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1998年6月大学英语六级考试试题
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            Part I Listening Comprehension(20 minutes)
            Section A
            Directions: In this section you will hear 10 short conversations. At
            the end of each conversation, a question will be asked about what
            was said. Both the conversation and the question will be spoken only
            once.After each question there will be a pause. During the pause,
            you must read the four suggested answers marked A),B),C)and D)and
            decide which is the best answer. Then mark the corresponding letter
            on the Answer Sheet with a single line through the center.
            Example: You will hear:
            You will read: A)2 hours. B)3 hours.
            C)4 hours. D)5 hours.
            From the conversation we know that the two are talking about some
            work they will start at 9 o'clock in the morning and have to finish
            at2 in the afternoon. Therefore, D)“5 hours” is the correct answer.
            Youshould choose [D] on the Answer Sheet and mark it with a single
            line through the center.
            Sample Answer [A][B][C][D]
            1.A) He thinks that there won't be enough sets for everybody.
            B) He thinks that the speaker won't show up.
            C) He thinks the seminar won't be open to the public.
            D) He thinks that there might not be any more tickets available.
            2.A) Their father is unable to keep his promise.
            B) Their father is going on a vacation without her.
            C) Their father isn't telling her the truth.
            D) Their father doesn't want to travel abroad.
            3.A) John didn't pass, although he had tried his best.
            B) John did better than he thought he was able to.
            C) John got an excellent score, which was unexpected.
            D) John was disappointed at his math score.
            4.A) The roof of the woman's house needs to be repaired.
            B) The roof of the man's house has several bad leaks.
            C) The woman's bathroom was badly damaged.
            D) The man works for a roofing company.
            5.A) Mr. Smith will be replaced if he makes another mistake.
            B) Mr. Smith is an admirable chief of the Asian Department.
            C) Mr. smith's department is more successful than all the others.
            D) Mr. smith is seldom in his office.
            6.A) She don't have a fax machine. B) She may quit her present job
            soon.
            C) She is tired of her present job. D) Her phone number has changed.
            7.A) Someone has taken her luggage. B) Her flight is 50 minutes
late.
            C) Her luggage has been delayed. D) She can't find the man she's
            been waiting for.
            8.A) To do whatever the committee asks him to.
            B) To make decisions in agreement with the committee.
            C) To run the committee his way.
            D) To make himself the committee chairman.
            9.A) The woman found the mail box empty.
            B) The man is waiting for some important mail.
            C) The man has just sent out his application.
            D) The woman will write a postcard to her daughter.
            10.A) Read the operation manual. B) Try the buttons one by one.
            C) Ask the shop assistant for advice. D) Make the machine run
slowly.
            Section B
            Directions: In this section, you will hear 3 short passages. At the
            end of each passage, you will hear some questions. Both 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). The mark the corresponding letter on the
            Answer Sheet with a single line through the center.
            Passage one
            Questions 11 to l4 are based on the passage you have just heard.
            11.A) They were drawing pictures. B) They were watching TV.
            C) They were making a telephone call. D) They were tidying up the
            drawing room.
            12.A) They locked the couple up in the drawing room.
            B) They seriously injured the owners of the house.
            C) They smashed the TV set and the telephone.
            D) They took away sixteen valuable paintings.
            13.A) He accused them of the theft. B) He raised the rents.
            C) He refused to prolong their land lease. D) He forced them to
            abandon their traditions.
            14.A) They wanted to protect the farmers' interests.
            B) They wanted to extend the reservation area for birds.
            C) They wanted to steal his valuable paintings.
            D) They wanted to drive him away from the island.
            Passage Two
            Questions 15 to 17 are based on the passage you have just heard.
            15.A) Through food B) Through air.
            C) Through insects D) Through body fluids.
            16.A) They ran a high fever. B) They died from excessive bleeding.
            C) Their nervous system was damaged D) They suffered from
            heart-attack.
            17.A) To see what happened to the survivors of the outbreak.
            B) To study animals that can also get infected with the disease.
            C) To find out where the virus originates.
            D) To look for the plants that could cure the disease.
            Passage Three
            Questions 18 to 20 are based on the passage you have just heard.
            18.A) To determine whether the Earth's temperature is going up.
