题目内容

Men have traveled ever【C1】______ they first appeared on the earth.【C2】______ primitive times they did not travel for pleasure but to find new places【C3】______ their herds could feed, or to escape【C4】______ hostile neighbours, or to find more favourable【C5】______ . They traveled on foot. Their journeys were long,【C6】______ , and often dangerous. They protected【C7】______ with simple weapons, such as sticks or stone clubs, and by lightning fires at night and, above【C8】______ , by keeping together.
【C9】______ intelligent and creative, they soon discovered easier ways of traveling. They【C10】______ on the backs of their domesticated animals; they hollowed out tree trunks and, by using bits of wood as paddles, were able to travel【C11】______ water.
Later they traveled, not for necessity, 【C12】______ for the joy and excitement of seeing and experiencing new things. This is still the main reason【C13】______ we travel today. Traveling, of course, has now become a 【C14】______ organized business. There are cars and splendid roads,【C15】______ trains, huge ships and jet airliners, all of【C16】______ provide us【C17】______ comforts and security. This sounds wonderful. But there are difficulties. If you want to go【C18】______ , you need a passport and a visa, tickets, luggage, and a hundred and【C19】______ other things. If you lose any of them, your journey may be 【C20】______ .
【C1】

A. when
B. since
C. while
D. then

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Why was the man worried at first?

A. He couldn't decide on a topic for his paper.
B. He thought his paper was late.
C. He hadn't heard from his family in a while.
D. He thought the woman had been iii.

SECTION A CONVERSATIONS
Directions: In this section you will hear several conversations. Listen to the conversations carefully and then answer the questions that follow.
听力原文:M: I really appreciate you're feeling me in on yesterday's lecture.
W: No problem. I thought you might want to go over it together. And anyway, it helps me review. Hope you're feeling better now.
M: I am, thanks. So you said she talked about squid? Sounds a little strange.
W: Well, actually, it was about the evolution of sea life, a continuation from last week. The octopus and the squid descended from earlier creatures with shells. They survived by shattering their shells, somewhere between 200 and 500 million years ago.
M: That's a pretty long span of time.
W: I know. That's what she said though. To be precise, exactly when they emerged is uncertain and why is still unexplained.
M: Some squid are really huge. Can you imagine something that big if it still had a shell?
W: Actually, it's because they lost their shells that they could evolve to a bigger size.
M: Make sense. But some are really huge. I've read about fishermen that caught squid that weight over a ton. Did she talk about how that happens?
W: Not really, but she did mention some unusual cases. In 1933 in New Zealand, they caught a squid let's see here it was 22 yards long. Its eyes were 18 inches across. Can you imagine?
M: Reminds me about all those stories of sea monsters.
W: Doctor Simpson thinks there are probably even larger ones that haven't been found, because squid are intelligent and fast—so they can easily get away from humans. Maybe some of those monster stories are true.
What topic are the man and woman discussing?

A. Mating habits of squid and octopus.
B. The evolution of certain forms of sea life.
C. The study of marine shells.
D. Survival skills of sea creatures.

听力原文:M: Hi, Sue. Where have you been?
W: Oh. Hi, Dan. I was just at the library. I have to hand in my biology paper tomorrow.
M: Tomorrow? Oh, no! I thought it wasn't due till Monday.
W: Oh. Don't worry. It is due Monday. But I'm going away for the weekend and won't be back till Monday night.
M: Oh, where are you going?
W: California. We're having a family reunion. It's my grandmother's ninetieth birthday, so all the cousins and aunts and uncles are going. She planned the whole thing herself.
M: Wow. That's great. How many people will be there?
W: Around sixty. My family is big and spread up but we're pretty close. So have you started working on your biology paper?
M: Yeah. I'm doing it on bees and bow they're able to recognize whether another bee is related to them.
W: How can they tell?
M: They use their sense of smell. The sweat bees guard their nest this way. If another bee approaches the nest, the guard determines if the new bee is familiar. If it is, it's allowed to enter.
W: Interesting. Can other insects do this? Well, the paper wasps can. Each wasp nest has a special combination of plant fibers and so the wasps that live there have a unique smell. Those two are the only kinds I've read about so far.
M: Well, you've still got time. It sounds like that the bees are picky about who comes to their family reunion.
What is the relationship between the speakers?

A. They're classmates.
B. They're roommates.
C. They're cousins.
D. They're lab partners.

What do we mean by a perfect English pronunciation? In one sense there are as many different kinds of English as there are speakers of it.【21】two speakers speak in exactly the same way. We can always hear differences【22】them, and the pronunciation of English varies a great deal in different geographical【23】. How do we decide what sort of English to use as a model? This is not a question that can be【24】in the same way for all foreign learners of English. When you live in a part of the world like India or West Africa, where there is a long【25】of speaking English for general communication purposes, you should【26】to acquire a good variety of the pronunciation of this area. It would be a fashion in these circumstances to use as a model BBC English or【27】of the sort. On the other hand, if you live in a country【28】there is no traditional use of English. You must take as your model some form. of native English pronunciation. It does not【29】very much which form. you choose. The most【30】way is to take as your model the sort Of English you can hear most often.
(36)

A. Not
B. No
C. None
D. Nor

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