新东方2008年6月四级听力真题原文

2021-10-11 19:15:10 · 作者:编辑部  
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Section A


Short Conversations:


11


M: Today’s a bad day for me! I fell off a step and twisted my ankle.


W: Don’t worry. Usually ankle injuries heal quickly if you stop regular activities for a while.


Q: What does the woman suggest the man do?


12


W: May I see your ticket please? I think you’re sitting in my seat.


M: Oh, you’re right! My seat is in the balcony. I’m terribly sorry!


Q: Where does the conversation most probably take place?


13


W: Did you hear Jay Smith died in his sleep last night?


M: Yes, it’s very sad. Please let everybody know that whoever wants to may attend the funeral.


Q: What are the speakers talking about?


14


M: Have you taken Prof. Yang’s exam before? I’m kind of nervous.


W: Yes. Just concentrate on the important ideas she’s talked about in class and ignore the details.


Q: How does the woman suggest the man prepare for Prof. Yang’s exam?


15


W: I’m so sorry, sir. And you’ll let me pay to have your jacket cleaned, won’t you?


M: That’s all right. It could happen to anyone. And I’m sure that coffee doesn’t leave lasting marks on clothing.


Q: What can we infer from the conversation?


16


W: Have you seen the movie ‘The Departed’? The plot was so complicated that I really got lost.


M: Yeah, I felt the same. But after I saw it a second time, I could put all the pieces together.


Q: How did the two speakers find the movie?


17


M: I’m really surprised you got an A on the test. You didn’t seem to have done a lot of reading.


W: Now you know why I never missed a lecture.


Q: What contributes to the woman’s high score?


18


W: Have you heard about a new digital television system? It lets people get about 500 channels.


M: Yeah. But I doubt they have anything different from what we watch now.


Q: What does the man mean?


Long Conversations:


Conversation One


W: Gosh! Have you seen this, Richard?


M: Seen what?


W: In the paper. It says there is a man going around pretending he is from the electricity board. He’s been calling at people’s homes, saying he is come to check that all their appliances are safe. Then he gets around them to make him a cup of tea. While they are out of their room, he steals their money, handbag, whatever and makes off with it.


M: But you know, Jane. It is partly their own fault, you should never let anyone like that in unless you are expecting them.


W: It’s all very well to say that. But someone comes to the door and says electricity or gas, and you automatically think they are ok. Especially if they flash a card to you.


M: Does this man have an ID then?


W: Yes, that’s just it. It seems he used to work for the electricity board at one time. According to the paper, the police are warning people especially pensioners not to meet anyone unless they have an appointment. It’s a bit sad one old lady told them she just been to the post office to draw her pension when he called, she said he must follow to her home. He stole the whole lot.


M: But what does he look like? Surely they must have a description


W: Oh yes they have .let’s see. In his 30s, tall, bushy dark hair, a slight northern accent. Sounds a bit like you actually.


Questions 19~22 are based on the long conversation you’ve just heard.


19 What does the woman want the man to read in the newspaper?


20 How did the man mentioned in the newspaper try to win further trust from the victims?


21 What is the warning from the police?


22 What does the woman speaker tell us about the old lady?


Conversation Two


M: Ms. Jones, could you tell me more about your fist job with hotel marketing concepts

W: Yes, certainly. I was a marketing consultant, responsible for marketing ten UK hotels. They were all luxury hotels in the leisure sector. All of a very high standard


M: which market were you responsible for?


W: For Europe and Japan.


M: I see from your resume that you speak Japanese, have you ever been to Japan?


W: Yes, I have. I spent a month In Japan in 2006. I met all the key people in the tourist industry, the big tour operators, and the tourist organizations. As I speak Japanese, I had a very big advantage.


M: Yes, of course. Have you has any contact with Japan in your present job.


W: Yes, I’ve had a lot. The truth is I’ve become very popular with the Japanese both for holidays and for business conferences. In fact the market for all types of luxury holidays for the Japanese has increased a lot recently.


M: Really? I am interested to hear more about that, but first tell me have you ever traveled on a luxury train, the orient express for example?


W: No, I haven’t. But I have traveled in the glacier express to Switzerland and I traveled across China by train about 8 years ago. I love train travel. That’s why I am very interested in this job


Questions 23-25 are based on the long conversation you’ve just heard.


23 What did the woman do in her first job?


24 What gives the woman an advantage during her business trip in Japan?


25Why is the woman applying for the new job?


