Song | 2005年12月大学英语四级听力真题 |
Artist | 英语听力 |
Album | 大学英语四级听力真题 |
Download | Image LRC TXT |
[00:09.78] | Section A |
[02:00.70] | Q1. |
[02:03.47] | W: Carol told us on the phone not to worry about her.Her left leg doesn't hurt as much as it did yesterday. |
[02:11.89] | M: She'd better have it examined by a doctor anyway. And I will call her about it this evening. |
[02:20.33] | Q: What does the man think Carol should do? |
[02:39.70] | Q2. |
[02:42.43] | M: There is a non-stop train for Washington and it leaves at 2:30. |
[02:48.89] | W: It's faster than the 2 o'clock train. Besides, we can have something to eat before getting on the train. |
[02:58.12] | Q: What do we learn from the conversation? |
[03:16.96] | Q3. |
[03:19.16] | M: Hi, Melissa, how's your project going? Have you thought about going to graduate school? |
[03:26.61] | Perhaps you can get into Harvard. |
[03:29.56] | W: Everything is coming along really well. I have been thinking about graduate school. |
[03:36.54] | But I'll talk to my tutor Dr. Garcia first and see what she thinks. |
[03:43.16] | Q: What do you learn about the woman from the conversation? |
[04:02.90] | Q4. |
[04:05.12] | W: Did you attend Alice's presentation last night? It was the first time for her to give a speech to a large audience. |
[04:14.55] | M: How she could be so calm in front of so many people is really beyond me! |
[04:21.00] | Q: What do we learn from the conversation? |
[04:39.92] | Q5. |
[04:44.04] | W: You've been doing weather reports for nearly 30 years. Has the weather got any worse in all these years? |
[04:51.72] | M: Well, not necessarily worse. But we are seeing more swings. |
[04:57.13] | Q: What does the man say about the weather? |
[05:17.11] | Q6. |
[05:19.57] | M: Excuse me, I am looking for the textbook by a Professor Jordon for the marketing course. |
[05:27.05] | W: I am afraid it's out of stock. You'll have to order it. |
[05:31.78] | And it will take the publisher 3 weeks to send it to us. |
[05:35.86] | Q: Where did this conversation most probably take place? |
[05:56.87] | Q7. |
[06:00.25] | M: I am going to New York next week, but the hotel I booked is really expensive. |
[06:06.96] | W: Why book a hotel? My brother has 2 spare rooms in his apartment. |
[06:13.26] | Q: What does the woman mean? |
[06:32.62] | Q8. |
[06:34.75] | W: In my opinion, watching the news on TV is a good way to learn English. What do you think? |
[06:41.75] | M: It would be better if you could check the same information in English newspapers afterwards. |
[06:49.06] | Q: What does the man say about learning English? |
[07:09.48] | Q9. |
[07:12.54] | M: I hear a newly-invented drug can make people tell the truth and it may prove useful in questioning terrorists. |
[07:22.38] | Isn't it incredible? |
[07:24.95] | W: Simple solutions to complex problems rarely succeed. |
[07:29.55] | As far as I know, no such drugs are ever known to work. |
[07:35.01] | Q: What does the woman think of the new drug? |
[07:54.29] | Q10. |
[07:57.26] | M: You know the electronics company is coming to our campus to recruit graduate students next week. |
[08:04.96] | W: Really? What day? I'd like to talk to them and hand in my résumé. |
[08:11.72] | Q: What does the woman want to do? |
[08:29.85] | Section B |
[09:10.65] | Passage one |
[09:13.03] | A new study reports the common drug aspirin greatly reduces life threatening problems |
[09:19.46] | after an operation to replace blocked blood vessels to the heart. |
[09:25.07] | More than 800,000 people around the world have this heart surgery each year. |
[09:32.71] | The doctors who carried out the study say giving aspirin to patients soon |
[09:38.96] | after the operation could save thousands of lives. |
[09:43.57] | People usually take aspirin to control pain and reduce high body temperature. |
[09:50.33] | Doctors also advise some people to take aspirin to help prevent heart attacks. |
[09:57.89] | About 10-15 percent of these heart operations end in death or damage to the heart or other organs. |
[10:08.45] | The new study shows that even a small amount of aspirin reduced such threats. |
[10:17.17] | The doctors said the chance of death for patients who took aspirin would fall by 67%. |
[10:25.82] | They claimed this was true if the aspirin was given within 48 hours of the operation. |
