『壹』 求英语六级的资料,哪些书籍好
基础阶段可来以从词汇开始,自刘一男 《四/六级词汇速记指南》,强化阶段,当然是做真题2016《大学英语四/六级考试真题精析与标准预测》,包含最新的9套真题和3套标准预测卷,真题解析精确细致,从考试考点出发,抓住考试命脉。书还有关于词汇、听力、阅读理解、翻译、写作等的赠品,冲刺阶段就是模拟题文都2016《大学英语四/六级考试决胜冲刺3套卷》2016 《大学英语四/六级绝对考场最后五套题》
『贰』 六级口语考试要看的书
我刚考了6月份的口语,成绩是B+
我考前没有做任何准备,连自我简介都没有事先准备,抱着去玩玩回的心态(答主要想在济南旅游一圈),当然这个成绩也不算好,讲究,得A是相当难的
你首先应该准备好自我简介,至于书,其实没有太大的必要性,这个平时的积累最重要,如果一定要看的话,现在又不知是哪个出版社出版的专门辅导六级口语的书,你去学校的书店肯定有卖,她们有看过的
1最重要的就是一定要放轻松,就当跟一群中年阿姨,叔叔拉拉家常而已
2在考试中不但要自己说,还要仔细听同组同伴的介绍和回答,因为考官很有可能就会就同伴的回答,向你提问,一句话要团队协作,一个团队水平的高低会影响你的成绩,所以事先跟团队成员沟通一下
3如果一次没听清楚考官的问题,不要慌,可以用英语就听见的部分反问,意思是考官你再说一遍,这样也不回影响成绩
4,呵呵!相信你成绩不错,口语也很好,不要犯最致命的一个低级错误,但我一个口语相当GOOD的同学也许由于太紧张了,她不经意冒出这样一句话,咦!这个单词是怎么说来着,标准的普通话,评委奶奶笑了,于是她的成绩被直接打到了C
有什么没说到的地方,你再指出来
最后祝你好运,向A冲刺
『叁』 大学的新视野大学英语是英语四六级考试的教材吗
你好,英语四六级考试并没有指定的教材,只要符合考试大纲的标准即可当内做考试的教材。
其实英语四容级对于英语好的人来说,选教材还是比较简单的,但是英语不好的人来说,需要花的时间和精力就会比较多了。不过,对于第一次考四级的人来说,都会不知道该看什么书、买什么资料,下面我就分享一下我考四级的经验吧!
每天都坚持听听力一个半到两个小时,我当时还另外买了一本四级的辅导书,叫《大学英语4级考试颠峰训练》里面针对四级考试分项训练,差不多够你用一个月的时间了,第二个月,就可以做历年真题了。
如果基础不好,开始听得时候会有些关键地方总也听不明白,不要先急于看答案和注解,多听几遍。看答案的时候把自己听不明白和错误的地方仔细看看,里面有一些你不太清楚地固定短语,单词等等,把它们记下来,一般来说,四级英语的听力都在一定的范围内,你听精了,自然就没问题了。
『肆』 大学英语四、六级考试的辅导资料哪里购买哪个出版的比较好
四六级的题是上海交大出的 推荐交大出版的
单词推荐新东方 可以考虑下思思大王记单词
外语教学与研究出版社的也很好
真题肯定是用王长喜的
一般新华书店 学校书店都有
加油 祝你好运
『伍』 英语四六级口语考试有指定教材吗什么名字和出版社要是没有,用什么书比较好呢
1.首先上课要认真听讲,尤其要做好笔记,下课再复习一遍,把他们都记在脑子里。然后再加入内自己的理解。当然容学英语的基础是先掌握好单词、短语。
2.如果你这方面不行的话,建议你多背背。然后要认真完成作业,如果说你上课有些东西还是不太理解,或许通过完成作业就可以掌握它的运用。
3.英语的难点在于碎的东西太多。要有很好的记忆力,和对语境的理解。建议你多下功夫。
免费的英语能力水平点评 去WÌZBEE看看吧去WÌZBEE以前,我的英语也不是很好,现在在WÌZBEE英语学的, 那里的外教不错,很专业,感觉很有经验,我的英语也提高了不少,现在是Eric老师教我的,他为人很有耐心,教的也很仔细,推荐你可以报下他们2节课的体验课.
