[听力原文]
M: We attended a lecture on philosophy by a professor from Peking University. It was great.
W: Yes, I felt it was easy to understand.
[听力原文]
M: We attended a lecture on philosophy by a professor from Peking University. It was great.
W: Yes, I felt it was easy to understand.
[听力原文]
When we accept the evidence of our unaided eyes and describe the Sun as a yellow star, we have summed up the most important single fact about it—at this moment in time. It appears probable, however, that sunlight will be the color we know for only a small part of the Sun’s history.
Stars, like individuals, age and change. As we look out into space. We see around us stars at all stages of evolution. There are faint bloodred dwarfs school that their surface temperature is a mere 4,000 degrees Fahrenheit, there are searing ghosts blazing at 100,000 degrees Fahrenheit and almost too hot to be seen, for the great part of their radiation is in the invisible ultraviolet range. Obviously, the "daylight" produced by any star depends on its temperature; today (and for ages to come) our Sun is at about 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit, and this means that most of the Sun’s light is concentrated in the yellow band of the spectrum, falling slowly in
A. The dangers of invisible radiation.
B. Faint dwarf stars.
C. The Sun’s fuel problem.
D. The evolutionary cycle of the Sun.
[听力原文]
M: We are having a little party at the weekend. Can you and Tom come
W: That sounds nice. Thank you. But I’ll have to check with Tom. I’ll tell you tomorrow.
[听力原文]
W: We will have to hurry if we are going to see the uncle. It is already 5:30
M: Well, it is only twenty minutes to go to the station. I think we have enough time. The train will arrive at 6:15. We can leave at 6:00 o’clock.
[听力原文]6-7
W: What did you think of the lecture
M: I thought it was very interesting.
W: Did you really
M: Yes, didn’t you
W: Certainly not. I thought he talked a lot of rubbish.
M: So you think you know more than he does.
W: Well, take coal for instance.
W: What about it
M: Coal won’t become important again.
W: Why not
M: It’s too dirty. They won’t be able to find people to work down in coal mines in the future.
W: They’ll invent new kinds of machinery.
M: Nonsense. The only sort of power they’ll use in the future is atomic power.
[听力原文]
W: If we hurry we can take the express train and save an hour.
M: Yes. The express takes only three hours to get to New York.
[听力原文]
M: Where on earth are we We are completely lost. What did I do wrong Did I take a wrong turn
W: I’m not sure, but I think you turned right when you should have turned left on the flyover bridge.
Q: What is the man doing ()
[听力原文]
M: We seem to be having this conversation over and over again.
W: You’re fight.
M: Look, I know how you feel about my smoking. You don’t have to tell me every day.
W: I’m sorry. I worry about you.
M: Let’s be honest. There’s always going to be a reason. After you graduate, it’s going to be hard to find a job, then there will be the stress from just starting a job.
M: OK, I get your point. It’s just so hard. You don’t really understand because you have never smoked.
W: You need some help. Why don’t you go to a doctor
M: You mean a psychiatrist
W: No, I don’t. I mean a general practitioner. Maybe you can get a patch, or some pills, well, I don’t know, something to help you with the withdrawal.
M: Really, I believe I can quit on my own. But I’ll think about it. I will.
W: All fight. I won’t mention it for a week.
A. The man’s graduation.
B. The couple’s engagement.
C. The man’s smoking.
D. The man’s stress.
[听力原文]
W: We still have enough time before meeting the manager. Let’s go out and have dinner.
M: I know a nice restaurant near the station
[听力原文]
Before we begin our tour, I’d like to give you some background information on the painter Grand Wood. We’ll be seeing much of his work today. Wood was born in 1881 in Iowa farm country, and became interested in art very early in life. Although he studied art in both Minneapolis and Chicago, the strongest influences on his art work were European. He spent time in both Germany and France and his study there helped shape his own stylized form of realism. When he returned to Iowa, Wood applied the stylistic realism he had learned in Europe to the rural life he saw around him and that he remembered from his childhood around the turn of the century. His portraits of farm families imitate the still formalism of photographs of early settlers posed in front of their homes. His paintings of farmers at work, and of their tools and animals, demonstrate a serious respect for the life of the mid-western United States.
By the 1930’s, Wood was a leading f
A. His study of photography.
B. His Work as a farmer.
C. His travel to Europe.
D. His background as a writer.
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