新闻听力15篇 加文本

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Model test one

Question 1 and 2 will be based on the following news item.

1.A) 4 B) 13 C) 17 D) 18

2.A) Methane explosion in Turkey B) Miscounting of the people died in the accident

C) terrible working conditions of coal mine workers

D) the worst mining disaster in history

Question 3 and 4 will be based on the following news item.

3.A) 13 months old B) 13 days old C) 13 years old D) 30 months old

4.A) the girls’ two things are fused together.

B) the girls’ legs fused together from her thighs to her ankles

C) the girl’s two knees are fused together

D) the girls’ two ankles are fused together.

Question 5 to 7 will be based on the following news item.

5. A) copied CDS B) Copied VCDs C) pirated CDs D) Pirated VCDs

6. A) 50 million B) 60 million C) 30 million D) 2 million

7 A) Trade mark B) Production right C) registered right D) property right

Model test two

Question 1 and 2 will be based on the following news item.

1. A) it starts on June 1st and lasts through the end of November

B)Storm usually from in winter

C)It starts on June 1st and lasts for one months

D) All year around

2. A) these frcasts are perfect

B) last year Colorado state predicted 19 named storms

C) one land fall cannot cause serious consequences

D) it is important to prepare the same for every hurricane season

Question 3 and 4 will be based on the following news item.

3. A) offering services to help people stop smoking

B) raising taxes

C) warning people about the dangers of tobacco

D) enforcing bans on tobacco advertising and other forms of marketing.

4 A)

5 million B) 8 million C) 1 billion D) 10 billion

Question 5 to 7 will be based on the following news item.

5 A) 50; 140 B) 60; 150 C) 70; 160 D) 80;170

6. A) Tuesday B) Wednesday C) Thursday D) Friday

7. A) they were dressed as women

B) their identities were still unclear

C) the protected themselves from being injured in the explosion

D) they donated explosives on a Shiite Mosque

Model Test Three

Section A

Directions:In this section, you will hear three news reports. At the end of each news report, you will hear two or three questions. Both the news report 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 and 2 will be based on the following news item.

1. A. He has decided to retreat from the talks. B. He has supported the talks.

C. He has covered doubts about the talks.

D. He has opposed the talks.

2. A. The spread of nuclear weapons in the Middle East.

B. The position taken by the Security Council.

C. The pollution of nuclear plants.

D. The tougher position of Iran on the nuclear issue.

Questions 3 and 4 will be based on the following news item.

3. A. 25 B. 10 C. 35 D. 15

4. A. Every French voter wanted more Europe with better social protection.

B. Every Dutch voter wanted less Europe which cost them less money.

C. Some would cast their vote in protest against an unpopular government today.

D. There are also another cast in fear of an uncertain future tomorrow.

Questions 5 to 7 will be based on the following news item.

5. A. United States B. Iraq C. Saudi Arabia D. United Arab Emirates

6. A. The United Arab Emirates doesn’t want to make enemy with America.

B. The United Arab Emirates has its own resources and there are no mines in that waters.

C. The United Arab Emirates is far from Iran.

D. The United Arab Emirates is afraid of Iran.

7. A. The United States. B. Iran C. The United Arab Emirates D. Not mentioned. Model Test Four

Section A

Directions:In this section, you will hear three news reports. At the end of each news report, you will hear two or three questions. Both the news report 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 and 2 will be based on the following news item.

1. A. Reducing the debt burden.

B. Ending trade regulations which put the continent’s economy at a disadvantage.

C. Giving more aid.

D. Paying back consultancy fees for aid officials.

2. A. The idea of real aid. B. The aid is not enough.

C. Debt is too heavy.

D. The misuse of the term “aid”.

Questions 3 and 4 will be based on the following news item.

3. A. The agreement will come into effect in two and a half years.

B. The agreement will be withdrawn in two and a half years after implementation.

C. The agreement will be ended after the first stage.

D. The agreement will be fully carried out after the first phase.

4. A. Agricultural products. B. Fisheries products.

C. Dairy products

D. All of the above.

Questions 5 to 7 will be based on the following news item.

