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1、全国英语等级考试第三级PUBLIC ENGLISH TEST SYSTEM (PETS)LEVEL 32 0 1 6年3月笔试真卷笔试部分答题时间:120分钟姓名_准考证号_SECTION I Listening(25 minutes)Directions: This section is designed to test Your ability to understand spoken English. You will hear a selection of recorded materials and you must answer the questions that accompa

2、ny them. There are two parts in this section, Part A and Part B. Remember, while you are doing the test, you should first put down your answers in your test booklet. At the end of the listening comprehension section, you will have 3 minutes to transfer your answers from your test booklet onto your A

3、NSWER SHEET. If you have any questions, you may raise your hand now as you will not be allowed to speak once the test has started. Now look at Part A in your test booklet.Part ADirections: You will hear 10 short dialogues. For each dialogue, there is one question and four possible answers. Choose th

4、e correct answer-A, B, C or D, and mark it in your test booklet. You will have 15 seconds to answer the question and you will hear each dialogue only once.1. What is the woman doing at the moment?A. Having a break.B. Having a coffee.C. Writing a report.D. Visiting the man.2. What does the woman ask

5、the man to do?A. Repair her windows.B. Take care of her house.C. Take a rest for a few days.D. Go to the seaside with her.3. What do we learn about the woman from the dialogue?A. She bought a suitable skirt.B. She wanted to purchase a skirt.C. She returned a skirt to the shop.D. She complained about

6、 the service.4. What does the man say to the woman?A. He envies her a lot.B. He enjoys cooking.C. He usually eats out.D. He runs a restaurant.5. What are the speakers talking about?A. Gardening.B. Air quality.C. Hot weather.D. Lack of rain.6. Why is the woman angry with her son?A. He ignored traffic

7、 signals.B. He failed to repair her car.C. He didnt attend his class.D. He didnt take her advice.7. Why does the man feel sorry?A. He forgot his Dads birthday.B. He didnt buy a birthday present.C. He didnt put the cake in the fridge.D. He arrived late for his dads birthday.8. Where is the mans house

8、 located?A. Near a park.B. By a restaurant.C. Close to a highway.D. In a Chinese neighborhood.9. What does the woman say about the data in the article?A. It is original.B. It is reliable.C. It is questionable.D. It is authoritative.10. What does the man tell the woman?A. The best time for job interv

9、iews.B. The strategies for job interviews.C. His comments on her recent work.D. His congratulations on her good luck.Part BDirections:You will hear four dialogues or monologues. Before listening to each one, you will have 5 seconds to read each of the questions which accompany it. While listening, a

10、nswer each question by choosing A, B, C or D. After listening, you will have 10 seconds to check your answer to each question. You will hear the recording only once.Questions 11 -13 are based on the following interview with John Smith, a psychologist on office behavior.11. What is the mans first tip

11、 on a productive workday?A. Arrive at the office earlier.B. Jump into paper work first.C. Start with less difficult tasks.D. Get ready within 15 minutes.12. Why should personal phone calls be avoided?A. They may take a lot of time.B. They may reduce social time.C. They may spoil a great mood.D. They

12、 may cause errors in work.13. Why should an alarm be set?A. To give a go-home signal.B. To remind people to relax.C. To make people work fast.D. To warn people of an emergency.Questions 14 -17 are based on the following conversation between two friends.14. What news does Renee share with Tom?A. She

13、met a high school classmate.B. She found an old friends address.C. She paid a visit to her high school.D. She got in touch with an old friend.15. Why did Renee and her friend lose contact?A. Her friends family left for another city.B. Her friend transferred to another school.C. They had an argument

14、and drifted apart.D. They were too busy to write to each other.16. What does Tom say about his old friends?A. He has lost touch with all of them.B. He maintains contact with most of them.C. He has regained contact with a few of them.D. He keeps in touch with one or two of them.17. How did Renees fri

15、end get her email address?A. From an old address book.B. From one of their former teachers.C. From another high school classmate.D. From the website of Renees company.Questions 18 -21 are based on a conversation between Lisa and her former neighbor John.18. Why did the woman decide to cancel her vac

