西瓜

文档

14174

关注

0

好评

0
PDF

【版本一】四级模拟一答案解析

阅读 91 下载 47 大小 473.5K 总页数 11 页 2023-05-22 分享
价格:¥ 1.00

热门文档

下载文档
/ 11
全屏查看
【版本一】四级模拟一答案解析
还有 11 页未读 ,您可以 继续阅读 或 下载文档
1、本文档共计 11 页,下载后文档不带水印,支持完整阅读内容或进行编辑。
2、所有文档标识价格只是收集/整理所需费用,并不意味着购买了版权,文档版权归原作者或出版社所有,文档仅供阅读交流使用,不得用于其他商业用途(如 [转卖]进行直接盈利或[编辑后售卖]进行间接盈利)。
3、本站所有内容均由合作方或网友上传,本站不对文档的完整性、权威性及其观点立场正确性做任何保证或承诺!文档内容仅供阅读交流使用,付费前请自行鉴别。
4、如文档内容存在违规,或者侵犯商业秘密、侵犯著作权、版权等,请立即联系我们,我们会第一时间进行删除处理,联系QQ362527402。
Key to Model Test OnePartIWriting高分范文精彩点评Dear Tinny,②总结来信内容,概述问题,引出自己DI'm very glad to receive your letter telling me that you are ready to的建议。start your job hut.As for the advice on how to make your resume distinctive,②④⑤使用To begin with,To continue,,I will try to make some practical suggestions.Last but not least引出三条不同的建议,②To begin with,③just as the saying goes,.“Honesty is the best policy.”层次分明。So is it when coming to preparing for your resume,as no employer wants a③恰当引用谚语,增加文采。liar working in his company.4To continue,your resume should be concise,⑥表达希望和祝福。presenting personal information,together with a short summary of yourprofessional experience.Don't dress up your resume as if it were a book or加分亮点part of a book,because no one wants to scan through pages of long-windedconcise简明的,简洁的characters.5 Last but not least,it is often worthwhile to prepare severaldress up盛装打扮,修饰different resumes stressing different aspects of yourself so as to make themscan through浏览,粗略地看particular for different jobs that you're seekinglong-winded冗长的6I believe you will take my advice into account seriously and I hopestress强调,着重you will find these suggestions useful.Wish you every success in your jobtake..into account考虑到…,把…考search.虑进去Sincerely yours,AnniePart IIListening ComprehensionSection ANews Report OnA 16-year-old boy was arrested after the car he was driving ploughed into the wall of a house,seriously injuring twoteenage girls as they walked along the road with friends.The teenager was confined after the vehicle,believed to have beenstolen,veered onto the pavement in Longsight,Manchester.(1)A group of four girls were walking along Elsdon Road whenthe car crashed into three of them.The vehicle then drove over a garden bush and smashed into the wall of a house.Twogirls,both aged 16,were seriously injured in the crash and a third was left with bruising.The two seriously injured teenagers were taken to the Manchester Royal Infirmary,with one suffering a broken armand the other a fractured hip.(2)Police were called to the scene and a 16-year-old was arrested on suspicion of theft of amotor vehicle and driving above the legal limit of a controlled drug.Shocked eyewitnesses reported hearing a"loud bang"and came rushing out of their houses and saw the aftermath of the smash.Questions 1 and 2 are based on the news report you have just heard.1.How many people were injured in the car accident?B)2.What can we learn about the boy?D)News Report Two(3)A handheld device can identify cancerous tissue in 10 seconds,according to scientists at the University of Texas.They say it could make surgery to remove a tumour quicker,safer and more precise.Tests suggest the technology is accurate96%of the time.The MasSpec Pen takes advantage of the unique metabolism of cancer cells.Their furious drive to growand spread means their internal chemistry is very different to that of healthy tissue.(4)The challenge for surgeons is finding the border between the cancer and normal tissue.In some tumours it isobvious,but in others the boundary between healthy and diseased tissue can be blurred.The pen should help doctors ensurenone of the cancer is left behind.Remove too little tissue,and any remaining cancerous cells will grow into another tumour.But take too much,and you can cause damage,particularly in organs such as the brain.Livia Eberlin,an assistant professor of chemistry at the University of Texas,Austin,said:"What's exciting about thistechnology is how clearly it meets a clinical need.The tool is elegant and simple and can be in the hands of surgeons in ashort time.”Questions 3 and 4 are based on the news report you have just heard.3.What is this news report mainly about?C)4.What challenge do surgeons face?A)News Report ThreeFor nearly 200 years,scientists have wondered about the Giant Red Spot on Jupiter.This week,pictures of the planetshow dark clouds moving around,and through,a large red oval centre.These are the closest images humans have ever seen of the spot on the giant gas planet.(5)America's space agency NASA sent the Juno spacecraft to Jupiter to gather scientific data on the solar system'sbiggest planet.On Monday Juno flew over the Giant Red Spot,which is a storm larger than our planet Earth.First observedin 1830,scientists think it may be more than 350 years old.(6)The storm measures 16,350 kilometers wide and appears tobe getting smaller.Bolton said,"it will take time for the scientists to process the information Juno is sending back to Earth.