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大学六级-184及答案解析.doc

1、大学六级-184 及答案解析(总分:710.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、Part Writing(总题数:1,分数:106.50)1.Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write an essay based on the following drawing. In your essay, you should first describe the drawing and interpret its meanings, and then give your comment on it. You should w

2、rite at least 150 words but no more than 200 words. (分数:106.50)_二、Part Listening Com(总题数:0,分数:0.00)三、Section A(总题数:4,分数:106.50)(分数:35.50)A.They need more shopping centers.B.Shopping centers are very common.C.The old houses should be kept.D.New houses should be built.A.She has decided not to go to Au

3、stralia.B.She hasn“t made a decision what to do.C.Her friend just returned from Australia.D.She prefers to travel without her friend.A.To go to the movies.B.To go out for lunch.C.To look for information.D.To ask for information.A.He was fined.B.He bought a ticket.C.He taught a lesson.D.He had an acc

4、ident.A.A sporting event.B.A doctor“s appointment.C.A grammar exercise.D.A gym exercise.(分数:21.30)A.Leave the parcel for him to mail later.B.Find another person to send the parcel.C.Give him a hand to prepare for the presentation.D.Finish the presentation before the meeting.A.He is going to give a t

5、alk on fishing.B.He thinks fishing is a good way to kill time.C.He has the same hobby as Cindy“s father.D.He is eager to meet Cindy“s parents.A.The dorm life is not interesting.B.There is no kitchen in the building.C.The girls are confined to the timetable.D.The dorm room is too crowded.Questions 9

6、to 11 are based on the conversation you have just heard. (分数:21.30)A.It can hardly be heard.B.It can hardly be noticed.C.It is used everywhere.D.It changes people“s ideas.A.In factories.B.in restaurants.C.On the farm.D.In prisons.A.It shortens the eating time.B.It cheers up customers“ mind.C.It sati

7、sfies customers“ fast pace.D.It is very popular among customers.Questions 12 to 15 are based on the conversation you have just heard. (分数:28.40)A.Art movements in the U.S.B.Modem history of the world.C.The effects of Great Depression in 1930s.D.The popularity of art.A.Many decided to move abroad.B.S

8、ome of them committed suicide for hardships.C.Many were forced to move to rural areas.D.Some of them lost their passion for creation.A.People in the country are busily harvesting crops.B.Soldiers are fighting bravely on the battlefield.C.Fashionable ladies are shopping around in the city center.D.A

9、poor man is begging money from passers-by.A.The artists got fed up with country scenes.B.The American social condition had changed.C.The interests of artists had shifted to other areas.D.People no longer took interest in regionalist paintings.四、Section B(总题数:0,分数:0.00)五、Passage One(总题数:1,分数:21.30)Qu

10、estions 16 to 18 are based on the passage you have just heard. (分数:21.30)A.It can survive in the desert without water and food.B.It can bear a temperature 9 higher than its body.C.It can not store water for more than a week.D.It can live longer than any other desert animals.A.Too little sunlight.B.S

11、urvival competition.C.Severe heat.D.Too much rain.A.They couldn“t bear the coldness underground.B.They can“t find food in the daytime.C.They cannot find water in the desert during the daytime.D.They cannot bear the rays and temperature during the daytime.六、Passage Two(总题数:1,分数:28.40)Questions 19 to

12、22 are based on the passage you have just heard. (分数:28.40)A.Anyone who is interested in that sport.B.Those who play best at that sport.C.The smartest students in class.D.The competitive ones in class.A.They are the leaders of these sports.B.They can cheer everyone up in the sport.C.They lead everyo

13、ne to shout and cheer.D.They jump up and down during the sport.A.They wear the same clothes and shoes as the players.B.They have to learn the jumping and cheering moves.C.They love the color and name of their team.D.They always call out the name of all the players.A.Clean all the desks and chairs in

14、 every classroom.B.Memorize the people who came to America long ago.C.Stand up and sing American National Anthem.D.Stand up and show respect to their national flag.七、Passage Three(总题数:1,分数:21.30)Questions 23 to 25 are based on the passage you have just heard. (分数:21.30)A.Chose some pens and pencils.

