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Listening(听力)
听力一
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。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.What kind of book is Li Lei looking for?
A.History.
B.Chinese.
C.Science.
2.Who is going to buy a present for Yang Ping?
A.Mike.
B.Betty.
C.Jane.
3.Where is the talk most likely to take place?
A.In an office.
B.At an airport.
C.In a shop.
4.Where is the man going?
A.To his office.
B.To the railway station.
C.Home.
5.When is Carl’s birthday?
A.July 2nd.
B.June 2nd.
C.April 4th.
第二节 听下面2段对话。每段对话后有几个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项。听每段对话前,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秒钟的作答时间。每段对话读两遍。
听第6段材料,回答第6-8题。
6.What is the possible relation between the two speakers?
A.The man is the woman’s husband.
B.The woman is a guest to the man’s house.
C.The man is a guest to the woman’s flat.
7.What were others doing inside?
A.Having dinner.
B.Having a concert.
C.Having a party.
8.What can we learn about the woman?
A.She worked hard and was successful.
B.She lived a poor life in the past.
C.Both A and B.
听第7段材料,回答第9-10题。
9.Who should send the Christmas cards at first?
A.The man.
B.The woman.
C.Someone.
10.Who will send them tomorrow?
A.The man.
B.The woman.
C.Someone.
听力二
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。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.What do we know about Bob’s house?
A.There’re fifty trees on one side of Bob’s house.
B.Bob’s house has five trees on either side.
C.There are thirty trees on both sides of Bob’s house.
2.What does the woman suggest?
A.Taking a taxi.
B.Taking a bus.
C.Walking.
3.Where might the dialogue take place?
A.In a bookstore.
B.In a park.
C.At home.
4.What do we know about Bob when he was in Paris?
A.He was 1.77 metres tall.
B.He was 2.10 metres tall.
C.He was 1.80 metres tall.
5.How long has the man been abroad?
A.Three weeks.
B.Four weeks.
C.Two months.
第二节 听下面2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。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秒钟的作答时间。每段对话或独白读两遍。
听第6段材料,回答第6-7题。
6.Where does the conversation most probably take place?
A.In a hospital.
B.At the man’s home.
C.At the woman’s home.
7.What was Mr Smith doing when the fire started?
A.He was reading a book.
B.He was watching TV.
C.He was sleeping.
听第7段材料,回答第8-10题。
8.How many cats does Nancy have?
A.20.
B.30.
C.25.
9.How long does Nancy work a day?
A.About 10 hours.
B.Half a day.
C.More than 12 hours.
10.What does Nancy usually do when she finishes her work every day?
A.She usually meets her friends.
B.She usually goes swimming.
C.She usually looks after her cats.
daughter to a successful business woman, her life has all the marks of a Hollywood blockbuster.
Madam Tussaud was born in 1761 and named Marie Grosholtz. Her father was killed in battle only two
months before Mane's birth. For the first five years of her life, Marie lived in Berne with her mother, who
worked as housekeeper for Dr Philippe Curtius. A doctor, with a talent for wax modeling, Curtius became
her teacher.
It was Curtius who opened the original wax exhibition in Paris in 1770 and introduced Marie to some
famous people. At only 17, she modeled the famous writer Francois Voltaire, followed by a portrait of
American statesman Benjamin Franklin when he was in Paris as US ambassador. Both figures are still on
display at Madame Tussaud's, London today.
Her work at Curtius successful wax exhibition led to an invitation to the court of Louis XVI and his
queen. For nine years she lived at the palace of Versailles guiding the artistic education of the king's sister.
Meanwhile the French Revolution was about to erupt. Aware of the political arrest, Philippe Curtius called
Marie back to Paris. Marie's connection with the royal family made her guilty. Both she and her mother
were arrested. After she was set free, Marie was forced to make death masks (a death mask is a model of
a dead person's face, made by coving their face with a soft substance and letting it become hard) of executed
(被处决的) nobles. Many were former friends at court, including her former employers, the king and queen.
By 1800 Marie was married with two young children and a poor business inherited from Curtius. Madame
Tussaud made the decision to take her exhibition on tour. In 1802, she left France. For the next 33 years,
Madame Tussaud traveled the British Isles, exhibiting her growing collection of portraits. In those pre-television
days, this was the only way most people had direct contact with the famous people of the time. The exhibition
became permanently based in London in 1835, moving to its present site in Marylebone Road in 1884. Her last
work, a remarkable self-portrait that is still on show, was completed only eight years before her death aged 89.
