时间:2019-03-16 作者:英语课 分类:王迈迈大学英语四级预测与详解


英语课

   [00:07.05]Section A


  [00:09.16]11.M: The concert starts at 9 : 00.
  [00:12.96]W: We still have fifteen minutes.
  [00:15.18]Q: What time is it?
  [00:32.25]12. M: Is it still snowing outside?
  [00:35.43]W: No, but the wind is still blowing a lot.
  [00:38.26]Q: What do you learn from the conversation?
  [00:56.69]13. M: These are very nice shirts. How much are they?
  [01:00.84]W: 5 dollars each, for two, 9.5 dollars. They are on sale today.
  [01:06.89]Q: How much does one shirt cost?
  [01:25.50]14: M: Is this school really as good as people say?
  [01:29.79]W: It used to be even better.
  [01:31.99]Q: How's the school?
  [01:49.84]15. M: Your house is bigger than mine.
  [01:52.90]W: So is Bob's but Tom's is smaller.
  [01:56.20]Q: Whose house is the smallest?
  [02:14.91]16. M: The music and the flowers are lovely.
  [02:19.20]W: Yes, I hope the food is good.
  [02:21.38]Q: Where did this conversation most probably take place?
  [02:41.43]17. M: I want to borrow the book "Good Earth".
  [02:45.53]W: Ask Mary. She has almost everything.
  [02:48.64]Q: What does the woman want the man to think about Mary?
  [03:08.21]18. M: These tomatoes are huge!
  [03:11.56]You must have watered them a lot.
  [03:13.52]W: Yes, I did. They ought to be ripe enough to pick
  [03:17.17]by next Friday when we have our picnic.
  [03:19.29]Q: Where did this conversation most probably take place?
  [03:39.80]Now you'll hear two long conversations.
  [03:43.27]Conversation One
  [03:45.65]M: Hi young lady. How may I help you? 
  [03:48.50]W: Well,  … yeah. I'm looking for a Father's Day's gift.
  [03:52.66]M: Okay. How about getting your father a new wallet? 
  [03:56.37]W: Hmm. How much is that wallet? 
  [03:59.02]M: Huh … which one? 
  [04:00.94]W: The black one.
  [04:02.42]M: Oh. It's only $40.95.
  [04:06.32]W: Huh? That's too expensive for me.
  [04:09.04]Do you have a cheaper one?
  [04:10.91]M: Hmm. How about this brown leather one?
  [04:14.90]W: Umm … I don't think my father will like the design on the outside,
  [04:19.19]and it doesn't have a place to put pictures.
  [04:21.66]How much is it anyway?
  [04:23.81]M: It's $25.99.
  [04:26.65]W: Hmm. I don't have that much money.
  [04:29.33]M: Okay. How much do you have to spend? 
  [04:32.39]W: I'm not sure.
  [04:34.19]Probably about ten dollars or so.
  [04:37.22]I've been helping 1 my mom around the house
  [04:38.99]for the past week to earn some money.
  [04:41.22]This is all I have.
  [04:42.79]M: Hmm. How about this tie? 
  [04:45.83]W: That's real pretty, but the price tag says $13.99,
  [04:50.25]and I know I don't have that much money.
  [04:53.20]M: Well, let's just say the tie just went on sale.
  [04:57.77]How about $5.00?What do you say?
  [05:00.54]W: Oh, thanks. I'll take it.
  [05:03.62]Questions 19 to 22 are based on the conversation you have just heard.
  [05:10.00]19. What is the girl shopping for?
  [05:28.00]20. Why doesn't the girl like the brown wallet?
  [05:46.38]21. How does the girl get the money?
  [06:04.16]22. What does the girl decide to buy?
  [06:23.51]Conversation Two
  [06:25.61]W: Dad, Dad, Dad! 
  [06:27.74]M: Uh, what, what, uh, uh!
  [06:31.52]W: The movie is over. You slept through the best part.
  [06:35.52]M: Ah, ah, I must have during the last few minutes.
  [06:39.03]W: Right. You were gone for so long
  [06:42.11]you should have brought your pillow and blanket.
  [06:44.91]So, what did you think about it?
  [06:47.30]M: Well, overall, I'm a little disappointed with the movie.
  [06:50.75]I mean, the story was a little ,
  [06:53.67]you have to admit. I mean, really.