[10:33.54] | The doctors believe aspirin helps heart surgery patients |
[10:38.99] | because it can prevent blood from thickening and blood vessels from being blocked. |
[10:45.10] | However, the doctors warned that people who have stomach bleeding |
[10:50.36] | or other bad reactions from aspirin should not take it after heart surgery. |
[10:57.54] | Questions 11 to 13 are based on the passage you have just heard. |
[11:04.87] | Q11. What is the finding of the new study of aspirin? |
[11:27.43] | Q12. In what way can aspirin help heart surgery patients according to the doctors? |
[11:52.64] | Q13. What warning did the doctors give about the use of aspirin? |
[12:15.45] | Passage Two |
[12:18.14] | Were you the first or the last child in you family? Or were you a middle or an only child? |
[12:26.71] | Some people think it matters where you were born in you family. |
[12:31.93] | But there are different ideas about what birth order means. |
[12:36.77] | Some people say that oldest children are smart and strong-willed. |
[12:43.09] | They are very likely to be successful. The reason for this is simple. |
[12:48.81] | Parents have a lot of time for their first child, they give him or her a lot of attention. |
[12:56.66] | So this child is very likely to do well. An only child will succeed for the same reason. |
[13:04.12] | What happens to the other children in the family? |
[13:08.58] | Middle children don't get so much attention, so they don't feel that important. |
[13:15.50] | If a family has many children, the middle one sometimes gets lost in the crowd. |
[13:21.52] | The youngest child, though, often gets special treatment. He or she is the baby. |
[13:28.69] | Often this child grows up to be funny and charming. Do you believe these ideas of birth order too? |
[13:37.41] | A recent study saw things quite differently. The study found that first children believed in family rules. |
[13:46.22] | They didn't take many chances in their lives. They usually followed orders. |
[13:52.27] | Rules didn't mean as much to later children in the family. |
[13:56.71] | They went out and followed their own ideas. They took chances and they often did better in life. |
[14:05.29] | Questions 14 to 16 are based on the passage you have just heard. |
[14:11.74] | Q14. According to common belief, in what way are the first child and the only child alike? |
[14:38.39] | Q15. What do people usually say about middle children? |
[15:00.79] | Q16. what do we learn about later children in a family from a recent study of birth order? |
[15:26.28] | Passage Three |
[15:28.43] | When my interest shifted from space to the sea, I never expected it would cause such confusion among my friends, |
[15:38.90] | yet I can understand their feelings. |
[15:43.08] | As I have been writing and talking about space flight for the best part of 20 years, |
[15:49.53] | a sudden switch of interest to the depth of the sea doer seem peculiar. |
[15:55.17] | To explain, I'd like to share my reasons behind this unusual change of mind. |
[16:01.28] | The first excuse I give is an economic one. Underwater exploration is so much cheaper than space flight. |
[16:11.21] | The first round-trip ticket to the moon is going to cost at least 10 billion dollars if you include research and development. |
[16:21.50] | By the end of this century, the cost will be down to a few million. |
[16:27.29] | On the other hand, the diving suit and a set of basic tools needed for skin-diving can be bought for 20 dollars. |
[16:36.21] | My second argument is more philosophical. The ocean, surprisingly enough, has many things in common with space. |
[16:45.23] | In their different ways, both sea and space are equally hostile. |
[16:51.99] | If we wish to survive in either for any length of time, we need to have mechanical aids. |
[16:59.69] | The diving suit helped the design of the space suit. |
[17:04.20] | The feelings and the emotions of a man beneath the sea will be much like those of a man beyond the atmosphere. |
[17:13.84] | Questions 17 to 20 are based on the passage you have just heard. |
[17:20.49] | Q17. How did the speaker's friends respond to his change of interest? |
[17:43.60] | Q18. What is one of the reasons for the speaker to switch his interest to underwater exploration? |
[18:08.93] | Q19. In what way does the speaker think diving is similar to space travel? |
