[00:57.57] |
11 |
[01:00.65] |
M: The biological project is now in trouble, you know, |
[01:05.09] |
my colleague and I have completely different ideas about how to proceed. |
[01:09.81] |
W:Why don't you compromise? Try to make it a win-win situation for you both. |
[01:16.20] |
Q: What does the woman suggest the man do? |
[01:35.27] |
12 |
[01:38.42] |
M: How does Nancy like the new dress she bought in Rome? |
[01:42.36] |
W: She said she would never have bought an Italian style dress if she had known Mary had already got such a dress. |
[01:49.47] |
Q: What do we learn from the conversation? |
[02:09.07] |
13 |
[02:11.80] |
M: You are not going to do all those dishes before we leave, are you? |
[02:16.71] |
If we don' tpick up George and Martha in 25 minutes we will never get to the theater on time. |
[02:22.82] |
W: Oh, didn't I tell you, Martha called to say her daughter was ill and they couldnot go tonight. |
[02:29.64] |
Q: What is the women probably going to do first? |
[02:49.85] |
14 |
[02:51.89] |
M :You've been hanging on to the phone for quite a while, who were you talking with? |
[02:57.28] |
W:Oh, it was Sally, you know, she always has the latest news in town |
[03:02.93] |
and can't wait to talk it over with me. |
[03:05.68] |
Q: What do we learn about Sally from the conversation? |
[03:25.81] |
15 |
[03:28.12] |
W: It has always been hard to get this car into first gear, |
[03:32.55] |
and now the clutch seems to be slipping. |
[03:35.38] |
M: If you leave the car with me, I will fix it for you this afternoon. |
[03:40.62] |
Q: Who is the woman probably speaking to? |
[04:00.45] |
16 |
[04:03.06] |
M: Kate, why does the downtown area look deserted now? |
[04:08.48] |
W: We1l, there used to be some really good stores, but lots of them moved out to the mall. |
[04:15.41] |
Q: What do we lear from the conversation? |
[04:33.35] |
17 |
[04:36.08] |
W :I found the lounge such a cozy place to study in. |
[04:40.44] |
I really like the feeling in sitting on the sofa and doing the reading. |
[04:45.20] |
M: Well, for me the hardest part about studying here is staying awake. |
[04:50.79] |
Q: What does the man mean? |
[05:08.85] |
18 |
[05:11.40] |
W: These mosquitoes bite are killing me. I can't help scratching. |
[05:16.65] |
M: Next time you go camping, take some precaution, say wearing long sleeves. |
[05:22.29] |
Q: Why does the man suggest the woman wear long sleeves? |
[05:46.50] |
Conversation One |
[05:49.80] |
M: Hello, and welcome to our program, "Working Abroad". |
[05:54.50] |
0ur guest this evening is a Londoner, who lives and works in Italy. |
[05:59.81] |
Her name 's Susan Hi1l. Susan, welcome to the program. |
[06:04.24] |
You live in Florence, how long have you been living there? |
[06:08.71] |
W: Since 1982. But when I went there in 1982, I planned to stay for only 6 months. |
[06:17.82] |
M: Why did you change your mind? |
[06:19.78] |
W: Well, I'm a designer, I design leather goods, mainly shoes, and handbags. |
[06:25.66] |
Soon after I arrived in Florence, I got a job with one of Italy's top fashion houses,Ferregamo. |
[06:33.17] |
So, I decided to stay. |
[06:35.68] |
M: How lucky! Do you still work for Ferregamo? |
[06:39.42] |
W: No, I've been a freelance designer for quite a long time now. Since 1988, in fact. |
[06:46.61] |
M: So does that mean you design for several different companies now? |
[06:50.77] |
W: Yes, that's right. I've designed many fashion items for a number of Italian companies, |
[06:56.66] |
and during last four years, I've also been designing for the British company, Burberry's. |
[07:02.44] |
M: What have you been designing for them? |
[07:04.82] |
W: Mostly handbags, and small leather goods. |
[07:08.07] |
M: Has the fashion industry in Italy changed since 1982? |
[07:12.80] |
W: Oh, yes. It's become a lot more competitive. |
[07:16.89] |
Because of quality of products from other countries has improved a lot. |
[07:21.47] |
But it's high quality and design is still world-famous. |
[07:25.81] |
M: And do you ever think of returning to live in England? |
[07:29.35] |
W: No, not really. Working in Italy is more interesting. |
[07:33.51] |
I also love the Mediterranean sun and the Italian life style. |
[07:38.08] |
M: Well, thank ycu for talking to us, Susan. |
[07:40.88] |
W: It was a pleasure. |
[07:43.44] |
Questions 19 to 22 are based on the conversation you've just heard: |
[07:50.25] |
19. Where does this talk most probably take place? |
[08:12.96] |
20. What was the woman's original plan when she went to Florence? |
[08:35.73] |
21. What has the woman been doing for a living since 1988? |
[08:59.72] |
22 What do we learn about the change in Italy's fashion industry? |
[09:21.13] |
Conversation 2 |
