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{{B}}Passage ThreeQuestions 32 to 35 are based on
the passage you have just heard.{{/B}}
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单选题The guests ______ of their rooms in the morning and left.
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单选题Which of the following is NOT the benefit brought by teddy bears according to the author?
单选题{{B}}Passage One{{/B}}
On the night of September 2, 1666, a
fire broke out in a baker's shop near Fish Street Hill in Lon- don. Before the
flames were finally extinguished (扑灭), nearly the entire cid, had been reduced
to ashes. Over thirteen thousand homes, fifty churches, and numerous public
buildings and hospitals were lost in the fire. For all practical purposes,
London was destroyed. The Great Fire was not seen as a total
tragedy, however. The deplorable (糟糕)conditions of the city had been attacked by
physicians and humanitarians for years before the fire; thus, with the
opportunity clearly presented to create a shining new city, artists and
craftsmen from all over England hurried to submit their designs for the
rebuilding of London. Among those who submitted plans was Sir
Christopher Wren, one of England's leading architects and the Surveyor General
of London. The task of rebuilding the city was given to him. Wren realized that
the Great Fire would not have been so damaging if the city bad been better laid
out: broader streets were needed to replace the twisted, narrow alleys overhung
with disrepaired wooden houses and shops. He also felt that redesigning the main
thoroughfares (大街) of London would result in increased and more effective
transportation within the city. Shortly after Wren began working
on his first drafts for the rebuilding, King Charles I issued a statement
prohibiting the construction of any house or shop within the city limits until
after the plans were completed. When the plans were known to the citizens of
London, however, they were overwhelmingly rejected. The most vocal leaders of
the opposition were the landlords, who feared that such a drastic widening of
the streets would reduce the amount of land available for development.
Winter was approaching; consequently, it was necessary for the rebuilding
to proceed at once. Per- mission was, therefore, granted for the townspeople and
landlords to commence reconstruction of their houses and shops at the sites
where they had been before the fire. Had the need for immediate action not been
so pressing, some kind of compromise could likely have been reached. This was
not to be, however, and the ideas that could have made London one of the world's
most beautiful cities never came to pass.
单选题Questions 19 to 21 are based on the passage you have just heard.
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单选题 Questions 9 to 12 are bused on the
conversation you have just heard.
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BQuestions 11 to 18 are based on the conversation
you have just heard./B