[18:32.45] | Q20. What is the speaker's purpose in giving this talk? |
[00:09.78] | Section A |
[02:00.70] | Q1. |
[02:03.47] | W: Carol told us on the phone not to worry about her. Her left leg doesn' t hurt as much as it did yesterday. |
[02:11.89] | M: She' d better have it examined by a doctor anyway. And I will call her about it this evening. |
[02:20.33] | Q: What does the man think Carol should do? |
[02:39.70] | Q2. |
[02:42.43] | M: There is a nonstop train for Washington and it leaves at 2: 30. |
[02:48.89] | W: It' s faster than the 2 o' clock train. Besides, we can have something to eat before getting on the train. |
[02:58.12] | Q: What do we learn from the conversation? |
[03:16.96] | Q3. |
[03:19.16] | M: Hi, Melissa, how' s your project going? Have you thought about going to graduate school? |
[03:26.61] | Perhaps you can get into Harvard. |
[03:29.56] | W: Everything is coming along really well. I have been thinking about graduate school. |
[03:36.54] | But I' ll talk to my tutor Dr. Garcia first and see what she thinks. |
[03:43.16] | Q: What do you learn about the woman from the conversation? |
[04:02.90] | Q4. |
[04:05.12] | W: Did you attend Alice' s presentation last night? It was the first time for her to give a speech to a large audience. |
[04:14.55] | M: How she could be so calm in front of so many people is really beyond me! |
[04:21.00] | Q: What do we learn from the conversation? |
[04:39.92] | Q5. |
[04:44.04] | W: You' ve been doing weather reports for nearly 30 years. Has the weather got any worse in all these years? |
[04:51.72] | M: Well, not necessarily worse. But we are seeing more swings. |
[04:57.13] | Q: What does the man say about the weather? |
[05:17.11] | Q6. |
[05:19.57] | M: Excuse me, I am looking for the textbook by a Professor Jordon for the marketing course. |
[05:27.05] | W: I am afraid it' s out of stock. You' ll have to order it. |
[05:31.78] | And it will take the publisher 3 weeks to send it to us. |
[05:35.86] | Q: Where did this conversation most probably take place? |
[05:56.87] | Q7. |
[06:00.25] | M: I am going to New York next week, but the hotel I booked is really expensive. |
[06:06.96] | W: Why book a hotel? My brother has 2 spare rooms in his apartment. |
[06:13.26] | Q: What does the woman mean? |
[06:32.62] | Q8. |
[06:34.75] | W: In my opinion, watching the news on TV is a good way to learn English. What do you think? |
[06:41.75] | M: It would be better if you could check the same information in English newspapers afterwards. |
[06:49.06] | Q: What does the man say about learning English? |
[07:09.48] | Q9. |
[07:12.54] | M: I hear a newlyinvented drug can make people tell the truth and it may prove useful in questioning terrorists. |
[07:22.38] | Isn' t it incredible? |
[07:24.95] | W: Simple solutions to complex problems rarely succeed. |
[07:29.55] | As far as I know, no such drugs are ever known to work. |
[07:35.01] | Q: What does the woman think of the new drug? |
[07:54.29] | Q10. |
[07:57.26] | M: You know the electronics company is coming to our campus to recruit graduate students next week. |
[08:04.96] | W: Really? What day? I' d like to talk to them and hand in my re sume. |
[08:11.72] | Q: What does the woman want to do? |
[08:29.85] | Section B |
[09:10.65] | Passage one |
[09:13.03] | A new study reports the common drug aspirin greatly reduces life threatening problems |
[09:19.46] | after an operation to replace blocked blood vessels to the heart. |
[09:25.07] | More than 800, 000 people around the world have this heart surgery each year. |
[09:32.71] | The doctors who carried out the study say giving aspirin to patients soon |
[09:38.96] | after the operation could save thousands of lives. |
[09:43.57] | People usually take aspirin to control pain and reduce high body temperature. |
[09:50.33] | Doctors also advise some people to take aspirin to help prevent heart attacks. |
[09:57.89] | About 1015 percent of these heart operations end in death or damage to the heart or other organs. |
[10:08.45] | The new study shows that even a small amount of aspirin reduced such threats. |
[10:17.17] | The doctors said the chance of death for patients who took aspirin would fall by 67. |
[10:25.82] | They claimed this was true if the aspirin was given within 48 hours of the operation. |
[10:33.54] | The doctors believe aspirin helps heart surgery patients |
