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TOFEL.98.1  
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旧 2008-11-28, 06:38   #1
Trance 帅哥
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TOFEL 97.8

1997年8月TOFEL 听力
A
1. (A) Discuss the situation with the person in charge of the dormitory.
(B) Ask her roommate not to make so much noise.
(C) Go to bed after midnight.
(D) Send a letter to the residents.
2. (A) Now he understands the system.
(B) He has no use for technology.
(C) He has to do some calculations.
(D) He doesn't know how to operate the computer.
3. (A) He's growing very quickly.
(B) He's the tallest of three boys.
(C) He can jump high.
(D) He has to leave today at there.
4. (A) Nothing can help Debra pass the exam.
(B) Debra doesn't need to study at all.
(C) Being well rested will help Debra on the exam.
(D) Debra should get some fresh air in the morning
5. (A) The woman's roommate went to get it.
(B) It was sent to the woman's roommate by mistake.
(C) The woman picked it up at the post office.
(D) The postal service delivered it to the woman's house.
6. (A) He has to wash a thousand dishes.
(B) He has more dishes than his brother.
(C) His brother takes too much time washing the dishes.
(D) he has asked his brother to wash the dished many times.
7. (A) He'd like to reschedule the party.
(B) He and Jill aren't free next week.
(C) He's not sure if Jill is available on Friday.
(D) He doesn't know what to bring to the party.
8. (A) The bicycle is being repaired.
(B) The bicycle is new.
(C) She lent the bicycle to a friend.
(D) The bicycle is parked outside.
9. (A) She wanted to visit Joe's home.
(B) She doesn't understand why Joe left without her.
(C) Joe should take a taxi to her house.
(D) Joe didn't want to take the taxi to his houses.
10. (A) He has always admired her.
(B) He wishes he could spend more time with her.
(C) She's taller than he is.
(D) She looks very different from him.
11. (A) Train service will return to normal in a few days.
(B) It's better to take a train later in the day.
(C) The man took the wrong train.
(D) Delays in train service will continue.
12. (A) Put the briefcase back in the elevator.
(B) Contact the owner of the briefcase.
(C) Find out if the receptionist lost a briefcase.
(D) Take the briefcase to the reception desk.
13. (A) Sports.
(B) Music.
(C) Hardware.
(D) Arts and crafts.
14. (A) She works long hours.
(B) She found another job.
(C) She is too tired to teach.
(D) No one can take her place.
15. (A) The band needs more practice.
(B) The band members are being paid to play.
(C) The band has been working hard.
(D) Band practice begins in an hour.
16. (A) She has changed her schedule.
(B) She was sick on Friday.
(C) She works less than she used to
(D) Her vacation started on Monday.
17. (A) Where the woman is going to dinner.
(B) Where the new restaurant is located.
(C) Where the woman got the coupon.
(D) Where the woman's cousin lives.
18. (A) She'd also like to get a printer.
(B) She needs a printer more than the man do.
(C) The man should buy a high quality printer.
(D) The man should invest in a printing company.
19. (A) Hurry.
(B) Pick up the Browns.
(C) Go downstairs.
(D) Move to a new house.
20. (A) She wants to change her major.
(B) She's not going to graduate school immediately.
(C) She'll stop at the office before returning to school.
(D) She'll switch colleges for graduate work.
21. (A) The picnic will probably be canceled.
(B) He's glad that the picnic is this weekend.
(C) It's not going to rain.
(D) He knows where the picnic is to be held.
22. (A) To try out for the volleyball team.
(B) Not to worry about what people think.
(C) To get them tickets to the volleyball game.
(D) To spend more time on her studies.
23. (A) Mike probably won't find an apartment in time.
(B) Mike should talk to his old landlord.
(C) Mike always manages to find an apartment
(D) Mike hasn't registered for school this year.
24. (A) Read a gas meter.
(B) Start a camp fire.
(C) Get gas for his car.
(D) Cook some food.
25. (A) He doesn't remember exactly what he said.
(B) He told the woman to try to get more sleep.
(C) He knew the woman would benefit from his advice.
(D) He didn't expect the woman to listen to him.
26. (A) It's easier to take the subway.
(B) Automobiles pollute the air.
(C) The subway is less than half full.
(D) Cars are expensive to operate.
27. (A) She thinks it's cold too.
(B) They need to get the freezer fixed again
(C) She'd like the man to repeat what he said.
(D) The man told her that before.
28. (A) The man caused the newsletter to be late.
(B) The man's article won't be published right away.
(C) She hasn't had time to read the man's article.
(D) She doesn't know what happened to the man's article.
29. (A) The sisters share a lot of things.
(B) She and her sister will switch seats.
(C) Things are going well for her sister.
(D) Her sister finished her cooking.
30. (A) Eat a late dinner.
(B) Cancel the break.
(C) Skip dinner.
(D) Bring the man something to eat.
31. (A) To make an appointment to look at a house.
(B) To get information about special housing.
(C) To ask about getting a loan to buy a house.
(D) To renew the housing contract.
32. (A) With his grandparents.
(B) In student housing.
(C) With his wife's parents.
(D) In his own apartment.
33. (A) He has more than one child.
(B) His wife is a graduate student.
(C) He is a full time student.
(D) He works at the university housing office.
34. (A) He earns less than $15,000 a year.
(B) He's looking for a full-time job.
(C) He thinks his rent is too high.
(D) He plans to go back to graduate school.
35. (A) She isn't there in the morning.
(B) Her assistant isn't there in the morning.
(C) She won't have the forms he needs until the afternoon.
(D) She isn't as busy in the afternoon.
36. (A) They lived in caves.
(B) They traveled in groups.
(C) They had an advanced language.
(D) They ate mostly fruit.
37. (A) They lived in large groups.
(B) They used sand as insulation.
(C) They kept fires burning constantly.
(D) They faced their homes toward the south.
38. (A) Meet his anthropology teacher.
(B) Lend him her magazine when she's done with it.
(C) Come over to his house after class.
(D) Help him study for an anthropology test.
39. (A) Putting a roof on a barn.
(B) Harvesting water reeds.
(C) Using stone as a building material.
(D) Daily farm operations.
40. (A) Clay tiles.
(B) Slate or stone
(C) Wooden shingles.
(D) Reeds or straw.
41. (A) Later colonists did not know how to thatch.
(B) Thatching was considered dangerous.
(C) Other roofing materials were available.
(D) Thatching was unsuitable for the climate.
42. (A) It's manufactured to be strong.
(B) It bends without breaking.
(C) Thatches nail it down securely.
(D) The winds can pass through it easily.
43. (A) If people had more time to learn how to do it.
(B) If its cost went down.
(C) If it could make buildings more attractive.
(D) If people realized its many advantages.
44. (A) The coffee market in Boston.
(B) The role of supermarkets in the coffee business.
(C) A new trend in the United States.
(D) The advertising of a new product.
45. (A) Gourmet coffee is less expensive.
(B) Regular brands of coffee have too much caffeine.
(C) Gourmet coffee tastes better.
(D) Gourmet coffee is grown in the United States.
46. (A) They will run out of coffee.
(B) They will successfully compete with gourmet coffee sellers.
(C) They will introduce new regular brands of coffee.
(D) They will lose some coffee business.
47. (A) Photographic techniques common in the early 1900's.
(B) The life of Alfred Stieglitz.
(C) The influence of weather on Alfred Stieglitz's photography.
(D) Alfred Stieglitze's approach to photography.
48. (A) How to analyze photographic techniques.
(B) How to define photography.
(C) How Alfred Stieglitz contributed to the history of photography.
(D) Whether photography is superior to other art forms.
49. (A) They were influenced by his background in engineering.
(B) They were very expensive to take.
(C) They were among the first taken under such conditions.
(D) Most of them were of poor quality.
50. (A) He thought the copying process took too long.
(B) He considered each photograph to be unique.
(C) He didn't have the necessary equipment for reproduction.
(D) He didn't want them to be displayed outside of his home.




被生活FIRE了...................
Trance 当前离线   回复时引用此帖
旧 2008-11-28, 06:38   #2
Trance 帅哥
级别:15 | 在线时长:305小时 | 升级还需:15小时级别:15 | 在线时长:305小时 | 升级还需:15小时级别:15 | 在线时长:305小时 | 升级还需:15小时级别:15 | 在线时长:305小时 | 升级还需:15小时级别:15 | 在线时长:305小时 | 升级还需:15小时级别:15 | 在线时长:305小时 | 升级还需:15小时
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97年8月TOFEL 语法
B
1. Some snakes lay eggs, but others _____ birth to live offspring.
(A) give
(B) giving
(C) they give
(D) to have given
2. Because it was so closely related to communication, _____ art form to develop.
(A) drawing was probably the earliest
(B) to draw early was probably
(C) early drawing probably
(D) the earliest draw.
3. Halley's Comet had its first documented sighting in 240 B.C. in China and _____ it has been seen from the Earth 29 times.
(A) after
(B) because of
(C) since then
(D) that is
4. _____ that managers commit in problem solving is jumping to a conclusion about the cause of a given problem.
(A) Major errors.
(B) Since the major error
(C) The major error
(D) Of the major errors.
5. Algonkian-speaking Native Americans greeted the Pilgrims _____ settled on the eastern shores of what is now New England.
(A) to whom
(B) of which
(C) who
(D) which
6. The best known books of Ross Macdonald, _____ writer of detective novels, feature the character Lew Archer, a private detective.
(A) is the
(B) is an
(C) they are by
(D) the
7. The first building to employ steel skeleton construction, _____.
(A) Chicago, Illinois, the home of the Home Insurance Company Building completed in 1885.
(B) The Home Insurance Company Building in Chicago, Illinois, was completed in 1885.
(C) Because the Home Insurance Company Building in Chicago, Illinois was completed in 1885.
(D) The Home Insurance Company Building in Chicago, Illinois, in 1885.
8. During the course of its growth, a frog undergoes a true metamorphosis _____ with fishlike larval stage.
(A) begin
(B) began
(C) beginning
(D) is begun.
9. Mahalia Jackson, _____ combined powerfully vitality with great dignity, was one of the best known gospel singers in the United-States.
(A) it was her singing
(B) which songs
(C) who sang
(D) whose singing
10. Precious metals, gems, and ivory have been used to make buttons, but most buttons are made of _____ wood, glass, or plastic.
(A) such materials that
(B) materials as such
(C) such materials as
(D) such materials.
11. Outside the bright primary rainbow, _____ much fainter secondary rainbow may be visible.
(A) so
(B) a
(C) since
(D) still
12. An critic, teacher, librarian, or poet who hopes to broaden poetry's audience faces the difficult challenge of persuading skeptical readers _____.
(A) that poetry is important today
(B) for poetry to be important today
(C) to be important poetry today
(D) poetry that is important today.
13. Following the guidelines for speaking and voting established by the book Robert's Rules of Order, _____ during meetings.
(A) and avoid large decision-making organizations' procedural confusion
(B) large decision-making organizations avoid procedural confusion
(C) is procedural confusion avoided by large decision-making organizations
(D) are avoiding procedural confusion in large decision-making organizations.
14. Indigo is a vat color, _____ called because it does not dissolve in water.
(A) which it
(B) it is
(C) but
(D) so
15. Associated with the Denishawn company from 1916 until 1923, Martha Grahaim developed a powerful, _____ that was integral to the foundations of modern dance.
(A) expressively stylish
(B) a style expressive
(C) stylishly expressive
(D) expressive style.
16. In the New England colonies, Chippendale designs were adapted to locally tastes,
and beautiful furniture resulted.
17. According to most psychological studies, body language expresses a speaker's
emotions and attitudes, and it also tends to affect the emotions and attitudes of the listen.
18. The dachshund is a hardy, alert dog with a well sense of smell.
19. Quasars, faint celestial objects resembling stars, are perhaps the most distant
objects know.
20. The importance of environmental stimuli in the development of coordination
between sensory input and motor response varies to species to species.
21. A smile can be observed, described, and reliably identify, it can also be elicited
and manipulated under experimental conditions.
22. A musical genius, John Cage is noted for his highly unconventional ideas, and
he respected for his unusual compositions and performances.
23. Chocolate is prepared by a complexity process of cleaning, blending and roasting
cocoa beans, which must be ground and mixed with sugar.
24. Several million points on the human body registers either cold, heat, pain, or touch.
25. In the 1800's store owners sold everything from a needle to a plow, trust
everyone, and never took inventory.
26. Although they reflect a strong social conscience, Arthur Miller's stage works are
typical more concerned with individuals than with systems.
27. While highly prized for symbolizing good luck, the four-leaf clover is rarity found
in nature.
28. An involuntary reflex, an yawn is almost impossible to stop once the mouth
muscles begin the stretching action.
29. Elected to serve in the United States House of representatives in 1968, Shirley
Chisholm was known for advocacy the interests of the urban poor.
30. A mirage is an atmospheric optical illusion in what an observer sees a nonexistent
body of water or an image of some object.
31. Turquoise, which found in microscopic crystals, is opaque with a waxy luster,
varying in color from greenish gray to sky blue.
32. Homo erectus is the name commonly given into the primate species from which
humans are believed to have evolved.
33. Today, modern textile mills can manufacture as much fabrics in a few seconds as
it once took workers weeks to produce by hand.
34. The Hopi, the westernmost tribe of Pueblo Indians, have traditionally live large.
multilevel structures clustered in towns.
35. Exploration of the Solar System is continuing and at the present rate of progress
all the planets will have been contacted within the near 50 years.
36. Since their appearance on farms in the United States between 1913 and 1920,
trucks have changed patterns of production and market of farm products.
37. Antique collection became a significant pastime in the 1800's when old object
began to be appreciated for their beauty as well as for their historical importance.
38. American painter Georgia O'Keeffe is well known as her large paintings of
flowers in which single blossoms are presented as if in close-up.
39. Despite television is the dominant entertainment medium for United States
households, Garrison Keillor's Saturday night radio show of folk songs and stories is
heard by millions of people.
40. The work which the poet Emma Lazarus is best known is "The New Colossus",
which is inscribed on the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty.
Trance 当前离线   回复时引用此帖
旧 2008-11-28, 06:39   #3
Trance 帅哥
级别:15 | 在线时长:305小时 | 升级还需:15小时级别:15 | 在线时长:305小时 | 升级还需:15小时级别:15 | 在线时长:305小时 | 升级还需:15小时级别:15 | 在线时长:305小时 | 升级还需:15小时级别:15 | 在线时长:305小时 | 升级还需:15小时级别:15 | 在线时长:305小时 | 升级还需:15小时
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97年8月TOFEL 阅读
C
Question 1-9
In the 1600's when the Spanish moved into what later was to become the southwestern United States, they encountered the ancestors of the modern-day Pueblo, Hopi, and Zuni peoples. These ancestors, known variously as the Basket Makers, the Anasazi, or the Ancient Ones, had lived in the area for at least 2,000 years. They were an advanced agricultural people who used irrigation to help grow their crops.
The Anasazi lived in houses constructed of adobe and wood. Anasazi houses were originally built in pits and were entered from the roof. But around the year 700 A.D., the Anasazi began to build their homes above ground and join them together into rambling multistoried complexes, which the Spanish called pueblos or villages. Separate subterranean rooms in these pueblos _____ known as kivas or chapels _____ were set aside for religious ceremonials. Each kiva had a fire pit and a hole that was believed to lead to the underworld. The largest pueblos had five stories and more than 800 rooms.
The Anasazi family was matrilinear, that is, descent was traced through the female. The sacred objects of the family were under the control of the oldest female, but the ritual ceremonies were conducted by her brother or son. Women owned the rooms in the pueblo and the crops, once they were harvested. While still growing, crops belonged to the man who, in contrast to most other Native American groups, planted them. The women made baskets and pottery, the men wove textile and crafted turpoise jewelry.
Each village had two chiefs. The village chief dealt with land disputes and religious affairs. The war chief led the men in fighting during occasional conflicts that broke out with neighboring villages and directed the men in community building projects. The cohesive political and social organization of the Anasazi made it almost impossible for other groups to conquer them.
1. The Anasazi people were considered "agriculturally advanced" because of the way they
(A) stored their crops
(B) fertilized their fields.
(C) watered their crops.
(D) planted their fields.
2. The word "pits" in line 7 is closest in meaning to
(A) stages
(B) scars
(C) seeds
(D) holes.
3. The word "stories" in line 12 is closest in meaning to
(A) articles
(B) tales
(C) levels
(D) rumors
4. Who would have been most likely to control the sacred objects of an Anasazi family?
(A) A twenty-year-old man
(B) A twenty-year-old woman
(C) A forty-year-old man
(D) A forty-year-old woman
5. The word "they" in line 16 refers to
(A) women
(B) crops
(C) rooms
(D) pueblos
6. The word "disputes" in line 20 is closest in meaning to
(A) discussions
(B) arguments
(C) developments
(D) purchases
7. Which of the following activities was NOT done by Anasazi men?
(A) Making baskets
(B) Planting crops
(C) Building homes
(D) Crafting jewelry.
8. According to the passage, what made it almost impossible for other groups to conquer the Anasazi?
(A) The political and social organization of the Anasazi
(B) The military tactics employed by the Anasazi
(C) The Anasazi's agricultural technology.
(D) The natural barriers surrounding Anasazi willages.
9. The passage supports which of the following generalizations?
(A) The presence of the Spanish threatened Anasazi society.
(B) The Anasazi benefited from trading relations with the Spanish.
(C) Anasazi society exhibited a well-defined division of labor.
(D) Conflicts between neighboring Anasazi villages were easily resolved.
 