[09:24.65] |
M: So, Claire, you're into drama! |
[09:28.47] |
W: Yes, I have a master's degree in drama and theatre. |
[09:32.79] |
At the moment, I'm hoping to get onto a Ph.D program. |
[09:36.75] |
M: What excites you about drama? |
[09:39.31] |
W: Well, I find it's a communicative way to study people and you learn how to read people in drama. |
[09:46.36] |
So usually I can understand what people are saying even though they might be lying. |
[09:52.11] |
M: That would be useful. |
[09:53.49] |
W: Yeah, it's very useful for me as well. |
[09:56.71] |
I'm in English lecture, so use a lot of drama in my classes such as role plays. |
[10:02.88] |
And I ask my students to create mini-dramas.They really respond well. |
[10:09.11] |
At the moment, I' m hoping to get onto a Ph.D course. |
[10:13.49] |
I'd like to concentrate on Asian drama and try to bring Asian theatre to the world's attention. |
[10:20.12] |
I don' t know how successful I would be, but, here's hoping. |
[10:24.20] |
M: Oh, I' msure you' l1 be successful. Now, Claire, what do you do for stage fright? |
[10:30.77] |
W: Ah, stage fright! Well, many actors have that problem. |
[10:35.40] |
I get stage fright everytime I'm going to teach a new class. |
[10:39.89] |
The night before, I usually can't sleep. |
[10:43.15] |
M: What? For teaching? |
[10:44.71] |
W: Yes. I get really bad stage fright. |
[10:47.97] |
But the minute I step into the classroom or get onto the stage, it just all falls into place. |
[10:54.82] |
Then I just feel like: Yeah, this is what I mean to do. And I'm fine. |
[11:00.64] |
M: Wow, that's cool! |
[11:03.94] |
Questions 23 to 25 are based on the conversation you've just heard: |
[11:11.26] |
23. Why does the woman find study in drama and theatre useful? |
[11:34.71] |
24. How did the woman's students respond to her way of teaching English? |
[11:58.09] |
25. What does the Woman say about her stage fright? |
[12:20.20] |
Section B |
[12:53.02] |
Passage |
[12:55.74] |
In January 1989, |
[12:58.51] |
the Community of European Railways presented their proposal for a high speed pan-European train network extending from Sweden to Sicily, |
[13:10.02] |
and from Portugal to Poland by the year 2020. |
[13:14.62] |
If their proposal becomes a reality, it will revolutionize train travel in Europe. |
[13:21.74] |
Journeys between major cities will take half the time they take today. |
[13:27.21] |
Brussels will be only one and a half hours from Paris. |
[13:31.84] |
The quickest way to get from Paris to Frankfurt, from Barcelona to Madrid will be by train, not plane. |
[13:40.63] |
When the network is complete, it will integrate three types of railway line: |
[13:47.32] |
totally new high speed lines with trains operating at speeds of 300 kilometers per hour, |
[13:54.80] |
upgraded lines which allow fcr speeds up to 200 to 225 kilometers per hour, |
[14:02.67] |
and existing lines for local connections and distribution of freight. |
[14:08.69] |
If businesspeople can choose between a three-hour train journey fromcity-center to city-center and a one-hour flight, |
[14:18.52] |
they 'll choose the train, says an executive travel consultant. |
[14:22.66] |
They won' t go by plane any more. |
[14:26.22] |
If you calculate flight time, check-in and travel to-and-from the airport, you'll find almost no difference. |
[14:34.93] |
And if your plane arrives late due to bad weather or air traffic jams or strikes, |
[14:41.65] |
then the train passengers will arrive at their destination first. |
[14:46.07] |
Since France introduced the first 260-kilometer-per-hour high speed train service between Paris and Lyons in 1981, |
[14:57.35] |
the trains have achieved higher and higher speeds. |
[15:01.09] |
On many routes, airlines have lost up to 90% of their passengers to high speed trains. |
[15:08.87] |
If people accept the Community of European Railways'plan, the 21 century will be the new age of the train. |
[15:19.99] |
Questions 26 to 29 are based on the passage you've just heard: |
[15:27.13] |
26. What is the proposal presented by the Community of European Railways? |
[15:51.50] |
27. What will happen when the proposal becomes a reality? |
[16:14.78] |
28. Why will business people prefer a three-hour train journey to a one-hour flight? |
[16:40.27] |
29. When did France introduce the first high speed train service? |
[17:04.54] |
Passage 2 |
[17:06.47] |
Western doctors are beginning to understand what traditional healers have always known |
[17:11.66] |
that the body and the mind are inseparable. |
[17:15.50] |
Until recently, modern urban physicians heal the body, psychiatrist the mind, and priests the soul. |
[17:24.10] |
However, the medical world is now paying more attention to holistic medicine |
