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2023年12月大學(xué)英語六級考試聽力真題及答案(一)

所屬教程:六級真題

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tingliketang

2024年12月10日

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英語六級真題的聽力部分,作為衡量學(xué)生英語實際應(yīng)用能力的重要標(biāo)尺,涵蓋了短對話、長對話及短文理解三大板塊,這些題型著重考察考生捕捉關(guān)鍵信息并深入理解語境的能力。因此,深入掌握并熟練運用真題聽力材料,對于提升六級考試成績具有舉足輕重的意義。此次,我們精心整理了2023年12月大學(xué)英語六級真題聽力部分(卷一)的詳細(xì)內(nèi)容及答案解析,旨在為廣大考生提供寶貴的備考資源與參考!

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Section A

Directions: In this section, you will hear two long conversations. At the end of each conversation, you will hear four questions. Both the conversation and the questions will be spoken only once. After you hear a question, you must choose the best answer from the four choices marked A), B), C) and D). Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet I with a single line through the centre.

Questions 1 to 4 are based on the conversation you have just heard.

1. A) It is clear that he is expected to enjoy a healthy life.

B) There is nothing wrong with his digestive system.

C) There is some indication of an issue with his blood circulation.

D) He doesn't know he has long been suffering from poor health.

2. A) Mistaking symptoms of illness for stress. 

B) Complaining they are being overworked. 

C) Being unaware of the stress they are under.

D) Suffering from illness without recognising it.

3. A) Prescribe some medication for him. 

B) Give him another physical check-up. 

C) Explain to him the common consequence of stress.

D) Buy some sleeping pills for him from the drugstore.

4. A) It calls for responsible management. 

B) It proves to be quite profitable. 

C) It is remarkably promising.

D) It is full of competition.

Questions 5 to 8 are based on the conversation you have just heard.

5. A) To avoid being in the limelight. 

B) To seek medical help for his injury. 

C) To pursue a less competitive career.

D) To stay away from his hostile teammates.

6. A) It has ups and downs. 

B) It proves rewarding. 

C) It does not last long.

D) It is not so profitable.

7. A) He was a financial advisor. 

B) He suffered from poor health. 

C) He became a basketball coach.

D) He was back in the news.

8. A) Study issues of public health. 

B) Alleviate the obesity problem. 

C) Raise sufficient public funding.

D) Train young basketball players.

Section B

Directions: In this section, you will hear two passages. At the end of each passage, you will hear three or four questions. Both the passage and the questions will be spoken only once. After you hear a question, you must choose the best answer from the four choices marked A), B), C) and D). Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet I with a single line through the centre.

Questions 9 to 11 are based on the passage you have just heard.

9. A) When she started teaching at Edinburgh University in Scotland.

B) While she was doing her doctoral studies on American Literature.

C) After publishing her first novel Behind the Scenes at the Museum.

D) After winning the 1986 Woman's Own Short Story Competition.

10. A) The themes of love and loss. 

B) The code of human behaviour.

C) The sins and flaws of eccentrics.

D) The manners of fashionable circles.

11. A) They are usually ignorant of complex human relations.

B) They successfully imitate the manners of celebrities.

C) They often get rewarded instead of being punished.

D) They are generally looked down upon in society.

Questions 12 to 15 are based on the passage you have just heard.

12. A) It is what members use to alleviate tension in a team.

B) It is what employers are increasingly seeking after.

C) It is conducive to getting over a recession.

D) It is necessary for learning a new task.

13. A) Make better choices. 

B) Follow innovative ideas. 

C) Achieve recognition duly.

D) Accumulate work experience.

14. A) Workers show more emotional intelligence. 

B) Workers use brains more than muscles. 

C) People usually work flexible hours.

D) People often work in teams.

15. A) Leave the group as soon as possible. 

B) Anticipate setbacks well in advance. 

C) Decide on new priorities speedily.

D) Stick to original goals confidently.

Section C

Directions: In this section, you will hear three recordings of lectures or talks followed by three or four questions. The recordings will be played only once. After you hear a question, you must choose the best answer from the four choices marked A), B), C) and D). Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet I with a single line through the centre.