            B) To study the behavior of some sea animals.
            C) To measure the depths of the ocean.
            D) To measure the movement of waves in the ocean.
            19.A) They were frightened and distressed.
            B) They swam away when the speaker was turned on.
            C) They swam closer to “examine”the speaker when it was turned off.
            D) They didn't seem to be frightened and kept swimming near the
            speaker.
            20.A) To attract more sea animals to the testing site.
            B) To drive dangerous sea animals away from the testing site.
            C) To help trace the sea animals being tested.
            D) To determine how sea animals communicate with each other.
            Part ⅡReading Comprehension(35 minutes)
            Directions: There are 4 reading passages in this part. 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
            divide on the best choice and mark the corresponding letter on the
            Answer Sheet with a single line through the center.
            Questions 21 to 25 are based on the following passage:
            Cyberspace (网络空间), data superhighways, mullet media-for those who
            have seen the future, the linking of computers, television and
            telephones will change our lives for ever, Yet for all the talk of a
            forthcoming technological utopia(乌托邦) little attention has been
            given to the implications of these developments for the poor. As
            with all new high technology, while the West concerns itself with
            the“how, ”the question of “for whom ”is put aside once again.
            Economists are only now realizing the full extent to which the
            communications revolution has affected the world economy.
            Information technology allows the extension of trade across
            geographical and industrial boundaries, and transitional
            corporations take full advantage of it. Terms of trade, exchange and
            interest rates and money movements are more important than the
            production of goods. The electronic economy made possible by
            information technology allows the haves to increase their control on
            global markets-with destructive impact on the have-nots.
            For them the result is instability. Developing countries which rely
            on the production of a small range of goods for export are made to
            feel like small parts in the international economic machine. As
            “futures”(期货)are traded on computer screens, developing countries
            simply have less and less control of their destinies.
            So what are the options for regaining control? One alternative is
            for developing countries to buy in the latest computers and
            telecommunications themselves-so-called “development communications”
            modernization. Yet this leads to long-term dependency and perhaps
            permanent constraints on developing countries' economies.
            Communications technology is generally exported from the U. S.,
            Europe or Japan; the patents, skills and ability to manufacture
            remain in the hands of a few industrialized countries, It is also
            expensive, and imported products and services must therefore be
            bought on credit-credit usually provided by the very countries whose
            companies stand to gain.
            Furthermore, when new technology is introduced there is often too
            low a level of expertise to exploit fir native development. this
            means that while local elites, foreign communities and subsidiaries
            of transitional corporations may benefit, those lives depend on
            access to the information are denied it.
            21.From the passage we know that the development of high technology
            is in the interests of
            _______ .
            A) the rich countries B) scientific development
            C) the elite D) the world economy
            22.It can be inferred from the passage that _______ .
            A) international trade should be expanded.
            B) the interests of the poor countries have not been given enough
            consideration.
            C) the exports of the poor countries should be increased.
            D) communications technology in the developing countries should be
            modernized.
            23.Why does the author say that the electronic economy may have a
            destructive impact on
            developing countries?
            A) Because it enables the developed countries to control the
            international market.
            B) Because it destroys the economic balance of the poor countries.
            C) Because it violates the national boundaries of the poor
countries.
            D) Because it inhibits the industrial growth of developing
countries.
            24.The development of modern communications technology in developing
            countries may _______ .
            A) hinder their industrial production.
            B) cause them to lose control of their trade.
            C) force them to reduce their share of exports.
            D) cost them their economic independence.
            25.The author's attitude toward the communications revolution is
            _______ .
            A) positive B) critical C) indifferent D) tolerant
            Questions 26 to 30 are based on the following passage:
            The estimates of the numbers of home-schooled children vary widely.
            The U. S. Department of Education estimates there are 250, 000 to
            35, 000 home-schooled children in the country. Hone-school advocates
            put the number much higher-at about a million.
            Many public school advocates take a harsh attitude toward home
            schoolers, perceiving their actions as the ultimate slap in the face
            for public education and a damaging move for the children. Home
            schoolers harbor few kind words for public schools, charging
            shortcomings that range from lack of religious perspective in the
            curriculum to a herdlike approach to teaching children.