Question 10-19
Barbed wire, first patented in the United States in 1867, played an important part in the development of American farming, as it enabled the settlers to make effective fencing to enclose their land and keep cattle away from their crops. This had a considerable effect on cattle ranching, since the herds no longer had unrestricted use of the plans for grazing, and the fencing led to conflict between the farmers and the cattle ranchers.
Before barbed wire came into general use, fencing was often made from serrated wire, which was unsatisfactory because it broke easily when under strain, and could snap in cold weather due to contraction. The first practical machine for producing barbed wire was invented in 1874 by an Illinois farmer, and between then and the end of the century about 400 types of barbed wire were devised, of which only about a dozen were ever put to practical use.
Modern barbed wire is made from mild steel high-tensile steel, or aluminum. Mild steel and aluminum barbed wire have two strands twisted together to form a cable which is stronger than single-strand wire and less affected by temperature changes. Single-strand wire, round or oval, is made from high-tensile steel with the barbs crimped or welded on . The steel wires used are galvanized - coated with zinc to make them rustproof. The two wires that make up the line wire or cable are fed separately into a machine at one end. They leave it at the other end twisted-together and barbed. The wire to make the barbs is fed into the machine from the sides and cut to length by knives that cut diagonally through the wire to produce a sharp point. This process continues automatically, and the finished barbed wire is wound onto reels, usually made of wire in length of 400 meters or in weights of up to 50 kilograms.
A variation of barbed wire is also used for military purposes. It is formed into long cojis or entanglements called concertina wire.
10. What is the main topic of the passage?
(A) Cattle ranching in the United States.
(B) A type of fencing
(C) Industrial uses of wire
(D) A controversy over land use.
11. The word "unrestricted" in line 4 is closest in meaning to
(A) unsatisfactory
(B) difficult
(C) considerable
(D) unlimited
12. The word "snap" in line 9 could best be replaced by which of the following?
(A) freeze
(B) click
(C) loosen
(D) break
13. What is the benefit of using two-stranded barbed wire?
(A) Improved rust-resistance
(B) Increased strength
(C) More rapid attachment of barbs
(D) Easier installation.
14. According to the author, the steel wires used to make barbed wire are specially processed to
(A) protect them against rust
(B) make them more flexible
(C) prevent contraction in cold weather
(D) straighten them.
15. The word "fed" in line 20 is closest in meaning to
(A) put
(B) eaten
(C) bitten
(D) nourished
16. The knives referred to in line 21 are used to
(A) separate double-stranded wire
(B) prevent the reel from advancing too rapidly
(C) twist the wire
(D) cut the wire that becomes barbs
17. What is the author's purpose in the third paragraph?
(A) To explain the importance of the wire.
(B) To outline the difficulty of making the wire
(C) To describe how the wire is made
(D) To suggest several different uses of the wire.
18. According to the passage, concertina wire is used for
(A) livestock management
(B) international communications
(C) prison enclosures
(D) military purposes.
19. Which of the following most closely resembles the fencing described in the passage?
(A) (图)
(B) (图)
(C) (图)
(D) (图)
 
Question 20-28
Under certain circumstance the human body must cope with gases at greater-than-normal atmospheric pressure. For example, gas pressures increase rapidly during a dive made with scuba gear because the breathing equipment allows divers to stay underwater longer and dive deeper. The pressure exerted on the human body increases by 1 atmosphere for every 10 meters of depth in seawater, so that at 30 meters in seawater a diver is exposed to a pressure of about 4 atmospheres. The pressure of the gases being breathed must equal the external pressure applied to the body; otherwise breathing is very difficult. Therefore all of the gases in the air breathed by a scuba diver at 40 meters are present at five times their usual pressure. Nitrogen which composes 80 percent of the air we breathe usually causes a balmy feeling of well-being at this pressure. At a depth of 5 atmospheres nitrogen causes symptoms resembling alcohol intoxication known as nitrogen narcosis. Nitrogen narcosis apparently results from a direct effect on the brain of the large amounts of nitrogen dissolved in the blood. Deep dives are less dangerous if helium is substituted for nitrogen, because under these pressures helium does not exert a similar narcotic effect.
As a scuba diver descends, the pressure of nitrogen in the lungs increases. Nitrogen then diffuses from the lungs to the blood and from the blood to body tissues. The reverse occurs when the diver surfaces; the nitrogen pressure in the lungs falls and the nitrogen diffuses from the tissues into the blood and from the blood into the lungs. If the return to the surface is too rapid, nitrogen in the tissues and blood cannot diffuse out rapidly enough and nitrogen bubbles are formed . They can cause severe pains, particularly around the joints.
Another complication may result if the breath is held during ascent. During ascent from a depth of 10 meters, the volume of air in the lungs will double because the air pressure at the surface is only half of what it was at 10 meters. This change in volume may cause the lungs to distend and even rupture. This condition is called air embolism. To avoid this event, a diver must ascent slowly, never at a rate exceeding the rise of the exhaled air bubbles, and must exhale during ascent.
20. What does the passage mainly discuss?
(A) The equipment divers use
(B) The effects of pressure on gases in the human body
(C) How to prepare for a deep dive
(D) The symptoms of nitrogen bubbles in the bloodstream.
21. The word "exposed to" in line 6 are closest in meaning to
(A) leaving behind
(B) prepared for
(C) propelled by
(D) subjected to
22. The word "exert" in line 15 is closest in meaning to
(A) cause
(B) permit
(C) need
(D) change
23. The word "diffuses" in line 19 is closest in meaning to
(A) yields
(B) starts
(C) surfaces
(D) travels
24. What happens to nitrogen in body tissues if a diver ascends too quickly.
(A) It forms bubbles
(B) It goes directly to the brain
(C) It is reabsorbed by the lungs.
(D) It has a narcotic effect.
25. The word "They" in line 21 refers to
(A) joints
(B) pains
(C) bubbles
(D) tissues.
26. The word "rupture" in line 26 is closest in meaning to
(A) hurt
(B) shrink
(C) burst
(D) stop
27. It can be inferred from the passage that which of the following presents the greatest danger to a diver?
(A) Pressurized helium
(B) Nitrogen diffusion
(C) Nitrogen bubbles
(D) An air embolism
28. What should a diver do when ascending?
(A) Rise slowly
(B) Breathe faster
(C) Relax completely
(D) Breathe helium.
 
Question 29-38
Each advance in microscopic technique has provided scientists with new perspectives on the function of living organisms and the nature of matter itself. The invention of the visible-light microscope late in the sixteenth century introduced a previously unknown realm of single-celled plants and animals. In the twentieth century, electron microscopes have provided direct views of viruses and minuscule surface structures. Now another type of microscope, one that utilize x-rays rather than light or electrons, offers a different way of examining tiny details, it should extend human perception still farther into the natural world.
The dream of building an x-ray microscope dates to 1895, its development, however, was virtually halted in the 1940's because the development of the electron microscope was progressing rapidly. During the 1940's electron microscopes routinely achieved resolution better than that possible with a visible-light microscope, while the performance of x-ray microscopes resisted improvement. In recent years, however, interest in x-ray microscopes has revived, largely because of advances such as the development of new sources of x-ray illumination. As a result, the brightness available today is millions of times that of x-ray tubes, which, for most of the century, were the only available sources of soft x-rays.
The new x-ray microscopes considerably improve on the resolution provided by optical microscopes. They can also be used to map the distribution of certain chemical elements. Some can form pictures in extremely short times, others hold the promise of special capabilities such as three dimensional imaging. Unlike conventional electron microscopy, x-ray microscopy enables specimens to be kept in air and in water, which means that biological samples can be studied under conditions similar to their natural state. The illumination used, so-called soft x-rays in the wavelength range of twenty to forty angstroms (an angstrom is one ten-billionth of a meter), is also sufficiently penetrating to image intact biological cells in many cases. Because of the wavelength of the x-rays used, soft x-ray microscopes will never match the highest resolution possible with electron microscopes. Rather, their special properties will make possible investigations that will complement those performed with light- and electron-based instruments.
29. What does the passage mainly discuss?
(A) The detail seen through a microscope
(B) Sources of illumination for microscopes
(C) A new kind of microscope
(D) Outdated microscopic technique
30. According to the passage, the invention of the visible-light microscope allowed scientists to
(A) see viruses directly
(B) develop the electron microscope later on
(C) understand more about the distribution of the chemical elements
(D) discover single celled plants and animals they had never seen before.
31. The word "minuscule" in line 5 is closest in meaning to
(A) circular
(B) dangerous
(C) complex
(D) tiny
32. The word "it" in line 7 refers to
(A) a type of microscope
(B) human perception
(C) the natural world
(D) light
33. Why does the another mention me visible light microscope in the first paragraph?
(A) To begin a discussion of sixteenth century discoveries.
(B) To put the x-ray microscope in historical perspective
(C) To show how limited its uses are
(D) To explain how it functioned
34. Why did it take so long to develop the x-ray microscope?
(A) Funds for research were insufficient.
(B) The source of illumination was not bright enough until recently.
(C) Materials used to manufacture x-ray tubes were difficult to obtain
(D) X-ray microscopes were too complicated to operate.
35. The word "enables" in line 32 is closest in meaning to
(A) constitutes
(B) specifies
(C) expands
(D) allows
36. The word "Rather" in line 28 is closest in meaning to
(A) significantly
(B) preferably
(C) somewhat
(D) instead
37. The word "those" in line 29 refers to
(A) properties
(B) investigations
(C) microscopes
(D) x-rays
38. Based on the information in the passage, what can be inferred about x-ray microscopes in the future?
(A) They will probably replace electron microscopes altogether.
(B) They will eventually be much cheaper to produce than they are now.
(C) They will provide information not available from other kinds of microscopes.
(D) They will eventually change the illumination range that they now use.
 