Questions 16 to 18 are based on the recording you have just heard.

16. A) What differentiates people from animals. 

B) Why philosophers disagree with scientists. 

C) Where humans' great cognitive capacity originates.

D) When being creative becomes a biological mandate.

17. A) It is what tells apart two adjacent generations. 

B) It is what sharpens our appetite for novelty. 

C) It is something only geniuses can achieve.

D) It is something every human being can do.

18. A) It seeks inspiration for novel inventions. 

B) It constantly absorbs new information. 

C) It uses existing ideas to create new ones.

D) It repeats precedent on a regular basis.

Questions 19 to 21 are based on the recording you have just heard.

19. A) Dogs know when their owners are not feeling well.

B) Dogs have the cognition for telling right from wrong.

C) Dogs have an aptitude for developing skills to interact with humans.

D) Dogs know when their human companions can no longer stand them.

20. A) They can readily detect different ill smells of viruses.

B) They can easily tell what bacteria cause odor change.

C) They are particularly sensitive to strange smells.

D) They have an extremely powerful sense of smell.

21. A) It can ensure owners suffer fewer chronic diseases.

B) It can benefit owners both physically and mentally.

C) It can reduce owners' risk of getting cancer or diabetes.

D) It can alert owners to the seriousness of their conditions.

Questions 22 to 25 are based on the recording you have just heard.

22. A) Crack down on courses like science, technology, engineering and math.

B) Restrict the ability of creative arts courses to recruit new students.

C) Look at how to reform technical and vocational education.

D) Ensure creative arts students get better value for money.

23. A) Seemingly reasonable. 

B) Clearly well-grounded. 

C) Extremely irrational.

D) Apparently simplistic.

24. A)A high proportion of them haven't tried to save money.

B) Most of them never hope to buy a house or to retire.

C) Forty percent of them earn less than £25,000 a year.

D) The majority of them have fairly well-paying jobs.

25. A) The context of a bank balance. 

B) Britain's economy as a whole. 

C) The specific degree a student earns.

D) Britain's defective educational system.

Section A

Conversation One

M: Hello, doctor.

W: Hello, please take a seat. I have your test results here, and it's good news. The blood test came back clear.[1] There is no indication of any digestive issues.

M: So then why do I feel so poorly all the time?

W: It's probably due to overwork and stress.

M: No, it can't be. I' ve always been working hard, but I' ve never felt stress. Other people suffering complain about that, but I don't. It must be something else.

W: What you have just described is a common sentiment. [2] Many people who suffer from stress fail to recognise it.You told me you often work long into the night, right?

M: Yes, most days in fact. But I' ve been doing that for about 20 years now.

W: That doesn't matter. You could have been suffering from stress for 20 years without knowing it, and now it's catching up to you.

M: But what about my feeling tired all the time and not being able to sleep well at night?

W: Those are common consequences of stress. And if you don't sleep well, then of course you will feel fatigued. [3] I'm going to prescribe some special sleeping pills for you. They have a soft, gentle effect and are made from natural ingredients, so your stomach should tolerate them fine, and there shouldn't be any negative side effects. Take one with your dinner and come see me after a month. If there is no improvement, I'll give you something stronger.

M: Thank you, doctor.

W: That's not all. You should try and work less. Is there any way you can decrease your workload?

M: Um, I'd have to think about it.[4]I'm a restaurant manager and this industry is very competitive. There are many things to keep track of and stay on top of.

W: I recommend you think about delegating some responsibilities to someone else. I'm not asking you to retire. Just to slow down a bit. It's for your own health.

1. Wat do we learn about the man from his test results?

2. What does the woman think is a common phenomenon among many people?

3. What does the woman say she will do for the man?

4. What does the man say about the industry he is engaged in?

Conversation Two

W: Today on People in the News, our guest is John Williams. The name may not sound familiar to you, but John was once an acclaimed basketball player. John, you stunned fans by leaving the sport at just 25. Why did you retire so early?

