时间:2018-12-04 作者:英语课 分类:王迈迈大学英语六级预测与详解


英语课

  [00:00.82]test 6

[00:03.25]Section A

[00:04.52]Now let's begin with the 8 short conversations.

[00:08.34]11. W:Nobody told me that the teacher was going to

[00:11.60]inspect our dormitory room.

[00:13.89]M:I meant to tell you last night but Tony dropped in

[00:16.33]and then it completely slipped my mind.

[00:19.20]Q:What does the man mean?

[00:36.36]12. W:If you are not satisfied with the color of the sweater,

[00:40.18]we also have some in dark green and brown.

[00:42.94]M:Actually blue is fine, but I prefer something in wool.

[00:46.69]Q:What will the man probably do next?

[01:04.68]13. W:Professor Johnson is perhaps the

[01:07.30]most critical professor I have ever seen.

[01:10.28]M:No kidding, sure he wasn't like that

[01:12.14]last year when I took his course.

[01:14.79]Q:What can be inferred about professor Johnson?

[01:33.51]14. M:The job offered here looks very attractive,

[01:37.26]but it requires a reference 1.

[01:38.84]Can I just submit the one Professor Lee wrote for me last semester?

[01:42.92]W:It might be a little dated. You'd better use a current one.

[01:47.06]Q:What does the woman suggest the man do?

[02:05.12]15. W:Do you like my new dress? It only cost me 80 dollars.

[02:09.62]M:Really? I spent five times more than you did on a similar one.

[02:14.08]Q:What does the man mean?

[02:31.02]16. M:Not many people came to the evening activity last night.

[02:35.71]W:Last night? I'd written down next Friday.

[02:39.28]Q:What does the woman imply?

[02:56.44]17. W:I've tried over 10 times today,

[03:00.00]but I never got through to the concert office.

[03:02.65]M:The number for ticket orders is always busy.

[03:05.64]Q:How does the woman probably feel now?

[03:23.51]18. M:The 3 books are 1 week overdue 2.

[03:26.99]How much is the fine for late return?

[03:29.43]W:You're very lucky. Originally,

[03:31.79]the fine is 20 cents a day for each book,

[03:34.56]but there's a reduction to encourage returns,

[03:37.11]so you only need to pay half of them.

[03:39.51]Q:How much does the man need to pay?



[03:54.70]Now you will hear 2 long conversations.

[03:57.45]Conversation One

[03:59.09]M: Excuse me, could you help me? 

[04:01.33]W: Yes. What seems to be the problem? 

[04:03.40]M: Well, I was wondering if anyone has turned in a passport. 

[04:06.75]W: I'm afraid not. Have you lost your passport? 

[04:09.26]M: I think so. I can't find it anywhere in my hotel room,

[04:12.60]and I remember the last place I used it yesterday

[04:15.04]was in this department store. 

[04:17.04]W: Where exactly did you use your passport in the store? 

[04:19.84]M: In the suit dress department. I had to show it to pay for

[04:22.93]these dresses with my traveler's checks.

[04:25.37]W: Well, let me call the suit dress department

[04:27.92]to see if they've found a passport. 

[04:30.40] (A minute later) 

[04:32.22]W: Sorry,your passport's not been turned in there, either. 

[04:35.46]M: Then what shall I do? 

[04:36.99]W: You can fill in this lost property report,

[04:39.32]and I'll keep my eye out for it.

[04:41.28]Those kinds of things usually turn up eventually,

[04:43.68]but I suggest you contact your embassy 3 and

[04:45.90]tell them about your situation,

[04:47.90]so they can give you a new passport in case it doesn't show up.

[04:51.39]M: You're right. Do you have a pen?

[04:53.38]W: Here you are. 

[04:54.83]M: Oh, I seem to lose something every time I travel.

[04:58.94]Questions 19 to 21 are based on the conversation you have just heard.

[05:04.10]19. Where does the man think he has lost his passport?

[05:22.56]20. What's the job of the woman?