15、B.Bargained with Mr. Stevenson about the price.C.Promised that they would come back again.D.Walked away at the end of their inquiry.A.Disappointed.B.Satisfied.C.Doubtful.D.Anxious.A.Sell the store to the young couple.B.Start another business for his daughter.C.Give the store to his daughter and son-

16、in-law.D.Open a store to sell ice cream.八、Section C(总题数:1,分数:71.00)International Women“s Day (8 March) is an occasion marked by women“s groups around the world. This date is also commemorated at the United Nations and is 1 in many countries as a national holiday. When women on all continents, often

17、divided by national boundaries and by 2 , linguistic (语言上的), cultural, economic and political differences, come together to celebrate their Day, they can 3 to a tradition that represents at least nine decades of struggle for equality, 4 , peace and development. International Women“s Day is the story

18、 of ordinary women as makers of history; it is rooted in the centuries-old struggle of women to 5 society on an equal footing with men. In ancient Greece, Lysistrata initiated a sexual strike against men in order to end war; during the French Revolution, Parisian women 6 “liberty, equality, friendsh

19、ip“ marched on Versailles to demand women“s rights to vote. The idea of an International Women“s Day first arose at the turn of the century, which in the industrialized world was a period of 7 and turbulence, booming population growth and radical ideologies. Since those early years, International Wo

20、men“s Day has assumed a new global dimension for women in developed and developing countries alike. The growing international women“s movement, which has been 8 by four global United Nations women“s conferences, has helped make the commemoration a rallying point for 9 efforts to demand women“s right

21、s and participation in the political and economic process. Increasingly, International Women“s Day is a time to reflect on progress made, to call for change and to celebrate acts of courage and determination by ordinary women who have played an 10 role in the history of women“s rights. (分数:71.00)填空项

22、 1:_九、Part Reading Compr(总题数:0,分数:0.00)十、Section A(总题数:1,分数:35.50)Aristotle defined a friend as “a single soul dwelling in two bodies“. How many friends we have, and how easily we make, maintain and lose them, has a significant impact on our emotional well-being. It“s no surprise, 1 , that friends c

23、an improve just about every aspect of our life. Friends can protect us from the 2 of bereavement (丧失亲人) or divorce. They don“t even have to be great friendssome of the positive effect is 3 down to the company: have a pint with a mate and you“re by definition not socially 4 . “There are friends you“r

24、e just more 5 with. Others may be more interesting, but they may be more offended. Really good friends don“t take offence. Friendships can end because they stop being equal. You may take different 6 , have different experiences, which make it harder to maintain a friendship.“ says educational psycho

25、logist Karen Majors. We first recognise the importance of friends in childhood. While some of us may retain a few childhood friends, the biggest opportunity for friendship comes in higher education. A study of long-term friendships found that friendships formed during college years stayed close 20 y

26、ears later, if they scored highly in closeness as well as 7 to begin with. “At college you can 8 close friendships because you“re in such close 9 for sustained periods,“ says Glenn Sparks, Purdue“s professor of communication. These relationships are rare and hard to 10 ; they“re very unusual outside

27、 family relationships. A. proximity B. rather C. routes D. then E. cultivate F. aftershocks G. preferable H. connected I. compromising J. comfortable K. replicate L. simply M. isolated N. communication O. possibility(分数:35.50)十一、Section B(总题数:1,分数:71.00)There“s Gold in Them there LandfillsA. In the

28、movie WALLE, humankind has left Earth in a bit of a mess. The planet is choked with garbage and all the people have shipped out, leaving robot WALLE to clean the place up and make it habitable again. Things may not be quite that bad yet, but there“s no doubt that we produce a huge amount of waste. E

29、ven with increased recycling, landfill sites are filling up by the day andin the absence of a brave robotthe waste experts of planet Earth are working on the next best thing: landfill mining. B. The idea is simple. Instead of disappearing under mountains of our own waste, while paying through the no

30、se for diminishing commodities, why not dig up and recycle what we have already thrown away? C. Next week, industry experts will gather in London for the first global landfill mining conference. Bringing together environmental scientists, economists and landfill operators, the one-day meeting promis

31、es to show delegates how to turn waste into “garbage gold“. D. Landfill mining has been tried before. The first scheme began in 1953 at Hiriya garbage dump outside Tel Aviv, Israel, and aimed to reclaim fine-particle waste rich in minerals to improve soil quality at local fruit farms. The landfill c

32、losed in 1998, but the recycling plant that remains on the site still produces soil improver from green waste. Then during the 1960s and 1970s, a handful of sites in the US began separating waste to recycle the steel and to compost food scraps. In the late 1980s, a pilot programme was set up to extr

33、act recyclables from a small, community landfill in the town of Edinburg, New York, and burn the solid leavings to generate energy. This pilot proved uneconomical but during the oil price rising of the 1990s interest in the economic value of waste soared. Investors claimed to snap up scrap metal com

34、panies, only for the price of commodities to drop through the floor in the mid-1990s. E. Yet now that commodities prices are rising once more, environmental issues are nigh on everyone“s list of priorities and land prices are increasing, every square kilometre is worth too much to use for landfill.

