英語六級真題的聽力部分,作為衡量學(xué)生英語實際應(yīng)用能力的重要標(biāo)尺,涵蓋了短對話、長對話及短文理解三大板塊,這些題型著重考察考生捕捉關(guān)鍵信息并深入理解語境的能力。因此,深入掌握并熟練運用真題聽力材料,對于提升六級考試成績具有舉足輕重的意義。此次,我們精心整理了2022年12月大學(xué)英語六級真題聽力部分(卷一)的詳細內(nèi)容及答案解析,旨在為廣大考生提供寶貴的備考資源與參考!
Section A
Directions:In this section,you will hear two long conversations.At the end of each conwersation,you will hear four questions.Both the conversation and the questions will be spoken only once.After you hear a question,you must choose the best answer from the four choices markedA),B),C)and D).Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 1 with a single line through the centre.
Questions 1 to 4 are based on the conversation you have just heard.
1.A)She hasn't started writing it.
B)She hasn't decided on a topic.
C)She is proofreading the first draft.
D)She is working on the references.
2.A)He lent many books to the man for reference.
B)He offered the man advice on resource hunting.
C)He published a lot in a number of reputable journals.
D)He told the man to be selective when using c-resources.
3.A)He didn't think her dissertation topic viable.
B)He wasn't interested in her dissertation topic.
C)He didn't want her to rush through her dissertation.
D)He wasn't specific about the length of her dissertation.
4.A)Change her research methodology.
B)Narrow down her dissertation topic.
C)Consult her professor more.
D)Follow the man's advice.
Questions 5 to 8 are based on the conversation you have just heard.
5.A)He has translated 12 books.
B)He is a well-known nutritionist.
C)His books sell well worldwide.
D)Hislatest book sold a million copies.
6.A)The desire of Americans to try exotic cuisines.
B)The demand for information about food safety.
C)The fact that over half of Americans are overweight.
D)The fact that science books are difficult to read.
7.A)The general public.
B)Those who are overweight.
C)Those who want to lose weight.
D)The medical community.
8.A)Switch to a vegetarian diet.
B)Follow a personalized diet.
C)Adhere to doctors'advice.
D)Cut carbohydrate intake.
Section B
Directions:In this section,you will hear two passages.At the end of each passage,you will hear three or four questions.Both the passage and the questions will be spoken only once.After you hear a question,you must choose the best answer from the four choices marked A),B),C)and D).Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 1 with a single line through the centre.
Questions 9 to l1 are based on the passage you have just heard.
9.A)The rate of their growth increased dramatically.
B)The growth of their new brain cells doubled.
C)They began to show signs of depression.
D)They began to get irritated and restless.
10.A)To avoid them in the future.
B)To warn others against them.
C)To make good sense of them.
D)To reflect on their causes.
11.A)Produce a surprising healing effect.
B)Weaken one'simmunity in the long run.
C)Make people more susceptible to illness.
D)Provide protection against mental illnesses.
Questions 12 to 15 are based on the passage you have just heard.
12.A)Placing their own interests over their staff's.
B)Being over whelmed by their daily routines.
C)Lacking the ability to relate to their staff.
D)Spending too much time handling email.
13.A)Their leadership may be challenged.
B)Their companies may go bankrupt.
C)Unexpected events mayoccur.
D)Major problems may result.
14.A)Keep an eye on their employees.
B)Motivate and inspire their team.
C)Sacrifice some of the immediate goals.
D)Have greater ambition in overall planning
15.A)Cultivate self-control.
B)Filter their email boxes.
C)Respond only after work.
D)Check only when necessary.
Section C
Directions;In this section,you will hear three recordings of lectures or talks followed by three or four questions.The recordings will be played only once.After you hear a question,you must choose the best answer from the four choices marked A),B),C)and D).Then mark the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 1 with a single line through the centre.
Questions 16 to 18 are based on the recording you have just heard.
16.A)The key to increasing healthy food supply.
B)The best way to improve marketing research.
C)The impact of advertisements on consumption.
D)The importance of the appearance of food.
17.A)By focusing on the nutrients in different foods.
B)By emphasizing the diversity of food.
C)By stressing pleasing aesthetics of food.
D)By winning the support of marketing professors.
18.A)They can attract customers with the healthy qualities of their products.
B)They can boost sales of healthy foods by making them visually appealing.
C)They can turn to marketing professors for advice.
D)They can rely on advertising for sales promotion.
