26 When Bob has caught a few fish, he cooks them and eats them.A.RightB.WrongC.Doesn't say
26 When Bob has caught a few fish, he cooks them and eats them.
A.Right
B.Wrong
C.Doesn't say
26 When Bob has caught a few fish, he cooks them and eats them.
A.Right
B.Wrong
C.Doesn't say
听力原文:M: How long has Bob been like this?
W: Ever since last night.
When did this happen to Bob?
A.Last week.
B.Last night.
C.Last term.
(First-price sealed-bid auction) Alice is selling her 2000 chevrolet cavalier to her friends, Bob and Charles. Bob attaches a value of S$8,000 to Alice's old car, while Charles's value of the car is S$10,000. (These valuations are common knowledge between Bob and Charles.) Alice designs the following auction to sell her car: First, she asks each of them to write his bid on a piece of paper. Then Bob and Charles give their bids (nonnegative integers) to Alice. Notice that when Bob and Charles write down their bids, they don't know each other's bid (so called "sealed bid"). After Alice receives the sealed bids, the bids are shown to everyone, and the car will be sold to the person who has the higher bid at the price equal to his own bid. When there is a tie (Bob and Charles bid the same amount), then Alice would flip a fair coin to decide who will get the car. In this game, Bob has 8000 strategies and Charles has 10000 strategies.
When Bob bent down, he was trying to______.
A.pick up a watch
B.hide the fact that he had found the watch
C.pick up the watch that has slipped off his wrist
D.pretend that he had found the watch
W: I am sorry, Bob. My schedule is just too tight. Next time I come, we must find time together and have a good chat.
M: I hope so.
What do we learn from the woman's reply?
A.She will find time to meet Bob on her next visit.
B.She will call Bob when she comes again.
C.She will visit Bob before she leaves.
D.She has no interest in chatting with Bob.
Directions :
Read the following text. Choose the best word or phrase for each numbered blank and mark A, B,
C, or D on, ANSWER SHEET 1.
It has always been a problem to decide whether "popular music" is music which represents the people or is simply music that the people like. The same problem of (26) exists with jazz. So many different (27) 0f music have been called jazz at one time or another that it is hard to say
what (28) it is. Jazz has always been considered to be black music (29) when I first (30)an interest in it twenty years ago, I used to hear white (31) playing music that was like Louis
Armstrong's in the 1920s. I found out afterwards that they learnt to do this by playing Armstrong's records over and over again until their style. was close enough to his (32) for them to
imitate him.
Since then white singers like Bob Dylan have rediscovered (33) 0wn folk tradition, instead of (34) from black roots. But the main (35) since 1960 have been social and technical. One is that young people have more (36) to spend on records at an earlier age than they used to, so Tin Pan Alley, the ' pop 'music industry, aims at the teenage audience. (37) is that electronic equipment has developed to such an (38) that technicians are now capable of mixing sound to (39) recordings that are quite different from alive (40) .
But the real (41) with 'pop' music is that Tin Pan Alley has always worked against its be-ing a (42) music of the people. It takes everything original and natural out of it and (43) it with cheap commercial imitations. (44) the American folk singer, Woody Guthrie, said:"They've always (45) the second-rate songs. They've never wanted to play the good ones. "
26.
[ A] definition
[ B] classification
[ C] imitation
[ D] discussion
听力原文:W: Well, Bob James, what a surprise! It's nice to see you again!
M: Hello, Margaret! My gosh! How long has it been? Wasn't it a year ago Christmas, the last time we saw you?
W: You know, I think you're right. How's your wife and the kids?
M: Oh, they're fine.
When did the two people see each other last?
A.More than two years ago.
B.Last Christmas.
C.Last birthday party.
D.A long time ago.
Section B
Directions: This section is to test your ability to understand short conversations. There are 2 recorded conversations in it. After each conversation, there are some recorded questions. The conversations and the questions will be spoken only once. When you hear a question, you should choose the correct answer from the 4 choices marked A, B, C, and D.
听力原文:M: Hello. May I speak to Bob?
W: I'm sorry, but he left a few minutes ago.
M: That's too bad.
W: Will you phone him again tonight?
M: I'm sorry, but I won't be free tonight.
W: Can I take a message?
M: It's very kind of you. There will be a lecture on English history by a famous professor at 2:30 tomorrow afternoon in the lecture hall. Please tell Bob not to be late.
W: Sure, bye.
