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Read the text and decide the function of each sent...

Read the text and decide the function of each sentence in the text. Managers will often put a CV on the rejection pile for any number of reasons. This is not something one should take personally. It happens because they will receive hundreds of applications for a job and need a way to cut that number down quickly to the twenty or so they intend to interview. The list is obviously endless, but includes major gaps, such as lack of qualifications, and minor oversights, such as spelling errors. Managers will often put a CV on the rejection pile for any number of reasons.

A、supporting reason

B、topic sentence

C、example

D、summary

提问人:网友crododile 发布时间:2022-01-07
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更多“Read the text and decide the f…”相关的问题
第1题
Read the text and choose the correct answer to the question.Wéi,nǐ hǎo,wǒ yào jì dōngxi。喂,你好,我要寄东西。Hǎo de,nǐ yào jì shenme。好的,你要寄什么?Yǔróngfú hé kùzi。羽绒服和裤子。wèn:Nǚde yào jì shénme dōnɡxi?问:女的要寄什么东西?

A.Wéi jīn 围巾

B.zhīshì dànɡāo 芝士蛋糕

C.yǔrónɡfú hé kùzi 羽绒服和裤子

D.qípáo 旗袍

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第2题
Read the text and choose the correct answer to the question.Li jiā xiàzhōu jiù guò shēngrì le。Wǒmen sòng tā qípáo zěnme yàng?李佳下周就过生日了。我们送她旗袍怎么样?Kěshì wǒmen bùzhīdào tā de chǐcùn,wǒmen sòng tā yí gè s

A.Máorónɡ wánjù 毛绒玩具

B.Qípáo 旗袍

C.Zúqiú 足球

D.Shēnɡrì dànɡāo 生日蛋糕

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第3题
PART 5 Read the text below and choose the correct word for each space. For each question,

PART 5

Read the text below and choose the correct word for each space. For each question, mark the letter next to the correct word — A, B, C or D — on your answer sheet.

THE ESCALATOR

An American, Charles D. Seeberger, invented moving stairs to transport people in the 1890s. He (26)______ this invention an 'escalator', (27)______ the name from the Latin word 'scala', (28) means 'ladder'. Escalators move people up and down short (29)______ Lifts de the same, but only move (30)______ small number of people. If an escalator breaks down, it can still be (31)______ as ordinary stairs. An escalator can move (32)______ 8,000 and 9,600 people an hour, and it (33)______ not need a person to operate it.

Towards the end of the nineteenth century, cities were (34)______ more crowded and the first escalators were built at railway stations and in big department (35)______ so that people could move about more quickly. Today we see escalators everywhere.

A.announced

B.called

C.translated

D.explained

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第4题
Read the text and choose the correct answer to the question.Duānwǔ Jié de shíhou,zhōngguór
én chúle chī zòngzi hái kěyi huá lóngzhōu。端午节的时候,中国人除了吃粽子还可以划龙舟。Kàn lái zhōngguó hé xīfāng yíyàng,guòjié de shíhou,búshì chī jiùshì wán。看来中国和西方一样,过节的时候,不是吃就是玩。wèn:Duānwǔ Jié de shíhou,Zhōnɡɡuó rén xǐhuān ɡàn shénme?问:端午节的时候,中国人喜欢干什么?

A.Tī zúqiú。 踢足球。

B.Jùcān。 聚餐。

C.Chī zònɡzi,huá lónɡzhōu。 吃粽子,划龙舟。

D.Yóuyǒnɡ。 游泳。

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第5题
Now, go through TEXT J quickly and answer questions 87 and 88. General InformationTourist

Now, go through TEXT J quickly and answer questions 87 and 88.

General Information

Tourist Information Centre

Bridgefoot. Tel. (01789) 293127

Summer: 9:30 am-6:00 pm Weekdays

11:00 am-5:00 pm Sundays

Winter: 9:30 am-5:00 pm Weekdays

● Visitor Information, including information for the disabled

● Accommodation Bookings

● Bureau De Change

● Parkings and Toilets Leaflet

● Guide Friday Tour Tickets

● Travel Shop Information

Guide Friday Tourism Centre

The Civic Hall, 14 Rother Street

Te. (01789) 299866

Open Daily from 9:00 am

Accommodation

Youth Hostel-Alveston(2 miles from Town Centre). Tel.(01789)297093

Taxi Services

Bridgefoot, Bridge Street, Union Street, and Rother Market near White Swan Hotel

Police Station

Rother Street

Tel.(01789)414111

Hospital

Arden Street

Tel.(01789)205831

Library

Henly Stree

Tel.(01789)292209

Post Office

Henly Street

Tel.(01789)414939

TEXT K

First read the following questions.