[10:38.99] | because it can prevent blood from thickening and blood vessels from being blocked. |
[10:45.10] | However, the doctors warned that people who have stomach bleeding |
[10:50.36] | or other bad reactions from aspirin should not take it after heart surgery. |
[10:57.54] | Questions 11 to 13 are based on the passage you have just heard. |
[11:04.87] | Q11. What is the finding of the new study of aspirin? |
[11:27.43] | Q12. In what way can aspirin help heart surgery patients according to the doctors? |
[11:52.64] | Q13. What warning did the doctors give about the use of aspirin? |
[12:15.45] | Passage Two |
[12:18.14] | Were you the first or the last child in you family? Or were you a middle or an only child? |
[12:26.71] | Some people think it matters where you were born in you family. |
[12:31.93] | But there are different ideas about what birth order means. |
[12:36.77] | Some people say that oldest children are smart and strongwilled. |
[12:43.09] | They are very likely to be successful. The reason for this is simple. |
[12:48.81] | Parents have a lot of time for their first child, they give him or her a lot of attention. |
[12:56.66] | So this child is very likely to do well. An only child will succeed for the same reason. |
[13:04.12] | What happens to the other children in the family? |
[13:08.58] | Middle children don' t get so much attention, so they don' t feel that important. |
[13:15.50] | If a family has many children, the middle one sometimes gets lost in the crowd. |
[13:21.52] | The youngest child, though, often gets special treatment. He or she is the baby. |
[13:28.69] | Often this child grows up to be funny and charming. Do you believe these ideas of birth order too? |
[13:37.41] | A recent study saw things quite differently. The study found that first children believed in family rules. |
[13:46.22] | They didn' t take many chances in their lives. They usually followed orders. |
[13:52.27] | Rules didn' t mean as much to later children in the family. |
[13:56.71] | They went out and followed their own ideas. They took chances and they often did better in life. |
[14:05.29] | Questions 14 to 16 are based on the passage you have just heard. |
[14:11.74] | Q14. According to common belief, in what way are the first child and the only child alike? |
[14:38.39] | Q15. What do people usually say about middle children? |
[15:00.79] | Q16. what do we learn about later children in a family from a recent study of birth order? |
[15:26.28] | Passage Three |
[15:28.43] | When my interest shifted from space to the sea, I never expected it would cause such confusion among my friends, |
[15:38.90] | yet I can understand their feelings. |
[15:43.08] | As I have been writing and talking about space flight for the best part of 20 years, |
[15:49.53] | a sudden switch of interest to the depth of the sea doer seem peculiar. |
[15:55.17] | To explain, I' d like to share my reasons behind this unusual change of mind. |
[16:01.28] | The first excuse I give is an economic one. Underwater exploration is so much cheaper than space flight. |
[16:11.21] | The first roundtrip ticket to the moon is going to cost at least 10 billion dollars if you include research and development. |
[16:21.50] | By the end of this century, the cost will be down to a few million. |
[16:27.29] | On the other hand, the diving suit and a set of basic tools needed for skindiving can be bought for 20 dollars. |
[16:36.21] | My second argument is more philosophical. The ocean, surprisingly enough, has many things in common with space. |
[16:45.23] | In their different ways, both sea and space are equally hostile. |
[16:51.99] | If we wish to survive in either for any length of time, we need to have mechanical aids. |
[16:59.69] | The diving suit helped the design of the space suit. |
[17:04.20] | The feelings and the emotions of a man beneath the sea will be much like those of a man beyond the atmosphere. |
[17:13.84] | Questions 17 to 20 are based on the passage you have just heard. |
[17:20.49] | Q17. How did the speaker' s friends respond to his change of interest? |
[17:43.60] | Q18. What is one of the reasons for the speaker to switch his interest to underwater exploration? |
[18:08.93] | Q19. In what way does the speaker think diving is similar to space travel? |
[18:32.45] | Q20. What is the speaker' s purpose in giving this talk? |