35、Raiding the dump seems like a good idea again. This time the prospects are more promising. Thanks to a decade of innovation by the recycling industry, the technology to process landfill waste is more readily available. F. So what“s in a landfill worth recycling? For a start, the average landfill is

36、filled with valuableand sometimes even preciousmetals. Aluminium, from drinks cans, is just one example. According to Patrick Atkins, environmental consultant for private equity fund Pegasus Capital Advisors, and until recently director of energy innovation at US aluminium producer Alcoa, Americans

37、throw away 317 aluminium cans every second of every day. Around half of these, totalling 680,000 tonnes of aluminium each year, dodge the recycling basket and end up in landfill. Given that the cost of aluminium peaked at $2,700 per tonne in July this means America is burying up to $1.83 billion wor

38、th of metal per year. Atkins estimates that there is now more aluminium in US landfills than can be produced from ores globally in one year. And it“s not only aluminium that is hiding down there with the used diapers (尿布) and grocery bags. One tonne of scrap from discarded PCs contains more gold tha

39、n can be produced from 16 tonnes of ore, he says. And the world throws away 18 million tonnes of electronic waste each year. G. Nowadays it is relatively easy to separate the metal you want from the junk you don“t using recycling technologies. Eddy current (旋涡流) magnets, for example, can avert alumi

40、nium and other metals from a flowing stream of waste. Plastic, too, is becoming easier to pick out. Rather than the more expensive process of doing it by hand, some plastic sorting plants are now using some scanners, which sort different types based on the spectrum of light they absorb. And since ri

41、sing prices are making oil seem like an expensive raw material to produce plastics, recycling existing plastic from landfill seems sensible. H. Metals and plastics are only part of it, says William Hogland, an environmental engineer at the University of Kalmar in Sweden. All that smelly food and oth

42、er organic waste rots down sooner or later. And as the TelAviv project discovered back in the 1950s, even this can be worth digging up. I. “The earth fraction of landfill can be one of the most profitable as coverage material, compost (堆肥) and for lawn improvement,“ Hogland says. There“s also plenty

43、 of flammable material in landfills. One kilogram of the coarse earth fractioncontaining particles greater than 50 millimetres acrossyields between 6 and 10 megajoules (兆焦) of energy, Hogland says, and the average Swedish landfill has 40 million tonnes of the stuff. Burning that waste is a controver

44、sial idea because of toxins (毒素) that may be released in the process. But, Hogland says, thanks to new technology for cleaning flue gases, Sweden is building new incinerators (焚烧炉) to provide heat and light for local communities. J. So if landfill sites are, sometimes literally, gold mines, why aren

45、“t companies tearing into them already? For its part, Alcoa has invested heavily in stopping as many cans as it can from reaching a landfill, but has stopped short of digging them up again. “It“s not something we are doing at this point,“ said Alcoa spokesman Kevin Lowery. “If we thought it was the

46、most efficient thing, we“d do it.“ K. Part of the reason for this is that while aluminium can be recycled at a fraction of the cost of producing it from ore, and using 94 per cent less energy, that“s only the case once you have collected the cans. Getting them out of landfill is more expensive than

47、buying aluminium directly from a recycling plant. Plus no two landfill sites are the same. Each has a different blend of useful materials, mixed with all kinds of less useful or dangerous materials. And when you consider that companies would likely want to mine more than one site, covered perhaps by

48、 different state or national regulations, it starts to look like too much trouble. L. Reid Lifset, an industrial ecologist at Yale University who has investigated the prospect of extracting copper from landfills, has come to a similar conclusion. “With current technology and prices, landfill mining

49、is generally not economically feasible,“ he says. “The benefits such as revenue from sale of recovered metals, and reduction in regulatory costs, generally did not outweigh the costs.“ In other words, there may be a lot of copper buried in landfills, but if copper is your thing, a huge mine with gigantic equipment makes more sense than picking your way through several different landfill sites. M. Advocates of landfill mining argue that with more imagination and a sober asse

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