89. How long is the Business English programme?

A.3 months.

B.6 months.

C.4 weeks.

D.10 weeks.

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第6题
PART 4 Read the text and questions below. For each question, mark the letter next to the c

PART 4

Read the text and questions below. For each question, mark the letter next to the correct answer —A, B, C or D —on your answer sheet.

The shoemaker

Bill Bird is a shoemaker who cannot make shoes fast enough for his growing number of customers — and he charges more than £300 for a pair! Customers travel hundreds of kilometres to his London shoe clinic or to his workshop in the countryside to have their feet measured. He makes shoes for people with feet of unusual sizes: very large, very small, very broad or very narrow. The shoes are at least as fashionable as those found in ordinary shops.

Mr Bird says: 'My problem is that I cannot find skilled workers. Young people all seem to prefer to work with computers these days. We will lose the necessary skills soon because there are fewer and fewer shoemakers nowadays. I am 45, and now I want to teach young people everything I know about making shoes. It's a good job, and a lot of people want to buy beautiful shoes specially made for them.'

He started in the business 19 years ago and now he employs three other people. His customers pay about £500 for their first pair of shoes. He says: 'Our customers come because they want comfortable shoes which are exactly the right size.' Extra pairs of shoes cost between£320 and £450, as it takes one employee a whole week to make just one shoe.

What is the writer trying to de in the text?

A.describe where Mr Bird finds his staff

B.encourage people to wear comfortable shoes

C.advertise a job selling expensive shoes

D.show Mr Bird's worries about his trade

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第7题
Part A Directions: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text b

Part A

Directions:

Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing [A], [B], [C] or D. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1 (40 points)

Text 1

Everybody loves a fat pay rise. Yet pleasure at your own can vanish if you learn that a colleague has been given a bigger one. Indeed, if he has a reputation for slacking, you might even be outraged. Such behaviour is regarded as “all too human,” with the underlying assumption that other animals would not be capable of this finely developed sense of grievance. But a study by Sarah Brosnan and Frans de Waal of Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, which has just been published in Nature, suggests that it all too monkey, as well.

The researchers studied the behaviour of female brown capuchin monkeys. They look cute. They are good-natured, cooperative creatures, and they share their food tardily. Above all, like their female human counterparts, they tend to pay much closer attention to the value of “goods and services” than males. Such characteristics make them perfect candidates for Dr. Brosnan’s and Dr. de waal’s study. The researchers spent two years teaching their monkeys to exchange tokens for food. Normally, the monkeys were happy enough to exchange pieces of rock for slices of cucumber. However, when two monkeys were placed in separate but adjoining chambers, so that each could observe what the other was getting in return for its rock, their behaviour became markedly different.

In the world of capuchins grapes are luxury goods (and much preferable to cucumbers). So when one monkey was handed a grape in exchange for her token, the second was reluctant to hand hers over for a mere piece of cucumber. And if one received a grape without having to provide her token in exchange at all, the other either tossed her own token at the researcher or out of the chamber, or refused to accept the slice of cucumber. Indeed, the mere presence of a grape in the other chamber (without an actual monkey to eat it) was enough to reduce resentment in a female capuchin.

The researches suggest that capuchin monkeys, like humans, are guided by social emotions. In the wild, they are a cooperative, group living species. Such cooperation is likely to be stable only when each animal feels it is not being cheated. Feelings of righteous indignation, it seems, are not the preserve of people alone. Refusing a lesser reward completely makes these feelings abundantly clear to other members of the group. However, whether such a sense of fairness evolved independently in capuchins and humans, or whether it stems from the common ancestor that the species had 35 million years ago, is, as yet, an unanswered question.

21. In the opening paragraph, the author introduces his topic by ________.

[A] posing a contrast

[B] justifying an assumption

[C] making a comparison

[D] explaining a phenomenon

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第8题
Part ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by c

Part A

Directions: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)

Everybody loves a fat pay rise. Yet pleasure at your own can vanish if you learn that a colleague has been given a bigger one. Indeed, if he has a reputation for slacking, you might even be outraged. Such behaviour is regarded as "all too human", with the underlying assumption that other animals would not be capable of this finely developed sense of grievance. But a study by Sarah Brosnan and Frans de Waal of Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia, which has just been published in Nature, suggests that it is all too monkey, as well.