[00:09.78] | Section A |
[02:00.70] | Q1. |
[02:03.47] | W: Carol told us on the phone not to worry about her. Her left leg doesn' t hurt as much as it did yesterday. |
[02:11.89] | M: She' d better have it examined by a doctor anyway. And I will call her about it this evening. |
[02:20.33] | Q: What does the man think Carol should do? |
[02:39.70] | Q2. |
[02:42.43] | M: There is a nonstop train for Washington and it leaves at 2: 30. |
[02:48.89] | W: It' s faster than the 2 o' clock train. Besides, we can have something to eat before getting on the train. |
[02:58.12] | Q: What do we learn from the conversation? |
[03:16.96] | Q3. |
[03:19.16] | M: Hi, Melissa, how' s your project going? Have you thought about going to graduate school? |
[03:26.61] | Perhaps you can get into Harvard. |
[03:29.56] | W: Everything is coming along really well. I have been thinking about graduate school. |
[03:36.54] | But I' ll talk to my tutor Dr. Garcia first and see what she thinks. |
[03:43.16] | Q: What do you learn about the woman from the conversation? |
[04:02.90] | Q4. |
[04:05.12] | W: Did you attend Alice' s presentation last night? It was the first time for her to give a speech to a large audience. |
[04:14.55] | M: How she could be so calm in front of so many people is really beyond me! |
[04:21.00] | Q: What do we learn from the conversation? |
[04:39.92] | Q5. |
[04:44.04] | W: You' ve been doing weather reports for nearly 30 years. Has the weather got any worse in all these years? |
[04:51.72] | M: Well, not necessarily worse. But we are seeing more swings. |
[04:57.13] | Q: What does the man say about the weather? |
[05:17.11] | Q6. |
[05:19.57] | M: Excuse me, I am looking for the textbook by a Professor Jordon for the marketing course. |
[05:27.05] | W: I am afraid it' s out of stock. You' ll have to order it. |
[05:31.78] | And it will take the publisher 3 weeks to send it to us. |
[05:35.86] | Q: Where did this conversation most probably take place? |
[05:56.87] | Q7. |
[06:00.25] | M: I am going to New York next week, but the hotel I booked is really expensive. |
[06:06.96] | W: Why book a hotel? My brother has 2 spare rooms in his apartment. |
[06:13.26] | Q: What does the woman mean? |
[06:32.62] | Q8. |
[06:34.75] | W: In my opinion, watching the news on TV is a good way to learn English. What do you think? |
[06:41.75] | M: It would be better if you could check the same information in English newspapers afterwards. |
[06:49.06] | Q: What does the man say about learning English? |
[07:09.48] | Q9. |
[07:12.54] | M: I hear a newlyinvented drug can make people tell the truth and it may prove useful in questioning terrorists. |
[07:22.38] | Isn' t it incredible? |
[07:24.95] | W: Simple solutions to complex problems rarely succeed. |
[07:29.55] | As far as I know, no such drugs are ever known to work. |
[07:35.01] | Q: What does the woman think of the new drug? |
[07:54.29] | Q10. |
[07:57.26] | M: You know the electronics company is coming to our campus to recruit graduate students next week. |
[08:04.96] | W: Really? What day? I' d like to talk to them and hand in my ré sumé. |
[08:11.72] | Q: What does the woman want to do? |
[08:29.85] | Section B |
[09:10.65] | Passage one |
[09:13.03] | A new study reports the common drug aspirin greatly reduces life threatening problems |
[09:19.46] | after an operation to replace blocked blood vessels to the heart. |
[09:25.07] | More than 800, 000 people around the world have this heart surgery each year. |
[09:32.71] | The doctors who carried out the study say giving aspirin to patients soon |
[09:38.96] | after the operation could save thousands of lives. |
[09:43.57] | People usually take aspirin to control pain and reduce high body temperature. |
[09:50.33] | Doctors also advise some people to take aspirin to help prevent heart attacks. |
[09:57.89] | About 1015 percent of these heart operations end in death or damage to the heart or other organs. |
[10:08.45] | The new study shows that even a small amount of aspirin reduced such threats. |
[10:17.17] | The doctors said the chance of death for patients who took aspirin would fall by 67. |
[10:25.82] | They claimed this was true if the aspirin was given within 48 hours of the operation. |
[10:33.54] | The doctors believe aspirin helps heart surgery patients |