[05:39.68]21. Which is not the suggestion given by the woman to the man?

[05:59.06]Conversation Two

[06:01.31]W: What do you think of the pollution problems in China?

[06:04.44]M: The pollution problems in China hit you in the face

[06:07.27]the moment you get out of the building,

[06:09.38]and you can't escape them in any major city in China.

[06:12.84]The air is thick with particulate 4, that is, dust.

[06:16.84]Have you heard the sandstorm? 

[06:18.95]W: Yes, I have heard it on TV.

[06:21.68]Once there's a sandstorm in Beijing,

[06:24.22]the dust can be found everywhere.

[06:26.08]It makes people very difficult to see.

[06:28.40]M: Yes, you are right.

[06:29.90]But I don't think air pollution is the most serious problem in Beijing,

[06:33.64]because some other large cities also

[06:35.53]have similar pollution problems awaiting solutions. 

[06:39.39]W: I know the most important cause of sandstorm is deforestation.

[06:43.46]People cut down too many of the trees in order to raise crops,

[06:46.73]or much worse, sell logs to earn money.

[06:49.79]But I have no idea of the reason of the other kinds of air pollution. 

[06:53.35]M: Coal burning, but although it is the number

[06:55.97]one cause of Beijing's pollution, it is reported that it is not the one

[07:00.45]that most affects people's health. 

[07:02.88]W: What is the worst pollutant 5 then? 

[07:04.85]M: The worst pollutant from car fumes 6 is lead.

[07:08.05]A high proportion of lead in the blood may

[07:10.33]result in mental retardation 7. 

[07:12.84]W: That sounds terrifying! What can we do about it? 

[07:15.85]M: They have adopted many anti pollution measures aimed at reducing

[07:19.42]the pollution caused by coal burning boilers 8 and car exhaust. 

[07:23.71]W: That certainly isn't the most effective way. 

[07:26.22]M: Well, another way out is to develop an efficient public

[07:29.20]transportation system to alleviate 9 people's dependence 10 on private cars.

[07:33.97]W: Em, it seems more effective. Ok! Thanks for your opinions.

[07:39.38]Questions 22 to 25 are based on the conversation you have just heard.

[07:45.13]22. What's the most important cause of sandstorm? 

[08:03.34]23. Which is not the reason why people cut down so many trees?

[08:22.90]24. Which one is not true according to the conversation?

[08:42.24]25. What's the most efficient anti pollution measure?

[09:01.73]Section B

[09:03.36]Passage One

[09:05.03]About a hundred yards along the path we came to a deep valley,

[09:08.96]on the far side of which the path led into some very thick bushes.

[09:13.69]Rather than push through these,

[09:15.43]I decided 11 that if we walked along the bottom of this valley we could

[09:19.03]climb up again and rejoin the path on the far side of the bushes.

[09:23.11]As I climbed down into the valley a bird flew off a rock

[09:26.53]on which I had put my hand.

[09:28.49]On looking at the spot from which the bird had risen I saw two eggs.

[09:33.36]These were a kind that I did not have in my collection,

[09:36.91]so I placed them carefully in my bag, wrapped in a little dry grass.

[09:41.75]As we went further down the valley the sides became steeper and

[09:46.07]not far from where I had entered it,

[09:48.14]I came to a drop of about twelve to fourteen feet.

[09:52.07]The water that rushed down all these small valleys in the rainy

[09:55.34]season had worn the rock as smooth as glass.

[09:59.24]As it was too deep to climb down, I handed my gun

[10:02.14]to one of the men and slid down it.

[10:04.76]My feet had hardly touchced the sandy bottom

[10:07.66]when the two men leapt down, one on each side of me.

[10:10.68]They quickly gave me the gun and asked me if I had heard the tiger.

[10:14.68]As a matter of fact I had heard nothing, possibly because of

[10:17.59]the noise I made sliding down the rock.

