Part I: Listening Comprehension (20 minutes) Section A
1. A. The play was the first he'd seen. B. The play wasn't too bad. C. He hasn't seen the play yet. D. He wants to see the play again.
2. A. It will be finished on time. B. It is only open during the day. C. Something has happened to the building. D. The workers are about to complete it.
3. A. He lost a button at work. B. He doesn't know where he put the calculator. C. He thinks he broke something the woman lent him. D. He's not sure how to solve the math problem.
4. A. The old houses should be turned into stores. B. The city needs even more made modernization. C. This shopping center is quite old. D. New shopping centers are very common.
5. A. Whether the woman knows how to type. B. Why the woman is in a hurry. C. How much typing the woman needs done. D. Whether the woman has a typewriter.
6. A. The transportation far the trip is free. B. The class didn't enjoy going on the field trip. C. Some people may not go on the trip. D. All of the class members have paid the fee.
7. A. Take a lot of money. B. Go to a different restaurant. C. Don't invite John. D. Wear different clothes.
8. A. They didn't have a good talk. B. They decided to go by plane. C. They weren't able to take a walk. D. They talked about geology.
9. A. She doesn't need an umbrella. B. She left her umbrella in the car. C. She can hold her umbrella over the man's head. D. She's the only one who doesn't have an umbrella.
10. A. He would send a postcard if he went away. B. He wouldn't be able to take a vacation. C. He had already gone back to work. D. He didn't want to go to Florida.
听力原文: Section A: 1. W: How do you like the play? M: Oh, I've seen worse. Q: What does the man mean? 2. M: What's happening with the new library building? W: The work crew is just finishing it up. Q: What does the woman say about the library? 3. M: I'm not quite sure how to use this calculator you lent me. I dropped it, and now the on-button doesn't light up. W: Oh, that's okay, it hasn't been working right for some time now. Q: What was the man's problem? 4. M: The city is going to tear down those old houses and put up a new shopping center. W: Another shopping center, that's nothing new. Q: What does the woman mean? 5. W: Do you know anyone who would do some typing on short notice? M: How big is the job? Q: What does the man want to know? 6. M: I think the whole class is going on the field trip next Friday. W: I'm not so sure, not everyone has paid the transportation fee. Q: What does the woman imply? 7. W: I'm taking John to that fancy new restaurant tonight. M: You can't go like that. You'd better change. Q: What does the man advice? 8. M: How did your talk with Harry go? W: It never really got off the ground. Q: What does the woman imply? 9. M: Helen, don't forget to take out your umbrella. W: Oh, it's just overcast. Q: What does Helen mean? 10. M: Have you seen this postcard from Rohm? He's in Florida. W: Oh, so he was able to get time off from work. Q: What had the woman assumed about Rohm?
Section B: Compound Dictation (15 minutes)
Today I would like to talk about the early days of movie making in the late nineteenth and early 11) centuries. Before the 12) films of D. W. Griffith, film makers were limited by several 13) questions of the era. According to one, the camera was always fixed at a view point 14) to that of the spectator in the theatre, a position now known as the long shot. It was another convention that the 15) of the camera never changed in the middle of a 16). In last week's films, we saw how Griffith ignored both these limiting 17) and brought the camera closer to the actor. This shot, now known as a full shot, was considered revolutionary at the time. For Love of Gold, was the name of the film in which the first use of the full shot. After progressing from a long shot to the full shot, the next logical step for Griffith was to bring in the camera still closer, in what is now called the close-up. 18), as for example, in Edqaed Asport's The Great Train Robbery, which was made in 1903. But not until 1908 in Griffith's movie 19). In the scene from After Many Years that we are about to see, pay special attention to the close-up of Annie Lee's worried face as she awaits her husband's return. In 1908, this close-up shocked everyone in the Biogress Studio. But Griffith had no time for argument. He had another surprise even more radical to offer. Immediately following close-up of Annie, he inserted a picture of the object of her thought--her husband cast sway on a desert aisle. 20).
答案:11. twentieth 12. pioneering 13. misguided 14. corresponding 15. position 16. scene 17. conventions 18. The close-up had been used before though only rarely and merely as a visual stunt 19. called After Many Years was the dramatic potential of the close-up exploited 20. This cutting from one scene to another without finishing either of them brought a torrent of criticism on the experiments