[10:38.99] | because it can prevent blood from thickening and blood vessels from being blocked. |
[10:45.10] | However, the doctors warned that people who have stomach bleeding |
[10:50.36] | or other bad reactions from aspirin should not take it after heart surgery. |
[10:57.54] | Questions 11 to 13 are based on the passage you have just heard. |
[11:04.87] | Q11. What is the finding of the new study of aspirin? |
[11:27.43] | Q12. In what way can aspirin help heart surgery patients according to the doctors? |
[11:52.64] | Q13. What warning did the doctors give about the use of aspirin? |
[12:15.45] | Passage Two |
[12:18.14] | Were you the first or the last child in you family? Or were you a middle or an only child? |
[12:26.71] | Some people think it matters where you were born in you family. |
[12:31.93] | But there are different ideas about what birth order means. |
[12:36.77] | Some people say that oldest children are smart and strongwilled. |
[12:43.09] | They are very likely to be successful. The reason for this is simple. |
[12:48.81] | Parents have a lot of time for their first child, they give him or her a lot of attention. |
[12:56.66] | So this child is very likely to do well. An only child will succeed for the same reason. |
[13:04.12] | What happens to the other children in the family? |
[13:08.58] | Middle children don' t get so much attention, so they don' t feel that important. |
[13:15.50] | If a family has many children, the middle one sometimes gets lost in the crowd. |
[13:21.52] | The youngest child, though, often gets special treatment. He or she is the baby. |
[13:28.69] | Often this child grows up to be funny and charming. Do you believe these ideas of birth order too? |
[13:37.41] | A recent study saw things quite differently. The study found that first children believed in family rules. |
[13:46.22] | They didn' t take many chances in their lives. They usually followed orders. |
[13:52.27] | Rules didn' t mean as much to later children in the family. |
[13:56.71] | They went out and followed their own ideas. They took chances and they often did better in life. |
[14:05.29] | Questions 14 to 16 are based on the passage you have just heard. |
[14:11.74] | Q14. According to common belief, in what way are the first child and the only child alike? |
[14:38.39] | Q15. What do people usually say about middle children? |
[15:00.79] | Q16. what do we learn about later children in a family from a recent study of birth order? |
[15:26.28] | Passage Three |
[15:28.43] | When my interest shifted from space to the sea, I never expected it would cause such confusion among my friends, |
[15:38.90] | yet I can understand their feelings. |
[15:43.08] | As I have been writing and talking about space flight for the best part of 20 years, |
[15:49.53] | a sudden switch of interest to the depth of the sea doer seem peculiar. |
[15:55.17] | To explain, I' d like to share my reasons behind this unusual change of mind. |
[16:01.28] | The first excuse I give is an economic one. Underwater exploration is so much cheaper than space flight. |
[16:11.21] | The first roundtrip ticket to the moon is going to cost at least 10 billion dollars if you include research and development. |
[16:21.50] | By the end of this century, the cost will be down to a few million. |
[16:27.29] | On the other hand, the diving suit and a set of basic tools needed for skindiving can be bought for 20 dollars. |
[16:36.21] | My second argument is more philosophical. The ocean, surprisingly enough, has many things in common with space. |
[16:45.23] | In their different ways, both sea and space are equally hostile. |
[16:51.99] | If we wish to survive in either for any length of time, we need to have mechanical aids. |
[16:59.69] | The diving suit helped the design of the space suit. |
[17:04.20] | The feelings and the emotions of a man beneath the sea will be much like those of a man beyond the atmosphere. |
[17:13.84] | Questions 17 to 20 are based on the passage you have just heard. |
[17:20.49] | Q17. How did the speaker' s friends respond to his change of interest? |
[17:43.60] | Q18. What is one of the reasons for the speaker to switch his interest to underwater exploration? |
[18:08.93] | Q19. In what way does the speaker think diving is similar to space travel? |
[18:32.45] | Q20. What is the speaker' s purpose in giving this talk? |