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[单选题]

Well, I suppose ______ people like the Smiths, but I don’t.

A.the

B.some

C.any

D.all

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更多“ Well, I suppose ______ people like the Smiths, but I don’t.”相关的问题

第1题

Well, I()I have he tine to give it a try,but I’m not sure that I’ll be able to finish it.

A.change

B.influence

C.chairman

D.suppose

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第2题

Well, I ___________ I have the time to give it a try, but Im not sure that Ill be able to finish it.

A、change

B、influence

C、chairman

D、suppose

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第3题

The manager of a small building company was very surprised to get a bill for two white mic
e which one of his workmen had bought. He sent for the workman and asked him why he had the bill sent to the company.

"Well," the workman answered, "you remember the house we were repairing in Newbridge last week, don't you? One of the things we had to do there was to put in some new electric wiring. Well, in one place we had to pass some wires through a pipe thirty feet long and about an inch across, which was built into solid stone and has four big bends in it. None of us could think how to do this until I had a good idea. I went to a shop and' bought two white mice, one of them male and the other female. Then I tied a thread to the body of the male mouse and put him into the pipe at one end, while Bill held the female mouse at the other end and pressed her to help her. I suppose he was a gentleman even though he was only a mouse. Anyway, as he ran through the pipe, he pulled the thread behind him. It was then quite easy for us to tie one end of the thread to the electric wires and pull them through the pipe."

The manager paid the bill for the white mice.

The manager wondered why ________.

A.the workman sent a bill to the company

B.the mice bought for the job were a male and a female

C.the workman had paid for the mice

D.mice were needed in repairing a house

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第4题

听力原文:W: That comes to $160.M: One hundred and sixty dollars! I just can't believe how

听力原文:W: That comes to $160.

M: One hundred and sixty dollars! I just can't believe how expensive textbooks are. And that's just for required texts. Why, if I have to buy all the books on my suggested reading lists, I'd have to take out a bank loan!

W: You could save some money if you buy used texts, you know.

M: I suppose, but it's hard for me to study from a text that's been marked up. Tell me, if I don't need some of these books, can I get a full refund?

W: Sure, if the professor changes his mind about a book or if you drop a course, just return it and we'll give you your money back—but only for the first three weeks of class. So don't write your name in the text or mark it up until you're sure you're going to keep it all semester.

M: And what about at the end of the semester? What's your buy-back policy?

W: As long as the books are in reasonably good condition, and they're going to be used in class the next semester, we'll give you 50% of their original value—even if you don't buy them at this store. Of course, if a professor changes texts or if a new edition comes out, we won't buy them back at all.

M: Fifty percent—that's all?

W: Well, I suppose that doesn't sound like much, but that's the store policy.

(20)

A.He is buying required textbooks.

B.lie is selling used books.

C.He is looking for all the suggested reading books.

D.He is borrowing friend's books.

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第5题

听力原文:M: In the studio today we have Eve Startling, a career adviser at a well known co
mprehensive school. Glad to have you with us, Eve.

W: Thank you.

M: A lot of young people are very nervous when they go to a job interview for the first time. What's the best way of dealing with this?

W: The obvious answer isn't much help, really, I'm afraid: "Just keep calm and do your best." If you're nervous to start with, this advice probably has the opposite effect. And in fact, a certain amount of tension is probably a good thing. It's the same with the way you sit when the inter viewer asks you to sit down.

M: How do you mean?

W: Well, if you balance on the edge of you chair, it shows you're nervous, but if you relax and make yourself too comfortable, that won't do, either. You should sit naturally, but straight, to show you're paying attention.

M: And I suppose you should face the interviewer when you answer questions.

W: Yes, eye contact is important then, but that doesn't mean you never take your eyes off the interviewer. And it's all right to be naturally pleasant, but don't try too hard.

M: One of the things that upset people most at interviews, I think, is that interviewers often ask trick questions. Even quite innocent questions like "How do you spend your spare time?" can contain traps in certain cases. Suppose the company would prefer an outdoor person but you spend every weekend looking at your stamp collection. What should you doe Should you always tell the truth or pretend to be what the company wants?

