2015 年 6 月英语六级真题(第 2 套)
Writing
Part I
Directions: Forthispart,youareallowed80minutestowriteanessaycommenting
on Albert Einstein’sremark “I have no special talents. I am only
passionatelycurious.”Youcangiveanexampleortwotoillustrateyour
point of view. You should write at least 150 words but no more than200
words.
(30 minutes)
Listening
(30 minutes)
Comprehension
Part II
Section A
Directions:In this section, you will hear 8 short conversations and 2 long
conversations.Attheendofeachconversation,oneormorequestionswill
beaskedaboutwhatwassaid.Boththeconversationandthequestionswill
be spoken only once. After each question there will be a pause. During
thepause,youmustreadthefourchoicesmarkedA),B),C),andD),and
decide which is the best answer. Then mark the corresponding letter on
Answer Sheet 1 with a single line through the centre.
注意:此部分试题请在答题卡 1 上作答。
1. A) The woman thinks she is cleverer than the man.
B) The man behaves as if he were a thorough fool.
C) The man is unhappy with the woman’s remark.
D) The woman seldom speaks highly of herself.
2. A) Three crew members were involved in the incident.
B) None of the hijackers carried any deadly weapons.
C) None of the passengers were injured or killed.
D) The plane had been scheduled to fly to Japan.
3. A) At a travel agency.
B) At a hotel front desk.
C) At a checkout counter.
D) At a commercial bank.
4. A) Chinatown has got the best restaurants in the city.
B) The critic thought highly of the Chinese restaurant.
C) The restaurant places many ads in popular magazines.
D) The restaurant was not up to the speakers’ expectations.
5. A) ProL Laurence is going into an active retirement.
B) ProL Laurence has stopped conducting seminars.
C) The professor’s graduate seminar is well received.
D) The professor will lead a quiet life after retirement.
6. A)Assigning Leon to a new position.
B) Finding a replacement for Leon.
C) Arranging for Rodney’s visit tomorrow.
D) Finding a solution to Rodney’s problem.
7. A) Photography is one of Helen’s many hobbies.
B) Helen asked the man to book a ticket for her.
C) The photography exhibition will close tomorrow.
D) Helen has been looking forward to the exhibition.
8. A) The speakers share the same opinion.
B) Steve knows how to motivate employees.
C) The man has a better understanding of Steve.
D) The woman is out of touch with the real world.
Questions 9 to 12 are based on the conversation you have just heard.
9. A) It is well paid.
B) It is stimulating.
C) It is demanding.
D) It is fairly secure.
10. A) A quick promotion.
B) Free accommodation.
C) Moving expenses.
D) A lighter workload.
11. A) He has difficulty communicating with local people.
B) He has to spend a lot more traveling back and forth.
C) He has trouble adapting to the local weather.
D) He has to sign a long-term contract.
12. A) The woman will help the man make a choice.
B) The man is going to attend a job interview.
C) The man is in the process of job hunting.
D) The woman sympathizes with the man.
Questions 13 to 15 are based on the conversation you have just heard.
13. A) To inquire about the interest rates at the woman’s bank.
B) To inquire about the current financial market situation.
C) To see if he can find a job in the woman’s company.
D) To see if he can get a loan from the woman’s bank.
14. A) Long-term investment.
B) A three-month deposit.
C) Any high-interest deposit.
D) Any high-yield investment.
15. A) She treated him to a meal.
B) She gave him loans at low rates.
C) She offered him dining coupons.
D) She raised interest rates for him.
Section B
Directions:Inthissection,youwillhear3shortpassages.Attheendofeachpassage,
youwillhearsomequestions.Boththepassageandthequestionswillbe
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.
注意:此部分试题请在答题卡 1 作答。
Passage One
Questions 16 to 18 are bused on the passage you have just heard.
16. A) Strict professional training.
B) Years of practical experience.
C) A refined taste for artistic works.
D) The ability to predict fashion trends.
17. A) Purchasing handicrafts from all over the world.
B) Conducting trade in art works with dealers overseas.
C) Strengthening cooperation with foreign governments.
D) Promoting all kinds of American hand-made specialties.
18. A) She has access to fashionable things.
B) She can enjoy life on a modest salary.
C) She is doing what she enjoys doing.
