book3 Unit 4听力答案与文本
现代大学英语精读3第二版Unit4_Book3

a life by choice, out of principle → natural, healthy, independent
a life as slaves of their possessions → artificial, anxious, loss of virtue
Text Analysis
Diogenes and Alexander
Unit 4
Character Analysis
Structure
Detailed Analysis
Text Analysis
Text Analysis
Character Analysis
Other people: half-men
Diogenes: the beggar (paras. 1-3)
Warming up
Paraphrase:
1.
Check-on Preview
Live without conventions, which are artificial and false; escape complexities and extravagances: only so can you live a free life. (para. 4) His life’s aim was clear to him: it was “to restamp the currency”: to take the clean metal of human life, to erase the old false conventional markings, and to imprint it with its true values. (para. 5)
2. Writing: comparison and contrast • Diogenes—Alexander • Diogenes—other beggars/hermits/philosophers • Alexander—other Macedonians (officers & officials) Here, the alternating comparison/contrast (subject by subject) is used.
人教版高一英语必修3第四单元(Book 3) Unit 4 早读材料和检测含答案

Unit 4 Astronomy: the science of the stars (Module 3)班级__________ 姓名____________ 学号_____________ Ⅰ. Words1. system2. theory3. violent4. unlike5. harmful6. exist7. puzzle8. pull9. astronomy10.religion 11.atom12. globe13. atmosphere14. fundamental15. acid16.chain17. multiply18.oxygen19. thus20. biology21.biologist22.gravity23. satellite24. gentle25.physicist26. climate27. crash28. spaceship29. float30. massⅡ. Phrases1. solar system2. in time3. be fundamental to4. be harmful toy eggs6. give birth to7. in one’s turn8. carbon dioxide 9. prevent… from10. cheer up11. now that12. break out13. watch out14. a chain reactionⅢ. Sentences1. 既然你已经通过了驾驶考试,你就可以独自开车了。
(now that)Now that you have passed the driving test, you can drive on your own.2. 是什么事使他不能参加我们的会议仍然是个谜。
(prevent…from)What prevented him from attending our meeting still remains a mystery.3. 昨天晚会的气氛非常欢快,每一个人都度过了美好的时光。
book3NewHorizonVLS3_Tapescripts of Unit4

II. Basic Listening Practice
1. Script
M: Did you pick up the paper for me today? I really want to check the job vacancies.
W: I know, it’s over there. There’s not much happen though. I had a look already. Maybe you should look on the Net instead.
M: And what did that experience teach you?
W: I learned that communication skills are extremely important. The knowledge I acquired from textbooks is indeed, but it is equally essential to be able to persuade a potential client t to trust you.
Q: What is the man looking for?
2. Script
M: You don’t have enough experience or qualifications for this role. What makes you believe you could handle the position?
Bewildered by the manager’s decision, Murphy asked, “Why would you be doing that? We both got nine questions correct. This being Ireland and me being Irish, I should get the job!”
