[听力原文]
W: Hi, Mr. Johnson. What is the purpose of your visit to England
M: I’m going for a conference.
[听力原文]8-10
M: Hi! Jane, what have you been doing this summer holiday
W: Working, mostly.
M: What kind of work have you been doing
W: I’ve been working in a hotel.
M: What, as a waitress
W: No, I’ve been helping in the kitchen most of the time — washing vegetables, preparing breakfast trays — that sort of thing.
M: Have you been enjoying it Or has it been rather boring
W: It hasn’t been too bad. I’ve found it quite interesting, in fact.
M: And have you earned a lot of money
W: Hardly, but I haven’t done too badly. I’ve been getting $40 a week, plus my meals and my accommodation, so I’ve earned over $500 all together.
[听力原文]6-7
W: Hi, long time no see. What have you been doing recently
M: I work part-time at a department store near Baiyun Road.
W: Well, it’s just near Caihong Sports Center.
M: Yes, and there is a cinema near the center, the Luisa Cinema. Sometimes I go there for a film.
W: That’s interesting.
M: I agree. And working there is a nice thing.
W: I hope I can find such a good place to work there too.
M: There are many good places where you can work. If you like you can also go to work with me.
W: Really Is there an opening
M: Yes, you can have a try.
[听力原文]
Hi. My name is Ralph Mesquite. I am a biologist. I live at Ling Lodge in Brooklyn City. Ling Lodge is on Old River Road. It is a part of Mosquito City. The houses in Brooklyn do not have street numbers. They have names. The name of my building is Ling Lodge and the name of the building next to my building is Antarctica.
Ling Lodge is across the road from the Nature Reserve. I often go to the Nature Reserve. I am studying the plants there. In particular I am studying the Mosquito Rose. The Mosquito Rose is a giant red flower. It is an endangered species.
Sometimes I work at the Nature Reserve and sometimes I work at home and sometimes I drive to my office at the university. Mosquito City has one university. I am a professor at the Mosquito City University. I am a biology professor.
I was born in Mosquito City and I have lived here most of my life. I am going to tell you a little about the city. Mosquito City is an independent country in the s
A. To introduce his life and Mosquito City.
B. To ask tourists to go to his hometown for a visit.
C. To promote biological education among the young people.
D. To teach us about the plants in his hometown.
[听力原文]
W: Hi.
M: Hi, I’m going door to door tonight to tell people about the Student Action Coalition. Do you have a few minutes
W: Sure. You know, I think I read something in the newspaper last week.
M: Yeah. There was an article about us in the last issue. See, we’re trying to protect and conserve some of the open spaces in campus.
W: That’s right. You are the group that’s opposing the extension of the parking lot next to Darwin Hall, right
M: That’s right. We just feel it is important to save some of the natural beauty of the campus. Some of those trees are hundreds of years old.
W: It’s a pretty spot. My friends and I had picnics over there by the stream.
M: Then you’ll understand how we feel. We are going to organize a protest on Thursday afternoon to get the administration to reconsider the parking lot plan.
W: Well, I have a class on Thursday after noon.
M: But maybe you cou
A. In the newspaper.
B. In the radio.
C. In the advertisement.
D. From her roommate.
[听力原文]
M: Did Henry paint the whole bookshelf himself
W: He had it painted red. He doesn’t like blue.
[听力原文]
M: What time do you usually have breakfast
W: Around 7:00, but lately I’ve been having trouble getting up in the morning, so I’ve been eating breakfast at 8:00, 9:00 even as late as 10:00.
[听力原文]
M. What will the weather be like tomorrow
W: The broadcast says it will be warm and dry.
[听力原文]
W: What are the historical trends with respect to marriage and family
M: The "traditional nuclear family", consisting of a breadwinner-husband and a homemaker-wife raising children, was the norm for most households in the United States in the 1950s. In these traditional families, married couples were usually of the same religion, the same race, and the same socio-economic class, and they were supposed to live together for the rest of their lives even if the relationship was abusive or dysfunctional. Times have changed. Today, the "Ozzie and Harriet" family constitutes only about 10 percent of all families (1). Family diversity is now the norm, with 25% of households consisting of adults living alone, and the rest made up of people living in a variety of family structures, such as dual-income families, single-parent families, step-families, inter-racial families, inter-faith families, foster families, cohabiting
A. that marriage is regarded as a sexist institution
B. that they become single when their spouse die
C. that people will for some reason get divorced
D. that marriage is seen as a quasi-religious institution
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