現(xiàn)代大學(xué)英語(yǔ)聽力1

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    Unit 9
    Task 1
    【答案】
    1) b, 2) a, 3) c, 4) c, 5) b, 6) a, 7) c, 8) b, 9) a, 10) b
    【原文】
    1) So, what does your father do for a living?
    2) How many people are in your family?
    3) How old is your sister?
    4) Where do your parents live now?
    5) How many brothers and sisters do you have?
    6) What is your brother’s name?
    7) Where does your mother work?
    8) How long have you been married?
    9) Do you have any children?
    10) Where did you and your wife meet?
    Task 2
    【答案】
    【原文】
    My name is Mary and I’m 13. I’m the eldest in my family. It’s terrible. I have to help my mother in the house, and do the shopping too. But my younger brother and sister don’t do a thing. They just play all day. And they come into my room and break my things. My mother says, “You must be nice to them. They’re smaller than you.” And my father tells me, “You’re the eldest, so you must set a good example.”
    I’m John, 12. I’m the youngest in my family. I hate it. My two brothers are 18 and 16, and my sister’s a year older than me. But they all think I’m still a baby. They can go to bed late, but I have to go to bed early. They get more pocket money than me too, and they have bigger bedrooms. I’ve got the smallest room in the family. And no one ever listens to me.
    My name is Anne and I’m 12. I’m the middle one in my family. That’s the worst place of all. I’m not the eldest and I’m not the youngest, so I’m not special. My elder sister does everything first, and she gets everything new. I have to wear her old clothes and use her old bag for school. Then everyone spoils my baby brother. They bring him presents and talk about him all the time. When I grow up, I’m going to have two children only. That’s better.Task 3
    【答案】
    1) c, 2) a, 3) a, 4) a, 5) b, 6) a, 7) c
    【原文】
    Ana Maria Cavazos was born on June 9th, 1908, in Reynosa, Medico. She was the eleventh
    of twelve children.
    Her father, Jesus Cavazos, was originally from Victoria, Texas, but moved his family to
    Mexico around 1855.
    Ana’s mother, Juana Castro, was the oldest of six brothers and sisters. Juana and Jesus were
    married in 1880. Ana’s family came to the United States during the Mexican Revolution in 1913.
    Their family experienced much hardship. Ana grew up in Texas and met her future husband in
    1929. Ana and Abel Contreras were married in 1931 and were the parents of eleven children.
    Task 4
    【答案】
    1) F, 2) T, 3) T, 4) F, 5) F, 6) F
    【原文】
    Margaret: Is family life in England very different from family life in your country, Maria?
    Maria: No, I don’t think so. But I have noticed a few differences.
    Margaret: Oh, such as what?
    Maria: Well, the family unit seems to be smaller here than in my country. For you, the family is
    simply Mum, Dad and the children.
    Margaret: You have a more extended family circle, do you?
    Maria: Yes. It’s quite common in my country to have a grandmother and an unmarried
    aunt or uncle living in as part of the family. And we wouldn’t dream of sending an elderly relative to an old people’s home, for instance.
    Margaret: You take care of elderly relatives yourselves, I guess.
    Maria: Oh yes. We haven’t got all your welfare services and it’s the family’s duty to look
    after an elderly parent, for example.
    Margaret: What about hospitality? Do you think English families do a lot of entertaining?
    Maria: Yes, but in a rather formal way. You don’t like people to “drop in” without a
    previous invitation, do you? In my country it’s quite usual to drop in on friends and
    relatives.
    Margaret: Have you ever lived in with an English family?
    Maria: Yes, I have. I was an au pair girl for a year. I learned a lot about English family life
    then. I’d never realized how fond the Englishman is of his home and family, his garden
    and his pets.
    Margaret: Pets? What sort of pets did they have?
    Maria: Oh, all sorts — dogs, cats and goldfish.
    Margaret: Did you enjoy living in with the family?
    Maria: Oh, yes. They were very kind. Everybody helped with the washing up, including the
    children, and we always found time to sip tea and watch television in the evenings!
    Task 5
    【答案】1) b, 2) c, 3) b, 4) b, 5) a
    【原文】
    Susan: I suppose that in England, too, family life has changed a lot in the last 50 years, hasn’t
    it?
    Marilyn: Oh yes, very much so. I think families used to be much larger. My grandmother was one
    of fourteen children! Very few people nowadays care to have such large families.
    Susan: I suppose that’s why in those days very few women took up careers outside the
    home. They were too busy bringing up their families.