听力教程第三册Unit4部分答案

听力教程第三册Unit 4部分答案Section OnePart 2 Listening for Gist1.This dialogue is about making an appointment with Dr. Milton.2.The key words are appointment, Dr. Milton, on duty, a later time 6:15. Section TwoPart 1 DialogueTunisian holiday for amateur archaeologistsDay ActivitiesThe first day… midday, … briefing,The second day … dawn, … sunrise, … coach, … coves,… walk along the beach,… recent, … exciting sites, … fishing village, … sunsetThe third day… enjoy the town, … lovely old town, … resortThe fourth day And the fifth day … amphitheatre, … lunch, … ferry, …Islands, … sailing boats,… fishermen’s picnicThe sixth day… picnic, … port, … nightThe final say… capital, … mosaics, … Tunis International AirportPart 2 PassageExercise B: Sentence Dictation1.After more than a century of assault by humans, the wolf population had dwindled to more than a handful by the1970s in Mexico and the American southwest.2.The program is now about halfway to meeting its goal of a “wild” population of at least 100 wolves covering morethan 12,800 square kilometers.3.Decisions about mating, movement among the 45 captive-breeding facilities and release into the wild are made by aUS-Mexican committee of scientists, land owners and others.4. A wolf with rare genes – until it has successfully reproduced – will never be released because of the high mortalityrate in the wild.5.The recovery program is gradually moving away from freeing captive-born wolves, as the population of pups bornfree takes off.Exercise C Detailed Listening1.1)The research center’s known as : the Wolf Sanctuary2)Location: in Eureka, 32 Kilometers southwest of St. Louis, the United States.3)Founding: in 19714)Purpose: to restore the endangered Mexican gray wolf.5)Founder: Marlin Perkins, a world-renowned naturalist and former director of the St, Louis Zoo, and his wife Carol 2.1) The last seven known wolves were captured in the wild or taken from zoos to begin the breeding program.2) The first captive-bred litter of Mexican gray wolves produced in the federal program was born at thewild CanidCenter.3) The first release into the wild took place.Section ThreeNews Item 1Exercise AThis news item is about the New York times winning seven Pulitzer prizes in journalism.News Item 2Exercise AThis news item is about the Smithsonian’s Jazz Appreciation Month.Exercise BCoincides with, performers, promote, assist,Organizers, schools, local museums, libraries, musicians, concert halls, radio stations, presenting, concerts, composers, musicians, JazzNews Item 3Exercise AThis news item is about an African American history museum showing the struggles and contributions of African Americans.Exercise BF T F F T T F TSection FourPart 1Exercise AThis radio program is about singer Norah Jones’ background and her popularity now.Exercise BA Gifted SingerName Norah JonesPlace of growing up TexasHer parents Father: a famous Indian musicianMother: an American womanPlace of her establishment New YorkThe feature of her songs A combination of jazz, pop, country folkand soulThe name of her new album“Come Away with Me”Part 2PassageExercise B Sentence Dictation1. A blur of gold was spotted through the high, wind-whipped grasses and off we walked toward the lion’s den.2.He couldn’t stop smiling as we crept closer into the glow of the day’s last light.3.Just a meter away from the lions a straggling buffalo loped by, but our appearance seemed to distract them and thebuffalo got away.4.Under an open sky we winded our way through cracked sun-baked pathways. Our guides knelt in the sand, pointingout the differences between the various animal tracks.5.Thrashing in the water a mauve-colored hippo grunted, snapped his giant jaws, and lunged forward. We kept ourdistance behind a log on the banks of the river.Exercise C Detailed Listening1.They experienced the African bush on foot.2.Seeing lions was a special treat for them.3.They saw 10 lions sitting in a semicircle in the grass.4.Kruger National Park stretches for almost 2.5 million hectares, roughly the size of Wales.5.They stayed in a thatched roof two-person huts with toilets and hot showers.6.Dinner was served around an open fire.7.They saw a crocodile sunning on a rock not far from where they had been swimming the day before.8.They were all on a high from their lion sighting.。
Book 3-Unit 4-Appendix 2-Understanding the Text-答案8.14

2. What did the author explain to the father?
He told the father what had happened to his son and that there was no way to save his son. He also explained to the father the concept of organ donation and how that worked. He also explained what a real hero was.
*What happened to the young Mexican man?
He died.
* Predict the end of the story. What do you think is going to happen?
His organs were donated.
1.2 Skimming and Predicting Again: Read the last two paragraphs and answer the following questions orally.
*What do you think is the main idea of the text at this point? Did you guess the ending of the story correctly?
1.3. Scanning: Read paragraphs 1 through6 indetail and fill in the blanks.
全新版unit 4,book 3课后练习答案

Usage
1. like/ as 2. as 3. like 4. like/ as 5. as/ like 6. as 7. like 8. as
Cloze A
1. caution 2. came to the conclusion 3. never get anywhere 4. undermining 5. not give/care a fig
1. The beautiful Malvern Hills have provided inspiration for many artists and musicians over the decades. 2. Much of his success is credited to his powers of imagination. 3. The industrial revolution was firmly built on the foundation of an agricultural revolution.