D) She is free to do whatever she wants.
Passage Two
Questions 19 to 22 are based on the passage you have just heard.
19. A) It is a Portuguese company selling coffee in New York.
B) Its most important task is to conduct coffee studies.
C) It represents several countries that export coffee.
D) Its role is to regulate international coffee prices.
20. A) The freezing weather in Brazil.
B) The impact of global warming.
C) The increased coffee consumption.
D) The fluctuation of coffee prices.
21. A) He is doing a bachelor’s degree.
B) He is young, handsome and single.
C) He is a heavy coffee drinker.
D) He is tall, rich and intelligent.
22. A) A visit to several coffee-growing plantations.
B) Coffee prices and his advertising campaign.
C) A vacation on some beautiful tropical beach.
D) A quick promotion and a handsome income.
Passage Three
Questions 23 to 25 are based on the passage you have just heard.
23. A) They were held up in a traffic jam.
B) They boarded a wrong coach in a hurry.
C) They were late for the first morning bus.
D) They were delayed by the train for hours.
24. A) It was canceled because of an unexpected strike.
B) It was the most exciting trip they ever had.
C) It was spoiled by poor accommodations.
D) It was postponed due to terrible weather.
25. A) Go overseas.
B) Stay at home.
C) Take romantic cruises.
D) Take escorted trips.
Section C
Directions:Inthissection,youwillhearapassagethreetimes.Whenthepassage
isreadforthefirsttime,youshouldlistencarefullyforitsgeneralidea.When
thepassageisreadforthesecondtime,youarerequiredtofillintheblankswith
theexactwordsyouhavejustheard.Finally,whenthepassageisreadforthethird
time, you should check what you have written.
注意:此部分试题请在答题卡 1 上作答。
Why would an animal kill itself? It seems a strange question, and yet it is one
that has 26 some people for a long time. The lemming (旅鼠) is one such animal.
Lemmings periodically commit mass 27, and no one knows just why!
The small 28, which inhabit the Scandinavian mountains, sustain themselves on
a diet of roots and live in nests they make underground. When their food supply is
29large, the lemmings live a normal, undisturbed life.
However, when the lemmings’ food supply becomes too low to support the
population, a singular30 commences. The lemmings leave their nests all together at
the same time, forming huge crowds. Great numbers of the lemmings begin a long and
hard journey across the Scandinavian plains, a journey that may last weeks. The
lemmings eat everything in their path, continuing their31march until they reach the
sea.
The reason for what follows remains a mystery for zoologists and naturalists.
Upon reaching the coast, the lemmings do not stop but swim by the thousands into
the surf. Most 32 only a short time before they tire, sink, and drown.
A common theory for this unusual phenomenon is that the lemmings do not realize
that the ocean is such 33 water. In their cross-country journey, the animals must
traverse many smaller bodies of water, such as rivers and small lakes. They may 34
that the sea is just another such swimmable35. But no final answer has been found
to the mystery.
Reading
(40 minutes)
Comprehension
Part III
Section A
Directions: In this section, there isa passagewithten blanks.Youarerequired
toselectonewordforeachblankfromalistofchoicesgiveninaword
bank following the passage. Read the passage through care fully before
making yourchoices.Eachchoice inthebank isidentified bya letter.
PleasemarkthecorrespondingletterforeachitemonAnswerSheet2with
asinglelinethroughthecentre.Youmaynotuseanyofthewordsinthe
bank more than once.
Questions 36 to 45 are based on the following passage.
Travel websites have been around since the l990s, when Expedia, Travelocity,
and other holiday booking sites were launched, allowing travelers to compare flight
and hotel prices with the click of a mouse. With information no longer 36 by
travelagents or hidden in business networks, the travel industry was revolutionized,
as greater transparency helped 37 prices.
Today, the industry is going through a new revolution—this time transforming
service quality. Online rating platforms— 38 in hotels, restaurants, apartments,
and taxis—allow travelers to exchange reviews and experiences for all to see.
Hospitality “businesses are now ranked, analyzed, and compared not by industry 39 ,
but by the very people for whom the service is intended—the customer. This has 40
a new relationshipbetween buyer and seller. Customers have always voted with their
feet; they can now explain their decision to anyone who is interested. As a result,
businesses are much more 41 , often in very specific ways, which creates powerful
42 to improve service.