    Marilyn: Yes, but most well-to-do families had servants to do the housework and even
    nannies to look after the children.
    Susan: Would you like to have lived then, Marilyn?
    Marilyn: Not particularly! Women weren’t as free as they are today. They often had to
    marry men they didn’t like and they were financially dependent on their parents or their husbands. I think we’re much better off today, don’t you?
    Susan: Well, I suppose we have more freedom of choice and we’re more independent,
    but, you know, some arranged marriages were very successful. And there was something rather charming about courtship in those days.
    Marilyn: Really? Such as what?
    Susan: Well, the custom of asking a girl’s father for permission to marry her, for example.
    Marilyn: And supposing he didn’t give his permission? No, thank you. I think family life is
    much pleasanter today because it’s freer and more informal. At least today we’re free to
    marry whoever we like and to take up a job, if we wish.
    Susan: That’s true. But I still think that family life in the old days must have been very pleasant
    and secure.
    Task 6
    【答案】
    1) They never interfered with her plans too much and she was allowed to take up the career she
    wanted.
    2) She became independent financially. But she still stays with her parents a lot.
    3) Yes.
    4) She doesn’t always get along well with her parents.
    5) They treat her as a child and they try to control her.
    【原文】
    Bella: Do you think young people are given too much freedom nowadays and that as a result
    they’ve lost respect for their parents and their elders generally, Joyce?
    Joyce: I don’t think so. My parents never interfered with my plans too much. They advised me but
    never forced me to do anything I didn’t want to do. I was allowed to take up the career I wanted. I think I respect and love them more for this.
    Bella: Are you quite independent of them now?
    Joyce: Yes. As soon as I left school and started my studies as a nurse, I became independent
    financially. I have a government grant which is enough for my keep. But I still stay with
    them a lot, as you know.
    Bella: You seem very close to your parents.
    Joyce: I am. I know that many young people today say they have nothing in common withvtheir parents, but I’m rather lucky because I get on well with mine. What about you, Bella?
    Bella: Well, we value family life very much in my country. I’m very fond of my family, but I
    don’t always get on very well with them. They try to control me too much.
    Joyce: But they allowed you to come to study in England on your own!
    Bella: Yes, but only after a lot of persuasion! Your parents treat you as an adult; mine treat me a
    child.
    Joyce: As I said, I’m lucky. Some English parents are like yours. They interfere too much and
    they’re out of sympathy with our generation.
    Task 7
    【答案】
    A. d
    B.
    1) A writer for the “Agony Column” in Flash magazine.
    2) Fifteen in two months’ time.
    3) Manchester.
    4) Quite a rough city.
    5) Christine.
    【原文】
    Radio Presenter: Good afternoon. And welcome to our midweek phone-in. In today’s programme
    we’re going to concentrate on personal problems. And here with me in the studio
    I’ve got Tessa Colbeck, who writes the agony column in Flash magazine. And
    we have our first caller on the line, and it’s Rosemary, I think, er... calling from
    Manchester. Hello Rosemary.
    Rosemary: Hello.
    Radio Presenter: How can we help you, Rosemary?
    Rosemary: Well, it’s my dad. He won’t let me stay out after ten o’clock at night and all my
    friends can stay out much longer than that. I always have to go home first. It’s
    really embarrassing.
    Tessa: Hello, Rosemary, love. Rosemary, how old are you, dear?
    Rosemary: I’m fifteen in two months’ time.
    Tessa: And where do you go at night — when you go out?
    Rosemary: Just to my friend’s house, usually. But everyone else can stay there much later
    than me. I have to leave at about quarter to ten.
    Tessa: And does this friend of yours.., does she live near you?
    Rosemary: It takes about ten minutes to walk from her house to ours.
    Tessa: I see. You live in Brighton, was it? Well, Brighton’s ....
    Rosemary: No. Manchester... I live in Manchester.
    Tessa: Oh. I’m sorry, love. I’m getting mixed up. Yes, well Manchester’s quite a rough
    city, isn’t it? I mean your dad...
    Rosemary: No. Not really. Not where we live. It isn’t. I don’t live in the City Centre or
    anything like that. And Christine’s house is in a very quiet part.
    Tessa: Christine. That’s your friend, is it?
    Rosemary: Yeah. That’s right. I mean, I know my dad gets worried but it’s perfectly safe.Radio Presenter: Rosemary, have you talked about this with your dad?
