文档内容
2015年高考英语听力真题(全国I卷)
参考答案:
1-5: CBACA 6-10: CBAAC 11-15: BBCAB 16-20: BACAB
录音原文
Example:
M: Excuse me, can you tell me how much the shirt is?
W: Yes, it’s nine-fifteen.
Text 1
W: What time is your train leaving?
M: It leaves at ten. I’ve got fifty minutes left.
W: You’d better hurry, or you won’t be able to catch it.
Text 2
M: Nice weather we’re having, don’t you think?
W: No. It is too cold.
M: I think it is just right.
W: I’d prefer it a few degrees warmer.
Text 3
M: Now, let’s stop talking and get going. I need to be in my office in fifteen minutes,
or I’ll be late for a meeting.
W: Okay, bye.
Text 4
M: This course is really difficult.
W: I don’t think it’s all that bad. And we’ll benefit a lot from it.
M: So, you’re taking it too?
W: That’s true.
Text 5
W: Could you turn that off? I can’t hear myself think.
M: What?
W: The radio.
M: Oh! Sorry.
Text 6
W: Hi Michael! I heard you just came back from a holiday.
M: Yes. I stayed for a week in China, and five days in India.
W: You do travel a lot, don’t you? Last year, you went to Norway, right?
M: Well, I’ve been to quite some countries, but not yet to Norway. Last summer, I
toured Russia for two weeks.
Text 7
M: Sally, do you like seafood?
W: Yes, of course.
M: Is there anything you especially like?
W: Well, I really don’t know. I can never remember the names.
M: Okay. Is there any food you don’t eat?W: Well, I don’t eat chicken. And I don’t like eggs, either. But I like all kinds of fish and
vegetables.
M: Then let’s look at the menu and see what they’ve got for us.
Text 8
M: You look pale, Stephanie. What’s wrong?
W: I don’t feel good. I have a bad headache. In fact, I haven’t got much sleep this
past week, and I feel really tired.
M: Why don’t you go to see a doctor?
W: Yeah, I think I should. But I have a report due tomorrow. Ms. Jenkins needs it for
the board meeting next Monday.
M: Well, it’s Wednesday today. Why don’t you talk to Ms. Jenkins, and ask if you can
hand it in on Friday morning?
W: Maybe I should try. I guess I just need a good sleep. Thanks, George.
M: If you need any help with the report, just let me know.
Text 9
W: Anything interesting in the paper today, dear?
M: Well, yeah. There are a few here that might interest us. Here’s one for just four
hundred dollars. It only has one bedroom, but it sounds nice, near Lake Street.
W: Yeah. Let me see what the cheapest two-bedroom apartment is. Oh, here’s one
on Market Street. It’s a real bargain. Only three hundred and fifty dollars. But it
doesn’t have any furniture.
M: Well, it costs a lot to buy all the furniture.
W: Oh, here’s another one for just over four hundred dollars. This sounds very
interesting! It’s on South Street. That’s a nice area.
M: Yes, it’s quiet. Did you say two bedrooms?
W: Yes, at four hundred and fifteen dollars.
M: Why don’t we go and have a look?
W: Okay, I’ll give them a call.
Text 10
Look at this picture. It’s the London Tea Trade Centre. As you can see, it is on the north bank
of the river Thames. It is the center of an important industry in the everyday lives of the British
people. Tea is the British national drink. Every man, woman, and child over ten years of age has
on average over four cups a day. Or some one thousand, five hundred cups annually. About thirty
percent of the world’s exports of tea makes its way to London. And Britain is by far the largest
importer of tea in the world. Now, in the second picture, you can see how tea is tasted in the Tea
Trade Center before it is sold. Here, different types of tea are tasted by skilled tea tasters, before
they’re sold at each week’s tea sale. It’s amazing to see them at work. Over a hundred kinds of tea
are laid out in a line on long tables. The tasters generally taste teas with milk, since that is how the
majority of British people drink their tea. The tasters move down the line with surprising speed,
tasting from a spoon and deciding what is a fair price for each tea. After that, they…