查看完整版本: 旧托福听力mp3及脚本——《第三十二天》(2002年1月)

Horse 2008-3-19 21:27

旧托福听力mp3及脚本——《第三十二天》(2002年1月)

对话听写训练1:[attach]4219[/attach]
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Woman: oh, Jack, I’m glad I caught you. I want to tell you I have to skip the history study group session tonight.`
8x"Ye*IF xVp Man: Really? That’s too bad. Aren’t you feeling well?
%wk+qi(_+A? Woman:  oh, it’s not bad. It’s going to be a public meeting down at the town hall. The state senator from this area ^1Y&Y:m A`/Qsb
is going to be there. She had this meeting three or four times a year to speak with her constituency.
Vp"[ccYvR z$nE| Man: Is that what you’d like to do with your evenings, go and listen to politicians?`%V8F\Z
Woman: actually, it’s a class assignment. Prof Jackson, he’s teaching that political science seminar I’m taking. He
o)OY:D@Fm_ told all of us in the seminar to go in and hear what the senator has to say tonight and also write up a report about
en?n$F8sr{6h the issues people bring up.fx!g/F#b,wE nj
Man: oh, like medical care, and tax and…?5{ e,xk'v^ek
Woman: right, as long as I’m there, I think I’d like to bring up government funding for state universities. The
K%t;laq8H%DH tuition keeps going up and it’s getting harder and harder for a lot of students to afford it.
.VWV9\G4~{tW]%o Man: tell me about it.
QyCf^z S Woman: anyway, I want to do a really good job on this report. I need to get a letter of recommendation from Prof
m|g'}&Z/B6\+a2Q!S Jackson for graduate school. So I guess I’d better show up there tonight and see what’s going on.b1[|Gx[4IQ
Man: Yeah, but, what about the history test? h3{ N.t aun
Woman: Well, I already put in some extra time on that this morning. So I think by tomorrow afternoon, I’ll be ready."N;t)E7MAT_!y1I
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对话听写训练2:[attach]4220[/attach]b8sj(_5z
A:I just finished reading a book of short story by Hemlen Garlen called Main Traveled Road. I really d,j#Z|'j2W$t f
enjoy it. Have u ever read it?5S+H#I iWAkbo J
B: Yes, it was a required reading in American literature course I took last year, even though its fiction, you get a B;|JlJV
realistic picture of the hard life people had back on American frontier. I don’t think I would survive 19 century
M7y!i_[!m frontier life.
-K D*J.NK'N,]P A: Me neither. Remember that story among the car roads. Garlen gives a vivid description of Julie Peterson, that young immigrant girl, she had to work on her family farm.
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A: Well when Julie feels exhausted, and she is wishing she can escape from her hard labor, she looks over her father
"}~5c"lIR working in the next field. And she is inspired to continue her own work.
^h0g ?7~R(P_+O[ ] B: I do remember that story. Garlen really captures the spirit of hard work that was so typical of immigrants and .j;|q'A;X[1p
pioneers who settled the American Midwest. It’s difficult to image that nothing seems to discourage them for long. v6o J2~!F]:V
A:I wonder how Garlen learn so much about the Midwest. Wasn’t he from Boston?
6|6kS)^:G.j6^&|9j B: He lived in Boston. In fact, he studied and taught in Boston School of Oritory, but I think he was born in
D O*Y{_} Lawcarbinlen, Wincosin. He did grow up in Midwest.
v.b4LK{ P;Y A: No wonder his descriptions are so good, I’m going to take this book back to the library now and see what other 5y\8j2w(_ p
Garlen’s works I can find.
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演讲听写训练1:[attach]4221[/attach]
R1B6?1t*G This is our last meeting before the campers arrive tomorrow. I’ll give you the activity schedules later. But, now I
'E-H Q'bCn want to answer a question one of you asked me yesterday about campers with asthma. Let me explain a little about the disease. First of all, it’s chronical and very common. 20 million people in the United States alone have it. It
7m _Hsf-oB] affects the bronchial tubes that are the airways of the lungs. During normal breathing, air is drawn in through the |QG{"?/Ave m
mouth and nose, and eventually makes its way into the bronchial tubes. The asthma patient’s bronchial tubes are very sensitive, and easily irritated by exercises or strength, exposure to allergy or pollution, or breathing in cold air, %A7EU fS
cigarettes smoke. When asthmatic suffers an attack, the airway path was constricted, making it difficult for the
_uX5_INbY person from breathing normally. If a camper in your group has even a mild asthma, you would be informed and given
*]!}DxOSb*N W0];y further instruction about what to do in case of an attack. But don’t worry. Some of our campers might have a mild
8q/tOG(i#m case, but they always bring their medicines with them and we never have a problem. Are there any other questions? Ok, then let’s talk about the schedule for tomorrow.
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演讲听写训练2:[attach]4222[/attach]
7H1a!{)W8pZm Today most astronomers accept the notion that groups of stars that make up the universe are all moving farther and
H({"oMQm @![Y+n(h farther away from each other but until fairly recently this idea of an expanding universe was not a theory most
Zg%QCX European scholars believed in since ancient times and up to about the 17th century most of these scholars thought the size of the universe have remained unchanged since the moment of its creation or perhaps forever, with all the stars remaining more or less in place in relation to each other but that was challenged in the late 17th century by Izic
z2p#Y)Do F-m Newton’s idea of gravity as a force of attraction, which contradicted the idea of a university that is static,
7w+OG7_ F:bx unchanging. If gravity causes all the stars out there in space to attract each other as Newton said, then they could 1W*} | y(s+J"U8Q`
remain essentially motionless. Sooner or later all the stars will fall toward each other well, scientists then propose T:p iJq-n|$C
a new model, taking Newton’s theory into account, they didn’t want to abandon the idea of motionless stars, but for
Za/la#}s/E this model to work, so the stars won’t fall in eachother, they had to modify Newton’s law of gravity, so they kve r6hS9M
theorize that for distance as large as those between stars, the gravitational force repels rather attracts. As you x u7^l,W7R9j jQ
might guess, this other contradictions. But this is prettily resolved in the past centuries by currently accepted W%^,tyW y,[*K&Qt V.{
theory, which says the universe is continuously expanding. You’ll be reading about all that as your homework tonight.6W7cpg Y+C(UD/CB

Qr^9y%}gf 演讲听写训练3:[attach]4223[/attach]
_ ]+c8k!raf On Monday we talked about insects, and how they gather food. Today I’d like to talk about the common garden spider and how it captures its prey with the round net-like structure it first produced almost 200 million years ago. I mean, of course a spider web. What’s interesting is why such a delicate structure isn’t ripped a part. When a fast-flying insect crashes into it, and compared with the spider, these insects can be huge and really heavy. In fact capturing a large insect in a spider web could be compared to capture an airplane in a fishing net. So, how can the web absorb such a shock without breaking? Is it just because the silk-like thread is made of so strong? well, experts analyze spider webs using a computer program ,one designed for crash testing cars and they found the structure of the web, the way of threads connected together helps balance the strength and tensions caused by the impact and spread them all across the web this saves the web from being destroyed and by the way, suggests some creative new ideas that human might use in designing buildings. The big surprise, though, is the role of air resistance in cushioning the shock of collision. The computer model showed that dragging a tiny thread from a spider web through the air is a lot like pulling a heavy rope through water. And since air resistance acts on many threads all across the web ,its amazing effect that multiplies many times. And this definitely helps the web survive the impact.
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查看完整版本: 旧托福听力mp3及脚本——《第三十二天》(2002年1月)