单项选择题

听力原文:M: Do you really believe that clothes carry a kind of message and that what we put on is a reflection of what we feel?
W: Oh, yeah. Now people are beginning to take seriously the idea of a kind of psychology of clothing, to believe that there is not just individual taste but also a thinking that is trying to express something we may not even be aware of ourselves.
M: But surely this has always been the casE.We all dress up when we want to impress someone; we tend to put on something smart.
W: But that's a conscious act. What I am talking about is more of a subconscious thing. Take for example the student away from home at university: if he tends to wrap himself up more than others, this is because he is probably feeling homesick. Similarly, a general feeling of insecurity can sometimes take the form. of over-dressing in warmer clothes than necessary.
M: Can you give any other examples?
W: Yes. I think people who are sociable tend to dress in an extroverted way, preferring brighter or more dazzling colors--yellows, bright reds, and so on.
M: Do you think the care--or lack of it--over the way we wear has anything to tell us?
W: Yes, indeeD.The length of a man's trousers speaks volumes about his awareness of his own imagE.If his trousers are very short or having loosely, this probably means he's absorbed by other things.
According to the woman, what governs the clothes we wear?
A.A desire to display one's wealth and express oneselF.
B.Love for beauty and a desire to impress others.
C.Individual taste and love for beauty.
D.Individual taste and a desire to express oneselF.

A.M:
B.
W:
C.
M:
D.
M:
E.
According
F.A
G.
B.Love
H.
C.Individual
I.
D.Individual
J.
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单项选择题
SECTION B PASSAGESDirections: In this section, you will hear several passages. Listen to the passages carefully and then answer the questions that follow.听力原文: In the early 1960s a new sound was heard, very different from anything, which had so far come from the American side of the AtlantiC.This was the Liverpool, or northwestern 'beat'. Situated on the river Mersey in the north-eastern corner of the industrial Black Country, Liverpool was not a place that anyone visited for fun. Until the 1960s it was known only as one of Britain's largest ports. Then, overnight, it became world famous as the birthplace of the new pop culture which, in a few years, swept across Britain and America, and most countries of the Western worlD.The people responsible for the pop revolution were four Liverpool boys who called themselves The Beatles. They played in small clubs in the back streets of the city. Unlike famous solo stars who had their songs written for them, The Beatles wrote their own words and musiC.Some pop groups, in particular the Rolling Stones, did more than just entertain. They wrote words that were deliberately intended to shock. They represented the anger and bitterness of youth struggling for freedom against authority.The Beatles finally won the affection and admiration of people of all ages and social backgrounds. Their songs became more serious. They wrote not only of love, but also of death and old age and poverty and daily lifE.They were respected by many intellectuals, and by some serious musicians. Largely thanks to The Beatles, pop music has grown into an immense and profitable industry.Which of the following is NOT true about Liverpool?A.It is located on the river Mersey.B.it is the birthplace of lots of musicians and intellectuals.C.It is one of Britain's largest ports.D.It is the birthplace of the new pop culturE.
A.听力原文:
B.
C.
D.
E.
Which
F.It
G.
B.it
H.
C.It
I.
D.It
J.