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  3   Listen carefully to the conversations and short passages
  [00:07.99]and choose the best answer to each of the questions.
  [00:13.56]1.M:She wants to apply for the job,
  [00:19.41]but she is really not qualified,I'm afraid.
  [00:24.24]W:That's a pity.She seems so bright.
  [00:29.49]Don't you think we could train her?
  [00:33.57]Q:Why might the applicant receive on the job training?
  [00:41.43]2.W:Oh my goodness!
  [00:51.59]I've spilled flour all over the kitchen floor
  [00:56.92]and my cake isn't ready for the oven yet.
  [01:01.65]M:I'll get the broom and the dustpan and clean it up for you.
  [01:07.42]Q:What is the man going to do for the woman
  [01:13.59]while she's getting the cake ready for the oven?
  [01:18.63]3.M:Can you give me some information about the cost of a trip to Los Angeles?
  [01:26.70]W:I'm sorry,sir.I can't give you that information over the phone.
  [01:33.54]The travel agent will be able to help you.
  [01:38.30]Q: Where did the man want to go?
  [01:44.25]4.W:I've been around the whole store,but I couldn't find any sixty-watt bulbs.
  [01:53.61]Don't you carry them anymore?
  [01:57.97]M:Oh,they used to be on Aisle 12,but we've moved them.
  [02:04.16]Now you'll find them at the end of Aisle 14,
  [02:09.31]in the Household Goods section.
  [02:13.38]They're underneath the toilet bowl cleanser.
  [02:18.03]Q: What does the woman want to buy?
  [02:23.36]5.M:Look at the low prices on these used television sets.
  [02:31.30]Something is fishy. Don’t you think so?
  [02:36.34]W:Well,there have been a lot of robberies recently.
  [02:42.09]Some of the stolen goods may have landed here.
  [02:47.37]Q: How do the people feel about the television sets?
  [02:54.52]6.M:Are you really going to buy that painting? Where will you hang it?
  [03:02.18]W:Yes,I think it would brighten my living room wall.
  [03:07.61]Don't you love the way the blues and greens blend?
  [03:13.04]Q: Where does the woman plan to hang the painting?
  [03:20.18]7.W: Ron,could I borrow fifty dollars?
  [03:30.16]I'll be happy to pay you back, with interest, at the end of next week.
  [03:37.00]M: You have a lot of nerve asking me to lend you money
  [03:42.07]after acting as if you didn't even know me at the reception last night.
  [03:47.92]Q: How did Ron respond?
  [03:53.80]8. M: You needn’t be so nasty about it.
  [03:59.86]I simply forgot that you needed the car to get to the airport.
  [04:05.60]W: I think I have every right to get upset.
  [04:10.93]You knew I was scheduled to give a speech at those meetings this afternoon.
  [04:18.40]Q: What does the man think the woman is doing?
  [04:25.53]9.W:I wish Jane would call when she knows she’ll be late.
  [04:33.08]This is the third time we have had to wait for her.
  [04:38.73]M:I agree,but she does have to drive through very heavy traffic to get here.
  [04:45.70]Q: How does the man feel about waiting for Jane?
  [04:52.47]10.W:What was that title again?
  [05:01.92]M: God is an Englishman. It’s a very famous book.
  [05:07.38]I’m sure you must have it.
  [05:11.33]Q: Where did this conversation most probably take place?
  [05:19.19]PASSAGEⅠ
  [05:25.75]Mark Twain, who wrote the story we’re going to read,
  [05:31.62]traveled quite a lot often because circumstances,
  [05:37.48]usually financial circumstances forced him to.
  [05:43.07]He was born in Florida, Missouri in 1835
  [05:48.71]and moved to Hannibal,Missouri with his family when he was about 4 years old.
  [05:55.55]Most people think he was born in Hannibal but that isn’t true.
  [06:01.72]After his father died when he was about 12
  [06:06.76]Twain worked in Hannibal for a while and then left,
  [06:11.91]so he could earn more money.
  [06:15.67]He worked for a while as a typesetter on various newspapers
  [06:21.83]and then got a job as a river pilot on the Mississippi.
  [06:27.58]Twain loved this job and many of his books show it.
  [06:33.46]The river job didn't last however,because of the outbreak of the Civil War.
  [06:40.82]Twain was in the Confederate Army for just 2 weeks
  [06:46.57]and then he and his whole company went West to get away from the war and the army
  [06:54.12]In Nevada and California Twain prospected for silver and gold without much luck,
  [07:01.98]but did succeed as a writer.
  [07:05.93]Once that happened Twain traveled around the country giving lectures
  [07:12.69]and earning enough money to go to Europe.
