2019年6月大学英语四级真题及答案PAGE16/NUMPAGES182016年6月英语四级考试真题及答案PartIWriting(30minutes)Directions:Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowritealettertoexpressyourthankstooneofyourfriendswhohelpedyoumostwhenyouwereindifficulty。Youshouldwriteatleast120wordsbutnomorethan180words。PartⅡListeningC...
PAGE16/NUMPAGES182016年6月英语四级考试真题及
PartIWriting(30minutes)Directions:Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowritealettertoexpressyourthankstooneofyourfriendswhohelpedyoumostwhenyouwereindifficulty。Youshouldwriteatleast120
sbutnomorethan180words。PartⅡListeningComprehension(25minutes) SectionA Directions:Inthissection,youwillhearthreenewsreports。Attheendofeachnewsreport,youwillheartwoorthreequestions。Boththenewsreportandthequestionswillbespokenonlyonce。Afteryouhearaquestion,youmustchoosethebestanswerfromthefourchoicesmarkedA),B),C)andD)。ThenmarkthecorrespondingletteronAnswerSheet1withasinglelinethroughthecentre。 Questions1and2arebasedonthenewsreportyouhavejustheard. 1.A)TheInternationalLaborOrganization’skeyobjective. B)Thebasicsocialprotectionforthemostvulnerable. C)Risingunemploymentworldwide. D)Globaleconomicrecovery. 2.A)Manycountrieshavenottakenmeasurestocreateenoughjobs. B)Fewcountriesknowhowtoaddressthecurrenteconomiccrisis. C)Fewcountrieshaverealizedtheseriousnessofthecurrentcrisis. D)Manycountriesneedsupporttoimprovetheirpeople’slivelihood. Questions3and4arebasedonthenewsreportyouhavejustheard. 3.A)Servestandardizedfoodnationwide. B)Putcalorieinformationonthemenu. C)Increaseproteincontentinthefood. D)Offerconvenientfoodtocustomers. 4.A)Theywillbefined. B)Theywillbeclosed. C)Theywillgetawarning. D)Theywilllosecustomers. Questions5to7arebasedonthenewsreportyouhavejustheard. 5.A)Inabilitytoimplementtheirbusinessplans. B)Inabilitytokeepturningoutnovelproducts. C)Lackofasuccessfulbusinessmodeloftheirown. D)Failuretointegrateinnovationintotheirbusiness. 6.A)Itisthesecrettobusinesssuccess. B)Itisthecreationofsomethingnew. C)Itisamagictooltobringbigrewards. D)Itisanessentialpartofbusinessculture. 7.A)Itshardworkingemployees. B)Itsflexiblepromotionstrategy. C)Itsinnovationculture.D)Itswillingnesstomakeinvestments.SectionB Directions:Inthissection,youwillheartwolongconversations.Attheendofeachconversationsyouwillhearfourquestions.Boththeconversationsandthequestion-swillbespokenonlyonce.Afteryouhearaquestion.YoumustchoosethebestanswerfromthefourchoicesmarkedA),B),C)andD).ThenmarkthecorrespondingletteronAnswerSheet1withasinglelinethroughthecentre. Questions8to11arebasedontheconversationyouhavejustheard. 8.A)He’sgotaddictedtotechnology. B)Heisnotverygoodatsocializing. C)Heiscrazyabouttext-messaging. D)Hedoesnottalklongonthephone. 9.A)Talkbig. B)Talkatlength. C)Gossipalot. D)Forgetherself. 10.A)Hethoughtitwascool. B)Heneededthepractice. C)Hewantedtostayconnectedwiththem. D)Hehadanurgentmessagetosend. 11.A)Itposesachallengetoseniors. B)Itsavesbothtimeandmoney. C)Itischildishandunprofessional. D)Itiscoolandconvenient. Questions12to15arebasedontheconversationyouhavejustheard. 12.A)Hewantstochangehisjobassignment. B)Heisunhappywithhisdepartmentmanager. C)Hethinkshedeservesextrapayforovertime. D)Heisoftensingledoutforcriticismbyhisboss. 13.A)Hisworkloadwasmuchtooheavy. B)Hisimmediatebossdidnottrusthim. C)Hiscolleaguesoftenrefusedtocooperate. D)Hissalarywastoolowforhisresponsibility. 