當(dāng)提及六級(jí)聽力時(shí),尤其是英語六級(jí)真題聽力,我們不禁會(huì)想起那些考驗(yàn)英語學(xué)習(xí)者聽力理解能力的挑戰(zhàn)。作為英語六級(jí)考試的重要組成部分,六級(jí)聽力部分不僅要求考生能夠捕捉和識(shí)別出基本的語言信息,更需要他們?cè)谟邢薜臅r(shí)間內(nèi)對(duì)復(fù)雜的語境進(jìn)行準(zhǔn)確理解,并快速作出反應(yīng)。小編為大家整理了2022年12月英語六級(jí)真題聽力第二套Recording 1的內(nèi)容,希望能對(duì)您有所幫助!
英文原文
Recording 1
錄音1
If you visit the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, chances are you will remember the roadside or campground bears above all else.
如果你去大霧山國家公園游玩,很可能你會(huì)對(duì)路邊或露營地的熊印象深刻。
Bears are the most popular animals in a number of our national parks, and these mountains, where the population of bears runs into the hundreds, offer plentiful opportunities to observe these large wild animals.
熊是我們?cè)S多國家公園中最受歡迎的動(dòng)物,而在這些山中,熊的數(shù)量多達(dá)數(shù)百只,因此有很多機(jī)會(huì)可以觀察這些大型野生動(dòng)物。
During the summer, since national parks are wildlife sanctuaries where no disturbance of the native animals is allowed, years of Protection have served to break down the wild bears' fear of humans.
在夏天,由于國家公園是野生動(dòng)物保護(hù)區(qū),不允許打擾本地動(dòng)物,多年的保護(hù)已經(jīng)消除了野生熊對(duì)人類的恐懼。
Now, instead of depending on their own resources for a living, many bears patrol park roads and campgrounds. They give the garbage cans a frequent going over. An occasional offer of food from a park visitor, an illegal and dangerous practice, makes beggars of them.
現(xiàn)在,許多熊不再依賴自己的資源生存,而是巡邏公園的道路和露營地。它們經(jīng)常翻找垃圾桶。偶爾有游客給它們喂食,這是一種非法且危險(xiǎn)的行為,使得這些熊變成了乞討者。
Bears are very often hungry, and since they will feed on almost any kind of plant or animal, garbage is quite acceptable. Feeding them, however, represents misguided kindness, because the bears come to expect such generosity from everyone, and consequently, trouble could lie ahead.
熊經(jīng)常處于饑餓狀態(tài),因?yàn)樗鼈儙缀鯐?huì)吃任何種類的植物或動(dòng)物,所以垃圾對(duì)它們來說也是可以接受的。然而,給它們喂食卻是一種錯(cuò)誤的善意,因?yàn)樾軙?huì)期望每個(gè)人都這么慷慨,結(jié)果可能會(huì)帶來麻煩。
Park rules prohibit the feeding of bears. Violators are arrested. Every year, doctors who have offices near the park treat a number of cases of bear bites and bear scratches.
公園規(guī)定禁止給熊喂食。違規(guī)者將被逮捕。每年,公園附近的醫(yī)生都會(huì)治療多起熊咬傷和抓傷案例。
Some of the accidents have come about in strange ways. One man was in the process of feeding two small cubs when the mother bear appeared and insisted upon having some of the food. Shoving the big bear aside with one hand, the man continued feeding the cubs when suddenly he was struck a fierce blow in the face.
有些事故發(fā)生在奇怪的方式下。一個(gè)男人正在給兩只小熊喂食時(shí),母熊出現(xiàn)了并堅(jiān)持要得到一些食物。男人用一只手推開大熊,繼續(xù)給小熊喂食,突然他的臉被狠狠地打了一下。
A bear, prompted by the food that a lady kept offering to him, entered the car where the generous person was sitting. Her efforts to push the bear out of the car resulted in injuries.
一只熊被一位女士不斷提供的食物所吸引,進(jìn)入了她所坐的車?yán)?。她試圖把熊推出車外,結(jié)果自己卻受了傷。
A man required medical attention after he applied a lighted cigarette to a bear's nose. Another man tried to boost a bear into the front seat of his car.
一個(gè)男人用點(diǎn)燃的香煙燙了熊的鼻子后,需要醫(yī)療救治。還有一個(gè)人試圖把一只熊抱進(jìn)他的汽車前座。
So that he might take a picture of a bear sitting beside his wife who was behind the wheel. Because bears prefer roads and campgrounds, the possibility of a hiker meeting up with a bear along park trails is small, but there's always that chance. For a bear seems to know if you are carrying a lunch or a candy bar; he may even insist on taking it.
為了拍下一只熊坐在他妻子旁邊的照片,而他的妻子正坐在駕駛座上。因?yàn)樾芨矚g道路和露營地,所以徒步者在公園小徑上遇到熊的可能性很小,但總是有這種可能。因?yàn)樾芩坪跄苤滥闶欠駧е绮突蛱枪?;它甚至可能?huì)堅(jiān)持要拿走它。
Question 16 to 18 are based on the recording you have just heard.
問題16至18基于您剛剛聽到的錄音。
Question 16: What does the speaker say about the bears in national parks now?
問題16:說話者現(xiàn)在對(duì)國家公園里的熊說了什么?
Question 17: What does the speaker say about visitors feeding bears in national parks?
問題17:說話者對(duì)游客在國家公園里給熊喂食有何看法?
Question 18: What is the Speaker's advice to people who carry some food while hiking on a park trail?
問題18:對(duì)于在公園小徑上徒步時(shí)攜帶食物的人,說話者有什么建議?