【正文】
ding the bookshelf last month? M: Uh, well, I hate to tell you this… but I can’t seem to find them. Q: What do we learn from the conversation? 12. W: I’m going to Martha’s house. I have a paper to plete, and I need to use her puter. M:Why don’t you buy one yourself? Think how much time you could save. Q: What does the man suggest the ? 13. W: Bob said that Seattle is a great place for conferences. M: He’s certainly in a position to make that ment. He’s been there so often. Q: What does the man say about Bob? 14. W: Mr. Watson, I wonder whether it’s possible for me to take a vacation early next month. M: Did you fill out a request form? Q: What is the probable relationship between the two speakers? 15. M: Do you want to go to the lecture this weekend? I hear the guy who’s going to deliver the lecture spent a year living in the rain forest. W: Great! I’m doing a report on the rain forest. Maybe I can get some new information to add to it. Q: What does the woman mean? 16. W: Wow! I do like this campus: all the big trees, the green lawns, and the old buildings with tall columns. It’s really beautiful. M: It sure is. The architecture of these buildings is in the Greek style. It was popular in the eighteenth century here. Q: What are the speakers talking about? 17. M: This article is nothing but advertising for housing developers. I don’t think the houses for sale are half that good. W: Come on, David. Why so negative? We’re thinking of buying a home, aren’t we? Just a trip to look at the place won’t cost us much. Q: What can be inferred from the conversation? 18. M: Would you pass me the sports section, please? W: Sure, if you give me the classified ads local news section. Q: What are the speakers doing? Now you’ll hear two long conversations. Conversation One W: Hello, Gary. How’re you? M: Fine! And yourself? W: Can’t plain. Did you have time to look at my proposal? M: No, not really. Can we go over it now? W: Sure. I’ve been trying to e up with some new production and advertising strategies. First of all, if we want to stay petitive, we need to modernize our factory. New equipment should’ve been installed long ago. M: How much will that cost? W: We have several options ranging from one hundred thousand dollars all the way up to half a million. M: OK. We’ll have to discuss these costs with finance. W: We should also consider human resources. I’ve been talking to personnel as well as our staff at the factory. M: And what’s the picture? W: We’ll probably have to hire a couple of engineers to help us modernize the factory. M: What about advertising? W: Marketing has some interesting ideas for television mercials. M: TV? Isn’t that a bit too expensive for us? What’s wrong with advertising in the papers, as usual? W: Quite frankly, it’s just not enough anymore. We need to be more aggressive in order to keep ahead of our petitors. M: Will we be able to afford all this? W: I’ll look into it , but I think higher costs will be justified. These investments will result in higher profits for our pany. M: We’ll have to look at the figures more closely. Have finance draw up a budget for these investments. W: All right. I’ll see to it. Questions 19 to 20 are based on the conversation you have just heard. are the two speakers talking about? does the woman say about the equipment of their factory? does the woman suggest about hu?! ?2. What does President Bush think of tapping oil in ANWR? A) It will increase America’s energy consumption. B) It will exhaust the nation’s oil reserves. C) It will help reduce the nation’s oil imports. D) It will help secure the future of ANWR. 63. We learn from the second paragraph that the American oil industry _________. A) shows little interest tapping oil in ANWR B) expect to stop oil imports from Saudi Arabia C) tend to exaggerate America’s reliance on foreign oil D) believes that drilling for ANWR will produce high yields 64. Those against oil drilling ANWR argue that ________. A) it will drain the oil reserves in the Alaskan region B) it can do little to solve . energy problem C) it can cause serious damage to the environment D) it will not have much mercial value 65. What do the environmentalists mean by saying “Not so fast” (Line1, )? A) Don’t be too optimistic. B) Don’t expect fast returns. C) The oil drilling should be delayed. D) Oil exploitation takes a long time. .66. It can be learned from the passage that oil exploitation beneath ANWR’s frozen earth ________. A) involves a lot of technological problems B) remains a controversial issue C) is expected to get under way soon D)will enable the . to be oil independent Part V Cloze(15 minutes) Directions :There are 20 blanks in the following passage .For each blank there are four choices marked A),B),C) and D) on the right side of the paper. You should choose the ONE that best fits into the passage. Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the center. 注意:此部分試題請(qǐng)?jiān)诖痤}卡2上作答。 “enemy” “one who opposes your interests. ”Thus, when a player meets an opponent ,he or she may tend to every action no matter how gross ,may be considered justifiable. I recall an incident in a handball game when a referee refused a player’s request for a time out for a glove change because he did not consider them wet enough .The player proceeded to rub his gloves across his wet Tshirt and then exclaimed, “Are they wet enough now?” In the heat of battle, players have been observed to throw themselves across the court without considering the consequences the such a move might have on anyone in their way. I have also witnessed a player reacting to his opponent’s intentional and illegal blocking by deliberately hitting him with the ball as hard as he could during the course of play. Off