盐城高三第一次调研考试答案

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盐城市2008—2009学年度高三年级第一次调研考试
英语试题听力材料及参考答案
Text 1
W: Can I help you?
M: No, thanks. I'm just looking.
W: OK, ask me if you need any help.
Text 2
M: Cars Rental Company. What can I do for you?
W: I want to rent this one. How much is it?
M: 30 dollars a day, and 200 dollars a week. How long do you want to keep it?
W: 8 days.
Text 3
M: Good morning, I haven't seen you for a long time.
W: Yes. I'm thinking of applying for a patent, but I have no experience.
M: Don't worry. I have read some books on the matter. Maybe I can help you!
Text 4
W: There is only thirty minutes. I've got an appointment of a quarter past seven.
M: I'll give you a lift if you like.
Text 5
M: Is this 615 sixth street?
W: NO, it's 616 fifth street.
Text 6
W: I'm very sorry you didn't win, Jack.
M: So am I. What a disappointment.
W: Come on, cheer up !
M: No. I feel terrible, Mary. And our classmates...
W: But you tried your best, didn't you?
M: Yes, I did.
W: You won't give up trying, will you'?
M: No. I won't. I'll do better next time.
W: I'll help you. We can practice together.
M: That would be great.
W: Then don't look so sad, Jack.
M: I'll try to cheer up.
W: You'll get over it.
M: I know. Thanks a lot, Mar3,.
W: Come on. I'll buy you a coffee.
M: Okay. Let's go.
Text 7
W: Tell us something, Mr. Smith, about New York City, about the weather, for example. You have lived in New York for many years. Do you like the weather?
M: New York is a wonderful city, without doubt the most interesting city in the world today, but I'm afraid the weather there is not very good.
W: Is it very cold in New York, Mr. Smith'?
M: Sometimes it's very cold, and sometimes it's very warm. On some days in winter it seems that there is no colder place in the world, because the air is always wet.
W: And in summer it's very hot?
M: Very hot. It's a large city, and there is little wind. The air in summer is often damp and heavy.
W: But why do so many people live there'?
M: Most people grow accustomed to the weather, but there are many others who complain about it all the time.
W: Is the weather always unpleasant?
M: Oh, no. On the contrary, there are many beautiful days in New York, especially in spring and in autumn. The sun shines; the sky, is clear and blue; the people walk along the streets or sit in the parks in the sun. The really unpleasant part, I suppose, is that the weather in New York changes often and so suddenly. One day it's warm, and the next day it's cold. One day it rains, and the next day it's clear and sunny. There is a story which says that when a visitor to New York complains about the weather, the New Yorker always answers, "Don't you like our weather? Then wait a minute! It'll change."
Text 8
W: Welcome to the program. This afternoon I'm standing in the middle of the northern Black Forest, with Rainer Sanger.
M: Good afternoon, Sarah.
W: Rainer, you're very concerned about this area of the forest, are you? Can you tell us why?
M: Well, much of the forest was wiped out in the terrible storm last winter, as you can see. Many of the trees are dead, and more are dying because of the damage. We believe that the government isn't doing enough right now to make this beautiful forest get into its former state.
W: I see. But have you spoken to the government about this?
M: We have tried, trot each time they say that they haven't got enough money. They are always using money as the excuse. It's getting really disappointing!
W: But it's not just an excuse, is it? They clearly don't have enough money for everything and the storm was an unexpected occurrence.
M: Of course, we appreciate that, and the point is that actually we aren't asking for much money. We would just like their guidance--we can provide volunteers to work on the forest.
Text 9
M: How time flies! Winter holidays are coming next week.
W: Yes, do you have any plan?
M: Certainly. I want to go to Egypt. What about you'?
W: I'm afraid I can go nowhere. I failed my English exam. You know my parents are so strict with me.
M: Bad luck!
W: I say, is Egypt an Asian country? Is it far?
M: Yes, quite far. And it's not in Asia, it's all African country.
W: Oh, yes. I've heard of not only the Pyramids but the Aswan Dam. Do you want to see?
M: Of course. I'll go there by boat in the Nile.
W: That'll be wonderful and interesting. How will you get there?
M: By air—by light No. CA808! My sister works on it! And then I'll be treated as a king!
W: Don't be so proud. I'll be off now. I wish you a good trip.
M: Oh, sorry. I didn't mean that. I don't want to hurt you...
Text 10
Read for life, all your life. Nothing ever invented provides such food for the mind, such infinite reward for time spent, as a good book. Read to your heart's content. Let one book lead to another. They nearly always do.
Take up a great author and read everything he or she has written. Read about places you've never been: sailing down the Mississippi with Huckleberry Fin, or wandering in the streets in St Petersburg with Anna Karenina. Read books that changed history: Tom Paine's Common Sense, Harriet Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin, Rachel Carson's Silent Spring.
Read those books you know you're supposed to have read and imagined as dry or uninteresting. A classic may be defined as a book ::hat stays long in print, and a book stays long in print only because it's outstanding. Why exclude the outstanding from your experience? And when you read a book you love—a book you feel has enlarged the experience of being alive, a book that "lights the fire"—then spread the world.
To carry a book with you wherever you go is old advice and good advice. John Adams urged his son John Quincy to carry a volume of poetry. "You will never be alone," he said, "with a poet in your pocket".
1—5 ABBBC 6—10 BACBA 11—15 BBCAB 16—20 CACAA
21—25 ACCDB 26—30 ADABA 31—35 BABDC
36—40 ABADD 41—45 CBADC 46—50 BCCBC 51—55 BACDB
56—60 ABACD 61—65 BABBD 66—70 BBACA
71. lasting 72. annual 73. Western 74. means 75. train/railway
76. easy/convenient 77. fly 78. Weather 79. hit/struck 80. spite
Dear Roy,
I'm very glad to receive your letter, and I feel it a great honor to introduce briefly to you something about the direct flights between the Chinese mainland and Taiwan. Six decades ago, Taiwan put a ban on the regular links between the two sides. But Last July saw the starting of weekend charter flights. Now both sides are even enjoying daily direct flights, which numbers up to monthly 60 at times. When the direct flights began in the first week, twelve air companies from the two sides applied for 101 flights, providing services between four Taiwan and 12 mainland cities.
Originally, the passenger planes were required to fly south by way of Hong Kong, and the cargo ships had to sail around the Japanese island of Okinawa north of Taiwan. Now the flights and cargo ships from Taipei and other main cities can directly reach more than 10 cities of the mainland, like Shanghai, which has taken much less time and greatly reduced the shipping costs.
The direct flights, I think, have opened a new era of direct air and shipping services, and brought new vigor to economic and trade ties between the two sides.
That's what I can tell you at present Maybe I'll have some more information for you not long time later.
Yours,
Li Ming

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