Questions 19 to 21 are based on the recording you have just heard.
19.A)It has witnessed a spectacular surge in demand.
B)It has met much criticism from cnvironmcntalists.
C)It has seen more small businesses offering environment-friendly products.
D)It has experienced increasingly fierce competition among global companies.
20.A)Consumers now know much more about technology.
B)Their mass production has sharply reduced the price.
C)Consumers tend to favor all that is novel.
D)Their quality has been greatly improved.
21.A)Purchasing only this kind of products for home cleaning.
B)Writing positive comments about them on social media.
C)Demonstrating on TV how effective these products are.
D)Tellingone another about their incomparable virtues.
Questions 22 to 25 are based on the recording you have just heard.
22.A)Increasing cleaners'workload.
B)Blocking the fountains'works.
C)Breaking a time-honored ritual.
D)Polluting the fountains'water.
23.A)They are occasionally retrieved by curious tourists.
B)They are regularly donated to charity organizations.
C)They are mostly used for the fountains'maintenance.
D)They are usually used as wages for fountain cleaners.
24.A)It is invested in a series of businesses.
B)It is used exclusively for its maintenance.
C)It is used to run a supermarket for the nedy.
D)It is estimated to be about $40,000 a month.
25.A)He was arrested for stealing money from four fountain cleaners.
B)He was sentenced to 34 years'imprisonment.
C)He collected rare coins from around the world.
D)He stole a lot of money from a fountain with a magnetic stick.
Section A
Questions 1 to 4 are based on the conversation you have just heard.
M:How's your dissertation going?I'm proofreading my fist draf and will submit it to my professor tomorrow.
W:Oh,(1)I haven't even started writing mine yet,so I'm really worried about finishing by the end of next semester.
M:You mean you haven't even begun yours yet?The final draft is due in five months.
W:Of course I've started it,but I can't get to the writing yet as I haven't found enough resources to use,so I'm still researching the topic.
M:Maybe the problem is the way you're doing your research.(2)I started by talking to my professor about where to look for information.And based on that,I found books in the library and a lot of reputabl journal articles on the Internet.
W:I've tried all that,but don't have enough to write the dissertation as my department'sminimum length is 70 pages.I think the problem is that my topicisn't viable.(3)And honestly,my professor did warn me at the beginning that I mightnot be able to find enough material. But I was so interested in the topic that I didn't let his advice to turn me.
M:Well,I suggest you find a newtopic.After all,our professors are here to guide us,so it's best to listen to them.
W:In retrospect,I wish I had listened to him,but I didn't.Andnow I don't want to give up my topic as I've already invested so much time and energy.
M:If you're committed to your current topic,maybe you couldmake some adjustments rather than abandon it completely.What is your topic?
W:It's“Depictionsof Femininity and Folklore from the South of the Country”.
M:That's pretty narrow.You could find more material if you made the topic broader,maybe by including other kinds of depictions.
W:(4)Broadening the topic is a great idea.I'll start by including folklore from other regions of the country.
1.What does the woman say about her dissertation?
2.What does the man say about his professor?
3.What docs the woman say about her professor?
4.What do we learn the woman will do to complete her dissertation?
Questions 5 to 8 are based on the conversation you have just heard.
W:Today,on Book Talk,we arelucky enough to host John Robbinsand discuss his newbook,Why Americans Are Fat and How We Can Lose Weight.(5-1)John isn't just a respected writer;he's also one of the rare celebrity authors writing about science today.
M:Thanks for having me,Rebecca,but I'm hardly a celebrity.
W:That's very modest of you to say,(5-2)considering that your four books have sold a total of seven million copies worldwide,and they've been translated into 12 different languages.What makes people so fascinated with your work?
M:(6)Well,people read my books because more than 60% of Americans are overweight or obese.And other countries are facing similar problems.Basically,we all want to know how to fix things.
W:We certainly do.I've read your new book and it's fabulous,especially when it comes to the way you make difficult science easy for laymen to understand.That's no small achievement.
M:I'm glad to hear you find my work accesible,because I was woried when I wrote it that dicussing the science might make the book more suited for a specialist audience.(7)My last book was written primarily for the medical community.Butthis time,I want tohelp ordinary people take control of their weight.
W:And how do you suggest they do that?Can you give us the basics of your advice for people who want to lose weight?
M:Briefly,(8)I argue that every person needs toconsider their metabolism and eat what suits their body's needs.I don't advocate one single diet.Some people should eat more carbohydrates than others.And different people need different amounts of protein and fat.
