2019英语六级第三套

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1、精选优质文档-倾情为你奉上Part I Writing (30 minutes)Directions: For this part, you are allowed 30 minutes to write an essay onthe importance of motivation and methods in learning.You should write at least 150 words but no more than 200 words.Part Listening Comprehension (30 minutes)Section ADirections:In this s

2、ection, you will hear two long conversations. At the end of each conversation, you will hear four questions. Both the conversation and the questions will be spoken only once. After you hear a question, you must choose the best answer from the four choices marked A),B),C) and D). Then mark the corres

3、ponding letter on Answer Sheet 1with a single line through the centre.Questions 1 to 4 are based on the conversation you have just heard.1. A) why Roman Holidaywas more famous than Breakfast at Tiffanys.B)why Audrey Hepburn had more female fans than male ones.C)Why the woman wanted to be like Audrey

4、 Hepburn.D)why so many girls adored Audrey Hepburn.1. A)Her unique personality.B)Her physical condition.C)Her shift of interest to performing arts.D)Her familys suspension of financial aid.3.A) She was not an outgoing person.B)She was modest and hardworkingC)She was easy-going on the whole.D)She was

5、 usually not very optimistic.4. A)She was influenced by the roles she played in the films.B)Her parents taught her to symbolize with the needy.C)She learned to volunteer when she was a child.D)Her family benifited from other peoples help.Questions 5 to 8 are based on the recording you have just hear

6、d.5. A) Give a presentation.B)Rise some questions.C)Start a new company.D)Ateed a board meeting.6. A) It will cut production costs.B)It will raise productivities.C)No staff willl be dismissed.D)No new staff will be hired.1. A. The timeline of restructuring. B. The reasons for restructuring.C. The co

7、mmunication channels.D. The companys new missions.1. A. By consulting their own department managers. B. By emailing questions to the man or the woman.C. By exploring various channels of communication.D. By visiting the companys own computer network.Section BDirections:In this section, you will hear

8、two passages. At the end of each passage, you will hear three or four questions. Both the passage and the questions will be spoken only once. After you hear a question, you must choose the best answer from the four choices marked A),B),C) and D). Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 1w

9、ith a single line through the centre.Questions 9 to 11 are based on the passage you have just heard.9.A. It helps passengers to take care of their pet animals.B. It has animals to help passengers carry their language.C. It uses therapy animals to soothe nervous passengers.D. It allows passengers to

10、have animal travel with them.10.A. Avoiding possible dangers.B. Finding their way around.C. Identifying drug smugglers.D. Looking after sick passengers.11.A. Schedule their flights around the animal visits.B. Photograph the therapy animals at the airport.C. Keep some animals for therapeutic purposes

11、.D. Bring their animals on board their plane.Questions 12 to 15 are based on the passage you have just heard.12.A. Beside a beautifully painted wall in Arles.B. Beside the gate of an ancient Roman city.C. At the site of an ancient Roman mansion.D. At the entrance to a reception hall in Rome.1. A) A

12、number of different images.B) A number of mythological heroes.A. Various musical instruments. D) Paintings by famous French artists.1. A) The originality and expertise shown. B) The worldly sophistication displayed.C)The stunning images vividly depicted. D) The impressive skills and costly dyes.1. A

13、) His artistic taste is superb. B) His identity remains unclear.C) He was a collector of antiques. D) He was a rich Italian merchant.Section CDirections:In this section, you will hear three recordings of lectures or talks followed by three or four questions. The recordings will be played only once.

14、After you hear a question, you must choose the best answer from the four choices marked A), B), C) and D). Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 1with a single line through the centre.Questions 16 to 18 are based on the recording you have just heard.1. A) They encourage international co

15、operation.A. They lay stress on basic scientific research.B. They place great emphasis on empirical studies.C. They favour scientists from its member countries.1. A) Many of them wish to win international recognition.A. They believe that more hands will make light work.B. They want to follow closely

16、 the international trend.C. Many of their projects have become complicated.1. A) It requires mathematicians to work independently.A. It is faced with many unprecedented challenges.B. It lags behind other disciplines in collaboration.C. It calls for more research funding to catch up.Questions 19 to 2

