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2013年6月六级考试真题(一).pdf

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1、 1 2013 年 6 月六级考试真题(第一套)Part Writing Direction:For this part,you are allowed 30 minutes to write an essay commenting on the remark“A smile is the shortest distance between two people.”You can cite examples to illustrate your point.You should write at least 150 words but no more than 200 words.Part L

2、istening Comprehension Section A Directions:In this section,you will hear 8 short conversations and 2 long conversations.At the end of each conversation,one or more questions will be asked about what was said.Both the conversation and the questions will be spoken only once.After each question there

3、will be a pause.During the pause,you must read the four choices marked A),B),C)and D),and decide which is the best answer.Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 1 with a single line through the centre.1.A)She has completely recovered.C)She is still in a critical condition.B)She went into

4、 shock after an operation.D)She is getting much better.2.A)Ordering a breakfast.C)Buying a train ticket.B)Booking a hotel room.D)Fixing a compartment.3.A)Most borrowers never returned the books to her.B)The man is the only one who brought her book back.C)She never expected anyone to return the books

5、 to her.D)Most of the books she lent out came back without jackets.4.A)She left her work early to get some bargains last Saturday.B)She attended the supermarkets grand opening ceremony.C)She drove a foil hour before finding a parking space.D)She failed to get into the supermarket last Saturday.5.A)H

6、e is bothered by the pain in his neck.B)He cannot do his report without a computer.C)He cannot afford to have a coffee break.D)He feels sorry to have missed the report.6.A)Only top art students can show their works in the gallery.B)The gallery space is big enough for the mans paintings.C)The woman w

7、ould like to help with the exhibition layout.D)The man is uncertain how his art works will be received.7.A)The woman needs a temporary replacement for her assistant.B)The man works in the same department as the woman does.C)The woman will have to stay in hospital for a few days.D)The man is capable

8、of dealing with difficult people.8.A)It was better than the previous one.C)It exaggerated the citys economic problems.B)It distorted the mayors speech.D)It reflected the opinions of most economists.Questions 9 to 12 are based on the conversation you have just heard.9.A)To inform him of a problem the

9、y face.C)To discuss the content of a project report.B)To request him to purchase control desks.D)To ask him to fix the dictating machine.10.A)They quote the best price in the market.B)They manufacture and sell office furniture.C)They cannot deliver the steel sheets on time.2 D)They cannot produce th

10、e steel sheets needed.11.A)By marking down the unit price.C)By allowing more time for delivery.B)By accepting the penalty clauses.D)By promising better after-sales service.12.A)Give the customer a ten percent discount.B)Claim compensation from the steel suppliers.C)Ask the Buying Department to chang

11、e suppliers.D)Cancel the contract with the customer.Questions 13 to 15 are based on the conversation you have just heard.13.A)Stockbroker.C)Mathematician.B)Physicist.D)Economist.14.A)Improve computer programming.C)Predict global population growth.B)Explain certain natural phenomena.D)Promote nationa

12、l financial health.15.A)Their different educational backgrounds.C)Chaos Theory and its applications.B)Changing attitudes towards nature.D)The current global economic crisis.Section B Directions:In this section,you will hear 3 short passages.At the end of each passage,you will hear some questions.Bot

13、h the passage and the questions will be spoken only once.After you hear a question,you must choose the best answer from the four choices marked A),B),C)and D).Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 1 with a single line through the centre.Passage One Questions 16 to 18 are based on the pa

14、ssage you have just heard.16.A)They lay great emphasis on hard work.C)They require high academic degrees.B)They name 150 star engineers each year.D)They have people with a very high IQ.17.A)Long years of job training.C)Distinctive academic qualifications.B)High emotional intelligence.D)Devotion to t

15、he advance of science.18.A)Good interpersonal relationships.C)Sophisticated equipment.B)Rich working experience.D)High motivation.Passage Two Questions 19 to 21 are based on the passage you have just heard.19.A)A diary.C)Distinctive academic qualifications.B)A fairy tale.D)Devotion to the advance of

16、 science.20.A)He was a sports fan.C)Sophisticated equipment.B)He loved adventures.D)High motivation.21.A)Encourage people to undertake adventures.C)Raise peoples environmental awareness.B)Publicise his colourful and unique life stories.D)Attract people to Americas national parks.Passage Three Questi