M: Meg,I loved being an athlete, but I didn't love being a celebrity. I was in the limelight when I was still a high school student and went professional right after high school graduation, which was a mistake.[5] I was a shy kid and I wasn't ready for all the media attention.

W: But walking away from millions of dollars at the height of your career, most people wouldn't be able to resist the lure of such a high salary. When you left the sport, there was speculation that you were having issues with your teammates or even an injury.

M: Not at all. It was hard to quit. I was tempted to stay in the game, because I love basketball and I loved my team.As for money, I turned professional at 18. So I'd actually earned a lot and saved most of it, because I had great financial advisers. [6] I knew basketball wasn't a career with a lot of longevity for most players, so I wanted to change careers while I was still young.

W: [7] Okay, that was 20 years ago, and you' re back in the news. You've created a foundation that works to get more kids playing team sports. Why?

M: I went to university and I studied public health and learned about the seriousness of the obesity epidemic, particularly among kids and adolescents in poor communities. [8] I' ve spent the last two decades trying to alleviate the problem. The foundation is just the latest attempt.

W: The foundation uses private donations to support basketball teams for girls and boys in primary school, right?

M: Actually, we support teams for secondary school students, too, and also have some public funding.

5. Why did John Williams leave the sport of basketball at just 25?

6. What does the man say about basketball as a career for most players?

7. What do we learn from the woman about John Williams 20 years later?

8. What has the man spent the last two decades trying to do?

Section B

Passage One

Kate Atkinson was born in York, England, in 1951. She worked hard to gain her credentials as an author. She studied English Literature at University in Scotland. After graduating in 1974, she researched a doctorate on American Literature. Later, she taught at the university she graduated from, and began writing short stories in 1981. [9] She began writing for women's magazines after winning the 1986 Woman's Own Short Story Competition. Her first novel, Behind the Scenes at the Museum, won the 1995 UK Book of the Year award. The book is set in Yorkshire and has been adapted for radio, theatre, and TV. She has written two plays for a theatre in Edinburgh— the first was called Nice and the second Abandonment, performed as part of the Edinburgh Festival in August 2000.

[10] Whatever genre Atkinson writes in, her books touch on the themes of love and loss and how to carry on. They are always presented with ingenuity and a wicked sense of humor. Her books tend to be populated by odd,sometimes sinful, and generally flawed eccentrics who become credible by virtue of being so fully realized. Her books have frequently been described as comedies of manners. That is to say, comedies that represent the complex and sophisticated code of behaviour current in fashionable circles of society, where appearances count more than true moral character. [11] A comedy of manners tends to reward its clever and deceitful characters, rather than punish their bad deeds. The humor of a comedy of manners relies on verbal wit and playful teasing.

9. When did Kate Atkinson begin to write for women's magazines?

10. What did Kate Atkinson's books touch on?

11. What do we learn about the clever and deceitful characters in a comedy of manners?

Passage Two

Why is adaptability an important skill to exercise in the workplace? Simply put,[12] adaptability is a skill employers are increasingly looking for. When you spend time learning a new task rather than resisting it, your productivity goes up. You can also serve as an example to your co-workers who may be having trouble adapting, and can help lead your team forward.[13] Strategy consultant, Dorie Clark, explains it to us this way. “I'd say that adaptability is an important skill in the workplace because frankly, circumstances change. Competitors introduce new products, economy might enter a recession, customer preferences differ over time, and more. If you shake your fist at the sky and say why can't it stay the same, that's not going to do very much good. Instead, you need to recognise when circumstances have changed, so you can take appropriate action based on what is, rather than how you wish the world would be.[13] That enables you to make more accurate, informed and effective choices.”

Also, the workplace itself has been evolving. [14] Today's work culture and management style is often based on teamwork, rather than a rigid hierarchy. Brainstorming, which requires creativity, flexibility, and emotional intelligence, is a typical problem-solving technique. Employees who are unable or unwilling to participate will not easily move forward in the company. Employees who are flexible demonstrate other skills too.[15] They can reprioritize quickly when changes occur and suggest additional modifications when something is not working. They can also regroup quickly when a setback occurs, adapting to the new situation confidently and without overreacting.