16、ation?A. She had trouble with her health.B. She had trouble with her investment.C. She had to attend a financial course.D. She had to attend a conference in Pads.19. What did the woman do after she graduated from college?A. She worked as a stock trader.B. She worked as a stock analyst.C. She worked

17、as a finance teacher.D. She worked as a company manager.20. Why did the woman want to start her own company?A. To make more money.B. To have more time for herself.C. To find more business opportunities.D. To know more about the stock market.21. How does the woman feel about the present economic stim

18、ulating package?A. Relieved.B. Optimistic.C. Unconfident.D. Disappointed.Questions 22 -25 are based on the following interview between a reporter and Mr. Smith on his website.22. Which industry is the mans website concerned with?A. News.B. Music.C. Education.D. Television.23.Whom is the mans website

19、 mainly meant for?A. College students in Asia.B. English learners of all ages.C. Teenagers and young adults.D. Any visitors for entertainment.24. What does the website want its visitors to get familiar with?A. Classic films.B. Western music.C. English accents. D. Public speeches.25. What does the ma

20、n hope his website will do in three years?A. Fulfill its short-term goal.B. Get a big market in Asia.C. Become self-financed.D. Get more investments.Now you have 3 minutes to transfer your answers from your test booklet to Your ANSWER SHEET. That is the end of Listening Comprehension.SECTION 11 Read

21、ing(50 minutes)Part ADirections:Read the following two texts. Answer the questions on each text by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on your ANSWER SHEET.Text 1Isabel has turned down two job offers in the past year. In , she started her own consulting practice, but by , most of her larger cli

22、ents had to drop her because of the economy. In , she was undertaking irregular assignments and knew she needed a steady job. The first job she considered was Director of HR for a company in Utah. After the initial interviews, she felt the job fit her except for the location. Still, she flew west to

23、 meet the hiring manager. The hiring manager explained that Isabel was the top candidate for the job but that, before she continued with the process, she should better understand the firms culture. She directed Isabel to several videos of the companys CEO, who regularly appeared in front of the comp

24、any in costume as part of morale building exercises and expected his senior leaders to do the same. Even though I was desperate for a job, I knew I couldnt do that, Isabel says. She called the recruiter to turn down the job and explained that she didnt feel there was a cultural fit.A few months late

25、r, she interviewed for another job: a director of employee relations at a local university. After several interviews, the hiring manager told her the job was hers if she wanted it. The job had many positives : it was a low-stress environment, it offered great benefits, and the university was an empl

26、oyee-friendly place. But the job was relatively junior despite the title and Isabel worried it wouldnt be challenging enough. Finally, she turned it down. It would be great to have a paycheck and great benefits but I would definitely have trouble sleeping at night, she says.In both cases, she was fr

27、ank with the hiring managers about why she wasnt taking the jobs.In the past, it felt like dating, I was worried about hurting peoples feelings, she says. However, they appreciated her frankness and thanked her for her honesty. She says it was hard to turn down the jobs and it was a risk for her fin

28、ancially but she felt she had to.26. In , Isabel_A. did consulting now and thenB. found a job close to her homeC. refused several job interviewsD. ran a successful consulting firm27. Isabel turned down the first job offer mainly because of its_A. CEO B. cultureC. locationD. recruiter28. Isabel was d

29、issatisfied with the second job due to its_A. junior rifleB. low benefitsC. EnvironmentD. lack of challenge29. Isabel believed that her rejection of the jobs was_A. harmful B. surprisingC. justifiable D. troublesome30. According to Isabel, it is important to_A. look for jobs with little stressB. loo

30、k for jobs with great benefitsC. be truthful in declining job offersD. be cautious in declining job offersText 2You do not usually get something for nothing. Now, a new study reveals that the evolution of an improved learning ability could come at a particularly high price: an earlier death. Past ex

31、periments have demonstrated that it is relatively easy .through selective breeding to make rats, honey bees and-that great favourite of researchers-fruit flies a lot better at learning. Animals that are better learners should be competitive and, thus, over time, come to dominate a population by natu

32、ral selection. But improved learning ability does not get selected amongst these animals in the wild. No one really understands why.Tadeusz Kawecki and his colleagues at the University of Fribourg in Switzerland have measured the effects of improved learning on the lives of fruit flies. The flies we