17、ons 22 to 25 are based on the passage you have just heard.22.A)The first infected victim.C)The doctor who first identified it.B)A coastal village in Africa.D)A river running through the Congo.23.A)They exhibit similar symptoms.C)They have almost the same mortality rate.B)They can be treated with the

18、 same drug.D)They have both disappeared for good.24.A)By inhaling air polluted with the virus.C)By drinking water from the Congo River.B)By contacting contaminated body fluids.D)By eating food grown in Sudan and Zaire.25.A)More strains will evolve from the Ebola virus.3 B)Scientists will eventually

19、find cures for Ebola.C)Another Ebola epidemic may erupt sooner or later.D)Once infected,one will become immune to Ebola.Section C Directions:In this section,you will hear a passage three times.When the passage is read for the first time,you should listen carefully for its general idea.When the passa

20、ge is read for the second time,you are required to fill in the blanks with the exact words you have just heard.Finally,when the passage is read for the third time,you should check what you have written.The ideal companion machine would not only look,feel,and sound friendly but would also be programm

21、ed to behave in an agreeable manner.Those qualities that 26 other people enjoyable would be simulated as closely as possible,and the machine would appear to be 27 ,stimulating and easygoing.Its informal conversational style would make interaction comfortable,and yet the machine would remain slightly

22、 28 and therefore interesting.In its first 29 ,it might be somewhat hesitant and unassuming,but as it came to know the user it would progress to a more 30 and intimate style.The machine would not be a passive 31 but would add its own suggestions,information,and opinions;it would sometimes 32 in deve

23、loping or changing the topic and would have a 33 of its own.The machine would convey presence.We have all seen how a computers use of personal names often fascinates people and needs them to treat the machine as if it were almost human.Such features are easily written into the software.By introducin

24、g a degree of forcefulness and humour,the machine could 34 a vivid and unique character.Friendships are not made in a day,and the computer would be more 35 as a friend if it simulated the gradual changes that occur when one person is getting to know another.At an appropriate time it might also expre

25、ss the kind of affection that stimulates attachment and intimacy.Part Reading Comprehension Section A Directions:In this section,there is a passage with ten blanks.You are required to select one word far each blank from a list of choices given in a word bank following the passage.Read the passage th

26、rough carefully before making your choices.Each choice in the bank is identified by a letter.Please mark the corresponding letter for each item on Answer Sheet 2 with a single line through the centre.You may not use any of the words in the bank more than once.Questions 36 to 45 are based on the foll

27、owing passage.Most experts in sleep behaviour agree that there is virtually an epidemic of sleepiness in the nation.“I cant think of a 36 study that hasnt found Americans getting less sleep than they ought to,”says Dr David.The beginning of our sleep-deficit crisis can be 37 to the invention of the

28、light bulb a century ago.From diary entries and other personal accounts from the 18th and 19th centuries,sleep scientists have reached the 38 that the average person used to sleep about 9.5 hours a night.By the 1950s and 1960s,that sleep schedule had been reduced 39 to between 7.5 and 8 hours,and mo

29、st people had to wake to an alarm clock.“People cheat on their sleep,and they dont realise theyre doing it,”says Dr David.“They think theyre okay because they can get by on 6.5 hours,when they really need 7.5,8 or even more to feel 40 vigorous.”Perhaps the most merciless robber of sleep,researchers

30、say,is the 41 of the day.Whenever pressures from work,family,friends and community mount,many people consider sleep the least expensive item on the agenda.“In our society,youre considered 42 if you say you only need 5.5 hours sleep.If you say youve got to get 8.5 hours,people think you lack drive an

31、d ambition.”To assess the 43 of sleep deficit,researchers have put subjects through a set of psychological and 4 performance tests requiring them,for instance,to add columns of numbers or 44 a passage read to them only minutes earlier.“Weve found that if youre sleep-deprived,performance suffers,”say

32、s Dr David.“Short-term memory is 45 ,so are abilities to make decisions and to concentrate.”A)ideally I)conclusion B)dynamic J)drastic C)currently K)expectations D)single L)dramatically E)startlingly M)recur F)complexity N)consequences G)traced H)recall O)impaired Section B Directions:In this sectio

