2017年6月大学英语四级真题(第二套)

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2017年6月大学英语四级真题(第二套)

Part II Listening Comprehension (30 minutes) Section A

Questions 1 to 2 are based on the conversation you have just heard. 1. B) C) D) 2. B) C) D)

Questions 3 to 4 are based on the conversation you have just heard. 3. B) C) D) 4. B) C) D)

Questions 5 to 7 are based on the conversation you have just heard. 5.

A) It sank into the sea due to overloading. A) He stayed behind to look after his injured dogs. He has won the Alaska Iditarod Race four times. He received a minor injury in the Iditarod Race. He has quit the competition in Alaska for good. A) Thefts of snowmobile dogs in Alaska. A series of injuries to snowmobile drivers. Attacks on some Iditarod Race competitors. A serious accident in the Alaska sports event.

A) Their drivers would feel safe after getting used to the automatic devices. They would be unpopular with drivers who only trust their own skills. Their increased comfort levels have boosted their sales. They are not actually as safe as automakers advertise. A) The majority of drivers prefer to drive and park themselves. Human drivers become easily distracted or tired while driving. Most drivers feel uncertain about the safety of self-driving cars. Most drivers have test driven cars with automatic braking features.

B) It ran into Nicaragua?s Big Corn Island. C) It disappeared between two large islands. D) It turned over because of strong winds. 6.

A) 13. B) 25.

C) 30. D)32.

7.

A) He has helped with the rescue effort.

B) He is being investigated by the police. C) He was drowned with the passengers.

D) He is among those people missing.

Section B

Questions 8 to 11 are based on the conversation you have just heard.

8. A) At a shopping centre.B) At a community college.

C) At an accountancy firm. D) At an IT company. 9. A) Helping out with data input. B) Arranging interviews.

C) Sorting application forms.

10. A) He enjoys using computers. B) He needs the money badly.

C) He wants to work in the city centre. D) He has relevant working experience.

11. A) Purchase some business suits. B) Learn some computer language. C) Improve his programming skills. D) Review some accountancy terms.

Questions 12 to 15 are based on the conversation you have just heard. 12. A) They are keen on high technology. B) They are poor at technology skills.

C) They often listen to National Public Radio. D) They feel superior in science and technology.

13. A) Japanese. B) Germans.

C) Poles.

14. A) Emailing. B) Texting.

C) Science. D) Literacy.

15. A) It is undergoing a drastic reform. B) It lays emphasis on creative thinking. C) It has much room for improvement. D) It prioritizes training of practical skills.

Section C

Questions 16 to18 are based on the passage you have just heard.

D) Americans.

D) Making phone calls.

16. A) They have small roots. B) They grow white flowers. C) They taste like apples. D) They come from Central Africa.

17. A) They turned from white to purple in color. B) They became popular on the world market. C) They became an important food for humans.

D) They began to look like modern-day carrots.

18. A) They were found quite nutritious. B) There were serious food shortages.

C) People discovered their medicinal value. D) Farm machines helped lower their prices.

Questions 19 to 21 are based on the passage you have just heard.

19. A) She could update her family any time she liked. B) She could call up her family whenever she liked

C) She could locate her friends wherever they were. D)

She could download as many pictures as she liked.

20. A) She liked to inform her friends about her success. B) C)

She enjoyed reading her friends? status updates. She felt quite popular among them. D) She felt she was a teenager again.

21. A) She could barely respond to all her 500 Facebook friends. B) C) D)

Questions 22 to 25 are based on the passage you have just heard.

22. A) They have strong muscles.

B) C) D)

23. A) It was a pet of a Spanish king.

They live a longer life than horses. They eat much less in winter. They can work longer than donkeys.

She spent more time updating her friends than her family. She could barely balance Facebook updates and her work. She didn?t seem to be doing as well as her Facebook friends.

B) C) D)

It was bought by George Washington. It was brought over from Spain. It was donated by a U.S. Ambassador.

24. A) They met and exchanged ideas on animal breeding.

B) C) D)

25. A) The wider use of horses. B) The arrival of tractors.

C) A shrinking animal trade. D) A growing donkey population. Part Ⅲ Section A

Questions 26 to 35 are based on the following passage.