[10:20.85]The men said they had heard a tiger growling 12 somewhere nearby,

[10:24.48]but they did not know from which direction the noise had come.

[10:28.30]Questions 26 to 28 are based on the passage you have just heard.

[10:33.39]26.Why did the writer decide to walk along the valley?

[10:51.68]27.What did the writer see when he disturbed the bird?

[11:10.11]28.Why was the rock difficult to get down?



[11:28.98]Passage Two

[11:30.40]And now for today's sports news.

[11:32.36]The London International Tennis Tournament ended today.

[11:35.42]Samuel Cox of the U. S. was the winner of the tournament.

[11:38.83]With Lloyd Smith of England finishing 2nd. Mr. Cox

[11:42.35]scored a decisive 13 victory over Smith.

[11:45.18]This was Mr. Cox's 1st major victory outside of the U. S.;

[11:49.22]today also marked the 1st time that an American

[11:51.76]has won the London Tennis Tournament.

[11:54.16]When asked about today's victory,

[11:55.76]Mr. Cox stated that he just hoped to win again

[11:58.74]in next month's tournaments in Paris and Copenhagen.

[12:02.96]Questions 29 to 31 are based on the passage you have just heard.

[12:07.94]29. Where did the tournament described

[12:10.74]in this announcement take place?

[12:27.24]30. How many times in the past has an American

[12:30.62]won the London Tennis Tournament?

[12:47.02]31. What is Mr. Cox looking forward to?



[13:06.00]Passage Three

[13:07.31]Influenza 14 has been with us a long, long time.

[13:11.02]According to some Greek writers on medical history,

[13:14.11]the outbreak of 412 B.C. was of influenza.

[13:17.75]The same has been suggested of the sickness that

[13:19.95]swept through the Greek army attacking Syracuse in 395 B.C.

[13:25.86]Flu is a disease that moves most quickly among people

[13:28.53]living in crowded conditions, hence it is likely to attack armies.

[13:33.65]In April 1918, flu broke out

[13:36.93]among American troops stationed in France.

[13:39.55]It quickly spread through all the armies

[13:41.66]but caused relatively 15 few deaths.

[13:44.02]Four months later, however,

[13:45.54]a second outbreak started which proved to be a killer 16.

[13:48.81]It killed not only the old and already sick

[13:51.36]but also healthy young adults.

[13:54.02]It went through every country in the world, only a few distant islands

[13:57.83]in the South Atlantic and the Pacific remaining untouched.

[14:01.84]Before the great outbreak ended,

[14:03.47]it had killed at least 15 million people .

[14:07.07]Medical science is still not certain what hit us in 1918.

[14:12.08]The virus of influenza was not found until 1933,

[14:16.07]so all that today can be said about the 1918 outbreak

[14:20.95]is the kind of antibodies it produced .

[14:24.34]The first big advance was also made in 1933,

[14:28.38]then a team of British doctors found the type A influenza virus.

[14:33.15]In 1940, a doctor of the United States found type B.

[14:37.77]Later type C was found, along with many subgroups of type A and B.

[14:43.07]Vaccines were prepared and used widely by the armies

[14:46.42]during the Second World War to prevent outbreaks.

[14:50.13]The flu virus proved trickier 18 than most.

[14:52.78]A vaccine 17 good against one type gave no protection against another.

[14:56.56]Indeed type A virus changes its nature so quickly that

[15:00.67]a perfectly 19 good vaccine may lose its value because of the change.

[15:05.04]This increases the need for the speedy discovery of

[15:07.73]flu outbreaks, so that stocks of the right vaccine can

[15:10.96]be prepared quickly after an outbreak.

[15:14.09]Starting such a warning system was one of the first things

[15:17.33]done by the World Health Organization.

[15:20.56]Questions 32 to 35 are based on the passage you have just heard.

[15:25.73]32.Why is influenza easier to attack armies?

[15:44.28]33.How many types of influenza have been

[15:47.15]found excluding subgroups?

[16:03.58]34.How many people were killed in the flu outbreak of 1918?