  [06:56.75]How unbelievable is about a captain
  [06:59.11]who navigates 2 his spaceship to the far reaches of the galaxy 3
  [07:02.45]and encounters a race of frog people.
  [07:05.55]I mean, come on.
  [07:07.15]W: Ah, I thought it was fantastic, Uhhh...
  [07:11.22]I mean, you have to that the special effects were,
  [07:14.95]and the acting 4 wasn't bad either.
  [07:17.84]M: Ah, come on. What about the ship's communications officer?
  [07:22.61]I mean, what did you think about him?
  [07:24.68]Well … Wasn't he a little similar to you?
  [07:27.71]He was always talking to himself,
  [07:30.16]and he had that funny hair do?
  [07:32.93]W: Well, he was a little … unusual ,Yeah, yeah,
  [07:37.14]but the ship's doctor was amazing.
  [07:39.66]It was so cool when he brought the captain back to life during one of the battles.
  [07:44.94]M: That was pretty realistic,
  [07:46.78]but then the rest of the movie just went from bad to worse.
  [07:50.28]And the photography was so fake 5!
  [07:52.84]W: How do you know?
  [07:54.05]You were snoring so loud the neighbors probably had to close their windows.
  [07:58.45]It was that bad.
  [07:59.68]M: Ah, well, let's go to bed.
  [08:02.17]Questions 23 to 25 are based on the conversation you have just heard.
  [08:08.20]23. What is one word to describe the father's opinion about the movie's storyline?
  [08:29.92]24. Whose performance do father and daughter agree upon in the movie?
  [08:49.57]25. What kind of movie is this?
  [09:09.04]Section B
  [09:10.96]Passage One
  [09:12.81]The history of plastics is longer than you might expect.
  [09:16.82]In fact the first man made plastic ever to appear on the market
  [09:22.01]was made over a hundred years ago.
  [09:24.33]It was discovered both by an Englishman
  [09:26.65]and an American in the same year.
  [09:29.27]But it was the American who first manufactured it
  [09:32.18]on a large scale during the 1860s.
  [09:35.58]Everybody was excited by this new material
  [09:39.03]which was so cheap to buy.
  [09:40.52]Poor young men working in smoky cities were able to buy plastic collars.
  [09:45.60]These collars were hard and uncomfortable.
  [09:48.37]But they did not have to wash them.
  [09:51.01]The poor young men could rub them clean
  [09:53.34]every evening with soap and water.
  [09:55.67]Poor mothers who had not been able to afford playthings for their children,
  [09:59.67]were now able to buy them playthings made of plastic.
  [10:05.20]Questions 26 to 28 are based on the passage you have just heard.
  [10:10.96]26. Who discovered plastics?
  [10:29.13]27. When were plastics manufactured on a large scale?
  [10:49.07]28. Why was everyone excited by plastics?
  [11:08.55]Passage Two
  [11:10.51]In 1812, in a village near Paris,
  [11:13.58]a little boy hit himself in the eyes with one of his father's sharp tools,
  [11:18.11]and became blind.
  [11:19.81]His name was Louis Braille,
  [11:22.89]and he was only four years old.
  [11:25.30]He was a clever boy,
  [11:26.54]and he soon learned to "see" without his eyes.
  [11:29.86]He touched things, or smelled them, or tasted them.
  [11:33.37]His family described things to him.
  [11:36.06]Although he couldn't see people's faces,
  [11:38.67]he learned to recognize their voices.
  [11:41.68]After his seventh birthday,
  [11:44.15]Louis went to the little school in the village.
  [11:47.70]But there weren't any books for him.
  [11:50.07]In 1819, the village priest 6 told Louis Braille's story
  [11:54.38]to the director of a famous school for blind boys.
  [11:58.45]At this school, boys learned math, grammar, geography, history, and music.
  [12:03.89]Also they learned to read.
  [12:05.89]Louis went to the school in Paris in February 1819.
  [12:10.51]He loved his classes and received high grade.
  [12:13.84]He learned to play piano.
  [12:15.54]Also he learned to read with his fingers.
  [12:18.69]Questions 29 to 31 are based on the passage you have just heard.
  [12:25.15]29. What's the main topic of the story?
  [12:43.57]30. How did Louis remember the people he knew?