ቤተ መጻሕፍቲ ባይዱ
back
3. He means that Einstein was slow in learning how to talk when he was a child and was rebellious.
back
4. He learned to think in pictures and visualize things instead of thinking in words, which contributes to his creativity.
4. As there were some major design flaws, the board of directors didn’t approve of the economic stimulus package. 5. Having realized that nobody could help him, Jordan finally come to the conclusion that he had to face reality and take up/ meet the challenge by himself.
新视野大学英语(第三版)Book III-Unit 4 The Surprising purpose of travel

3
4 UNIT Let’s go
Section A The Surprising purpose of travel
Objectives
To talk about the surprising purpose of travel To understand the text fully
Cultural Background
1. Left Bank café
Some Proper Names
The Left Bank caféof the River Seine in Paris is traditionally the Latin Quarter(university district), filled with students, professors, bookshops and cheap restaurants. The Left Bank café is a favorite meeting place of great artists, writers, and famous intellectuals since the early 20th century.
Cultural Background
Some Proper Names
3. What do you know about Machu Picchu?
• An ancient ruined South American city high up in the Andes mountains in Peru.
Summary
Jotter
Warming-Up Extr. & App. Essay Writing Further Dev.
人教新课标必修三unit4听力材料文本

人教新课标必修三unit4听力材料文本Page 30 THEORIES OF GRA VITYMichael Jones of the new space magazine is talking with space traveler Li Yanping about the changes in the theory of gravity.LY= Dr Li Yanping MJ= Dr Michael JonesPart1MJ: Hello, Dr Li Yianping. It’s so good of you to talk to me. Some students ask us why things always fall back to earth if you throw them up in the air. Could you explain it?LY : Well. At first people thought it was because the earth was the center of the universe. of course that was wrong. One day Isaac Newton watched an apple fall to the ground. He said that something else must be pulling the apple back to the earth. He called it gravity.MJ: I see. Did people accept his idea?LY: They did. Later they worked out that bigger object like the sun have stronger gravity than smaller objects like our plants. If you are travelling in deep space, you couldn’t fall back to the earth. You’re just too far away.Part2MJ: Does it me an there’s no gravity in space?LY: No. in a spaceship you would feel the pull as it got closer to such an object. You would travel faster and faster towards it.MJ: Until you hit it?LY: Not exactly. You may pass it very fast and then it would throw you out into space again. After that you would slow down to the usual speed.MJ: How do you know this?LY: In 1905 Einstein said that in space large objects make space-time bend ; the larger the object, the further the space-time bends. So time goes slower in very strong gravity.MJ: What about the black holes?LY: That’s a place in space which has such a strong mass that nothing can escape from its gravity. There is a kind of edge around this mass. If you cross over this edge, it’s impossible for you to get bac k. However if you don’t cross the edge, you can still escape. Stephen Hawking has done a lot of research into black holes. He has shown that they spit things out as well as eat them.Page62 AN INTERVIEW WITH YANG LIWEIR= Mr Renault Y= Yang LiweiPart1R: Thank you so much, Mr yang , for coming to talk to us today about your experience in space.Y: not at all. I’m happy to be here.R: please can you tell us your most exciting moment?Y: Well, that was when the spaceship began to lift off the ground. Then I knew that I was really on my way and that China would become the third country to send people into space.R: Did you feel afraid?Y: Because I was trained not to worry. So I watched all my instruments and stayed calm.R: What surprised you? Y: The beauty o f the space. I’d never realized how lovely the earth looks till I was going round it.Part2R: Did you always want to be an astronaut?Y: Well, I dreamed of it when I was young, but I never thought my wish would come true. It all happened gradually. First I gotmy degree and then I trained for ten years to a airplane and then to fly a spaceship.R: Did you have to be a certain size and weight?Y: Yes. An astronaut has to be smaller than 170cm and weigh less than 70kg. R: So you were the perfect choice! But of course you had to work very hard. Would you like to go into space again?Y: Yes I would if there was an opportunity. I’d like to go to the moon one day. R: I hope we’ll be talking to you again after you’ve finished that trip. Goodbye, Mr Yang. Thank you for talking to us.Y: It was my pleasure.Page65 AN INTERVIEW WITH LI YANPINGW=Wallis L =Li YanpingW: Mr Li, would you please tell us about your space walk?L: Yes, I’d happy to. We cleaned and repaired