W:But you do have some recommendations for everyone,includingeating ten servings of vegetables and three of fruit a day.We'll talk about those recommendations next,but now we need to take a short break for a message from our sponsor.
5.What does the woman say about the man in her introduction?
6.What has motivated the man to write his books?
7.Who does the man say his last book was mainly written for?
8.What does the man recommend people do?
Section B
Questions 9 to 11 are basedon the passage you have just heard.
Stress is often depicted as negative,but research shows that moderate amounts of it can be beneficial for your brain and your body.
First,the benefits for the brain.Studies have shown that short periods of stress can actually bolster cognitive functioning.(9)Rescarchers discovered that placing rats in a stresful situation for just a few hours doubled the growth of new brain cells.The rats also did better on a memory test later on.Scientists think the same thing happens in humans.But how does stres improve memory?It's simple.When your brain cells multiply,your memory can improve.Viewed from a biological perspective,this makes sense,(10)because animals that are better at remembering dangerous situations can avoid them in the future.If an anima encounters a predator and escapes,for example,it's important to remember where and when that encounter happened.Experts assert that the same principle applies to humans.
Now,let's turn to how stress benefis the body.This may come as a surprise to laymen.But expertssay that stresscan keep you from getting sick.(11)Scientists concede that chronic stress can make you more prone to illness.But research shows that short periods of stres can actually provide some protection against getting sick,because it increases your immune functioning.One study shows that rats that experienced brief stress had a surge of immune cell esponse,which makes the immunesystem better prepared to fightiless.For humans,there's even evidence that experiencing stress before geting vaccinated could help make vaccines more effective.
9.What did researchers discover about rats placed briefly in a stressful situation?
10.Why do people tend to have clear memories of dangerous situations they have encountered?
11.What do scientists believe chronic stress can do?
Questions 12 to 15 are based on the passage you have just heard.
(12)For many managers and people who work in leadership positions,dealing with emails is a dilemma.It's likely the unpredictable,uncontrollable and ongoing nature of day-to-day email in terms of yolume,importance and urgency contributes to their levels of anxiety and to diminished leadership skills. That's becaus it's not unusual for many leaders to prioritize email management over people management.An obsesson with managing their inbox prevents them from dealing with their employes.(13)As a result,they ignore the issues that might only be mild problems at first,until unfortunately,theyinevitably transform into a major problem or crisis by virtue of neglect.(14)As leaders,they are expected to motivate and inspire their team in pursuit of longer term strategic goals and also,less ambitiously but more practically,to monitor their daily output,to set clear expectations,and to give regular feedback.When presented with a choice between the appeal of their inbox and other more important activities,many sacrifice the latter.Daily email demands have a negative impacton their goal progress.This is because leaders must divert resourcesfrom other tasks to check,filter and respond to emails.(15)The solution is cultivating self-control which is like a muscle—it can be strengthened or improved over time through exercise.Some suggestions include making space in your diary for the only periods during which you'll be checking emails,setting a timer for yourself so you don't become distracted by your inbox for toolong,turning off email alerts so you're not interrupted by them.
12.What does the speaker say is a common problem with managers?
13.What may happen when managers ignore minor problems?
14.What are leaders expected to do in pursuing their strategic goals?
15.How can a managerbest avoid being distracted by email?
Section C
Questions 16 to 18 are bascd on the recording you have just heard.
In last week'slecture,wetalked about the problem scausedby pooreating habits,focusing on how medical professionals are trying to solve these problems.Today,well continue with the topic,but focus on research from a different field—marketing.
Now,what can marketing tell us about improving nutrition?Well,(16)a team of marketing professors has studied the importance of the visual aspect of food and how that influences food choices.
Those marketing experts assert that the impact of the appearance of fod is greater than we might presume,and might hold the key to encouraging better cating.So how important is the appearance of food?
Rescarch shows that just seeing an appealing photograph of a hamburger in an advertisement,for example,can cause individuals to imagine the taste or smell of that hamburger.This can make them more likely to purchase and consume it.Of course,that's the point of advertisements.So isn't that a god thing?
Well,the marketing professors argue that this is actually a problem,because the combination of pleasing aesthetics of and easy aces to unhealthy foods,such as hamburgers and pizza,may be contributing to a worldwide health crisis.In fact,statistics show that 39%o f all adults in the world weigh too much and another 13% are obese.
