Question1 WG;1[o&
W:It would help me if you could go over the last week and give me an idea howmuch beer drank each evening. QK\QvU2y
M:Well, let me see, I went up to the pub 4 times last week, and drank about 3 pintseach evening. $.}fL;BzVz
Question:How much beer did the man drink last week? Lrz>0_Q
q
phN
Question2 9jiZtwRpk
W:Is there anything else I can do to help me sleep at night? uKqN
M:Don’t worry so much about things of work. I know, I know, easier said than done. ^\cB&<h
W:Should I stay home from work? _y)#N<
M:No, I don’t think that’s necessary, just remember to stay calm. J?-"]s`J
Question:What does the doctor suggest the woman do? vhEPk2wD,
$6:j3ZTXrt
Question3 >.PLD} zE_
W:How’s even your feeling in general?
Nora<
M:No complaints, really. E`>-+~ZUsk
Question:What does the man mean? ]?^m;~MQZ
K2L+tw
Question4 r,i^-jv;
W:Our managing director is going to give you a raise. )KR9al f3
M:Really? Are you kidding me? A75IG4]
W:Absolutely! He thinks you would! PF@<>NO+W
Question:What does the woman say? HPpKti7g
@g""*T1:$
Question5 gOO\` #
W:I’ve been so worried about my daughter. She’s so different and temperament for me.We are not always on the same wheeling. G F,/<R #
M:That’s quite common with mothers and daughters. ]m(Uv8/6
W:She is a further personality and very much on the ball, but she is an excitablechild. cy?u
*
Question:What does the woman mean? hp,bfcM
;-@^G
3C:
Question6 sBq @W4
W:Where is your injury? +K;(H']Z<-
M:Here, my ankle. c5<M=$
W:How did it happen? k%/Z.4vQG
M:I tripped over on the pavement and twisted it. It was swollen and very painful. n'1pNL:
Question:What is true about the woman? 1>4'YMdZi
Wze\
z
Question7 5X nA.?F^
W:John wants to move upwards and onwards within his new company. S*IF/ fu
M:He is well qualified and the boss interested him. M2[;b+W9
W:So you think he will achieve his goal? ; @-7'%(C
M:Yeah! For betting he will. |9jeOV}/
Question:What did the man mean? z(aei(U=
%rzC+=*;
Question8 7z)Hq./3@
M:Take the slip to the front desk and then arrange an appointment for the tests. UOZ"#cQ
W:Thank you, doctor! Have a nice day! C\
j|+s
Question:What will the woman do? vR3'B3y
F# y5T3(P
Question9 4H]Go~<
M:There is one girl on my school who everybody picks up. w{UVo1r:
W:Why? lDnF(
M:Because she doesn’t wear what everybody else wears. t`o-HWfS.
Question:What can be inferred about the girl in question? |#L U"D
QnME|j\
Question10 4)!aYvaER
M:What’s your coming for today, Mrs. Anderson? kKr7c4q
W:I’ve been having some pains in my joints, especially the knees! %]h5\%@w
Question:Where does the conversation most probably take place? t Q385en
btJ:Wt}
Question11 %# ?)+8"l
W:How long does the pain last when you get it? 6.ASLH3#
M:It comes and goes! Sometimes I hardly feel anything, other times it can last upto half an hour or more. |77.Lqqy,
W:Is there any type of food that seems to cause stronger pain or other types? [KLs}
~H
M:Um, heavy foods like stay insomnia usually brings it on, I’ll been to avoidthose. -hiG8%l5
Question:What type of food seems to cause stronger pain to the man? {~_X-g5|]
?'Y\5n/*$
Question12 OS;qb:;
W:Carl, your bicycle is too old, it’s not safety to ride. Aw~
=U!
M:Yeah! I think I need to buy a new one, but it will go with time. 3}@3pVS
Question:What did the man mean? h.d-a/
@E
%:ALJ
Question13 {4J:t_<nKO
M:How long could you have these symptoms? AE?MEag
W:Oh, I have the cough for two weeks, but feeling ill just be past a few days. Mrysy)x
Question:What do we know about the woman’s illness?