Although some readers might not care for gossipy reports of unfriendly bellboys
(行李员) in Berlin or malfunctioning hotel hairdryers in Houston, the true power
of online reviews lies not just in the individual stories, but in the websites’
43 to aggregate a large volume of ratings.
The impact cannot be 44 .Businesses that attract top ratings can enjoy rapid
growth, as new customers are attracted by good reviews and 45 provide yet more
positive feedback. So great is the influence of online ratings that many companies
now hire digital reputation managers to ensure a favorable online identity.
A) accountable
B) capacity
C) controlled
D) entail
E) forged
F) incentives
G) occasionally
H) overstated
I) persisting
J) pessimistic
K) professionals
L) slash
M) specializing
N) spectators
O) subsequently
Section B
Directions:In this section, you are going to read a passage with ten statements
attachedtoit.Eachstatementcontainsinformationgiveninoneoftheparagraphs.
Identify the paragraph from which the in formation is derived. You may choose a
paragraph more than once. Each paragraph is marked with a letter. Answer the
questions by marking the corresponding letter on Answer Sheet 2.
A better credit card is the solution to ever larger hack attacks
Plastic Surgery
[A] A thin magnetic strip (magstripe) is all that stands between your credit-card
information and the bad guys. And they’ve been working hard to break in. That’s
why 2014 is shaping up as a major showdown: banks, law enforcement and technology
companies are all trying to stop a network of hackers who are succeeding in stealing
account numbers, names, email addresses and other crucial dataused in identity theft.
More than 100 million accounts at Target, Neiman Marcus and Michaels stores were
affected in some way during the most recent attacks, starting last November.
[B]Swipe(刷卡) is the operative word: cards are increasingly vulnerable to attacks
when you make purchases in a store. In several recent incidents, hackers have been
able to obtain massive information of credit-, debit-(借记) or prepaid-card numbers
using malware, i.e. malicious software, inserted secretly into the retailers’
point-of-sale system—the checkout registers. Hackers then sold the data to a second
group of criminals operating in shadowy corners of the web. Not long after, the stolen
data was showing up on fake cards and being used for online purchases.
[C] The solution could cost as little as $2 extra for every piece of plastic issued.
The fix is a security technology used heavily outside the US. While American credit
cards use the 40-year-old magstripe technology to process transactions, much of the
rest of the world uses smarter cards with a technology called EMV (short for Europay,
MasterCard, Visa) that employs a chip embedded in the card plus a customer PIN
(personal identification number) to authenticate (验证) every transaction on the
spot. If a purchaser fails to punch in the correct PIN at the checkout, the
transaction gets rejected. (Onlinepurchases can be made by setting up a separate
transaction code. )
[D] Why haven’t big banks adopted the more secure technology? When it comes to
mailing out new credit cards, it’s all about relative costs, says David Robertson,
who runs the NilsonReport, an industry newsletter. “The cost of the card, putting
the sticker on it, coding the account number and expiration date, embossing (凸
印) it, the small envelope—all put together, you’re in the dollar range.” A
chip-and-PIN card currently costs closer to$3, says Robertson, because of the price
of chips. (Once large issuers convert together,the chip costs should drop.)
[E] Multiply S3 by the more than 5 billion magstripe credit and prepaid cards in
circulation in the US. Then consider that there’s an estimated$12.4 billion in card
fraud on a global basis, says Robertson. With 44% of that in the U.S.,American
credit-card fraud amounts to about$5.5 billion annually. Card issuers have so far
calculated that absorbing the liability for even big hacks like the Target one is
still cheaper than replacing all that plastic.
[F] That leaves American retailers pretty much alone the world over in relying on
magstripe technology to charge purchases—and leaves consumers vulnerable. Each
magstripe has three tracks of information, explains payments security expert Jeremy
Gumbley, the chief technology officer of CreditCall, an electronicpayments company.
The first and third are used by the bank or card issuer. Your vital account
information lives on the second track, which hackers try to capture. “Malware is
scanning through the memory in real time and looking for data,”he says. “It creates
a text file that gets stolen.’’
