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听力原文:North Korea says it will not shut down its nuclear program as agreed until the Un

ited States releases millions of dollars frozen in a Macau bank. US officials say that decision is up to Macau. The comments come ahead of Monday's resumption in Beijing on North Korea's nuclear disarmament.

The North Korea has millions of dollars deposited in a Macau bank.

A.正确

B.错误

答案
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更多“听力原文:North Korea says it will not shut down its nuclear program as agreed until the Un”相关的问题

第1题

听力原文:Talks aimed at getting North Korea to stop trying to make nuclear weapons ended o
n Saturday with no significant breakthrough, but with all sides saying they are prepared to keep talking. The bare bones of a possible deal had emerged on Friday: North Korea would end its military nuclear programme in return for aid from China, Russia and South Korea.

There is a change for the better in North Korea nuclear crisis.

A.正确

B.错误

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第2题

听力原文:To ease tensions, North Korea opened disarmament talks with the United States and
four other nations three years ago. Last September, they released a joint statement. It said North Korea would end its nuclear arms program in exchange for economic aid and security guarantees.

Three years ago, North Korea opened disarmament talks with the other 5 countries to ease tension. Last September, they released a joint statement.

A.正确

B.错误

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第3题

听力原文: The U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency referred (提交;把......提交; 使求助

听力原文: The U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency referred (提交;把......提交; 使求助于; 归诸于) the North Korean nuclear issue to the U. N. Security Council Thursday. The council could consider economic sanctions against North Korea. The North has said it would consider any sanctions to be a declaration of war. The nuclear argument began in October when U. S. officials said North Korea admitted having a covert nuclear program. Washington and its allies suspended fuel shipments, and the North retaliated by expelling U. N. monitors, taking steps to restart frozen nuclear facilities and withdrawing from the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty.

The U.N. International Atomic Energy Agency ______

A.could refer the nuclear issue to the U.N. Security Council

B.would consider economic sanctions against North Korea

C.could declare war on North Korea for the nuclear issue

D.had reported the nuclear issue to the U.N. Security Council

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第4题

听力原文:Three major storms drenched North Korea in July, washing away crops and raising t
he possibility of famine in a reclusive country that already battles chronic food shortages. The Choson Sinbo said that as of July 17,549 people were killed, 295 went missing and 3,043 were injured in the storms. The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said last Friday that flooding in the second week of July had killed 151 people and left 29 missing.

How many people were missing in the storm of July 17 that drenched North Korea?

A.549.

B.151.

C.295.

D.29.

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第5题

听力原文:PALESTINE Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas has renewed his call for a ceasefire w

听力原文: PALESTINE

Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas has renewed his call for a ceasefire with Israel and he has criticized militants for rocket attacks that, he said, are counterproductive. Abbas, who is the front-runner in the January 9th Palestinian elections, said the rocket attacks are quoted "useless" because they provoke what he called a very grave Israeli escalation. He also accused Israel of hindering the Palestinian election campaign. Early today, Israel launched a new incursion into northern Gaza after a Qassam rocket wounded an Israeli woman. Palestinian witnesses says fifty Israeli tanks and armored personnel carriers moved into Belt Hanoun in the Jabalia refugee camp.

IRAQ

The Iraqi Interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi has said his patience over the situation in the insurgent-held city of Fallujah is wearing thin and negotiations to restore his government control there must come to an end soon. He said the government was in the final phase of efforts to secure the city without what he called a major military confrontation. US forces have carrying out repeated strikes against insurgents in Fallujah.

CHINA

The first international Tibetan traditional medicine conference will be held July 15th to 17th in Lhasa, capital city of the Tibet Autonomous Region. China's Ethnic Medicine Institute, Tibetan Health Bureau and Tibetan Medical College will co-host the conference. The conference has received more than 500 research papers from China and abroad. The organizing committee primarily selected 290 articles to be discussed at the conference. More than 50 foreign guests from the US, Russia, Britain, India, Germany, France, Italy and Nepal will attend the meeting. The Chinese mainland will send a delegation consisting of 250 Tibetan medicine experts to the conference.

NORTH KOREA

North Korea is warning the United Nations Security Council not to consider sanctions against it and says it will not recognize any resolutions on its nuclear program that the world body might approve. Four days before the UN Security Council is scheduled to discuss North Korea's nuclear program, Pyongyang is clarifying its views on the matter. A North Korean foreign ministry spokesman, quoted by the state-run Korean Central News Agency, says just bringing up the issue is "a prelude to war".