33、re given two different fruits as egg-laying sites. One of these was laced with a bitter additive that could be detected only on contact. The flies were then given the same fruit but without an additive. Flies that avoided the fruit which had been bitter were deemed to have learned from their experie

34、nce. Their children were reared and the experiment was run again.After repeating the experiment for 30 generations, the children of the learned flies were com- pared with normal flies. The researchers report in a forthcoming edition of Evolution that although learning ability could be bred into a po

35、pulation of fruit flies, it shortened their lives by 15%. When the researchers compared their learned flies to colonies selectively bred to live long lives, they found even greater differences. Whereas learned flies had reduced their life spans, the long-lived flies learned less well than even avera

36、ge flies.The authors suggest that evolving an improved learning ability may require a greater investment in the nervous system which takes resources away from processes that delay ageing. However, Dr. Kawecki thinks the effect could also be a by-product of greater brain activity increasing the produ

37、ction of Reactive Oxygen Species (ROS), which can increase oxidation in the body and damage health.No one knows whether the phenomenon holds true for other animals. So, biologists, at least, still have a lot to learn.31. Past experiments prove selective breeding can make animals better_A. Commanders

38、B. CompetitorsC. survivors D. learners32. In this experiment, scientists observed that_A. some flies avoided the fruit without an addictiveB. some flies preferred the fruit with an addictiveC. the eggs of the flies were not damagedD. the impact on the flies did not last long33. The forthcoming repor

39、t says that_A. long-lived flies are better at laying eggsB. long-lived flies are poorer in learningC. learned flies have a relatively long lifeD. learned flies live as long as average ones34. According to Dr.Kawecki, greater brain activity_A. reduces oxygen consumptionB. regulates the nervous system

40、C. speeds up the ageing processD. stabilizes the ageing process35. We learn from the text that_A. the research findings need to be tested furtherB. biologists are doing similar research on other animalsC. the animal world usually follows the same universal lawsD. biologists are applying their findin

41、gs to other areasPart BDirections:Read the texts from a magazine article in which five people talk about tipping in a restaurant. For questions 36-40, match the name of each person to one of the statements (A- G) given below.Mark your answers on your ANSWER SHEET.Richard:Ive always viewed tipping as

42、 a way of saying thank you to the one who serves me. I believe what is bad is when no tip is left at all. The better the service, the higher the tip. Unless the service is literally perfect, I never tip more than 10% of the bill. Much like the harder teachers in school, I never give an easy “A.”My a

43、ssessment is honest.Daniel:A tip is a thank you, but in truth, a tip is payment for service. 20% is a standard tip. Servers deserve it for their hard work. Restaurants will never pay more for labor unless they are forced to do so by new laws. Tips make up about 97% of a servers total income. Those t

44、ips are needed for survival. So, before servers are paid a living wage, tip 20%.Kate:Why should I pay the difference between what the restaurant is willing to pay the employee and what an acceptable wage is? I do pay 20%, but I hate it. A friend of mine left Europe for New York City, found a job in

45、a restaurant there and ended up making $5,500 a month. Enough above mini- mum wage? How about miners, construction workers, resident doctors, etc? Do they get tipped?Patricia:18 -20% for good service is todays standard. The restaurant and its employees arc too polite to tell you this or to put it on

46、 their menus, but that is their expectation and you need to understand that. I believe it is good manners to respect this. To do otherwise is to be openly rude. If you disagree, you arc wise to cat elsewhere, as you are hurting a hardworking professional.Michael:Tipping has gotten out of control. I

47、always had thought it was 15%, and now suddenly servers have made it 20%. I tip 15%, and thats it. If the service is really superior, then I work higher from there. Interesting to be told ,“If you cant afford to tip 20%, then you should cat at home.” If all those people stayed away, the restaurant would not even be in business.Now match the name of each person (36 - 40) to the appropriate statement.Note: there are two extra statements.Statements36. Richard37. Daniel38. Kate39. Patricia40. MichaelA. Its rude not to tip.B. I do tip, though I dont like it.C. Tipping shouldnt be compul

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