『陆』 英语六级考试中心证书查询网站
:1. 首先呢,可以在英语四六级的官网上查分数,需要你输入准考证号 2. 其次呢,可以去99宿舍网查分数,也是要用准考证号查询的,如果忘记准考证,可
『柒』 求去年12月全国英语六级考试试卷
2007年12月22日大学六级真题word (2008-06-04 16:34:07)
标签:教育
Part I Writing (30 minutes)
The digital age
1. 如今,数字化产品越来越多,如…
2. 使用数字化产品对于人们学习工作和生活的影响。
Part II Reading Comprehension (Skimming and Scanning) (15 minutes)
Seven Ways to Save the World
Forget the old idea that conserving energy is a form of self-denial—riding bicycles, dimming the lights, and taking fewer showers. These days conservation is all about efficiency: getting the same—or better—results from just a fraction of the energy. When a slump in business travel forced Ulrich Ramer to cut costs at his family—owned hotel in Germany, he replaced hundreds of the hotel’s wasteful light bulbs, getting the same light for 80 percent less power. He bought a new water boiler with a digitally controlled pump, and wrapped insulation around the pipes. Spending about £100,000 on these and other improvements, he slashed his £90,000 fuel and power bill by £60,000. As a bonus, the hotel’s lower energy needs have reced its annual carbon emissions by more than 200 metric tons. “For us, saving energy has been very, very profitable,” he says. “And most importantly, we’re not giving up a single comfort for our guests.”
Efficiency is also a great way to lower carbon emissions and help slow global warming. But the best argument for efficiency is its cost—or, more precisely, its profitability. That’s because quickly growing energy demand requires immense investment in new supply, not to mention the drain of rising energy prices.
No wonder efficiency has moved to the top of the political agenda. On Jan. 10, the European Union unveiled a plan to cut energy use across the continent by 20 percent by 2020. Last March, China imposed a 20 percent increase in energy efficiency by 2020. Even George W. Bush, the Texas oilman, is expected to talk about energy conservation in his State of the Union speech this week.
The good news is that the world is full of proven, cheap ways to save energy. Here are the seven that could have the biggest impact.
Insulate
Space heating and cooling eats up 36 percent of all the world’s energy. There’s virtually no limit to how much of that can be saved, as prototype “zero-energy homes” in Switzerland and Germany have shown. There’s been a surge in new ways of keeping heat in and cold out (or vice versa). The most advanced insulation follows the law of increasing returns: if you add enough you can scale down or even eliminate heating and air-conditioning equipment, lowering costs even before you start saving on utility bills. Studies have shown that green workplaces (ones that don’t constantly need to have the heat or air-conditioner running) have higher worker proctivity and lower sick rates.
Change Bulbs
Lighting eats up 20 percent of the world’s electricity, or the equivalent of roughly 600,000 tons of coal a day. Forty percent of that powers old-fashioned incandescent light bulbs—a 19th-century technology that wastes most of the power it consumes on unwanted heat.
Compact fluorescent lamps, or CFLS, not only use 75 to 80 percent less electricity than incandescent bulbs to generate the same amount of light, but they also last 10 times longer. Phasing old bulbs out by 2030 would save the output of 650 power plants and avoid the release of 700 million tons of carbon into the atmosphere each year.
Comfort Zone
Water boilers, space heaters and air conditioners have been notoriously inefficient. The heat pump has altered that equation. It removes heat from the air outside or the ground below and uses it to supply heat to a building or its water supply. In the summer, the system can be reversed to cool buildings as well.
Most new residential buildings in Sweden are already heated with ground-source heat pumps. Such systems consume almost no conventional fuel at all. Several countries have used subsidies to jump-start the market, including Japan, where almost I million heat pumps have been installed in the past two years to heat water for showers and hot tubs.
