1994年6月大学英语四级(CET-4)真题试卷
阿门英文Part I Listening Comprehension (20 minutes)
Section A
1. A) His wife doesn’t want him to.
B) He will be out of town.
C) He has some work to do.
D) He doesn’t want to.(A)
2. A) Do shopping.
B) Make a phone call.
C) Take a bus.
D) Give them to the woman.(B)
3. A) Maria’s friends don’t call her very often.
B) Maria likes to talk on the phone with her friends.
C) Maria doesn’t like to talk on the phone with her friends.
D) Maria doesn’t have any friends.(D)
4. A) In October.
B) Between April and October.
C) In April.
D) She isn’t certain.(B)
5. A) Once it starts raining, it’ll rain a lot.
hear me cryB) It has been raining for some time.
呈现英文C) They’re ready to catch the train.香蕈
D) The train has just started off.(C)
6. A) He offered her a pencil.
B) He was afraid of losing his pen.公众演说
C) He lent her his extra pen.
D) He said he didn’t have any ink.(C)
7. A) Bob will be on time.
B) She hopes Bob won’t come.
叫鸡C) Bob can’t come.
D) Bob will be late.(A)
汽车装潢培训
8. A) To the beach.
B) To a restaurant.
C) To a theatre.
D) To the zoo.(C)
9. A) Ask the woman to find Mr. White for him.
B) Hold the phone.
C) Pay the manager a visit.
D) Make another call.(D)
10. A) She is going to give up biology.
B) She spends half of her time on biology and half on math.
C) To her match is even more difficult than biology.
D) To her biology is difficult, but math is not.(B)
Section B
Passage One
Questions 11 to 13 are bad on the passage you have just heard.
11. A) He had to get a job.
B) He was afraid of failure.
C) He wanted to join the Army.
D) He wasn’t interested in studying.(A)
12. A) She was shocked.
B) She was disappointed.
C) She expresd doubts.
D) She encouraged him.(B)
13. A) He was lucky.
B) He had a good wife.
C) He was determined.
D) He had a good teacher.(A)
Passage Two
Questions 14 to 16 are bad on the passage you have just heard.
14. A) She was driving along a country road.
B) She was lying in a hospital bed.
C) She was lying near a lonely road trembling.
D) She was telling an astonishing story to a doctor.(D)
15. A) She was attacked by robbers.
B) She was stopped by a policeman.
throw
C) She fainted due to the effects of some drug.
D) She was forced to enter a flying saucer.(B)
16. A) The woman had been taken a long distance away from her home.
B) The woman had intended to leave her husband without telling him.
C) The woman had been dishonest to her husband.
D) The woman made up an astonishing story.(D)
Passage Three
Questions 17 to 20 are bad on the passage you have just heard.
parrot17. A) In the 15th century.
B) In the 16th century.
C) In the 5th century.
D) In the 6th century.(C)
18. A) Becau it was at the aside.
投诉信英文B) Becau it was the only modern building there.
C) Becau of the beautiful garden in front of it.
D) Becau of its old style of architecture.(C)
19. A) To keep the tourists away.
B) To welcome the tourists.
C) To make money.
D) To warn the tourists not to ruin his garden.(A)
20. A) In order to earn more money.
B) In order to have more peace.
C) In order to welcome more visitors.
D) In order to have a bigger garden.(D)
Part II Reading Comprehension (35 minutes)
Passage One
Questions 21 to 25 are bad on the following passage.
The failed Skylab will come screaming home to earth in disappointment sometime next month. But it will fall we know not where.
That preci information is beyond even the calculations of scientists and their computers.
The best they can tell us is that the space station, weighing 77 tons and as high as a 12 story building, will break into hundreds of pieces that will be scattered across a track 100 miles wide and 4,000 miles long.
We are again expod to one of tho unexpected adventures, or misadventures, of science that attracts our attention from the boring routines of daily existence and encourages us to think a lot about man’s future.
What worries Richard Smith, the Skylab’s director, is the “big pieces” that will come through the atmosphere, Two lumps, weighing 2 tons each, and ten, weighing at least 1,000 pounds each, will come in at speeds of hundreds of miles an hour and if they crash on land they will dig holes up to 100 feet deep.
What worries us, with our lack of scientific knowledge and our quick imagination, is both the big and little pieces, although project officials say there is a very small chance that anyone will be injured by them.