Question 39-50
Perhaps the most striking quality of satiric literature is its freshness, its originality of perspective. Satire rarely offers original ideas. Instead it presents the familiar in a new form. Satirists do not offer the world new philosophies. What they do is look at familiar conditions from a perspective that makes these conditions seem foolish, harmful or affected. Satire jars us out of complacence into a pleasantly shocked realization that many of the values we unquestioningly accept are false. Don Quixote makes chivalry seem absurd, Brave New World ridicules the pretensions of science, A Modest proposal dramatizes starvation by advocating cannibalism. None of these ideas is original. Chivalry was suspect before Cervantes, humanists objected to the claims of pure science before Aldous Huxley and people were aware of famine before Swift. It was not the originality of the idea that made these satires popular. It was the manner of expression the satiric method that made them interesting and entertaining. Satires are read because they are aesthetically satisfying works of art, not because they are morally wholesome or ethically instructive. They are stimulating and refreshing because with commonsense briskness they brush away illusions and secondhand opinions. With spontaneous irreverence, satire rearranges perspectives, scrambles familiar objects into incongruous juxtaposition and speaks in a personal idiom instead of abstract platitude.
Satire exists because there is need for it. It has lived because readers appreciate a refreshing stimulus, an irreverent reminder that they lived in a world of platitudinous thinking, cheap moralizing, and foolish philosophy. Satire serves to prod people into an awareness of truth though rarely to any action on behalf of truth. Satire tends to remind people that much of what they see, hear, and read in popular media is sanctimonious, sentimental, and only partially true. Life resembles in only a slight degree the popular image of it. Soldiers rarely hold the ideals that movies attribute to them, nor do ordinary citizens devote their lives to unselfish service of humanity. Intelligent people know these things but tend to forget them when they do not hear them expressed.
39. What does the passage mainly discuss?
(A) Difficulties of writing satiric literature.
(B) Popular topics of satire
(C) New philosophies emerging from satiric literature
(D) Reasons for the popularity of satire.
40. The word "realization" in line 6 is closest in meaning to
(A) certainly
(B) awareness
(C) surprise
(D) confusion
41. Why does the author mention Don Quirote, Brave New World and A Modest Proposal in lines 6-8?
(A) They are famous examples of satiric literature
(B) They present commonsense solutions to problems.
(C) They are appropriate for readers of all ages.
(D) They are books with similar stories.
42. The word "aesthetically" in line 13 is closest in meaning to
(A) artistically
(B) exceptionally
(C) realistically
(D) dependably
43. Which of the following can be found in satire literature?
(A) Newly emerging philosophies
(B) Odd combinations of objects and ideas
(C) Abstract discussion of moral and ethnics
(D) Wholesome characters who are unselfish.
44. According to the passage, there is a need for satire because people need to be
(A) informed about new scientific developments
(B) exposed to original philosophies when they are formulated
(C) reminded that popular ideas are often inaccurate
(D) told how they can be of service to their communities.
45. The word "refreshing" in line 19 is closest in meaning to
(A) popular
(B) ridiculous
(C) meaningful
(D) unusual
46. The word "they" in line 22 refers to
(A) people
(B) media
(C) ideals
(D) movies
47. The word "devote" in line 25 is closest in meaning to
(A) distinguish
(B) feel affection
(C) prefer
(D) dedicate
48. As a result of reading satiric literature, readers will be most likely to
(A) teach themselves to write fiction
(B) accept conventional points of view
(C) become better informed about current affairs
(D) reexamine their opinions and values
49. The various purposes of satire include all of the following EXCEPT
(A) introducing readers to unfamiliar situations
(B) brushing away illusions
(C) reminding readers of the truth
(D) exposing false values.
50. Why does the author mention "service of humanity" in line 25?
(A) People need to be reminded to take action
(B) Readers appreciate knowing about it
(C) It is an ideal that is rarely achieved.
(D) Popular media often distort such stories.
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TOFEL 97.10

97年10月TOFEL 听力
1. (A) He doesn't have enough money to buy a printer now.
(B) He's not sure how much a printer costs.
(C) He'll buy a computer later this week.
(D) He lost the money he was saving.
2. (A) Wait to play until after his 9 o'clock class.
(B) Ask Carol to play tennis.
(C) Ask Carol if she's going to class.
(D) Get a tennis lesson from Carol.
3. (A) They should ask for an increase in the budget.
(B) The calculations appear correct to her.
(C) She'll try to see what method was used
(D) They need to make a copy of the budget.
4. (A) He could bring something to the woman
(B) He'd be happy to go with the woman.
(C) He wants the woman to get him a newspaper.
(D) He'd like something to eat.
5. (A) The barbecue has been canceled.
(B) The weather will probably be cool.
(C) The man will not be able to attend the barbecue.
(D) Casual dress will be appropriate.
6. (A) He has had study habits.
(B) He sleeps too much.
(C) He wakes up early.
(D) He's an excellent student.
7. (A) She dislikes fireworks.
(B) She has plans for the evening.
(C) She doesn't feel like going out.
(D) She has to get theater tickets.
8. (A) The library is closed tonight.
(B) He doesn't know how to get to the library.
(C) Jean is using his car.
(D) He won't be able to help the woman.
9. (A) He has received his telephone bill.
(B) His calls weren't listed.
(C) The woman has already paid for her call.
(D) He has received a long distance call.
10. (A) The man should take the stereo back to the store.
(B) The man should refer to the instruction manual.
(C) She'll go to the man's house and help him.
(D) She'll give the man her instruction manual.
11. (A) Candy has been ordered for the machine.
(B) They still have some candy left over.
(C) The machine isn't working right now.
(D) The machine was moved to another building.
12. (A) Discuss a magazine article with the woman.
(B) Help the woman find a new doctor.
(C) Go to the store for some medicine.
(D) Buy the woman some magazines.
13. (A) The plants may need more light.
(B) The plants should get less water.
(C) The area in front of the window is too cold for plants.
(D) Plants rarely do well in the dormitory.
14. (A) The restaurant closes early during the week.
(B) He thought the woman's birthday was next week.
(C) The woman should find out if she can reserve a table.
(D) He won't be able to go with the woman.
15. (A) Find out where their professor is going to perform.
(B) Go to a concert.
(C) Perform in a musical recital.
(D) Interview the violinist.
16. (A) He has to go home to feed pet.
(B) He's expecting Cindy to arrive soon.
(C) He cannot go to Cindy's.
(D) He must keep an appointment with his doctor.
17. (A) Join the dormitory council himself.
(B) Attend the next council.
(C) Persuade the other council members not to quit.
(D) Help the woman find someone to fill the vacancy.
18. (A) The center has just opened.
(B) He's looking forward to using the center.
(C) The door to the fitness center is locked
(D) There are long lines to get into the center.
19. (A) The film committee is full
(B) Being on the committee requires a great deal of
(C) It is difficult to be selected for the committee.
(D) The man needs to sign up another place.
20. (A) Disappointed.
(B) Surprised
(C) Nervous
(D) Uninterested.
21. (A) The weather is usually bad at the picnics.
(B) He'll need a change of clothes for the picnic
(C) He's not looking forward to attending the picnic.
(D) He's looking for a new place to hold the picnic.
22. (A) He agrees that the custodian will have a lot of work to do.
(B) He doesn't want to mess up the clean room.
(C) He wants the woman to speak a little louder.
(D) He doesn't think the woman should talk to the custodian again
23. (A) He usually isn't hungry until lunch time.
(B) His stomach hurts when he eats too fast.
(C) He likes to eat lunch at two o'clock.
(D) He needs to run errands during lunch.
24. (A) He put some notes on the desk last night.
(B) The woman should check with the school
(C) The woman shouldn't have moved his books.
(D) The notebook might be among some other books.
25. (A) Somebody frightened the birds away.
(B) The berries aren't ripe yet.
(C) She doesn't like berries.
(D) The berries aren't good to ear.
26. (A) She thought her hair was too short.
(B) Her new hairstyle is more practical
(C) She cut her hair herself.
(D) She has to tie back her hair.
27. (A) Write his paper on a more general topic.
(B) Take the woman's advice about his paper.
(C) Choose an entirely new topic for his paper.
(D) Retype his paper.
28. (A) She decided not to cancel her appointment.
(B) Her new glasses aren't comfortable.
(C) She's too busy to get a checkup
(D) She has to check when the appointment is.
29. (A) He hadn't noticed any change in Mark.
(B) Mark looks different without a beard.
(C) He thinks Mark looked better with the beard.
(D) He hasn't seen Mark yet.
30. (A) She didn't like the food the man prepared.
(B) She's not a very good cook.
(C) She's annoyed with the man.
(D) She thinks the man spent too much time cooking.
31. (A) She's waiting for her father.
(B) She's having her bicycle repaired.
(C) She wanted to surprise John.
(D) She works there.
32. (A) To replace his stolen bicycle.
(B) To begin bicycling to work.
(C) To join a bicycle club.
(D) To train for a bicycle race.
33. (A) Buy a used bicycle.
(B) Buy a racing bicycle.
(C) Replace the tires on his bicycle.
(D) Sell his old bicycle to the shop.
34. (A) It must be the right height.
(B) It must have several gears.
(C) It must have good tires.
(D) It must be the right weight.
35. (A) On television.
(B) At registration
(C) In class.
(D) At work.
36. (A) Students are not required to attend regular class lectures.
(B) The professor videotapes class lectures for review.
(C) Classes are held at various locations throughout the area.
(D) Students receive credit for work experience.
37. (A) It allows them to meet students from other universities.
(B) It promotes the concept of self-learning.
(C) It allows more flexibility in students' schedule.
(D) It doesn't require any examinations.
38. (A) It's a requirement for psychology majors.
(B) She wasn't able to get into the traditional course.
(C) She lives far from the university.
(D) She has to work a lot of hours this semester.
39. (A) It requires too much traveling.
(B) It limits interaction among students.
(C) It will increase class size.
(D) It will encourage students to watch too much television.
40. (A) He was well known on the West Coast.
(B) He served as James Polk's Vice President.
(C) He supported financial aid to farmers.
(D) He was a popular war hero.
41. (A) He was not interested in political reform
(B) He had an unusual military career.
(C) He had no political experience.
(D) He expressed many controversial ideas.
42. (A) He lost the support of farmers.
(B) He was opposed by the Whig party.
(C) He died early in his term.
(D) He came into conflict with railroad owners.
43. (A) Listen to a talk about another President.
(B) Write a report about Taylor's accomplishments
(C) Discuss the differences between Polk and Taylor.
(D) Begin working on their reports about Vice President.
44. (A) To commemorate a historic flight.
(B) To try out eighty new balloons.
(C) To recruit balloonists from all over the United States.
(D) To determine whether helium balloons are better than hot-air balloons.
45. (A) They may not be able to inflate their balloons.
(B) There are too many balloons to launch at once.
(C) Their flight pattern could be uncertain due to the wind.
(D) They'll lose money if some balloons can't take off.
46. (A) They're expensive.
(B) They were the first kind of balloon ever used.
(C) They're faster than air balloons.
(D) They're popular in the United States.
47. (A) To review what students know about volcanic activity.
(B) To demonstrate the use of a new measurement device.
(C) To explain the answer to an examination question.
(D) To provide background for the next reading assignment.
48. (A) They occur at regular intervals.
(B) They can withstand great heat.
(C) They travel through the Earth's interior.
(D) They can record the Earth's internal temperature.
49. (A) When the Earth was formed.
(B) The composition of the Earth's interior.
(C) Why lava is hot.
(D) How often a volcano is likely to erupt.
50. (A) How deep they are.
(B) Where earthquakes form.
(C) How hot they are.
(D) What purpose they serve.
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回复: TOFEL 97.10

