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第一部分 听力(共两节,满分30分) 第一节(共5小题;每小题1.5分,满分7.5分) 听下面5段对话。每段对话后有一个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项,并标在试卷的相应位置。听完每段对话后,你都有10秒钟的时间来回答有关小题和阅读下一小题。每段对话仅读一遍。 1. What will the woman probably do tonight? A. See a film. B. Go to a concert. C. Do some shopping. 2. Where does the conversation take place? A. In an office. B. In a hotel. C. In a bedroom. 3. What time is it now? A. 2:30. B. 2:20. C. 2:10. 4. What did the man buy yesterday? A. Shirts. B. Shoes. C. Trousers. 5. What does the man suggest the woman do? A. Study at home. B. Go to school. C. Come back early. 第二节(共15小题, 每小题1.5分, 满分22.5分) 听下面5段对话或独白。每段对话或独白后有几个小题,从题中所给的A、B、C三个选项中选出最佳选项,并标在试卷的相应位置。听每段对话或独白前,你将有时间阅读各个小题,每小题5秒钟;听完后,各小题将给出5秒钟的作答时间。每段对话或独白读两遍。 6. What is the probable relationship between the two speakers? A. Clerk and guest. B. Nurse and patient. C. Manager and secretary. 7. What can we learn from this conversation? A. The man can't smoke in the office. B. The man's living-room is full of smoke. C. The man can't get a non-smoking room. 听下面一段对话,回答第8至第10三个小题。 8. Why is the man sleeping on the job? A. He has to work late. B. He has to get up early. C. He has a busy social life. 9. How did the man probably go to work in the past? A. By bus. B. By train. C. By motorbike. 10. How long does it take the man to go to work now? A. About two hours. B. About one hour. C. About 15 minutes. 听下面一段对话,回答第1l至第13三个小题。 11. Where is the woman probably speaking? A. In a changing room. B. At a school cafe. C. At an information desk. 12. When can the man swim in the afternoon? A. From one to three. B. From three to five. C. From five to seven. 13. What would the man like to play? A. Tennis. B. Football. C. Basketball. 听下面一段对话,回答第14至第17四个小题。 14. Why did the couple leave? A. They got their concert tickets. B. They felt angry with the woman. C. They didn't want to wait any longer. 15. How soon will the ticket office be closed? A. In one hour. B. In two hours. C. In three hours. 16. What do we know about the woman? A. She quarreled with the man. B. She is waiting for her friend. C. She has moved forward only a little. 17. What can we learn about the man? A. He is willing to wait. B. He is pleased to see the woman. C. He is disappointed about his phone order. 听下面一段对话,回答第18至20题三个小题。 18. What did the speaker ask the students to do the week before? A. Write a short story. B. Prepare for the lesson. C. Learn more about the writer. 19. Why does the speaker ask the questions? A. To check the students’ understanding of the story. B. To draw the students’ attention to reading skills. C. To let the students discuss father-son relationships. 20. What will the students do in 10 minutes? A. Ask more questions. B. Discuss in groups. C. Give their answers. 第二部分:阅读理解 (共20小题;每小题2分,满分40分) 阅读下列短文,从每题所给的四个选项(A、B、C和D)中,选出最佳选项,并在答题卡上将该项涂黑 A Most people go to a doctor in their own town or suburb (郊区). But people in the Australian outback can’t get to a doctor quickly. The nearest doctor is sometimes hundreds of kilometers away so they have to call him on a two-way radio. This special doctor is called the “flying doctor”. He visits sick people by plane. When someone is very sick, the doctor has to fly to the person’s home. His plane lands on a flat piece of ground near the person’s house. Sometimes the doctor has to take the patient to hospital. Flying doctors take about 8,600 people to hospital each year. However, most of the time the person isn’t very sick, and the doctor doesn’t have to visit. He can give advice on the radio from the office at the flying doctor center. He can tell the patient to use some medicine from a special medicine chest (箱子). There is one of these chests in every home in the outback. Each bottle, tube (管子) and packet (包) in the chest has a number. The doctor often says something like this,” take two tablets (药片) from bottle 5 every four hours.” 21. Some people in the Australian outback can’t get to a doctor quickly. Because_________ there are few doctors there the nearest doctor is sometimes very far away from them there is always heavy traffic on the road they don’t want to see a doctor 22. The word “outback” in the passage probably means__________. the part of a country far away from cities B. downtown forest D. market-place 23. The doctor there usually goes to visit his patient__________. ? A. by sea???????? B. by air??????? C. on foot??????? D. in a car 24. If the person isn’t very sick, the doctor only _________. A. tells him to have a rest B. tells him what food to eat C. gives him some advice D. gives him some medicine 25. From the passage we know that_________. people in Australia are seldom