(7)NASAJuno was launched on August 5,2011 from Cape Canaveral in Florida.The spacecraft will continue flybys to get moreinformation for scientists to learn about the planert.Questions 5 to 7 are based on the news report you have just heard.5.Why did NASA send the Juno spacecraft to Jupiter?A)6.What does the speaker say about the storm on Jupiter?C)7.What does NASA want to know from the information Juno is sending back?B)Section BConversation OneM:Hi,Sarah!I'm Adley Boardman.We spoke on the phone.W:Oh yes,I remember.M:(8-1)It says on your CV that you do voluntary work.W:(8-2)Well,when I have time,yes!I do work at a centre for children with difficulties.M:That must be very interestingW:(8-3)It's rewarding and challenging.M:Sarah,can you tell us a little bit about your current position?W:I'm assistant sales director for a chain of language schools.M:(9-1)So this post would be quite a change then.W:(9-2)I don't think so honestly,because the skills are the same,despite the product.M:Why are you thinking of moving on?W:Well,I've come as far as I can in my current position,I feel,and I'm 28 now and would love to take on some moreresponsibilities.M:(10-1)How would you deal with a rapidly changing and uncertain global market?W:(10-2)OK,that's actually something I wanted to talk about in my presentation...but I'd say to stay flexible and todiversify markets and sales strategies.M:Ok,can you tell us about a time you closed a particularly challenging deal?W:Well,the biggest contract I won was with a large university in India,to provide language training.The contract was fullof technicalities and the client was very picky!But I still pulled it off.M:(11-1)OK.Do you have any questions for us?W:(11-2)Yes.It's about your ethical policy and your carbon footprint.I was wondering whether you are planning to reduceyour carbon footprint and whether all your products are ethically sourced?M:That's a very good question,and that's something we're moving towards at the moment.Questions 8 to 11 are based on the conversation you have just heard.8.What does the woman say about her voluntary work?C)9.What is different between the woman's current job and the post she is applying for?B)10.What should they do when facing an uncertain global market according to the woman?A)11.What does the woman concern about this post?D)Conversation TwoM:Hello,everyone.(12-1)Today we have Linda Forbus from the Department of Transport,and she is here to talk about atypically British way to travel.W:(12-2)Ah,yes.It's on a bus-or,to be exact,on red double-decker bus.Double-decker buses are buses that have twolevels-an upstairs and a downstairs.You see them in other countries too,but for lots of people a red double-decker busis a typical London sight.M:Actually,if you think about a red London bus,(13)you're probably thinking about one special kind of double-decker buscalled the Routemaster.The one that's open at the back.W:That's right.You get onto the bus at the back-there isn't a door;it is openM:And you can just jump on or off the bus.(14)Bit dangerous.W:Yeah,a bit.But,in fact,we don't really have that typical red double-decker Routemaster bus any more.M:Yeah,we do-I saw one this morning.W:Well,we do still have them on one or two bus routes right in the centre of London but I think that's sort of a tourist thing,really.Buses nowadays are mostly new double-deckers.They're still red-or the very long single-decker buses-theones we call bendy buses.M:Oh,yeah,I don't like those bendy buses.W:(15)But they're much easier to get on for people wheelchairs.or mums with babies in pushchairs or old people whocan't walk very well.That was one of the main reasons that they stopped using the Routemaster buses.M:Oh right,I didn't know that.W:So people like to see the old-fashioned Routemaster buses and tourists like to see them too,but it's probably better totravel on the new buses-they're definitely more comfortable.Questions 12 to 15 are based on the conversation you have just heard.12.What are the speakers talking about?A)13.What is special about the Routemaster?D)14.What does the man think of the Toutemaster?C)15.What was the main reason that bendy buses replaced the Routemaster?C)Section CPassage OneWhen mammals first began to grow larger,some of them evolved into the earliest ancestors of horses.(16)The firsthorses evolved in North America.They were about the size of dogs.They had three toes.lived in jungles and ate fruit.(17)Around 20 million years ago,some horses evolved to live on the grassland of central North America.Thesehorses had one big toe and smaller side toes,and they had long legs so they could run fast to escape from tigers and wolves.They were bigger,and they had their eyes on the side of their heads,instead of in front By about 17 million years ago,theseplains horses were eating grass instead of fruit.Some North American plains horses used their long legs to run south to South America about 10 million years ago.About 5 million years ago,the North American plains horses evolved into modern horses.Some of them ran across theSiberian land bridge to Central Asia,where they must have been happy to find thousands of miles of grassland that theycould live on.(18)Some of these Asian horses slowly spread south across Asia and Africa,evolving into donkeys.Othersstayed on the Central Asian plains,where they leamed to eat apples and carrots.Sometime around 10,000 BC,horses disappeared in both South America and North America.Probably this was
文档评分
    请如实的对该文档进行评分
  • 0
发表评论
返回顶部