时间:2018-12-01 作者:英语课 分类:大学英语6级考试听力直通249分


英语课

  [00:12.05]MODEL TEST 3

  [00:14.51]Section A

  [00:16.24]Directions:

  [00:17.66]In this section,

  [00:19.54]you will hear 8 short conversations

  [00:22.45]and 2 long conversations.

  [00:25.47]At the end of each conversation,

  [00:27.61]one or more questions will be asked

  [00:30.01]about what was said. Both the conversation

  [00:32.46]and the questions will be spoken only once.

  [00:38.00]After each question there will be a pause.

  [00:41.79]During the pause, you must read the four choices

  [00:45.29]marked A), B), C), and D),

  [00:49.70]and decide which is the best answer.

  [00:52.88]Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer sheet 2

  [00:57.85]with a single line through the centre.

  [01:00.56]now let's begin with the 8 short conversations

  [01:07.25]11. M: It's been hot and humid for three weeks straight.

  [01:12.93]I wish it'd light up.

  [01:15.44]W: I love summer weather, but there is a limit

  [01:19.85]Q: What does the woman mean?

  [01:36.63]12.M: I'm trying to find someone

  [01:40.58]to come with me to the new sculpture exhibit

  [01:42.95]in the art museum on Saturday.

  [01:45.69]W: I'm not too crazy about art myself,

  [01:48.68]but what about Mary?

  [01:50.43]She's taking an art history course

  [01:52.26]and seems to be enjoying it.

  [01:54.71]Q: What does the woman suggest the man do?

  [02:15.11]13. M: Now suppose I was to stay at home

  [02:19.87]and do all the housework and look after the children

  [02:23.46]while my wife went out to work.

  [02:26.68]What would you think about that?

  [02:29.28]W: If I'm going to be logical, no.

  [02:33.18]Q: What does the woman mean?

  [02:51.37]14. W: These tomatoes are huge and fat.

  [02:56.37]You must have watered and fertilized them a lot.

  [02:59.61]M: Yes, I did. They ought to be ripe enough

  [03:03.11]to pick by the next Friday when we have our party.

  [03:06.86]Q: Where did this conversation most probably take place?

  [03:27.51]15. M: I'm really enjoying that literature with Professor Benson.

  [03:33.81]Was the lecture this morning interesting?

  [03:37.13]W: To tell you the truth,

  [03:38.80]I was so exhausted from staying up last night

  [03:41.78]to finish the reading that I didn't get much out of it.

  [03:45.71]Q: What does the woman mean?

  [04:03.59]16. M: I'm sorry, Miss.

  [04:07.61]You'll have to come with us.

  [04:09.63]Hidden cameras have detected what you have done.

  [04:13.40]Leave the merchandise here.

  [04:15.85]W: I'll come along,

  [04:17.21]but I assure you that I can prove my innocence.

  [04:21.09]Q: Where does this conversation most likely take place?

  [04:41.33]17.W: I don't know why,

  [04:44.78]but since I saw Williams on TV,

  [04:47.60]I don't feel so bad about myself now.

  [04:50.01]M: Well, they say laughter is the best medicine.

  [04:54.29]Q: What can be inferred about the show

  [04:56.73]the woman just watched?

  [05:15.99]18.M: Did you see that new art work?

  [05:20.81]You know that poster they just put up in the cafeteria;

  [05:23.43]I wonder whose bright idea that was.

  [05:26.48]W: You know there's nothing wrong with the poster itself,

  [05:30.05]it just doesn't go with the colors in the cafeteria.

  [05:33.83]Q: What do we learn about the poster

  [05:36.36]from the conversation?

  [05:52.15]Now you will hear the two long conversations

  [05:56.85]Conversation One

  [05:59.60]M: Excuse me. Are you going to buy a concert tickets?

  [06:03.54]W: Yes, I am. So are all these people in front of me.

  [06:07.78]M: Have you been here long?

  [06:09.71]W: About 45 minutes. I've moved forward

  [06:12.88]a total of about 3 feet in that time

  [06:15.99]M: You are kidding.