97年10月TOFEL语法
B
1. Portland, Maine, is _____ the poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow spent his early years.
(A) where
(B) it where
(C) where is
(D) which is where
2. As consumers' response to traditional advertising techniques declines, businesses are beginning _____ new methods of reaching customers.
(A) the development that
(B) it developing
(C) develop
(D) to develop
3. The knee is _____ most other joints in the body because it cannot twist without injury.
(A) more likely to be damaged than
(B) likely to be more than damaged
(C) more than likely to be damaged
(D) to be damaged more than likely
4. The quince is an attractive shrub or small tree _____ closely related to the apple and pear trees.
(A) is
(B) that is
(C) that it is
(D) is that which
5. Many gases, including the nitrogen and oxygen in air, _____ color or odor.
(A) have no
(B) which have no
(C) not having
(D) they do not have
6. The American Academy of Poets, _____ the 1930's, provides financial assistance to support working poets.
(A) when it was founded
(B) was founded
(C) which was founded in
(D) was founded in
7. During the Pleistocene glacial periods _____ portions of the Earth where plant and animal life flourished making it possible for people to subsist.
(A) the
(B) it was
(C) there were
(D) have there been
8. The photographs of Carrie Mae Weems, in which she often makes her family members _____, are an affectionate and incisive representation of the African American experience.
(A) are her subjects
(B) her subjects
(C) are subjects
(D) which her subjects.
9. Hubble's law states that the greater the distance between any two galaxies, _____ is their relative speed of separation.
(A) the greatest
(B) the greater
(C) greater than
(D) as great as
10. The onion is characterized by an edible bulb composed of leaves rich in sugar and a pungent oil, _____ the vegetable's strong taste.
(A) which the source of
(B) that the source is
(C) the source of
(D) of the source is
11. A regional writer with a gift for dialect, _____ her fiction with the eccentric, comic, but vital inhabitants of rural Mississippi.
(A) and Eudora Welty is peopling
(B) Eudora Welty peoples
(C) because Eudora Welty peoples.
(D) Eudora Welty, to people.
12. Relative humidity is the amount of water vapor the air contains at a certain temperature _____ with the amount it could hold at that temperature.
(A) to compare
(B) compared
(C) comparing
(D) compares
13. Scientists believe the first inhabitants of the Americas arrived by crossing the land bridge that connected Siberia and _____ more than 10,000 years ago.
(A) this is Alaska now
(B) Alaska is now
(C) is now Alaska
(D) what is now Alaska.
14. Fibers of hair and wool are not continuous and must normally be spun into thread _____ woven into textile fabrics.
(A) as are they
(B) when to be
(C) that they are
(D) if they are to be
15. Margaret Brent, because of her skill in managing estates, became _____ largest landholders in colonial Maryland.
(A) what the
(B) one of the
(C) who the
(D) the one that
16. Eleanor Roosevelt set the standard against which the wives of all United States
A B C
Presidents since have evaluated.
D
17. The Armory Show, held in New York in 1913, was a important exhibition of
A B C
modern European art.
D
18. Ripe fruit is often stored in a place who contains much carbon dioxide so that the
A B C
fruit will not decay too rapidly.
D
19. In 1852, Massachusetts passed a law requiring all children from four to eighteen
A B C
years of old to attend school.
D
20. The main purpose of classifying animals is to show the most probable
A B
evolutionary relationship of the different species to each another.
C D
21. Matthew C. Perry, a United States naval commander, gained fame not in war and
A B C
through diplomacy.
D
22. One of the most impressive collections of nineteenth-century European paintings
A B
in the United States can be found to the Philadelphia Museum of Art.
C D
23. Three of every four migrating water birds in North America visits the Gulf of
A B C
Mexico's winter wetlands.
D
24. Charleston, West Virginia, was named for Charles Clendenin, who son George
A B
acquired land at the junction of the Elk and Kanawha rivers in 1787.
C D
25. Financier Andrew Mellon donated most of his magnificent art collection to the
A B C
National Gallery of Art, where it is now locating.
D
26. Soil temperatures in Death Valley, California, near the Nevada border, have been
A B C
known to reach 90 of degrees Celsius.
D
27. When the Sun, Moon, and Earth are alignment and the Moon crosses the Earth's
A B C
orbital plane, a solar eclipse occurs.
D
28. Mary Cassatt's paintings of mothers and children are known for its fine linear
A B
rhythm, simple modelings, and harmonies of clear color.
C D
29. Plants synthesize carbohydrates from water and carbon dioxide with the aid of
A B
energy is derived from sunlight.
C D
30. The best American popular music balances a powerful emotions of youth with
A B C
tenderness, grace, and wit.
D
31. In the nineteenth century, women used quilts to inscribe their responses to social,
A B C
economic, and politics issues.
D
32. Fossils in 500-million-year-old rocks demonstrate that life forms in the Cambrian
A B
period were mostly marine animals capability of secreting calcium to form shells.
C D
33. Rainbows in the shape of complete circles are sometimes seen from airplanes
A B
because they are not cutting off by the horizon.
C D
34. Hot at the equator causes the air to expand, rise, and flow toward the poles.
A B C D
35. Although research has been ongoing since 1930, the existence of ESP- perception
A B
and communication without the use of sight, hear, taste, touch, or smell - is still disputed. C D

36. As many as 50 percent of the income from motion pictures produced in the United
A B
States comes from marketing the films abroad.
C D
37. Sleep is controlled by the brain and associated by characteristic breathing rhythms. A B C D

33. The walls around the city of Quebec, which was originally a fort military, still
A B
stand, making Quebec the only walled city in North America.
C D
34. The manufacture of automobile was extremely expensive until assembly-line
A B C
techniques made them cheaper to produce.
D
35. The ballad is characterized by informal diction, by a narrative largely dependent
A B
on action and dialogue, by thematic intense, and by stress on repetition.
C D
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97年10月TOFEL 阅读
C
Question 1-7
Hotels were among the earliest facilities that bound the United States together. They were both creatures and creators of communities, as well as symptoms of the frenetic quest for community. Even in the first part of the nineteenth century, Americans were private, business and pleasure purposes. Conventions were the new occasions, and hotels were distinctively American facilities making conventions possible. The first national convention of a major party to choose a candidate for President (that of the National Republican party, which met on December 12, 1831, and nominated Henry Clay for President) was held in Baltimore, at a hotel that was then reputed to be the best in the country. The presence in Baltimore of Barnum's City Hotel, a six-story building with two hundred apartments helps explain why many other early national political conventions were held there.
In the longer run, too. American hotels made other national conventions not only possible but pleasant and convivial. The growing custom of regularly assembling from afar the representatives of all kinds of groups - not only for political conventions, but also for commercial, professional, learned, and avocational ones - in turn supported the multiplying hotels. By mid-twentieth century, conventions accounted for over third of the yearly room occupancy of all hotels in the nation, about eighteen thousand different conventions were held annually with a total attendance of about ten million persons.
Nineteenth-century American hotelkeepers, who were no longer the genial, deferential "hosts" of the eighteenth-century European inn, became leading citizens. Holding a large stake in the community, they exercised power to make it prosper. As owners or managers of the local "palace of the public", they were makers and shapers of a principal community attraction. Travelers from abroad were mildly shocked by this high social position.
1. The word "bound" in line 1 is closest in meaning to
(A) led
(B) protected
(C) tied
(D) strengthened
2. The National Republican party is mentioned in line 8 as an example of a group
(A) from Baltimore
(B) of learned people
(C) owning a hotel
(D) holding a convention
3. The word "assembling" in line 14 is closest in meaning to
(A) announcing
(B) motivating
(C) gathering
(D) contracting
4. The word "ones" in line 16 refers to
(A) hotels
(B) conventions
(C) kinds
(D) representatives
5. The word "it" in line 23 refers to
(A) European inn
(B) host
(C) community
(D) public
6. It can be inferred from the passage that early hotelkeepers in the United States were
(A) active politicians
(B) European immigrants
(C) Professional builders
(D) Influential citizens
7. Which of the following statements about early American hotels is NOT mentioned in the passage?
(A) Travelers from abroad did not enjoy staying in them.
(B) Conventions were held in them
(C) People used them for both business and pleasure.
(D) They were important to the community.
 
Question 8-17
Beads were probably the first durable ornaments humans possessed, and the intimate relationship they had with their owners is reflected in the fact that beads are among the most common items found in ancient archaeological sites. In the past, as today, men, women, and children adorned themselves with beads. In some cultures still, certain beads are often worn from birth until death, and then are buried with their owners for the afterlife. Abrasion due to daily wear alters the surface features of beads, and if they are buried for long, the effects of corrosion can further change their appearance. Thus, interest is imparted to the bead both by use and the effects of time.
Besides their wearability, either as jewelry or incorporated into articles of attire, beads possess the desirable characteristics of every collectible, they are durable, portable, available in infinite variety, and often valuable in their original cultural context as well as in today's market. Pleasing to look at and touch, beads come in shapes, colors, and materials that almost compel one to handle them and to sort them.
Beads are miniature bundles of secrets waiting to be revealed: their history, manufacture, cultural context, economic role, and ornamental use are all points of information one hopes to unravel. Even the most mundane beads may have traveled great distances and been exposed to many human experiences. The bead researcher must gather information from many diverse fields. In addition to having to be a generalist while specializing in what may seem to be a narrow field, the researcher is faced with the problem of primary materials that have little or no documentation. Many ancient beads that are of ethnographic interest have often been separated from their original cultural context.
The special attractions of beads contribute to the uniqueness of bead research. While often regarded as the "small change of civilizations", beads are a part of every culture, and they can often be used to date archaeological sites and to designate the degree of mercantile, technological, and cultural sophistication.
8. What is the main subject of the passage?
(A) Materials used in making beads.
(B) How beads are made
(C) The reasons for studying beads
(D) Different types of beads
9. The word "adorned" in line 4 is closest in meaning to
(A) protected
(B) decorated
(C) purchased
(D) enjoyed
10. The word "attire" in line 9 is closest in meaning to
(A) ritual
(B) importance
(C) clothing
(D) history
11. All of the following are given as characteristics of collectible objects EXCEPT
(A) durability
(B) portability
(C) value
(D) scarcity.
12. According to the passage, all of the following are factors that make people want to touch beads EXCEPT the
(A) shape
(B) color
(C) material
(D) odor
13. The word "unravel" in line 16 is closest in meaning to
(A) communicate
(B) transport
(C) improve
(D) discover
14. The word "mundane" in line 16 is closest in meaning to
(A) carved
(B) beautiful
(C) ordinary
(D) heavy
15. It is difficult to trace the history of certain ancient beads because they
(A) are small in size
(B) have been buried underground
(C) have been moved from their original locations
(D) are frequently lost
16. Knowledge of the history of some beads may be useful in the studies done by which of the following?
(A) Anthropologists
(B) Agricultural experts
(C) Medical researchers
(D) Economists
17. Where in the passage does the author describe why the appearance of beads may change?
(A) Lines 3-4
(B) Lines 6-8
(C) Lines 12-13
(D) Lines 20-22.
 
Question 18-31
In the world of birds, bill design is a prime example of evolutionary fine-tuning. Shorebirds such as oystercatchers use their bills to pry open the tightly sealed shells of their prey, hummingbirds have stiletto-like bills to probe the deepest nectar-bearing flowers, and kiwis smell out earthworms thanks to nostrils located at the tip of their beaks. But few birds are more intimately tied to their source of sustenance than are crossbills. Two species of these finches, named for the way the upper and lower parts of their bills cross, rather than meet in the middle, reside in the evergreen forests of North America and feed on the seeds held within the cones of coniferous trees.
The efficiency of the bill is evident when a crossbill locates a cone. Using a lateral motion of its lower mandible, the bird separates two overlapping scales on the cone and exposes the seed. The crossed mandibles enable the bird to exert a powerful biting force at the bill tips, which is critical for maneuvering them between the scales and spreading the scales apart. Next, the crossbill snakes its long tongue into the gap and draws out the seed. Using the combined action of the bill and tongue, the bird cracks open and discards the woody seed covering action and swallows the nutritious inner kernel. This whole process takes but a few seconds and is repeated hundreds of times a day.
The bills of different crossbill species and subspecies vary - some are stout and deep, others more slander and shallow. As a rule, large-billed crossbills are better at securing seeds from large cones, while small-billed crossbills are more deft at removing the seeds from small, thin-scaled cones. Moreover, the degree to which cones are naturally slightly open or tightly closed helps determine which bill design is the best.
One anomaly is the subspecies of red crossbill known as the Newfoundland crossbill. This bird has a large, robust bill, yet most of Newfoundland's conifers have small cones, the same kind of cones that the slender-billed white-wings rely on.
18. What does the passage mainly discuss?
(A) The importance of conifers in evergreen forests
(B) The efficiency of the bill of the crossbill
(C) The variety of food available in a forest
(D) The different techniques birds use to obtain food
19. Which of the following statements best represents the type of "evolutionary fine - turning" mentioned in line1?
(A) Different shapes of bills have evolved depending on the available food supply
(B) White - wing crossbills have evolved from red crossbills
(C) Newfoundland's conifers have evolved small cones
(D) Several subspecies of crossbills have evolved from two species
20. Why does the author mention oystercatchers, hummingbirds, and kiwis in lines 2-4?
(A) They are examples of birds that live in the forest
(B) Their beaks are similar to the beak of the crossbill
(C) They illustrate the relationship between bill design and food supply
(D) They are closely related to the crossbill
21. Crossbills are a type of
(A) shorebird
(B) hummingbird
(C) kiwi
(D) finch
22. Which of the following most closely resembles the bird described in lines 6-8?
(A) (图)
(B) (图)
(C) (图)
(D) (图)
23. The word "which" in line 12 refers to
(A) seed
(B) bird
(C) force
(D) bill
24. The word "gap" in line 13 is closest in meaning to
(A) opening
(B) flower
(C) mouth
(D) tree
25. The word "discards" in line 15 is closest in meaning to
(A) eats
(B) breaks
(C) finds out
(D) gets rid of
26. The word "others" in line 18 refers to
(A) bills
(B) species
(C) seeds
(D) cones
27. The word "deft" in line 19 is closest in meaning to
(A) hungry
(B) skilled
(C) tired
(D) pleasant
28. The word "robust" in line 24 is closest in meaning to
(A) strong
(B) colorful
(C) unusual
(D) sharp
29. In what way is the Newfoundland crossbill an anomaly?
(A) It is larger than the other crossbill species
(B) It uses a different technique to obtain food
(C) The size of its bill does not fit the size of its food source
(D) It does not live in evergreen forests.
30. The final paragraph of the passage will probably continue with a discussion of
(A) other species of forest birds
(B) the fragile ecosystem of Newfoundland
(C) what mammals live in the forests of North America
(D) how the Newfoundland crossbill survives with a large bill
31. Where in the passage does the author describe how a crossbill removes a seed from its cone?
(A) The first paragraph
(B) The second paragraph
(C) The third paragraph
(D) The forth paragraph
 