17、1 are based on the recording you have just heard.1. A) Scientists tried to send a balloon to Venus.A. Scientists discovered water on Venus.B. Scientists found Venus had atmosphere.C. Scientists observed Venus from a space vehicle.20.A) It resembles Earth in many aspects.B)It is the same as fiction h

18、as portrayed.C)It is a paradise of romance for alien life.D)It undergoes geological changes like Earth.21.A) It might have been hotter than it is today.B)It might have been a cozy habitat for life.C)It used to have more water than Earth.D)It used to be covered with rainforests.Questions 22 to 25 are

19、 based on the recording you have just heard.22.A) Causes of sleeplessness.B)Cross-cultural communication.C)Cultural psychology.D)Motivation and positive feelings.23.A) They attach great importance to sleep.B)They often have trouble falling asleep.C)They pay more attention to sleep efficiency.D)They

20、generally sleep longer than East Asians.24.A) By asking people to report their sleep habits.B)By observing peoples sleep patterns in labs.C)By having people wear motion-detecting watches.D)By videotaping peoples daily sleeping processes.25.A) It has made remarkable progress in the past few decades.B

21、)It has not yet explored the cross-cultural aspect of sleep.C)It has not yet produced anything conclusive.D)It has attached attention all over the world.Part Reading Comprehension (40 minutes)Section ADirections:In this section, there is a passage with ten blanks. You are required to select one word

22、 for each blank from a list of choices given in a word bank following the passage. Read the passage through carefully before making your choices. Each choice in the bank is identified by a letter. Please mark the corresponding letter for each item on Answer Sheet 2with a single line through the cent

23、re. You may not use any of the words in the bank more than once.Questions 26 to 35 are based on the following passage. Pasta is no longer off the menu, after a new review of studies suggestedthat the carbohydrate can form part of a healthy diet, and even help people lose weight. For years,nutritioni

24、sts have recommended that pasta be kept toa26 ,to cut calories, prevent fat build-up and stop blood sugar27up.The low-carbohydrate food movement gave birth to such diets as the Atkins, Paleo and Keto, which advised swapping foods like bread, pasta and potatoes for vegetables, fish and meat. More rec

25、ently the trend of swapping spaghetti for vegetables has been28by clean-eating experts.But nowa29review and analysis of 30 studies by Canadian researchers found that not only does pasta not cause weight gain, butthree meals a week can help people drop more than half a kilogram over four months. The

26、reviewers found that pasta had beenunfairly demonized(妖魔化) because it had been 30 in with other, more ft-promoting carbohydrates.“The study found that pasta didnt 3to weight gain or increase inbody fat,”said lead author Dr John Sievenpiper. “In32the evidence, we can now say with some confidence that

27、 pasta does not have an 33effect on body weigh outcomes when itis consumed as part ofa healthy dietarypattern.”In fact, analysisactuallyshowed a smallweigh loss 34to concerns. perhaps pasta can be part of a healthydietThose involved in the 35trials on average ate 3.3 servingsof pasta a week instead

28、of other carbohydrates,one serving equaling around halfa cup. They lost around halfa kilogram over an average follow-up of 12 weeks.A) adverseB) championedC)clinicalD) contrary E) contribute F) intimate G) lumped H) magnifiedI) minimum J) radiating K) ration L) shooting M) subscribe N) systematic O)

29、 weighingSection BDirections:In this section, you are going to read a passage with ten statements attached to it. Each statement contains information given in one of the paragraphs. Identify the paragraph from which the information is derived. You may choose a paragraph more than once. Each paragrap

30、h is marked with a letter. Answer the questions by marking the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2. The Best Retailers Combine Bricks and ClicksA) Retail profits are falling sharply. Stores are closing. Malls are emptying. The depressing stories just keep coming. Reading the earnings announcement

31、s of large retail stores like Macys, Nordstrom, and Target is about as uplifting as a tour of an intensive care unit. The interact is apparently taking down yet another industry. Brick and mortar stores(实体店) seem to be going the way of the yellow pages. Sure enough, the Census Bureau just released d

