㈠ 谁有大学英语听说3的听说答案
今年九月份开始,新视野大学英语改版了,网上没有答案。搜到的都是以前的版本。新的答案版本还没有出来。不过,你上视听课的时候,可以带上视听教材。
㈡ 21世纪大学实用英语视听说教程3答案(复旦大学出版的)unit1-unit2的listening practice的听力原文
参考答案
1-5 BCDCB
6-10 DDCAB
11-15 BCDCA
16-20 CBDDB
21-25 ABADC
26-30 BACBD
31-35 BCDCD
36-40 DCCBC
41-45 BBDDC
46-50 DCCDB
51-55 GBEFA
56. Her unborn baby.
57. She began to deliver the baby.
58. In a hospital.
59. He felt very surprised.
60. Because she was to attend her mother’s funeral.
(2)大学英语听说3听力原文答案扩展阅读:
英语语法句子成分英文表达:
强调句:emphatic sentence
倒装句:inverted sentence
祈使句:imperative sentence
反义疑问句:disjunctive question
主动语态:active voice
被动语态:passive voice
独立结构:absolute construction
限定从属分句:finite clause
非限定分句:non-finitive clause
状语从句:adverbial clause
主语从句:subject clause
定语(关系)从句:relative clause/attributive clause
㈢ 求全新版大学英语听说教程3的听力原文及答案
听力原文地址。来网页底自部有其他单元原文链接请注意!
http://www.xmwaiyu.com/Info/list.asp?id=617
请看这里网友的回复,看来part D的mp3是找不到。
http://www.rye.net/bbs/dispbbs.asp?boardID=10&ID=5539&page=1
㈣ 大学英语听说第三版4听力原文 董亚芬
【大学英语听说第三版听力原文 董亚芬】
Unit1(BOOK4)
Part B The Hospital Window
Jack and Ben, both seriously ill, occupied the same hospital room. Jack, whose bed was next to the room's only window, was allowed to sit up in his bed for an hour each afternoon to help drain the fluid from his lungs. But Ben had to spend all dcent growth in the Asian cigarette market from 1999 - 2000.
In Singapore, there has been an increase of smokers, which reflects the popularity of the addictive habit in Asia. Statistics show that seven Singaporeans die every day from smoking-related diseases in this country of 3.5 million people.
Questions:
1. Which of the following days is World No Tobacco Day?
2. What did the WHO announce on World No Tobacco Day?
3. Why did the speaker cite Singapore as an example?
4. What can be inferred from this passage?
Unit 8
Part B
A Terrible Disease
Now at 57, on good days I'm filled with hope and determination, but on bad days Ihave the worst sense of being alone. I've started a support group for other sufferers, for Iknow it's essential to have contact with people who are walking through the same maze.Jack's coping well. While he still dreams of waking up to find all this has been ahorrible nightmare, he's assured me that I can depend on him. When we married he didn't
know 'for better or worse' included Alzheimer's. But neither did I.
Questions:
1. What does the story mainly tell us?
2. Which of the following is one of the symptoms of the speaker's disease?
3. What can we learn from the story?
4. What do you know about the speaker from the story?
5. What can be inferred about the speaker's mother?
Part C
Old Age's Problems and OpportunitiesOld age in the United States presents many problems and opportunities. As a result
of improved medical services , people live longer than they used to. This increase in longevity creates a wide range of social needs. The medical specialty of gerontology (老年医学) has opened up new research areas and careers related to the elderly.
The elderly must set up a new life. Often, the elderly must rely on a fixed income - Social Security and pensions - and graally diminished savings. While some live with their children, many more live by themselves, with a friend or in a nursing home.
However, the increasing proportion of elderly people in society has given them a new political power. They have formed organizations to voice their own needs and concerns to local state and federal agencies. Lobbying(游说)for such issues as increased Social Security benefits, better health care, income tax benefits and rent controls has brought to the public an increased awareness of the determination of the elderly to assert their ability to deal effectively with their own lives.
Unit10
Part B
A Victim of Drugs
Margaret frowned as she shook the can of deodorant. It was almost empty but she'd only had it a week -- surely she couldn't have used it all?
realized Paul had been behaving oddly because of the drugs.
But the worst was yet to come. He was soon found stealing money at home. Margaret reported him to the police to give him a fright, and the police kept him to Margaret.
Then he shook his dad's hand.
The next morning Paul died.
Margaret was so angry that the drugs had won. She said, "Drug addiction is a disease and it beat him. The only winners are the drug dealers who get rich on the suffering of ordinary families like ours."
Questions:
1. How old was Paul when he first started to get high on a drug-like substance?
2. Which substance did Paul first start to use?
3. How did Margaret get to know that Paul was taking drugs?
4. Why did Margaret report Paul to the police when she found him stealing money at home?
5. Which of the following can be inferred from the text?
6. What was the cause of Paul's death?
Part C
Interview with an Internet Addiction Counselor
Interviewer: Welcome to this edition of Talk of the Nation. I'm Jenny Butler. We're talking this hour about how and why people might become addicted to things other than drugs. Our high-tech society offers new high-tech addictions like video games, online chat rooms, etc. Dr. James at Maryland University has put together a support group for
students who find themselves addicted to the Internet. He joins me now from his office in College Park.
somehow break the pattern. Go out and take a walk, and then come back before you get back online.
Interviewer: So that's how we can avoid Internet addiction. Thank you very much, Dr. James.
James: Thank you.
Questions:
1. What is the name of the program?
2. What is the topic of this edition?
3. What are the harmful effects of Internet addiction?
4. What are the warming signals that show you are starting to get addicted?
5. How to avoid the Internet addiction according to Dr. James?