    Rosemary: No. He just shouts and then he says he won’t let me go out at all if I can’t come
    home on time.
    Radio Presenter: Why don’t you just try to sit down quietly with your dad — sometime when he’s
    relaxed — and just have a quiet chat about it? He’ll probably explain why he
    worries about you. It isn’t always safe for young girls to go out at night.
    Tessa: Yes. And maybe you can persuade him to come and pick you up from Christine’s
    house once or twice.
    Rosemary: Yes. But I don’t think he’ll agree to that. Anyway, I’ll talk to him about it. Thanks.
    Task 8
    【答案】
    1) F, 2) T, 3) F, 4) F, 5)F
    【原文】
    George’s mother was worried about him. One evening, when her husband came home, she
    spoke to him about it.
    “Look dear,” she said, “you must talk to George. He left school three months ago. He still
    hasn’t got a job, and he isn’t trying to find one. All he does is smoke, eat and play records.”
    George’s father sighed. It had been a very tiring day at the office.
    “All right,” he said, “I’ll talk to him.”
    “George,” said George’s mother, knocking at George’s door, “your father wants to speak to
    you.”
    “Oh!”
    “Come into the sitting-room dear.”
    “Hello old man,” said George’s father, when George and his mother joined him in the
    sitting-room.
    “Your father’s very worried about you,” said George’s mother. “It’s time you found a job.”
    “Yes,” replied George without enthusiasm.
    George’s mother looked at her husband.
    “Any ideas?” he asked hopefully.
    “Not really,” said George.
    “What about a job in a bank?” suggested George’s mother, “or an insurance company
    perhaps?”
    “I don’t want an office job,” said George.
    George’s father nodded sympathetically.
    “Well, what do you want to do?” asked George’s mother.
    “I’d like to travel,” said George.
    “Do you want a job with a travel firm then?”
    “The trouble is,” said George, “I don’t really want a job at the moment. I’d just like to travel
    and see a bit of the world.”
    George’s mother raised her eyes to the ceiling. “I give up,” she said.
    Task 9
    【答案】
    holding a job, even tougher, playing cops and robbers, shot, yelled, slumped to the ground, ran over, had been hurt in the fall, bent over, It’s the only chance I get to rest
    第5/9頁(yè)
    【原文】
    Being a working woman can be tough, but holding a job and having children is even tougher.
    There’s a story about a mother with three active boys who were playing cops and robbers in
    the backyard after dinner one summer evening.
    One of the boys “shot” his mother and yelled, “Bang, you’re dead.” She slumped to the
    ground and when she didn’t get up right away, a neighbour ran over to see if she had been hurt in the fall.
    When the neighbour bent over, the overworked mother opened one eye and said, “Shhh.
    Don’t give me away. It’s the only chance I get to rest.”
    Task 10
    【答案】
    A.
    1) turn off the television
    2) feed the cat
    3) wash up dishes
    4) dry the dishes
    5) put away the dishes
    6) tidy the kitchen
    7) put out the cat
    8) lock all the doors
    9) turn out all the lights
    B.
    1) She said she was going up to bed.
    2) She was sitting up in bed reading a book and eating chocolates.
    3) A gate banging downstairs.
    4) He had to go to shut the garden gate.
    【原文】
    “Henry!”
    “Yes, dear?”
    “I’m going up to bed now. Don’t forget to do your little jobs.”
    “No, dear.”
    Henry turned off the television and went into the kitchen. He fed the cat, washed up several
    dishes, dried them and put them away. Then he put the cat out, locked all the doors and turned out all the lights. When he got to the bedroom, his wife was sitting up in bed reading a book and eating chocolates.
    “Well dear, have you done all your little jobs?”
    “I think so, my love.”
    “Have you fed the cat?”
    “Yes, dear.”
    “Have you put him out?”
    “Yes, dear.”
    “have you washed up the dishes?”
    “Yes, dear.”
    “Have you put them away?”
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    “Yes, dear.”
    “Have you tidies the kitchen?”
    “Yes, dear.”
    “Have you turned out all the lights?”
    “Yes, dear.”
    “Have you locked the front door?”
    “Yes, dear.”
    “Then you can come to bed.”
    “Thank you, dear.”
    After a little while they heard a gate banging downstairs.
    “Henry.”
    “Yes, dear.”
    “I’m afraid you’ve forgotten to shut the garden gate.”
    “Oh dear!”
    Task 11
    【答案】
    1) b, 2) c, 3)a, 4)b, 5) b
    【原文】
    Interviewer: Mr. Dolby, do you mind if we speak a little about you and Katherine?