12. Why does the speaker say adaptability is an important skill to exercise in the workplace?

13. What does adaptability enable us to do according to strategy consultant Dorie Clark?

14. What do we learn about today's work culture from the passage?

15. What are employees with adaptability able to do when changes occur?

Section C

Recording One

[16] What makes humans different from other species? Some philosophers argue it's morals or ethics, while some scientists assert it's our greater cognitive development. But I argue that the main difference is our desire to combat routine. This makes being creative a biological mandate, as what we seek in art and technology is surprise, not simply a fulfillment of expectations.

As a result, a wild imagination has characterized the history of our species. We build intricate habitats, devise complex recipes for our food, wear clothes that reflect constant changes in fashion, communicate with elaborate signs, symbols, and sounds, and travel between habitats on wings and wheels of our own design. To satisfy our appetite for novelty, innovation is key. But who innovates?

Now, many people, both laymen and experts, believe that only geniuses innovate.[17] But I believe that innovation is not something that only a few people do. The innovative drive lives in every human brain, and the resulting war against the repetitive is what powers the massive changes that distinguish one generation from the next. The drive to create the new is a trait of being human. We build cultures by the hundreds and tell new stories by the millions. We create and surround ourselves with things that have never existed before, while animals do not. But where do our new ideas come from?

According to many, new ideas come from seemingly nowhere to great minds. From this perspective, new ideas are almost like magic. They come in a flash of inspiration to a select few. However, the reality is that, across the spectrum of human activities, prior work propels the creative process. We may think of innovation as being the result of inspiration or genius, but it's really the result of developing the ideas of others further. This happens in technology, where one invention enables or inspires further inventions. And it happens in the arts, as writers, composers, and painters use the work of previous artists in their own work.[18] The human brain works from precedent. We take the ideas we' ve inherited and put them together into some new shape.

What is a true creator? Is a creator a genius who makes something out of nothing? No. Creators are simply humans who use what they inherit, who absorb the past and manipulate it to create possible futures. Thus, humans are creators as a rule rather than as an exception.

16. What question does the speaker address in this talk?

17. What does the speaker believe about innovation?

18. How does the human brain work according to the speaker?

Recording Two

[19] Many dog owners would tell you that their dog somehow knows when they' re ill or upset, and according to researchers who study dog cognition, those pet owners are right. Dogs do know when their human companions are having a rough time. Not only can your dog sense when you have a cold, but domestic dogs have shown an aptitude for detecting both much smaller mood fluctuations and far more serious physical conditions. This is because dogs are extremely sensitive to changes in the people they' re familiar with, and illness causes change. [20] If a person is infected with a virus or bacteria, for example, their odor will be abnormal, and dogs are able to smell that change even if the human can't, because dogs have a much more powerful sense of smell than humans.

Researchers have also found that a person's mood, which can be an indicator of a larger illness, triggers a dog's sense of smell. Human emotions manifest physically in chemical signals that are emitted by the body, and dogs are able to smell those as well. Beyond smell, dogs gather information from a person's voice in order to sense changes.

In 2014, researchers discovered that dogs have an area of the brain similar to one in humans that allows them to understand emotional cues in the tone of a speaker's voice, beyond what they'd be able to pick up from familiar words alone. A person's voice can also carry indicators of illness. What's not understood quite so well is what dogs understand about these changes. Humans send out lots of cues, but whether dogs know some of these cues mean illness isn't clear. What we perceive as concern on a dog's part might be more like increased curiosity or suspicion that something is wrong with us, and sticking close by is a great way to gather more information about the situation.

Some researchers assert dogs will one day help doctors diagnose diseases, as some dogs have already demonstrated the ability to detect an assortment of ailments, including diabetes and certain types of cancer. But those researchers concede that's probably in the distant future.[21] For now, research suggests dog ownership can have an array of benefits in and of itself. Keeping a pet dog has been shown to bolster health and boost mood. Dogs also help people relax, and they can be a particular comfort to those with chronic diseases.

