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change? 聽第 10段材料,回答第 1720題。 1. When is Cold Feet and The Lost Soul shown? A. Today B. On Thursday C. On Saturday. 2. Where does the man want to go? A. To a bookstore B. To a chemist’s C. To a shoemaker’ s. 3. How Old was the man when he went to Indonesia? A. 18 B. 19 C. 20. 4. What does the woman advise the rnan to do? A . Drink less. B. See a doctor C. Stop smoking. 5. What is the man? A . A teacher B. A customer C. A waiter. 第二節(jié) (共 15小題;每小題 ,滿分 ) 聽下面 5段對話或獨白。錄音內(nèi)容結(jié)束后,你將有兩分鐘的時間將試卷上的答案轉(zhuǎn)涂到答題卡上。每段對話或獨白讀兩遍。s life? If yes. don39。d been offered the universe. 24. From the passage we know_______. A. Annie knew how important she was to her mother. B. shoppers didn’t notice the author dancing with her son. C. there are bedtime stories in the Tale of Samuel Whiskers. D. Sam was not surprised at the music which was played in the store. 25. When the author knew her daughter could not stop looking at her pretty face, she felt_______. A. sad B. deeply moved C. annoyed D. ashamed 26. Why wouldn’t the author trade a dance with her son even if she was given the world? A. Because she knew she wouldn’t be given the universe . B. Because her son was the most important person to her . C. Because she thought she was the happiest one at the moment. D. Because it was very important for the author to dance with her son. 27. What does the author want to prove by showing two examples of her kids? A. Her kids love her very much. B. She enjoys staying with her kids. C. The greatest moments of a lifetime always e unexpectedly. D. Those women walking under the moon should enjoy the happiness with kids. C On the banks of Tanzania’s Lake Eyasi lives the world’s last hunter gatherer tribe (部落 ) — the Hadza. They don’t grow food, raise animals or build houses. Instead they live a life unchanged for more than ten thousand years. Their world is one of plete freedom — something modern society can barely imagine and is unlikely to ever experience, let alone have the skills to stay alive. Text messages and phone calls don’t exist. Nor do cars and electricity. No jobs, timetables, and social structures. No laws, taxes and unbelievably, no money — the closest thing to currency is the trade for a pair of shorts with a neighboring tribe. We spent our time with the Hadza hunting baboons (狒狒 ), a daily activity for the men. Their land is packed with sharp bushes, poisonous snakes and maneating lions. But a successful hunting trip is the difference between eating or going hungry. The Hadza diet consists mainly of honey, fruit and meat. Men often hunt in pairs to shoot animals with bows and arrows. The Hadza show us how to track animals, from baboons to snakes to lions. They are hugely skilled with their handmade bows and arrows — we have a go and barely get the arrow to go three feet in front of us. The language of the Hadza is believed to be the oldest stillspoken language known to man. The Hadza don’t have conflict, and have no memory of starvation. Their population never reaches numbers that cannot be supported through hunting or gathering. They never get from their land more than they need. Unlike modernday office workers, the Hadza enjoy an extraordinary amount of free time. Their “work” — hunting for food — takes up around five hours of their day. They’ve been in such a state of pea ceful existence for thousands of years. 28. We can learn from the text that the Hadza_______. A. lead a very primitive life