  [13:02.09]31. When did Louis go to the school for blind boys?
  [13:22.36]Passage Three
  [13:24.23]Most Americans think that ice cream
  [13:26.68]is as American as baseball and apple pie.
  [13:31.08]But ice cream was known long before America was discovered.
  [13:35.25]The Roman Emperor Nero may have made a kind of ice cream.
  [13:40.51]He hired hundreds of men to bring snow and ice from the mountains.
  [13:44.52]He used it to make cold drinks.
  [13:46.69]Traveler Marco Polo brought the method
  [13:49.74]of making cold and frozen 7 milk from China.
  [13:52.75]Hundreds of years later, ice cream reached England.
  [13:56.01]It is said that King Charles I enjoyed that very much.
  [13:59.69]There is a story that he ordered his cook
  [14:02.19]to keep the method of making ice cream a royal secret.
  [14:06.09]Today ice cream is known throughout the world.
  [14:09.88]Americans alone eat more than two billion quarts 8 a year.
  [14:15.79]Questions 32 to 35 are based on the passage you have just heard.
  [14:21.61]32. What do most Americans think about ice cream?
  [14:40.49]33. Why did the Roman Emperor hire hundreds of men?
  [15:00.31]34. What is Marco Polo known as?
  [15:18.46]35. How many quarts of ice cream have been eaten by Americans in one year?
  [15:39.83]Section C
  [15:41.73]Art, said Picasso, is a lie that makes us realize the truth. So is a map.
  [15:48.86]We do not usually associate the precise work
  [15:52.31]of the mapmaker with a fanciful object of art.
  [15:56.67]Yet a map has many qualities that a painting or a poem has.
  [16:01.59]It is truth realized in a symbolic 9 way,
  [16:04.74]holding meanings it does not express on the surface.
  [16:09.54]And like work of art, it requires imaginative 10 reading.
  [16:14.14]Thus, map and reality are not, and cannot be, identical.
  [16:19.27]No aspect of map use is so obvious yet so often overlooked 11.
  [16:25.84]Most map reading mistakes occur
  [16:28.11]because the user forgets this vital fact
  [16:31.26]and expect a one to one correspondence 12 between map and reality.
  [16:36.52]A map, like a painting, is just one special version of reality.
  [16:42.23]To understand a painting,
  [16:43.72]you must have some idea of the medium
  [16:46.79]which was used by the artist.
  [16:49.38]You wouldn't expect a water color to
  [16:51.28]look anything like an oil painting or a charcoal 13 drawing,
  [16:55.78]even if the subject matter of all three were the same.
  [16:59.78]In the same way, the techniques used to create maps
  [17:03.45]will greatly influence the final representation 14.
  [17:07.83]As a map reader,
  [17:09.00]you should always be aware of the invisible hand of the mapmaker.
  [17:13.50]If the entire map making process operates at its full potential,
  [17:18.85]communication takes place between the mapmaker and the user.
  [17:23.55]The mapmaker translates reality
  [17:26.36]into the clearest possible picture under the circumstances,
  [17:31.60]and the map reader converts 15 this picture back
  [17:34.33]into an impression of the environment.
  [17:37.70]For such communication to take place,
  [17:39.95]the map reader as well as the mapmaker
  [17:42.36]must know something about how maps are created.
  [17:53.08]Art, said Picasso, is a lie that makes us realize the truth. So is a map.
  [18:00.01]We do not usually associate the precise work
  [18:03.49]of the mapmaker with a fanciful object of art.
  [18:09.36]Yet a map has many qualities that a painting or a poem has.
  [18:14.33]It is truth realized in a symbolic way,
  [18:17.94]holding meanings it does not express on the surface.
  [18:22.72]And like work of art, it requires imaginative reading.
  [18:27.76]Thus, map and reality are not, and cannot be, identical.
  [18:33.94]No aspect of map use is so obvious yet so often overlooked.
  [18:42.91]Most map reading mistakes occur
  [18:45.32]because the user forgets this vital fact
  [18:48.56]and expect a one to one correspondence between map and reality.
  [18:54.88]A map, like a painting, is just one special version of reality.
  [19:50.53]To understand a painting,
  [19:52.03]you must have some idea of the medium
  [19:55.07]which was used by the artist.
