1、大学英语六级听力-101 及答案解析(总分:100.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、Listening Comprehens(总题数:4,分数:100.00)These days we take for granted the wide variety of music available on the radio. But, this wasn“t always the case. In the early days of radio, stations 1 broadcasting only a narrow range of sounds, which was all right for
2、 the human voice but music didn“t sound very good. There was also a great deal of 2 and other static noises that further 3 the quality of the sound. A man named Edwin Armstrong, who was a music lover, set out to change this. He invented FM radio, a technology that allowed stations to send a broad ra
3、nge of 4 that greatly improved the quality of the music. Now, you“d think that this would have made him a 5 ; it didn“t. Radio stations at that time had invested 6 amounts of money in the old technology. So the last thing they wanted was to invest millions more in the new technology. Nor did they wa
4、nt to 7 other radio stations that had a superior sound and could put them out of business. So they 8 the Federal Communications Commission the department of the United States government that regulates radio stationsto put 9 regulations on FM radio. The result was that its use was limited to a very s
5、mall area around New England. Of course as we all know, Edwin Armstrong“s FM technology eventually prevailed and was 10 by thousands of stations around the world. But this took years of court battles and he never saw how it came to affect the lives of almost everyone. (分数:25.00)填空项 1:_Millions of sp
6、orts lovers are thinking about just one thing right nowthe Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia. Close to 2,900 men and women are set to compete in the 2014 Winter Games. The 11 were held on Friday night. The games continue through Sunday, February 23. At least $50 billion are being spent on the 2014 Wi
7、nter Games, making it the 12 Olympics in history. Seven billion dollars was spent on the 2010 Winter Games in Vancouver, Canada. Olympic officials chose Sochi to host the 2014 games almost seven years ago. At the time, Russian President Vladimir Putin said the games would cost about $13 billion. Yet
8、 the real cost is four times his 13 . So where did all the money go? Many Russians say people 14 the project have taken some of it. One research group found that 38 percent of Russians it spoke with said the Olympics increased the likelihood of 15 . Other observers say the high cost is partly the re
9、sult of 16 measures. Brian Jenkins is a 17 expert from the RAND Corporation. “There are anywhere between 70,000 and 100,000 policemen and military troops deployed around the city. 18 , we hear reports that Russian authorities are going door to door in Sochi looking for 19 .“ The main threat comes fr
10、om separatist and Islamist groups from the North Caucasus. One group 20 two suicide bombings in Volgograd last December. The attacks killed more than 30 people. The city is only about 600 kilometers away from Sochi. (分数:25.00)填空项 1:_It is a growing custom in America not to announce an engagement unt
11、il the date of the marriage is approximately settled. A man is generally not 21 to ask a girl to marry him until he is able to provide a home for her. This, however, does not prevent long friendships between young couples or a 22 understanding growing up between them, and it is during this period th
12、at they learn to know each other and find out if they are suited for a life“s 23 . When “a young man goes a courting“ it generally means that he has some particular girl in mind. A man“s courting is generally on his best behavior, and many a happily married wife 24 her courting days as the most deli
13、ghtful of her life. At that time the woman is the object of a devotion to which she has as yet 25 nothing. She is still at liberty to weigh and choose, to compare her lover to other men, while the knowledge that she is the 26 girl that some man is trying to win gives her a pretty sense of 27 . Wheth
14、er it is one of the fictions about courtship or not, it is generally 28 that a young woman is longer in making up her mind than is the young man. When a man finds the right girl he is pretty 29 know it, and it is his business then to 30 and persuade her to his point of view. (分数:25.00)填空项 1:_Entranc
15、e examinations have been causing problems and 31 at the University of Liberia in Monrovia. The exams help to decide whom the University will accept as a student. The problems begin after an education specialist James Dorbor-Jallah 32 direct and administer the testing. Recently, about 25,000 high sch
16、ool students took the test but failed. Mr. Dorbor- Jallah says, he and his team want to show that a 33 , honest examination can help. He says some Liberian think they cannot enter the university unless they make a financial gift 34 . He said the university has been trying to decide how to oversee th