the Humble telescope.W: Oh, and is that when you did your space walk?L: Yes.W: How did you prepare for it?L: First we had to get into spacesuits. They are very sick and carry all the oxygen we need to breathe. The suit also has hot and cold water so it can warm us if it’s too cold or cool us if it’s t oo hot. So it’s very heavy.W: Is it dangerous to leave the spaceship?L: Yes, indeed. When we leave, we go into a small room. We have to wear gravity boots to walk there. We close the door behind us and then we open the door to space. Then our gravity boots stop working and we fly out of the door. W: how do you move about in space?L: we use small engines to move around. T o go left we pushthe right engine and to go right we push the left one. We move slowly because we don’t weigh anything. We can fly around like feathers.W: what does it feel like in space?L: very strange. There is no gravity so doing any job is very tiring.W: what happens if you fly too far from the spaceship?L: You’d never get back so we tied ourselves to the spaceship with a special rope.W: How did you repair the Hubble telescope?L: We used some special tools tied round our waists. That way we didn’t lose them. We did a good job. The telescope works fine now.W: Thank you very much, Mr Li.。
- 1、下载文档前请自行甄别文档内容的完整性,平台不提供额外的编辑、内容补充、找答案等附加服务。
- 2、"仅部分预览"的文档,不可在线预览部分如存在完整性等问题,可反馈申请退款(可完整预览的文档不适用该条件!)。
- 3、如文档侵犯您的权益,请联系客服反馈,我们会尽快为您处理(人工客服工作时间:9:00-18:30)。
Unit 4Part TwoListening IFor many of you this will be your last year at university and now is the time for you to begin thinking seriously about your future careers. In order to give you as much help as possible, I have quoted a list of questions that you ought to ask yourself.First, "Have I got a clear knowledge of my abilities as well as my interests?" Be honest about your weaknesses as well as your strengths. Take a really good look at yourself and give real thought to the kind of person you are, and what kind of person you want to be.Second, "Do I know the kinds of occupations in which people like myself tend to find success and satisfaction?" Talk to people who have similar abilities and interests and who are already in the careers that interest you. You can gain some idea of what they consider to be important and challenging in those careers. Watch these people at work.Third, "Have I weighed carefully the immediate advantages against the long-term prospects offered by the jobs I am considering?" Will the occupation you select give you satisfaction in the years to come? Realize now the importance of education in all fields, technical and professional. Remember that chances of promotion are usually given to educated persons—other things being equal.Fourth, "Have I talked with my parents, my teachers and my headmaster?" Remember they have a lot of experience that you can benefit from. They can help you think about the jobs. They can stimulate you to give careful thought to what you really want to do, and offer useful suggestions about how you might take full advantage of your personal qualities and qualifications.Last, "How do I regard my job? Is it just a means of getting money to do the things that I want to do? Is the work important to my future happiness? Is it a combination of both?"The above questions and their answers should give you some better ideas about how you should start planning your career. Your life-long job cannot be approached in any kind of haphazard fashion. It must be considered carefully, examined from every angle, and talked over with those who know you and those who can help you in any way.Exercise 12.3.4.5.7Exercise 21. weaknesses2. similar abilities and interests / important and challenging3. education promotion educated persons4. parents, teachers / benefit /give careful thought /useful suggestions / personal qualities5. getting money / our future happiness/ combinationListening IIInterviewer: Some people feel that their jobs are misunderstood by others. Is that very common?Sociologist: Oh, absolutely. Most jobs or professions have an image or stereotype attached to them, and some of these are not realistic. The serious point is that young people choose their careers based on these false images, and they may even avoid certain careers which have a negative image. This can cause problems for the economy.Interviewer: Is there evidence of this problem?Sociologist: Yes, there was a recent survey of children's attitudes to different professions. Interviewer: How was this done? Children don't know much about jobs and professions.Sociologist: True. What the investigators wanted to get was children's impressions and prejudices. They gave the children twelve pairs of statements, one of the pair positive, and the other