19. What view of many dog owners win support from researchers studying dog cognition?

20. Why can dogs detect their owner's abnormal odor according to the speaker?

21. What does research suggest for now about dog ownership?

Recording Three

Earlier this month, the think-tank called Onward published a report, “A Question of Degree”, which argues that degrees in the creative arts are not good value for money.[22] Ministers, according to Onward, should“crack down on courses that offer extremely limited value for money to students ten years after graduation”, restricting the ability of such courses to recruit new students, if the average graduate earns below the student loans payment threshold. Courses like science, technology, engineering, and math, and economics, where the average graduate earns a lot, should be favored.

The report provides insight into a government review which looks at how to reform technical education and how to ensure students get good value for money.[23] At first glance, it might even seem like Onward have a point. According to their data, the majority of creative arts students earn less than 25,000 pounds a year, ten years after graduation. The average male creative arts students, indeed, apparently earn much less than they would, had they simply never gone to university. This isn't really good for anyone, and it's certainly no good for graduates, who are forced to endure a lifestyle where they can never save up, never buy a house, never hope to retire.

Onward have identified a real problem. Creative arts graduates from top universities— like Oxford, with a high proportion of privately-educated students— have fairly good work prospects.[24] Well,40 percent of all graduates— regardless of their degree— are on less than 25,000 pounds a year,5 years after graduation. [25] This suggests that the problem isn't really to do with specific students studying specific degrees, but really with the economy as a whole. Regardless of what they' ve studied, young people find it hard to get ahead unless they' re lucky enough to be born with successful parents.

If ministers want to make education pay for young people, they need to look beyond the higher education sector, towards the wider world. The rewards that education gives us are not measurable. They are not always instantly obvious, and certainly not always direct. An education makes you a different person from the one you would have been if you hadn't received it. We need to look at the value of education not in the context of a bank balance, but of a life. If we continue to allow ourselves to be distracted with talk of“value for money”, we will all be made poorer as a result.

22. What does Onward's report propose ministers should do? 

23. What does the speaker think of Onward's arguments? 

24. What do we learn about British college graduates five years after graduation?

25. What does the speaker say actually accounts for the problem identified by Onward?

1.B)【解析】對話開頭交代了男士的檢查結(jié)果,醫(yī)生對男士說:“我這有你的檢查結(jié)果,是個好消息。驗血結(jié)果沒有問題。沒有任何消化問題的跡象?!庇纱丝芍珺項與對話內(nèi)容相符。

2.C}【解析】對話中間,女士說男士感覺不舒服可能是因為過于繁重的工作和壓力,男士卻反駁說自己從沒感到過壓力,女士說男士描述的這種看法是普遍的,隨后指明這一普遍看法是指“許多承受壓力的人沒有意識到這一點”,故C項與對話內(nèi)容相符。

3.A)【解析】對話中間,男士詢問女士自己總覺得很累,晚上睡不好覺是怎么回事,女士解釋說這些癥狀都是壓力帶來的常見后果,并說:“我將給你開一些專門的安眠藥。”由此可知,A項與對話內(nèi)容相符。

4.D)【解析】對話最后,女士建議男士應(yīng)該少干點活,并詢問男士有什么辦法可以減少他的工作量,男士回答說:“我是一名餐廳經(jīng)理,這個行業(yè)競爭非常激烈?!庇纱丝芍惺克鶑氖碌男袠I(yè)充滿了競爭,D項與對話內(nèi)容相符。

5.A)【解析】對話開頭,女士問男士為什么這么早退役,男士回答說自己不喜歡當(dāng)名人,并說道:“我是一個害羞的孩子,而且我還沒有準(zhǔn)備好接受所有媒體的關(guān)注?!庇纱丝芍?,約翰年紀(jì)輕輕就從籃球運動退役,是為了避免成為焦點,A項與對話內(nèi)容相符。

