英语大试卷第一册第十单元答案
Unit 10
核销
Part 1 Word Dictation
1-5:demonstrate,integrity,boundary,scarce,consist
6-10:ensure,assure,protest,intelligent,clarify
11-15:appoint,tempt,rely,inevitably,prerve
16-20:fashionable,convenience,component,enrich,tough
油泵工作原理
21-25:contemporary,ultimate,cheat,appropriate,download
26-30:reconcile,moral,expen,press,property
31-35:issue,incline,notion,honesty,structure
36-40:transform,curb,strategy,proof,mester
Part 2 Dictation
1-5:demonstrated,applies,ensure,assure,clarify
6-10:appropriate,protested,engaged,dilemma,access
11-15:issues,transform,perceive,strategy,cynical
16-20:yield to,figure out,inclined to,given credit,bottom line
Part 3 Understanding Long Conversations
Recording 1 1-5: C C B D A
Transcript:
Mr. McCracken: Hello. Hello? Is anyone there?
Dr. Wallace: What? What is it? Who's there at this time of night?
Mr. McCracken: It's 4:30 in the afternoon, Dr. Wallace. I'm Friedrich McCracken, town official. I've come to help you becau I've heard that you were sick.
Dr. Wallace: Oh, I'm sorry. I'll open the door right away. Welcome in, Mr. McCracken. I'm afraid that I don't have any tea to offer you.
Mr. McCracken: That's quite all right. I won't be long.
Dr. Wallace: What can I do for you?
Mr. McCracken: I've brought some medicine for you to take.
Dr. Wallace: Oh, thank you. I would have gone to the store mylf, wait, where did you get that medicine?
Mr. McCracken: At your medicine shop. What's the problem?
queroDr. Wallace: I can't take that. Plea, go to another shop and bring me back some more medicine.
Mr. McCracken: You won't take medicine from your own shop? Is this a joke?
Dr. Wallace: No. You e, I'm not even a real doctor.
gumQuestions
1. When did Mr. McCracken go to Dr. Wallace's home?
2. Why did Mr. McCracken visit Dr. Wallace?
3. What was Mr. McCracken's job?
4. Why didn't Dr. Wallace offer Mr. McCracken a cup of tea?
5. Why didn't Dr. Wallace take the medicine that came from his shop?
Part 4 Understanding Passages
太空舞步教程Recording 1 1-5: A C A D B
Transcript:
jpmorganAn old, blind woman invited a doctor to her home and said that if he cured her eyes, he would receive money from her。 but if not, she would give him nothing. Having made this agreement, the doctor brought medicine and treated the woman's eyes time after time, and on every visit he took something away. When he had stolen all her property, he cured her blindness and asked for the promid money. The woman, however, refud to pay since all the goods in her hou were gone. She argued, "I did promi to give you a sum of money if I should recover my sight. But, I think that I must still be blind. Before you came to my hou, I had many things. But now, though you say I am cured of my blindness, I am not able to e a single thing in my home."
Questions
1. What was the agreement between the blind woman and the doctor?
2. What did the doctor do each time he visited the blind woman?
3. When did the doctor cure the old woman?
4. What did the old woman find when she was cured?
5. Why did the old woman refu to pay the doctor?getudto
Recording 2 1-5: D C B A D
Transcript:
A famous psychologist got 77 people to volunteer for an unusual project. All were asked to keep diaries for a week and record the number of the lies they told. The result was that only one person claimed he had told no lies. The others told 873 altogether. The lies were not big lies. People would pretend to support a spou or friend more than he or she really believed or to pretend to agree with a relative's opinion. According to the study, women lied mostly so they wouldn't hurt others' feelings and men lied to feel good about themlves. Most surprisingly, people said their lies were no big deal and caud them "little regret". This attitude ems very common in society.
Questions
原则英语1. Who was in charge of the project?
2. Why were the people asked to keep diaries for a week?
3. What was the result of the experiment?headlock
4. What's the difference between male and female liars?
5. What's surprising about the result of this study?
Recording 3 1-5: A B D B C
Transcript:
A fox was running from a hunter. He thought that he wouldn't get away, but then he saw a woodsman who he thought might help him. He ran to the woodsman and begged the man for a safe hiding place. The woodsman showed him the hole of a big tree, into which the fox quickly disappeared. Soon the hunter came up and asked the woodsman if he had en the fox. The woodsman said he had not en any fox. But as he said this, he p
ointed with one hand to the tree where the fox lay hidden. The hunter, however, did not e the gesture. He hurried away with the hope that he could still find the fox. Then, the fox came out and began to leave without taking any notice of the woodsman. "I saved your life and yet you are leaving without a word of thanks," the woodsman protested. The fox gave him a cold look, "Indeed, I should have thanked you greatly if your deeds had been as good as your words."