YRa{6*M
&TJMop Vn
Question14 e&sZ]{uD
W:I think I could recover the cough at the end of this year. y.P Wh<dI
M:I’m sorry to burst your bubble, but the stock index still ranges between 1900and 2900 after every year. E
w#UlA:"v
h+=xG|1R[5
Question15 tIn
dve
M:I just want check to understand which pills to take and when? nX~Qt%
W:The yellow one in the morning and the others, oh, I think no, maybe, ah, you’d betterto write it down! Then you won’t forget! 5x856RQ'
M:Here is some paper! The yellow one once a day before breakfast, the large roundone three times a day after meals, the small ones when you need one for sleeping. $cjwY$6
Question:Which of the following statements is true? fy9m
S
.TZ0FxW
SectionB Dialogue One Question 16-20 hWc`4xdl
W:Hi, Patrick, how are your feeling today? RP[^1
M:A bit better. a7$-gW"Z(,
W:That’s good to hear. Are you still feeling nausea? "/H B#
M:No. I haven’t felt sick to my stomach so she is to switch my medication. QA|87alh
W:Great, say, your test result came this morning. p G|-<6WY
M:It’s about time. Is it good news or a bad? PL"u^G`
W:I guess it would be a bit of both. Which do you want first? oKyl2jg+,
M:Let’s get the bad news over with. S
$j"'K
W:OK. It looks like you are going to need surgery to remove your tumor from yourleg. After the operation you’re going to have to escape your feet for at least3 weeks. That means no soccer. *^[m?3"W
M: It is afriend of you if you are going to say that. P+ejyl,
W:Now, for the good news. The belt shows the tumor is benign which means it isnot cancerous. We’re going to take it out anyway just being on a safe side. s Zn@y e^
M:Wow, that’s a load off my mind. Thanks doctor. )<ig6b%
W:Don’t get too excited, we still need to get the bottom of this way ofloathing... A-"2 sp*t
M:I probably have just been so worried about stupid lump. OVq(u
lwi+
W:These things off and on are stress-related but we’re still going to do a fewblood test just rule a few things out. B`{7-Asc1
M:Things like what? Cancer? 7QSrC/e
W:Actually, I am thinking more of the lines of food allergy. Y @(izC&h
r0^ *|+
|)KOy~"
Passage1 y@XE! L
Womanmay be more susceptible to the lung-damaging effect to smoking than men,according to the new research by Inassessali Sohine ND, and her colleagues fromChiming Laboratory, Briven and Women Hospital and University of Bergen Norway.They analyzed the data from the Norwegian case control study, including 954subjects with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and 955 controls,all the current or ex-smokers. And COPDsubject had moderate or severe COPD. Although analysis indicated the women maybe more vulnerable to the effect to smoking, which is something previouslysuspected but not proven, said Dr. Sohine. The study results would be preventedon May 18, at the 115 international conference of American directive society inSantiago. Examining the total study samples there is nogender differences with respect to lung function and COPD severity. The womenwere on average younger, and they smoked significantly left than men. Toexperience the differences further they also analyzed two subgroups of studyexample, COPD subject on the age of 60 and COPD subjects with less than 20 packyears. In both subgroups we need have more severe disease and great impairmentto the lung function than man. This means the female smokers in our studyexperienced reduced the lung function at a lower level of smoking exposure andat the earlier age than men, said Dr. Sohine. It’s long been suspected that theeffective smoking on lung function may be modified by gender. Interactionanalysts confirm that being female represents a higher risk of reduced lungfunction and severer COPD. But this gender reset was most pronounced women’slevel of smoking exposure was low. According to Dr Sohine, the reason why thewomen may be more susceptible to the effect of cigarette smoke is stillunknown. There are several possible explanations. Women have small airways,therefore eat cigarettes may be more harm. Also there are gender
]v2%h X
ZuLW%z.
Passage2 9 AWFjoXl"
InDecember 1997 large numbers of cattle, goats and sheep began dying in theGarissa district of north-eastern Kenya. A month later people started dying,too. It was, at the time, the biggest recorded outbreak of Rift Valley fever inEast Africa. Some 100,000 stock animals succumbed and about 90,000 people wereinfected, hundreds fatally in five countries. 5,_DM
InDecember 2007 the same thing happened. Or, it started to happen but was stopped inits tracks. The difference was that the second time around there was warning.In September researchers at the Goddard Space Century,Greenbelt, Maryland, part of America’s space agency, NASA, told the authoritiesin Kenya that they had a problem. They told them again in October. And again inNovember. By the time the epidemic emerged, the Kenyan health ministry haddispatched teams to the area to distribute mosquito nets and urge villageleaders and religious authorities to stop people slaughtering and eatinganimals. Though the outbreak still killed 300 people in Kenya, Somalia andTanzania, it could be a lot worse. According to Kenneth Linthicum of America’sDepartment of Agriculture, the number of deaths would probably have been morethan twice as high without the warning. 6uS;H]nd<
Thewarning itself was possible because of a model of how disease spreads that DrLinthicum helped design. And the data that were plugged into that model camefrom satellites. bU4l|i;j
Whatthe researchers at Goddard had noticed at the time of the first outbreak wasthat in the months preceding it, surface temperatures in the equatorial part ofthe Indian Ocean had risen by half a degree. These higher temperatures broughtheavy and sustained rains, cloud cover and warmer air to much of the Horn ofAfrica. Mosquitoes multiplied wildly, and lived long enough for the virus thatcauses the fever to develop to the point where it is easily transmissible. InSeptember 2007 the researchers saw the same thing happeningin the ocean, and suspected the same consequences would follow. to9X2^
ee2k..Tq#
2 xE+"?0