  [06:17.40]W: Not at all.

  [06:18.79]There was a couple up ahead of me

  [06:20.38]who got so disgusted and they finally gave up and left.

  [06:24.00]They said they'd been waiting for more than an hour

  [06:27.29]M: Terrific. Does anyone know what's causing the delay?

  [06:31.85]W: If so, no one has let us know.

  [06:34.91]It could be that there aren't enough people

  [06:37.06]sellin tickets this afternoon.

  [06:39.25]Or maybe their computer is down.

  [06:41.68]I'm sure the concert hasn't been cancelled.

  [06:45.11]M: I just hope they don't run out of tickets

  [06:47.55]before I get up there.

  [06:50.11]W: That really would be annoying, wouldn't it?

  [06:53.05]M: I guess I should have come before lunch.

  [06:56.18]Or has it been like this all day?

  [06:59.33]W: Apparently it has.

  [07:01.47]In fact, before I came

  [07:03.43]I tried calling to charge my tickets over the phone,

  [07:06.88]just to avoid this long wait.

  [07:09.06]But they are not taking phone orders,

  [07:11.31]or checks, or credit cards.

  [07:14.29]It's cash or nothing,

  [07:15.75]and you have to come in person.

  [07:18.15]M: Well, there are two more hours

  [07:20.39]before the tickets office closes.

  [07:23.37]Tickets for a good concert are worth waiting for.

  [07:26.98]So I think I'll just make myself comfortable.

  [07:30.66]Questions 19 to 21 are based on the conversation

  [07:34.55]you have just heard.

  [07:37.21]19. What do we learn about the woman's opinion

  [07:41.57]about what's happening?

  [07:59.37]20. How are people expected to purchase their tickets?

  [08:19.73]21. What will the man probably do next?

  [08:39.14]Conversation Two

  [08:41.87]M: You like living in the city, don't you?

  [08:44.72]W: Oh, I love it. It's so convenient.

  [08:47.92]I can take the bus to work,

  [08:49.67]or the subway, or the taxi.

  [08:52.07]And there is so much to do.

  [08:53.93]M: I know what you mean.

  [08:55.62]I'd like to live in the city, too,

  [08:58.21]but to live in the suburbs is better for children.

  [09:01.83]W: Well, there are a lot of good things about suburban living.

  [09:05.17]But, as a working woman,

  [09:07.40]I think a city has all the conveniences -

  [09:10.52]including the best food and fastest news.

  [09:13.94]M: But there are more trees,

  [09:16.26]grass and fresh air in the suburbs.

  [09:19.23]W: Yeah,

  [09:20.12]but living in a city, it's convenient to go everywhere.

  [09:24.23]There are lots of movie houses, theaters and so on.

  [09:28.18]You can take them to the suburbs on the weekends.

  [09:30.97]M: Yeah, children are the right age.

  [09:33.80]There are lots of things for them here.

  [09:35.96]W: You are right.

  [09:37.39]They are at the library in Brooklyn.

  [09:39.46]And they come back home for lunch,

  [09:41.12]then go uptown to the Museum of Natural History.

  [09:44.18]There is so much for young people to see and do.

  [09:47.23]M: Not just for young people.

  [09:49.44]What about me?

  [09:50.82]I've never been to the Museum of Natural History.

  [09:53.72]W: Neither have I.

  [09:55.53]When I was a child,

  [09:56.78]I used to go to the Museum of Art.

  [09:59.01]M: I've been there several times.

  [10:02.25]Twice with children.

  [10:04.31]W: Well, I have an idea.

  [10:06.11]Next weekend, we go to the Museum of Natural History.

  [10:09.65]M: Ok, that's really a very nice idea.

  [10:13.83]Questions 22 to 25 are based on the conversation

  [10:17.71]you have just heard.

  [10:20.13]22. What are the two speakers mainly talking about?

  [10:40.46]23. What does the man think of living in the suburbs?

  [11:01.14]24. What is the man's opinion of the city?

  [11:20.70]25. What do we know about the woman

  [11:24.75]according to the conversation?