W: Tell the truth, yes, but not necessarily the whole truth. It's no good pre tending to be what you're not an experienced interviewer would soon find out but you needn't go out of your way to tell them anything you don't want them to know.

M: One last piece of advice before we sign off?

W: Yes, and it may surprise you. That is that very often young people get carried away just with the idea of winning. It's hard to remember when there's a lot of unemployment, as there is nowadays, but you should be sure that this is the kind of work you want to do and the firm is one that you would enjoy working for. Otherwise you may get the job and then find out that you hate it. So remember to ask sensibly questions as well as to answer sensibly.

(23)

A.She is a job interviewer.

B.She is a university professor.

C.She is a career adviser.

D.She is a psychologist.

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第6题

Polly: Franco, who do you take after in your family?Franco: Definite1y my mother.We’re b

Polly: Franco, who do you take after in your family?

Franco: Definite1y my mother.We’re both quite moody and impatient.We used to argue a lot when I was growing up, because she’s quick-tempered.Also, we’re both tall and thin.

Polly: Do you 1ook like her as well?

Franco: No, I 1ook like my dad, but he's very ca1m.I am more romantic.What about you?

Polly: People say I 1ook 1ike my mum.We've got the same nose, unfortunately.But I' m not 1ike

her in other ways.She's shy whereas I'm much more sociab1e.I 1ove being with my

friends and meeting new peop1e, but she hates it.I' m more 1ike my dad, I think.What

about you, Mary?

Mary: I' m a natural optimist, just like my dad.He is never pessimistic.I always think that everything wi1l work out well in the end and so does he.I’ve got the same sense of humour as my mum.We both laugh at stupid things.I suppose I look a bit like my grandmother.We've got the same smile, and we both have very dark hair.

1、Franco’s () is tall and thin.

A.mum

B.dad

C.daughter

2、Franco’s dad is().

A.quick-tempered

B.romantic

C.calm

3、Polly’s mum is() and() meeting new people.

A.sociable; loves

B.shy; hates

C.shy; loves

4、Mary is a (n) (), just like her dad.

A.optimist

B.pessimist

C.artist

5、Mary has the same() like her grandmother.

A.eyes

B.nose

C.smile

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第7题

What is intelligence, anyway? When I was in the army, I received a kind of aptitude test t
hat all soldiers took and, against a normal of 100, scored 160. No one at the base had ever seen a figure like that, and for two hours they made a big fuss over me. (It didn't mean anything. The next day I was still a buck private with KP—kitchen police—as my highest duty. )

All my life I've been registering scores like that, so that I have the complacent feeling that I'm highly intelligent, and I expect other people to think so, too. Actually, though, don't such scores simply mean that I am very good at answering the type of academic questions that are considered worthy of answers by the people who make up the intelligence tests—people with intellectual bents similar to mine?

For instance, I had an auto-repair man once, who, on these intelligence teste, could not possibly have scored more than 80, by my estimate. I always took it for granted that I was far more intelligent than he was. Yet, when anything went wrong with my car I hastened to him with it, watched him anxiously as he explored its vitals, and listened to his pronouncements as though they were divine oracles—and he always fixed my car.

Well, then, suppose my auto-repair man devised questions for an intelligence test.Or suppose a carpenter did, or a farmer, or, indeed, almost anyone but an academician. By every one of those thests, I'd prove myself a moron. And I'd be a moron, too. In the world where I could not use my academic training and my verbal talents but had to do something intricate or hard, working with my hands, I would do poorly. My intelligence, then, is not absolute but is a function of the society I live in and of the fact that a small subsection of that society has managed to foist itself on the rest as an arbiter of such matters.

Consider my auto-repair man, again. He had a habit of telling me jokes whenever he saw me. One time he raised his head from under the automobile hood to say: "Doc, a deaf-and-mute guy went into a hardware store to ask for some nails. He put two fingers together on the counter and made hammering motions with the other hanD.The clerk brought him a hammer. He shook his head and pointed to the two fingers he was hammering. The clerk brought him nails. He picked out the sizes he wanted, and left. Well, doc, the next guy who came in was a blind man. He wanted scissors. How do you suppose he asked for them?"