America?s Internet is fester than ever before, but people still complain about their Internet being too slow. New York?s Attorney General?s office (26)_______an investigation in the fall into whether or notVerizon, Cablevision and Time Warner are delivering broadband that?s as fast as the providers (27)_______ it is. Earlier this month, the office asked for the public?s help to measure their speed results, sayingconsumers (28)_______ to get the speeds they were promised. “Too many of us may be paying for onething, and getting another,” the Attorney General said.

If the investigation uncovers anything, it wouldn?t be the first time a telecom provider got into (29)_______ over the broadband speeds it promised and delivered customers. Back in June, the Federal Communications Commission fined AT& T $ 100 million over (30)_______ that the carrier secretly reduced wireless speeds after customers consumed a certain amount of (31)_______ .

Even when they stay on the right side of the law, Internet providers arouse customers? anger over bandwidth speed and cost. Just this week, an investigation found that media and telecom giant Comcast is

the most (32)_______ provider. Over 10 months, Comcast received nearly 12,000 customer complaints, many (33)_______ to its monthly data cap and overage (超过额度的)charges.

Some Americans are getting so (34)_______ with Internet providers they?re just giving up. A recent

study found that the number of Americans with high-speed Internet at home today (35)_______ fell during the last two years, and 15% of people now consider themselves to be “cord-cutters.”

注意:此部分试题请在答题卡2上作答。 A)accusations E) complain B) actually F) data C) claim G) deserved D) communicating H) frustrated Reading Comprehension (40 minutes)

They participated in a mule-driving competition. They showed and traded animals in the market. They fed mules with the best food they could find.

I) hated M) trouble

Section B

J) launched N) usually K) relating O) worried L) times From Accountant to Yogi: Making a Radical Career Change

[A] At some point, almost all of us will experience a period of radical professional change. Some of us will seek it out; for others it will feel like an unwelcome intrusion into otherwise stable careers. Either way, we have choices about how we respond to it when it comes.

[B] We recently caught up with yoga entrepreneur Leah Zaccaria, who put herself through the fire of change to completely reinvent herself. In her search to live a life of purpose, Leah left her high-paying accounting job, her husband, and her home, hi the process, she built a radically new life and career. Since then, she has founded two yoga studios, met a new life partner, and formed a new community of people. Even if your personal reinvention is less drastic, we think there are lessons from her experience that apply.

[C] Where do the seeds of change come from? the Native American Indians have a saying: “Pay attention to the whispers so you won?t have to hear the screams.” Often the best ideas for big changes come from unexpected places — it?s just a matter of tuning in. Great leaders recognize the weak signals or slight signs that point to big changes to come. Leah reflects on a time she listened to the whispers: “About the time my daughter was five years old. I started having a sense that ?this isn?t right.”? She then realized that her life no longer matched her vision for it.

[D] Up until that point, Leah had followed traditional measures of success. After graduating with a degree in business and accounting, she joined a public accounting firm, married, bought a house, put lots of stuff in it, and had a baby. “I did what everybody else thought looked successful,” she says. Leah easily could have fallen into a trap of feeling content; instead, her energy sparked a period of experimentation and renewal.

[E] Feeling the need to change, Leah started playing with future possibilities by exploring her interests and developing new capabilities. First trying physical exercise and dieting, she lost some weight and discovered an inner strength. “1 felt powerful because 1 broke through my own limitations,” she recalls.

[F] However, it was another interest that led Leah to radically reinvent herself. “I remember sitting on a bench with my aunt at a yoga studio,?? she said, having a moment of clarity right then and there: Yoga is saving my life. Yoga is waking me up. I?m not happy and I want to change and I?m done with this.” In that moment of clarity Leah made an important leap,conquering her inner resistance to change and making a firm commitment to take bigger steps.

[G] Creating the future you want is a lot easier if you are ready to exploit the opportunities that come your way. When Leah made the commitment to change, she primed herself to new opportunities she may otherwise have overlooked. She recalls:

[H] One day a man I worked with, Ryan, who had his office next to mine, said, “Leah, let?s go look at this space on Queen Anne.” He knew my love for yoga and had seen a space close to where he lived that he thought might be good to serve as a yoga studio. As soon as I saw the location, I knew this was it. Of course I was scared, yet I had this strong sense of “I have to do this.” Only a few months later Leah opened her first yoga studio, but

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