  [11:41.13]Section B

  [11:42.86]Directions:

  [11:44.88]In this section,

  [11:46.16]you will hear 3 short passages.

  [11:49.31]At the end of each passage,

  [11:51.41]you will hear some questions.

  [11:54.01]Both the passage and the questions will be spoken only once.

  [11:59.51]After you hear a question,

  [12:01.43]you must choose the best answer from the four choices

  [12:05.36]marked A), B), C) and D).

  [12:09.69]Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2

  [12:14.56]with a single line through the centre.

  [12:18.65]Passage One

  [12:20.40]Stress is a very normal part of life.

  [12:23.50]Most people feel stress at some time in their lives.

  [12:27.99]It doesn’t come from an event itself,

  [12:31.44]that is, from the things that are happening in our lives.

  [12:35.33]It comes form the meaning we give to what has happened.

  [12:40.34]We can experience stress any time

  [12:42.88]we don’t feel we have control.

  [12:45.30]It is the body’s way of showing anxiety or worry.

  [12:50.16]Stress is not just caused by our mental or emotional condition,

  [12:55.62]it is also influenced by how tired we are,

  [12:59.45]whether we get enough physical exercise,

  [13:02.33]and whether we can relax.

  [13:04.70]If we feel stressed,

  [13:06.61]there are several things that we can do.

  [13:09.60]First, we need to learn how to relax

  [13:12.86]and breathe slowly and smoothly.

  [13:16.26]We can also take some time out of our worried,

  [13:19.24]busy schedule to notice the small things in life.

  [13:23.46]Smell the air, look at the flowers,

  [13:26.59]notice the small designs in the leaves on a tree-

  [13:30.77]these activities can do much to quiet us

  [13:33.96]and to give ourselves a small break in a busy schedule.

  [13:40.01]We need to take care of our bodies.

  [13:43.03]Being tired makes it easier for us to get sick

  [13:47.08]and to develop physical problems related to stress.

  [13:51.21]We need to get enough rest, eat well,

  [13:54.25]and do some regular exercise.

  [13:57.21]Finally, we need to find out

  [13:59.18]what is causing the stress in our lives.

  [14:02.69]Once we have found it,

  [14:04.69]we need to begin to change that part of our lives.

  [14:08.63]If we believe that we can control stress,

  [14:12.15]we can begin to control our lives.

  [14:16.12]Questions 26 to 28 are based on the passage

  [14:20.08]you have just heard.

  [14:22.57]26. Which of the following causes stress

  [14:25.99]according to the speaker?

  [14:43.39]27. When can we experience stress?

  [15:03.25]28. What can help us get rid of stress?

  [15:22.62]Passage Two

  [15:24.67]Our topic today is about fleas

  [15:27.31]that plague all of us who have cats and dogs in our homes.

  [15:31.55]You may be surprised to find out

  [15:33.58]that there are about 1 500 species of fleas,

  [15:38.77]and that each species has its own preferred host.

  [15:42.66]Fleas are, in fact, quite adept at finding their hosts.

  [15:47.68]In an experiment, 270 fleas from rabbits were marked

  [15:52.61]and then let loose in a large meadow.

  [15:55.54]After a few days,

  [15:57.10]a full half of the fleas had found rabbits to live on.

  [16:01.60]Fleas also have a very interesting flexible diet.

  [16:05.71]They can go for many months without eating if they have to,

  [16:09.49]and they will change hosts in order to get more food,

  [16:12.80]even if they don't like the taste of their new host

  [16:15.47]as much as the old! Their jumping ability is incredible ,too.

  [16:20.40]You may know this from your own experience.

  [16:23.20]Some fleas can jump as high as 13 inches,

  [16:27.18]which is quite a lot for such a small creature.

  [16:30.97]This jumping ability comes from their relatively large muscular legs

  [16:36.05]that are equipped with resilin,

  [16:38.46]a kind of natural rubber.

  [16:40.65]The elastic properties of this resilin

  [16:44.01]have not yet been equaled in any artificial substance.

  [16:47.56]Though the fleas on your cat or dog are not dangerous to you,

  [16:51.68]some fleas carry diseases.

