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提问人:网友jhonmary 发布时间:2022-01-07
[主观题]

Woman: Now, Richard, would you care to explain how the answers to the test questions appea

red on your desk?

Man: I can't, Professor Harley. Someone must have left them on my desk.

Question: What is the man's problem?

A.He is suspected of cheating.

B.He left the answers on his desk.

C.He doesn't know how to explain.

D.He didn't know the answers to the questions.

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第1题
Woman:Now,Richard,would you care to explain how the answers to the test questions appear
ed on your desk?

Man:I call’t,Professor Harley.Someone must have left them on my desk.

Question:What is the man’s problem?

A.He is suspected of cheating

B.He left the answers on his desk.

C.He doesn’t know how to explain.

D.He didn’t know the answers to the questions.

点击查看答案
第2题
At last her efforts bore fruit. Burton was appointed to Santos ,in Brazil, where Isabel mi
ght also go. They made their farewell rounds and Isabel learnt Portuguese while she packed up. At Lisbon three-inch cockroaches seethed about the floor of their room. Isabel was caught off her guard, but Burton was brutal," I suppose you think you .look very pretty, standing on that chair and howling at those innocent creatures." Isabel’s reaction was typical. She reflected that ofcourse he was right; if she had to live in a country full of such creatures, and worse, she had better pull herself together. She got down and started lashing out with a slipper, tn two hours she had got a bag of ninety-seven.

On arrival in Brazil she found that Portuguese fauna had been nothing. Now there were spiders, as big as crabs. In the matter of tropical diseases it seems to have ranked with darkest Africa; there were slaves, too, and in a society where men drank brandy for breakfast, no one condemned the habit of chaining mad slave to the roof-top as a sort of domestic pet, or clown. There was cholera too, and the less dramatic but agonizing local boils," so close you could not put a pin through them."

The Emperor found the new Consul and his wife a great addition to the country, and once again Burton’s wonderful conversation held his audience spellbound. But Chic Brazilians looked askance at Isabel wading barefoot in the streams, bottling snakes, painting and doing up a ruined chapel, or accompanying Richard on expeditions to the virgin interior. There were gymnastics and cold baths, and Mass and market," helping Richard with Literature" (his writing was always in capitals to her) and the wearisome pages of Foreign Office reports she was always so loyal and dutiful in copying out for him.

About now, a note of sadness creeps into Isabel’s letters home. We sense an immense loneliness behind the courage with which she always faced life. Richard was going through a particularly trying phase. The explorer was dying hard, strangled in office tape. He would cut loose and disappear for weeks at a time, returning as bitter and restless as when he left. It was she who held everything together and kept up the facade, both with the Foreign Office, who were constanfiy making the most awkward enquiries, and the local society, who were equally curious. There were few diversions for her.

Richard preferred discussing metaphysics and astronomy with the Capuchin monks to going to the local dances. She was learning now to be self-sufficient, to manage, unobtrusively, the practical side of their lives, and to rough it, both physically and emotionally. She had to combine the shadow-like devotion of the Oriental woman with a fighting spirit seldom found in women, and certainly not in most Victorian women.

We can conclude that Isabel Burton ______.

A.had been trying to get her husband a job in a place where she could go with him.

B.had been trying to get her husband a job in Brazil.

C.was always trying to plant fruit trees from Brazil.

D.was always trying to make great efforts in Brazil.

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第3题
SECTION BINTERVIEWDirections: In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen c

SECTION B INTERVIEW

Directions: In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. Questions 1 to 5 are based on an interview. At the end of the interview you will be given 10 seconds to answer each of the following five questions.

Now listen to the interview.

听力原文:Interviewer: Richard, you're one of Virginia's patients.

Richard: That's right.

Interviewer: Erin... how did you first know that you had diabetes?

Richard: Erm ... I was on a camping holiday with my parents and my mother had recently read an article in a woman's magazine which described the symptoms which are desperate thirst and also urinating a lot. And... er... because we were camping, my mother filled up the water buckets for the morning the night before and,., er... she realized one morning that she'd filled two 2-gallon buckets and found only half a bucket left in the morning, so I'd drunk 3 gallons of water during the night and of course urinated it all out as well. It was quite soggy round the tent!

Interviewer: Good heavens! And did you feel iii?

Richard: Yeah, you feel really iii, you feel like very thirsty, really thirsty and sweating a lot and just tired lethargic, you can't do anything.

Interviewer: So she then took you off to the doctor, did she?

Richard: Yeah, where.., to a GP who did a urine test which was the standard way of testing for diabetes and of course I... my sugar content was sky high; and that's an automatic sign really that you're diabetic.

Interviewer: And how old were you when all this happened?

Richard: I was five and one half.

Interviewer: So are those symptoms common? Is that what everybody suffers from? This thirst?

Richard: Yes on the whole... I mean.., when.., erm.., well, put it this way, your body needs sugar.., erm to function, just you know for sleeping, working, playing, all those sorts of things. And it's insulin that.., erm... enables your body to use the sugar, and so if you haven't got enough, the sugar builds up in tile blood and you actually get.., well, in fact you get dehydrated really and the only way your body can get rid of the sugar is to send it out through the kidneys, through the urine. So you send out loads and loads of urine and so you get this awful thirst and so that..., that' s usually the first symptoms, especially with somebody young, you know, who's going to actually need insulin.