Remake Factories
From steel mills to paper factories, instry eats up about a third of the world’s energy. The opportunities to save are vast. In Ludwigshafen, German chemicals giant BASF runs an interconnected complex of more than 200 chemical factories, where heat proced by one chemical process is used to power the next. At the Ludwigshafen site site alone, such recycling of heat and energy saves the company £200 million a year and almost half its CO2 emissions. Now BASF is doing the same for new plants in China. “Optimizing (优化) energy efficiency is a decisive competitive advantage,” says BASF CEO Jurgen Hambrecht.
Green Driving
A quarter of the world’s energy---including two thirds of the annual proction of oil—is used for transportation. Some savings come free of charge: you can boost fuel efficiency by 6 percent simply by keeping your car’s tires properly inflated (充气). Gasoline-electric hybrid(混合型的) models like the Toyota Prius improve mileage by a further 20 percent over conventional models.
A Better Fridge
More than half of all residential power goes into running household appliances, procing a fifth of the world’s carbon emissions. And that’s true even though manufacturers have already hiked the efficiency of refrigerators and other white goods by as much as 70 percent since the 1980s. According to an International Energy Agency study, if consumers chose those models that would save them the most money over the life of the appliance, they’d cut global residential power consumption (and their utility bills) by 43 percent.
Flexible Payment
Who says you have to pay for all your conservation investments? “Energy service contractors” will pay for retrofitting(翻新改造)in return for a share of the client’s annual utility-bill savings. In Beijing. Shenwu Thermal Energy Technology Co. specializes in retrofitting China’s steel furnaces. Shenwu puts up the initial investment to install a heat exchanger that preheats the air going into the furnace, slashing the client’s fuel costs. Shenwu pockets a cut of those savings, so both Shenwu and the client profit.
If saving energy is so easy and profitable, why isn’t everyone doing it? It has do with psychology and a lack of information. Most of us tend to look at today’s price tag more than tomorrow’s potential saving. That holds double for the landlord or developer, who won’t actually see a penny of the savings his investment in better insulation or a better heating system might generate. In many people’s minds, conservation is still associated with self-denial. Many environmentalists still push that view.
Smart governments can help push the market in the right direction. The EU’s 1994 law on labeling was such a success that it extended the same idea to entire buildings last year. To boost the market value of efficiency, all new buildings are required to have an “energy pass” detailing power and heating consumption. Countries like Japan and Germany have successively tightened building codes, requiring an increase in insulation levels but leaving it up to builders to decide how to meet them.
The most powerful incentives, of course, will come from the market itself. Over the past year, sky-high fuel prices have focused minds on efficiency like never before. Ever-increasing pressure to cut costs has finally forced more companies to do some math on their energy use.
Will it be enough? With global demand and emissions rising so fast, we may not have any choice but to try. Efficient technology is here now, proven and cheap. Compared with all other options, it’s the biggest, easiest and most profitable bang for the buck.
1. What is said to be best way to conserve energy nowadays?
A) Raising efficiency. B) Cutting unnecessary costs..
C) Finding alternative resources. D) Sacrificing some personal comforts.
2. What does the European Union plan to do?
A) Diversify energy supply. B) Cut energy consumption.
C) Rece carbon emissions. D) Raise proction Raise proction efficiency.
3. If you add enough insulation to your house, you may be able to _____________.
A) improve your work environment B) cut your utility bills by half
C) get rid of air-conditioners D) enjoy much better health
4. How much of the power consumed by incandescent bulbs is converted into light?
A) A small portion. B) Some 40 percent. C) Almost half. D) 75 to 80 percent.
