___________ calla otorga.
A.Quien
B.Que
C.A quien
D.Quines
A.Quien
B.Que
C.A quien
D.Quines
What’s going to bedifficult for the man?
A.Makingnice coffee.
B.Workingat home quietly.
C.Choosinga birthday gift.
To reduce customers’ complaints, we are not supposed to:
A.Identify complaints
B.Stay quiet and listen
C.Avoid difficult clients
D.Resolve ahead of time
Which of the following statements about Hank Walker's pictures is true?
A.They are too quiet to attract attention.
B.They display a world familiar to us.
C.They stand as selfish lovers waiting for appreciation.
D.They are too expensive to buy.
听力原文:W:Professor Hook was so strange today.
M:I noticed that too。He was talking we quietly and then not giving us any homework at all.Can you believe that?
Q:What can be inferred about Professor Hook?
(17)
A.He usually talks quietly.
B.He usually assigns homework.
C.He didn't come to class today.
D.He came to class late today.
根据下列文章,请回答 36~40 题。 Is the Tie a Necessity?
Ties, or neckties, ha ve been asymbol of politeness and elegance in Britain for centuries. But the casual Prime Minister Tony Blair has problems with them. Reports suggest that even the civil servants may stop wearing ties. So, are the fa mously formal British really going to abandon the neckties?
Maybe. Last week, the UK's Cabinet Secretary Andrew Turnbull openly welcomed Atieless era . He hinted that civil servants would soon be free of the costliest 12 inches of fabric that most men ever buy in their lives.
In fact, Blair showed this attitude when he had his first guests to acocktail party. Many of them were celebrities (知名人士) without ties, which would ha ve been unima ginable even in the recent past.
For some more conservative British, the tie is a must for proper appearance. Earlier, Labor leader Jim Calla ghan said he would ha ve died rather than ha ve his children seen in public without Atie. For people like Calla ghan, the tie was asign of being complete, of showing respect. Men were supposed to wear Atie when going to church, to work in the office, to aparty - almost every social occasion.
But today, people ha ve begun to accept acasual style. even for formal occasions.
The origin of the tie is tricky. It started as something called simply a "band". The term could mean anything around a man's neck. It appeared in finer ways in the 1630s. Frenchmen showed alove of this particular fashion statement. Their neckwear (颈饰) impressed Charles II, the king of England who was exiled (流放) to France at that time.When he returned to England in "1660, he brought this new fashion item along with him.
It wasn't, however, until the late 18th century that fancy young men introduced a more colorful, flowing piece of cloth that eventually beca me known as the tie. Then, clubs, military institutions and schools began to use colored and patterned ties to indicate the wearer's membership in the late 19th century. After that, the tie beca me anecessary item of clothing for British gentlemen.
But now, even gentlemen are getting tired of ties. Anyway, the day leers abit easier when you wake up without ha ving to decide which tie suits you and your mood.
第6题:The tie symbolizes all of the following except
A.respect.
B.elegance.
C.politeness.
D.democracy.
听力原文:M: Excuse me; I'm trying to find my way to Reynolds Hall.
W: Reynolds Hall? I don't think I know where that is.
M: I'm looking for an exhibit of graduate student paintings. The campus newspaper said it was in Reynolds Hall.
W: Oh, now I know where you mean.Everyone on campus just calla that the Art Building.
M: So how do I get there?
W: Go straight ahead until you come to the main library. You'll see a walkway leading off to the left. Go that way, and then pass the Chemistry Building...
M: Let's see...to the library, take the walkway to the right...
W: No, to the left.
M: To the left, and pass the Chemistry Building...
W: That's right, and then you'll cross a little service road. Walk just a little bit farther and there's the Art Building. You can't miss it becausethere's a big fountain right in front of it.
M: I think I've got it.
W: I hope you enjoy the exhibit. Usually the graduate student exhibits are very interesting, and I've heard this one is especially good.
M: Actually, the main reason I'm going is that my sister has a couple of paintings on show. I wanted to take a look at them.
(20)
A.She doesn't know about the painting exhibit.
B.She isn't very familiar with the name "Reynolds Hall".
C.She doesn't realize the man is speaking to her.
D.She isn't sure where the Art Building is.
Peek through the inspection windows of the nearly 100 three-dimensional (3D) printers quietly making things at RedEye, a company based in Minnesota, and you can catch a glimpse of how factories will work in the future. It is not simply that the machines run day and night【C1】______by just a handful of technicians.【C2】______it is what they are making that shows how this revolutionary production process is【C3】______the manufacturing mainstream. 3D printers make things by building them up, a layer at a time,【C4】______a particular material, rather than【C5】______it by cutting, drilling or machining—which is why the process is also called additive manufacturing. There are many ways in which this can be done, and with only a【C6】______adjustment of software each item can be different,【C7】______the need for costly retooling of machines. This has made 3D printing a【C8】______way to make one-off items, especially prototype parts, mock-ups, small mechanical【C9】______and craft items. And that is about all that 3D printers are good for,【C10】______the doubters. Chief among them is Terry Gou, the boss of Foxconn. He thinks 3D printing is just "a trick" without any【C11】______value in the manufacture of real finished goods, and he has vowed to start spelling his name backwards if【C12】______wrong. Mr. Gou is right about one thing: additive manufacturing is not about to replace mass manufacturing.【C13】______the technology is improving, the finish and durability of some printed items can still【C14】______what producers require. And nor can 3D printers produce millions of【C15】______parts at low cost, as mass-production lines can.【C16】______3D printers have their【C17】______which is why they are starting to be used by some of the worlds biggest manufacturers, such as Airbus, Boeing, GE, Ford and Siemens. The market for 3D printers and【C18】______is small, but growing fast. Last year it was worth $2.2 billion worldwide, up 29% from 2011. As producers become more【C19】______with the technology, they are moving from prototypes to final【C20】______.
【C1】
A.designed
B.attended
C.introduced
D.bought
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