17、e process, so people“s abilities would be measured 35 their performances on the examination. Last year, the University of Liberia accepted about 7, 000 new students after they took a similar exam. But that test was judged differently. Mr. Dorbor-Jallah says the university 36 his help because it had
18、problems in the past with entrance exams. The country“s Minister of Education says she does not think that all 25,000 high school students failed the test. Some of the students have held 37 at the university. They say they were cheated of the more than 20 dollars required to register for the test. I
19、t appeared that the university would have no first year students until Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf met with university officials. The officials then said they would lower admission test 38 and accept at least 1,600 people. President Sirleaf said the school could not be expected to 39 it
20、“s admission policies so soon after the end of Liberia“s second civil war. The fighting ended 10 years ago. She 40 conditions caused by the fighting for what she has called “the mess“ in the country“s educational system. (分数:25.00)填空项 1:_大学英语六级听力-101 答案解析(总分:100.00,做题时间:90 分钟)一、Listening Comprehens(
21、总题数:4,分数:100.00)These days we take for granted the wide variety of music available on the radio. But, this wasn“t always the case. In the early days of radio, stations 1 broadcasting only a narrow range of sounds, which was all right for the human voice but music didn“t sound very good. There was al
22、so a great deal of 2 and other static noises that further 3 the quality of the sound. A man named Edwin Armstrong, who was a music lover, set out to change this. He invented FM radio, a technology that allowed stations to send a broad range of 4 that greatly improved the quality of the music. Now, y
23、ou“d think that this would have made him a 5 ; it didn“t. Radio stations at that time had invested 6 amounts of money in the old technology. So the last thing they wanted was to invest millions more in the new technology. Nor did they want to 7 other radio stations that had a superior sound and coul
24、d put them out of business. So they 8 the Federal Communications Commission the department of the United States government that regulates radio stationsto put 9 regulations on FM radio. The result was that its use was limited to a very small area around New England. Of course as we all know, Edwin A
25、rmstrong“s FM technology eventually prevailed and was 10 by thousands of stations around the world. But this took years of court battles and he never saw how it came to affect the lives of almost everyone. (分数:25.00)填空项 1:_ (正确答案:were capable of)解析: were capable of 听力原文 These days we take for grante
26、d the wide variety of music available on the radio. But, this wasn“t always the case. In the early days of radio, stations were capable of broadcasting only a narrow range of sounds, which was all right for the human voice but music didn“t sound very good. There was also a great deal of crackling an
27、d other static noises that further interfered with the quality of the sound. A man named Edwin Armstrong, who was a music lover, set out to change this. He invented FM radio, a technology that allowed stations to send a broad range of frequencies that greatly improved the quality of the music. Now,
28、you“d think that this would have made him a millionaire ; it didn“t. Radio stations at that time had invested enormous amounts of money in the old technology. So the last thing they wanted was to invest millions more in the new technology. Nor did they want to compete with other radio stations that
29、had a superior sound and could put them out of business. So they pressured the Federal Communications Commissionthe department of the United States government that regulates radio stationsto put restrictive regulations on FM radio. The result was that its use was limited to a very small area around
30、New England. Of course as we all know, Edwin Armstrong“s FM technology eventually prevailed and was adopted by thousands of stations around the world. But this took years of court battles and he never saw how it came to affect the lives of almost everyone. 解析: crackling 解析: interfered with 解析: frequ
31、encies 解析: millionaire 解析: enormous 解析: compete with 解析: pressured 解析: restrictive 解析: adopted Millions of sports lovers are thinking about just one thing right nowthe Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia. Close to 2,900 men and women are set to compete in the 2014 Winter Games. The 11 were held on Frid
32、ay night. The games continue through Sunday, February 23. At least $50 billion are being spent on the 2014 Winter Games, making it the 12 Olympics in history. Seven billion dollars was spent on the 2010 Winter Games in Vancouver, Canada. Olympic officials chose Sochi to host the 2014 games almost se
33、ven years ago. At the time, Russian President Vladimir Putin said the games would cost about $13 billion. Yet the real cost is four times his 13 . So where did all the money go? Many Russians say people 14 the project have taken some of it. One research group found that 38 percent of Russians it spo