            Yet, as public school officials realize they stand little to gain by
            remaining hostile to the home-school population, and as home
            schoolers realize they can reap benefits from public schools, these
            hard lines seem to be softening a bit. Public schoolers have moved
            closer to tolerance and, in some cases, even cooperation.
            Says John Marshall, an education official, “We are becoming
            relatively tolerant of home schoolers. ”The idea is, ‘Let's give the
            kids access to public school so they'll see it's not as terrible as
            they've been told, and they'll want to come back.
            Perhaps, but don't count on it, say home-school advocates. Home
            schoolers, oppose the system because they have strong convictions
            that their approach to education-whether fueled by religious
            enthusiasm or the individual child's interests and natural pace-is
            best.
            “The bulk of home schoolers just want to be left alone, ”says Enge
            Cannon, associate director of the National Center For Home
            Education. She says home schoolers choose that path for a variety of
            reasons, but religion plays a role 85 percent of the time.
            Professor Van Galen breaks home schoolers into two groups. Some home
            schoolers want their children to learn not only traditional subject
            matter but also “strict religious doctrine and a conservative
            political and social perspective. Not incidentally, they also want
            their children to learn-both intellectually and emotionally-that the
            family is the most important institution in society. ”
            Other home schoolers contend “not so much that the schools teach
            heresy(异端邪说), but that schools teach whatever they teach
            inappropriately, ”Van Galen writes. “These parents are highly
            independent and strive to ‘take responsibility ’for their own lives
            within a society that they define as bureaucratic and inefficient. ”
            26.According to the passage, home schoolers are _______.
            A) those who engage private teachers to provide additional education
            for their children.
            B) those who educate their children at home instead of sending them
            to school.
            C) those who advocate combining public education with home
schooling.
            D) those who don't go to school but are educated at home by their
            parents.
            27.Public schools are softening their position on home schooling
            because _______.
            A) there isn't much they can go to change the present situation.
            B) they want to show their toletance for different situation.
            C) home schooling provides a new variety of education for children.
            D) public schools have so many problems that they cannot offer
            proper education for all
            children.
            28.Home-school advocates are of the opinion that _______ .
            A) things in public schools are not so bad as has often been said.
            B) their tolerance of public education will attract more kids to
            public schools.
            C) home schooling is superior and, therefore, they will not easily
            give in.
            D) their increased cooperation with public school will bring about
            the improvement of
            public education.
            29.Most home schoolers' opposition to public education stems from
            their ________.
            A) respect for the interest of individuals.
            B) worry about the inefficiency of public schools.
            C) concern with the cost involved.
            D) devotion to religion.
            30.According to Van Galen some home schoolers believe that _______ .
            A) public schools take up a herdlike approach to teaching children.
            B) teachers in public school are not as responsible as they should
            be.
            C) public schools cannot provide an education that is good enough
            for their children.
            D) public schools are the source of bureaucracy and inefficiency in
            modern society.
            Questions 31 to 35 are based on the following passage:
            Every year television stations receive hundreds of complaints about
            the loudness of advertisements. However, federal rules forbid the
            practice of making ads louder than the programming. In addition,
            television stations always operate at the highest sound level
            allowed for reasons of efficiency. According to one NBC executive,
            no difference exists in the peak sound level of ads and programming.
            Given this information why do commercials sound so loud?
            The sensation of sound involves a variety of factors in addition to
            its speak level. Advertisers are skilful at creating the impression
            of loudness through their expert use of such factors. One major
            contributor to the perceived loudness of commercials is that mush
            less variation in sound level occurs during a commercial. In regular
            programming the intensity of sound varies over a large range.
            However, sound levels in commercials tend to stay at or near peak
            levels.
            Other “tricks of the trade” are also used. Because low-frequency
            sounds can mask higher frequency sounds, advertisers filter out any
            noises that may drown out the primary message. In addition, the
            human voice has more auditory (听觉的) impact in the middle frequency
            ranges. Advertisers electronically vary voice sounds so that they
            stay within such a frequency band. Another approach is to write the
            script so that lots of consonants (辅音) are used, because people are
            more aware of consonants than vowel (元音) sounds. Finally,
            advertisers try to begin commercials with sounds that are highly
            different from those of the programming within which the commercial
            is buried. Because people become adapted to the type of sounds
            coming from programming, a dramatic change in sound quality draws
            viewer a attention. For example, notice how many commercials begin
            with a cheerful song of some type.
