单选题Questions 15~18 are based on the following story.
单选题{{B}}Text 3{{/B}}
Cars account for half the oil consumed
in the US, about half the urban pollution and one-fourth the greenhouse gases.
They take a similar oil of resources in other industrial nations and in the
cities of the developing world. As vehicle use continues to increase in the
coming decade, the US and other countries will have to deal with these issues or
else face unacceptable economic, health-related and political costs. It is
unlikely that oil prices will remain at their current low level or that other
nations will accept a large and growing US contribution to global climatic
change. Policymakers and industry have four options: reduce
vehicle use, increase the efficiency and reduce the emissions of conventional
gasoline-powered vehicles, switch to less harmful fuels, or find less polluting
driving systems. The last of these -- in particular the introduction of vehicles
powered by electricity -- is ultimately the only sustainable option. The other
alternatives are attractive in theory but in practice are either impractical or
offer only marginal improvements. For example, reduced vehicle use could solve
traffic problems and a host of social and environmental problems, but evidence
from around the world suggests that it is very difficult to make people give up
their cars to any significant extent. In the US, mass transit ridership and
carpooling have declined since World War Ⅱ. Even in western Europe, with fuel
prices averaging more than $1 a liter (about $ 4 a gallon) and with easily
accessible mass transit and dense populations, cars still account for 80 percent
of all passenger travel. Improved energy efficiency is also
appealing, but automotive fuel economy has barely made any progress in 10 years.
Alternative fuels such as natural gas, burned in internal-combustion engines,
could be introduced at relatively low cost, but they would lead to only marginal
reductions in pollution and greenhouse emissions (especially because oil
companies are already spending billions of dollars every year to develop less
polluting types of gasoline).
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单选题{{B}}Part A{{/B}}
{{I}} You will hear 10 short dialogues. For each dialogue, there is one question and four possible answers. Choose the correct answer—A , B, C or D, and mark it in your test booklet. You will have 15 seconds to answer the question and you will hear each dialogue ONLY ONCE. Now look at Question 1.{{/I}}
单选题A small population may mean ______.
单选题WhatisSallydoingnow?A.TypinglettersforMr.Black.B.TypingareportforMrs.Farnsworth.C.TypingareportforMr.Black.D.TypinglettersforMrs.Farnsworth.
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单选题{{B}}Text 3{{/B}}
Thousands of years ago man used handy
rocks for his surgical operations. Later he used sharp bone or horn, metal
knives and more recently, rubber and plastic and that was where we stuck, in
surgical instrument terms, for many years. In the 1960s a new tool was
developed, one which was, first of all, to be of great practical use to the
armed forces and industry, but which was also, in time, to revolutionize the art
and science of surgery. The tool is the laser and it is being
used by more and more surgeons all over the world, for a very large number of
different complaints. The word "laser" means: light amplification by stimulated
emission of radiation. As we all know, light is hot, any source of light -- from
the sun itself down to a humble match burning -- will give warmth. But light is
usually spread out over a wide area. The light in a laser beam, however, is
concentrated. This means that a light with no more power than that produced by
an ordinary electric light bulb becomes intensely strong as it is concentrated
to a pinpoint-sized beam. Experiments with these pinpoint beams
showed researchers that different energy sources produce beams that have a
particular effect on certain living cells. It is now possible for eye surgeons
to operate on the back of the human eye without harming the front of the eye,
simply by passing a laser beam right through the eyeball. No knives, no
stitches, no unwanted damage -- a true surgical wonder. Operations which once
left patients exhausted and in need of long period of recovery time now leave
them feeling relaxed and comfortable. So much more difficult operations can now
be tried. The rapid development of laser techniques in the past
ten years has made it clear that the future is likely to be very exciting.
Perhaps some cancers will be treated with laser in a way that makes surgery not
only safer but also more effective. Altogether, tomorrow may see more and more
information coming to light on the diseases which can be treated
medically.
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单选题Where does this conversation most probably take place?
单选题The phrase "come to grips with" in the last paragraph most probably means ______.
单选题Questions 5 to 9 are based on the following conversation.
单选题What'sthemostpossiblerelationshipbetweenthetwospeakers?
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单选题Misleading advertisement can ______.
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