14.A)Heneverknowshowtorefuse. B)Heisalwaysreadytohelpothers. C)Hisbosshasalotoftrustinhim. D)Hisbosshasnosenseoffairness. 15.A)Putallhiscomplaintsinwriting. B)Waitandseewhathappensnext. C)Learntosaynowhennecessary. D)Talktohisbossinpersonfirst. SectionC Directions:Inthissection,youwillhearthreepassages.Attheendofeachpassage,youwillhearthreeorfourquestions.Boththepassageandthequestionswillbespokenonlyonce.Afteryouhearaquestion,youmustchoosethebestanswerfromthefourchoicesmarkedA),B),C)andD).ThenmarkthecorrespondingletteronAnswerSheet1withasinglelinethroughthecentre. Questions16to18arebasedonthepassageyouhavejustheard. 16.A)Theimportanceofsleeptoahealthylife. B)ReasonsforAmericans’declineinsleep. C)Sometipstoimprovethequalityofsleep. D)Diseasesassociatedwithlackofsleep. 17.A)Theyaremorehealth-conscious. B)Theyarechangingtheirlivinghabits. C)Theygetlessandlesssleep. D)Theyknowthedangersoflackofsleep. 18.A)Theirweightwillgodown. B)Theirmindfunctionwilldeteriorate. C)Theirworkefficiencywilldecrease. D)Theirbloodpressurewillrise. Questions19to21arebasedonthepassageyouhavejustheard. 19.A)Howmuchyoucanaffordtopay. B)Whatcourseyouaregoingtochoose. C)Whichuniversityyouaregoingtoapplyto. D)Whenyouaregoingtosubmityourapplication. 20.A)Thelistofcoursesstudied. B)Thefullrecordofscores. C)Thereferencesfromteachers. D)Thepersonalstatement. 21.A)Specifywhattheywouldliketodoaftergraduation. B)Describeindetailhowmuchtheywouldenjoystudying. C)Indicatetheyhavereflectedandthoughtaboutthesubject. D)Emphasizethattheyadmiretheprofessorsintheuniversity. Questions22to25arebasedonthepassageyouhavejustheard. 22.A)Itwasequippedwithrubbertyres. B)Itwasbuiltinthelate19thcentury. C)ItwaspurchasedbytheRoyalfamily. D)ItwasdesignedbyanEnglishengineer. 23.A)Theyconsumedlotsofpetrol. B)Theytooktwopassengersonly. C)Theyweredifficulttodrive. D)Theyoftenbrokedown. 24.A)Theywereproducedontheassemblyline. B)Theywerebuiltwithlesscostlymaterials. C)TheyweremodeledafterBritishcars. D)Theyweremadeforordinaryuse. 25.A)Itmadenewsallovertheworld. B)ItwasbuiltfortheRoyalfamily. C)Itmarkedanewerainmotortravel. D)Itattractedlargenumbersofmotorists.PartIIIReadingComprehension(40minutes) SectionA Directions:Inthissection,thereisapassagewithtenblanks.Youarerequiredtoselectonewordforeachblankfromalistofchoicesgiveninawordbankfollowingthepassage.Readthepassagethroughcarefullybeforemakingyourchoices.Eachchoiceinthebankisidentifiedbyaletter.PleasemarkthecorrespondingletterforeachitemonAnswerSheet2withasinglelinethroughthecentre.Youmaynotuseanyofthewordsinthebankmorethanonce. Questions26to35arebasedonthepassageyouhavejustheard. Physicalactivitydoesthebodygood,andthere’sgrowingevidencethatithelpsthebraintoo.ResearchersintheNetherlandsreportthatchildrenwhogetmoreexercise,whetheratschoolorontheirown, 26 tohavehigherGPAsandbetterscoresonstandardizedtests.Ina 27 of14studiesthatlookedatphysicalactivityandacademic 28 ,investigatorsfoundthatthemorechildrenmoved,thebettertheirgradeswereinschool, 29 inthebasicsubjectsofmath,Englishandreading. Thedatawillcertainlyfueltheongoingdebateoverwhetherphysicaleducationclassesshouldbecutasschoolsstruggleto 30 onsmallerbudgets.Theargumentsagainstphysicaleducationhaveincludedconcernsthatgymtimemaybetakingawayfromstudytime.WithstandardizedtestscoresintheU.S. 31 inrecentyears,someadministratorsbelievestudentsneedtospendmoretimeintheclassroominsteadofontheplayground.Butasthesefindingsshow,exerciseandacademicsmaynotbe 32 exclusive.Physicalactivitycanimproveblood 33 tothebrain,fuelingmemory,attentionandcreativity,whichare 34 tolearning.Andexercisereleaseshormonesthatcanimprove 35 andrelievestress,whichcanalsohelplearning.Sowhileitmayseemasifkidsarejustexercisingtheirbodieswhenthey’rerunningaround,theymayactuallybeexercisingtheirbrainsaswell. 注意:此部分