5. Some countries have tried to jump-start the market of heat pumps by __________.
A)upgrading the equipment B)encouraging investments C) implementing high-tech D)providing subsidies
6. German chemicals giant BASF saves £200 million a year by ___________.
A) recycling heat and energy B) setting up factories in China
C) using the newest technology D) recing the CO2 emissions of its plants
7. Global residential power consumption can be cut by 43 percent if ___________.
A) we increase the insulation of walls and water pipes
B) We choose simpler models of electrical appliances
C) We cut down on the use of refrigerators and other white goods
D) We choose the most efficient models of refrigerators and other white goods
8. Energy service contractors profit by taking a part of clients____________.
9. Many environmentalists maintain the view that conservation has much to do with _____.
10. The strongest incentives for energy conservation will derive from __________
Part III Listening Comprehension (35 minutes)
Section A
11. A) Proceed in his own way. B) Stick to the original plan.
C) Compromise with his colleague. D) Try to change his colleague’s mind.
12. A) Mary has a keen eye for style. B) Nancy regrets buying the dress.
C) Nancy and Mary went shopping together in Rome. D) Nancy and Mary like to follow the latest fashion.
13. A) Wash the dishes. B) Go to the theatre.
C) Pick up George and Martha. D) Take her daughter to hospital.
14. A) She enjoys making up stories about other people. B) She can never keep anything to herself for long.
C) She is eager to share news with the woman. D) She is the best informed woman in town.
15. A) A car dealer. B) A mechanic C) A driving examiner. D) A technical consultant.
16. A) The shopping mall has been deserted recently. B) Shoppers can only find good stores in the mall.
C) Lots of people moved out of the downtown area. D) There isn’t much business downtown nowadays.
17. A) He will help the woman with her reading. B) The lounge is not a place for him to study in.
C) He feels sleepy whenever he tries to study. D) A cozy place is rather hard to find on campus.
18. A) To protect her from getting scratches. B) To help relieve her of the pain.
C) To prevent mosquito bites. D) To avoid getting sunburnt.
Questions 19 to 22 are based on the conversation you have just heard.
19. A) In a studio. B) In a clothing store. C) At a beach resort D) At a fashion show
20. A) To live there permanently. B) To stay there for half a year.
C) To find a better job to support herself. D) To sell leather goods for a British company.
21. A) Designing fashion items for several companies. B) Modeling for a world-famous Italian company.
C) Working as an employee for Ferragamo. D) Serving as a sales agent for Burberrys.
22. A) It has seen a steady decline in its profits. B) It has become much more competitive.
C) It has lost many customers to foreign companies. D) It has attracted lot more designers from abroad.
23. A) It helps her to attract more public attention. B) It improves her chance of getting promoted.
C) It strengthens her relationship with students. D) It enables her to understand people better.
24. A) Passively. B) Positively. C) Skeptically. D) Sensitively.
25. A) It keeps haunting her day and night. B) Her teaching was somewhat affected by it.
C) It vanishes the moment she steps into her role. D) Her mind goes blank once she gets on the stage.
Section B
Passage One
Questions 26 to 29 are based on the passage you have just heard.
26. A) To win over the majority of passengers from airlines in twenty years.
B) To reform railroad management in western European countries.
C) To electrify the railway lines between major European cities.
D) To set up an express train network throughout Europe.
27. A) Major European airliner will go bankrupt.
B) Europeans will pay much less for traveling.
C) Traveling time by train between major European cities will be cut by half.
D) Trains will become the safest and most efficient means of travel in Europe.
28. A) Train travel will prove much more comfortable than air travel.
B) Passengers will feel much safer on board a train than on a plane.
C) Rail transport will be environmentally friendlier than air transport.
D) Traveling by train may be as quick as, or even quicker than, by air.
29. A) In 1981. B) In 1989. C) In 1990. D) In 2000.
Passage Two
Questions 30 to 32 are based on the passage you have just heard.
30. A) There can be no speedy recovery for mental patients.
B) Approaches to healing patients are essentially the same.
C) The mind and body should be taken as an integral whole.
D) There is no clear division of labor in the medical profession.
31. A) A doctor’s fame strengthens the patients’ faith in them.
B) Abuse of medicines is widespread in many urban hospitals.
C) One third of the patients depend on harmless substances for cure.