(17) Now,as we discussed last time,medical professionals have tried to fight the obesity epidemic by focusing on the nutrients found in different foods,emphasizing things like carbohydrate,fat,sugar and calorie content.But they've had limited success.
The marketing professors believe that the real solution to obesity is making food look appealingand focusing on the pleasure of both oking atand eating that food.That pleasure can be used as a tool to promote healthy food choices.In fact,the research done by the team showed that associating healthy food with pleasant images,experiences and emotionsled togreater interest in purchasingor eating it.“This is a better strategy,” they claim,then reminding consumers that a certain food is good for them.But are they right?
Well,the researchers cited a marketing campaign designed to reverse the salesdecline of carrots.The campaign didn't emphasize the carots'healthy qualities,but embrace their beauty and the pleasure derived from eating them.For example,theads focused on the bright,beautifulorange color andcrisp texture of the carrots.The campaign led to an inpressive increase in product salesof more than 10%.(18)The researchers believe that other companies could bolster sales of healthy foods with similar ads,depicting their products as attractive and a source of pleasure.
16.What does the speaker say a team of marketing professors has studied?
17.How have medical professionals tried to fight obesity?
18.What can other companies learn from the cxample of the carrot promotion campaign?
Questions 19 to 21 are based on the recording you have just heard.
The house hold cleaning products industry really began to take off in the 1950s.Prior to that resourceful housewives,who had grown up in a less prosperous era,relied on substances that they used in their kitchens such as vinegar used to clean windows.Today,the house hold cleaning products industry is worth bllions of dollarsa year and is dominated by large global companies.
(19)In recent years,however,many countries have witnessed a surge in the number of small businesses and companies offering more environment-friendly cleaning products,and they're doing good business,too.One reason for this is that consumers are becoming more aware of environment and sustainability isucs.They also want to make their home a safe place,free from toxic chemicals.The third reason is people's awareness of a knowledge about technology has never been greater.(20)In the past,people might have been skeptical of a new product claimed to be able to achieve amazing cleaning results,but they now have faith in technology's ability to do what was once thought impossible. There is perhaps no better example of this than a patented cloth sold by one company,which remarkably uses only water rather than traditional cleaning products.The company claims its cloth lifts,traps and removes dirt and bacteria.And considering that people don't see these products in shops,or advertised on TV or in the pres,it has been a pretty steep rise.Many of the people behind these companies began testing the viability of their products by selling them at local markets.Then,in many cases,(21)customers are doing the marketing for these products by leaving threads of comments on social media,praising their virtues. There are also TV shows and books dedicated to maintaining home tidiness and cleanliness and the benefits of having a clean home.Having a safe and clean home might be one thing people feel they can control in an increasingly out-of-control world.And there are social media celebrities.One womanin Britain has become a social media sensation with more than two million followers for her cleaning tips page.
19.What does the speaker say about the cleaning products industry in recent years?
20.Why are newly developed cleaning products selling well?
21.What are some customers doing to help promote non-traditional cleaning products?
Questions 22 to 25 are based on the recording you have just heard.
Throwing spare change into a fountain is a time-honored ritual:throw a penny into the water,and your wish might come true.But all that money has to go somewhere,(22)Otherwise,the growing piles of pennics,quarters and euros could clog up the fountain's works.Today,I'm going to talk about where all the coins go.
Well,the coins collected can go to all sorts of different places from fountain maintenance to charity or public service.(23)In New York City,for example,coins collected from fountains in public parks often go towards the fountains'maintenance itself,though entrepreneurs who don't mind getting their hands wet often get to it first.There are over 50 beautiful,decorative display fountains in New York City parks.They are cleaned by the parks'staff every few weeks.But most of the coins have already been removed by entrepreneurial New Yorkers and there is not a significant amount left to be collected.
Other citics,though,can pull in a much more serious haul.Take for example,Rome's famous Trevi fountain:forhundreds ofyears,visitorshave thrown coinsover their shoulder into the fountain to ensure that they will return.So many tourists toss in coins that Roman officals have the fountain cleaned every night reportedly gettingas much as $4,000 in loose change from around the world each day.(24)Most of the money collected each night goes towards running a supermarket for the needy.And collecting that cash is serious business.Roman officials have been known to be tough on anyone caught skimming coins from the fountain.In one case in 2005,police arested four fountain cleaners after they were spotted slipping coins into their own pockets after collecting them.(25)Authorities finall caught one notorious thief named Thomas Morgan and banned him from the fountain after he fished out thousands of dollars in change over 34 years using a magnetic stick.