SPAIN

The Galileo system will be made up of 30 satellites beaming navigation signals to ground-control centers in the EU. Spain has been blocking a deal on how the system would be run, demanding to host one of the centers, but a compromise has now been reached allowing the multi-billion-dollar project to move ahead. But it's already running five years behind schedule. It's meant to be made up and running by 2013, but analysts say by then the American global positioning system may have already established an unassailable grip on the satellite navigation industry.

Questions:

6. According to the news, besides Israel's rocket attacks, what else did Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas also accuse Israel of?

7.What does the news indicate about the Iraqi Interim Prime Minister?

8.What is the news mainly about?

9.According to the news, what is North Korea's attitude toward the issue?

10.Why is the Galileo system already running five years behind the original schedule?

(26)

A.Attacking the Palestinian government.

B.Launching a new incursion.

C.Opposing the Palestinian election.

D.Holding back the Palestinian election.

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第6题

听力原文:BARCELONA A new study in the journal of Experimental Psychology suggested that it

听力原文: BARCELONA

A new study in the journal of Experimental Psychology suggested that it's not just humans that can tell the difference between languages. It turns out that rats can distinguish between Japanese and Dutch. That's what researchers at the Park Scientific Barcelona found. When they trained rats to press a little lever in response to a specific language, some rats were given Japanese while others heard Dutch. When the rats later listened to both languages they ignored the unfamiliar one. Human babies easily pick up on the distinctive rhythm of a language as they are learning to talk. Rats obviously don't use language. So this finding suggests that some of the skills that make human language possible probably evolved for other reasons.

AMERICA

An examination of old bones in America has led scientists to suggest that sperm whales diving deep beneath the surface of the ocean can suffer from decompression sickness or the bends just as human divers do. Researchers found evidence of damage in the bones of whales dating back over a period of more than 100 years. The pitting and erosion of the bones matched the conditions associated with the bends in which too rapid ascent from the ocean depth can cause agonizing pain or death.

JAPAN

Another powerful earthquake has struck Japan's northwestern Niigata Prefecture, site of the quake, Saturday. That was the nation's most deadly earthquake in 9 years. The latest temblor measuring 5.6 on the open-ended Richter Scale occurred early Monday local time. There were no immediate damage reports. On Sunday, Japan's Prime Minister announced he asked parliament for emergency funding to help people recover from Saturday's earthquake which left at least 23 people dead and thousands more injured. The quake forced about 65,000 people to evacuate their homes and cut off power, communications and transportation. It was the worst in Japan since the 1995 earthquake in the city of Kobe.

CHINA

The American Secretary of State is in China for talks expected to focus on the deadlock over North Korea's nuclear program. China has hosted previous six-nation talks aimed at resolving the crisis over what North Korea describes as its nuclear deterrent. Pyongyang has refused to resume negotiation and says US-led international naval exercise due to begin on Monday off the Japanese coast are evidence of Washington's hostile intent. Speaking earlier in Tokyo, Mr. Secretary denied the accusation and said it was urgent to resume the multilateral talks with North Korea.

EUROPE

The US dollar has continued to fall on international currency markets, hitting the lowest level it's reached against the Euro since the European single currency began trading in 1999. It slipped to 1 dollar 34.6 cents against the Euro. That's down more than a third from its highest point in 2002. The head of the European Central Bank described the plunge as brutal and financial analysts say the dollar could soon lose its status as the world's dominant currency. But the United States Treasury Secretary insists that the government is addressing the issue.

Questions:

6. What does this news item mainly suggest?

7.What can sperm whales suffer from when diving deep?

8.Which of the following statements is NOT a feature of the earthquake?

9.What can we infer from the news?

10.Which of the following statements is TRUE according to the news?

(26)

A.Only humans can tell the difference between languages.

B.Rats can use language.

C.Rats can distinguish between English and Chinese.

D.The distinction of linguistic rhythm is a skill owned not only by humans.

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第7题

听力原文:A new book by two professors at Pennsylvania State University compares public edu

听力原文: A new book by two professors at Pennsylvania State University compares public education systems around the world. The book is called National Differences, Global Similarities: World Culture and the Future of Schooling.

David Baker and Gerald LeTendre led a group of researchers who gathered information on about 50 countries. Some findings came from the Third International Mathematics and Science Study. That study took place in 1994 and again five years later.

