题目内容

听力原文:W: Dad!
M: Yes? What's the matter, Mary?
W: I'm wondering if I should buy a pair of tennis shoes. I'm going to join the tennis club at school.
M: Why hot? It' s good that you' re finally playing sports.
W: But I'd like to have Adidas.
M: Adidas? They're expensive. The Chicago Bulls wear them, after all!
W: No. All the guys on the school tennis team are wearing Adidas, boys as well as girls.
M: But none of us ever had Adidas and we used to play quite well.
W: Here, Dad, is an ad about Adidas. Can I read it to you?
M: Go ahead.
W: 'Over forty years ago, Adidas gave birth to a new idea in sports shoes, And the people who wear our shoes have been running and winning ever since. In fact, Adidas has helped them set over 400 world records in track and field alone. '
M: Nonsense! The players have to go through a lot of hard training and practice. It's nothing to do with the shoes. They may be comfortable, but....
W: You're right, Dad. The ad goes on to say 'You are born to run. And we were born to HELP YOU DO IT BET- TER.'
M: Hmm. It may be good for running, but you don't run.
W: Listen, '... Maybe that's why more and more football, soccer, basketball and tennis', see? 'TENNIS players are turning to Adidas. They know that, whatever their game, they can rely on Adidas workmanship and quality in every product we make. '
M: OK, OK, dear. I know Adidas is good. But how much is a pair in your size?
W: You don' t have to worry about that, Dad. I've saved same money since last Christmas. I just want to hear your opinion.
M: That's good. I have been wanting to have a pair of Adidas sneakers myself.
(27)

About taking up a sport.
B. About favorite tennis teams.
C. About obtaining a pair of shoes.
D. About joining a sports club.

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听力原文: I travel quite a lot in Beijing. I think the underground railway is marvelous. I nearly always travel by tube because it is fast and cheap. But I also like to travel by bike, particularly for short journeys. Beijing's public transport is quite efficient. You can go almost wherever you like by public transport. Buses usually run at very short intervals. But they are rather crowded and slow, particularly in the rush hour. The roads get very congested and there are traffic jams at busy crossroads. When you are in a hurry, the best way to travel in Beijing is by tube. Taxis get held up in traffic jams and besides, the fares are quite high.
In China today the most common way of traveling is still by rail, although traveling by car or coach is getting more and more popular. We have almost all the provinces and big cities connected by the railways. There are over 53,000 kilometers of track in China. Rail transport provides a very important service to the public, to industry and commerce. Rail fares are usually lower than airfares. They are almost the same as coach fares, but traveling by train is more comfortable than traveling by car or coach.
(23)

A. How to improve transportation.
B. The best transportation facilities.
C. A comparison between railway and airplane.
D. Transportation in China.

【C20】

A. hardly been explained
B. been explained
C. been interrupted
D. been replaced

In 1983, Warren began successfully treating sufferers with antibiotics and bismuth.

A. Y
B. N
C. NG

Section B
Directions: There are 2 passages in this section. Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements. For each of them there are four choices marked A, B, C and D. You should decide on the best choice.
On the night of September 2, 1666, a fire broke out in a baker's shop near Fish Street Hill in Lon- don. Before the flames were finally extinguished (扑灭), nearly the entire cid, had been reduced to ashes. Over thirteen thousand homes, fifty churches, and numerous public buildings and hospitals were lost in the fire. For all practical purposes, London was destroyed.
The Great Fire was not seen as a total tragedy, however. The deplorable (糟糕)conditions of the city had been attacked by physicians and humanitarians for years before the fire; thus, with the opportunity clearly presented to create a shining new city, artists and craftsmen from all over England hurried to submit their designs for the rebuilding of London.
Among those who submitted plans was Sir Christopher Wren, one of England's leading architects and the Surveyor General of London. The task of rebuilding the city was given to him. Wren realized that the Great Fire would not have been so damaging if the city bad been better laid out: broader streets were needed to replace the twisted, narrow alleys overhung with disrepaired wooden houses and shops. He also felt that redesigning the main thoroughfares (大街) of London would result in increased and more effective transportation within the city.
Shortly after Wren began working on his first drafts for the rebuilding, King Charles I issued a statement prohibiting the construction of any house or shop within the city limits until after the plans were completed. When the plans were known to the citizens of London, however, they were overwhelmingly rejected. The most vocal leaders of the opposition were the landlords, who feared that such a drastic widening of the streets would reduce the amount of land available for development.
Winter was approaching; consequently, it was necessary for the rebuilding to proceed at once. Per- mission was, therefore, granted for the townspeople and landlords to commence reconstruction of their houses and shops at the sites where they had been before the fire. Had the need for immediate action not been so pressing, some kind of compromise could likely have been reached. This was not to be, however, and the ideas that could have made London one of the world's most beautiful cities never came to pass.
What became of the plans for the rebuilding of London?

A. Nothing—they were never finished.
B. They were adopted in modified form.
C. They were followed and London was rebuilt at once.
D. Nothing—London was rebuilt as it had been before the fire.

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