201012ӢļȫԤ
Ý£Part I Writing (30 minutes)
Part II Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning) (15 minutes)
Part III Listening Comprehension (35 minutes)
Part IV Reading Comprehension (Reading in Depth) (25 minutes)
Part V Cloze (15 minutes)
Part VI Translation (5 minutes)
201012ӢļȫԤдϸĶ
201012´ѧӢļȫԤԾ
201012´ѧӢļȫԤԾĶ
201012ӢļȫԤռ
ѧӢļȫԤһ
Part Writing
д˼·
һƪڴġӴʼۣļͥÔÔ¼Ô
οġ
Generation Gap
Generation gap seems a hot topic between the old and the young. Parents complain that children dont show them proper respect and obedience, while children complain that their parents dont understand them at all. Often they discover that they have very little in common.
One cause of the generation gap is the opportunity that young people have to choose their own life. In traditional societies, children lived in the same area as their parents, married people their parents knew and approved of, and often continued the family occupation.
In our society, people often move out of the home at an early age, marry or live with people their parents have never met, and choose occupations that are rather different. Parents often expect their children to be better than them. However, these ambitions for their children are another cause of the division between them.
Finally, the speed of change in our society is another cause of it. In the traditional culture, people are valued for their wisdom, but in our society the knowledge of a lifetime may become out of date.
No doubt, the generation gap will continue to be a feature of our life. Its causes are rooted in the freedoms and opportunities of our society, and in the rapid pace at which society changes.
Part Reading Comprehension(Skimming and Scanning)
Ôľ
˶
ȱپ֮⣬⿴ȥ񡶴衷ӰƬеһһ޴ˮţβ;Ӱһصذڶ
ͻȻеƤĩҸܵζʱ𶯡˲䣬ͱһ̨Ч⣬ٵˮпһͨգ֮䣬ǿҧסһ㡣Ťͷ˺´⣬ȥܿأʳͽˡ
Ϊƶ
׷Ĺһֿŵķʽ֤ƶ˶ڶҪá
һ󲿷ֵĶͨƶʳǻƶӱܵˡѰżµĵ̡ƶķСԾССƮ
ƶķǿƶƣκλƶDZͧܰ䵽ңԶȻĶԣƶԴĽгɹӡܹԽӽʱٵزѧ̵ӡ󡣵ǣϸоſ˴ѧĺѧS. A. WainwrightF. VosburghJ. H. HebrankŷһġоУѧǶλڷʥ¹˹԰ӾӾ˹۲졣˶ǽ˷ͬʱҲƤͼо
Ƥǹؼ
ѧǷ֣ƤˮиЧζĹؼƤкά̥ڲһһЩάΪÔάǵķɻЩάԴͷŴάʱάĹһͷźάɳˡ
ſ˴ѧѧҷ֣췢ζʱ򡣵ǰƶʱάܵǿҵ죬DZܱάС㳯һѸٵͷʱͱͷųˡ
ཻشͷţβ;һǿҵذڶƤһĶʹӵһˮдȥ
Ô´
ʲôάܴ洢˶?׷Ѱ𰸵ĹУſ˴ѧĿѧǷ֣̥ԲƤϡ̥ѹ͵һ㽺Ô䴦·ҲһǣڵѹѪҺѹÔάѹڿѹ
㻺ζʱάڵѹԽϵ͡άȽɳʱǵĽǶѰʳֻζʱַʽƶǣҪʳԴʱһЩı仯Զˡ
ڲѹܻ10Ôάѹ¾죬˴
ţתƵβϣ˶ʣµͿ֪ˡ
ٶȿļ¼
һֿٵĺֺ鶯ٶΪÿСʱ20ӢоѧǷ֣һĿζ׷ݵƤƤɵģˮСͨ£ˮлζʱˮƽȵǵ塣ƽȵˮΪȻƶʱΧˮͱļʹĦӴ󣬽ٶȡ
ƤԺܴ󣬿ˮIJζ
ʵϣˮDZ˺Ƥ޴ˮԲķʽƽȵζʱܵè°Ù¶È¾Í½Ë£Ç£È´Ü¹Æ¼Â¼Ù¶Ë®Ð¿Ù´Ð¡
ĵٶ
еĶﶼͺһٵζ˶Чʷҿ棩ûпǵţйĵطһϸϸټҪʹô𤻬ҺԱСƶͬľ룬ֻҪķʮ֮һ
ѧΪ棩ЧʺܵͣȻܵһơ仰˵ǶȰԼںС֮ѰʳѰҺʵٹ?