Section B


Passage One


Time! I think a lot about time. And not just because it’s the name of the news organization I work for. Like most working people, I find time or the lack of it a never ending frustration and an unwinnable battle. My everyday is a race against the clock that I never ever seem to win. This is hardly a lonesome complaint. According to the families and work institutes national study of the changing workforce, fifty-five percent of employees say they don’t have enough time for themselves, sixty-three percent don’t have enough time for their spouses or partners, and sixty-seven percent don’t have enough time for their children. It’s also not a new complaint. I bet our ancestors returned home from hunting wild animals and gathering nuts and complained about how little time they had to pay in battle scenes on their cave wars. The difference is that the boss of animal-hunting and the head of nut-gathering probably told them to shut up or no survival for you. Today’s workers are still demanding control of their time. The difference is today’s bosses are listening. I’ve been reading a report issued today called ‘When Work Works’ produced jointly by three organizations. They set out to find and award the employers who employ the most creative and most effective ways to give their workers flexibility. I found this report worth reading and suggest every boss should read it for ideas.


Questions 26~28 are based on the passage you’ve just heard.


26. What is the speaker complaining about?


27. What does the speaker say about our ancestors?


28. Why does the speaker suggest all bosses read the report by the three organizations?


Passage Two


"Loving a child is a circular business. The more you give, the more you get, the more you want to give." Penelope Leach once said. What she said proves to be true of my blooded family. I was born in 1931. As the youngest of six children, I learned to share my parents' love. Raising six children during the difficult times of the Great Depression took its toll on my parents' relationship and resulted in their divorce when I was 18 years old. Daddy never had very close relationships with his children and drifted even farther away from us after the divorce. Several years later a wonderful woman came into his life, and they were married. She had two sons, one of them still at home. Under her influence, we became a “blended family” and a good relationship developed between the two families. She always


treated us as if we were her own children.


It was because of our other mother -- Daddy's second wife -- that he became closer to his own children. They shared over twenty-five years together before our father passed away. At the time of his death, death, the question came up of my mother -- Daddy's first wife -- attending his funeral.


I will never forget the unconditional love shown by my stepmother when I asked her if she would object to mother attending Daddy's funeral. Without giving it a second thought, she immediately replied.“Of course not, Honey-she's the mother of my children.”


Questions 29~31 are based on the passage you’ve just heard.


29. According to the speaker, what contributed to her parents' divorce?


30. What brought the father closer to her own children?


31. What message does the speaker want to convey in this talk?


Passage Three


In February last year, my wife lost her job. Just as suddenly, the owner of the greenhouse where I worked as manager died at heart attack. His family announced that they were going to close the business because no one in the family wanted to run it. Things looked pretty gloomy. My wife and I read the want ads each day.


Then one morning, as I was hanging out the “going out of business” sign at the greenhouse, the door opened, and in walked a customer. She was an office manager whose company had just moved into the new office park on the edge of town. She was looking for pots and plants to place in the reception areas in the offices. “I don’t know anything about plants,” she said, “I’m sure in a few weeks they’ll all be dead.”


While I was helping her select her purchases, my mind was raising. Perhaps as many as a dozen firms have recently opened offices in the new office park, and there were several hundred more acres with construction under-way. That afternoon, I drove out to the office park. By 6 o’clock that evening, I had signed contracts with seven companies to rent plants from me and pay me a fee to maintain them. Within a week, I had worked out an agreement to lease the greenhouse from the owner’s family. Business is now increasing rapidly, and one day, we hope to be the proud of the greenhouse


Questions 32~35 are based on the passage you’ve just heard.


32. What do we learn about the greenhouse?


33. What was the speaker doing when the customer walked in on morning?


34. What did the speaker think of when serving the office manager?


35. What was the speaker’s hope for the future?


Section C


Compound Dictation


We are now witnessing the emergence of an advanced economy based on information and knowledge. Physical labor, raw materials, and capital are no longer the key ingredients in the creation of wealth. Now the vital raw material in our economy is knowledge. Tomorrow's wealth depends on the development and exchange of knowledge. And individuals entering the work force offer their knowledge not their muscles. Knowledge workers get paid for their education and their ability to learn. Knowledge workers engage in mind work. They deal with symbols, words, figures and data. What does all this mean for you? As a future knowledge worker, you can expect to be generating, processing, as well as exchanging information. Currently, three out of four jobs involve some form of mind work, and that number will increase sharply in the future. Management and employees alike will be making decisions in such areas as product development, quality control, and customer satisfaction. In the new world of work, you can look forward to being in constant training to acquire new skills that will help you keep up with improved technologies and procedures. You can also expect to be taking greater control of your career. Gone are the nine-to-five jobs like time security, predictable promotions, and even the conventional work place as you are familiar with. Don't expect the companies will provide you with a clearly defined career path, and don't wait for someone to enpower you -- you have to enpower yourself.


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