negative. Children were asked to say which of the statements was "most true" for each profession.Interviewer: For example?Sociologist: Well, for example, "Such and such a person is likely to be boring or interesting company."Interviewer: I see. What professions did they ask about?Sociologist: The list is long, but it included lawyers, economists, accountants, sales representatives, scientists and engineers.Interviewer: And the results?Sociologist: Well, they are striking, especially for engineers who came out much worse than one might expect. About 90 percent of the children thought that engineering was a "dirty job", of "low status", and the engineer was more likely to take orders than to give them. The only other person they thought more likely to lose his job was the sales representative. But, there were good points too. Engineering was seen to be "interesting, well-paid work".Interviewer: Hmm, not a rosy picture.Sociologist: No, but it got better when children were asked what they thought of the engineer as a person. Most of them chose positive comments, but most thought the engineer was likely to be badly dressed.Interviewer: What about other professions? What were the most popular?Sociologist: Oh, the lawyers by far. Next came accountants and scientists as well as economists. The engineers and sales representatives were the least popular.Interviewer: Sounds like a sign of the times.Sociologist: Yes, but I think the most serious implication was the children's apparent ignorance of the importance of the engineer's role in society.Exercise 11. choose their careers2. avoid certain careers3.different professions4.Children’s impressions and prejudices5. lawyers6. accountants7. scientists8. most popular9. least popular 10. ignoranceExercise 21. T2. T3. F4. T5. F6. TPart Three More ListeningPractice One(Here's a dialog between a woman whose job is to help people find jobs and a man looking for a job.)Woman: Look. Here's a job that might interest you.Man: What is it? Are you sure? The last job interview you sent me off to was a disaster.Woman: Well, look. It says they want a sales manager, and it looks like it's a big international company. That'd be good. You might get to travel.Man: What kind of company is it, though?Woman: Um, let's see. Yes, it's a textile company that seems to import from abroad. They say the salary is really good. They operate a system of paying you a basic salary and then offering you a sales commission on top of that. They say it is high. And oh, look! They give you a car to travel round in. That's not bad, is it?Man: Um, do they say anything about experience?Woman: Um, let's see. No, they want someone young with ambition and enthusiasm. Oh yes, they want graduates, so that's OK. You've been to university. Now what else? Let's see.Man: There must be some catch.Woman: No, the only thing is you have to travel, but then that's what the company car's for. Oh, and you have to be able to get on well with other people because it says you have to be good on a team.Man: Um, perhaps I'll have a closer look at that one.Exercise 11. D2. D3. A4. BExercise 21. sales manager2. salary3. sales commission4. a car5. travel round in6. experience7. university8. on a teamPractice TwoWomack: Now what do you want to see me about, Janet?Janet:Well, I have a few questions I'd like to ask you, Mr. Womack. Can you give me some information about secretarial jobs?Womack:Yes, of course. First, let me get your file out. Now you're 16, aren't you?Janet:That's right.Womack:Well, what would you like to know?Janet:About the opportunities in general and the basic training, and things like typing speed and shorthand speed.Womack:Before we go any further, Janet, when you said secretarial work, did you only mean typing or more general things?Janet:Well, I suppose I'd have to start as a word processor operator, wouldn't I?Womack:If you left school at sixteen, yes. But if you wanted to have a better chance of getting a more interesting secretarial job more quickly, it would be better if you stayed on and took A levels. According to your file, your English is good, and you've done French and economics, haven't you?Janet:Yes, they're my best subjects. If I stayed, what A levels would I need to be a secretary?Womack:That depends, but those three subjects are all very suitable.Janet:And then I suppose I'd have to do a secretarial course, wouldn't I? Um, what sort of speed do they expect?Womack:I've got the typing speed here, I think. Oh, yes, it should be 65 words per minute.Janet:And would I have to learn shorthand?Womack:Yes, you would. You'd need a speed of 90 to 100 words a minute.Janet:Oh, it sounds a lot, doesn't it? Would I have a chance to use my French?Womack:Oh, yes, if you were a