Question 32-38
If you look closely at some of the early copies of the Declaration of Independence, beyond the flourished signature of John Hancock and the other 55 men who signed it, you will also find the name of one woman, Mary Katherine Goddard. It was she, a Baltimore printer, who published the first official copies of the Declaration, the first copies that included the names of its signers and therefore heralded the support of all thirteen colonies.
Mary Goddard first got into printing at the age of twenty-four when her brother opened a printing shop in Providence, Rhode Island, in 1762. When he proceeded to get into trouble with his partners and creditors, it was Mary Goddard and her mother who were left to run the shop. In 1765 they began publishing the Providence Gazette, a weekly newspaper. Similar problems seemed to follow her brother as he opened businesses in Philadelphia and again in Baltimore. Each time Ms. Goddard was brought in to run the newspapers. After starting Baltimore's first newspaper, The Maryland Journal, in 1773, her brother went broke trying to organize a colonial postal service. While he was in debtor's prison. Mary Katherine Goddard's name appeared on the newspaper's masthead for the first time.
When the Continental Congress fled there from Philadelphia in 1776, it commissioned Ms. Goddard to print the first official version of the Declaration of Independence in January 1777. After printing the documents, she herself paid the post riders to deliver the Declaration throughout the colonies.
During the American Revolution, Mary Goddard continued to publish Baltimore's only newspaper, which one historian claimed was "second to none among the colonies". She was also the city's postmaster from 1775 to 1789 - appointed by Benjamin Franklin - and is considered to be the first woman to hold a federal position.
32. With which of the following subjects is the passage mainly concerned?
(A) The accomplishments of a female publisher
(B) The weakness of the newspaper industry
(C) The rights of a female publisher
(D) The publishing system in colonial America
33. Mary Goddard's name appears on the Declaration of Independence because
(A) she helped write the original document
(B) she published the document
(C) she paid to have the document printed
(D) her brother was in prison
34. The word "heralded" in line 5 is closest in meaning to
(A) influenced
(B) announced
(C) rejected
(D) ignored
35. According to the passage, Mary Goddard first became involved in publishing when she
(A) was appointed by Benjamin Franklin
(B) signed the Declaration of Independence.
(C) took over her brother's printing shop
(D) moved to Baltimore
36. The word "there" in line 17 refers to
(A) the colonies
(B) the print shop
(C) Baltimore
(D) Providence
37. It can be inferred from the passage that Mary Goddard was
(A) an accomplished businesswoman
(B) extremely wealthy
(C) a member of the Continental Congress
(D) a famous writer
38. The word "position" in line 24 is closest in meaning to
(A) job
(B) election
(C) document
(D) location
 
Question 39-50
Galaxies are the major building blocks of the universe. A galaxy is giant family of many millions of stars, and it is held together by its own gravitational field. Most of the material universe is organized into galaxies of stars together with gas and dust.
There are three main types of galaxy: spiral, elliptical, and irregular. The Milky Way is a spiral galaxy, a flattish disc of stars with two spiral arms emerging from its central nucleus. About one-quarter of all galaxies have this shape. Spiral galaxies are well supplied with the interstellar gas in which new stars form: as the rotating spiral pattern sweeps around the galaxy it compresses gas and dust, triggering the formation of bright young stars and in its arms. The elliptical galaxies have a symmetrical elliptical or spheroidal shape with no obvious structure. Most of their member stars are very old and since ellipticals are devoid of interstellar gas, no new stars are forming in them. The biggest and brightest galaxies in the universe are ellipticals with masses of about 1013 times that of the Sun, these giants may frequently be sources of strong radio emission, in which case they are called radio galaxies. About two-thirds of all galaxies are elliptical. Irregular galaxies comprise about one-tenth of all galaxies and they come in many subclasses.
Measurement in space is quite different from measurement on Earth. Some terrestrial distances can be expressed as intervals of time, the time to fly from one continent to another or the time it takes to drive to work, for example. By comparison with these familiar yardsticks, the distances to the galaxies are incomprehensibly large, but they too are made more manageable by using a time calibration, in this case the distance that light travels in one year. On such a scale the nearest giant spiral galaxy, the Andromeda galaxy, is two million light years away. The most distant luminous objects seen by telescopes are probably ten thousand million light years away. Their light was already halfway here before the Earth even formed. The light from the nearby Virgo galaxy set out when reptiles still dominated the animal world.
39. The word "major" in line 1 is closest in meaning to
(A) intense
(B) principal
(C) huge
(D) unique
40. What does the second paragraph mainly discuss?
(A) The Milky Way
(B) Major categories of galaxies
(C) How elliptical galaxies are formed
(D) Differences between irregular and spiral galaxies
41. The word "which" in line 7 refers to
(A) dust
(B) gas
(C) pattern
(D) galaxy
42. According to the passage, new stars are formed in spiral galaxies due to
(A) an explosion of gas
(B) the compression of gas and dust
(C) the combining of old stars
(D) strong radio emissions
43. The word "symmetrical" in line 9 is closest in meaning to
(A) proportionally balanced
(B) commonly seen
(C) typically large
(D) steadily growing
44. The word "obvious" in line 10 is closest in meaning to
(A) discovered
(B) apparent
(C) understood
(D) simplistic
45. According to the passage, which of the following is NOT true of elliptical galaxies?
(A) They are the largest galaxies.
(B) They mostly contain old stars.
(C) They contain a high amount of interstellar gas.
(D) They have a spherical shape.
46. Which of the following characteristics of radio galaxies is mentioned in the passage?
(A) They are a type of elliptical galaxy.
(B) They are usually too small to be seen with a telescope.
(C) They are closely related to irregular galaxies.
(D) They are not as bright as spiral galaxies.
47. What percentage of galaxies are irregular?
(A) 10%
(B) 25%
(C) 50%
(D) 75%
48. The word "they" in line 21 refers to
(A) intervals
(B) yardsticks
(C) distances
(D) galaxies
49. Why does the author mention the Virgo galaxy and the Andromeda galaxy in the third paragraph?
(A) To describe the effect that distance has no visibility.
(B) To compare the ages of two relatively young galaxies.
(C) To emphasize the vast distances of the galaxies from Earth.
(D) To explain why certain galaxies cannot be seen by a telescope.
50. The word "dominated" in line 26 is closest in meaning to
(A) threatened
(B) replaced
(C) were developing in
(D) were prevalent in
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TOFEL.98.1

98年1月托福听力试题
A
1. (A) Each person will be allowed to buy only one ticket.
(B) The tickets will sell out quickly.
(C) The rock concert will probably be rescheduled.
(D) There will be extra tickets at the rock concert.
2. (A) Board the train.
(B) Send a fax.
(C) Change his departure time.
(D) Have breakfast.
3. (A) The woman should cut his hair again.
(B) He wants the woman to cut his hair extremely short.
(C) He's bald and doesn't need a haircut.
(D) The woman previously cut off too much of his hair.
4. (A) The manager took the man's keys.
(B) The man has too many keys.
(C) The man often misplaces his keys.
(D) The same thing happened to her.
5. (A) She has to practice her speech.
(B) She doesn't like seafood.
(C) She thinks the restaurant is too expensive.
(D) She will accompany the man to the restaurant.
6. (A) Try to find out who the wallet belongs to.
(B) Keep the wallet until someone comes looking for it.
(C) Leave the wallet where she found it.
(D) Get the attention of the person who dropped the wallet.
7. (A) The program begins on Sunday.
(B) He'll meet the woman on Saturday.
(C) They could watch the program on Sunday.
(D) His cousin arrives on Sunday.
8. (A) She can't help the man look for another platter.
(B) She forgot the platter had been broken.
(C) She didn't realize the platter had been broken.
(D) She doesn't want the man to replace the platter.
9. (A) The woman can take a bus to the museum.
(B) The woman should wait in front of the museum.
(C) He doesn't know where the museum is.
(D) There's only one bus that travels down Main Street.
10. (A) She'd like to take a later flight.
(B) They should leave for the airport immediately.
(C) They won't arrive late.
(D) She isn't afraid to travel alone.
11. (A) Look for owls with the man.
(B) Meet the man at the owl exhibit.
(C) Call the radio station.
(D) Listen to the broadcast.
12. (A) There is a charge for overdue materials.
(B) He'll return the videotapes tomorrow.
(C) He'll pay someone to return the videotapes.
(D) The media center is probably already closed.
13. (A) What lie can do about the woman's problem.
(B) Whether the woman can take care of his pets.
(C) Whether the woman has any cats.
(D) Where the woman is going.
14. (A) She left the library at 12:30.
(B) She canceled the meeting unexpectedly.
(C) She has already arrived at the library.
(D) She is consulting with the reference librarian
15. (A) He does not know who Michelle is.
(B) He has gotten a job as a messenger.
(C) He does not want to deliver the note.
(D) He waits to tell the woman what Michelle said.
16. (A) The woman should have been more considerate.
(B) He probably won't do well on Friday's test.
(C) The woman hasn't caused a problem.
(D) The woman should help him study for the test.
17. (A) Complain to the student government about her professor.
(B) Take trigonometry instead of calculus.
(C) Offer to tutor other math students.
(D) Get a math tutor to help her out.
18. (A) She's usually busy working.
(B) She moved out in the middle of the term.
(C) She doesn't have time to go to the newspaper office.
(D) She's looking for a new roommate.
19. (A) He has already finished his assignment.
(B) He's bothering the woman.
(C) He forgot to attend class.
(D) He's willing to help the woman.
20. (A) Get a good night's sleep so she'll feel better.
(B) Apply for a job at the jazz club.
(C) Listen to his recordings of jazz music.
(D) Go out for some entertainment.
21. (A) He could check the shelves for the woman later.
(B) The woman's report is off the subject.
(C) He's sorry about die woman's problem.
(D) The woman is lucky to have found the books.
22. (A) She thinks the man has been away for a while.
(B) She wants to know when the man will be away.
(C) She thinks the man is taking a long trip.
(D) She doesn't think the man has packed enough.
23. (A) He isn't sure which of his photographs to submit.
(B) He has ho ideas for creative photographs.
(C) He's only going to submit one photograph.
(D)He didn't know about the contest.
24. (A) The man is exaggerating.
(B) The man should try to eat less.
(C) Food with a lot of fat should be avoided.
(D)People should worry less about their diets.
25. (A) She was working on a training schedule.
(B) She didn't get home until after midnight.
(C) She was busy with her guests all evening.
(D) She left too late to catch the train.
26. (A) He wants to keep informed while he's absent.
(B) The details of the report haven't been checked yet.
(C) He has just come back to work.
(D)He has to be away longer than expected.
27. (A) She wants a less expensive apartment.
(B) She is planing to buy a house.
(C) She wants a nicer view.
(D) She needs more room.

28. (A) She had her stereo repaired.
(B) She gave her speakers to a friend.
(C) She got some new records.
(D) She bought some audio equipment.
29. (A) She's looking forward to her weekend trip.
(B) She will accept the man's invitation.
(C) She would prefer to go to the aquarium alone.
(D) She thinks the children will enjoy the aquarium.
30. (A) It's been too cold to go skating this winter.
(B) The woman can go indoors if she gets cold.
(C) The lake may not have frozen.
(D)He also likes to skate in the winter.
31. (A) Membership in a food co-op.
(B)The benefits of health food.
(C)Shopping in the supermarket.
(D) The current cost of food.
32. (A) Lowering its prices.
(B)Selling more household necessities.
(C) Changing its membership rules.
(D)Opening up more checkout hues.
33. (A) Avoid junk food.
(B)Attend monthly meetings.
(C) Buy cleaning supplies at the co-op.
(D) Work at the co-op.
34. (A) To save money on food.
(B) To buy food without additives.
(C) To do all his shopping in one place.
(D) To meet other health conscious people.
35. (A) The membership fee is lower.
(B) They can help choose the products that will be sold.
(C)They may attend fewer meetings.
(D)They may go to the co-op more times per week.
36. (A) The effects of caffeine.
(B) Some causes of headaches.
(C) How to do well on exams.
(D) Problems with the student cafeteria.
37. (A) He has a headache.
(B) He failed his history exam.
(C) He is tired.
(D) He is too busy.
38. (A) Decaffeinated coffee may help prevent heart disease.
(B) Coffee does not necessarily cause heart disease.
(C) Coffee has less caffeine than soda.
(D)The taste of regular and decaffeinated coffee is the same.
39. (A) It helps people work efficiently.
(B) It's more refreshing than soda.
(C) It should be drunk in moderation.
(D)It has less flavor than tea.
40. (A) To review material covered in an earlier lecture.
(B) To change students' approach to writing.
(C) To point out an example of good writing.
(D) To give an assignment for the next class.
41. (A) To correct spelling and grammar.
(B) To make smooth transitions between ideas.
(C) To add more specific details and examples.
(D) To improve overall effectiveness.
42. (A) Within the first week of class.
(B) Two weeks before the final due date.
(C) By the cud of the term.
(D) A week after the last class.
43. (A) They will develop a negative attitude toward long papers.
(B) They will become more interested in keeping diaries.
(C) They will make a habit of revising their papers.
(D)They will become inspired to write poetry.
44. (A) Automobile safety.
(B) Increasing fuel efficiency.
(C) California's pollution laws..
(D) Electric-powered cars.
45. (A) They are cheaper.
(B) They do not pollute as much.
(C) They are simpler to drive.
(D) They are faster.
46. (A) It is not comfortable.
(B) It is difficult to steer.
(C) It cannot go long distances without recharging.
(D) Its engine easily overheats.
47. (A) To create space for a temporary exhibit.
(B) To reflect changes in scientific theory.
(C) To make use of the latest technology.
(D) To display newly acquired fossils.
48. (A) It had aggressive tendencies.
(B) It is connected to modern birds.
(C) It was the 1argest dinosaur.
(D) Its tail usually dragged oil the ground.
49. (A) They are from the same time period.
(B) They share similar physical traits.
(C) They ate only water plants.
(D)They lived in a hot, humid climate.
50. (A) According to their size.
(B) According to the region of the world they lived in.
(C) According to what they ate.
(D) According to when they lived.
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98年1月TOFEL托福语法试题
B
1. Between 1870 and 1 890 the total population of tile United States---.
(A) that doubled
(B) doubled
(C) It doubled
(D) when doubled
2. Intended to display the work of twentieth-century artists, in 1929.
(A) the opening of the Museum of Modern Art
(B) so the Museum of Modern Art opened
(C) why tile Museum of Modern Art opened
(D) the Museum of Modern Art opened
3. The Earth has a tremendous amount of water, but--- in the ocean..
(A) almost all of it is
(B) it is almost all of
(C) is of it almost all
(D) all is of it almost
4. --- have sense organs in a canal known as the lateral line, which allows them to respond to changes in water pressure caused by nearby motion.
(A) That tile fish
(B) Fish
(C) When fish
(D) If tile fish
5. Direct information on the chemical composition of the Moon became available in 1969 --- of the first Apollo mission to land on the Moon.
(A) with tile return
(B) returning
(C) when returned
(D) and the return
6. --- completely harmless to the environment is very difficult and usually economically unsound.
(A) Cleaning products that
(B) Cleaning products are
(C) Cleaning products are made
(D) Making a cleaning product
7. One of Ulysses S. Grant's first acts as President of the United States was to name tile Seneca chief Donehogawa --- of Indian Affairs.
(A) as was Commissioner
(B) Commissioner
(C) was Commissioner
(D) him Commissioner
8. One of the most ancient arts,--- in different parts of the world.
(A) for weaving to develop independently
(B) the independent development of weaving
(C) weaving, to develop independently
(D) weaving developed independently
9. --- classified as a carnivore, the North American grizzly bear cats berries and even grass.
(A) Just as
(B) Because of
(C) Although
(D) Either
10. Not only --- much bigger than any planet, but unlike the planets, it consists completely of gaseous material.
(A) the Sun is
(B) the Sun, which is
(C) is the Sun
(D) that the Sun
11. Colloquialisms,---of informal spoken language, are often considered inappropriate for more formal written language.
(A) expression which are characteristic
(B) which characteristic expressions
(C) are expressions characteristic
(D) expressions can be characteristic
12. Her work in genetics won United States scientist Barbara McClintock ----- in 1983.
(A) was the Nobel Prize
(B) the Nobel Prize was
(C) the Nobel Prize
(D) for the Nobel Prize
13. --- usually thought to end in northern New Mexico, the Rocky Mountains really extend southward to the frontier of Mexico.
(A) Despite
(B) To be
(C) While
(D) However
14. The novelist Edith Wharton considered the Writer Henry James
(A) that a strong influence on her work
(B) as strong influence on her work
(C) a strong influence on her work
(D) was a strong influence on her work
15. Ironically, the poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow claimed he never liked teaching, although a professor at Harvard University and taught for many years.
(A) becoming
(B) he became
(C) had lie become
(D) for him to become
16. The hind leg of the gerbil are particularly well adapted to leaping across its
A B C D
desert habitat.
17. Educator Helen Magill White was. the first American woman to have earn the
A B C
Ph.D. degree.
D
18. The changes that occur in the life cycle of a butterfly or moth are probable the
A B C
most striking examples of metamorphosis.
D
19. In the nineteenth century, North American locomotives ran on hardwood fuel,
A B C
Which was inexpensive and plentiful in the time.
D
20. Much theories have been developed concerning how people learn about
A B C
cultures from the myths and legends passed down from one generation to
another.
D
21. Several comet are discovered each year, but very few of them are bright
A B C
enough to be seen without the aid or magnification.
D
22. Charles Monroe Schulz's comic strip "Peanuts" is translated into 26 languages
A B
also has appeared in over 2,300 daily newspapers.
C D
23. In human beings the liver is the biggest glandular organ of his digestive system.
A B C D
24. Many scientists contributed to the development of television, whether no one
A B C D
person can be said to have invented it.
25. Northern Canada contains vast areas treeless of low vegetation known
A B C D
as tundra.
 
