题目内容

Growing Pains(《成长的烦恼》)是大陆较早引进的一部美国情景喜剧,讲述的是西佛一家的三个孩子在成长中遇到一些故事。而你们在自己的成长过程中也一定碰到过一些挫折,失败,而长大的标志是你在这些经历中获得了一些宝贵的财富。请以 Gains from Growing Pains 为题,写一篇不少于120词的英语短文。(开头已经给出,不计入字数。)
要求:1. 描述成长过程中的一件令你烦恼的事情。

2. 说说此事最终带给你的启示和收获。

Growing up is not always a very enjoyable time.                                                                                     

                                                                                   

                                                                                   

                                                                                  

                                                                                    

                                                                                   

                                                                                   

                                                                                    

                                                                                   

                                                                                   

                                                                                    

                                                                                     

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听力(Listening Comprehension)

第一节

听下面5段对话.每段对话后有一个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项,并标在试卷的相应位置.听完每段对话后.你都有10秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题.每段对话仅读一遍.

1.Where does this conversation most probably take place?

A.At a railway station.

B.In a travel service.

C.At the airport.

2.What does the man mean about the bowls and plates?

A.He prefers to have them wrapped quickly.

B.He would like the store to send them to him.

C.He will take them with him to save time.

3.Why is the man worried?

A.He doesn't like biology.

B.He can't get the books he needs.

C.He has too much reading to do.

4.When does the woman's class begin on Mondays?

A.8∶15.

B.8∶30.

C.8∶45.

5.What are the two speakers talking about?

A.Making a new plan for the computer club.

B.Borrowing more laptops(笔记本电脑).

C.Getting more computers and e-mail addresses.

第二节

听下面5段对话或独白.每段对话或独白后有几个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项,并标在试卷的相应位置.听每段对话或独白前,你将有时间阅读各个小题,每小题5秒钟;听完后,各小题将给出5秒钟作答时间.每段对话或独白读两遍.

听下面一段对话.回答第6和第7题.

6.What was the man's problem?

A.He lost his money.

B.He didn't know where the ticket machine was.

C.He didn't know how to get a ticket.

7.Where should the man get off the train?

A.At State Street Station.

B.At Star Palace Station.

C.At Central Park Station.

听下面一段对话,回答第8至10题.

8.What does Carol have to do on Saturday morning?

A.Do some washing for her mother.

B.Go to the shopping center at 11∶00.

C.Go to the doctor's after doing some shopping.

9.What will Carol do after she has lunch?

A.Help a girl with her studies.

B.Do her history homework.

C.Play soccer with her brother.

10.What can we know about Carol?

A.She is not content with her mother's time planning for her.

B.She has promised to go to see Jim in the evening.

C.She will send her brother to play soccer.

听下面一段对话,回答第11至13题.

11.On which day has the man decided to leave?

A.The 22nd.

B.The 23rd.

C.The 29th.

12.What flight will the man take from New York to Berlin?

A.Flight BA 2701.

B.Flight BA 7101.

C.Flight PA 2701.

13.How long will the man have to wait at Kennedy Airport?

A.Half an hour.

B.One and a half hours.

C.Two hours.

听下面一段对话,回答第14至16题.

14.What's the matter with Simon?

A.He has caught a bad cold.

B.He has the flu.

C.He has some trouble with his feet.

15.What can we learn from the conversation?

A.Simon has been ill in bed since Sunday.

B.Eva suggests Simon seeing another doctor.

C.Simon is anxious about the speech he is to give.

16.What has Simon decided to do?

A.Go to the party to dance.

B.Follow Eva's advice

C.See the same doctor again.

听下面一段独白,回答第17至20题.

17.What will happen if rainforests are not protected?

A.All the rainforests will disappear within 400 years.

B.The world will become colder and colder.

C.More than 130 kinds of life forms will die out every day.

18.What is the percentage of life forms on Earth living in rainforests?

A.15% to 17%.

B.15% to 70%.

C.50% to 70%.

19.If we want to protect rainforests, what should we do?

A.Buy some products made from rainforests.

B.Offer some money or help with the work.

C.Join the organization of the environment.

20.Which of the following doesn't the speaker mention?

A.Learning more about rainforests.

B.Growing more rainforests.

C.Reading the books about saving the rainforests.

We hear with our ears, right? Yes, but scientists have known for years that we also hear with our eyes. In a study published in 1976, researchers found that people combined both auditory cues(听力提示) and visual ones,like mouth and face movements, when they heard speech.

A new study that looks at a different set of sensory cues adds to a growing body of evidence that suggests such combination is natural. In a paper, Bryan Gick and Donald Derrick report that people can hear with their skin.

The researchers had volunteers listen to spoken syllables. Meanwhile, they connected the volunteers to a device that would blow a tiny puff (气流) of air onto the skin of their hands or necks. The syllables included “ba” and “pa”, which produce brief puffs from the mouth when spoken, and “da” and “ta,” which do not produce puffs. They found that when listeners heard “da” or “ta” while a puff of air was blown onto their skin, they considered the sounds as “ba” or “pa”.

Dr. Gick said the findings were similar to those from the 1976 study, in which visual cues defeated auditory ones — volunteers listened to one syllable but thought it another because they were watching a video of mouth movements corresponding to the second syllable. In his study,he said,cues from sensory receivers on the skin defeated the ears as well. “Our skin is doing the hearing for us,” he said.

Dr. Gick noted that it would normally be rare that someone actually sensed a puff of air produced by another, although people might occasionally sense their own puffs. “What’s so persuasive about this particular effect,” he added. “is that people are picking up on this information that they don’t know they are using.” That supports the idea that combining different sensory cues is natural.

