试卷详情
-
大学六级-1522
-
[填空题]Scientists will have to ______ (提出增加世界粮食供应的新方法).
-
[填空题]______ (为了实现成为职业运动员的梦想), Tom kept training for 3 years.
-
[单项选择]Questions 22 to 25 are based on the conversation you have just heard.A) An orchestra conductor. C) A sales manager in a music company.
B) An music fan. D) A background music composer.
-
[单项选择]Passage One
Questions 26 to 28 are based on the passage you have just heard.A) An environment protector. C) An engineer on construction.
B) A visiting scholar. D) A tourist who have visited Alaska.
-
[填空题]The author of the report ______ (对医院的问题非常了解) because he has been working there for many years.
-
[单项选择]Passage Two
Questions 29 to 31 are based on the passage you have just heard.
A. Homeshcooling can provide more time for the families to get together.
B. Homeschooling solves the problem of congestion (拥挤) in one class.
C. Homeschooling has a lot of organizations to provide teaching materials.
D. Parents have their own religious beliefs.
-
[单项选择]Sleep is a funny thing. We’re taught that we should get seven or eight hours a night, but a lot of us get by just fine on less, and some of us actually sleep too much. A study out of the University of Buffalo last month reported that people who routinely sleep more than eight hours a day and are still tired are nearly three times as likely to die of stroke — probably as a result of an underlying disorder that keeps them from snoozing (睡) soundly.
Doctors have their own special sleep problems. Residents (住院医生) are famously sleep deprived. When I was training to become a neurosurgeon, it was not unusual to work 40 hours in a row without rest. Most of us took k in stride, confident we could still deliver the highest quality of medical care. Maybe we shouldn’t have been so sum of ourselves. An article in the Journal of the American Medical Association points out that in the morning after 24 hours of sleeplessness, a person’s motor performance is comparable to that of someone who is
A. People who sleep less than 8 hours a day are more prone to illness.
B. Poor sleep quality may be a sign of physical disorder.
C. Stroke is often associated with sleep.
D. Too much sleep can be as harmful as lack of deep.
-
[多项选择]出国留学的好处;
2. 出国留学的弊端;
3. 结论和你的观点。
The Advantages and Disadvantages of Studying Abroad
-
[单项选择]Questions 11 to 18 are based on the conversation you have just heard.
A. Because she has an appointment with the man.
B. Because she has an appointment with the *sales manager.
C. Because she wants to find a job.
D. Because she wants to make sure if she can find a vacancy.
-
[单项选择]Questions 19 to 21 are based on the conversation you have just heard.
A. Because she wants to practice herself.
B. Because she wants to work with the professor from Harvard.
C. Because she has to support the family.
D. Because she is tired of the classes.
-
[单项选择]Nearly all surgical stunts stick themselves with needles and (62) instruments while in training. But (63) fail to report the injuries, (64) their health and that of their families and patients to the threat of (65) disease, according to a survey by Dr. Makary and colleagues being published today. Their being (66) was the chief reason the surgical residents (67) for the injuries, which were mostly (68) .
The survey revealed that young surgeons didn’t report the potentially fatal injuries for a range of reasons. (69) a time surgeons feel that doing so would take too much time, could (70) career opportunities and might cause a loss of face among (71) . In addition, there was a (72) belief that getting even timely medical attention would not prevent infection.
"It’s been long (73) , but no one truly appreciated the (74) of the problem," said Martin Makary. "Every surgeon is (75) to
-
[填空题]Staying Smart: Advice on Navigating Your Career
Millions of career changes occur each year. Some are natural, but many more occur in adverse circumstances. Other forces at work today further alter the work environment. The Internet tidal wave destroys existing business methods and creates new ones. Many jobs get shaken up in the process. In 1998 the momentum of the Asian economies went from fast-forward to reverse. With their appetite for new products and services, these countries had fueled economic growth all over the world. The change in their fortunes has affected and untold number of careers throughout the world.
Clearly, environmental changes like these beget strategic inflection points for companies. Even more acutely, however, they bring career inflection points to the employees of those companies.
Your Career is Your Business
Every person, whether he is an employee or self-employed, is like an individual business. Your career is your busin
-
[填空题]Negotiating—a complex process even between parties from the same nation — is even more complicated in international transactions bemuse of the added chance of misunderstandings stemming from cultural differences. It is essential to understand the importance of rank in the other country; to know who the decision makers are; to be familiar with the business style of the foreign company; and to understand the nature of agreements in the country, the significance of gestures, and negotiating etiquette. These cultural differences lead to very different style of contract negotiation.
There are enormous cultural differences between Asia and the United States. The classic difference is that in Asia, the good faith human relationship between the parties is central. In the United States, on the whole, there is a greater effort to have precise legal descriptions of everything that might happen, resolving every particular type of dispute that can be predicted in advance. Thus, during negoti
-
[填空题]Tom is a hard-working boy. (他宁愿呆在图书馆学习而不去跳舞) ______ on weekends.
-
[填空题]Four-year-rid children are being tested for their ability to recognize simple words and letters in the (36) . They are also being tested for their skills with numbers. Federal education officials say the test will help the Head Start program (37) . The officials will compare the (38) of the children against national (39) in early arithmetic, reading and writing.
Local non-profit organizations (40) the programs. The government spends more than six-and-a-half thousand-million dollars a year to pay for Head Start.
Federal officials say close to a million children (41) the country take part in the programs.
Wade Horn leads the Head Start program for the government. Mister Horn says the test is (42) to learn which kinds of programs help children the most.
The United States Department of Health and Human Services (43) a report on Head Start in June. (44) . It said the Head Start chil
-
[填空题]You will surely finish the task on schedule ______ (只要你按照我告诉你的方法去做).
-
[单项选择]As long as her parents can remember, 13-year-old Katie Hart has been talking about going to college. Her mother, Tally, a financial-aid officer at an Ohio university, knows all too well the daunting calculus of paying for a college education. Last year the average yearly tuition at a private, four-year school climbed 5.5 percent to more than $17,000. The Harts have started saving, and figure they can afford a public university without a problem. But what if Katie applies to Princeton (she’s threatening), where one year’s tuition, room and board — almost $34,000 in 2002 — will cost more than some luxury cars Even a number cruncher like Tally admits it’s a little scary, especially since she’ll retire and Katie will go to college at around the same time.
Paying for college has always been a humbling endeavor. The good news: last year students collected $74 billion in financial aid, the most ever. Most families pay less than full freight. Sixty percent of public-university students an
-
[单项选择]Passage Three
Questions 32 to 35 are based on the passage you have just heard.
A. It is a kind of costs the students should pay for studies.
B. It is a form of financial aid the students don’t have to pay back.
C. It is the money that the students get from the colleges.
D. It is a kind of loans the students should repay when they have jobs.