32、ata showing that online retail sales surged 15.2 percent between the first quarter of 2015 and the first quarter of 2016.B) But before you dump all of your retail stocks, there are more facts you should consider. Looking only at that 15.2 percent surge would be misleading. It was an increase that wa

33、s on a small base of 6.9 percent. Even when a tiny number grows by a large percentage terms, it is often still tiny.C) More than 20 years after the internet was opened to commerce, the Census Bureau tells us that brick and mortar sales accounted for 92.3 percent of retail sales in the first quarter

34、of 2016. Their data show that only 0.8 percent of retail sales shifted from offline to online between the beginning of 2015 and 2016.D) So, despite all the talk about drone (无人机) deliveries to your doorstep, all the retail executives expressing anxiety over consumers going online, and even a Preside

35、ntial candidate exclaiming that Amazon has a huge antitrust problem, the Census data suggest that physical retail is thriving. Of course, the closed stores, depressed executives, and sinking stocks suggest otherwise. Whats the real story?E) Many firms operating brick and mortar stores are in trouble

36、. The retail industry is getting reinvented, as we describe in our new book Matchmakers. Its standing in the Path of what Schumpeter called a gale(大风) of creative destruction. That storm has been brewing for some time, and as it has reached gale force, most large retailers are searching for a respon

37、se. As the CFO of Macys put it recently, “Were frankly scratching our heads.”F) But its not happening as experts predicted. In the peak of the dot. com bubble, brick and mortar retail was one of those industries the internet was going to kill-and quickly. Thedot.corn bust discredited most prediction

38、s of that sort and in the years that followed, onventional retailers confidence in the future increased as Census continued to report weak online sales. And then the gale hit.G) It is becoming increasingly clear that retail reinvention isnt a simple battle to the death between bricks and clicks. It

39、is about devising retail models that work for people who are making increasing use of a growing array of internet-connected tools to change how they search, shop, and buy. Creative retailers are using the new technologies to innovate just about everything stores do from managing inventory, to market

40、ing, to getting paid.H) More than drones dropping a new supply of underwear on your doorstep, Apples massively successful brick-and-mortar-and-glass retail stores and Amazons small steps in the same direction are what should keep old-fashioned retailers awake at night. Not to mention the large numbe

41、r of creative new retailers, like Bonobos, that are blending online and offline experiences in creative ways.I) Retail reinvention is not a simple process, and its also not happening on what used to be called Internet Time. Some internet-driven changes have happened quickly, of course. Craigslist qu

42、ickly overtook newspaper classified ads and turned newspaper economics upside down. But many widely anticipated changes werent quick, and some havent really started. With the benefit of hindsight (后见之明), it looks like the interact will transform the economy at something like the pace of other great

43、inventions like electricity. B2B commerce, for example, didnt move mainly online by 2005 as many had predicted in 2000, nor even by 2016, but that doesnt mean it wont do so over the next few decades.J) But the gale is still blowing. The sudden decline in foot traffic in recent years, even though it

44、hasnt been accompanied by a massive decline in physical sales, is a critical warning. People can shop more efficiently online and therefore dont need to go to as many stores to find what they want. Theres a surplus of physical shopping space for the crowds, which is one reason why stores are downsiz

45、ing and closing.K) The rise of the mobile phone has recently added a new level of complexity to the process of retail reinvention. Even five years ago most people faced a choice. Sit at your computer, probably at home or at the office, search and browse, and buy. Or head out to the mall, or Main Str

46、eet, look and shop, and buy. Now, just about everyone has a smartphone, connected to the internet almost everywhere almost all the time. Even when a retailer gets a customer to walk in the store, she can easily see if theres a better deal online or at another store nearby.L) So far, the main thing m

47、any large retailers have done in response to all this is to open online stores, so people will come to them directly rather than to Amazon and its smaller online rivalsMany are having the same problem that newspapers have. Even if they get online traffic, they struggle to make enough money online to

48、 compensate for what they are losing offline.M) A few seem to be making this workAmong large traditional retailers, Walmart recently reported the best results, leading its stock price to surge, while Macys, Target, and Nordstroms dropped. Yet Walmarts year-over-year online sales only grew 7 percent,