            The attention-getting property of commercials can be seen by
            observing one-to two-year-old children who happen to be playing
            around a television set. They may totally ignore the programming.
            However, when a commercial comes on, their attention is immediately
            drawn to it because of its dramatic sound quality.
            31.According to the passage, the maximum intensity of sound coming
            from commercials _______.
            A) does not exceed that of programs.
            B) is greater than that of programs.
            C) varies over a large range than that of programs.
            D) is less than that of programs.
            32.commercials create the sensation of loudness because _______ .
            A) TV stations always operate at the highest sound levels.
            B) their sound levels are kept around peak levels.
            C) their sound levels are kept in the middle frequency ranges.
            D) unlike regular programs their intensity of sound varies over a
            wide range.
            33.Many commercials begin with a cheerful song of some kind because
            ________ .
            A) pop songs attract viewer attention.
            B) it can increase their loudness.
            C) advertisers want to make them sound different from regular
            programs.
            D) advertisers want to merge music with commercials.
            34.One of the reasons why commercials are able to attract viewer
            attention is that ________ .
            A) the human voices in commercials have more auditory impact.
            B) people like cheerful songs that change dramatically in sound
            quality.
            C) high-frequency sounds are used to mask sounds that drown out the
            primary message.
            D) they possess sound qualities that make the viewer feel that
            something unusual is
            happening.
            35.In the passage, the author is trying to tell us ________ .
            A) how TV ads vary vocal sounds to attract attention.
            B) how the loudness of TV ads is overcome.
            C) how advertisers control the sound properties of TV ads.
            D) how the attention-getting properties of sounds are made use of in
            TV ads.
            Questions 36 to 40 are based on the following passage:
            In the United States, the need to protect plant and animal species
            has become a highly controversial and sharply political issue since
            the passage of the Endangered Species Act in 1973. The act, designed
            to protect species' living areas, and policies that preserve land
            and forests compete with economic interests. In the 1990's, for
            example, the woodcutters in the Western United States were
            challenged legally in their attempt to cut trees for timber in the
            Cascade Mountains. The challenge was mounted to protect the
            endangered spotted owl(猫头鹰), whose remaining population occupies
            these forests and requires the intact, ancient forest for survival.
            The problematic situation set the interests of environmentalists
            against those of corporations and of individuals who stood to lose
            jobs. After months of debate and legal battles, the fate of the
            woodcutters-and the owls-was still undecided in mid-1992.
            Similar tensions exist between the developed and the developing
            nations. Many people in industrialized nations, for example, believe
            that developing nations in tropical regions should do more to
            protect their rain forests and other natural areas. But the
            developing countries may be impoverished (使穷困), with populations
            growing so rapidly that using the land is a means to temporarily
            avoid worsening poverty and starvation.
            Many of the changes to Earth that concern scientists have the
            potential to rob the planet of its biological richness. The
            destruction of Earth's ozone layer (臭氧层), for example, could
            contribute to the general process of impoverishment by allowing
            ultra-violet rays to harm plants and animals. And global warming
            could wipe out species unable to quickly adapt to changing climates.
            Clearly, protecting will come only through coordinated international
            efforts to control human population, stabilize the composition of
            the atmosphere, and preserve intact Earth's complex web life.
            36.Why does the author say that the protection of endangered species
            is a highly controversial
            issue?
            A) Because people can't agree as to what species to protect.
            B) Because it is difficult to find an effective way to protect such
            species.
            C) Because it affects the interests of certain groups of people.
            D) Because it is a major problem involving a series of legal
            procedures.
            37.According to the passage, the preservation of rain forests
            ________ .
            A) may hamper a developing country in its fight against poverty.
            B) benefits developed countries rather than developing countries.
            C) should take priority over the control of human population.
            D) will help improve the living conditions in developing countries.
            38.According to the passage, cutting tress to grow more food
_______.
            A) will widen the gap between the developed and the developing
            countries.
            B) is but a short-term relief to the food problem.