In dulgently, I lifted my fight hand and made scissoring motions with my first two fingers. Whereupon my auto-repair man laughed and said, "Why, you dumb jerk, he used his voice and asked for them. " Then he said smugly, "I've been trying that on all my customers today. " "Did you catch many?" I askeD."Quite a few," he said, "but I knew for sure I'd catch you. " "Why is that?" I askeD."Because you're so goddamned educated, Doc, I knew you couldn't be very smart. "

And I have an uneasy feeling he had something there.

By calling his assignment to KP as "my highest duty", the author suggests that______.

A.KP is an important position in the army every soldier desires

B.KP is a job of manual labor which does not require a special level of intelligence

C.KP is his most important job in the army

D.he is proud of his position as KP

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第8题

听力原文:W: In the studio today we've got Roberta Wilson, who's a time management consulta
nt. Good morning, Roberta.

M: Good morning, Cindy.

W: Roberta, what exactly do time management consultants do?

M: Well, Cindy, it's all about helping people to organize their work in an ef fective way: maximum efficiency; minimum stress.

W: Hah, sounds like something I need. Who are your clients?

M: Um, mainly business people, but I've also worked with politicians, civil servants and university lecturers.

W: Um, quite a range, then. And what sort of things help people to organ ize their time? I suppose punctuality is important.

M: Um, yes and no. It's easier to finish a meeting on time if it starts on time. But in international contexts, you do have to be aware of cultural differences.

W: For example?

M: Well, in Britain big, formal meetings usually start on time, but less for mal meetings often begin a few minutes late. In Germany, on the other hand, people expect all meetings to begin on time; In some countries, er, for example, in Latin America, there's a more relaxed attitude. So, you d6 have to adapt to circumstances.

W: Um, it sounds like even if you manage your own time very well, you still can't control what other people do.

M. Well, you can set limits. If you're meeting a friend who always arrives late, you can say, "Well, I'm going to wait for 15 minutes. If they aren't there by then, I'll leave,"

W: Hmm. I've got one friend who's always late. I don't think I'd ever see her if I did that.

M: Hah, but people who are always late are the ones you need to set limits with. If they know that you won't wait, then, perhaps they'll make an effort.

W: Isn't that rather harsh?

M: No, not really. Someone who constantly turns up late is putting a low value on your time. Let them know you've got other things to do. And I'm not suggesting you do that with everyone just the persistent latecomers.

(20)

A.To help people to organize their work in an effective way.

B.To help people to become efficient at their jobs.

C.To help people to arrange their time properly.

D.To help people to reduce stress.

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第9题

假定政府想增加产出和私人投资,你建议采取哪种政策? Suppose that the government wants to i
ncrease output as well as private investment.Which type of policy would you recommend?

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第10题

We got up early this morning and 【61】 a long walk after breakfast. We walked through the b
usiness 【62】 of the city. The city 【63】 larger than I thought it would be. Well, the business section is smaller than I thought it would be. I suppose that's 【64】 Washington is a special kind of city. 【65】 of the people in Washington work for the government.

At about 9:30 we went to the White House. It's 【66】 the public from 10 【67】 12, and there was a long line of people 【68】 to get in. We didn't have to wait very long, because the line moved 【69】 quickly.

The White House is really white. It is painted every year. And it seems very white, because it's got beautiful lawns 【70】 around it, with many trees and shrubs. The grounds 【71】 about four square blocks. I mean, they're about two blocks long 【72】 each side.

Of course, we didn't see the whole building. The part 【73】 the President lives and works is not open to the public. But the part we saw was beautiful. We went 【74】 five of the main rooms. One of them was the library on the ground floor. On the next floor, there are three rooms named 【75】 the colors that are used in them: the Red Room, the Blue Room, and the Green Room. The walls are covered with silk 【76】 There are 【77】 of old furniture from the time 【78】 the White House was 【79】 built. And everywhere there are paintings and statues of former presidents and 【80】 famous people from history.

(61)

A.made

B.took

C.went

D.set

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