5. A. 23 years. B. 22 years C. 21 years D. 20 years

6. A. A general pardon to political prisoners.

B. The removal of any officials from old ruling party.

C. Agreement to recognize banned political parties.

D. Removal of all restriction on the media

7. A. High unemployment and corruption. B. High food prices and corruption

C. High unemployment food prices.

D. People killed in the revolution and corruption.

Model Test Five

Section A

Directions:In this section, you will hear three news reports. At the end of each news report, you will hear two or three questions. Both the news report 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 and 2 will be based on the following news item.

1. A. People cannot always rely on X-ray to diagnose disease.

B. X-ray is always helpful in diagnosing disease.

C. X-ray will cause law suit.

D. We should use MRI instead of X-ray.

2. A. 34. B. 5

3. C.35. D. 43

Questions 3 and 4 will be based on the following news item.

3. A. She fell down and bumped her head.

B. She got a serious disease related to her stomach.

C. She is being treated for blood clot in her head.

D. She is going from bad to worse after the operation.

4. A. She is operated to remove the blood clot.

B. She is going to resume her work next month.

C. She is getting worse after the diagnosis.

D. She is taking medicine at home.

Questions5 to 7 will be based on the following news item.

5. A. Leaders of top industrial countries met in the US for world finance.

B. Leaders of developing economies met in the US for a summit on finance.

C. Leaders of G20 leaders met in the US for a summit on economy.

D. Leaders of developing and industrial economies met in the US for summit on future world’s finance.

6. A. 5 billion. B. 50 billion. C. 500 billion. D. 5,000 billion.

7. A. When to avoid a repeat of the financial crisis.

B. When to withdraw that support without harming a recovery.

C. How to withdraw that support without harming a recovery.

D. How to avoid a repeat of the financial crisis.

听力文本

Model test 1

Item1

A methane explosion at a coal mine in north-west Turkey killed 13 workers - not 17 as earlier reported - Turkish officials have said.They said 18 people were in hospital, with four in critical condition.The blast on Tuesday caused an underground chamber to collapse at a mine 20km (12 miles) outside Dursunbey, in Balikesir province.Some 33 workers were rescued after the explosion, which came two months after a blast at a mine in Bursa killed 19. The mine's owner said it had buried the miners nearly 820ft (250m) below the surface.

Labour Minister Omer Dincer said officials had initially overstated the death toll because four bodies had been counted twice.Seventeen workers were killed in a similar blast at the mine in 2006, Turkey's Anatolia news agency reported.The safety record of Turkey's coal mining industry lags behind that of most industrial nations, analysts say. The country's worst mining disaster was in 1992, when 270 miners were killed near the Black Sea port of Zonguldak.

Item 2

Doctors have fully separated the fused legs of a baby girl who's come to be known as Peru's mermaid. Holding up the legs of 13-month-old Milagro Wednesday her surgeon, called the delicate procedure a true success. The medical team had planned to begin repairing the birth defect by opening her legs up to the knees but say the procedure exceeded doctors' expectations. The girl's legs had been fused together from her thighs to her ankles when she was born. Milagro, whose name means miracle was born with a rare congenital defect commonly known as mermaid syndrome, which occurs in one out of every 70,000 births. Her doctors say there are only 3 known cases of children with the condition alive in the world today.

Item 3

BANGKOK-Thailand is Asia's biggest production base for pirated compact discs with a capacity to make 60 million copies a year, report said last week. Delegates at a seminar on international property rights said that CD piracy and a host of other copyright violations put Thailand at risk of losing trade privileges, the Nation Daily reported. Thienchai Prinvises, a representative of the Motion Picture Producer Association of America, said that of the 60 million illegal CDs produced in Thailand, 50 million were exported. He said that failure by police to curb the piracy may lead to trade tensions and estimated that Thailand housed about 30 copying machines each able to produce 2 million CDs a year.