[17:30.58] |
which is an approachbased on the belief that people state of mind can make them sick or speed their recovery from sickness. |
[17:38.97] |
Several study show that the effectiveness of a certain drugof ten depends on the patient's expectations of it. |
[17:47.55] |
For example, in one recent study, |
[17:51.22] |
psychiatrist and a major hospital tried to see how patients could be made calm. |
[17:57.91] |
They divided them into two groups. |
[18:00.90] |
One group was given a drug while the other group received a harmless substance instead of medicine without their knowledge. |
[18:09.14] |
Surprisingly, more patients in the second group showed the desired effect than those in the first group. |
[18:17.59] |
In study after study, there's a positive reaction in almost one-third of the patients taking harmless substances. |
[18:27.28] |
How was this possible? How can such a substance have an effect on the body? |
[18:34.30] |
Evidence from a 1997 study at the University of California shows that |
[18:40.36] |
several patients who received such substances were able to produce their own natural drug, |
[18:48.35] |
that is, as they took the substancetheir brains released natural chemicals that act like a drug. |
[18:56.26] |
Scientists theorizedthat the amount of these chemicals released by a person's brain quite possibly |
[19:04.27] |
indicates how much faith the person has in his or her doctor. |
[19:10.63] |
Questions 30 to 32 are based on the passage you've just heard: |
[19:16.43] |
30. According to the speaker, what are western doctors beginning to understand? |
[19:41.27] |
31. What does the recent study at a major hospital seem to prove? |
[20:05.54] |
32. What evidence does the 1997 study at the University of California produce? |
[20:30.39] |
Passage 3 |
[20:33.63] |
So we've already talked a bit about the growth of extreme sports like rock-climbing. |
[20:39.68] |
As psychologists, we need to ask ourselves: Why is this person doing this? |
[20:46.43] |
Why do people take these risks and put themselves in danger when they don't have to? |
[20:52.13] |
One common trait among risk-takers is that they enjoy strong feelings or sensations. |
[20:59.93] |
We call this trait sensation-seeking. |
[21:02.98] |
A sensation-seeker is someone who's always looking for new sensations. |
[21:09.45] |
What else do we know about sensation- |
[21:12.80] |
Well, as I said, sensation-seekers like strong emotions. |
[21:18.46] |
You can see this trait in many partsof a person's life, not just in extreme sports. |
[21:24.37] |
For example, many sensation-seekers enjoy hard rock music. |
[21:30.25] |
They like the loud sound and strong emotion of the songs. |
[21:34.20] |
Similarly, sensation-seekers enjoy frightening horror movies. |
[21:38.64] |
They like the feeling of being scared and horrified while watching the movie. |
[21:44.47] |
This feeling is even stronger for extreme sports where the person faces real danger. |
[21:50.98] |
Sensation-seekersfeel the danger is very exciting. |
[21:55.11] |
In addition, sensation-seekers like new experiences that force them to push their personal limits. |
[22:02.98] |
For them, repeating the same things everyday is boring. |
[22:07.46] |
Many sensation-seekers choose jobs that involve risk, |
[22:12.56] |
such as starting a new business or being an emergency room doctor. |
[22:17.41] |
These jobs are different everyday, so they never know what will happen. |
[22:22.57] |
That's why many sensation-seekers also like extreme sports. |
[22:29.09] |
When you do rock-climbing, you never know what will happen. |
[22:32.48] |
The activity is always new and different. |
[22:37.17] |
Questions 33 to 35 are based on the passage you 've just heard: |
[22:43.21] |
33. According to the speaker, what is a common trait among risk-takers? |
[23:07.16] |
34. What do sensation-seekers find boring? |
[23:29.15] |
35. What is the speaker's profession? |
[24:40.59] |
If you are like most people, you 've indulged in fake listening many times. |
[24:47.25] |
You go to history class, sit in the 3rd row, and look squarely at the instructor as she speaks. |
[24:54.40] |
But your mind is far away, floating in the clouds of pleasant daydreams. |
[25:00.23] |
Occasionally you come back to earth. |
[25:03.11] |
The instructor writes an important term on the chalkboard, and you dutifully copy it in your notebook. |
[25:09.82] |
Every once in a while the instructor makes a witty remark, causing others in the class to laugh. |
[25:17.35] |
You smile politely, pretending that you've heard the remark and found it mildly humorous. |
[25:23.45] |
You have a vague sense of guilt that you aren't paying close attention. |