请在答题卡2上作答.A)attendanceB)consequentlyC)currentD)depressingE)droppingF)essentialG)feasibleH)flowI)moodJ)mutuallyK)particularlyL)performanceM)reviewN)surviveO)tend SectionB Directions:Inthissection,youaregoingtoreadapassagewithtenstatementsattachedtoit.Eachstatementcontainsinformationgiveninoneoftheparagraphs.Identifytheparagraphfromwhichtheinformationisderived.Youmaychooseaparagraphmorethanonce.Eachparagraphismarkedwithaletter.AnswerthequestionsbymarkingthecorrespondingletteronAnswerSheet2.FindingtheRightHome—andContentment,Too [A]Whenyourelderlyrelativeneedstoentersomesortoflong-termcarefacility—amomentfewparentsorchildrenapproachwithoutfear—whatyouwouldlikeistohaveeverythingmadeclear. [B]Doesassistedlivingreallymarkagreatimprovementoveranursinghome,orhastheindustrysimplyhiredbetterinteriordesigners?Arenursinghomesasbadaspeoplefear,oristhatanout-modedstereotype(固定看法)?Candoingone’shomeworkreallysteerfamiliestothebestplaces?Itisgenuinelyhardtoknow. [C]Iamabouttomakethingsmorecomplicatedbysuggestingthatwhatkindoffacilityanolderpersonlivesinmaymatterlessthanwehaveassumed.Andthatthecharacteristicsadultchildrenlookforwhentheybeginthesearcharenotnecessarilythethingsthatmakeadifferencetothepeoplewhoaregoingtomovein.Iamnottalkingaboutthequalityofcare,letmehastilyadd.Nobodyflourishesinagloomyenvironmentwithirresponsiblestaffandapoorsafetyrecord.Butanaccumulatingbodyofresearchindicatesthatsomedistinctionsbetweenonetypeofeldercareandanotherhavelittlerealbearingonhowwellresidentsdo. [D]Themostrecentofthesestudies,publishedinThejournalofAppliedGerontology,surveyed150Connecticutresidentsofassistedliving,nursinghomesandsmallerresidentialcarehomes(knowninsomestatesasboardandcarehomesoradultcarehomes).ResearchersfromtheUniversityofConnecticutHealthCenteraskedtheresidentsalargenumberofquestionsabouttheirqualityoflife,emotionalwell-beingandsocialinteraction,aswellasaboutthequalityofthefacilities. [E]“Wethoughtwewouldseedifferencesbasedonthehousingtypes,”saidtheleadauthorofthestudy,JulieRobison,anassociateprofessorofmedicineattheuniversity.Areasonableassumption—don’tfamiliesstruggletoavoidnursinghomesandsufferrealguiltiftheycan’t? [F]Intheinitialresults,assistedlivingresidentsdidpaintthemostpositivepicture.Theywerelesslikelytoreportsymptomsofdepressionthanthoseintheotherfacilities,forinstance,andlesslikelytobeboredorlonely.Theyscoredhigheronsocialinteraction. [G]Butwhentheresearcherspluggedinanumberofothervariables,suchdifferencesdisappeared.Itisnotthehousingtype,theyfound,thatcreatesdifferencesinresidents’responses.“Itisthecharacteristicsofthespecificenvironmenttheyarein,combinedwiththeirownpersonalcharacteristics—howhealthytheyfeeltheyare,theirageandmaritalstatus,”Dr.Robisonexplained.Whetherresidentsfeltinvolvedinthedecisiontomoveandhowlongtheyhadlivedtherealsoprovedsignificant. [H]Anelderlypersonwhodescribesherselfasinpoorhealth,therefore,mightbenolessdepressedinassistedliving(evenifherchildrenpreferredit)thaninanursinghome.Apersonwhobadinputintowherehewouldmoveandhashadtimetoadapttoitmightdoaswellinanursinghomeasinasmallresidentialcarehome,otherfactorsbeingequal.Itisaninteractionbetweenthepersonandtheplace,notthesortofplaceinitself,thatleadstobetterorworseexperiences.