Dr. Gick said the finding also suggested that other sensory cues might be at work in speech perception(知觉) — that, as he put it, “we are these fantastic perception machines that take in all the information available to us and combine it faultlessly.”

“Da” or “ta” were considered as “ba” or “pa” when __________.

A. they were spoken quickly

B. puffs of air were blown onto the listener’s skin

C. they were pronounced using a special device

D. they were made with face movements

Which of the following statements is TRUE?

A. Humans combine different sensory cues through experience.

B. Dr. Gick’s new study is more important than the one in 1976.

C. People sometimes can sense their own puffs when speaking

D. Only auditory and visual cues are at work in speech perception.

What is the best title of the text?

A. We Can Hear with Our Skin

B. Our Visual Cues Is Doing the Hearing for Us

C. Facial Expressions Are Important

D. We Are Fantastic Machines

We hear with our ears, right? Yes, but scientists have known for years that we also hear with our eyes. In a study published in 1976, researchers found that people combined both auditory cues(听力提示) and visual ones,like mouth and face movements, when they heard speech.
A new study that looks at a different set of sensory cues adds to a growing body of evidence that suggests such combination is natural. In a paper, Bryan Gick and Donald Derrick report that people can hear with their skin.
The researchers had volunteers listen to spoken syllables. Meanwhile, they connected the volunteers to a device that would blow a tiny puff (气流) of air onto the skin of their hands or necks. The syllables included “ba” and “pa”, which produce brief puffs from the mouth when spoken, and “da” and “ta,” which do not produce puffs. They found that when listeners heard “da” or “ta” while a puff of air was blown onto their skin, they considered the sounds as “ba” or “pa”.
Dr. Gick said the findings were similar to those from the 1976 study, in which visual cues defeated auditory ones — volunteers listened to one syllable but thought it another because they were watching a video of mouth movements corresponding to the second syllable. In his study,he said,cues from sensory receivers on the skin defeated the ears as well. “Our skin is doing the hearing for us,” he said.
Dr. Gick noted that it would normally be rare that someone actually sensed a puff of air produced by another, although people might occasionally sense their own puffs. “What’s so persuasive about this particular effect,” he added. “is that people are picking up on this information that they don’t know they are using.” That supports the idea that combining different sensory cues is natural.
Dr. Gick said the finding also suggested that other sensory cues might be at work in speech perception(知觉) — that, as he put it, “we are these fantastic perception machines that take in all the information available to us and combine it faultlessly.”
【小题1】“Da” or “ta” were considered as “ba” or “pa” when __________.

A.they were spoken quickly
B.puffs of air were blown onto the listener’s skin
C.they were pronounced using a special device
D.they were made with face movements
【小题2】Which of the following statements is TRUE?
A.Humans combine different sensory cues through experience.
B.Dr. Gick’s new study is more important than the one in 1976.
C.People sometimes can sense their own puffs when speaking
D.Only auditory and visual cues are at work in speech perception.
【小题3】What is the best title of the text?
A.We Can Hear with Our Skin
B.Our Visual Cues Is Doing the Hearing for Us
C.Facial Expressions Are Important
D.We Are Fantastic Machines

We hear with our ears, right? Yes, but scientists have known for years that we also hear with our eyes. In a study published in 1976, researchers found that people combined both auditory cues(听力提示) and visual ones,like mouth and face movements, when they heard speech.

A new study that looks at a different set of sensory cues adds to a growing body of evidence that suggests such combination is natural. In a paper, Bryan Gick and Donald Derrick report that people can hear with their skin.

The researchers had volunteers listen to spoken syllables. Meanwhile, they connected the volunteers to a device that would blow a tiny puff (气流) of air onto the skin of their hands or necks. The syllables included “ba” and “pa”, which produce brief puffs from the mouth when spoken, and “da” and “ta,” which do not produce puffs. They found that when listeners heard “da” or “ta” while a puff of air was blown onto their skin, they considered the sounds as “ba” or “pa”.

Dr. Gick said the findings were similar to those from the 1976 study, in which visual cues defeated auditory ones — volunteers listened to one syllable but thought it another because they were watching a video of mouth movements corresponding to the second syllable. In his study,he said,cues from sensory receivers on the skin defeated the ears as well. “Our skin is doing the hearing for us,” he said.

Dr. Gick noted that it would normally be rare that someone actually sensed a puff of air produced by another, although people might occasionally sense their own puffs. “What’s so persuasive about this particular effect,” he added. “is that people are picking up on this information that they don’t know they are using.” That supports the idea that combining different sensory cues is natural.

Dr. Gick said the finding also suggested that other sensory cues might be at work in speech perception(知觉) — that, as he put it, “we are these fantastic perception machines that take in all the information available to us and combine it faultlessly.”

1.“Da” or “ta” were considered as “ba” or “pa” when __________.

A. they were spoken quickly

B. puffs of air were blown onto the listener’s skin

C. they were pronounced using a special device

D. they were made with face movements

2.Which of the following statements is TRUE?

A. Humans combine different sensory cues through experience.

B. Dr. Gick’s new study is more important than the one in 1976.

C. People sometimes can sense their own puffs when speaking

D. Only auditory and visual cues are at work in speech perception.

3.What is the best title of the text?

A. We Can Hear with Our Skin

B. Our Visual Cues Is Doing the Hearing for Us

C. Facial Expressions Are Important

D. We Are Fantastic Machines

 

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