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M: I know that. I wish now that I had bought a bigger car.
Q: What size car had the man probably purchased?
(15)

A small car.
B. A trailer.
C. A large car.
D. A small foreign car.

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听力原文:W: These tomatoes axe huge! You must have watered them a lot.
M: Yes, I dick They ought to be ripe enough to pick by next Friday when we have our picnic.
Q: Where did this conversation most probably take place?
(17)

A. In a kitchen.
B. In an orchard.
C. In a garden.
D. At a picnic.

A.How we look at pain.B.To feel pain as much as possible.C.To show an interest in pain

A. How we look at pain.
B. To feel pain as much as possible.
C. To show an interest in pain.
D. To accept the pain reluctantly.

听力原文:M: Hey, Karen. Look like you've get some sun this weekend.
W: Yeah. I guess so. I spent the weekend at the beach.
M: Oh, that's great. Where did you stay?
W: Some friends of my parents live out there, and they invited me there for as long as I want to stay.
M: Oh, that's great. But how come you came back so soon? If I were you, I would stay there longer.
W: Oh, I hated to do it, but I had to. I've got a paper to work on. I just couldn't do any serious studying at the beach, you know.
M: I don't blame you then. So what did you do at there? I mean besides lying out in the sun, you must have other things to enjoy yourself.
W: Yeah. I jogged up and down the beach and I played some volleyball. You know I never realized how hard it is to run on sand. I couldn't get through a whole game before I had to sit down. It's much easier to run on wet sand near the water.
M: I think so. Did you go swimming?
W: I wanted to. But they said the water isn't warm enough for that until a couple of months from now. So I just waded in up to my knees.
M: It all sounds so relaxing. I wish I could get away to the beach like that.
W: It looks like you could use it. Don't tell me you spent the weekend in the library again.
M: Seems you are right. I've got a paper due next Monday.
(20)

A. Relaxing at the seashore.
B. Visiting her parents.
C. Sailing on a boat.
D. Preparing for a race.

听力原文: Thirty-two people watched Kitty Genovese being killed fight beneath their windows. She was their neighbor. Yet none of the 32 helped her. No one even called the police. Was it lack of feeling about one's fellow man?
"Not so," say scientists John Barley and Bib Fatane. These men went beyond the headlines to look for the reasons why people didn't act. They found that a person has to go through two steps before he can help.
First he has to notice that it is an emergency. Suppose you see some smoke. Is the smoke coming into the room from a leak in the air conditioning? Is it "steam pipes"? Or is it really smoke, from a fire? It's not always easy to tell if you are faced with a real emergency.
Second, and more important, the person faced with an emergency must feel personally responsible. He must feel that he must help, or the person won't get the help.
Tests show that in a group, Americans often fail to act. They feel that others will act. They, themselves, needn't. They do not feel any direct responsibility.
Are people bothered by situations where people are in trouble? Yes, scientists found that the people were emotional, they sweated, they had trembling hands. They felt the other person's trouble. But they did not act. They were in a group. Their actions were shaped by the actions of those they were with.
(30)

A. To explain why people fail to act in emergencies.
B. To explain when people will act in emergencies.
C. To explain what people will do in emergencies.
D. To explain how people feel in emergencies.

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