            C) can hardly alleviate the shortage of food.
            D) proves to be an effective way out for impoverished nations.
            39.Among“humanity's current problems” (Line 6, Para. 3), the chief
            concern of the scientists
            is _______ .
            A) the impoverishment of developing countries.
            B) the explosion of the human population.
            C) the reduction of biological diversity.
            D) the effect of global warming.
            40.The author's purpose in writing this passage is ________ .
            A) to describe the difficulties in solving humanity's current
            problems.
            B) to present the different views on humanity's current problems.
            C) to analyze the contradiction between countries in dealing with
            humanity's current
            problems.
            D) to point out that humanity's current problems can only be solved
            through the cooperation
            of nations.
            Part ⅢVocabulary(20 minutes)
            Directions: There are 30 incomplete sentences in this part. For each
            sentence there are four choices marked A),B) ,C) and D). Chose the
            ONE that best completes the sentence. Then mark the corresponding
            letter on the AnswerSheet with a single line through the centre.
            41.The directions were so _______ that it was impossible to complete
            the assignment.
            A) ingenious B) ambitious C) notorious D) ambiguous
            42.Because a degree form a good university is the means to a better
            job, education is one of
            the most ________ areas in Japanese life.
            A) sophisticated B) competitive C) considerate D) superficial
            43.If a person talks about his weak points, his listener is expected
            to say something in the
            way of _______ .
            A) persuasion B) remedy C) encouragement D) compromise
            44.Her interest in redecorating the big house kept her ________ for
            a whole week.
            A) constrained B) dominated C) restricted D) occupied
            45.If we _______ our relations with that country, we'll have to find
            another supplier of raw
            materials.
            A) diffuse B) diminish C) terminate D) preclude
            46.Movie directors use music to _______ the action on the screen.
            A) contaminate B) compliment C) contemplate D) complement
            47.A terrible traffic accident happened; people were saddened when
            they watched the ________
            sight on TV.
            A) panic B) patriotic C) pathetic D) periodic
            48.Many tourists were _______ by the city's complicated traffic
            system.
            A) degraded B) bewildered C) evoked D) diverted
            49.Over the last fifteen years, running has become a popular
            ________ for 30 million
            participants of all ages.
            A) fantasy B) pastime C) symposium D) penalty
            50.Some people think that a ________ translation, or word-for-word
            translation, is easier than
            a free translation.
            A) litetal B) literary C) liberal D) linear
            51.Many novels that attempt to mirror the world are really _______
            of the reality that they
            represent.
            A) reflections B) demonstrations C) illuminations D) reproductions
            52.It is through learning that the individual _______ many habitual
            ways of reacting to
            situations.
            A) retains B) gains C) achieves D) acquires
            53.Generally, it is only when animals are trapped that they ________
            to violencein order to
            escape.
            A) proceed B) appeal C) resort D) incline
            54.Mary once _______ with another musician to compose a piece of pop
            music.
            A) merged B) collaborated C) coincided D) constituted
            55.During their fist teacher training year, the students often
            visited local schools for the
            _______of lessons.
            A) observation B) investigation C) inspection D) examination
            56.He attends to the _______ of important business himself.
            A) transaction B) transition C) tranwmission D) transformation
            57.Out of _______ revenge, he did his worst to blacken her character
            and ruin her reputation.
            A) perfect B) total C) sheer D) integral
            58.A most ______ argument about who should go and fetch the bread
            from the kitchen was going
            on when I came in.
            A) trivial B) delicate C) minor D) miniature
            59.The children cheered up when they saw hundreds of colorful
            ballons _______ slowly into the
            sky.
            A) floating B) raising C) heaving D) ascending
            60.Do you have any ______ about what living beings on other planets
            would be like?
            A) ideal B) comprehension C) notion D) intelligence
            61.We rarely perceive more than a minute _______ of the sights and
            sounds that fall upon our
            sense organs; the great majority pass us by.
            A) fiction B) function C) fraction D) friction
            62.For many patients, institutional care is the most _______ and
            beneficial form of care.
            A) persistent B) appropriate C) thoughtful D) sufficient
            63.It's pleasure for him to ______ his energy and even his life to
            research work.