“Youcan’tjustsay,‘Let’sputthispersoninaresidentialcarehomeinsteadofanursinghome—shewillbemuchbetteroff,”Dr.Robisonsaid.Whatmatters,sheadded,“isacombinationofwhatpeoplebringinwiththem,andwhattheyfindthere.” [I]Suchfindings,whichruncountertocommonsense,havesurfacedbefore.Inamulti-statestudyofassistedliving,forinstance,UniversityofNorthCarolinaresearchersfoundthatahostofvariables—thefacility’stype,sizeorage;whetherachainownedit;howattractivetheneighborhoodwas—hadnosignificantrelationshiptohowtheresidentsfaredintermsofillness,mentaldecline,hospitalizationsormortality.Whatmatteredmostwastheresidents’physicalhealthandmentalstatus.Whatpeoplewerelikewhentheycameinhadgreaterconsequencethanwhathappenedonetheywerethere. [J]AsIwasconsideringallthis,apressreleasefromarespectedresearchfirmcrossedmydesk,announcingthatthefive-starratingsystemthatMedicaredevelopedin2008tohelpfamiliescomparenursinghomequalityalsohaslittlerelationshiptohowsatisfieditsresidentsortheirfamilymembersare.Asamatteroffact,consumersexpressedhighersatisfactionwiththeone-starfacilities,thelowestrated,thanwiththefive-starones.(Moreonthisstudyandthestarratingswillappearinasubsequentpost.) [K]Beforewecollectivelytearourhairout—howarewesupposedtofindourwayinalandscapethisconfusing?—hereisathoughtfromDr.PhilipSloane,ageriatrician(老年病学专家)attheUniversityofNorthCarolina:“Inaway,thatcouldbeliberatingforfamilies.” [L]Ofcourse,sonsanddaughterswanttovisitthefacilities,talktotheadministratorsandresidentsandotherfamilies,anddoeverythingpossibletofulfilltheirduties.Butperhapstheydon’thavetoturnthemselvesintoprivateinvestigatorsorCongressionalsubcommittees.“Familiescanlookabitmoreforwheretheresidentsaregoingtobehappy,”Dr.Sloanesaid.Andinvolvingthefutureresidentintheprocesscanbeveryimportant. [M]Weallhaveourownideasaboutwhatwouldbringourparentshappiness.Theyhavetheirideas,too.Afriendrecentlytookhermothertovisitanexpensiveassistedliving/nursinghomenearmytown.Ihaveseenthisplace—itiselegant,insideandout.Butnobodygreetedthedaughterandmotherwhentheyarrived,thoughthevisithadbeenplanned;nobodyintroducedthemtotheotherresidents.Whentheyhadlunchinthediningroom,theysataloneatatable. [N]Thedaughterfearedhermotherwouldbeignoredthere,andsoshedecidedtomoveherintoamorewelcomingfacility.Basedonwhatisemergingfromsomeofthisresearch,thatmighthavebeenasrationalawayasanytoreachadecision. 36.Manypeoplefeelguiltywhentheycannotfindaplaceotherthananursinghomefortheirparents. 37.Thoughithelpsforchildrentoinvestigatecarefacilities,involvingtheirparentsinthedecision-makingprocessmayproveveryimportant. 38.Itisreallydifficulttotellifassistedlivingisbetterthananursinghome. 39.Howaresidentfeelsdependsonaninteractionbetweenthemselvesandthecarefacilitytheylivein. 40.Theauthorthinksherfriendmadearationaldecisioninchoosingamorehospitableplaceoveranapparentlyelegantassistedlivinghome. 41.ThesystemMedicaredevelopedtoratenursinghomequalityisoflittlehelptofindingasatisfactoryplace. 42.Atfirsttheresearchersofthemostrecentstudyfoundresidentsinassistedlivingfacilitiesgavehigherscoresonsocialinteraction. 43.Whatkindofcarefacilityoldpeopleliveinmaybelessimportantthanwethink. 44.Thefindingsofthelatestresearchweresimilartoanearliermulti-statestudyofassistedliving. 