Model test 2

Item 1

We are talking about hurricanes, because that is what forecasters at Colorado State University are talking about. Every year, they make predictions about the Atlantic hurricane

season. It starts on June 1st and lasts through the end of November, although storms can form outside that season, as well. This year, the Colorado State forecasters say we`re in for a less active season. They`re predicting 10 named storms. They think only four of those will become hurricanes.

A couple of things to keep in mind here, though. One, these forecasts aren`t perfect. Last year, Colorado State predicted 16 named storms. We had 19. Two, even if just one storm makes landfall, it can still cause serious consequences. Forecasters say it`s important to prepare the same for every hurricane season.

Item 2

The World Health Organization is urging countries to follow six policies to prevent millions of tobacco-related deaths. The six policies are known as MPOWER, spelled M-P-O-W-E-R. The M is for monitoring tobacco use and prevention policies. The P is for protecting people by establishing smoke-free areas. The O stands for offering services to help people stop smoking. The W is for warning people about the dangers of tobacco. The E is for enforcing bans on tobacco advertising and other forms of marketing. And R is for raising taxes on tobacco. The W.H.O. says tobacco now causes more than five million deaths a year. It predicts this number will rise to more than eight million by the year two thousand thirty. By the end of the century, it says, tobacco could kill one billion people -- ten times as many as in the twentieth century.

Item 3

At least 70 people have been killed in an attack on a Shiite Mosque in the Iraqi capital Baghdad. Almost 160 others were injured when suicide bombers detonated explosives after Friday prayers. The bombers struck when they knew the caused the most carnage as hundreds of Shiite worshipers streamed out after the weekly Friday prayers. Police believe two of the attackers were dressed as women although their identities are still unclear. Their black head to toe robes covered out the explosive vests in which nails another metallic objects were embedded ensuring horrific injuries The prayer leader of the mosque is also a member of the parliament from the largest Shiite party. He condemned the bombings as a deliberately sectarian attack.

答案及新闻底稿

Model test 3

Keys: 1. B 2. D 3. B 4. C 5. D 6. B 7. D

News Item One

Iran's new chief nuclear negotiator has given his backing to talks to resolve its atomic standoff with the West, while insisting that Tehran will not give up its plans to develop a full nuclear fuel cycle. "Iran deems it a principle to continue talks and it accepts negotiation as the right manner," Ali Larijani, installed as secretary of Iran's Supreme National Security Council on Monday, told the Sharq Daily in an interview published on Tuesday. European diplomats have expressed concern that Larijani, a conservative close to Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, will adopt a tougher line on the nuclear issue than his predecessor Hassan Rohani.

News Item Two

It's been a momentous week for Europe with the rejection -- in two referendums in France and then the Netherlands -- of the European Union's new constitution. Many EU leaders say the process of ratification should go on until every country has had its say. Others aren't so sure. Ten

out of the twenty-five countries have already ratified the constitutional treaty, but the French and the Dutch have shocked Europe's ruling elite. People were opposed to the constitution for a wide variety of sometimes contradictory reasons. For every French voter who wanted more Europe with better social protection there was a Dutch voter who wanted less Europe which cost them less money. For every angry no vote cast in protest against an unpopular government today, there was another cast in fear of an uncertain future tomorrow.

News Item Three

Iran said it has sent a naval force into the Gulf of Omen to clear mines. Thehran Radio said the operation would begin only if the United Arab Emirates agreed to allow Iranian mine-sweeping forces into their territorial waters. But shortly after the Iranian announcement, the United Arab Emirates turned down the idea, saying they would rely on their own resources and that in any case their coastal waters were now almost clear of mines. Iran had asked to be allowed into the area after several mines were detected in waters off the port of Fujairah. Iran has blamed the United States for laying the mines. However, a BBC correspondent in the area says it is widely assumed the Iranians put them there.