  [19:57.59]You wouldn't expect a water color to
  [19:59.63]look anything like an oil painting or a charcoal drawing,
  [20:04.08]even if the subject matter of all three were the same.
  [20:08.64]In the same way, the techniques used to create maps
  [20:11.77]will greatly influence the final representation.
  [21:06.25]As a map reader,
  [21:07.27]you should always be aware of the invisible hand of the mapmaker.
  [21:12.15]If the entire map making process operates at its full potential,
  [21:17.14]communication takes place between the mapmaker and the user.
  [22:12.13]The mapmaker translates reality
  [22:14.76]into the clearest possible picture under the circumstances,
  [22:19.90]and the map reader converts this picture back
  [22:22.54]into an impression of the environment.
  [22:25.99]For such communication to take place,
  [22:28.29]the map reader as well as the mapmaker
  [22:30.71]must know something about how maps are created.
  [22:36.46]Art, said Picasso, is a lie that makes us realize the truth. So is a map.
  [22:43.82]We do not usually associate the precise work
  [22:46.99]of the mapmaker with a fanciful object of art.
  [22:51.42]Yet a map has many qualities that a painting or a poem has.
  [22:56.33]It is truth realized in a symbolic way,
  [22:59.43]holding meanings it does not express on the surface.
  [23:04.29]And like work of art, it requires imaginative reading.
  [23:09.04]Thus, map and reality are not, and cannot be, identical.
  [23:14.39]No aspect of map use is so obvious yet so often overlooked.
  [23:20.31]Most map reading mistakes occur
  [23:22.72]because the user forgets this vital fact
  [23:26.05]and expect a one to one correspondence between map and reality.
  [23:31.36]A map, like a painting, is just one special version of reality.
  [23:37.09]To understand a painting,
  [23:38.48]you must have some idea of the medium
  [23:41.47]which was used by the artist.
  [23:44.07]You wouldn't expect a water color to
  [23:46.16]look anything like an oil painting or a charcoal drawing,
  [23:50.53]even if the subject matter of all three were the same.
  [23:54.77]In the same way, the techniques used to create maps
  [23:58.26]will greatly influence the final representation.
  [24:02.72]As a map reader,
  [24:03.72]you should always be aware of the invisible hand of the mapmaker.
  [24:08.75]If the entire map making process operates at its full potential,
  [24:13.72]communication takes place between the mapmaker and the user.
  [24:18.61]The mapmaker translates reality
  [24:21.34]into the clearest possible picture under the circumstances,
  [24:26.42]and the map reader converts this picture back
  [24:29.07]into an impression of the environment.
  [24:32.55]For such communication to take place,
  [24:34.71]the map reader as well as the mapmaker
  [24:37.16]must know something about how maps are created.

n.食物的一份&adj.帮助人的,辅助的
  • The poor children regularly pony up for a second helping of my hamburger. 那些可怜的孩子们总是要求我把我的汉堡包再给他们一份。
  • By doing this, they may at times be helping to restore competition. 这样一来, 他在某些时候,有助于竞争的加强。
v.给(船舶、飞机等)引航,导航( navigate的第三人称单数 );(从海上、空中等)横越;横渡;飞跃
  • Dolpins also navigates by some kind of echo system. 原来海豚也是借助某种回声系统寻向的。 来自辞典例句
  • Navigates in menus, lists, choice screens and into edited texts. 可以操纵菜单、列表、屏幕选项和进入编辑文本。 来自互联网
n.星系;银河系;一群(杰出或著名的人物)
  • The earth is one of the planets in the Galaxy.地球是银河系中的星球之一。
  • The company has a galaxy of talent.该公司拥有一批优秀的人才。
n.演戏,行为,假装;adj.代理的,临时的,演出用的
  • Ignore her,she's just acting.别理她,她只是假装的。
  • During the seventies,her acting career was in eclipse.在七十年代,她的表演生涯黯然失色。