For the most part,money collected from privately-owned fountains in the United States also goes to charity.The fountain in New York City's Bryant Park is owned and operated by a not-for-profit corporation which puts the cash collected by cleaners towards the fountain's own maintenance.Tens of thousands of dollars in coins removed from wishing wells,fountains and ponds in Florida's WaltDisney World are donated each year tosupport foster children living in the state.Whether or not your wish comes true after tossing a coin into a fountain,you can rest assured knowing that the change is likely going to someone who needs it.
22.What problem might be caused by the growing piles of coins in fountains?
23.What does the speaker say about the coins collected from New York City's park fountains?
24.What do we learn about the money collected from Rome's Trevi Fountain?
25.What does the speaker say about Thomas Morgan?
1.A)【精析】細節(jié)辨認題。對話一開始,男士詢問女士的論文進度,女士在句(1)中回答說她還沒開始寫。因此答案為A)。
2.B)【精析】細節(jié)辨認題。句(2)中男士提到,他在開始寫論文之前先和教授討論了去哪里找資料的問題。基于這個討論,他在圖書館找到了參考書,并在網(wǎng)上找到了大量知名期刊文章。因此答案為B)。
3.A)【精析】細節(jié)辨認題。女士認為自己無法開始寫論文是因為自己的題目不可行。根據(jù)句(3)可知,她的教授確實在一開始的時候提醒她可能會找不到足夠的資料。因此答案為A)。
4.D)【精析】細節(jié)推斷題。男士認為女士的論文題目太過狹窄,如果將題目擴大可能會找到更多資料。根據(jù)句(4)可知,女士認為擴大題目是個好主意,她會將對其他地區(qū)的民間傳說的描述囊括進來。由此可知,女士會聽從男士的建議。因此答案為D)。
5.C)【精析】細節(jié)推斷題。句(5-1)中女士介紹說,約翰不僅是一位受人尊敬的作家,還是當(dāng)今為數(shù)不多的撰寫科學(xué)類文書的名人作家之一。根據(jù)句(5-2)可知,男士的4部著作在全球總共售出了700萬冊,并被翻譯成12種不同的語言。由此可知,男士的著作暢銷全世界。因此答案為C)。
6.C)【精析】細節(jié)推斷題。女士問男士是什么讓人們對他的書作如此著迷。男士在句(6)中回答,人們讀他的書是因為超過60%的美國人超重或肥胖,其他國家也面臨類似的問題??偟膩碚f,大家都想知道如何解決問題。也就是說,超過一半美國人都超重的事實讓人們都想知道如何解決這個問題,這也就驅(qū)動了男士去寫相關(guān)的書。因此答案為C)。
7.D)【精析】細節(jié)辨認題。男士在句(7)中明確提到,他的上一部書主要是為醫(yī)學(xué)界寫的。因此答案為D)。
8.B)【精析】細節(jié)推斷題。句(8)中男士提到,他認為每個人都需要考慮自己的新陳代謝,吃適合自己身體需求的東西。他不提倡單一飲食。有些人應(yīng)該比其他人攝入更多的碳水化合物。不同的人對蛋白質(zhì)和脂肪的需求量不同。也就是說,男士建議人們遵循個性化飲食。因此答案為B)。
9.B)【精析】細節(jié)辨認題。句(9)中提到,研究人員發(fā)現(xiàn),將老鼠置于壓力狀態(tài)下幾個小時就會使它們新的腦細胞的生長翻倍。因此答案為B)。