    David: Go ahead.
    Interviewer: She didn’t say very much about you to us, you see.
    David: Well, we weren’t together very long. Only about two years. Didn’t she tell you?
    Interviewer: No, not exactly. It must have been very difficult leaving your family.
    David: Yes and no. I miss the little boy. And I missed Katherine as well at first. Well, there
    was another baby on the way. That was difficult, of course, for her too. But it was her
    choice. Not mine.
    Interviewer: You mean she wanted you to go?
    David: Yes.
    Interviewer: What was wrong?
    David: We argued a lot. I had a job and when I got home in the evenings nothing was done.
    Nothing. I had to cook all the meals. Do the cleaning. It was an impossible situation.
    Task 12
    【答案】
    Main idea: are becoming more and more diverse
    1) Horizon Research Group, families in China’s cities are becoming more and more diverse, several generations under the same roof, a double-income-no-kids (DINK) family
    2)
    a) 48 percent, 1997, 37 percent
    b) one-person, linear, generational, 7.2 percent, 1 percentage point, six years ago
    c) 6.8 percent, 3.9 percentage points
    d) a married couple living with their parents, three generations, 6.4 percentage points, 49 percent e) cohabitation, celibacy
    3) pluralistic society, diverse values, 1980s, 10,000, 60,000
    第7/9頁(yè)
    a 38-year-old businessman, a graphic designer, their two-person family is one of the happiest in the world, have so many plans to do things together, we are two kids who like playing together, satisfied with, bother with children
    【原文】
    After a hard day’s work, people used to go home to the nuclear family — husband, wife and
    children.
    But families are changing shape in China. These days, a household may consist of one person, several generations under the same roof, or a double-income-no-kids (DINK) family.
    A national survey by Horizon Research Group released over the weekend shows that families
    in China’s cities are becoming more and more diverse.
    The most common family type in Chinese cities was once the nuclear family. But while it
    accounted for 48 percent of families in urban areas in 1997, that figure has decreased to 37 percent today, the survey shows.
    Covering more than 1,000 households in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Wuhan, the
    survey found that the number of DINKs, one-person and linear or generational families is on the rise from six years ago.
    The research group carried out a similar survey of family types in 1997, covering more than
    5,100 households in 10 major cities across China.
    This time round, more than 7.2 percent of respondents classified themselves as DINKs, 1
    percentage point higher than six years ago.
    One-person households account for 6.8 percent of respondents, 3.9 percentage points higher
    than the previous survey.
    Linear families — a married couple living with their parents or three generations living
    together — increased in number by 6.4 percentage points, reaching 49 percent.
    According to social science experts, it seems certain more distinct lifestyles will emerge, for
    example, cohabitation and celibacy are both on the rise.
    In any event, today’s pluralistic society, with its diverse values, should be welcomed, said Li
    Yinhe, a sociologist on family and marriage. “Everyone’s choice, whether traditional or unconventional, should be respected,” Li said.
    Since the DINK lifestyle emerged in the 1980s, it has sprung up in all of China’s big cities.
    Beijing now has 10,000 DINK families. When combined with those in Shanghai and Guangzhou, the figures rise to about 60,000, according to Youth League Committee of Beijing statistics.
    Childbearing was in ancient China a family’s top priority, but now it is regarded as a personal
    choice by many young couples.
    Zheng Jian, a 38-year-old businessman, and his wife Xiao Yan, a graphic designer, think their
    two-person family is one of the happiest in the world.
    They have been married for more than 10 years and have no children.
    “We always have so many plans together, to do things together,” said Zheng. “And it seems
    like we are two kids who like playing together.”
    They insist: “We are satisfied with our present lives, so why bother with children?”
    Task 13
    【答案】
    In the past, when more Americans lived on farms, the typical family had many children. In a
    第8/9頁(yè)
    farm family, parents and their children often lived with grandparents. Often, too, uncles and aunts lived nearby. But when industry became more important than agriculture in American life, families became smaller. Industry requires workers who are ready and able to move off the land and to move again whenever necessary. Large families cannot be moved from place to place as smaller families can.
    Today, because of industrialization, a typical family will be required to move even more often, so families will be even smaller. The typical family may remain childless and consist only of a man and a woman. A smaller number of families may raise children. These families may raise children as their chief occupation, leaving the childless families free to move from job. Furthermore, these child-raising families may raise other people’s children in addition to their own.