26. Gordon Parks composed wrote, and directed Martin, the classical ballet who
A B C
Examines the meaning of the life of Martin Luther King. Jr.
D
27. In 1965 Rodolfo Gonzales has estab1ished an organization called the Crusade
A B C
For Justice in Denver, Colorado.
D
28. Large, heavy draft horses were commonly used for labor farm in the United
A B C
States before the introduction of tractors.
D
29.Herads of migrating caribou, members of the deer family arc an important
B
economically resource to Inuits and other Native Americans.
C D
30. Some nineteenth-century advocates for the emancipation of women in the
A B
United States were also activity in the Underground Railroad, helping slaves to
C D
escape.
31. Feathers not only protect birds from injury and conserve body heat but also
A B
function in flight. courtship, camouflage, and sensory perceptive.
C D
32. The radio telescope, invented in 1932, has capabilities beyond far those of
A B C
optical telescopes in tracking signals from galaxies.
D
33. Rafting was an essential mean of transportation from prehistoric times to the
A B C D
nineteenth century.
D
34. Many fortification rank among the most functional and beautiful works of
A B C
architecture constructed in North America before the twentieth century.
D
35. Because her work was popular with European royally, Harriet Goodhue Hosmer
A B
became financial successful as a sculptor in the mid-eighteen hundreds.
C D
 
36. The actor James Earl Jones gained Broadway stardom in "The Great White
A B
hope" for his powerful portrayal of prizefighter.
C D
37. Despite fats and oils arc nutritionally important as energy sources, medical
A B C
research indicates that saturated fats may contribute to hardening of the arteries.
D
38. Large multicolored insects with four wings, dragonflies play a very important
A B
role in the ecosystem of humid area by controlling the population of mosquitoes.
C D
39. During early nineteenth-century Boston. the architect Charles Bulfinch, eager to
A B
make the city beautiful, sometimes provided free plans for people building homes.
C D
40. In 1889 Jane Addams, a social worker in Chicago, founded hull house,
an institution devoted to the improvement of community life in poor
A B C
neighborhood.
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98年1月托福阅读试题
C

Question 1-9
Although social changes in the United States were being wrought throughout most of the nineteenth-century,, public awareness of the changes increased to new levels in the 1890's. The acute, growing public awareness of the social changes that had been taking place for some time was tied to tremendous growth in popular journalism in the late nineteenth century, including growth in quantity and circulation of both magazines and newspapers. These developments, in addition to the continued growth of cities, were significant factors in the transformation of society from one characterized by relatively isolated self-contained communities into an urban, industrial nation. The decade of the 1870's, for example, was a period in which the sheer number of newspapers doubled, and by 1880 the New York Graphic had published the first photographic reproduction in a newspaper, portending a dramatic rise in newspaper readership. Between 1882 and 1886 alone, the price of daily newspapers dropped from four cents a copy to one cent, made possible in part by a great increase in demand. Further more, the introduction in 1890 of the first successful linotype machine promised even further growth. In 1872 only two daily newspapers could claim a circulation of over 100,000,but by 1892 seven more newspapers exceeded that figure. A world beyond the immediate community was rapidly becoming visible.
But it was not newspapers alone that were bringing the new awareness to people In the United States in the late nineteenth century. Magazines as they are known today began publication around 1882, and, in fact, the circulation of weekly magazines exceeded that of newspapers in the period which followed. By 1892, for example, the circulation of the Ladies' Home Journal had reached an astounding 700,000. An increase in book readership also played a significant part in this general trend. For example, Edward Bellamy's utopian novel, Looking Backward, sold over a million copies in 1888, giving rise to the growth of organizations dedicated to the realization of Bellamy's vision of the future. The printed word, unquestionably. was intruding on the insulation that had characterized United Slates society in an earlier period.
1. The word "acute" in line 3 is closest in meaning to
(A) useful
(B) intense
(C) genuine
(D)controversial
 
2. According to the passage, the expansion of popular journalism
was linked to
(A) changes in the distribution system
(B) a larger supply of paper
(C) an increase in people's awareness of social changes
( D) greater numbers of journalists
3 According to the passage , the New York Graphic's inclusion of photographs contributed to
(A) the closing of newspapers that did not use photographs
(B) newspapers becoming more expensive
(C) an increase in the number of people reading newspapers
(D) a reduction in the cost of advertising
4. Why was there a drop in the price of daily newspapers between 1882 and 1886 ?
(A) There was a rise in demand.
(B) Newspapers had fewer pages.
(C) Newspapers contained photographic reproductions.
(D) Magazines began to compete with newspapers.
5..The word "exceeded" in line 16 is closest in meaning to
(A) controlled
(B) surpassed
(C) affected
(D) equaled
 
6. What does the author mean by the statement " A world beyond the immediate community was rapidly becoming visible" in lilies 16-11 ?
(A) Photographs made newspapers more interesting.
(B) The United Slates exported newspapers to other countries.
(C) People were becoming increasingly aware of national and international issues.
(D) Communities remained isolated despite the growth of popular journalism
7. The word " that" in line 21 refers to
(A) century
(B) publication
(C) circulation
(D) period
8. The word "astounding" in line 22 is closest in meaning to
(A) surprising
(B) estimated
(C) encouraging
(D) sudden
9. Why does the author mention Edward Bellamy's novel Looking Backward?
(A) To illustrate how advanced the technology of printing had become
(B) To emphasize the influence of the printed word on a society undergoing rapid
change
(C) To document its prediction about the popularity of newspapers
(D) To demonstrate that hooks had replaced newspapers and magazines as the
leading source of information
Question 10-19
Glass is a remarkable substance made from the simplest raw materials. It can be colored or colorless, monochrome or polychrome, transparent, translucent, or opaque. It is lightweight impermeable to liquids, readily cleaned and reused , durable yet fragile, and often very beautiful Glass can be decorated in multiple ways and its optical properties are exceptional. In all its myriad forms – as table ware, containers, in architecture and design – glass represents a major achievement in the history of technological developments.
Since the Bronze Age about 3,000 B.C., glass lias been used for making various kinds of objects. It was first made from a mixture of silica, line and an alkali such as soda or potash, and these remained the basic ingredients of glass until the development of lead glass in the seventeenth century. When heated , the mixture becomes soft and malleable and can be formed by various techniques into a vast array of shapes and sizes. The homogeneous mass thus formed by melting then cools to create glass, but in contrast to most materials formed in this way (metals, for instance), glass lacks the crystalline structure normally associated with solids, and instead retains the random molecular structure of a liquid. In effect, as molten glass cools, it progressively stiffens until rigid, but does so without setting up a network of interlocking crystals customarily associated with that process. This is why glass shatters so easily when dealt a blow. Why glass deteriorates over time, especially when exposed to moisture, and why glassware must be slowly reheated and uniformly cooled after manufacture to release internal stresses Induced by uneven cooling.
Another unusual feature of glass is the manner in which its viscosity changes as it turns from a cold substance into a hot, ductile liquid. Unlike metals that flow or "freeze" at specific temperatures glass progressively softens as the temperature rises, going through varying stages of malleability until it flows like a thick syrup. Each stage of malleability allows the glass to be manipulated into various forms, by different techniques, and if suddenly cooled the object retains the shape achieved at that point. Glass is thus amenable to a greater number of heat-forming techniques than most other materials.
10. Why does the author list the characteristics of glass in lines 1-5?
(A) To demonstrate how glass evolved
(B) To show the versatility of glass
(C) To explain glassmaking technology
(D) To explain the purpose of each component of glass
11. The word "durable"' in hue 3 is closest in meaning to
(A) lasting
(B) delicate
(C) heavy
(D) Plain
1 2. What does the author imply about the raw materials used to make glass?
(A) They were the same for centuries.
(B) They arc liquid
(C) They are transparent
(D) They are very heavy.
13. According to the passage, how is glass that has cooled and become rigid different from most other rigid substances?
(A) It has an interlocking crystal network.
(B) It has an unusually low melting temperature.
(C) It has varying physical properties.
(D) It has a random molecular structure.
14. The word "customarily" in line 13 is closest in meaning to
(A) naturally
(B) necessarily
(C) usually
(D) certainly
15. The words "exposed to" in line 19 are closest in meaning to
(A) hardened by
(B) chilled with
(C) subjected to
(D) deprived of
16. What must be done to release the internal stresses that build up in glass products during manufacture?
(A) the glass must be reheated and evenly cooled.
(B) the glass must be cooled quickly.
(C) The glass must be kept moist until cooled.
(D) The glass must be shaped to its desired form immediately
17. The word "induced" in line 21 is closest in meaning to
(A) joined
(B) missed
(C) caused
(D) lost
18. The word "it" in line 22 refers to
(A) feature
(B) glass
(C) manner
(D) viscosity
19. According to the passage. why can glass be more easily shaped into specific forms than can metals
(A)It resists breaking when heated
(B)It has better optical properties.
(C)It retains heat while its viscosity changes.
(D) It gradually becomes softer as its temperature rises.
Question 20-30
A great deal can be learned from the actual traces of ancient human locomotion: the footprints of early hominids. The best-known specimens are the remarkable tracks discovered at Lactoli, Tanzania, by Mary Leaky. These were left by small hominids around 3.6 to 3.75 million years ago, according to potassium – argon dates of the volcanic rocks above and below this level. These hominids walked across a stretch of moist volcanic ash, which was subsequently turned to mud by rain, and which then set like concrete.
Examination of he shape of the prints revealed to Mary Leakey that the feet had a raised arch, a rounded heel, a pronounced ball, and a big toe that pointed forward. These features, together with the weight-bearing pressure patterns, resembled the prints of upright-walking modern humans. The pressures exerted along the foot, together with the length of stride, which averaged 87 centimeters, indicated that the hominids had been walking slowly. In short, all the detectable morphological features implied that the feet that left the footprints were very little different from those of contemporary humans.
A detailed study has been made of the prints using photogrammetry, a technique for obtaining measurements through photographs, which created a drawing showing all the curves and contours of the prints. The result emphasized that there were at least seven points of similarity with modern bipedal prints, such as the depth of the heel impression, and the deep imprint of the big toe. M Day and E. Wickens also took stereophotographs of the Lactoli prints and compared them with modern prints make by men and women in similar soil conditions. Once again, the results furnished possible evidence of bipedalism. Footprints thus provide us not merely with rare impressions of the soft tissue of early hominids, but also with evidence of upright waling that in many ways is clearer than can be obtained from the analysis of bones.
The study of fossil footprints is not restricted to examples from such remote periods. Hundreds of prints are known, for example, in French caves dating from the end of the last ices age, approximately 10,000 years ago. Research by Leon Pales, using detailed silicon resin molds of footprints mostly made by bare feet, has provided information about this period.
20. What does the passage mainly discuss?
(A)The analysis of footprint fossils
(B)Accurate dating of hominid remains
(C) the career of Mary Leakey
(D)Behavioral patterns of early humans
21. The word "remarkable" in line 2 is closest in meaning to
(A) extraordinary
(B) enormous
(C) various
(D) orderly
22.The age of the Laetoli footprints was estimated by
(A) testing the fossilized bones of the hominids
(B) studying the shape of the footprints
(C) analyzing nearly rock layers
(D) comparison with footprints from other locations
23.It can be inferred that the footprints in volcanic ash at Laetoli were well preserved because
(A) they were buried by a second volcanic eruption
(B) the ash contained potassium anti argon
(C) the ash was still warm from the volcanic cruptions
(D) suitable conditions caused the ash 10 harden
24. Which or the following is NOT mentioned as a characteristic of the feet in Mary Leakey's fossil find?
(A)The shape or the heel
(B)The number of toes
(C)A raised arch
(D) A pronounced ball
25. The word "exerted" in line 11 is closest in meaning to
(A) influenced
(B) applied
(C) returned
(D) lessened
26. The figure of 87 centimeters mentioned in line 1 2 refers to the size of the
(A) objects carried by the hominids
(B) steps taken by the hominids
(C) hominids bodies
(D) hominids feet
27. Why does the author mention the "heel impression" in line 19?
(A) To emphasize the size of the hominids foot
(B) To speculate on a possible injury the hominid had suffered
(C) To give an example of similarity to modern human footprints
(D) To indicate the weight of early hominids
28.The word "restricted" in line 26 is closest in meaning to
(A) limited
(B) improved
(C) continued
(D) succeeded
29.What can be inferred about the footprints found in French caves mentioned in the last paragraph?
(A)They show more detail than the Laetoli prints.
(B)They are of more recent origin than the Laetoli prints.
(C)They are not as informative as the Laetoli prints.
(D)They are more difficult to study than the Laetoli prints
30.Which of the following terms is defined in the passage?
(A) "hominids" (line 3)
(B) "arch" (line 9)
(C) "photogrammetry" (line 16)
(D) "silicon resin molds"(line 29)