  [16:54.43]It is the rat flea that is responsible for carrying some fatal plagues.

  [16:59.50]These fleas have been in part responsible

  [17:02.30]for the Great Plague of Europe in 500 A D

  [17:06.15]that spread from Ethiopia, Byzantium to Europe.

  [17:10.68]They are also part of the cause

  [17:13.33]of Black Death in China and Europe.

  [17:16.36]Questions 29 to 32 are based on the passage

  [17:20.15]you have just heard.

  [17:24.48]29.According to the passage,

  [17:26.40]in what way are fleas flexible in their diets?

  [17:46.89]30.According to the talk, what is resilin?

  [18:06.19]31.According to the speaker,

  [18:09.72]which flea has been responsible for deaths?

  [18:29.24]32. According to the speaker,

  [18:31.36]where did the Great Plague spread in the sixth century?

  [18:49.81]Passage Three

  [18:51.81]Through the years of being an advisor at the university,

  [18:55.70]I've often been requested to give suggestions about

  [18:59.16]how to handle "information anxiety".

  [19:02.81]Now let me give you some advice.

  [19:05.82]First of all, what is "information anxiety"?

  [19:10.38]Well, as you know, we are bombarded daily by books,

  [19:14.47]magazines, newspapers, television, and radio.

  [19:19.38]We are hit with bills, letters, and reports.

  [19:23.23]All of this can cause quite a lot of anxiety.

  [19:27.09]It's because we are living in the "information age"

  [19:30.79]that we get this bombardment of information everyday.

  [19:35.56]So today let me give you some organizing tips

  [19:39.56]that should make your life easier.

  [19:42.82]First of all, when you get your mail,

  [19:45.41]open it and sort it right away.

  [19:48.30]Get rid of all junk inserts,

  [19:50.59]and then sort the mail into four categories:

  [19:53.70]to do, to pay, to read, and to file.

  [19:59.56]Be realistic about your reading.

  [20:02.29]Check the magazines you subscribe to on a regular basis.

  [20:06.73]If you find yourself falling behind in your reading,

  [20:09.93]let some of those subscriptions go.

  [20:13.14]And if you are one of those people

  [20:15.89]who like to clip out articles to read later,

  [20:18.83]then do some screening first

  [20:21.63]and be sure to clip only the most important articles

  [20:24.46]for reading later.

  [20:26.95]You should have a filing system,

  [20:29.37]but don't use your files as a dumping ground.

  [20:33.81]Make it a rule to clean out your files and papers

  [20:36.74]at least once a year, more often if possible.

  [20:41.00]Spend five or ten minutes each day

  [20:43.59]cleaning up your desk and prioritizing your work

  [20:46.82]for the next day.

  [20:49.13]The following day will get off to a much better start

  [20:52.39]if your desk is organized and you are not faced

  [20:56.41]with overwhelming piles of paper.

  [21:00.19]Don't use the top of your desk as a storage area.

  [21:05.06]It should be a work area, with plenty of room to work.

  [21:10.91]Questions 33 to 35 are based on the passage

  [21:15.72]you have just head.

  [21:18.50]33.According to the speaker,

  [21:21.80]what should the listeners do when they first get their mail?

  [21:40.11]34.What should people do with their magazine subscriptions?

  [22:00.94]35.How often does the speaker suggest

  [22:04.72]that the listeners clean out their files?

  [22:24.39]Section C

  [22:25.74]Directions:

  [22:27.32]In this section,

  [22:28.73]you will hear a passage three times.

  [22:32.24]When the passage is read for the first time,

  [22:34.88]you should listen carefully for its general idea.

  [22:38.77]When the passage is read for the second time,

  [22:41.43]you are required to fill in the blanks

  [22:44.77]numbered from 36 to 43

  [22:48.10]with the exact words you have just heard.

  [22:51.90]For blanks numbered from 44 to 46

  [22:55.52]you are required to fill in the missing information.

  [22:59.32]For these blanks,

  [23:00.89]you can either use the exact words

  [23:03.07]you have just heard or write down the main points

  [23:06.93]in your own words.