secretary with languages.Janet:What sort of work would I have to do?Womack:Well, you'd have to translate letters, of course, but you'd also have to answer the phone to foreign callers and interpret if foreign visitors came to the firm. It would be useful if you learned a second foreign language. That would help a lot.Janet:I think I'd like a job like that. But I'd better go away and think about it. You see, well, after all, two more years at school is a long time, isn't it?Womack:I'm sure it seems so at your age. If you need any more help, please come back and we'll talk about it again.Janet:Thanks, Mr. Womack.Questions:1. Who is Janet?2. When will Janet be qualified for a more interesting secretarial job?3. What subjects has Janet taken?4. What is Janet's decision finally?5. What can you infer from the dialog?Exercise 11.B2.B3. A4.C5. CExercise 21. 65 words 2 . 90 to 100 words3. with languages / translate letters/ answer the phone/ foreign visitors/ second foreign language Practice ThreeDavid: Hi! You're listening to Radio Southwest, the best in the southwest for music andup-to-the-minute news. Sue's here. Hello, Sue.Sue: Hello, David.David: And we've got the Jobspot for you today. So, if you're looking for a new job, this could be the spot for you. So, let's have a look, and see what we've got today.Sue: Well, the first one we've got is a cook. That's in a large, busy restaurant, so it's very useful to have had experience in cooking. Must be a high school graduate and the pay is $12 an hour. So that's not bad, is it? The hours are good too. That's Monday to Friday, 3:00 p.m. till 6:00 p.m.David: Great. Thanks, Sue. So that's a cook. Now, how do you fancy working out of doors? How do you fancy being a gardener? So as long as you're fit and strong, and at least 16 years old, that'll suit you. The pay is $8 an hour. And the hours, Tuesday to Saturday, 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., you have to work on Sunday once a month, but on Monday the Garden Center's closed. Now, the sort of work you'd be doing is potting, watering, things like that. So, how about applying for that? Pay, $8 an hour. Sue, what else have you got?Sue: Right, Dave. Well, from outdoors to indoors. We've got a word processor operator job here. This job might suit a woman with school-age children, because the hours are only 15 hours a week. It's a small, friendly office, and they require a high school graduate with two years' experience operating a computer. Pay is $9 per hour. So, there you go. That's a nice job in an office. If you fancy any of those jobs, give us a ring here on Jobspot at Radio Southwest. And now back to the music.Exercise 11. C2. A3. B4. D5. BExercise 21. ADF2. BF3. ACEPractice FourInterviewer: Do you think anybody can be trained to be a teacher?Interviewee: Well, I think there are probably some people that can be teachers but I think it's agift that you have. And not many people have that internal kind of thing.Interviewer: Can you define any of that?Interviewee: Oh...Interviewer: What sort of specific uh...are there certain personality...Interviewee: Well, I think that the best teachers are people that are fairly sensitive, and, er, extroverted, okay?Interviewer: Uh-huh...Interviewee: The best teachers I know are kind of extroverted people, and they really like kids...Interviewer: Uh-huh.Interviewee: But, by the same token, I know some teachers who really care about doing a good job and want those kids to like them and want to do well.Interviewer: Right...Interviewee: But for some teachers, they just don't have it. And it's...it's sad when you see that happening, because there're some teachers who don't care, you know—they're just in it now because they've been in it so long and it's too late to move out...and...Interviewer: Well, aren't there some very definable management skills involved in teaching that often are neglected in teacher training, maybe? I mean...Interviewee: I don't know how you train somebody to do that. To be a good teacher, I think you have to have a high tolerance level for confusion—I think you have...Interviewer: Um...Interviewee: To have that when you've got thirty kids... You have to have that. You have to be a very patient person, and I know it just sounds totally inadequate, but I don't know how to put my...my finger on it. It just...Interviewer: But you do believe it is uh...there is a gift of some sort, or there is something...Interviewee: Yeah, I do.Exercise 11.sensitive extroverted2.kids3.doing a good job4. tolerance level5. patientExercise 21. T2. F3. T4. F5.TPart Four Testing YourselfSection 1There are at least 100 million workers in the Unites States. Most of them are on the job 35 to 40 hours a week. Their typical