[25:28.77] |
But you tell yourself that any material you miss can be picked up from a friend's notes. |
[25:34.59] |
Besides, the instructor's talking about road construction in acient Rome,and nothing could be more boring. |
[25:43.50] |
So back you go into your private little world, only later do you realize you've missed important information for a test. |
[25:52.52] |
Fake listening may be easily exposed, |
[25:56.59] |
since many speakers are sensitive to facial cues and can tell if you' re merely pretending to listen. |
[26:02.98] |
Your blank expression, and the faraway look in your eyes are the cues that betray you inattentiveness. |
[26:10.77] |
Even if you are not exposed there's another reason to avoid fakery. |
[26:16.93] |
It's easy for this behavior to become a habit. |
[26:20.88] |
For some people, the habit is so deeply rooted that they automatically start daydreaming |
[26:27.66] |
when a speaker begins talking on some thing complex or uninteresting. |
[26:32.66] |
As a result, they miss lots of valuable information. |
[26:40.76] |
(read again) |
[26:42.89] |
If you are like most people, you've indulged in fake listening many times. |
[26:48.97] |
You go to history class, sit in the 3rd row, and look squarely at the instructor as she speaks. |
[26:56.60] |
But your mind is far away, floating in the clouds of pleasant daydreams. |
[27:02.06] |
Occasionally you come back to earth. |
[27:04.61] |
The instructor writes an important term on the chalkboard, and you dutifully copy it in your notebook. |
[27:10.96] |
Every once in a while the instructor makes a witty remark, causing others in the class to laugh. |
[27:17.82] |
You smile politely, pretending that you've heard the remark and found it mildly humorous. |
[27:23.90] |
You have a vague sense of guilt that you aren't paying close attention. |
[27:28.85] |
But you tell yourself that any material you miss can be picked up from a friend's notes. |
[27:35.04] |
Besides, the instructor's talking about road construction in acient Rome,and nothing could be more boring. |
[28:49.78] |
So back you go into your private little world, only later do you realize you' ve missed important information for a test. |
[28:59.29] |
Fake listening may be easily exposed, |
[29:03.25] |
since many speakers are sensitive to facial cues and can tell if you' re merely pretending to listen. |
[29:10.38] |
Your blank expression, and the faraway look in your eyes are the cues that betray you inattentiveness. |
[30:25.16] |
Even if you are not exposed there's another reason to avoid fakery. |
[30:29.90] |
It's easy for this behavior to become a habit. |
[30:33.66] |
For some people, the habit is so deeply rooted that they automatically start daydreaming |
[30:40.52] |
when a speaker begins talking on some thing complex or uninteresting. |
[31:58.64] |
As a result, they miss lots of valuable information. |
[32:04.30] |
(read third time) |
[32:09.17] |
If you are like most people, you've indulged in fake listening many times. |
[32:14.47] |
You go to history class, sit in the 3rd row, and look squarely at the instructor as she speaks. |
[32:21.88] |
But your mind is far away, floating in the clouds of pleasant daydreams. |
[32:27.68] |
Occasionally you come back to earth. |
[32:30.91] |
The instructor writes an important term on the chalkboard, and you dutifully copy it in your notebook. |
[32:37.35] |
Every once in a while the instructor makes a witty remark, causing others in the class to laugh. |
[32:44.43] |
You smile politely, pretending that you've heard the remark and found it mildly humorous. |
[32:50.75] |
You have a vague sense of guilt that you aren't paying close attention. |
[32:56.06] |
But you tell yourself that any material you miss can be picked up from a friend's notes. |
[33:01.54] |
Besides, the instructor's talking about road construction in acient Rome,and nothing could be more boring. |
[33:10.60] |
So back you go into your private little world, only later do you realize you've missed important information for a test. |
[33:19.95] |
Fake listening may be easily exposed, |
[33:23.76] |
since many speakers are sensitive to facial cues and can tell if you're merely pretending to listen. |
[33:29.99] |
Your blank expression, and the faraway look in your eyes are the cues that betray you inattentiveness. |
[33:37.87] |
Even if you are not exposed there's another reason to avoid fakery. |
[33:44.11] |
It's easy for this behavior to become a habit. |
[33:47.88] |
For some people, the habit is so deeply rooted that they automatically start daydreaming |
[33:55.26] |
when a speaker begins talking on some thing complex or uninteresting. |
[34:00.28] |
As a result, they miss lots of valuable information. |