  [23:08.85]Finally, when the passage is read for the third time,

  [23:12.37]you should check what you have written.

  [23:16.63]Now, listen to the passage

  [23:20.72]Nursing, as a typically female profession,

  [23:23.91]must deal constantly with the false impression

  [23:26.71]that nurses are there to wait on the physician.

  [23:30.32]As nurses, we are licensed to provide nursing care only.

  [23:34.81]We do not have any legal or moral obligation to any physician.

  [23:39.76]We provide health teaching,

  [23:41.45]assess physical as well as emotional problems,

  [23:44.61]coordinate patient related services,

  [23:47.96]and make all our nursing decision

  [23:50.43]based upon what is best or suitable for the patient.

  [23:54.02]If in any circumstance

  [23:55.76]we feel that a physician’s order is inappropriate or unsafe,

  [24:00.34]we have a legal responsibility to question that order,

  [24:04.23]or refuse to carry it out.

  [24:06.91]Nursing is not a nine-to-five job with every weekend off.

  [24:11.22]All nurses are aware of that before they enter the profession.

  [24:16.25]The emotional and physical stress,

  [24:18.87]however, that occurs due to odd working hours is a prime reason

  [24:22.46]for a large amount of the career dissatisfaction.

  [24:25.86]It is sometimes required that we work overtime,

  [24:28.90]and that we change shifts four or five times a month.

  [24:33.04]That destructs our sleeping and eating habits,

  [24:35.64]and isolates us from everything

  [24:37.74]except job related friends and activities.

  [24:40.88]The quality of nursing care is being affected dramatically

  [24:43.99]by these situations.

  [24:45.86]Most hospitals are now staffed by new graduates,

  [24:48.97]as experienced nurses finally give up trying to change the system.

  [24:53.98]Consumers of medically related services

  [24:56.60]have evidently not been affected enough

  [24:59.08]yet to demand changes in our medical system.

  [25:02.01]But if trends continue as predicted,

  [25:04.91]they will find that.

  [25:05.86]Most critical hospital care will be provided by new,

  [25:08.45]inexperienced, and sometimes inadequately trained nurses.

  [25:18.64]Now the passage will be read again

  [25:25.36]Nursing, as a typically female profession,

  [25:28.62]must deal constantly with the false impression

  [25:31.41]that nurses are there to wait on the physician.

  [25:34.77]As nurses, we are licensed to provide nursing care only.

  [25:39.45]We do not have any legal or moral obligation to any physician.

  [25:44.16]We provide health teaching,

  [25:46.00]assess physical as well as emotional problems,

  [25:49.09]coordinate patient related services,

  [25:51.73]and make all our nursing decision

  [25:55.33]based upon what is best or suitable for the patient.

  [25:58.64]If in any circumstance

  [26:00.35]we feel that a physician’s order is inappropriate or unsafe,

  [26:05.04]we have a legal responsibility to question that order,

  [26:08.68]or refuse to carry it out.

  [26:11.54]Nursing is not a nine-to-five job with every weekend off.

  [26:15.82]All nurses are aware of that before they enter the profession.

  [26:20.86]The emotional and physical stress,

  [26:22.90]however, that occurs due to odd working hours is a prime reason

  [26:26.90]for a large amount of the career dissatisfaction.

  [26:30.54]It is sometimes required that we work overtime,

  [26:33.79]and that we change shifts four or five times a month.

  [26:37.55]That destructs our sleeping and eating habits,

  [26:40.25]and isolates us from everything

  [26:42.77]except job related friends and activities.

  [26:44.96]

  [27:45.67]The quality of nursing care is being affected dramatically

  [27:48.73]by these situations.

  [27:50.58]Most hospitals are now staffed by new graduates,

  [27:53.73]as experienced nurses finally give up trying to change the system.

  [27:58.81]Consumers of medically related services

  [28:01.47]have evidently not been affected enough

  [28:06.68]yet to demand changes in our medical system.

