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2016年6月大学英语四级真题及参考答案
Part ⅡListening Comprehension
(听力部分共有两套)
四级第一套
Section A
1. C) Rising unemployment worldwide.
2. A) Many countries have not taken measures to create enough jobs. 3. B) Put calorie information on the menu.
4. A) They will be fined.C) They will get a warning. 5. D) Failure to integrate innovation into their business. 6. B) It is the creation of something new. 7. C) Its innovation culture.
Section B
8. D) He does not talk long on the phone. 9. B) Talk at length.
10. A) He thought it was cool.
11. C) It is childish and unprofessional.
12. B) He is unhappy with his department manager. 13. A) His workload was much too heavy. 14. C) His boss has a lot of trust in him. 15. D) Talk to his boss in person first.
Section C
16. A) The importance of sleep to a healthy life. 17. C) They get less and less sleep. 18. D) Their blood pressure will rise.
19. B) What course you are going to choose. 20. D) The personal statement.
21. C) Indicate they have reflected and thought about the subject. 22. B) It was built in the late 19th century. 23. D) They often broke down.
24. A) They were produced on the assembly line. 25. C) It marked a new era in motor travel.
四级第二套
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Section A
1. C) Why sufficient sleep is important for college students.
2. C) Making last-minute preparations for tests may be less effective than sleeping. 3. B) Whether the British irports Authority should sell off some of its assets. 4. D) Lack of runway and terminal capacity.
5. D) Report the nicotine content of their cigarettes.
6. A) The biggest increase in nicotine content tended to be in brands young smokers like. 7. B) They were not prepared to comment on the cigarette study.
Section B
8. A) Holland.
9. D) Learning a language where it is not spoken. 10. C) Trying to speak it as much as one can.
11. A) It provides opportunities for language practice. 12. B) Rules and regulations for driving. 13.C) Make cars that are less powerful. 14. D) They tend to drive responsibly. 15. C) It is not useful.
Section C
16. D) The card reader failed to do the scanning.
17. B) By covering the credit card with a layer of plastic. 18. A) Produce many low-tech fixes for high-tech failures. 19. A) They vary among different departments. 20.D) By contacting the deparmental office.
21. B) They specify the number of credits students must earn. 22. C) Students in health classes. 23. A) Its overemphasis on thinness.
24. B) To explain how computer images can be misleading. 25. C) To promote her own concept of beauty.
Part Ⅲ Reading Comprehension
四级第一套
Section A
26.O) tend 27.M) review
28.L) performance
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29.K) particularly 30.N) survive 31.E) dropping 32.J) mutually 33.H) flow 34.F) essential 35.I) mood
Section B
36.E)“We thought we would see differences based on the housing types,” said the lead author of the study, Julie Robison, an associate professor of medicine at the university. A reasonable assumption—don't families struggle to avoid nursing homes and suffer real guilt if they can't?
37.L)Of course, sons and daughters want to visit the facilities, talk to the administrators and residents and other families, and do everything possible to fulfill their duties. But perhaps they don't have to turn themselves into private investigators or Congressional subcommittees. “Families can look a bit more for where the residents are going to be happy,” Dr. Sloane said. And involving the future resident in the process can be very important.
38.B)Does assisted living really mark a great improvement over a nursing home, or has the industry simply hired better interior designers? Are nursing homes as bad as people fear, or is that an out-moded stereotype (固定看法)? Can doing one's homework really steer families to the best places? It is genuinely hard to know.
39.H)An elderly person who describes herself as in poor health, therefore, might be no less depressed in assisted living (even if her children preferred it) than in a nursing home. A person who had input into where he would move and has had time to adapt to it might do as well in a nursing home as in a small residential care home, other factors being equal. It is an interaction between the person and the place, not the sort of place in itself, that leads to better or worse experiences. “You can't just say, ‘Let's put this person in a residential care home instead of a nursing home—she will be much better off,’” Dr. Robison said. What matters, she added, “is a combination of what people bring in with them, and what they find there.”
40.N)The daughter feared her mother would be ignored there, and so she decided to move her into a more welcoming facility. Based on what is emerging from some of this research, that might have been as rational a way as any to reach a decision.
41.J)As I was considering all this, a press release from a respected research firm crossed my desk, announcing that the five-star rating system that Medicare developed in 2008 to help families compare nursing home quality also has little relationship to how satisfied its residents or their family members are. As a matter of fact, consumers expressed higher satisfaction with the one-star facilities, the lowest rated, than with the five-star ones.(More on this study and the star ratings will appear in a subsequent post.)
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