vt.伪造,造假,假装;n.假货,赝品
  • He can tell a fake from the original.他能分辨出赝品和真品。
  • You can easily fake up an excuse to avoid going out with him.你可以很容易地编造一个借口而不与他一同外出。
n.神父,牧师,司铎,司祭,领导者,神甫;vt.使成为神职人员
  • He confessed to a priest that he had sinned.他向神父忏悔他犯了罪。
  • The priest visited all the old people in the parish.牧师探望了教区里的所有老人。
adj.冻结的,冰冻的
  • He was frozen to death on a snowing night.在一个风雪的晚上,他被冻死了。
  • The weather is cold and the ground is frozen.天寒地冻。
夸脱(液体或固体的容积单位)( quart的名词复数 ); 金矿
  • A gallon contains four quarts. 一加仑相当于四夸脱。
  • Susie cried quarts, I know she did. 苏姗泪流满面,我知道她会这样的。
adj.象征性的,符号的,象征主义的
  • It is symbolic of the fighting spirit of modern womanhood.它象征着现代妇女的战斗精神。
  • The Christian ceremony of baptism is a symbolic act.基督教的洗礼仪式是一种象征性的做法。
adj.富有想象力的,爱想象的
  • The imaginative child made up fairy stories.这个想像力丰富的孩子自己编神话故事。
  • Scott was an imaginative writer.司格特是位富于想象力的作家。
v.忽视( overlook的过去式和过去分词 );监督;俯视;(对不良现象等)不予理会
  • He seems to have overlooked one important fact. 他好像忽略了一个重要的事实。
  • This is a minor point, but it must not be overlooked. 此事虽小,然亦不可忽视。 来自《现代汉英综合大词典》
n.信件,通信(联系)符合,一致,相似
  • He showed me all the correspondence relating to the matter.他把与这件事有关的全部信件都给我看了。
  • What she has just said isn't in correspondence with the views of the majority.她刚才所说的同大多数人所持的观点不一致。
n.炭,木炭,生物炭
  • We need to get some more charcoal for the barbecue.我们烧烤需要更多的碳。
  • Charcoal is used to filter water.木炭是用来过滤水的。
n.表现某人(或某事物)的东西,图画,雕塑
  • The painting is a representation of a storm at sea.这幅画描绘的是海上的暴风雨。
  • All parties won representation in the national assembly.所有政党在国民大会中都赢得了代表资格。
v.(使)转变( convert的第三人称单数 );(使)转化;皈依;改变(信仰)
  • The microphone converts acoustic waves to electrical singals for transmission. 麦克风将声波转化成电信号进行传播。 来自《简明英汉词典》
  • These individuals' desire for wilderness preservation converts wilderness areas into public goods. 这些保护荒野的人们的愿望是把荒野区域转变成公有物。 来自英汉非文学 - 环境法 - 环境法
学英语单词
Acef
Aconitum lonchodontum
active anafront
AGP bus
alveolar sac
apertoes
b.f.a
Barrax
beam bunches
beer-drinking
bleach tank
Brikollare system
Brǎdeni
businessloans
butane iso-
C3H6O
cafe au lait spots
Caldwell, Erskine
cascade theory of cosmic radiation
citizeness
compensating feed stoker
complementary symmetry emitter follower
computer output
cophased
dimangular
Drummond Ra.
eggy
electromagneticss
elongation ruler
emberiza cioides castaneiceps
enlistees
esperite
exit aperture
FET high frequency amplifier circuit
futureoriented
gasification gas
got lucky
gray spiegel
great great grandfather
guard mounting
Gwegyo
harmonic induction engine
horse-blocks
hyperentanglement
instant photographic film
international call sign
intrinsic electroluminescence
investigated flood
isbas
japonica A. Gray Smilacina
Julian,Peroy Lavon
Kartung
keep alive voltage
keyhole notch
laceleaves
level order
lime cake waste
liver-Yang
mallet-finger
masures
mechanical degradation
medium energy electron diffraction
migrainous headache
military institute
milling arbour
money-laundering
mopping-up operation
munsen
nicener
nonrhetorical
nudzh
on ... bones
operational indicator
Ossa, Oros
over applied expense
potential difference of electric
printer elegraph code
provedore
pulse warmer
radiation frequency spectrum
reach saturation point
real damages
record of requisition
red sauce
remi inferior ossis ischii
repetition-rate divider
rheumatoid vasculitis
spiral wrack
split axle box
spring follow
subparts
Sunday motorist
tandem generators
The ends justify the means.
toluiquinone
towering kiln
ultimate wet strength
unactivatable
upper finite group
vacuum skull melting
venae colica sinistra
ventadour