45.Aresident’ssatisfactionwithacarefacilityhasmuchtodowithwhethertheyhadparticipatedinthedecisiontomoveinandhowlongtheyhadstayedthere. SectionC Directions:Thereare2passagesinthissection.Eachpassageisfollowedbysomequestionsorunfinishedstatements.ForeachofthemtherearefourchoicesmarkedA),B),C)andD).YoushoulddecideonthebestchoiceandmarkthecorrespondingletteronAnswerSheet2withasinglelinethroughthecentre. Passageone Questions46to50arebasedonthefollowingpassage. AsArtificialIntelligence(AI)becomesincreasinglysophisticated,therearegrowingconcernsthatrobotscouldbecomeathreat.Thisdangercanbeavoided,accordingtocomputerscienceprofessorStuartRussell,ifwefigureouthowtoturnhumanvaluesintoaprogrammablecode. Russellarguesthatasrobotstakeonmorecomplicatedtasks,it’snecessarytotranslateourmoralsintoAIlanguage. Forexample,ifarobotdoeschoresaroundthehouse,youwouldn’twantittoputthepetcatintheoventomakedinnerforthehungrychildren.“Youwouldwantthatrobotpreloadedwithagoodsetofvalues,”saidRussell. Somerobotsarealreadyprogrammedwithbasichumanvalues.Forexample,mobilerobotshavebeenprogrammedtokeepacomfortabledistancefromhumans.Obviouslythereareculturaldifferences,butifyouweretalkingtoanotherpersonandtheycameupcloseinyourpersonalspace,youwouldn’tthinkthat’sthekindofthingaproperlybrought-uppersonwoulddo. Itwillbepossibletocreatemoresophisticatedmoralmachines,ifonlywecanfindawaytosetouthumanvaluesasclearrules. Robotscouldalsolearnvaluesfromdrawingpatternsfromlargesetsofdataonhumanbehavior.Theyaredangerousonlyifprogrammersarecareless. Thebiggestconcernwithrobotsgoingagainsthumanvaluesisthathumanbeingsfailtososufficienttestingandthey’veproducedasystemthatwillbreaksomekindoftaboo(禁忌). Onesimplecheckwouldbetoprogramarobottocheckthecorrectcourseofactionwithahumanwhenpresentedwithanunusualsituation. Iftherobotisunsurewhetherananimalissuitableforthemicrowave,ithastheopportunitytostop,sendoutbeeps(嘟嘟声),andaskfordirectionsfromahuman.Ifwehumansaren’tquitesureaboutadecision,wegoandasksomebodyelse. Themostdifficultstepinprogrammingvalueswillbedecidingexactlywhatwebelieveinmoral,andhowtocreateasetofethicalrules.Butifwecomeupwithananswer,robotscouldbegoodforhumanity. 46.Whatdoestheauthorsayaboutthethreatofrobots? A)Itmayconstituteachallengetocomputerprogranmers. B)Itaccompaniesallmachineryinvolvinghightechnology. C)Itcanbeavoidedifhumanvaluesaretranslatedintotheirlanguage. D)Ithasbecomeaninevitableperilastechnologygetsmoresophisticated. 47.Whatwouldwethinkofapersonwhoinvadesourpersonalspaceaccordingtotheauthor? A)Theyareaggressive. B)Theyareoutgoing. C)Theyareignorant. D)Theyareill-bred. 48.Howdorobotslearnhumanvalues? A)Byinteractingwithhumansineverydaylifesituations. B)Byfollowingthedailyroutinesofcivilizedhumanbeings. C)Bypickinguppatternsfrommassivedataonhumanbehavior. D)Byimitatingthebehaviorofpropertybrought-uphumanbeings. 49.Whatwillawell-programmedrobotdowhenfacinganunusualsituation? A)keepadistancefrompossibledangers. B)Stoptoseekadvicefromahumanbeing. C)Triggeritsbuilt-inalarmsystematonce. D)Dosufficienttestingbeforetakingaction. 