2005 年 6 月英语四级真题及答案
Part I Listening Comprehension
Section A
1. A) The man hates to lend his tools to other people.
B) The man hasn’t finished working on the bookshelf.
C) The tools have already been returned to the woman.
D) The tools the man borrowed from the woman are missing.
2. A) Give the ring to a policeman.
B) Wait for the owner of the ring in the rest room.
C) Hand in the ring to the security office.
D) Take the ring to the administration building.
3. A) Save time by using a computer.
B) Buy her own computer
C) Borrow Martha’s computer.
D) Stay home and complete her paper
4. A) The man doesn’t have money for his daughter’s graduate studies.
B) The man doesn’t think his daughter will get a business degree.
C) The man insists that his daughter should pursue her studies in science.
D) The man advises his daughter to think carefully before making her
decision.
5. A) The cinema is some distance away from where they are.
B) He would like to read the film review in the newspaper.
C) They should wait to see the movie at a later time.
D) He’ll find his way to the cinema.
6. A) He’s been to Seattle many times.
B) He has chaired a lot of conferences.
C) He has a high position in his company.
D) He lived in Seattle for many years.
7. A) Teacher and student.
B) Doctor and patient. .
C) Manager and office worker.
D) Travel agent and customer
8. A) She knows the guy who will give the lecture .
B) She thinks the lecture might be informative
C) She wants to add something to her lecture .
D) She’ll finished her report this weekend
9. A) An art museum.
C) A college campus
B) A beautiful park.
D) An architectural exhibition
10. A) The houses for sale are of poor quality
B) The houses are too expensive for the couple to buy
C) The housing developers provide free trips for potential buyers
D) The man is unwilling to take a look at the houses for sale
Section B
Passage one
11. A) Synthetic fuel
C) Alcohol
B) Solar energy
D) Electricity
12. A) Air traffic conditions
C) Road conditions
B) Traffic jams on highways
D) New traffic rules
13. A) Go through a health check
C) Arrive early for boarding
B) Carry little luggage
D) Undergo security checks
Passage Two
14. A) In a fast-food restaurant
C) At a county fair
B) At a shopping center
D) In a bakery
15. A) Avoid eating any food
B) Prepare the right type of pie to eat
C) Wash his hands thoroughly
D) Practice eating a pie quickly
16. A) On the table
C) Under his bottom
B) Behind his back
D) On his lap
17. A) Looking sideways to see how fast your neighbor eats.
B) Eating from the outside toward the middle
C) Swallowing the pie with water
D) Holding the pie in the right position
Passage Three
18. A) Beauty
C) Luck
B) Loyalty
D) Durability
19. A) He wanted to follow the tradition of his country
B) He believed that it symbolized an everlasting marriage
C) It was thought a blood vessel in that finger led directly to the heart
D) It was supposed that the diamond on that finger would bring good luck
20. A) The two people can learn about each other’s likes and dislikes
B) The two people can have time to decide if they are a good match
C) The two people can have time to shop for their new home.
D)The two people can earn enough money for their wedding
Part II Reading Comprehension
Passage one
Is there enough oil beneath the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (保护区) (ANWR)
to help secure America’s energy future ? President Bush certainly thinks so.
He has argued that tapping ANWR’s oil would help ease California’s electricity
crisis and provide a major boost to the country’s energy independence. But no
one knows for sure how much crude oil lies buried beneath the frozen earth
with the last government survey, conducted in 1998, projecting output
anywhere from 3 billion to 16 billion barrels.
The oil industry goes with the high end of the range, which could equal as
much as 10% of U.S. consumption for as long as six years. By pumping more
than 1 million barrels a day from the reserve for the next two three decades,
lobbyists claim, the nation could cut back on imports equivalent to all
shipments to the U.S. from Saudi Arabia. Sounds good. An oil boom would also
mean a multibillion-dollar windfall(意外之财)意外之财)in tax revenues, royalties(开采权
使 用 费 )and leasing fees for Alaska and the Federal Government. Best of all,
advocates of drilling say , damage to the environment would be insignificant .
“We’ve never had a document case of oil rig chasing deer out onto the pack
ice.” says Alaska State Representative Scott Ogan .
Not so far , say environmentalists . Sticking to the low end of government
estimates, the National Resources Defense Council says there may be no
more than 3.2 billion barrels of economically recoverable oil in the coastal
plain of ANWR, a drop in the bucket that would do virtually nothing to ease
America’s energy problems. And consumers would wait up to a decade to gain
any benefits, because drilling could begin only after much bargaining over
leases, environmental permits and regulatory review. As for ANWR’s impact on
the California power crisis, environmentalists point out that oil is responsible
for only 1% of the Golden State’s electricity output –and just 3% of the
nation’s.
21. What does President Bush think of tapping oil in ANWR?
A) It will exhaust the nation’s oil reserves.
B) It will help secure the future of ANWR.
C) It will help reduce the nation’s oil imports
D) It will increase America’s energy consumption
22. We learn from the second paragraph that the American oil industry _______
A) believes that drilling for oil in ANWR will produce high yields
B) tends to exaggerate America’s reliance on foreign oil
C) shows little interest in tapping oil in ANWR
D) expects to stop oil imports from Saudi Arabia
23. Those against oil drilling in ANWR argue that _________
A) it can cause serious damage to the environment
B) it can do little to solve U.S. energy problems
C) it will drain the oil reserves in the Alaskan region
D) it will not have much commercial value
24. What do the environmentalists mean by saying “Not so fast” (Line 1,
Para .3)?
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