6.C)【解析】對話中間,男士說:“我知道對大多數(shù)球員來說, (打)籃球并不是一項長久的職業(yè),所以我想在還年輕的時候改變職業(yè)?!庇纱丝芍?,C項與對話內(nèi)容相符。

7.D)【解析】對話中女士對男士說:“好吧,那是20年前的事了,現(xiàn)在你又上新聞了?!庇纱丝芍?,D項與對話內(nèi)容相符。A項是根據(jù)男士所說的financial advisers設(shè)置的干擾項,男士原話是他有很棒的財務(wù)顧問,而不是他自己成為了財務(wù)顧問,故排除。

8.B)【解析】對話最后,男士說自己大學(xué)的專業(yè)是公共衛(wèi)生,他了解到肥胖癥流行的嚴(yán)重性,在過去的20年里,一直都致力于緩解這一問題。由此可知,B項與對話內(nèi)容相符。

9.D)【解析】文章開頭部分提到,1986年,她在“女性自己的短篇小說比賽”中獲獎,之后開始為女性雜志寫文章。由此可知,凱特·阿特金森是在作品獲獎之后開始為女性雜志撰稿的,故選項D正確。文中并未提到她所任教的大學(xué)的名字,故選項A排除;文中雖然提到她1974年畢業(yè)后攻讀了美國文學(xué)博士學(xué)位,以及后來出版第一部小說《博物館的幕后故事》,但前者是她在為女性雜志撰稿之前,后者是她在為女性雜志撰稿之后,故選項B、C都排除。

10.A)【解析】文章中間部分提到,無論阿特金森以何種體裁寫作,她的作品都涉及愛與失去,以及如何繼續(xù)下去的主題,選項A是文中的原詞,故為正確選項。其他三項都是根據(jù)文中的個別詞匯code of behaviour、eccentrics、fashionable circles等設(shè)置的干擾項, 故均排除。

11.C)【解析】文章后半部分介紹了阿特金森的文章風(fēng)格,被稱為風(fēng)俗喜劇,并在結(jié)尾處指出了風(fēng)俗喜劇的一個特點:風(fēng)俗喜劇往往會獎勵那些聰明而又狡詐的人物,而不是懲罰他們的惡行。選項C是對reward its clever and deceitful characters, rather than punish their bad deeds的同義轉(zhuǎn)述, 故為正確選項。其他三項文中都沒有提到,故均排除。

12.B)【解析】文章開頭便提出問題:為什么說適應(yīng)能力是在職場中要鍛煉的一項重要技能? 接下來第二句就回答了這個問題:適應(yīng)能力是雇主越來越追求的一項技能。因此,選項B正確,選項中的seeking after是文中 looking for的同義轉(zhuǎn)述。

13.A)【解析】文章開頭在提出了適應(yīng)能力的重要性之后,引出了戰(zhàn)略顧問多莉·克拉克的解釋。她的解釋很長,還列舉了幾個例子,最后才得出結(jié)論——適應(yīng)能力能讓你根據(jù)實際情況采取適當(dāng)?shù)男袆?,做出更?zhǔn)確、更明智和更有效的選擇。選項A是對這個結(jié)論的概括,為正確選項。其他三個選項文中都未提及,故均排除。

14.D)【解析】文章開頭在提出了適應(yīng)能力的重要性之后,引出了戰(zhàn)略顧問多莉·克拉克的解釋。她的解釋很長,還列舉文章后半部分提到,如今的工作文化和管理方式往往基于團隊合作,而不是過于嚴(yán)格的等級制度。因此,選項D正確, work in teams是對文中based on teamwork的同義轉(zhuǎn)述。其他三個選項文中都未提及, 故均排除。

15.C)【解析】文章最后指出,靈活的員工能在變化發(fā)生時迅速調(diào)整優(yōu)先次序,并在某些事情行不通時提出額外的調(diào)整建議。因此選項C正確, 選項中的Decide on new priorities和speedily分別對應(yīng)原文中的reprioritize和 quickly。

