LISTENING
Directions: In this section of the test, you will have an opportunity to demonstrate your ability to understand conversations and talks in English. Answer all the questions on the basis of what is stated or implied by the speakers in the recording. There will be time for you to read the instructions and you will have a chance to check your work. The recording will be played ONCE only. Time allowance: about 40 minutes, including 05 minutes to transfer your answers to your answer sheet.
PART 1
Directions: In this part, you will hear EIGHT short announcements or instructions. There is one question for each announcement or instruction. For each question, choose the right answer A, B, C, or D. Then, on the answer sheet, find the number of the question and fill in the space that corresponds to the letter of the answer that you have chosen.
What is the reason for the call?
- A. To get Mr. Clifford's contact information
- B. To receive payment for a service
- C. To discuss available Internet packages
- D. To set up an installation date
- A. Portland
- B. Milton
- C. Rochester
- D. St. Louis
- A. A piece of luggage
- B. An airline delay
- C. A document
- D. A travel itinerary
- A. A cook
- B. A receptionist
- C. A waiter
- D. A food critic
- A. November 9
- B. November 10
- C. November 12
- D. Next weekend
- A. A sporting event
- B. An awards ceremony
- C. A concert
- D. A theatrical performance
- A. A medical prescription
- B. A payment invoice
- C. Test results
- D. Hospital forms
- A. It was decorated first.
- B. It is much bigger than the others.
- C. It has more furniture.
- D. It looks more modern.
PART 2
Directions: In this part, you will hear THREE conversations. The conversations will not be repeated. There are four questions for each conversation, choose the correct answer A, B, C, or D.
Questions 9 to 12 refer to the following conversation.
What would the man like Julie to do?
- A. Meet with the president
- B. Come to the office later
- C. Change the appointment time
- D. Contact some clients
- A. At 1 o'clock
- B. At 2 o'clock
- C. At 3 o'clock
- D. At 4 o'clock
- A. Go to the emergency room
- B. Relocate his office
- C. Meet with some clients
- D. Call the president's office
- A. At 1 o'clock
- B. At 2 o'clock
- C. At 3 o'clock
- D. At 4 o'clock
- A. His Internet is slow.
- B. His computer is broken.
- C. He cannot contact technical support.
- D. His Internet provider closed down.
- A. A new account.
- B. A new contract discount.
- C. A new credit card.
- D. A new computer.
- A. They give discounts on used computers.
- B. They offer great technical assistance.
- C. They provide a money-back guarantee.
- D. They repair computers free of charge.
- A. Give her name when ordering a service.
- B. Email the company his details.
- C. Go to a nearby computer shop.
- D. Talk to a service staff member.
- A. At a convention center
- B. At a local hotel
- C. At a shopping mall
- D. At a company warehouse
- A. A name tag
- B. A guest list
- C. An information package
- D. An operating manual
- A. At 8 a.m
- B. At 9 a.m
- C. At 10 a.m
- D. At 11 a.m
- A. The name of the conference
- B. The venue of the event
- C. The number of guests
- D. Things he can bring to the event
PART 3
Directions: In this part, you will hear THREE talks or lectures. The talks or lectures will not be repeated. There are five questions for each talk or lecture. For each question, choose the right answer A, B, C, or D.
Questions 21 to 25 refer to the following lecture. Listen to part of a lecture in a Psychology class.
What is the lecture mainly about?
- A. A process for meeting human needs
- B. A system of classifying human needs
- C. A comparison of different approaches to human development
- D. Experiments testing a theory of human development
- A. They are very genetically similar to humans
- B. They need very little other than food and water
- C. They placed meeting certain needs before meeting others
- D. They need the same things humans need
- A. Having completed growth
- B. Being well-loved by all people
- C. Having a limited sense of humor
- D. Having a well-developed awareness of ethics
- A. To challenge students to explain what she meant
- B. To check the students’ understanding of the preceding levels
- C. To introduce the next idea in the lecture
- D. To see if students need additional examples
- A. How educators have applied Maslow's ideas in classrooms
- B. What a person can do to attain self-actualization
- C. How Maslow's ideas are challenged by experts
- D. Why certain people meet more of their needs than others
- A. The differences between salt and pepper.
- B. How pepper made it to our dinner table.
- C. The structure of the medieval European spice trade.
- D. The symbolic importance of spices in the Middle Ages.
- A. use salt and herbs to preserve food
- B. use pepper and spices to preserve food
- C. use salt and herbs to flavor food
- D. use pepper and spices to flavor food
- A. It tasted better than pepper, cinnamon, or other spices.
- B. It could keep foods from spoiling.
- C. It had its origins in mysterious and distant lands.
- D. It is necessary to human health.
- A. Pepper tasted better than salt.
- B. Salt had less symbolic value than pepper.
- C. Salt had become part of European culture but pepper had not.
- D. Pepper had less preservative value than salt.
- A. To illustrate how common spices today could seem exotic to them
- B. To show students how the spice trade changed European social organization
- C. To emphasize their mistrust of outsiders and dependence on the Church
- D. To point out how spices were generally traded only short distances
- A. To ask if the professor's website is working properly
- B. To let the professor know she finds the online site very informative
- C. To request help with her computer
- D. To see why she's the one having trouble understanding the course
- A. He doesn't think she is using the software correctly.
- B. Her trouble could be caused by something other than a virus.
- C. The problem he was having with the website has been fixed.
- D. She's been having difficulty with the website all long.
- A. She can't access the material on the website.
- B. She is having trouble with the class.
- C. The website seems to respond slowly to her input.
- D. When she talks, she hears her words shortly after she says them.
- A. Its staff create a lot of nuisance programs.
- B. Its staff run an ethical business.
- C. Its staff often cause delays to computer systems.
- D. Its staff are professional and helpful.
- A. Go to the store to buy an anti-spyware program for her computer
- B. Get a second opinion from another professor
- C. Have her computer checked for adware and spyware problems
- D. Check with her classmates to see if any of them are having problems