B. successful
C. peaceful
D. lonely
B. her gift for wax modeling
C. her mother's help
D. her friendship with the king's sister
B. she had modeled the French royal family
C. she had worked at the place of Versailles
D. she had refused to make death masks
B. how Marie balanced her family and work
C. the establishment of Madame Tussaud's, London
D. the popularity of Madame Tussaud's wax exhibition
a. She hadn't seen his father since she was born.
b. She modeled the portrait of Francois Voltaire.
c. She modeled the portrait of Francois Voltaire.
d. She guided the artistic education of the king's daughter.
e. In 1842, she completed her last work.
B. 3
C. 4
D. 5
The story of Madame Tussaud is as fascinating as that of the exhibition itself. From a housekeeper's daughter to a successful business woman, her life has all the marks of a Hollywood blockbuster.
Madam Tussaud was born in 1761 and named Marie Grosholtz. Her father was killed in battle only two months before Mane's birth. For the first five years of her life, Marie lived in Berne with her mother, who worked as housekeeper for Dr Philippe Curtius. A doctor, with a talent for wax modeling, Curtius became her teacher.
It was Curtius who opened the original wax exhibition in Paris in 1770 and introduced Marie to some famous people. At only 17, she modeled the famous writer Francois Voltaire, followed by a portrait of American statesman Benjamin Franklin when he was in Paris as US ambassador. Both figures are still on display at Madame Tussaud's, London today.
Her work at Curtius successful wax exhibition led to an invitation to the court of Louis XVI and his queen. For nine years she lived at the palace of Versailles guiding the artistic education of the king's sister. Meanwhile the French Revolution was about to erupt. Aware of the political nrest,Philippe Curtius called Marie back to Paris. Marie7 s connection with the royal family made her guilty. Both she and her mother were arrested. After she was set free, Marie was forced to make death masks (a death mask is a model of a dead person's face, made by coving their face with a soft substance and letting it become hard) of executed (被处决的) nobles. Many were former friends at court, including her former employers, the king and queen.
By 1800 Marie was married with two young children and a poor business inherited from Curtius. Madame Tussaud made the decision to take her exhibition on tour. In 1802, she left France. For the next 33 years, Madame Tussaud traveled the British Isles, exhibiting her growing collection of portraits. In those pre-television days, this was the only way most people had direct contact with the famous people of the time. The exhibition became permanently based in London in 1835, moving to its present site in Marylebone Road in 1884. Her last work, a remarkable self – portrait that is still on show, was completed only eight years before her death aged 89.
【小题1】The underlined part in Para. 1 implies that Madame Tussaud’s life was .
| A.complicated | B.successful | C.peaceful | D.lonely |
| A.Curtius’ recommendation | B.her gift for wax modeling |
| C.her mother’s help | D.her friendship with the king’s sister |
| A.she had worked for Dr Philippe Curtius |
| B.she had modeled the French royal family |
| C.she had worked at the place of Versailles |
| D.she had refused to make death masks |
| A.how Marie’s was modeling business became successful |
| B.how Marie balanced her family and work |
| C.the establishment of Madame Tussaud’s, London |
| D.the popularity of Madame Tussaud’s wax exhibition |
a. She hadn’t seen his father since she was born.
b. She modeled the portrait of Francois Voltaire.
c. She modeled the portrait of Francois Voltaire.
d. She guided the artistic education of the king’s daughter.
e. In 1842, she completed her last work.
| A.2 | B.3 | C.4 | D.5 |
Oprah Winfrey, the American media queen, is undoubtedly one of the most successful women in the world. She’s the host and owner of The Oprah Winfrey Show, which continuingly wins high ratings, and the founder of Harpo Productions, which produces her television shows and movies.
Certainly Winfrey feels right these days. Early on, however, Winfrey seemed more like a candidate for welfare rolls than film roles. She stayed with her grandmother after birth and moved to Wisconsin to live with her mother at 6, and hence began the most difficult period in her life. They lived in the low-income community and her mother showed her less attention. Her classmates came from families with more money and she couldn’t participate with them in a lot of activities.
The young girl had held too much anger and pain inside and she rebelled. She repeatedly ran away from home and got into various troubles. During that time, she turned heavy smoker, became addicted to alcohol and drug and was sent to a juvenile detention home(青少年拘留所) at the age of 13.
Fed up, Oprah’s mother sent her to Tennessee to live with her father. To a large extent, this man saved Oprah’s life and helped pave the way for her success. She received a full scholarship to Tennessee State University where she majored in Speech and Performing Arts. After graduation, she landed a job as a news reader at a television station, where she did not do well at first. But she did not give up; instead, she worked harder. She put in long hours and prepared carefully before going on camera.
