t make a rervation in advance.
11. A)Five. B)Thirteen. C)Three. D)Thirty.
Question 12 to 15 are bad on the conversation you just heard
12. A)Study. B)Job. C)Company. D)Business.
13. A)Seven days. B)Four days. C)Five days. D)Six days.
14. A)Forty days. B)Fifteen days. C)Eighteen days. D)Fourteen days.
15.A)Go to night school.
B)Go to training class on weekend.
C)Take four hours’ college cours a week.
D)Have a tutor.
Section B
Passage One
16. A)He can u less than 3 percent of it.
B)He can u about 97 percent of it.
C)He can u exactly 3 percent of it.
D)He can u nearly 97 percent of it.
17. A)We can invent ways of increasing rainfall.
B)We can reduce the number of people.
C)We can cut down our need of water.
D)We can develop ways of re-using water and making u of a water.
18. A)Water can only be ud once.
B)Ud water can be made usable again.
C)Recycled water is not fit for drinking.
D)Only rain water is drinkable.
Passage Two
19. A)Taking a taxi. B)Riding a tour bus. C)On foot. D)Riding a bicycle.
20. A)A bike is usually faster than a taxi.
B)They have brought down their incomes.
C)There are more traffic accidents.
D)They are often stopped by bikes when running.
21. A)Some bikes are expensive. B)Taxi drivers treat them rudely.
C)Riding bike is sometimes dangerous. D)Riders must wear helmets.
Passage Three
22. A)Tar. B)Smoke. C)Tabaco. D)Nicotine.
23. A)Into the air. B)Into the tar.
C)Right into the blood stream.
D)None of the above.
24. A)Happy. B)Relaxed. C)Nervous. D)Comfortable.
25.A)Tar. B)Cigarette ashes. C)Nicotine. D)Not mention.
PartⅡ Reading Comprehension
The golden rule your parents and your kindergarten teacher taught you was pretty simple: “Do unto others as you’d have others do unto you.” Imagine how you’d feel if you were in the other person’s shoes. Stand up for yourlf, but try not to hunt people’s feelings.
In cyberspace, we state this in an even more basic manner: Remember the human. When you communicate electronically, all you e is a computer screen. You don’t have the opportunity to u facial expressions, gestures, and tone of voice to communicate your meaning: words—lonely written words -- are all you’ve got. And that goes for your correspondent as well.
When you’re holding a conversation online—whether it’s an email exchange or a respon to a discussion group posting—it’s easy to misinterpret your correspondent’s meaning. And it’s frighteningly easy to forget that your correspondent is a person with feelings more or less like your own.