Model Test Four

Keys: 1. D 2. D 3. D 4. C 5. A 6. B 7. A

News Item One

The momentum is building ahead of next month's G8 summit in Scotland where the leaders of the world's richest nations will debate what they can do to help some of the world's poorest. Africa is the priority and the politicians will discuss reducing the debt burden, ending trade regulations which put the continent's economy at a disadvantage, and giving more aid. T he solution, or, at least, the project SOLD as the solution to, has been "aid": Emergency aid, development aid, agricultural aid, economic advice. Billions of dollars worth of it. The problem with this solution is that, patently, it hasn't worked. On the whole, Africa has got poorer. The failure hasn't really been the idea of real aid but the misuse of that term. Clearly, if, in the famous phrase, you "teach a man to fish" you're probably helping him.

News Item Two

Canada and Israel signed on Wednesday a free trade agreement which will eliminate tariffs from nearly all industrial products traded between the two countries beginning January 1st, 1997.The two countries agreed that these tariffs will be phased out over the first two and a half years. Duty-free or low duties will be applied to a variety of agricultural and fisheries products exported by both countries. Both sides have excluded dairy, poultry and egg products. In support of this agreement, both ministers also announced the formation of a business advisory group to function within the Canada-Israel joint Economic Commission. The mandate of the new group is to produce innovative approaches to stimulate business and to provide advice to the two governments on trade issues.

News Item Three

Tunisia is observing three days of mourning for people killed in the revolution that ousted the president a week ago. As many as one hundred people may have died since the start of the

uprising in December. The former president, Zine el-Abidene Ben Ali, held power for twenty-three years. A temporary government has offered a general pardon to political prisoners and agreed to recognize banned political parties. The acting prime minister, Mohammed Ghannouchi, has also removed all restrictions on the media. The interim government promises to hold elections. And it has arrested members of Mr. Ben Ali's family for investigation of corruption. But protesters in Tunis and elsewhere continued to demand the removal of any officials from the old ruling party. On Friday, the first day of national mourning, protesters in Tunis welcomed police officers who joined them for the first time. Still, the situation calmed enough this week for the government to announce that schools and universities will reopen next week. The protests grew out of anger over high unemployment and food prices, which are currently reaching new highs on world markets. The question now is how much the events in Tunisia will influence people in other countries.

Model Test Five

Keys: 1. A 2. C 3. C 4. D 5. D 6. D 7. A

News Item One

US doctors from Duke University warn that relying on standard X-rays alone to give a clean bill of health could lead to wrong diagnoses and law suits. When they re-checked the X-ray results of 92 patients using a more detailed scanner, called MRI, they found 35 fractures that had been missed. The findings are published in the American Journal of Roentgenology. Dr. Charles Spritzer, who led the research, said: "The diagnosis of traumatic fracture most often begins and ends with X-rays of the hip, pelvis, or both. In some cases though, the exclusion of a traumatic fracture is difficult."

News Item Two

American Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is at home after a stay in a New York hospital, where she was treated for a blood clot. Her doctors say she is making excellent progress. A State Department spokeswoman said Mrs. Clinton plans to return to her office next week. Last month, the 65-year-old diplomat suffered a stomach virus that caused her to be dehydrated -- lacking enough fluids in her body. She fell and hit her head while she was sick. In a normal medical examination following the accident, doctors discovered the blood clot between her brain and her skull, a sinus venous thrombosis. She is currently taking medicine called blood thinners to break up the blood clot.

News Item Three

This week, leaders of the top industrial and developing economies gathered in the eastern United States. They met in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, for a summit on the world's financial future. Leaders of the Group of 20 have now met three times in less than a year to deal with the worst recession since the 1930s. Many of their governments have used spending programs to inject five trillion dollars into their economies. These stimulus efforts have had some success. Now, the question is how and when to withdraw that support without harming a recovery, and how to avoid a repeat of the financial crisis. The leaders agreed to make the G20 the main group for their international economic cooperation, instead of the G8.

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