The researchers studied the behaviour of female brown capuchin monkeys. They look cute. They are good-natured, co operative creatures, and they share their food readily. Above all, like their female human counterparts, they tend to pay much closer attention to the value of "goods and services" than males.

Such characteristics make them perfect candidates for Dr. Brosnan's and Dr. de Waal's study. The researchers spent two years teaching their monkeys to exchange tokens for food. Normally, the monkeys were happy enough to exchange pieces of rock for slices of cucumber. However, when two monkeys were placed in separate but adjoining chambers, so that each could observe what the other was getting in return for its rock, their behaviour became markedly different.

In the world of capuchins grapes are luxury goods (and much preferable to cucumbers). So when one monkey was handed a grape in exchange for her taken, the second was reluctant to hand hers over for a mere piece of cucumber. And if one received a grape without having to provide her token in exchange at all, the other either tossed her own token at the re searcher or out of the chamber, or refused to accept the slice of cucumber. Indeed, the mere presence of a grape in the other chamber (without an actual monkey to eat it) was enough to induce resentment in a female capuchin.

The researchers suggest that capuchin monkeys, like humans, are guided by social emotions. In the wild, they are a co-operative, group-living species. Such co-operation is likely to be stable only when each animal feels it is not being cheated. Feelings of righteous indignation, it seems, are not the preserve of people alone. Refusing a lesser reward completely makes these feelings abundantly clear to other members of the group. However, whether such a sense of fairness evolved in dependently in capuchins and humans, or whether it stems from the common ancestor that the species had 35 million years ago, is, as yet, an unanswered question.

In the opening paragraph, the author introduces his topic by ______.

A.posing a contrast

B.justifying an assumption

C.making a comparison

D.explaining a phenomenon

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第9题
Part ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by c

Part A

Directions: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)

Karim Nasser Miran lives on a bench in the Charles de Gaulle Airport on the outskirts of Paris. He has been living there for 11 years. Amazingly, this little seat by a basement shopping mall, between a pizzeria and a fast-food stand has been the only place he has been allowed to stay for all that time.

His possessions are crammed into an airport trolleys, which is always beside him. He has a sports bag which holds his few clothes, a shopping bag with his washing soap and other bathroom goods, and books and his diaries which he keeps in cardboard boxes.

For years, the 54-year-old Miran has been trying to leave Charles de Gaulle Airport but authorities will not let him out of the air port. This strange set of circumstances has continued for 11 years.

Miran was born in Iran, but is stateless] because he has no documents to prove his citizenry. They have been lost. For this reason he cannot get a passport. Miran says that his mother is Danish or Scottish. His father died when Miran was just over 20 years old, so he left I ran for Britain searching for his mother. He could not find her, and returned to Iran. He lost his citizenship and tried to return to Britain. When the British asked him about relatives who could guarantee him a job, he could not tell the immigration officials their names as he was still searching for,.them.

He tried to enter Germany, Russia and Holland without success. He managed to get into Belgium where he was'given refugee status. Five years later he left for France, but he says the document which gave him refugee status, and the right to travel, was stolen from him. He could not leave the Charles de Gaulle Airport. This;vas in 1988. Eleven years later he was still searching for them.

To start with, friendly airport workers gave him free meals, and let him use the shower and toilets there. They even gave him access to a phone, and called the airport doctor when Miran did not feel well.

Miran became such a permanent fixture of Terminal One that all the workers started to call him Monsieur Alfred. Each day they greeted him, each day Miran wrote in his diary in order to keep trace of his own world, and each day he failed to release himself from his giant, glass-and-concrete prison.

But in 1999, Miran became confident that he might be able to leave the airport terminal and start a new life. Officials told him they finally located a key document, issued in 1981 but lost in 1988, which could be his ticket to freedom.

Even after eleven years in the airport terminal, Miran said he had not lost hope. He did a correspondence course to help to educate himself. Every day the airport post office carefully set aside all the mail addressed to him with his written lessons to be done. Every day he set, all alarm clock to ring at 7 a.m. and after his tea and food he would begin studying. The ambition he built up was to return to Brussels to do a degree.