34、ke with said the Olympics increased the likelihood of 15 . Other observers say the high cost is partly the result of 16 measures. Brian Jenkins is a 17 expert from the RAND Corporation. “There are anywhere between 70,000 and 100,000 policemen and military troops deployed around the city. 18 , we hea
35、r reports that Russian authorities are going door to door in Sochi looking for 19 .“ The main threat comes from separatist and Islamist groups from the North Caucasus. One group 20 two suicide bombings in Volgograd last December. The attacks killed more than 30 people. The city is only about 600 kil
36、ometers away from Sochi. (分数:25.00)填空项 1:_ (正确答案:opening ceremonies)解析: opening ceremonies 听力原文 Millions of sports lovers are thinking about just one thing right now the Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia. Close to 2,900 men and women are set to compete in the 2014 Winter Games. The opening ceremonies
37、 were held on Friday night. The games continue through Sunday, February 23. At least $50 billion are being spent on the 2014 Winter Games, making it the costliest Olympics in history. Seven billion dollars was spent on the 2010 Winter Games in Vancouver, Canada. Olympic officials chose Sochi to host
38、 the 2014 games almost seven years ago. At the time, Russian President Vladimir Putin said the games would cost about $13 billion. Yet the real cost is four times his estimates . So where did all the money go? Many Russians say people involved in the project have taken some of it. One research group
39、 found that 38 percent of Russians it spoke with said the Olympics increased the likelihood of corruption . Other observers say the high cost is partly the result of security measures. Brian Jenkins is a terrorism expert from the RAND Corporation. “There are anywhere between 70,000 and 100,000 polic
40、emen and military troops deployed around the city. In addition , we hear reports that Russian authorities are going door to door in Sochi looking for suspects .“ The main threat comes from separatist and Islamist groups from the North Caucasus. One group claimed responsibility for two suicide bombin
41、gs in Volgograd last December. The attacks killed more than 30 people. The city is only about 600 kilometers away from Sochi. 解析: costliest 解析: estimates 解析: involved in 解析: corruption 解析: security 解析: terrorism 解析: In addition 解析: suspects 解析: claimed responsibility for It is a growing custom in Am
42、erica not to announce an engagement until the date of the marriage is approximately settled. A man is generally not 21 to ask a girl to marry him until he is able to provide a home for her. This, however, does not prevent long friendships between young couples or a 22 understanding growing up betwee
43、n them, and it is during this period that they learn to know each other and find out if they are suited for a life“s 23 . When “a young man goes a courting“ it generally means that he has some particular girl in mind. A man“s courting is generally on his best behavior, and many a happily married wif
44、e 24 her courting days as the most delightful of her life. At that time the woman is the object of a devotion to which she has as yet 25 nothing. She is still at liberty to weigh and choose, to compare her lover to other men, while the knowledge that she is the 26 girl that some man is trying to win
45、 gives her a pretty sense of 27 . Whether it is one of the fictions about courtship or not, it is generally 28 that a young woman is longer in making up her mind than is the young man. When a man finds the right girl he is pretty 29 know it, and it is his business then to 30 and persuade her to his
46、point of view. (分数:25.00)填空项 1:_ (正确答案:supposed)解析: supposed 听力原文 It is a growing custom in America not to announce an engagement until the date of the marriage is approximately settled. A man is generally not supposed to ask a girl to marry him until he is able to provide a home for her. This, howe
47、ver, does not prevent long friendships between young couples or a sentimental understanding growing up between them, and it is during this period that they learn to know each other and find out if they are suited for a life“s partnership . When “a young man goes a courting“ it generally means that h
48、e has some particular girl in mind. A man“s courting is generally on his best behavior, and many a happily married wife looks back on her courting days as the most delightful of her life. At that time the woman is the object of a devotion to which she has as yet conceded nothing. She is still at lib
49、erty to weigh and choose, to compare her lover to other men, while the knowledge that she is the ultimate girl that some man is trying to win gives her a pretty sense of self-importance . Whether it is one of the fictions about courtship or not, it is generally assumed that a young woman is longer in making up her mind than is the young man. When a man finds the right girl he is pretty apt to know it, and it is his business then to start out and persuade her to