33、n,you are going to read a passage with ten statements attached to it.Each statement contains information given in one of the paragraphs.Identify the paragraph from which the information is derived.You may choose a paragraph more than once.Each paragraph is marked with a letter.Answer the questions b

34、y marking the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2.Welcome,Freshmen.Have an iPod.A Taking a step that many professors may view as a bit counterproductive,some colleges and universities are doling out Apple iPhones and Internet-capable iPods to their students.The always-on Internet devices raise so

35、me novel possibilities,like tracking where students gather together.With far less controversy,colleges could send messages about cancelled classes,delayed buses,campus crises or just the cafeteria menu.B While schools emphasise its usefulness online research in class and instant polling of students,

36、for example 一 a big part of the attraction is,undoubtedly,that the iPhone is cool and a hit with students.Being equipped with one of the most recent cutting-edge IT products could just help a college or university foster a cutting-edge reputation.C Apple stands to win as well,hooking more young cons

37、umers with decades of technology purchases ahead of them.The lone losers,some fear,could be professors.Students already have laptops and cell phones,of course,but the newest devices can take class distractions to a new level.They practically beg a user to ignore the long-suffering professor struggli

38、ng to pass on accumulated wisdom from the front of the room 一 a prospect that teachers find most irritating and students view as,well,inevitable.D“When it gets a little boring,I might pull it out,”acknowledged Naomi Pugh,a first-year student at Freed-Hardeman University in Henderson,Tenn.,referring

39、to her new iPod Touch,which can connect to the Internet over a campus wireless network.She speculated that professors might try even harder to make classes interesting if they were to compete with the devices.E Experts see a movement toward the use of mobile technology in education,though they say i

40、t is in its infancy as professors try to come up with useful applications.Providing powerful hand-held devices is sure to fuel debates over the role of technology in higher education.“We think this is the way the future is going to work”said Kyle Dickson,co-director of research and the mobile learni

41、ng initiative at Abilene Christian University in Texas,which has bought more than 600 iPhones and 300 iPods for students entering this fall.F Although plenty of students take their laptops to class,they dont take them everywhere and would prefer something lighter.Abilene Christian settled on the dev

42、ices after surveying students and finding that they did not like hauling around their laptops,but that most of them always carried a cell phone,Dr Dickson said.5 G It is not clear how many colleges and universities plan to give out iPhones and iPods this fall;officials at Apple were unwilling to tal

43、k about the subject and said that they would not leak any institutions plans.“We cant announce other peoples news,”said Greg Joswiak,vice president of iPod and iPhone marketing at Apple.He also said that he could not discuss discounts to universities for bulk purchases.H At least four institutions t

44、he University of Maryland,Oklahoma Christian University,Abilene Christian and Freed-Hardeman 一 have announced that they will give the devices to some or all of their students this fall.Other universities are exploring their options.Stanford University has hired a student-run company to design applic

45、ations like a campus map and directory for the iPhone.It is considering whether to issue iPhones but not sure its necessary,noting that more than 700 iPhones were registered on the universitys network last year.At the Massachusetts Institute of Technology,iPhones might already have been everywhere,i

46、f AT&T,the wireless carrier offering the iPhone in the United States,had a more reliable network,said Andrew Yu,mobile devices platform project manager at MIT.“We would have probably gone ahead with this,maybe just getting a thousand iPhones and giving them out,”Mr.Yu said.I The University of Maryla

47、nd at College Park is proceeding cautiously,giving the iPhone or iPod Touch to 150 students,said Jeffrey Huskamp,vice president and chief information officer at the university.“We dont think that we have all the answers,”Mr.Huskamp said.By observing how students use the gadgets,he said,“Were trying

48、to get answers from the students.”J At each college,the students who choose to get an iPhone must pay for mobile phone service.Those service contracts include unlimited data use.Both the iPhones and the iPod Touch devices can connect to the Internet through campus wireless networks.With the iPhone,t

49、hose networks may provide faster connections and longer battery life than AT&Ts data network.Many cell phones allow users,to surf the Web,but only some newer ones are capable of wireless connection to the local area computer network.K University officials say that they have no plans to track their s

50、tudents(and Apple said it would not be possible unless students give their permission).They say that they are drawn to the prospect of learning applications outside the classroom,though such lesson plans have yet to surface.L“My colleagues and I are studying something called augmented reality(a fiel

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