1.𰸡D)
ͬת⣬һųѡ⡣еĴʡmovement to do somethingԽ𰸶λС⡰Moving to Surviveµڶεǰ仰Like the shark, most animals use movement to find food. They also use locomotion to escape enemies, find a mate, and explore now territoriesþһͬתѡA)B)C)ÔоἰԲȷѡD)Ôûἰȷ𰸡
2.𰸡B)
ϸƶ⡣ɿDZͧΪ˵ʲôеġexamples of automobiles, rockets and submarinesǹؼʣԽ𰸶λС⡰Moving to Surviveµεǰ仰Humans have the added advantage of using their various inventions to move about in just about any kind of environment. Automobiles, rockets, and submarines transport humans from deep oceans to as far away as the moonڶ仰Ϊ˵仰ݣB)˼һ£ѡоδἰ
3.𰸡A)
ϸƶ⡣ɣ⿼ˮпζĹؼʲôеġkeyǹؼʣԽ𰸶λС⡰Skin Is the Key׶εľ仰The biologists discovered that the skin of the shark is the key to the animals high efficiency in swimming through the waterѡA)ȫһ£ֱѡA)ɡѡоἰǶɵҪ
4.𰸡D)
ϸƶ⡣еġthe Duke University scientistsǹؼʣԽ𰸶λС⡰Skin Is the Keyµڶεľ仰The Duke University biologists have found that the greatest stretching occurs where the shark bends its body while swimmingÑ¡D)ȫһ£ԴѡD)ѡÔľδἰΪ
5.𰸡C)
ϸƶ⡣Сa belted radial tireǹؼʣԽС⡰Source of Energy¶εĵ仰Just as a radial tire is inflated by pressure, so, too, is the area just under the sharks collagen radialsеġjust as͡so˵ߵ֮ڡinflated by pressureԴӦC)ѡA)B)ߵIJ֮ͬѡD)ûἰ
6.𰸡A)
ϸƶ⡣еĹؼǡa laminar flowԿԽС⡰Dolphin Has Speed Record£ݸýڶεĵľ仰Normally when a fish or other object moves slowly through the water, the water flows smoothly past the body. This smooth flow is known as laminar flow.Ƕ仰ĸдȷA)ѡѡ˼ϡa laminar flowĶ壬Ҫ󲻷
7.𰸡C)www.xamda.CoMԾ͵Դ
ͬת⡣Сa slugÍ¡a mouseΪؼʣֱӶλС⡰Other Animals Less Efficient¶εĵڶ仰It uses so much energy ... a mouse traveling the same distance uses only one twelfth as much energyǶԸþͬдȷC)12 timesÑ¡Ôݲ
8. 𰸡feeling the vibrations of a struggling prey
㿿ζ
9. 𰸡collagen fibers
Skin Is the KeyУڶ仰The fibers are called collagen fibers
10.𰸡some fantastic involuntary changes
Source of EnergyУڶε仰DZ𰸡
¿Î³ÌרҵÃû³Æ | ½²Ê¦ | Ô¼Û/ÓÅ»Ý¼Û | Ãâ·ÑÌåÑé | ±¨Ãû |
---|---|---|---|---|
¡¶´óѧӢÓïËļ¶¡·¾«Æ·°à£¨°üÀ¨Óï·¨¡¢´Ê»ã¡¢·Ò룩 | ¶¡Ñ©Ã÷ | £¤100 / £¤100 | ±¨Ãû | |
¡¶´óѧӢÓïËļ¶¡·¾«Æ·°à£¨ÔĶÁÀí½â£© | ¶¡Ñ©Ã÷ | £¤100 / £¤100 | ±¨Ãû | |
¡¶´óѧӢÓïËļ¶¡·¾«Æ·°à£¨ÌýÁ¦£© | ¶¡Ñ©Ã÷ | £¤100 / £¤100 | ±¨Ãû | |
¡¶´óѧӢÓïËļ¶¡·¾«Æ·°à£¨Ð´×÷£© | ¶¡Ñ©Ã÷ | £¤100 / £¤100 | ±¨Ãû |