M: Bye.
6. Why does the man phone Bob?
(6)
A.To tell Bob he won't be free tonight.
B.To ask whether Bob has left or not.
C.To tell Bob there will be a lecture tomorrow afternoon.
D.To ask Bob whether he will be free tonight.
Jack went to a barber's shop and had his hair cut, but he was not happy with the result(结果). When his friend Bob saw him, he laughed and said, "What has happened to your hair, Jack?"
Jack said, "I tried a new barber's shop today, because I wasn't quite satisfied with my old one, but this one seems even worse."
Bob agreed. "Yes, I think you're right, Jack. Now I'll tell you what to do when you go into a barber's shop next time: look at all the barber's hair, find out whose hair looks worst, and then go straight to him."
"Why shall I go to him?" Jack asked.
"Who cut that man's hair?" answered Bob. "Just think it. He couldn't cut it himself, could he? Another barber cut it. So you know he can't be the worst barber."
Jack was not satisfied with the new barber.
A.True.
B.False.
Task 1
Directions: After reading the following passage, you will find 5 questions or unfinished statements, numbered 36 through 40. For each question or statement there are 4 choices marked A, B, C, and D. You should make the correct choice.
Bob and Annie had not known each other long before they became eager to get married: Bob because he wanted Annie and she (though she was fond of Bob in her own way) because she could at least lead a life away from her family. When Mrs. Thompson suggested that they marry and live with her in Dover Street until they could get a house of their own, Annie hesitated. Her idea of marriage had been something which brought her a husband and an orderly, well-furnished home all at once. But she soon saw the advantages of this arrangement. She would, first of all, escape from her present life into a house which was quiet and efficiently run, not like her own; and she would be able to go on working so that she and Bob could save up all money more quickly for their own house. She would also get Bob, a good enough husband for any working-class girl: good-natured and ready to be bent to her way whenever it was necessary for her ends.
Things went well until her mother-in-law's death, when Annie had to give up her job and was at home all day. Her father-in-law became just a silent figure in the house and al though Bob became used to him, Annie began to find the old man's constant presence in the house a source of growing annoyance.
"He gets on my nerves, Bob", she said one night when they were alone. "Just sitting there all day and I have to clean up around him. And he hardly says a word from getting up in the morning to going to bed".
"Well, I suppose he has the right to do as he likes", Bob said mildly. "It's his house not ours. We're the lodgers(寄宿者)." But to Annie, now looking after the house as if it were her own, it was beginning to seem the other way about.
Annie wanted to get married because she ______.
A.had known Bob for a long time
B.wanted to leave home
C.was madly in love with Bob
D.had led a lonely life
In the playground Bob showed me the watch. He put it on his wrist, and it looked love ly. I wished I had been the one to sit by the table. It was really a beautiful watch, gold by the look of it. The headmaster came outside then, and the doctor was with him. They walked about, looking around and talking all the time. After a while the bell rang, and we got into our lines, ready to go in.
The headmaster said, "I've got a little job for boys. This doctor, who was giving us a talk just now, has lost his watch in the playground. It happened before, he says- it just slips off his wrist. So look around for it, will you? See if you're clever enough to find it. I promise that the boy who does so will get a useful reward."
Of course, Bob was not going to miss a chance like that. He's just about the luckiest boy in the school rewards just drop into his hands. We all walked about the playground, looking here and there for the watch. And I wasn't at all surprised when Bob bent down as if he was picking something up. Then he hurried past me towards the doctor.
"Where are you going?" I called out, though I knew very well where he was going. The next minute there was Bob, all smiles, handing over the watch to the old doctor and hanging about for the reward.
But the doctor did not seem at all pleased. In fact he looked quite ready to thrust (插入) a knife in Bob's heart-until the headmaster burst out laughing. Bob told me later the old man hadn't even said "Thank you" for the watch.
The thing that puzzled us most of all was that Bob didn't get any reward. When he mentioned to the headmaster about k, the old man said, "Ah, yes, we mustn't forget that. I said ' a useful re ward' , didn't I?" Then he gave Bob a big sheet of paper and told him to write a composition on the harm of smoking. Bob says he hasn't got any idea of what to write.
While the doctor was talking about the harm to smoking, the two boys were______.
A.not thinking about anything
B.thinking about the harm of smoking
C.thinking about the watch and how to get it, perhaps
D.thinking that the headmaster was very clever
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