The Charles de Gaulle Airport is located ______.

A.in the outlying district of Paris

B.in the center of Paris

C.far from Paris

D.near Paris

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第10题
Part ADirections: Read the following three texts. Answer the questions on each text by cho

Part A

Directions: Read the following three texts. Answer the questions on each text by choosing A, B, C or D. Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.

The human nose has given to the language of the world many interesting expressions. Of course, this is not surprising. Without the nose, obviously, we could not breathe or smell. It is the part of the face that gives a person special character. Cyrano de Bergerac said a large nose showed a great man — courageous, courteous, manly and intellectual.

A famous woman poet wished that she had two noses to smell a rose! Blaise Pascal, a French philosopher, made an interesting comment about Cleopatra's nose. If it had been shorter, he said, it would have changed the whole face of the world!

Historically, man's nose has had a principal role in his imagination. Man has referred to the nose in many ways to express his emotions. Expressions concerning the nose refer to human weakness: anger, jealousy and revenge.

In English there are a number of phrases about the nose. For example, to hold up one's nose expresses a basic human feeling — pride. People can hold up their noses at people, things, and places.

The phrase, to be led around by the nose, shows man's weakness. A person who is led around by the nose lets other people control him. On the other hand, a person who follows his nose lets his instinct guide him.

For the human emotion of rejection, the phrase to have one's nose put out of joint is very descriptive. The expression applies to persons who have been turned aside because of a competitor. Their pride is hurt and they feel rejected. This expression is not new. It was used by Erasmus in 1542.

This is only a sampling of expressions in English dealing with the nose. There are a number of others. However, it should be as plain as the nose on your face that the nose is more than an organ for breathing and smelling!

Which of the following can be the best title of the passage?

A.Man's Nose Reflecting His Language Ability

B.Man's Nose and Interesting Expressions

C.As Plain as the Nose on the Face

D.Famous People Talking about Man's Nose

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第11题
Part ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by c

Part A

Directions: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D . Mark your answers on ANSWER SHEET 1.

If you see a diamond ring on the fourth finger of a woman's left hand, you probably know what it means: in America, this has long been the digit of choice for betrothal jewelry, and the lore of the trade traces the symbolism back to ancient times. But if you see a diamond ring on the fourth finger of a woman's right hand, you may or may not know that it signifies an independent spirit, or even economic empowerment and changing gender mores. "A lot of women have disposable income , "Katie Couric said recently on the "Today" show after showing viewers her Chanel right-hander. "Why wait for a man to give her a diamond ring?"

This notion may be traced back, approximately, to September. That's when the Diamond Information Center began a huge marketing campaign aimed at articulating the meaning of righthand rings — and thus a rationale for buying them. "Your left hand says 'we, '" the campaign declares. "Your right hand says'me. ' " The positioning is brilliant: the wearer may be married or unmarried and may buy the ring herself or request it as a gift. And while it can take years for a new jewelry concept to work itself thoroughly into the mainstream, the right-hand ring already has momentum.

At the higher end of the scale, the jewelry maker Kwiat, which supplies stores like Saks, offers a line of Kwiat Spirit Rings that can retail for as much as $ 5,000, and "we're selling it faster than we're manufacturing it," says Bill Gould, the company's chief of- marketing. At the other end of the scale, mass-oriented retailers that often take a wait-and-see attitude have already jumped on the bandwagon.

Firms like Kwiat were given what Gould calls "direction" from the Diamond Information Center about the new ring's attributes — multiple diamonds in a north-south orientation that distinguishes it from the look of an engagement ring, and so on. But all this is secondary to the newly minted meaning. "The idea," Morrison says, "is that beyond a trend, this could become a sort of cultural imperative. "

A tall order? Well, bear in mind that "a diamond is forever" is not a saying handed down from imperial Rome. It was handed down from an earlier generation of De Beers marketers. Joyce Jonas, a jewelry appraiser and historian, notes that De Beers, in the 40' s and 50's, took advantage of a changing American class structure to turn diamond rings into a(n) (attainable) symbol for the masses. By now, Jonas observes, the stone alone "is just a commodity. "And this, of course, is what makes its invented significance more crucial than ever.

A diamond ring on the fourth finger of a woman's left hand suggests that ______.

A.she is married

B.she is engaged

C.she may choose her jewelry

D.she has independent spirit

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