[16:22.91]35.Which of the following is true according to

[16:26.14]the passage you have just heard?

[16:43.30]Section C

[16:45.19]The traditional American Thanksgiving Day

[16:47.34]celebration went back to 1621.

[16:51.04]In that year a special feast 20 was prepared

[16:53.66]in Plymouth, Massachusetts.

[16:56.10]The colonists 21 who had settled there had left England

[16:59.37]because they felt denied of religious freedom.

[17:02.31]They came to the new land and

[17:04.23]faced difficulties in coming across the ocean.

[17:07.28]The ship which carried them was called the Mayflower.

[17:10.70]The North Atlantic was difficult to travel. There were bad storms.

[17:15.54]They were assisted in learning to live in the new land

[17:19.46]by the Indians who inhabited 22 the region.

[17:22.26]The Puritans, as they were called, had much to be thankful for.

[17:26.37]Their religious practices were no longer a source of

[17:29.30]criticism by the government.

[17:31.44]They learned to adjust their farming habits to the climate and soil.

[17:35.48]When they selected the fourth Thursday of November for their

[17:38.53]Thanksgiving celebration, they invited their neighbours, the Indians,

[17:42.64]to join them in dinner and a prayer of gratitude 23 for the new life.

[17:47.17]They recalled the group of 102 men, women,

[17:50.44]and children who left England.

[17:52.59]They remembered their dead who did not live to

[17:54.86]see the shores of Massauchusetts.

[17:57.25]They reflected on the 65 days' journey, which tested their strength.

[18:03.98]The traditional American Thanksgiving Day

[18:06.20]celebration went back to 1621.

[18:10.60]In that year a special feast was prepared

[18:13.25]in Plymouth, Massachusetts.

[18:15.69]The colonists who had settled there had left England

[18:18.88]because they felt denied of religious freedom.

[18:23.93]They came to the new land and

[18:25.65]faced difficulties in coming across the ocean.

[18:28.81]The ship which carried them was called the Mayflower.

[18:33.24]The North Atlantic was difficult to travel. There were bad storms.

[18:39.14]They were assisted in learning to live in the new land

[18:42.89]by the Indians who inhabited the region.

[18:47.83]The Puritans, as they were called, had much to be thankful for.

[18:52.01]Their religious practices were no longer a source of

[18:54.85]criticism by the government.

[18:58.01]They learned to adjust their farming habits to the climate and soil.

[19:51.15]When they selected the fourth Thursday of November for their

[19:53.70]Thanksgiving celebration, they invited their neighbours, the Indians,

[19:58.13]to join them in dinner and a prayer of gratitude for the new life.

[20:51.80]They recalled the group of 102 men, women,

[20:54.97]and children who left England.

[20:57.15]They remembered their dead who did not live to

[20:59.36]see the shores of Massauchusetts.

[21:50.82]They reflected on the 65 days' journey, which tested their strength.

[21:57.18]The traditional American Thanksgiving Day

[21:59.18]celebration went back to 1621.

[22:02.93]In that year a special feast was prepared

[22:05.47]in Plymouth, Massachusetts.

[22:08.00]The colonists who had settled there had left England

[22:11.31]because they felt denied of religious freedom.

[22:14.26]They came to the new land and

[22:15.86]faced difficulties in coming across the ocean.

[22:19.17]The ship which carried them was called the Mayflower.

[22:22.58]The North Atlantic was difficult to travel. There were bad storms.

[22:27.53]They were assisted in learning to live in the new land

[22:31.27]by the Indians who inhabited the region.

[22:34.11]The Puritans, as they were called, had much to be thankful for.

[22:38.40]Their religious practices were no longer a source of

[22:41.31]criticism by the government.

[22:43.38]They learned to adjust their farming habits to the climate and soil.

[22:47.38]When they selected the fourth Thursday of November for their

[22:50.47]Thanksgiving celebration, they invited their neighbours, the Indians,

[22:54.54]to join them in dinner and a prayer of gratitude for the new life.