            A) dedicate B) dictate C) decorate D) direct
            64.They are well _______ with each other since they once studied in
            the same university.
            A) identified B) recognized C) acknowledged D) acquainted
            65.There is a _______ difference in meaning between the words
            surroundings and environment.
            A) gentle B) subtle C) feeble D) humble
            66.All the finished products are stored in a ________ of the
            delivery port and shipping is
            available at any time.
            A) garage B) cabinet C) capsule D) warehouse
            67.when he tried to make a ________ , he found that the hotel was
            completely filled because of
            a convention.
            A) reservation B) claim C) mess D) revision
            68.Parents take a great interest in the _______ questions braised by
            their children.
            A) nasty B) naive C) obscure D) offensive
            69.Although it was his first experience as chairman, be ________
            over the meeting with great
            skill.
            A) presided B) administered C) mastered D) executed
            70.both partise promised to ______ the contract to be signed the
            following day
            A) keep with B) tangle with C) adhere to D) devote to
            Part ⅣShort Answer Questions(15 minutes)
            Directions:In this part there is a short passage with five questions
            or incomplete statements. Read the Passage carefully. Then answer
            the questions or complete the statements in the fewest Possible
            words(not exceeding 10 words)
            Most Americans spend far more of their leisure time with the mass
            media than in any other occupation. In addition, most of us hear,
            see, or read some of the media while engaged in other activities.
            thus an extremely large number of our waking hours are spent with
            the mass media. Of all the media, television is clearly dominant,
            withnewspapers a close second, at least as a source of news and
            other information. Our exposure to all media is important, however,
            because all of them contribute materials for the construction of
            that world in our heads. For most people, increased use of one
            medium does not decrease use of another. Infact, in certain cases,
            and especially for certain purposes, the more one uses one medium,
            the more likely one is to use others.
            There are various factors that can cause you to expose yourself to
            the media selectively, avoiding much of the material with which you
            disagree. Some of that selective exposure is probably due to the
            psychological pressure you feel to avoid the discomfort caused by
            confrontation with facts and ideas contrary to your beliefs,
            attitudes, or behavior. However, some selective exposure is not due
            to the pressure for consistency but to other factors, such as your
            age, education, and even the area in which you live and the people
            with whom you associate.
            Quite a different sort of factor that affects your media experiences
            is the social context of exposure: whether you are alone or with
            others when you are exposed to a medium; whether you are at home, at
            the office, in a theater, and soon. These contexts are as much as a
            potential part of the message you will form as film images on the
            screen or words on the page. In addition, that social context
            aaffects-both directly and indirectly-the media and the media
            content to which you become exposed. New friends or colleagues get
            you interested in different things. Other members of the family
            often select media content that you would not have selected, and you
            become exposed to it.
            There various factors have so much influence on your media exposure
            that so little of that exposure is planned.
            Questions:(注意:答题尽量简短,超过10个词要扣分。第条横线限写一个英语单词,标点符号不占格。)
            S1.Exposure to all media is important and people sometimes tend to
            use more media if _______.
            __________ ___________ ___________ ____________ __________
            __________ ___________ ___________ ____________ __________
            S2.Why are newspapers considered as an important medium according to
            passage?
            __________ ___________ ___________ ____________ __________
            __________ ___________ ___________ ____________ __________
            S3.For one reason or another, people's exposure to the media is
            often _______.
            __________ ___________ ___________ ____________ __________
            __________ ___________ ___________ ____________ __________
            S4.Apart from personal preferences, what determines one's choice of
            the media and media content?
            __________ ___________ ___________ ____________ __________
            __________ ___________ ___________ ____________ __________
            S5.The last sentence of the passage indicates that one's exposure to
            the media is _______.
            __________ ___________ ___________ ____________ __________
            __________ ___________ ___________ ____________ __________
            Part ⅤWriting(30 minutes)
            Directions:For this part, you are allowed thirty minutes to write a
            composition on the topic Do “Lucky Numbers”Really Good Luck? You
            should write at least 120 words and you should base your composition
            on the outline (given in Chinese) below:
            1、有些人认为某些数学会带来好运。
            2、我认为数学和运气无关,……
            Do“Lucky Numbers”Really Bring Good Luck?
            答案(略)

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