Her hard work paid off: she moved up swiftly to news reader and reporter in Baltimore and was offered her own talk show in 1977. From then on, her career began to take off.
Some people are handed money at birth and are nurtured into success; other people create their own success, and Oprah Winfrey definitely belongs to the latter. “There is no such thing as failure in my life,” she concluded, “Life is a marathon. I think the ones who survive in life do it by hammering at it one day at a time.” Well, by doing so, she won the game.
- 1.
By mentioning “Winfrey seemed more like a candidate for welfare rolls than film roles” in Paragraph 2, the author indicates that ______.
- A.she was interested in acting and applied for roles in many films, but failed.
- B.she was more interested in working for charities than in films.
- C.she lived a poor life and had to depend on the government for food.
- D.the film companies wouldn’t offer her roles because she was too poor.
- A.
- 2.
Which of the following is NOT the cause of her bad behaviors as a teenager?
- A.Her mother had no time to take good care of her.
- B.Her classmates’ families were very rich.
- C.She couldn’t take part in activities with her classmates.
- D.She had too much anger and pain inside.
- A.
- 3.
Oprah Winfrey succeeded at last chiefly due to _______.
- A.her hard childhood living with her grandmother.
- B.her hard work and the spirit of not giving up.
- C.her good performance in the juvenile detention home.
- D.her major in Speech and Performing Arts in college.
- A.
- 4.
Which of the following can best serve as the title of this passage?
- A.Oprah Winfrey, from a problem girl to the American media queen.
- B.Oprah Winfrey, from a news reader to a marathon winner.
- C.Even famous people have a disgraceful past.
- D.All that glitters is not gold.
- A.
The story of Madame Tussaud is as fascinating as that of the exhibition itself. From a housekeeper's daughter to a successful business woman, her life has all the marks of a Hollywood blockbuster.
Madam Tussaud was born in 1761 and named Marie Grosholtz. Her father was killed in battle only two months before Mane's birth. For the first five years of her life, Marie lived in Berne with her mother, who worked as housekeeper for Dr Philippe Curtius. A doctor, with a talent for wax modeling, Curtius became her teacher.
It was Curtius who opened the original wax exhibition in Paris in 1770 and introduced Marie to some famous people. At only 17, she modeled the famous writer Francois Voltaire, followed by a portrait of American statesman Benjamin Franklin when he was in Paris as US ambassador. Both figures are still on display at Madame Tussaud's, London today.
Her work at Curtius successful wax exhibition led to an invitation to the court of Louis XVI and his queen. For nine years she lived at the palace of Versailles guiding the artistic education of the king's sister. Meanwhile the French Revolution was about to erupt. Aware of the political nrest,Philippe Curtius called Marie back to Paris. Marie7 s connection with the royal family made her guilty. Both she and her mother were arrested. After she was set free, Marie was forced to make death masks (a death mask is a model of a dead person's face, made by coving their face with a soft substance and letting it become hard) of executed (被处决的) nobles. Many were former friends at court, including her former employers, the king and queen.
By 1800 Marie was married with two young children and a poor business inherited from Curtius. Madame Tussaud made the decision to take her exhibition on tour. In 1802, she left France. For the next 33 years, Madame Tussaud traveled the British Isles, exhibiting her growing collection of portraits. In those pre-television days, this was the only way most people had direct contact with the famous people of the time. The exhibition became permanently based in London in 1835, moving to its present site in Marylebone Road in 1884. Her last work, a remarkable self – portrait that is still on show, was completed only eight years before her death aged 89.
The underlined part in Para. 1 implies that Madame Tussaud’s life was .
A.complicated B.successful C.peaceful D.lonely
Marie got a job at that court of Louis XVI because of .
A.Curtius’ recommendation B.her gift for wax modeling
C.her mother’s help D.her friendship with the king’s sister
Marie was arrested during the French Revolution because .
A.she had worked for Dr Philippe Curtius
B.she had modeled the French royal family
C.she had worked at the place of Versailles
D.she had refused to make death masks
The last paragraph is mainly about .
A.how Marie’s was modeling business became successful
B.how Marie balanced her family and work
C.the establishment of Madame Tussaud’s, London
D.the popularity of Madame Tussaud’s wax exhibition
According toe the passage, how many of the following statements about Marie are TREU?
a. She hadn’t seen his father since she was born.
b. She modeled the portrait of Francois Voltaire.
c. She modeled the portrait of Francois Voltaire.
d. She guided the artistic education of the king’s daughter.
e. In 1842, she completed her last work.
A.2 B.3 C.4 D.5
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