Questions 31-40
The livelihood of each species in the vast and intricate assemblage of living things depends on the existences of other organisms. This interdependence is sometimes subtle, sometimes obvious. Perhaps the most straight forward dependence of one species on another occurs with parasites, organisms that live on or in other living things and derive nutrients directly from them. The parasitic way of life is widespread. A multitude of microorganisms( including viruses and bacteria) and an army of invertebrates – or creatures lacking a spinal column (including crustaceans, insects, and many different types of worms ) –make their livings directly at the expense of other creatures. In the face of this onslaught, living things have evolved a variety of defense mechanisms for protecting their bodies from invasion by other organisms.
Certain fungi and even some kinds of bacteria secrete substances known as antibiotics into their external environment. These substances are capable of killing or inhibiting the growth of various kinds of bacteria that also occupy the area, thereby eliminating or reducing the competition for nutrients. The same principle is used in defense against invaders in other groups of organisms. For example, when attacked by disease-causing fungi or bacteria, many kinds of plants produce chemicals that help to ward off the invaders.
Members of the animal kingdom have developed a variety of defense mechanisms for dealing with parasites. Although these mechanisms vary considerably, all major
groups of animals are capable of detecting and reacting to the presence of "foreign" cells. In fact, throughout the animal kingdom, from sponges to certain types of worms, shellfish, and all vertebrates (creatures possessing a spinal column), there is evidence that transplants of cells or fragments of tissues into an animal are accepted only if they come from genetically compatible or closely related individuals.
The ability to distinguish between "self" and "nonself", while present in all animals, is most efficient among vertebrates, which have developed an immune system as their defense mechanism. The immune system recognizes and takes action against foreign invaders and transplanted tissues that are treated as foreign cells.
31. What does the passage mainly discuss?
(A) how parasites reproduce
(B) how organisms react to invaders
(C) how antibiotics work to cure disease
(D) how the immune systems of vertebrates developed
32. The word "intricate" iii line 1 is closest in meaning to
(A) difficult
(B) widespread
(C) critical
(D) complex
33. The expression "an army" in line 6 is closest in meaning to
(A) an illness
(B) an attack
(C) a large number
(D) a distinct type
34. The expression "an army in line 6 is closest in meaning to
(A) an illness
(B) an attack
(C) a large number
(D) a distinct type
35. According to the passage, some organisms produce antibiotics in order to
(A) prevent disease in humans
(B) aid digestion
(C) fight off other organisms
(D) create new types of nutrients
35.The word "vary" in line 19 is closest in meaning to
(A) differ
(B) endure
(C) balance
(D) contribute
36. The word "they" in line 23 refers to
(A) sponges, worms and shellfish
(B) vertebrates
(C) individuals
(D) transplants
37. According to the passage, a transplant of tissue between genetically incompatible organisms will result in the transplanted tissue
(A) becoming a parasite
(B) being treated as an invader
(C) altering its genetic makeup
(D) developing a new immune system
38. According to the passage, the ability to distinguish between "self" and "nonself" enables vertebrates to
(A) accept transplanted cells
(B) detect and react to invasion
(C) weaken their immune system
(D) get rid of antibiotics
39. All of the following ate defined in the passage EXCEPT
(A) parasites(line 4)
(B) invertebrates(line7)
(C) nutrients (line14)
(D) vertebrates(line 22)
40. The paragraph following the passage most probably discusses
(A) how the immune system in vertebrates fights off foreign cells
(B) different types of bacteria and lung
(C) how vertebrates and invertebrates differ
(D) examples of different groups of organisms
 
Question 41-50
The development of jazz can be seen as part of the larger continuum of American popular music, especially dance music. In the twenties, jazz became the hottest new thing in dance music, much as ragtime had at the turn of the century, and as would rhythm and blues in the fifties, rock in the fifties, and disco in the seventies.
But two characteristics distinguish jazz from other dance music. The first is improvisation, the changing of a musical phrase according to the player's inspiration. Like all artists, jazz musicians strive for an individual style, and the improvise or paraphrased is a jazz musician's main opportunity to display his or her individuality. In early jazz, musicians often improvised melodies collectively, thus creating a kind of polyphony. There was little soloing as such, although some New Orleans players, particularly cornet player Buddy Bolden, achieved local fame for their ability to improvise a solo. Later the idea of the chorus-long or multichorus solo took hold. Louis Armstrong's instrumental brilliance, demonstrated through extended solos, was a major influence in this development.
Even in the early twenties, however, some jazz bands had featured soloists. Similarly, show orchestras and carnival bands often included one or two such "get-off" musicians. Unimproved, completely structured jazz does exist, but the ability of the best jazz musicians to create music of great cohesion and beauty during performance has been a hallmark of the music and its major source of inspiration and change.
The second distinguishing characteristic of jazz is a rhythmic drive that was initially called "hot" and later "swing". In playing hot , a musician consciously departs from strict meter to create a relaxed sense of phrasing that also emphasizes the underlying rhythms.("Rough" tone and use of moderate vibrato also contributed to a hot sound .) Not all jazz is hot, however, many early bands played unadorned published arrangements of popular songs. Still, the proclivity to play hot distinguished the jazz musician from other instrumentalists.

41. The passage answers which of the following questions?
(A) which early jazz musicians most Influenced rhythm and blues music?
(B) What are the differences between jazz and other forms of music?
(C) Why Is dancing closely related to popular music in the United States?
(D) What Instruments comprised a typical jazz band of the 1920's?
42. Which of the following preceded jazz as a popular music for dancing?
(A) Disco
(B) Rock
(C) Rhythm and blues
(D)Ragtime
43. According to the passage, jazz musicians are able to demonstrate their individual artistry mainly by?
(A) creating musical variations while performing
(B) preparing musical arrangements
(C) reading music with great skill
(D) being able to play all types of popular music
44. Which of the following was the function of "get-off" musicians (line 16)?
(A) Assist the other band members in packing up after a performance
(B) Teach dance routines created for new music
(C) Lead the band
(D) Provide solo performances in a band or orchestra
45. The word "cohesion" in line 18 is closest in meaning to
(A) sorrow
(B) fame
(C) unity
(D) vibration
46. The word "initially" in line 20 is closest in meaning to
(A) at first
(B) shortly
(C) alphabetically
(D) in fact
47. The word "consciously" in line 21 is closest in meaning to
(A) carelessly
(B) easily
(C) periodically
(D) purposely
48. The word "unadorned" in line 24 is closest in meaning to
(A) lovely
(B) plain
(C) disorganized
(D) inexpensive
49. Which of the following terms is defined in the passage?
(A) "improvisation" (line 6)
(B) "polyphony" (line 10)
(C) "cornet player"(line 11)
(D) "multichorus"(line 12)
50. The topic of the passage is developed primarily by means of
(A) dividing the discussion into two major areas
(B) presenting contrasting points of view
(C) providing biographies of famous musician
(D) describing historical events in sequence
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98年5月托福听力试题
1. The view is spectacular. Could you take a picture of me with the mountains in the background?
I'm afraid I just ran out of film
What does the woman mean? (C)

2. Excuse me, were you ready to order now?
I'll be with you in just minute.
What does the man mean? (B)

3. I think I forgot my umbrella. Did you notice that it was raining outside?
Yeah. It is. And I just realize that I left my car window open.
What will the man probably do next? (C)

4. How does your daughter like her new school?
Fine. She seems to have made new friends in no time.
What can be inferred about the man's daughter? (C)

5. There is an article here in this magazine you might interesting. It's about buying running shoes.
If it's not chemistry and it's not on the final exam, I can't read it now.
What is the man probably doing? (B)

6. You are washing your car even on vacation. It makes me feel guilty.
You shouldn't. It's just that I have nothing better to do at the moment.
What does the woman imply? (C)

7. My doctor told me I needed to go for some expensive treatment for my injured knee.
Are you sure? Maybe you need a second opinion.
What does the woman suggest the man do? (C)

8. Hello, could me fit me in for an appointment today? I need a stylist who's good at cutting curly hair.
Judy is good at that. She is the owner. How about the noon?
What will the woman probably do? (B)

9. There is nothing I like more than a good mystery novel when I've got some spare time.
I like to read too. But I prefer non-fiction: history, social commentary and stuff like that.
What does the man imply? (C)

10. I'm no expert. But that noise in your refrigerator doesn't sound good.
Maybe you should call and have it checked out.
You are right. And I suppose I've put it off long enough.
What will the woman probably do? (A)

11. What's up with Donald? I've never seen him so happy.
His supervisor gave performance evaluations this morning.
What can be inferred about Donald? (A)

12. It's not going to snow again tomorrow, is it? It was supposed to be warm all week.
Well, if you go by the forecast that I heard, you shouldn't put your coat and hat away quite yet.
What does the woman imply? (B)

13. I don't know how it happened. But I got two different appointments at lunch tomorrow. I'm supposed to meet both David and Jim.
Why don't you make one of them a breakfast meeting?
What does the woman suggest the man do? (B)

14. It's all right to wear jeans for a class presentation, isn't it?
That's what I'm wearing. But if we wear jackets too, maybe we won't look so casual.
What does the man imply? (C)

15. This spring weather is perfect for playing tennis.
Unfortunately the only time I get to enjoy it is when I'm walking to class or to the library.
What does the man imply? (D)

16. Boy, how quickly technology changes. So many people have a computer in their home nowadays.
I know. I feel so behind the time.
What can be inferred about the woman? (D)

17. Joan and her friend went to new restaurant last night and said that it served the best food they ever had.
That's quite a recommendation. Maybe we should see for ourselves.
What will the speakers probably do? (D)

18. I hear you have a brother who went to school here too. Have I ever seen him?
Well, he graduated last year. But you would never have guessed that we were brothers.
What does the man imply? (D)

19. I'm thinking of heading to the gym before going to dinner. Care to join me?
If you don't mind waiting while I go get my gym bag..
What does the man mean? (B)

20. I'm in a terrible mood. My boss didn't like the report I wrote.
Well, don't take it out on me.
What does the man mean? (A)

21. So I guess it's been a year now since your last checkup. Have you had any health problems?
None to speak of.
What does the woman mean? (B)

22. Have you ordered your graduation announcements?
No, I had Don do it for me.
What does the woman say about the graduation announcements? (D)

23. I hear you got a big parking ticket.
Yeah. I never realized Lot 3 was only for faculty.
What does the man imply? (C)

24. I went through a whole box of paper and a printer ribbon just trying to get my resume right.
It'll be worth it. You know just to make a good impression.
What can be inferred from the conversation? (B)

25. So you weren't happy with the way the newspaper covered the rally protesting the rising tuition fees?
No. The article underestimated the number of students who were there and I don't think it explained our point of view very well.
What can be inferred about the man? (A)

26. When are you ever going to finish this report? You've been working on it for three months.
Only two and half. But it does seem longer.
What does the woman say about the report? (D)

27. I've been meaning to get my eyes checked. I just haven't gotten around to it yet.
Why don't you call for an appointment right away? Once on your calendar you will get it done. What does the man suggest the woman do? (B)

28. Hey, Lisa. Has Professor Smith returned my call yet?
I just got in a little while ago myself.
What does Lisa imply? (C)

29. I got an invitation to a financial planning seminar. And I don't want to go alone.
Count me in. I need all the help I can get managing my money.
What will the woman probably do? (B)

30. I hope you are not too put out with me for stopping by Fred's on the way over here. I had to pick up an assignment.
Well, that's not a big deal. But you might at least phone if you know you are going to keep someone waiting.
What does the woman mean? (C)

PART B
31-34 Conversation at a registrar's office at a university.
* I want to register for this mathematics course.
* I'm sorry registration has closed.
* Closed? The clerk told me I could come back and register any time during the first week of classes.
* Well, that's not possible. The computer's official student account has already been sent to the state. And that's what our budget is based on. Who told you that anyway?
* Some woman here when I tried to register three weeks ago. She said I just had to pay a late fee.
* She must have been a temporary worker. They don't have much training. Why didn't you register then?
* She said I couldn't until I had my birth certificate. Here it is.
* Your birth certificate?
* Well, I'm a new part-time student. So she ask for identification. I don't drive so I don't have a driver's license.
* Huh. That's no reason to demand a birth certificate. We only need to establish residency: a phone bill with your name and address on it would've been fine.
* Really? Only prove of my address?
* Yes. I'm afraid she gave you the wrong information. Still you'll have to wait and take your math's class next semester.
* But that's on it fair.
* Well, I sympathize with your problem, but frankly, I don't think there is anything anyone can do for you. You were trapped in the system. If you want to you can talk to the director. She will hilp you if she can.
* Great.
* Don't get your hopes up.

