Passage Two
' y, e/ q# |3 k5 F, E Y% z1 U I live in a small village in the country. My wife and I run the village shop. We have a very peaceful life. "Boring ", some might say. But we love it. We know all the people in the village and have plenty of time to stop and chat. I have plenty of time for my hobbies too, gardening, fishing, and walking in the countryside. I love the outdoor life. It wasn’t always like this though. I used to have a really stress job, working till late in the office every evening and often bringing work home at the weekend. The advertising world is very competitive and when I look back, I can’t imagine how I stayed it. I had no private life at all, no time for the really important things in life. Because of the pressure of the job I used to smoke and drink too much. The crisis came when my wife left me .She complained that she never saw me and I had no time for family life. This made me realize what was really important to me. I talked things through with her and decided to get back together again and started a new and better life together. I gave up tobacco and alcohol, and searched for new hobbies. Now I am afraid looking back since the past life seemed a horrible dream. & I. y4 U) K4 F4 \$ t9 T
14. What did the speaker use to do for a living?
: _9 `0 {1 _! D 15. What do we know about the speaker’s life in the past? ' |) i, B* ?/ {, i( u
16. What made the speaker change his life style?
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Questions 14 to 16 are based on the passage you have just heard. 7 d! S) `) `: _( s6 A v. {
14. A) He ran a village shop. C) He worked in an advertising agency. ) j$ E5 C1 s! t" f2 L% ^
B) He worked on a farm. D) He was a gardener. ; u, H- z0 X% a% r! }
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15. A) It was stressful. C) It was peaceful. 8 `; f5 \# t @) l8 S
B) It was colorful. D) It was boring. 9 @0 q3 j7 N6 |9 t; R
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16. A) His desire to start Iris own business. C) The decline in his health. 5 M! X- z3 t n/ v- v
B) The crisis in his family life. D) His dream of living in the countryside.
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7 H7 X8 k5 s/ \5 l, L Passage Three
! S) k# ]% v; Z "Where is the university" is the question many visitors to Cambridge asked, but no one could point them in any one direction because there is no campus. The university consists of thirty-one self-governing colleges. It has lecture halls, libraries, laboratories, museums and offices throughout the city. Individual colleges choose their own students who have to meet the minimum entrance requirements set by the university. Undergraduates usually live and study in their colleges where they are taught in very small groups. Lectures and laboratory and practical work are organized by the university and held in university buildings. There are over 10,000 undergraduates and 3,500 post-graduates, about 40% of them are women and some 8% from overseas. As well as teaching, research is of major importance. Since the beginning of the 20th century, more than 60 university members have won Nobel Prizes. University has a huge number of buildings for teaching and research. It has more than 60 specialist subject libraries as well as the university library, which, as a copyright library, is entitled to a copy of every book published in Britain. Examinations are set and degrees are awarded by the university. It allowed women to take the university exams in 1881, but it was not until 1948 that they were awarded degrees. ]7 U. Z$ K9 G$ |
17.Why is it difficult for visitors to locate Cambridge University?
6 [( |/ e7 F6 M2 C" @% h% t; p 18. What does the passage tell us about the colleges of Cambridge University? 6 @. L. j* g7 O& \( |8 W
19. What can be learnt from the passage about the libraries in Cambridge University?
! f9 a9 G4 A. \ 20. What does the passage tell about women students in Cambridge University? % O& \- P4 u, `+ Y/ p ]4 a3 C- k2 P
2 Z, ?, ] y7 ?& k. m4 ]; E Questions 17 to 20 are based on the passage you have just heard. 5 C7 y' r2 Y" ~% }; M& T3 T0 p
17. A) Because there are no signs to direct them. ( V7 D4 N7 j$ J4 R1 u
B) Because no tour guides are available. # Z' R, ^5 @" K( l8 s+ s
C) Because all the buildings in the city look alike. 2 ? p. V" k5 W! h8 n8 F
D) Because the university is everywhere in the city. ' ]; H2 ~* K5 E9 U4 F3 ^. ?
$ A; y5 ? Z* \+ G 18. A) They set their own exams. C) They award their own degrees.
! F' Y* k% I( a5 Z7 H B) They select their own students. D) They organize their own laboratory work.
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19. A) Most of them have a long history.
& g% V! m. x! r+ M& ]+ g B) Many of them are specialized libraries. 8 ^% M0 _) C* J# q, L! U1 j
C) They house more books than any other university library.
9 q# E0 m4 W! R2 u: o9 G D) They each have a copy of every book published in Britain. ' t3 K0 U- c: K0 c' r; V- B/ a
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20. A) Very few of them are engaged in research. 0 c& q. | @+ d- a$ U" p7 W* e5 l- h
B) They were not awarded degrees until 1948.
; f2 L& Y* ~5 C; @ C) They have outnumbered male students. 3 R8 ? \6 Z5 K a2 b1 v# N- a
D) They were not treated equally until 1881. |