ill every family in the outback has a special medicine chest a “flying doctor” is a man who flies people to hospital there are very few hospitals in Australia B The United Nations says forty million people or so around the world went hungry in 2008, mainly because of higher food prices. Early estimates(估计) from the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) show that 963 million people did not get enough to eat. World food prices have dropped since early 2008. Prices of major crops have decreased by more than half from their height earlier last year. But they remain high compared to earlier years. But FAO official Hafez Ghanem says lower prices have failed to end the food crisis (危机) in many poor countries. “For millions in developing countries,” he says, “getting enough food every day to live an active and healthy life is a distant dream.” The FAO says food shortage is a threat to people's health. Today, two-thirds of the world's undernourished people live in just a few countries. These are India, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Pakistan, Ethiopia and so on. A report on food insecurity warns that the current economic crisis could send even more people into hunger and poverty. In sub-Saharan Africa, the percentage of the people who continually go hungry fell from 34% in 1997 to 30% in 2008. But the FAO says Ghana is the only country that has reached two sets of hunger reduction targets. These were set by the 1996 World Food Summit and the Millennium Development Goals. The main reason is the growth in agricultural production in Ghana. The FAO says some countries in Southeast Asia like Thailand and Vietnam have made progress in hunger reduction goals. But South Asia and Central Asia haven't, and North Korea is still in hot water. 26. What FAO official Hafez Ghanem says implies(暗示)__________ A. it's easy but takes long to provide people with enough food B. enough food can make people more active and healthier C. there is difficulty solving the food shortage in a short time D. people in developing countries will never get enough food 27. Ghana has reached the targets of hunger reduction mainly because of ________. A. the still high food prices B. the donation of developed countries C. the two targets of hunger reduction D. the growth in agricultural production 28. The underlined word "undernourished" in Para. 4 probably means ________. A. hungry and unhappy B. unhealthy for lack of food C. not fat because of poverty D. undeveloped and poor 29. Which country has not made progress in hunger reduction? A. North Korea B. Thailand C. Vietnam D. Ghana 30. What is the best title of this passage? A. The food production of the world B. The hunger reduction target of the FAO C. The food shortage around the world D. The solution to the global food shortage C French surgeons have performed what they said on Wednesday was the world's first partial face transplant--- giving a new nose, chin and lips to a woman attacked by a dog. Specialists from two French hospitals carried out the operation on a 38-year-old woman on Sunday in the northern city of Amiens by taking the face from a brain-dead woman, who had hanged herself just hours before the operation. Her family agreed on the operation. “The patient is in an excellent state and the transplant looks normal,” the hospitals said in a brief statement after waiting three days to announce the pioneering surgery. The woman had been left without a nose and lips after the dog attacked her last May, and was unable to talk or chew properly. Such injuries are “extremely difficult, if not impossible” to repair using normal surgical techniques, the statement said. The statement did not say what the woman would look like when she had fully recovered, but medical experts said she was unlikely to resemble the woman who had been the source of her new face. The operation was led by Jean-Michel Dubernard, a specialist from a hospital in Lyon who has also carried out hand transplants, Skin transplants have long been used to treat burns and other injuries, but operations around the mouth and nose have been considered very difficult because of the area's high sensitivity to foreign tissue. Teams in France, the United States and Britain had been developing techniques to make face transplants a reality There was a short-term risk for the patient if blood vessels became blocked, a medium-term danger of her body rejecting the new skin and a long-term possibility that the drugs used could cause cancers. Experts say that although such medical advances should be | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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