49、 leading its CEO to lament (哀叹), “Growth here is too slow”Part of the problem is that almost two decades after Amazon filed the oneclick patent, the online retail shopping and buying experience is filled with frictionsA recent study graded more than 600 internet retailers on how easy it was for cons

50、umers to shop, buy, and payAlmost half of the sites didnt get a passing grade and only 18 percent got an A or BN) The turmoil on the ground in physical retail is hard to square with the Census data Unfortunately, part of the explanation is that the Census retail data are unreliableOur deep 100k into

51、 those data and their preparation revealed serious problemsIt seems likely that Census simply misclassifies a large chunk of online salesIt is certain that the Census procedures, which lump the online sales of major traditional retailers like Walmart with“non-store retailers1ike food truckscan mask

52、major changes in individual retail categoriesThe bureau could easily present their data in more useful waysbut they have chosen not to.O) Despite the turmoil, brick and mortar wont disappear any time soonThe big questions are which, if any, of the large traditional retailers will still be on the sce

53、ne in a decade or two because they have successfully reinvented themselves, which new players will operate busy stores on Main Streets and maybe even in shopping malls, and how the shopping and buying experience will have changed in each retail category. Investors shouldnt write off brick and mortar

54、. Whether they should bet on the traditional players who run those stores now is another matter36.Although online retailing has existed for some twenty years, nearly half of the internet retailers still fail to receive satisfactory feedback from consumers, according to a recent survey37.Innovative r

55、etailers integrate internet technologies with conventional retailing to create new retail models38.Despite what the Census data suggest, the value of physical retails stocks has been dropping39.Innovativedriven changes in the retail industry didnt take place as quickly as widely anticipated40.Statis

56、ticsindicatethatbrickandmortarsalesstillmadeupthelionsshareoftheretailbusiness.41.Companiesthatsuccessfullycombineonlineandofflinebusinessmodelsmayprovetobea big concern for traditional retailers.42.Brickandmortarretailers faithintheirbusinesswasstrengthenedwhenthedotcombubble burst.43.Despitethetre

57、mendouschallengesfromonlineretailing,traditionalretailingwillbeheretostayforquitesometime.44.Withtheriseofonlinecommerce,physicalretailstoresarelikelytosufferthesamefateasitheyellowpages.45.Thewideuseofsmartphoneshasmadeitmorecomplexfortraditionalretailerstoreinventtheirbusiness.Section CDirections:

58、There are 2 passages in this section.Each passage is followed by some questions or unfinished statements.For each of them there are four choices marked A), B), C)and D). You should decide on the best choice and mark the corresponding letter onAnswer Sheet 2with a single line through the centre.Passa

59、ge OneQuestions 46 to 50 are based on the following passage. ProfessorStephenHawkinghaswarnedthatthecreationofpowerfulartifcialintelligence(AI)willbe“eitherthebest,ortheworstthing,evertohappentohumanity”,andpraisedthecreationofanacademicinstitutededicatedtoresearchingthefutureofintelligence as “ cru

60、cial to the future of our civilisation and our species”.HawkingwasspeakingattheopeningoftheLeverhulmeCentrefortheFutureofIntelligence(LCFI) at Cambridge University, a multi-disciplinary institute that will attempt to tackle some of the open-ended questions raised by the rapid pace of development in

61、AI research. “We spend a great deal of time studyin history,” Hawking said, “which, lets face it, is mostly the history of stupidity. So it;s a welcome change that people are studying instead the future of intelligence.”While the world-renowned physicist has often been cautious about AI, raising con

62、cerns that humanity could be the architect of its own destruction if it creates a super-intelligence with a will of its own, he was also quick to highlight the positives that AI research can bring. “The potential benefits of creating intelligence are huge,” he said. “We cannot predict what we might

63、achieve when our own minds are amplified by AI. Perhaps with the tools of this new technological revolution, we will be able to undo some of the damage done to the natural world by the last one-industrialisation. And surely we will aim to finally eradicate disease and poverty. And every aspect of our lives will be transformed. In short, success in creating AI could be the biggest event in the history of our civilization.”Huw Price, the centres academic director and the Bertrand Russell professor of philosophy at Cambridge University, where Hawking is also an academic, said

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