[22:59.08]They recalled the group of 102 men, women,

[23:02.32]and children who left England.

[23:04.50]They remembered their dead who did not live to

[23:06.69]see the shores of Massauchusetts.

[23:09.11]They reflected on the 65 days' journey, which tested their strength.



1 reference
n.提到,说到,暗示,查看,查阅
  • We spent days going through all related reference material.我们花了好多天功夫查阅所有有关的参考资料。
  • I like to have my reference books within my reach.我喜欢把参考书放到伸手可取的地方。
2 overdue
adj.过期的,到期未付的;早该有的,迟到的
  • The plane is overdue and has been delayed by the bad weather.飞机晚点了,被坏天气耽搁了。
  • The landlady is angry because the rent is overdue.女房东生气了,因为房租过期未付。
3 embassy
n.大使馆,大使及其随员
  • Large crowd demonstrated outside the British Embassy.很多群众在英国大使馆外面示威。
  • He's a U.S. diplomat assigned to the embassy in London.他是美国驻伦敦大使馆的一名外交官。
4 particulate
adj.微小的;n.微粒,粒子
  • A special group was organized to dig up the particulate of the case.成立了一个专门小组来查明该案件的各个细节。
  • Lungs retain relatively insoluble particulate material.肺脏内留有不溶解的颗粒物质。
5 pollutant
n.污染物质,散布污染物质者
  • Coal itself is a heavy pollutant.煤本身就是一种严重的污染物。
  • Carbon dioxide may not be a typical air pollutant.二氧化碳可能不是一种典型的污染物。
6 fumes
n.(强烈而刺激的)气味,气体
  • The health of our children is being endangered by exhaust fumes. 我们孩子们的健康正受到排放出的废气的损害。
  • Exhaust fumes are bad for your health. 废气对健康有害。
7 retardation
n.智力迟钝,精神发育迟缓
  • Asbestos reinforcement confers excellent flame retardation properties on a composite. 石棉增强材料使复合材料具有优异的防火性能。
  • The theory confirms the increase in the retardation effect with decrease in particle size. 理论证实,随着颗粒尺寸的减小,这一减速效应将增大。
8 boilers
锅炉,烧水器,水壶( boiler的名词复数 )
  • Even then the boilers often burst or came apart at the seams. 甚至那时的锅炉也经常从焊接处爆炸或裂开。 来自英汉非文学 - 科学史
  • The clean coal is sent to a crusher and the boilers. 干净的煤送入破碎机和锅炉。
9 alleviate
v.减轻,缓和,缓解(痛苦等)
  • The doctor gave her an injection to alleviate the pain.医生给她注射以减轻疼痛。
  • Nothing could alleviate his distress.什么都不能减轻他的痛苦。
10 dependence
n.依靠,依赖;信任,信赖;隶属
  • Doctors keep trying to break her dependence of the drug.医生们尽力使她戒除毒瘾。
  • He was freed from financial dependence on his parents.他在经济上摆脱了对父母的依赖。
11 decided
adj.决定了的,坚决的;明显的,明确的
  • This gave them a decided advantage over their opponents.这使他们比对手具有明显的优势。
  • There is a decided difference between British and Chinese way of greeting.英国人和中国人打招呼的方式有很明显的区别。
12 growling
adj.决定性的,坚定的,果断的,决断的
  • A decisive person acts quickly and often succeeds.果断的人行动迅速,常常成功。
  • Man is a decisive factor in doing everything.人是做每件事情的决定性因素。
13 influenza
n.流行性感冒,流感
  • They took steps to prevent the spread of influenza.他们采取措施
  • Influenza is an infectious disease.流感是一种传染病。
14 relatively
adv.比较...地,相对地
  • The rabbit is a relatively recent introduction in Australia.兔子是相对较新引入澳大利亚的物种。
  • The operation was relatively painless.手术相对来说不痛。
15 killer
n.杀人者,杀人犯,杀手,屠杀者
  • Heart attacks have become Britain's No.1 killer disease.心脏病已成为英国的头号致命疾病。