[G] Chip-and-PIN cards, by contrast, make fake cards or skimming impossible because
the information that gets scanned is encrypted(加密). The historical reason the US
has stuck with magstripe, ironically enough, is once superior technology. Our cheap,
ultra·reliable wired networks made credit-card authentication over the phone
frictionless. In France, card companies created EMV in part because the telephone
monopoly was so maddeningly inefficient and expensive. The EMV solution allowed
transactions to be verified locally and securely.
[H] Some big banks, like Wells Far90, are now offering to convert your magstripe
card to a chip-and-PIN model. (It’s actually a hybrid(混合体)that will still have
a magstripe, since most US merchants don’t have EMV terminals.)Should you take them
up on it?If you travel internationally, the answer is yes.
[I] Keep in mind, too, that credit cards typically have better liability protection
than debit cards. If someone uses your credit card fraudulently(欺诈性地), it’s
the issuer or merchant, not you,that takes the hit. Debit cards have different
liability limits depending on the bank and the events surrounding any fraud. “If
it’s available, the logical thing is to get a chip-and-PIN card from your
bank.”says Eric Adamowsky, a co-founder of CreditCardlnsider.com. “I would use
credit cards over debit cards because of liability issues.”Cash still works pretty
well too.
[J] Retailers and banks stand to benefit from the lower fraud levels of chip-and-PIN
cards but have been reluctant for years to invest in the new infrastructure(基础
设施)needed for the technology, especially if consumers don’t have access to it.
It’s a chicken-and-egg problem; no one wants to spend the money on upgraded
pointofsale systems that can read the chip cards if shoppers aren’t carrying
them—yet there’s little point in consumers’carrying the fancy plastic if stores
aren’t equipped to use them. (An earlier effort by Target to move to chip and PIN
never gained progress.)According to Gumbley, there’s a“you-first mentality. The
logjam(僵局)has to be broken.”
[K] JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon recently expressed his willingness to do so,
noting that banks and merchants have spent the past decade suing each other over
interchange fees—the percentage of the transaction price they keep—rather than
deal with the growing hacking problem. Chase offers a chip-enabled card under its
own brand and several others for travel-related companies such as British Airways
and Ritz-Carlton.
[L] The Target and Neiman hacks have also changed the cost calculation: although
retailers have been reluctant to spend the$6.75 billion that Capgemini consultants
estimate it will take to convert all their registers to be chip-and-PIN-compatible,
the potential liability they now face is dramatically greater. Target has been hit
with class actions from hacked consumers. “It’s the ultimate nightmare,’’a
retail executive from a well-known chain admitted to TIME.
[M] The card-payment companies MasterCard and Visa are pushing hard for change. The
two firms have warned all parties in the transaction chain—merchant, network, bank
that if they don’t become EMV-compliant by October 2015, the party that is least
compliant will bear the fraud risk.
[N] In the meantime, app-equipped smartphones and digital wallets—all of which can
use EMV technology—are beginning to make inroads(侵袭)on cards and cash. PayPal,
for instance, is testing an app that lets you use your mobile phone to pay on the
fly at local merchants—without surrendering any card information to them. And
further down the road is biometric authentication, which could be encrypted with,
say, a fingerprint.
[O] Credit and debit cards, though, are going to be with us for the foreseeable future,
and so are hackers, if we stick with magstripe technology. “It seems crazy to
me,”says Gumbley, who is English, “that a cutting-edge-technology country is
depending on a 40-year-old technology.”That’s why it may be up to consumers to
move the needle on chip and PIN. Says Robertson: “When you get the consumer into
a position of worry and inconvenience, that’s where the rubber hits the road.”
46. It is best to use an EMV card for international travel.
47. Personal information on credit and debit cards is increasingly vulnerable to
hacking.
48. The French card companies adopted EMV technology partly because of inefficient
telephone service.
49. While many countries use the smarter EMV cards, the US still clings to its old
magstripe technology.
50. Attempts are being made to prevent hackers from carrying out identity theft.
51. Credit cards are much safer to use than debit cards.
52. Big banks have been reluctant to switch to more secure technology because of
the higher costs involved.
53.The potential liability for retailers using magstripe is far more costly than
upgrading their registers.
54. The use of magstripe cards by American retailers leaves consumers exposed to
the risks of losing account information.
55. Consumers will be a driving force behind the conversion from magstripe to EMV
technology.