10.A)【精析】細節(jié)推斷題。句(10)中提到,更善于記住危險情況的動物將來可以避開這些危險。例如如果動物遇到捕食者并逃脫,記住這種遭遇發(fā)生的地點和時間是很重要的。專家斷言,同樣的原理也適用于人類。由此可知,人們對他們曾遇到過的危險情況有清晰的記憶是為了將來避開它們。因此答案為A)。
11.C)【精析】細節(jié)辨認題。句(11)中明確提到,科學(xué)家承認,長期的壓力會讓人更容易生病。因此答案為C)。
12.D)【精析】細節(jié)辨認題。句(12)中提到,對于許多管理者和擔(dān)任領(lǐng)導(dǎo)職務(wù)的人來說,處理電子郵件讓人左右為難。就數(shù)量、重要性和緊迫性而言,日常電子郵件的不可預(yù)測性、不可控制性和持續(xù)性可能導(dǎo)致他們的焦慮程度上升以及領(lǐng)導(dǎo)能力下降。因此答案為D)。
13.D)【精析】細節(jié)推斷題。根據(jù)句(13)可知,管理者們忽略了起初可能只是小問題的事情,直到這些事情不幸由于疏忽而不可避免地變成了重大問題或危機。也就是說,忽視小問題可能會導(dǎo)致重大問題。因此答案為D)。
14.B)【精析】細節(jié)辨認題。句(14)中提到,作為領(lǐng)導(dǎo)者,他們應(yīng)該激勵自己的團隊去追求長期戰(zhàn)略目標(biāo),應(yīng)該少些雄心而更實際地監(jiān)控團隊的日常產(chǎn)出、設(shè)定明確的預(yù)期并定期提供反饋。因此答案為B)。
15.A)【精析】細節(jié)辨認題。短文中提到,領(lǐng)導(dǎo)者必須從其他任務(wù)中轉(zhuǎn)移資源來查看、過濾和回復(fù)電子郵件。根據(jù)句(15)可知,這一問題的解決方法是培養(yǎng)自制力,就像肌肉一樣——隨著時間的推移,肌肉可以通過鍛煉得到加強或改善。因此答案為A)。
16.D)【精析】細節(jié)辨認題。句(16)中提到,一個營銷教授團隊研究了食物視覺方面的重要性以及它如何影響食物選擇。因此答案為D)。
17.A)【精析】細節(jié)辨認題。根據(jù)句(17)可知,醫(yī)療專業(yè)人員試圖通過關(guān)注不同食物中的營養(yǎng)成分和強調(diào)碳水化合物、脂肪、糖和卡路里等的含量來對抗肥胖流行病。因此答案為A)。
18.B)【精析】細節(jié)辨認題。講座中提到了一個通過強調(diào)胡蘿卜的外觀和口感而成功將胡蘿卜的銷售量提高的案例。句(18)中講話者提到,研究人員認為其他公司可以通過類似的廣告來增加健康食品的銷量,將他們的產(chǎn)品描述為有吸引力和快樂的源泉。因此答案為B)。
19.C)【精析】細節(jié)辨認題。句(19)中提到,近年來,許多國家提供更多環(huán)保清潔產(chǎn)品的小公司的數(shù)量激增,而且他們的生意也做得很好。因此答案為C)。
20.A)【精析】細節(jié)推斷題。根據(jù)句(20)可知,過去,人們可能會對聲稱能夠達到驚人的清潔效果的新產(chǎn)品持懷疑態(tài)度,但他們現(xiàn)在相信技術(shù)有能力完成曾經(jīng)被認為不可能的事情。也就是說,消費者現(xiàn)在對技術(shù)有了更多的了解,所以新興清潔產(chǎn)品會暢銷。因此答案為A)。
21.B)【精析】細節(jié)辨認題。根據(jù)句(21)可知,顧客通過在社交媒體上留言(稱贊它們的優(yōu)點)來為這些產(chǎn)品進行營銷。因此答案為B)。
22.B)【精析】細節(jié)推斷題。講座開頭提到,將零錢扔進噴泉是一種歷史悠久的儀式:把一便士扔進水里,你的愿望可能會實現(xiàn)。但這些錢都得去往別處。根據(jù)句(22)可知,否則的話,越來越多的便士、美分和歐元可能會堵塞噴泉裝置。因此答案為B)。
23.C)【精析】細節(jié)辨認題。句(23)中明確提到,在紐約市,從公園里的噴泉中收集的硬幣通常用于噴泉的維護。因此答案為C)。
24.C)【精析】細節(jié)辨認題。講座中提到,數(shù)百年來都有游客把硬幣扔進羅馬著名的特雷維噴泉,羅馬官員要求每晚都要清理噴泉,據(jù)報道,每天都會收集到高達4000美元的世界各地的零錢。根據(jù)句(24)可知,每天晚上收集到的大部分錢都用于一家為有需要的人經(jīng)營的超市。因此答案為C)。
25.D)【精析】細節(jié)辨認題。句(25)中提到,當(dāng)局最終抓住了一個名叫托馬斯·摩根的臭名昭著的小偷,并禁止他進入噴泉,因為他用一根磁力棒在至少34年的時間里從噴泉中撈出了數(shù)千美元的零錢。因此答案為D)。
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