Interviewer: So what's the treatment now for diabetes?

Richard: Well it... I mean, it depends when and sort of how you get diabetes. If... on the whole, below the age of, erm about 30, you're going to need to have insulin injections for the rest of your life because you're, you're not producing ..., you're just not producing enough insulin and probably no insulin after a while. But .... erm.., there are lots.., it's almost what 2% of the population, possibly more, now have diabetes anti in the sort of the later age range people develop it... um... and sometimes it can be controlled just by diet or with diet and tablets.

Interviewer: And the effect on people's diet, does it vary for each individual, or are there basic rules that all diabetics follows?

Richard: What you advise for diabetes now is... um.., the diet that you recommend for everybody, you know, that you have.., urn.., plenty of fresh vegetables and fruit, and.., um.., enough carbohydrate to fill you up... um.., and preferably sort of high fire carbohydrate, and.., um... cut down on fats, which.., it's actually the opposite almost that you were recommended 10 years ago.

How did Richard first know he was iii?

A.He felt tired and sleepy.

B.He was desperate for a drink of water.

C.lie had a poor appetite.

D.He went to the doctor and had a urine test.

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第4题
At last her efforts bore fruit. Burton was appointed to Santos, in Brazil, where Isabel mi
ght also go. They made their farewell rounds and Isabel learnt Portuguese while she packed up. At Lisbon three-inch cock roaches seethed about the floor of their room. Isabel was caught off her guard, but Burton was brutal," I suppose you think you look very pretty, standing on that chair and howling at those innocent creatures." Isabel's reaction was typical. She reflected that of course he was right; if she had to live in a country full of such creatures, and worse, she had better pull herself together. She got down and started lashing out with a slipper. In two hours she had got a bag of ninety-seven.

On arrival in Brazil she found that Portuguese fauna had been nothing. Now there were spiders, as big as crabs. In the matter of tropical diseases it seems to have ranked with darkest Africa; there were slaves, too, and in a society where men drank brandy for breakfast, no one condemned the habit of chaining mad slave to the roof-top as a sort of domestic pet, or clown. There was cholera too, and the less dramatic but agonizing local boils," so close you could not put a pin through them."

The Emperor found the new Consul and his wife a great addition to the country, and once again Burton's wonderful conversation held his audience spellbound. But chic Brazilians looked askance at Isabel wading barefoot in the streams, bottling snakes, painting and doing up a mined chapel, or accompanying Richard on expeditions to the virgin interior. There were gymnastics and cold baths, and Mass and market, "helping Richard with Literature" (his writing was always in capitals to her) and the wearisome pages of Foreign Office reports she was always so loyal and dutiful in copying out for him.

About now, a note of sadness creeps into Isabel' s letters home. We sense an immense loneliness behind the courage with which she always faced life. Richard was going through a particularly trying phase. The explorer was dying hard, strangled in office tape. He would cut loose and disappear for weeks at a time, returning as bitter and restless as when he left. It was she who held everything together and kept up the facade, both with the Foreign Office, who were constantly making the most awkward enquiries, and the local society, who were equally curious. There were few diversions for her.

Richard preferred discussing metaphysics and astronomy with the Capuchin monks to going to the local dances. She was learning now to be self-sufficient, to manage, unobtrusively, the practical side of their lives, and to rough it, both physically and emotionally. She had to combine the shadow-like devotion of the Oriental woman with a fighting spirit seldom found in women, and certainly not in most Victorian women.

We can conclude that Isabel Burton ______.

A.had been trying to get her husband a job in a place where she could go with him

B.had been trying to get her husband a job in Brazil

C.was always trying to plant fruit trees from Brazil

D.was always trying to make great efforts in Brazil

点击查看答案
第5题
The woman told Richard who was his father ______.A.before she diedB.before her son leftC.b

The woman told Richard who was his father ______.

A.before she died

B.before her son left

C.before she was in hospital

D.after the truck knocked her down

点击查看答案
第6题
It can be inferred from the first paragraph that______.A.up to now, Richard didn"t know he

It can be inferred from the first paragraph that______.

A.up to now, Richard didn"t know he had caught certain disease

B.Richard"s illness offered him a chance to think about his life

C.but for his illness, Richard would not have stopped working

D.there was something wrong with both Richard"s mental and physical health

点击查看答案
第7题
Which of the following is not true about Richard?A.He is a driver.B.He has two kids.C.He i

Which of the following is not true about Richard?

A.He is a driver.

B.He has two kids.

C.He is now unemployed.

D.His wife is a secretary.

点击查看答案
第8题
听力原文:M: Is Richard the best student in your class7W: He is anything but that.Q: What d

听力原文:M: Is Richard the best student in your class7

W: He is anything but that.

Q: What does the woman mean?

(5)

A.Richard is the best student in her class.

B.Richard is good in every way.

C.Richard is not a good student at all.

D.Richard can do everything well.

点击查看答案
第9题
听力原文:W: Will Richard be coming to the meeting tonight?M: He's supposed to. But in fact

听力原文:W: Will Richard be coming to the meeting tonight?

M: He's supposed to. But in fact he won't be hack from the vocation until the day after tomorrow.

Q: Where is Richard now?

(17)

A.At work.

B.At the meeting.

C.Back at home.

D.Away from home.

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