  [28:07.90]

  [29:07.38]But if trends continue as predicted,

  [29:09.79]they will find that

  [29:10.96]Most critical hospital care will be provided by new,

  [29:14.22]inexperienced, and sometimes inadequately trained nurses.

  [29:19.14]

  [30:23.07]Now the passage will be read for the third time

  [30:31.64]Nursing, as a typically female profession,

  [30:34.78]must deal constantly with the false impression

  [30:37.50]that nurses are there to wait on the physician.

  [30:40.96]As nurses, we are licensed to provide nursing care only.

  [30:45.58]We do not have any legal or moral obligation to any physician.

  [30:50.33]We provide health teaching,

  [30:52.22]assess physical as well as emotional problems,

  [30:55.39]coordinate patient related services,

  [30:58.71]and make all our nursing decision

  [31:00.95]based upon what is best or suitable for the patient.

  [31:04.73]If in any circumstance

  [31:06.55]we feel that a physician’s order is inappropriate or unsafe,

  [31:11.10]we have a legal responsibility to question that order,

  [31:14.93]or refuse to carry it out.

  [31:17.67]Nursing is not a nine-to-five job with every weekend off.

  [31:21.05]All nurses are aware of that before they enter the profession.

  [31:26.86]The emotional and physical stress,

  [31:29.03]however, that occurs due to odd working hours is a prime reason

  [31:33.10]for a large amount of the career dissatisfaction.

  [31:36.60]It is sometimes required that we work overtime,

  [31:39.49]and that we change shifts four or five times a month.

  [31:43.70]That destructs our sleeping and eating habits,

  [31:46.41]and isolates us from everything

  [31:48.38]except job related friends and activities.

  [31:51.58]The quality of nursing care is being affected dramatically

  [31:54.88]by these situations.

  [31:56.56]Most hospitals are now staffed by new graduates,

  [31:59.33]as experienced nurses finally give up trying to change the system.

  [32:04.67]Consumers of medically related services

  [32:07.41]have evidently not been affected enough

  [32:10.00]yet to demand changes in our medical system.

  [32:13.00]But if trends continue as predicted,

  [32:15.70]they will find that.

  [32:17.30]Most critical hospital care will be provided by new,


  [32:19.29]inexperienced, and sometimes inadequately trained nurses.

  [32:27.76]This is the end of listening comprehension



学英语单词
3-Sulfoalanine
absolute and relative of contradiction
adenosin (A,Ado)
air-bag
allis shad
amblyproct
anterior-posterior points combination
average forecast
awake from
Ballygarrett
beam scale
Boltzmann's equation
booked stop
brand-marketing
brick condenser
Cayenne pepper grains
chaffee
Charpentier, Gustave
chromoleucites
classica
coal petrography
coleby
comparative adjectives
consumable electro arc furnace
Contrasto, Colle del
coral master (spain)
denitrated collodion
dosage compensation (muller 1932)
dried floral
drinkwaters
Egyptian furniture
enfoldings
evections
financial management initiative (fmi)
forward linkage
fourcher
general theory of relativities
genus proboscideas
gone through the mill
graphicomassa hanleyi
greenfinger
gyrosynchrotron radiation
hand den
have one's gruel
hearsease
heat-checking
hebecarpus
Hexamethyleneimine
hold paint
horsetrade
hypotensions
ink box
intragemmal nerve plexus
knock-out
lepay
levopropylhexedrine
liquid bitumen
lower light
manual catching
maximum recording thermometer
memoize
Mithren
mobard
model uncertainty
molecule-sized
morchellas
multi-ports
nonaccepting
nuclear-electric propulsion
Obila
paper-disk chromatography
parallel play
paraspecific anti-venom
parent involvement
polishing wheel
priesthood
private-viewing
Puddle slut
put A into B
rationing system
re serve
re-entry profile
Received Pronunciation
round-up function
safety winding
Salmonella georgia
shifted diagonal
shopless
sinter rim
sluttifying
small-scale integration
space communication network
spacing container
split straw
sport esthetics
symbols of money
the-ch
tike
to grease
trial range
wave-number spectrum
zelenka