D) A patient’s expectations of a drug have an effect on their recovery.
32. A) Expensive drugs may not prove the most effective.
B) The workings of the mind may help patients recover.
C) Doctors often exaggerate the effect of their remedies.
D) Most illnesses can be cured without medication.
Passage Three
Questions 33 to 35 are based on the passage you have just heard.
33. A) Enjoying strong feelings and emotions. B) Defying all dangers when they have to.
C) Being fond of making sensational news. D) Dreaming of becoming famous one day.
34. A) Working in an emergency room. B) Watching horror movies.
C) Listening to rock music. D) Doing daily routines.
35. A) A rock climber. B) A psychologist. C) A resident doctor. D) A career consultant.
Section C
If you’re like most people, you’ve inlged in fake listening many times. You go to history class, sit in the third row, and look (36) ________ at the instructor as she speaks. But your mind is far away, (37) _______ in the clouds of pleasant daydreams. (38) ________ you come back to earth: the instructor writes an important term on the chalkboard, and you (39) _______ it in your notebook. Every once in a while the instructor makes a (40) _________ remark, causing others in the class to laugh. You smile politely, pretending that you’ve heard the remark and found it mildly (41) ___________. You have a vague sense of (42) ___________ that you aren’t paying close attention, but you tell yourself that any (43) ________ you miss can be picked up from a friend’s notes. Besides, (44) _______________________. So back you go into your private little world. Only later do you realize you’ve missed important information for a test.
Fake listening may be easily exposed, since many speakers are sensitive to facial cues and can tell if you’re merely pretending to listen. (45) ________________________.
Even if you’re not exposed, there’s another reason to avoid fakery; it’s easy for this behavior to become a habit. For some people, the habit is so deeply rooted that (46) _________________. As a result, they miss lots of valuable information.
『捌』 我今年考英语六级,想买本词汇,请问哪个出版社的,哪个版本比较好比较权威
星火记忆的单词比较好,据说已经被英国人在英国出版了。
我自己用的是新东方那个红的,还有一本便携本,很小也不贵,挺不错。
其实随便用什么都可以。
『玖』 2020年9月份考全国英语六级是否简单一点
不
四六级只会因为疫情问题而更改考试时间,毕竟连雷打不动的高考都延期一个月了,但是难度就不会有变化了。
虽然四六级考试由原来的 100分制改为710分的记分体制,不设及格线,不颁发合格证书,只发放成绩单,名义上是已经没有了“过与不过”的概念。
但是学生们普遍认为,425分相当于原来的及格线,520分相当于原来的“优秀”,因为四级要考到425分以上才能具备报考六级的资格,因此425分就成了学生们普遍认可的“生死线”。
(9)英语六级考试中国书籍出版社奥华元扩展阅读:
新题型说明
1,单词及词组听写
原复合式听写调整为单词及词组听写,短文长度及难度不变。要求考生在听懂短文的基础上,用所听到的原文填写空缺的单词或词组,共10题。短文播放三遍。
2,长篇阅读
原快速阅读理解调整为长篇阅读理解,篇章长度和难度不变。篇章后附有10个句子,每句一题。每句所含的信息出自篇章的某一段落,要求考生找出与每句所含信息相匹配的段落。有的段落可能对应两题,有的段落可能不对应任何一题。
3,翻译
原单句汉译英调整为段落汉译英。翻译内容涉及中国的历史、文化、经济、社会发展等。四级长度为140-160个汉字;六级长度为180-200个汉字。
参考资料来源:网络-大学英语六级考试
『拾』 英语六级考试必读的书
读书?这种考试就抄是针对性复习。做真题最有效,背好课本里的那些单词管够。听力多听,可以有很大的进步。你要多模拟几次考试,自己掐表,阅读的速度非常重要,注意关键词等技巧。补强弱项,多做,或者增强强项,我当时就是听力用很多时间练习,毕竟他是唯一能说答案给你的部分,最后听力180过的,四级听力200多。哈哈