16.A)【解析】在講座開頭,講話者便提出了“是什么讓人類與其他物種不同”這個問題。由此很容易得出正確答案為選項A。

17.D)【解析】講話者在中間部分提到,許多人都認(rèn)為只有天才才能創(chuàng)新,但講話者相信,創(chuàng)新不是只有少數(shù)人才能做到的事情。由此可知,選項D為正確答案。

18.C)【解析】講話者提到,人類的大腦是依托先例運作的。我們把繼承下來的想法組合在一起,形成新的形態(tài)。由此可知, 選項C為正確答案, 同時可直接排除選項D。選項A中的inspiration和 inventions講座中雖然也有提到,但這不是本題所提問的內(nèi)容,故選項A排除。講座中雖有提及absorb,但描述的是創(chuàng)造者吸收過去的經(jīng)驗, 不符合題意,故選項B排除。

19.A)【解析】講話者在開頭就提到,許多養(yǎng)狗人士會告訴你,當(dāng)他們生病或心煩意亂時,他們的狗不知怎么就會知道,而且根據(jù)研究狗認(rèn)知的研究人員的說法,這些寵物主人的感覺是對的。由此很容易得出,選項A為正確答案。

20.D)【解析】講話者在前半部分提到,如果一個人感染了病毒或細(xì)菌,他們的氣味就會有異常,即使人類不能,狗也能聞出這種氣味的變化,因為狗的嗅覺比人類強大得多。由此可知,選項D為正確答案。

21.B)【解析】講話者在最后提到,目前,有研究表明,養(yǎng)狗本身就有很多好處,可以促進健康和改善情緒。由此可知,選項B為正確答案, “身心受益”是對原文bolster health and boost mood的概括。選項A是強干擾項, 其中的chronic diseases講座中雖然也有提到,但講的是對那些患有慢性疾病的人來說,狗是一種特別的安慰,而非能確保主人少患慢性病,故排除。

22.B)【解析】講話者在開頭提到,智庫Onward發(fā)表了一份題為“學(xué)位問題”的報告,該報告認(rèn)為創(chuàng)意藝術(shù)專業(yè)的學(xué)位并非物有所值。Onward認(rèn)為,部長們應(yīng)該“嚴(yán)厲打擊那些為畢業(yè)10年后的學(xué)生提供的性價比極其有限的課程”,如果畢業(yè)生的平均收入低于學(xué)生貸款支付門檻,就應(yīng)該限制這類課程招收新生的能力。由此可知,Onward認(rèn)為創(chuàng)意藝術(shù)專業(yè)給學(xué)生提供的課程性價比極其有限,應(yīng)該限制創(chuàng)意藝術(shù)課程招收新生的能力,故選項B為正確答案。講話者明確提到,根據(jù) Onward的報告,科學(xué)、技術(shù)、工程、數(shù)學(xué)以及經(jīng)濟學(xué)等畢業(yè)生平均收入較高的課程應(yīng)受到青睞,故選項A錯誤。其余兩個選項在講話中并未提及,可排除。

23.A)【解析】講話者提到,乍一看,Onward的觀點似乎有道理,故選項A為正確答案。其余三個選項在講話中并未提及,可排除。

24.C)【解析】講話者提到,40%的畢業(yè)生——無論什么樣的學(xué)位——畢業(yè)5年后的年薪還不到2.5萬英鎊,故選項C為正確答案,同時排除選項D。講話者提到,畢業(yè)生們不得不忍受一種永遠(yuǎn)無法存錢,永遠(yuǎn)無法買房、永遠(yuǎn)無法指望退休的生活方式,這里指的是全體畢業(yè)生,而且原文表述的是客觀上低收入導(dǎo)致的“不能”, 而不是主觀上的“不想”,故排除選項A和B。

25.B)【解析】講話者在后半部分提到,問題并不真正在于那些攻讀特定學(xué)位的學(xué)生,而在于整個經(jīng)濟。由此可知, 選項B為正確答案,同時排除選項C。其余兩個選項在講話中并未提及,可排除。

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