The professors say education is increasingly shaped by what they call “transnational forces”. Officials in many counties are concerned about how their students compare with students in other countries.

Each part of the book develops a different subject researched in schools around the world. One of the subjects is violence among students. The professors say countries with the most school violence include Hungary, Romania and the Philippines.

They say the United States is somewhere in the middle, above nations like New Zealand, Canada, South Korea, Spain and Australia. The findings are based on reports from students.

Professor Baker says inequalities in educational systems act as an influence. He says schools that are sharply divided between “winners and losers” in math have higher levels of violence. “This does not mean that nations should stop trying to raise scores,” he says. “But they should be careful to raise the performance among all students.”

(30)

A.National Similarities and Global Differences

B.World Culture and the Future of Schooling

C.National Differences, Global Similarities: Worm Culture and the Future of Schooling

D.National Similarities, Global Differences: World Culture and the Future of Schooling

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第8题

听力原文:W What led you to open the Cincinnati Glass Center?M Well, people know about Cinc

听力原文:W What led you to open the Cincinnati Glass Center?

M Well, people know about Cincinnati's history as a steel manufacturing center for North America, but not many people know that the town used to be a center of the glass industry as well. We wanted to awaken people to that part of Cincinnati's past.

W What would you say has been your proudest achievement since you opened the museum?

M Since we opened the center, several prominent glass artists have moved here, artists from all over the world. I'm proud that we've attracted so many glass artists to the city.

What is being discussed?

A.A museum

B.A library

C.An art school

D.An art gallery

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第9题

听力原文:Megan Della Selva, a sophomore at George Washington University, has already trade

听力原文: Megan Della Selva, a sophomore at George Washington University, has already traded e-mail messages with her mom, just to say hi, Maria Minkarah, the friend she is having lunch with, has just talked to her dad, to report on a doctor's visit and her latest thoughts about studying abroad. The young women keep in close touch with their families, discussing matters big and small, academic and

personal. Interviews with students on a variety of campuses suggest that many turn to their parents for help with everything from roommate troubles to how to improve the paper they e-mailed home. Perhaps the most striking thing was the tone students had when talking about their parents. , fond, warm and admiring. The sense of parents as people to be admired was widespread.

Not all college students are this closely connected with their parents. But university officials, students and their families say that the generation gap is nothing like what it used to be, now that baby boomers, once so alienated from their parents, have become parents themselves. "This generation of parents is more involved," said Jennifer Bell, coordinator of the parents office at North Carolina State University. "Thirty years ago, parents were content to drive their kids to college, drop them off, and pick them up at graduation. Now there are different expectations, because they've been involved in their kids' lives all through school."

Cellphones and e-mail have a lot to do with what university administrators and parents alike say has been a big change over the last decade. Hundreds of colleges nationwide have recognized the new reality by giving parents a stronger presence on campus, through a host of offices created to deal with parents' queries and concerns.

(33)

A.freshman

B.sophomore

C.junior

D.senior

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第10题

听力原文:In ancient times, many people believed tile earth was a flat disc. Well over 2,00

听力原文: In ancient times, many people believed tile earth was a flat disc. Well over 2,000 years ago, rite ancient Greek philosophers were able to put forward two good arguments proving that it was not. Direct observations of heavenly bodies was the basis of both these arguments. First, the Greeks knew that during eclipses of the moon, file earth was between the sun and the moon, and they saw that during these eclipses, the earth's shadow on the moon was always round, they realized that this could be true only if the earth was spherical. If tile earth were a flat disc, then its shadow during eclipses would not be a perfect circle, it would be stretched out into a long ellipse. Tile second argument was based on what the Greeks saw during their travels. They noticed that the North Star, or Polaris, appeared lower in the sky when they traveled south, in more northern regions, the North Star appeared to them to be much higher in file sky. By the way, it was also from this difference in the apparent position of the North Star that the Greeks first calculated the approximate distance around the circumference of the earth, a figure recorded in ancient documents says 400,000 stadia, that's the plural of the word stadium. Today, it's not known exactly what length one stadium represents, but let's say, it was about 200 meters, the length of many athletic stadiums. This would hake the Greek' s estimate about twice the figure accepted today, a very good estimate for those writing so long before even the first telescope was invented.

(33)

A.How ancient philosophers measured the distance between heavenly bodies.

B.How ancient philosophers explained the cause of an eclipse of the Moon.

C.Why ancient philosophers thought the Earth was a sphere.

D.Why ancient philosophers thought the Earth moved around the Sun.

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