  • The bulk of the evidence points to him as her killer.大量证据证明是他杀死她的。
16 vaccine
n.牛痘苗,疫苗;adj.牛痘的,疫苗的
  • The polio vaccine has saved millions of lives.脊髓灰质炎疫苗挽救了数以百万计的生命。
  • She takes a vaccine against influenza every fall.她每年秋季接种流感疫苗。
17 trickier
adj.狡猾的( tricky的比较级 );(形势、工作等)复杂的;机警的;微妙的
  • This is the general rule, but some cases are trickier than others. 以上是一般规则,但某些案例会比别的案例更为棘手。 来自互联网
  • The lower the numbers go, the trickier the problems get. 武器的数量越低,问题就越复杂。 来自互联网
18 perfectly
adv.完美地,无可非议地,彻底地
  • The witnesses were each perfectly certain of what they said.证人们个个对自己所说的话十分肯定。
  • Everything that we're doing is all perfectly above board.我们做的每件事情都是光明正大的。
19 feast
n.盛宴,筵席,节日
  • After the feast she spent a week dieting to salve her conscience.大吃了一顿之后,她花了一周时间节食以安慰自己。
  • You shouldn't have troubled yourself to prepare such a feast!你不该准备这样丰盛的饭菜,这样太麻烦你了!
20 colonists
n.殖民地开拓者,移民,殖民地居民( colonist的名词复数 )
  • Colonists from Europe populated many parts of the Americas. 欧洲的殖民者移居到了美洲的许多地方。 来自《简明英汉词典》
  • Some of the early colonists were cruel to the native population. 有些早期移居殖民地的人对当地居民很残忍。 来自《简明英汉词典》
21 inhabited
adj.感激,感谢
  • I have expressed the depth of my gratitude to him.我向他表示了深切的谢意。
  • She could not help her tears of gratitude rolling down her face.她感激的泪珠禁不住沿着面颊流了下来。
学英语单词
A Treatise on Blood Troubles
A.K.C.
Ancenis
Antiangor
ataxia cerebral
Autoskarn
baldists
behat
Benderok, Sungai
bioadhesion
biopterin
bodyfat
bring a hornets' nest about one's ears
burst-error channel
Caulobacteraceae
cement fibrolite plate
central processing
chigger mite
cold-junction
color subcarrier oscillator
control blade
cosmical aerodynamics
Croton lachnocarpus
cyclohexane
degradation of structure
demilitarizations
duro meter
electromagnetic logging
enclosed accommodation space
erinites
false lights
family scarabaeidaes
fifthly
flooding irrigation method
francisco goyas
frisson
gay Greek
genus Bungarus
glider guns
greater burdock
height of A-frame
islands of stability
Jihomoravský Kraj
Kaumalapau
keysville
khirbet qumran
kirnbergers
mellownesses
Mendelian population
Microtis
Moraxellaceae
neonaticide
on-state losses
onigiri
oword
pad-type thermocouple
parting planing tool
pentapetes phoenicea l.
perityphlitides
populum
press endorsement
promotions
pseudothiobinupharidine
rebatches
reclaimed acid
red myelocyte
Relafen
requisition on title
revolving radio beacon
ringshaped sprinkler
rivets for name plate
santes bell
sarsaponin
Schnee bath
secondary-articulation
short call
shortwave broadcasting
snowgrass
Spanish treasure fleet
split-row fertilizer boot
stacked heads
statute titles
steering-knuckle
storage/retrieve machine (s/r machine)
take enjoyment in
therapeutae (europe)
timer scale
trans-3-cis-4-dibromo-tert-butylcyclohexane
turncock
Ukrainian alphabet
unevidence
unsigned binary number
Venturiaceae
viraginous
VOSA
w-why
waymon
weighted average earings per share
World Cup, Table
yaugh