31. What problem does the woman have? (B)
32. Why does the woman have to go to the office two times? (D)
33. According to the man, what does the woman need to show the evidence of? (B)
34. Why does the man imply when he tells the woman "not to get her hopes up"? (A)

35-38 Conversation between two students doing chemistry experiment.
* Hi, Mary. Do you want to start writing a lab report after we finish this experiment?
* I can't. In fact I need to finish early because I'm going over to the psychology department to talk to Professor Smith about a job opening.
* You mean a job on campus?
* Yeah. And it sounds pretty interesting. It involves helping with your study on learning style. You know, about how some people learn best by sight, while others learn best by hearing or touch.
* Yeah. I know that's an area of expertise.
* Right. Anyway for her study she's taking some high school students who aren't doing very well in their classes and testing them to find out what their learning styles are. Then tutors, people like me, will work with them presenting material to them in their particular learning style.
* Hey. That is interesting. Now will you mostly do the testing or the tutoring?
* Both I hope. I want to be involved from start to finish.
* Are you getting paid for this?
* I'm sure we'll get something though, probably not much. Anyway it doesn't matter to me, I just want to have some hands-on experience.
* Yeah. And it'll be nice to help those high school students too.
* That's what I thought when I saw the ad. You know you could do it too. You don't have to be in her classes to work on the study.
* Really? Do you have any idea what the schedule is like?
* Late afternoon then evening for tutoring I think. After all the kids are in regular classes until three thirty.
* Actually that's perfect for me.
* Then come along. We will save the lab report for later. But we'd better make sure we do a good job on our experiment first.
* Yeah. First thing's first.
35. What are the speakers mainly discussing? (D)
36. Why is the woman interested in working with Professor Smith? (B)
37. What will the college students do for the high school students? (C)
38. What will the speakers probably do next? (D)

PART C
39 to 42 A museum guide talking about native American pottery.
Hello, I'll be your tour guide today here at the art museum so I'd like to welcome you to this month's exhibit of native American pottery. We'll begin our tour in a few minutes. But first I'm going to tell you something about the way this pottery was created. Pottery was made all over ancient North America by many different groups of people. One of the earliest of these ancient American cultures was the Hohokam people. They lived in what is now Arizona from about 300 BC to AD 1500. And it's their pottery that you will be looking at today. All of the pottery was made from clay. Some objects were mug, bowls and ladies for drinking and eating. You will also see finger rings and animal-shaped incense burners which we believe were probably used in special ritual. The Hohokam formed their pottery vessels from coils of clay. Then shaped them with special tools to create very thin sides on the vessels. Afterwards they painted the pottery with red design. Actually many of the pieces here have designs right on them that show how the pottery was used. Now I hope you'll enjoy the beauty and the uniqueness of the Hohokam pottery and that will give you some interesting insights about the people who created it. Please feel free to ask me any questions and thank you for joining us today.

39. What does the speaker mainly discuss? (C)
40. What is the purpose of the talk? (B)
41. What did the Hohokam do with their pottery? (B)
42. What does the speaker say about the way the hohokam pottery was made? (A)

43 to 46 A talk in an American history class.
I'm going to introduce two current points of view about the motivation for writing the United States Constitution back in 1787. The first one is called the idealist view. The idealists basically believe that the writers of the Constitution were motivated by ideas. Which ideas? The ideas of the revolutionary war, such as liberty and democracy. The idealists remind that the young country had a lot of problems: an economic depression, a large war debts, lawlessness and trade barriers between the states. They argue that the representatives needed to control these problems in order for the United States to survive. The other point of view is the economic view. The economic view is that the writers of the Constitution were concerned about their own financial interests. According to them most people were living wealth for the wealthiest people were afraid of losing their money. The writers wanted a strong central government that would promote trade protect private property and perhaps most of all collect taxes to pay off the United States' large war debts. Because a number of those who wrote the constitution had loaned money to the government during the revolution. Which view is correct? Well historians who wrote during the calm and prosperous 1950s found reasons to believe the idealist view. Those who wrote during the trouble of 1960s found support for the economic view point. I'd say that neither view is complete, both the idealist and the economic perspective contribute a part to the whole picture.

43. What is the talk mainly about? (D)
44. According to the economic view, who benefited the most from the new Constitution? (B)
45. What can be inferred about the views of the historians ? (C)

46 to 50 Part of a speech on birds by a biologist.
Many egg-laying animals merely lay their eggs and leave. Turtles for instance, the eggs hatch on their own. The current theory about birds is that the earliest birds did just that when they were cold-blooded creatures living in warm places. However when they became warm-blooded creatures living in cold places they had to remain on the eggs to keep them warm. The process we call incubation. For this they needed a place a nest. Very likely the first nests were just primitive depressions scrape into the ground. Even now many species still lay eggs in this sort of crude nests. In fact every spring a mother killdeer lays her in some pebbles along the edge of the parking lot just outside this building. Primitive nests on the ground were fine for some birds but others began to elevate their nests in branches perhaps to avoid predators. These early elevated nests were probably loose platforms of sticks and twigs the types still built by ospreys and mostarians today. The latest evolvement in nest the most recent version, so to speak, is the cup-shaped nest. This is the one we regard today as the typical bird's nest, you know, like a robin's nest.

46. What is the main topic of the talk? (C)
47. What evolutionary change in birds led to nest building? (B)
48. According to the speaker, where were the first bird's nests located? A)
49. What is the killdeer's nest in parking lot an example of? (A)
50. According to the speaker, what is a possible reason that birds began to build nests in trees?
A
1. (A) She doesn't want to waste her film.
(B) She already took a picture of the mountains.
(C) She doesn't have any more film.
(D) She doesn't know how to use the camera.
2. (A) Their food will arrive shortly.
(B) He'll take their order soon
(C) He'll ready to take their order
(D) They'll have to wait for a table
3. (A) Borrow the woman's car keys.
(B) She doesn't like her school
(C) She has adapted easily to her new school
(D) She spends most of her free time at school.
4. (A) She doesn't spend much lime with her friends.
(B) She doesn't like her school.
(C) She has adapted 'easily to her new school.
(D) She spends most of her free time at school.
5. (A) Writing an article.
(B) Studying for a chemistry test.
(C) Shopping for shoes.
(D) Reading a magazine.
6. (A) She's watching the cars go by.
(B) The man should feel well soon.
(C) She prefers to keep busy.
(D) The man works harder than she does.
7. (A) Change his diet.
(B) Take a different kind of medicine.
(C) Ask another doctor about the prob1em.
(D) Do special knee exercises.
8.(A) Ask a friend for the name of a hair stylist.
(B) Get her hair cut at 12:00.
(C)Make an appointment with someone else.
(D)Call another hair salon.
 
9.(A) He doesn't have time to read.
(B) He has no reading preferences.
(C) He doesn't read the same kinds of books as the woman.
(D) He likes to write essays on social topics.
10.(A) Call a repair person soon.
(B) Ask the man to fix her refrigerator.
(C) Find a book on how to make repairs.
(D) Wait to see if the problem disappears.
11.(A) He received a good evaluation.
(B)He had a fight with his boss.
(C)He's looking forward to meeting with his supervisor.
(D)He's always in a good mood.
12. (A) She needs a new hat and gloves.
(B) The weather will continue to be cold.
(C) She doesn't know what the weather will be like tomorrow.
(D) She doesn't know where the man put his winter clothes.
13. (A) Cancel his appointments.
(B) Reschedule one of his appointments.
(C) Prepare for the meeting at breakfast.
(D) Keep both meetings short.
14.(A) The woman shouldn't wear jeans.
(B) They shouldn't dress too much alike.
(C) They shouldn't dress too informally.
(D) The man is looking for a new jacket.'
15. (A) He doesn't spend enough lime studying.
(B)He doesn't think the weather is nice."
(C) He'd prefer not to walk to class.
(D) He has little time for outdoor activities.
16 .(A) She has gotten behind in her work.
(B) Her computer is the latest model
(C) She keeps her computer at home
(D) She doesn't have a computer.
17.(A) Ask Joan to recommend mend a good restaurant.
(B) Eat dinner at Joan's house.
(C) Ask their friends about the restaurant.
(D) Go to the restaurant.
18.(A) His brother is younger than he is.
(B) He and his brother went to different schools.
(C) He doesn't like his brother.
(D) He and his brother are different.
19.(A) He has already been to the gym.
(B) He wants to go with the woman.
(C) His gym bag is the gym.
(D) He'd rather go after dinner.
20.(A) The woman shouldn't make him feel bad.
(B)The woman should help him write a report.
(C)He doesn't want to take the woman out.
(D)He feels responsible for the woman's mood.
21.(A) She'd rather not discuss her problems.
(B)She has been healthy.
(C)It's hard for her to explain her problems.
(D)She's sorry she didn't come back sooner.
22. (A) She only wanted four of them.
(B) She put them in alphabetical order.
(C) Don sells them.
(D) Don placed the order for them.
23. (A) He's a member of the faculty.
(B) His parking permit expired.
(C) He parked in the wrong place by mistake.
(D) He has never parked In Lot 3.
24. (A) The man's resume is very short.
(B) The man has made many revisions to his resume.
(C) The woman is' not impressed by the man's resume.
(D) The printer is not working properly.
25. (A) He's opposed to the tuition increase.
(B) He wasn't able to attend the protest rally.
(C) He works for the student newspaper.
(D) He rarely reads the newspaper.
26.(A) It's the longest report she's ever written.
(B) She's only halfway done with it.
(C) She'll finish it in two weeks.
(D) She has spent less time on it than the man thinks.
27. (A) Make a list of what she needs to do.
(B) Schedule an eye exam without delay.
(C) Order an appointment book.
(D) Get over her fear of eye doctors.
28. (A) Professor Smith hasn't arrived yet.
(B) She's sorry she's late.
(C) She doesn't know if anyone called.
(D) She'll call Professor Smith in a few minutes.
29. (A) Count her money.
(B) Go to the seminar with the man.
(C) Help the man learn to manage his money.
(D) Pay for the seminar.
30. (A) She never keeps other people waiting.
(B) She wanted the man to help her with her assignment.
(C) She's upset that the man didn't tell her he'd be late.
(D) She's glad that the man phoned her.
31. (A) She 'doesn't Want to pay the late fee.
(B) She was given incorrect information.
(C) She can't afford to pay her tuition.
(D) She didn't pass her mathematics class last semester.
32. (A) The director couldn't give her an appointment right away.
(B) The office was closed the first time she went.
(C) The computer were out of service the first time she was there.
(D) She did not have acceptable identification with her on her first visit.
33. (A) Her prior schooling.
(B) Her residence.
(C) Her age.
(D) Her driving record.
34. (A) The director probably isn't able to make an exception.
(B) The director probably won't see her.
(C) The director usually isn't very helpful.
(D) Part-time students aren't the director's responsibility.
35. (A) A chemistry assignment,
(B) A study that their chemistry professor did.
(C) A class that the woman is taking.
(D) A job possibility.
36. (A) She wants to quit her job in the chemistry lab.
(B) She wants to get practical experience.
(C) She's interested in becoming a psychology major,.
(D) She wants to earn extra money.
37. (A) Employ them as lab assistants.
(B) Teach classes at their high school.
(C) Help them with their studies.
(D) Pay them for participating in the study.
38. (A) Write their lab reports.
(B) Find out Professor Smith's schedule.
(C) Interview some high school students.
(D) Finish their chemistry experiment.
39. (A) How the museum preserves Native American artifacts.
(B) The rituals of the Hohokam people.
(C) Methods used by the Hohokam for creating pottery.
(D) Artistic designs of Native American pottery.
40. (A) To introduce a speaker to a group.
(B) To provide background information for a special exhibit.
(C) To describe an upcoming video presentation.
(D) To introduce a lecture series.
41.(A) They sold it to art collectors.
(B) They used it for cooking and storage.
(C) They displayed it for decoration.
(D) They used it to display new tools.
42. (A) Special tools were used to shape the clay.
(B) It was created on pottery wheels.
(C) The clay was placed in molds.
(D) Each person was responsible for a particular part of the process.
43.(A) The problems caused by the Revolutionary War.
(B) How some people became rich in the late 1700's.
(C) The importance of providing for a tax system in the Constitution.
(D) Motives for creating the United States Constitution.
44. (A) Tax collectors.
(B) The wealthy.
(C) Soldiers.
(D) State officials.
45.(A) They are not influenced by government policy.
(B) They are opinions that have no basis in fact.
(C) They are affected by the conditions of the time in which they are written.
(D) They would be more accurate if historians followed one ideology.
46. (A) How birds learn to build nests.
(B) Why birds lay eggs.
(C) How birds' nests have evolved
(D) Why some birds' nests are considered primitive.
47. (A) Their flying ability improved greatly.
(B) They became warm-blooded.
(C) They began to lay eggs.
(D) They changed their migration patterns.
48. (A) On the ground.
(B) In cold places.
(C) On the highest branches of trees
(D) Inside tree trunks.
49. (A) A primitive type of nest.
(B) An elevated nest.
(C) A typical cup-shaped nest.
(D) A nest of twigs and branches.
50. (A) To avoid predators.
(B) To expose tile eggs to stronger sunlight.
(C) To have a better view of predators.
(D)To save labor.
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