  [07:17.94]Twain didn't travel much the last 10 years of his life
  [07:23.53]and he didn't publish much either.
  [07:27.37]Somehow his travels even when forced inspired his writings.
  [07:33.93]Like many other popular writers
  [07:37.87]Twain derived much of the materials for his writing
  [07:43.15]from the wealth and diversity of his own personal experiences.
  [07:49.92]Questions 11 to 14 are based on the passage you have just heard.
  [07:57.28]11.The speaker focuses on which aspect of Mark Twain’s life?
  [08:05.75]12.Where do most people think Twain was born?
  [08:16.69]13.Why did Twain go West?
  [08:22.62]14.What connection does the lecturer suggest between Twain's travels and his writings?
  [08:36.99]PASSAGE Ⅱ
  [08:44.64]In December 1903,two brothers, bicycle-makers from Ohio,
  [08:52.79]made the world’s first successful flight
  [08:57.65]in a heavier-than-air, motor-powered craft.
  [09:03.22]Orville and Wilbur Wright had flown gliders for about seven years
  [09:10.16]to test wind resistance and the control of planes in flight.
  [09:16.41]They built a home made wind tunnel to try out their theories,
  [09:22.68]and they built their plane knowing it could fly and that they could control it.
  [09:29.44]They made a thin,light,double-winged plane of spruce,wire and muslin
  [09:37.59]along the lines of the gliders.
  [09:41.72]The wingspan was 40 feet,with double wings and a double rudder.
  [09:48.80]They attached a 12 horsepower engine
  [09:53.84]with a chain transmission like that of a bicycle,
  [09:58.52]driving two propellers in opposite directions.
  [10:04.08]The first successful flight lasted 12 seconds,
  [10:10.14]lifting 12 feet off the ground and covering a distance of 120 feet.
  [10:18.00]The achievement created little interest at first.
  [10:23.05]No one realized then that this was one of history's important milestones,
  [10:29.99]and the beginning of aviation as we know it today,
  [10:35.14]with its profound effect on people all over the world.
  [10:40.89]After their successful flight,
  [10:45.64]the Wrights gave up bicycle-making and concentrated on airplanes.
  [10:51.99]In 1909 the army bought a plane from them.
  [10:57.55]Not long after,commercial firms were established in France and Germany
  [11:04.40]to manufacture Wright airplanes.
  [11:09.26]One of the brothers died in 1912,
  [11:14.01]but the other lived to see the dawn of the jet age
  [11:19.16]and the beginning of the nuclear era,
  [11:23.42]the latter accelerated by long-range aviation.
  [11:29.29]Questions 15 to 17 are based on the passage you have just heard.
  [11:37.05]15.What does the article tell about the first plane?
  [11:44.21]16.What is said about the brothers' development of the plane?
  [11:54.84]17.What happened after the initial flight?
  [12:04.40]PASSAGE Ⅲ
  [12:07.88]Good morning, students, n
  [12:11.72]I hope you have been able to read the two books about speech and hearing problems\
  [12:18.38]that I put in the library.
  [12:21.85]Today's lecture deals with the presence of the unusually large deaf population
  [12:29.30]that existed on the Massachusetts island of Martha's Vineyard
  [12:35.46]for about three centuries.
  [12:39.33]From the settlement of the island in the 1640's
  [12:44.66]to the twentieth century,the people there,
  [12:49.49]who were descended from only twenty-five or thirty original families,
  [12:55.73]married mainly other residents of the island.
  [13:01.09]They formed a highly inbred group,
  [13:05.74]producing an excellent example of the genetic patterns for the inheritance of deafness.
  [13:13.70]Indeed in the late eighteen hundreds
  [13:18.56]one out of every twenty-five people in one village on the island was born deaf,
  [13:25.33]and the island as a whole had a deafness rate
  [13:30.58]at least seventeen times greater than that of the rest of the United States.
  [13:37.35]Even Alexander Graham Bell,the inventor of the telephone
  [13:43.88]and a prominent investigator researching into hearing loss,
  [13:49.31]visited Martha's Vineyard to study the population.
  [13:54.74]But because the principles of genetics and inheritance were still unknown,
  [14:01.69]he was not able to explain the patterns of deafness
  [14:06.84]and why a deaf parent did not always have deaf children.
  [14:12.58]In the twentieth century,
  [14:16.42]the local population has mixed with people off the island
  [14:22.09]and the rate of deafness has fallen.
  [14:26.46]Questions 18 to 20 are based on the passage you have just heard.
  [14:33.61]18.Where does this talk take place?
  [14:39.86]19.Why were so many people there deaf?
  [14:49.31]20.According to the talk,how has the island changed in the twentieth century?

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