day includes seven to eight hours of work. Usually, they have a15-minute coffee break in the morning and in the afternoon. But work schedules vary from job to job.White-collar workers—office workers and many professionals—usually have "nine to five" jobs. They begin at 9:00 a.m. and finish at 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday. "Blue-collar" workers—mechanics, electricians, and laborers—often work from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. In many factories, blue-collar workers come to work in eight-hour shifts. Typically, these shifts start at8:00 a.m., 4:00 p.m., and midnight. Finally, sales people and managers in retail stores work on Monday and Thursday nights, when the stores are open. Many retail workers also work on Saturdays, and some work on Sundays.These are the normal schedules for most American workers. However, many businesses now use a new system called "flex-time scheduling". Under this system, the employees choose their own working hours. Some people work from 8:00 to 4:00 five days a week. Some work from 9:00 to 5:00. Other people work 10 or 12 hours a day four days a week. Employees and managers are both happy with the system. The employees like the freedom of choice, so they work hard. The managers, of course, like the hard-working employees.What, then, is a typical work schedule? It depends on the job—and on the workers.1. 100 million2. 35 to 403. 7 to 84. office workers many professionals5. 8:00 to 4:006. eight-hour shifts7. Monday Thursday Saturdays Sundays8.choose their own working hours/freedom of choice /happy withSection IIMan: How long have you worked for AM-ADMEL, Gill?Woman: Only for a year. It's May now, isn't it? Yes, I joined last August in fact.Man: August in 1996.Woman: Yes.Man: What did you do before that?Woman: I used to work for a travel agency in London.Man: It was interesting, wasn't it?Woman: Not really. It was just secretarial work, rather like this job. And it wasn't too well-paid. But I took a secretarial course when I left school and I couldn't think what else to do.Man: So you went straight from school into a secretarial course, didn't you?Woman: Well, not quite. I left school when I was 16, in 1989, I think it was. And then I went to work in a hotel in Austria for a year, to learn some German.Man: Austria? Why Austria?Woman: I don't know really. Well, we used to go there on holiday quite often when we were younger, and, well, I like Austria actually. Anyway then I went back and did the secretarial course. That was a year's course.Man: And then you got the job at the travel agency I suppose.Woman: Yeah, that's right. That was in 1991.Man: So you were there for five years!Woman: Yes, it's awful, isn't it? Actually, I'm thinking of giving it all up to become a nurse.Man: Really?Woman: Well, I worked in a hospital in Twickenham during my last year at school. Just cleaning and helping to make beds and so on. It was part of our Practical Careers training.Man: And you liked it?Woman: Yes, it was interesting.1. D2. A3. A4. C5. DSection IIIMan: Well, now then, one thing I'd like to ask is, er, exactly why you applied for the job. I mean, just looking at your application form, you're actually over-qualified...Woman: Yes, I thought you might ask that. Um, the thing is, in my present job, although I'm actually in charge of a small team and I have a lot of responsibility, it's largely a desk job with alot of paperwork...Man: And you're not too keen on being stuck in an office all day?Woman: To be honest, no, I'm not. I much prefer being out on site where I can supervise things, and deal with problems as they occur. And this job should give me the kind of contact with other engineers, architects, builders and so on.Man: Mmm. You'd certainly have to do quite a lot of traveling in the local area, you know, visiting different sites. You do realize, though, that the starting salary isn't as good as the salary in your present job?Woman: Yes, I realize that, but um, it does say in the job advertisement that the promotion prospects are very good.Man: That's true, and er, as this is a new project that we're working on, we think there'll be a very good chance of fairly quick promotion, depending on performance, that is...Woman: Yes, of course. Well, you see, I've got very little chance of promotion in my present job.I mean it's a very small company and there's nowhere really for me to go; that's why I'm looking around for somewhere else.Questions:1) What kind of position is the woman applying for?2) What does the interviewer want to know exactly?3) Why does the woman want to leave her present job?4) What is said about the job the woman applies for?5) What can we say about the woman?1. B2. C3. C4. D5. A。