50.Whatismostdifficulttodowhenweturnhumanvaluesintoaprogrammablecode? A)Determinewhatismoralandethical. B)Designsomelarge-scaleexperiments. C)Setrulesforman-machineinteraction. D)Developamoresophisticatedprogram. PassageTwo Questions51to55arebasedonthefollowingpassage. Whydosomepeoplelivetobeolderthanothers?Youknowthestandardexplanations:keepingamoderatediet,engaginginregularexercise,etc.Butwhateffectdoesyourpersonalityhaveonyourlongevity(长寿)?Dosomekindsofpersonalitiesleadtolongerlives?AnewstudyintheJournaloftheAmericanGeriatricsSocietylookedatthisquestionbyexaminingthepersonalitycharacteristicsof246childrenofpeoplewhohadlivedtobeatleast100. Thestudyshowsthatthoselivingthelongestaremoreoutgoing,moreactiveandlessneurotic(神经质的)thanotherpeople.Long-livingwomenarealsomorelikelytobesympatheticandcooperativethanwomenwithanormallifespan.Thesefindingsareinagreementwithwhatyouwouldexpectfromtheevolutionarytheory:thosewholiketomakefriendsandhelpotherscangatherenoughresourcestomakeitthroughtoughtimes. Interestingly,however,othercharacteristicsthatyoumightconsideradvantageoushadnoimpactonwhetherstudyparticipantswerelikelytolivelonger.Thosewhoweremoreself-disciplined,forinstance,werenomorelikelytolivetobeveryold.Also,beingopentonewideashadnorelationshiptolonglife,whichmightexplainallthosebad-temperedoldpeoplewhoarefixedintheirways. Whetheryoucansuccessfullychangeyourpersonalityasanadultisthesubjectofalongstandingpsychologicaldebate.Butthenewpapersuggeststhatifyouwantlonglife,youshouldstrivetobeasoutgoingaspossible. Unfortunately,anotherrecentstudyshowsthatyourmother’spersonalitymayalsohelpdetermineyourlongevity.Thatstudylookedatnearly28,000Norwegianmothersandfoundthatthosemomswhoweremoreanxious,depressedandangryweremorelikelytofeedtheirkidsunhealthydiets.Patternsofchildhoodeatingcanbehardtobreakwhenwe’readults,whichmaymeanthatkidsofdepressedmomsendupdyingyounger. Personalityisn’tdestiny(命运),andeveryoneknowsthatindividualscanlearntochange.Butbothstudiesshowthatlonglifeisn’tjustamatterofyourphysicalhealthbutofyourmentalhealth. 51.TheaimofthestudyintheJournaloftheAmericanGeriatricsSocietyis____. A)toseewhetherpeople’spersonalityaffectstheirlifespan B)tofindoutifone’slifestylehasanyeffectontheirhealth C)toinvestigatetheroleofexerciseinlivingalonglife D)toexamineallthefactorscontributingtolongevity 52.Whatdoestheauthorimplyaboutoutgoingandsympatheticpeople? A)Theyhaveagoodunderstandingofevolution. B)Theyarebetteratnegotiatinganagreement. C)Theygenerallyappearmoreresourceful. D)Theyaremorelikelytogetoverhardship. 53.Whatfindingofthestudymightprovesomewhatoutofourexpectation? A)Easy-goingpeoplecanalsolivearelativelylonglife. B)Personalitycharacteristicsthatproveadvantageousactuallyvarywithtimes. C)Suchpersonalitycharacteristicsasself-disciplinehavenoeffectonlongevity. D)Readinesstoacceptnewideashelpsoneenjoylongevity. 54.WhatdoestherecentstudyofNorwegianmothersshow? A)Children’spersonalitycharacteristicsareinvariablydeterminedbytheirmothers. B)Peoplewithunhealthyeatinghabitsarelikelytodiesooner. C)Mothers’influenceonchildrenmaylastlongerthanfathers’. D)Mothers’negativepersonalitycharacteristicsmayaffecttheirchildren’slifespans. 55.Whatcanwelearnfromthefindingsofthetwonewstudies? A)Anxietyanddepressionmoreoftenthannotcutshortone’slifespan. B)Longevityresultsfromacombinationofmentalandphysicalhealth. C)Personalityplaysadecisiveroleinhowhealthyoneis. D)Healthisinlargepartrelatedtoone’slifestyle. PartIVTranslation(30minutes) Directions:Forthispart,youareal
本文档为【2019年6月大学英语四级真题及答案】,请使用软件OFFICE或WPS软件打开。作品中的文字与图均可以修改和编辑,
图片更改请在作品中右键图片并更换,文字修改请直接点击文字进行修改,也可以新增和删除文档中的内容。
[版权声明] 本站所有资料为用户分享产生,若发现您的权利被侵害,请联系客服邮件isharekefu@iask.cn,我们尽快处理。
本作品所展示的图片、画像、字体、音乐的版权可能需版权方额外授权,请谨慎使用。
网站提供的党政主题相关内容(国旗、国徽、党徽..)目的在于配合国家政策宣传,仅限个人学习分享使用,禁止用于任何广告和商用目的。