大学英语听力教程4答案
【篇一:全新版大学英语听说教程4(第二版)答案doc】
part b 1. what is one world?a radio or tv program. 2. what is the topic of the program? birthday celebrations around the world. 3. what do shaheen hag and pat cane do? they run a weekly column in the toronto daily star. 4. why don’t some people in india celebrate their birthdays? because they can’t afford the cost. 5. why is the eighteenth birthday so important in finland? because eighteen is the age when one is accepted as an adult with the right to vote, buy wines and drive a car. 6. why can girls in some countries get to vote at an earlier age than boys? because girls are considered to be more mature than boys of the same age. 7. which of the countries
mentioned in the conversation are muslim countries? turkey, egypt, indonesia, and senegal. 1. the program is broadcast in canada every day.( f ) 2. people everywhere in the world
celebrate theirbirthdays.( f ) 3. many muslims do not celebrate their birthdays for religious reasons.( t )4. in england, the
twenty-first birthday is very important, which is unusual in the west.( f ) 5. the twenty-first birthday is very important in japan. ( f ) 6. in norway, young men and women usually get married before 30 to avoid having pepper thrown at them.( f ) 7. eighteen is a very lucky number in japan.( f ) 8. it can be
concluded that our world is made more colorful by the many different ways birthdays are observed in different countries.( t ) part c 1) unique 2) globe3) simultaneously 4) terrorist5)
remembrance 6) appropriate 7) sharing. 8) the material can be submitted to the project organizers in scotland 9) it will allow a voice to all people regardless of nationality, religion, race, political viewpoint, gender or age. 10) contributors will be
invited to attend the first public performance of the film in their respective countries unit 2 part b d c b a a 1 non-smokers seem to have won the battle because smoking is banned
not only in public places like theaters and airports but also in all workplaces. 2. they have banned smoking in parks and recreation centers. in los angeles, for example, they have implemented a smoke-free park policy, officially designating smoke-free zones in all 375 parks and recreation centers in the
city. and since january 1, 2002 all parks in california have become smoke-free to safeguard children from the harmful effects of secondhand tobacco smoke and dangerous tobacco waste. part c d d a aunit 3 part b ex.1 on p24-25 d c a c ex.2 on 25 firstly, it is a fact that some people were born with better memories. secondly, different things are kept in different parts of the brain. ideas, words and numbers are stored in the left-hand side and images, sounds and smells in the right-hand side. thirdly, unusual experiences can produce chemicals such as adrenaline in our body which can boost memory.fourthly, how well we remember something is also affected by the context in which we learn about it.finally, the more often you recall a memory, the morelikely you are to remember it. if you don’t, you’ll lose it. part cadb unit 4 part b. exercise 1 d b d cd a
part c c db unit 5 part b. exercise 1 bc a exercise 2f t f f f f t f t t part c c dc a b unit 6 part b. exercise 1 ad d bdd exercise 2
exercise 2(原文)
listen to the passage again and complete the table below. its the universal cry of parents,
generally heard by the second day of college summer breaks: get a job!
omar solimans mother joined the chorus. you have to do something, she told him.
solimans friends had obtained prestigious internships in his hometown of washington, d.c.
but he couldnt imagine himself sitting at a desk all day. after years of delivering furniture for his mothers store,
he remembered that a lot of people had stuff they wanted to get rid of.
if he borrowed his moms van,
he could make a little money hauling their trash away for them. that night, soliman came up with a name for his new business: college hunks hauling junk.
he distributed flyers the next day,
and within hours, his phone was ringing.
he asked his friend nick friedman to help out.
they made $220 in three hours cleaning out a womans garage. soliman and friedman pocketed $10,000 that summer.
but the two werent ready to become full-time trashmen after graduation.
we were trained to finish college and get a good job, says soliman.
he graduated with a business degree from the university of miami
and first went into marketing at a research firm.
friedman, who had an economics degree from pomona college in california,
became an economic analyst for a consulting company. months later, they quit their jobs and started their junk business full time.
at first they had trouble finding a bank willing to lend them money
as they didnt have much of a credit rating.
after five turndowns, one bank decided to gamble $50,000 on their idea.
they put together another $60,000 from their parents and their own savings.
they bought a truck, hired a graphic artist to design a logo, ran newspaper and radio ads and recruited haulers on campuses.
wearing bright orange hats and green polos and khakis these college hunks will haul away
everything from construction materials to old couches. to cut down the cost of unloading at landfills,
they have learned to recycle metals and electronics
and donate to charities over 60 percent of what they collect. they also give away a portion of their earnings
from each job to local college scholarship programs. and now, just four years later,
they run a nationwide company that pulled in $3 million in 2008.
they employ 130 people and have 16 franchises in 10 states and d.c.
and plan to expand to 80 franchises by 2012.
part c b c b a unit 7 wealth part b. exercise 1 d c b b a b exercise 2 1. with a fortune, easier and freer, gains
nothing,glittering baggage, attended to 2. the more snow it collects 3. comfort, enters the house a guest , becomes a
host , a master 4. and ride mankind match: 1. d2. a 3. b 4. c part c c a b bunit 8 war part b exercise 1 b c b a d
exercise 2 1. he was only 20 years old. 2. there are 75 british cemeteries 3. the name of 55,000 missing soldiers are
engraved on its walls. 4. there are no headstones, no flowers, only slabs in the grass. the whole place is dark and dank. 5. it was created by an explosion. 6. it dates from medieval times part c b d c d c b
unit 9 aging part b exercise 1c c d c d exercise 2 diana female alzheimer’s disease 53, four memory 1. recognize
familiar buildings husband’s workplace 2. no idea how to get home 3. recognize her cousin 4. her way round her office
building made mistakes part c 1) opportunities 2) services 3) longevity 4) specialty 5) structure 6) existences 7)
complicated 8) the elderly must rely on a fixed income 9) while some live with their children, many more live by themselves, with a friend or in a nursing home 10) they have formed
organizations to voice their own needs and concerns to local, state and federal agencies. unit 10 home schooling part b exercise 1. b d a c exercise2 1. 41-foot sailing boat 2. dining table 3. devised their own curriculum 4. a shuttle launch, the kennedy space center museums. 5. use a library 6. writing, science experiments,. artwork, projects 7. the world around them 8. a rain forest, a coral reef, historic ruins, foreign markets, local festivals part ca b c c unit 11 opinion polls part b exercise 1 a c b b c exercise 2 1. they are too high 2. so that people can be discouraged from using cars 3. she suggests that they use a graded charging system depending on how far they are from the city centre.
【篇二:全新版大学英语听说教程4听力答案】
ass=txt>unit 1 one world part b: exercise 1:
1. a radio or tv program.
2. birthday celebrations around the world.
3. they run a weekly column in the toronto daily star. 4.
because they can’t afford it. 5. a couple of hundred years ago. 6. because eighteen is the age when one is accepted as an adult with the right to vote, buy wines and drive a car.